There were a huge number of Ravi Guild members surrounding me, but I barely noticed them. I just glared at the Aman family with my spear held tightly in my right hand.
At that moment, Lagus fell to his knees in front of me and bowed his head. âIâm terribly sorry about this. I was the one who invited you⊠this is entirely my fault.â
âAhâŠâ Muskan dropped to her knees as well. âI apologize as well. I justâŠwanted you to help me free my friends and family from oppressionâŠâ she said, tears streaming down her face.
Watching them beg for my forgiveness somehow cooled down the anger that was boiling up to my eyes. The two people who pissed me off the most just threw themselves at my feet; itâd be wrong if I stayed angry and started killing everybody. The glass had already been spilt; what else could I do?
âHaâŠ.â I sighed as I returned my spear into my inventory.
At Akashwiâs signal the guards left the tent and closed the flap. It wouldnât be right to show the entire guild Lagus on his knees. I sat back down on my chair.
âPlease forgive me. I was only thinking about myself. I justâŠâ
A thought crossed my mind as I watched Muskan cry. How did someone like her obtain the Descendant of the God of Destruction? As far as I knew, random skills could only be received by devas who had fulfilled certain requirements. Random skills were something of a badge to prove to others just how strong someone was.
A random skill as powerful as the Descendant of the God of Destruction must have had some crazy requirements that only a powerful deva could fulfill, but I couldnât see any sign of that powerful deva in the crying Muskan. She looked more pitiful than anything else.
Muskanâs will to better the lives of the Shudras and the Dilats was unchanging. I wasnât scorning that will; I just disregarded it, as I was thinking only about myself. I put myself first, even though I had no idea what would happen to millions of people.
âCan you really not undo it?â
âNo⊠I canât.â
âWhy didnât you make a guild master of either the Sahtashwi Guild or the Beni-Kinant Guild a comrade?â
âThey would have to be within three meters away from me⊠they would have also had someone else kill me, even if it meant they would incur a significant punishment. I am that much of a threat to them!â
I sighed heavily. âThen whatâs this about a punishment.â
âI donât know about that, either.â
A vein pulsed on my temple. âThen do you know about the reward?â
âI donâtâŠâ
This woman was dead weight. Hell, she was useless from the start when she couldnât keep quiet about her skill. She could have kept quiet about this whole thing and lived on a mountain in solitude until the skill was completely activated, and she would have been fine.
âI know what youâre worrying about, but I can assure you that everything will be taken care of.â
âYou know what Iâm worrying about?â
âYes.â
I doubted she even understood why I turned her down in the first place.
âI wonât be able to do anything to you even after the skill is completely activated.â
ââŠâ
âThe same goes for Master Lagus here.â
âBecause of the Comrade effect?â
âYes. It is because of the Comrade effect and⊠anyway, itâs the truth. I wonât lie to you.â
I could see in her eyes a resolution I didnât see before in her. It was pretty overwhelming.
âMr. Lee, I trust Muskan with my life. If it turns out she is lying, then I will serve you for the rest of my life as your slave.â
âWhat are you saying, my son?!â Sandip shouted in shock.
âBrother, no!â Akaswhi stood up too, incredulous at what his older brother just uttered.
I was taken aback, as well. I knew the kind of man Lagus Aman was in the past. He would never go back on his word. It was only with that honor that Lagus could create and lead the Liberation Army to such greatness. It was that honor that made Lagus the Alpha and Omega of the Liberation Army.
âOur plan is to use the Manori Creek as the final line of our defense. We have nowhere else to go if we get pushed back farther than this point. We will hold out here until Muskanâs skill activates completely. It would be best if you leave this place now, Mr. Lee.â Lagus took a sip from his tea before continuing, âShould we lose, we will compensate you for whatever loss you incur from the Comrade effect. Should we win⊠well, youâll get your reward either way.â
Lagusâs calm words made me feel a bit sheepish for getting that angry. However, I didnât fully trust either of them yet. Muskan made a mess out of something so simple when she couldnât protect her precious secret. Her head was too high in the clouds for something so serious.
