âThat means⊠If the seal ends up breaking, then thereâll be no point in offering sacrifices.â
ââŠThatâs right.â
âWhen will it break?â
âI do not know. What I do know is that in the time Iâve lived so far, the time between sacrifices has been rapidly shrinking from every 5 years to every 2 years. Maybe itâll break in another 5, 10, or 30 years⊠However, I doubt itâll last for 50âŠâ
In the not-so-far future, the Hydra will be set free.
A monstrous, mountain-sized dragon with 9 heads that spews poison so deadly a mere whiff will spell certain death.
If that thing were to descend upon these lands, the Luminous territory would be in dire straits.
The seal was already losing its effectiveness.
I thought back to the sacrificial woman, who shed tears and cried out in delight in her newfound life.
If it comes to this, thenâ
Quietly resolving myself, I called out to the mayor.
ââŠWhen will it break?â
âWhat?â
The mayorâs mouth hung open in confusion.
âLike I said, itâll be around 50 years at the longestââ
âThatâs not what I mean.â
I shook my head.
âIâm talking about the day the Hydra will revive in the event that we donât sacrifice that woman.â
ââ!â
Laura and the mayor widened their eyes in shock.
âW-⊠What do you mean by that? Are you saying you want toâŠÂ purposely undo the seal?â
âItâll end up breaking anyway, right? Just let it happen at this point.â
I didnât have the courage to tell that woman to die again.
In that case, there was no harm in giving it a shot.
âŠIâve come to know that apparently, this Magic Arrow of mine is strong enough to help other people.
âIâll defeat the Hydra.â
The room went dead silent.
Laura spoke up in a panicked voice.
ââŠB-But Albert! Youâll die just by getting near the Hydraâs poison, you know!? How will youâ!?â
âDid you forget, Laura? The firing range of my Magic Arrow isââ
Iâve already said the same thing twice todaâ
âAh, itâs 13 kilometers! I guess weâre in the clear!â
ââŠYeahâŠâ
I was cut off by Laura.
I guess this means she finally memorized it.
âAccording to the legends, the seal weakens with each new moon. Therefore, the Hydra will awaken on the following new moonâin other words, three days from now.â
âGot it.â
ââŠIf you want to offer the sacrifice and stall the awakening, please make your decision by the morning of the final day.â
Laura and I finished our talks with the mayor and went to the vacant house that was provided to us.
After we left our luggage in our rooms and took a short breather, I spoke to Laura.
âHey, Laura.â
âWhat is it?â
ââŠAm I making a mistakeâŠ?â
I was attempting to take an absurdly risky gamble. Even someone as dim-witted as myself understood that.
Although the seal was on the verge of breaking at any moment, at the very least, it was still being maintained. Preserving it would probably bring a momentary peace to the Luminous territory.
And here I am, throwing all of that away and deciding to challenge the Hydra.
âItâll be fine if I win, butâwhatâll happen if I lose?â
The Hydra would overrun this villageâno, it would probably bring ruin to every inch of the Luminous territory.
I knew.
This journey hammered it into me: Thousands upon thousands of people lived in this territory.
âAlbert! At least eat before you go!
I knew the villagers who welcomed me with smiles on their faces.
There were people who called these lands home and lived their lives to the fullest. They spent their days finding their happiness in the small things.
If I were to lose, everythingâincluding their livelihoodsâwould be smashed to bits. They would all perish along with their poison-ridden hometowns.
Did I have the right to deliver such a devastating blow to their peaceful day-to-day lives?
âIs offering the sacrifice the correct thing to do?â
At least then we could preserve this transient moment of tranquility.
In the end, all it would take was the life of oneâjust oneâgirl.
It was a minuscule price to pay for several years of peace.
Anyone who governed anything was duty-bound to say these words:
Die for the rest of us.
That was the resolve carried by those who govern a territory.
âBut I canât do such a thing.â
It still lingered in my ears.
The voice and tears of joy of the woman I saved after she was freed from the fear of death.
I couldnât tell her to die.
I couldnât tell her to die for the Luminous people.
I couldnât just forget about the happiness I felt when I saved her back then.
Thatâs why I thought to myself.
Iâll save the woman.
Iâll protect everybody in the Luminous territory.
Iâllâ
Defeat the Hydra.
However, my opponent held the name of the Hydra. I didnât know if I could really win or not.
âAm I unfit to be the next family head? Did I really make the right decision?â
I was scared.
When I think of the countless lives that weighed upon this decisionâŠ
When I realize just how heavy of a burden that really wasâŠ
Laura, who had been listening to me with an earnest expression, momentarily fell into thought and muttered.
ââŠI donât know. ButâŠâ
Laura continued.
âI believe telling that woman to die is the easy way out of this. All youâd be doing is using the life of a single person and forgetting about it until the next time. That doesnât solve anything. It doesnât change the fact that the Hydra will eventually reawaken, and countless women will be offered as sacrifices.â
Thatâs right. Nothing will change.
The perpetual tragedy from bygone days wonât change.
Nor will the tragedy thatâs in store for future generations.
âYou thought that was horrible, right? You thought you wanted to save them from that fate, right? You thought you wanted to change things for the better, right?â
Thatâs right.
Thatâs exactly why I set out on this journey in the first place.
When I saw people resign themselves to an unjust death brought about by the helplessness of their situation, I wanted to tell them that they didnât need to die.
I wanted to tell them that they didnât need to cry anymore.
âYouâre trying to help the people in trouble! I think that sentiment is praiseworthy! You try to save even a single person! You put in the effort to achieve that goal! I never once wanted to laugh off those feelings of yours as stupid!â
Lauraâs words resonated with me.
They gave me courage and lit a fire within me.
âAll you have to do is win! Thatâs all, just win! Ancient dragon or not, I donât care! You can beat it!â
She continued.
âAfter all, youâve always turned despair into hope!â
Iâve done what I could and managed up until now.
I have to do my best.
I have to do something about this situation.
Laura encouraged me every step of the way to this moment.
The words she said echoed in my ears.
âI believe Albert is more of a hero than anyone else!
Ever since that day, I continued to take the steps to become the hero I wanted to be for Laura.
If Laura believed in me, thenâ
âI believe in you! I believe that youâll win! I believe youâll beat that dragon without a hitch and come back safely! And I want you to become a feudal lord thatâll save everybodyâwithout leaving a single person behind!â
Laura finished speaking.
A silence descended like a drop curtain.
My heart became clear. Each and every word she said slowly made their way into my heart and drove away the clouds of doubt inside me.
âŠThatâs right.
A weakling like myself might not be up to the task, but Lauraâs hero surely wouldnât crumble under something like this.