The next day, we visited the Adventurer Guild after returning to the Luminous capital.
The reason beingâ
âHow should we look for villages troubled by monsters?â
When I asked Laura that question, she answered like so:
âItâd be best to go to the Adventurerâs Guild.â
âThe Adventurerâs Guild?â
âItâs a place where jack-of-all-trades-type people gather and take on goblin extermination quests and stuff. If people are really troubled with something, then theyâll put out a request there.â
The first floor of the Adventurerâs Guild was a bar.
People were sitting here and there at the tables arranged around the room. The clothes they wore were quite variedâat one glance youâd see a magician-looking man, then the next youâd see a woman with a longsword by her side. The one thing that they all had in common was that they all gave off a different aura from a commoner.
They were most likely adventurers.
We headed towards the counter and talked to the young woman standing there.
âExcuse me. Is this the Adventurerâs Guild?â
âYeah, what about it?â
The woman glanced at me, then at Laura.
âDo you want to submit a request?â
ââŚNo, not quite. I want to take on a request. Something like, goblin extermination, or stuff like that.â
I told her what I wanted to do extremely awkwardly.
âŚItâs hard to have a conversation when I hardly know how any of this stuff worksâŚ
âYou want to take on a requestâŚ? I can tell you donât seem to know much about adventurers from what youâre saying, but are you registered as an adventurer?â
âI need to register?â
âYeah. Thatâs because the work you can take on changes based on your rank. If you register, do your work, and raise your rank, then the work youâll be able to do will gradually increase. After all, we canât entrust a huge job to a person we canât trust.â
âThatâs true.â
âAre you gonna register? If thatâs all youâll be doing, itâs free.â
âHmâŚâ
I fell into deep thought. Itâs not like I really want to be an adventurer.
âAm I able to check what kind of requests are available before I register?â
âLook no further than there.â
The woman directed her gaze at a large bulletin board. Countless pieces of paper were affixed onto it.
âIf youâre feeling up to registering, then call out to me. Your reward wonât be paid if you donât register, even if you finish the request.â
âThank you.â
I moved over to the bulletin board after giving my thanks to the female receptionist.
There were a wide variety of request papers spread across the board.
The request summary, details, location, reward, and so on were packed together compactly on each paper.
They were all written in the same format, so the guild is most likely summarizing all of the details from the requestors, rather than the requestors writing it themselves.
Each request had multiple papers with identical contents affixed onto the board in a set.
There were a wide variety of requests entailing different things, butâ
âLaura, how about we only collect the request papers related to extermination?â
âAlright, got it.â
âCan you tell if the monsters in the request are inflicting harm on the villages? I want to exclude the villages that put out requests just because monsters live nearby and think itâs dangerous.â
If thereâs actual harm being dealt to the villagers, then it goes without saying that the monsters needed to be dealt with. However, I didnât plan on going as far as defeating the monsters that are quietly coexisting with villages. At the very least, I didnât see myself doing that.
I only planned on defeating the monsters that are bothering people.
Laura looked over several papers.
âHmm⌠It looks to me like they didnât include that much detail, so itâs hard to tell⌠We might need to go to the village to make sure.â
âI seeâŚâ
âBut I believe practically all of them are being harmed.â
âWhy?â
In response to my question, Laura lowered her voice and answered.
âIt costs money to send requests to adventurers. No village has that kind of financial leeway, so as long as they arenât truly in a pinch, they wonât send a request to the guild.â
âAah⌠thatâs true.â
I knew itâLaura being here was a huge help.
If it were me, I wouldnât have ever known about their circumstances.
âWell then, letâs take the requests from top to bottom.â
We moved to a nearby table.
I intently scanned over the request papers.
There lay the cries of the requestorsâthe cries of the Luminous people. To think there were so many people being terrorized by the menace of monsters.
ââŚWe gotta help themâŚâ
âYes! Thatâs right!â
Laura shook my right hand up and down, and I matched her.
It was at that moment.
âThe hell? What requests are you guys lookinâ at?â
All of a sudden, I smelled a breath stinking of alcohol.
It was still broad daylight, yet someone was drinking?
Someone presumptuously extended their arm to our table and snatched one of the scattered requests.
When I shifted my gaze to the voice, I saw a middle-aged man with a red face standing beside our table. His body was well-built, and he gave off the exact image of a warrior.
ââŚHey hey, these are extermination requests⌠What, you guys tryna complete these? That wonât do. You gotta let these lie for a little while longer!â
After saying that, he took a gulp of the beer that he held in his other hand in high spirits.
I faced him and asked a question.
ââŚLet it lie?â
âYeah, yeah. Yâsee, weâre ignoring the requests.â
I didnât get what he meant.
âWhy would you do such a thing?â
âExtermination requests are submitted cuz the requestors are seriously in trouble! After all, their lives are on the line! Which means if you ignore âem, the reward will increase!â
He spoke as if he were announcing an amazing breakthrough and roared with laughter.
Laura, who seldom got angry at anything, scowled.
âW-W-What a horrible thing to do! Youâre casting aside the voices crying for help!â
âThe fuck? You serious? Weâre putting our lives on the line protecting them over here. Is it wrong to try and sell our services at a high price? Weâre no different than merchants.â
At a loss for words, Laura let out a small groan.
The man pointed at a few of the papers on the table.
âI got an eye on that and that, so donât take âem. Actually, some of the other requests have already been reserved by some other guys. Isnât that right!?â
He looked over his shoulder and looked at the other adventurers.
The people who were looking at our exchange let out a small chuckle.
âEveryoneâs waiting for the reward to increase. Just by drinking alcohol here, the money we can earn goes up! Isnât that great! We gotta put them in a bit of a tighter pinch!â
My mood was worsening just by listening to himâŚ
ââŚThe thing is, merchants arenât dealing with lives.â
âHah?â
âDonât mind me asking, but is this what all adventurers do?â
âNo? Normally, what weâre doing isnât feasible. What usually happens is a bunch of idiots eager to finish requests go on and take âem all.â
âIs what weâre doing any different?â
âA little while ago, the inheritor of this territory departed to battle as a commander. When that happened, a bunch of the skilled guys were hired and went off with him. Iâm not sure if they died or transferred to another territory, but right now, thereâs a shortage of labor goinâ on.â
I see⌠so the people here are unskilled and have terrible personalitiesâŚ
The man continued with a gleeful-looking expression.
âTo us adventurers whoâve been made to toil away at boring, low-paying jobs, this is the golden age I say, the golden age! Thatâs why weâre making those requestors worry just a bit more. If you guys join our group as well, then weâll allot you some requests, you know? HAHAHAHAHA!â
The man burst with laughter as he returned to his seat.
âAlbertâŚâ
Laura looked at me with a sad-looking face.
I told her that itâd be fine.
ââŚYou can sit here and drink alcohol as long as you want. Youâll have lost your chance by the time you feel like cashing out.â
I gathered the request papers scattered on the table.
âLetâs go, Laura. Weâll take care of all of the requests.â