HoweverâŠfor some reason, I was beginning to believe in her. That resolution in her eyes was strong.
After a few more words, I spoke up, âIâll stay and observe the situation for now. Iâm not⊠entirely convinced yet.â I wasnât sure what I would do yet, but I didnât want to miss history in the making. âBy the way, thereâs something Iâve been curious about. Wouldnât it be better to leave India and go into hiding? Iâm sure you have a Warp Scroll you can use.â
âNo! That is impossible. If I do, then⊠the skill will fail,â Muskan quickly replied.
At the Manori Creek riverbankâŠ
âAll Ice Mages freeze the river.â
âYes, sir!â
âFrozen Earth!â
A good chunk of the 20,000 soldiers were made up of Ice Mages. They gathered together and formed a solid bridge of ice across the four-kilometer river.
I crossed with the Amans and Muskan. Once we crossed, the soldiers made quick work of the ice bridge and destroyed it.
Unsure of what else to do, I ended up joining in on the Ravi Guildâs battle preparations.
âThe Manori Creek is a strong river, but it wonât be enough to slow the enemyâs advances.â
âI know. They are definitely stronger than us; they wonât have much trouble crossing the river. But, should they form an ice bridge like we did, we can have our Fire Mages force them to lose a good chunk of their forces in the river. If weâre lucky, we can stop them for some time.â
âAgreed. It is the best option we have to hurt them, but if we want to stop both guilds completely we will need to deal with the twoâŠâ
âHmmâŠâ
âUghâŠâ
I listened in as it seemed that there was a ray of hope for the Ravi Guild, but when they started talking about the two, whoever they were, the officers frowned and spat in annoyance. I kept listening in, but I had no idea who they were talking about.
In the past, the only famous person I had heard about n India, other than Gandhi, was Lagus Aman. I never heard about anyone else, even if they were part of the most powerful guild in India.
âItâll be tough for Master Lagus to deal with both at the same time.â
âThat Kiran bastard will be the more annoying of the two.â
âDamn that pest!â
The officers spat at Kiranâs name, but I noticed that they occasionally stole glances my way.
âWho is this other person, other than Kiran?â I was getting curious as to who these guys were now. Who were they that they could actually give Lagus a hard time?
âKiran is from the Sahtaswhi Guild and Madadu is from the Behi-Kinant Guild.â
âKiran is a deity who has the Equality skill.â
âEquality?â
âYes. Equality is a skill that forces its targetâs Stat points to be equally distributed across all five Stats. It can only be used on one person at a time.â
âItâs annoying skill for anyone, but itâs especially dangerous against mages. Fighter classes will lose out on precious attack power, but mages will completely lose their magic power if their INT and WIL are too low.â
-A skill like that actually exists?-
âThere is a side effect to the skill. The userâs Stats all go to 1, rendering the user useless in a battle, but theyâll use it to take out our strongest player.â
That spelled trouble for the Ravi Guild. Lagus wouldnât be able to use his Psychokinesis Random Skill to its full potential, and would become next to useless in the upcoming battle.
âMadadu is a summoner known as the Blade of Gluttony. He summons a giant, three-meter long sword, and knows how to use it, even though heâs a Summoner.â
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âIf Mr. Lee decides to join in, he will have to face Kiran. His Stats will be high enough to take that loss.â
âIf you can take Kiran out, then the battle will be ours.â
ââŠâ I didnât say anything back as they fervently replied, as if they were waiting for my questions. I then locked eyes with Muskan, who was sitting off in the corner. Her eyes had no trace of nervousness or fear in them. They werenât filled with malice, either. Her confidence⊠almost provided comfort for the upcoming battle.
âIâll face Kiran,â I said to the officers.
I had no idea what the outcome of my decision would be. I did not know if I would come to regret this later, but a voice in the back of my head said that I had to fight. I had to help the Ravi Guild. No, I had to help Muskan, if I didnât want to regret anything later on.