âI hesitated a moment and you drowned in the sea. I almost killed you. No, I should have actively protected you in the first place. Instead of pitying myself, asking if we were in the same situation.â
âAfter all, I was no different from the cruel people on the deck.â
Rosen smiled and shook her head.
âSome stupid b*stard stepped on my hand and I fell.â
âI was able to catch you.â
âSince you keep insisting like that, fine. Itâs okay, though. You didnât do anything wrong. You have obligations⌠After all, itâs more strange that you rescued me. Even if everyone in the world was on my side, you could never be.â
As if on the border between dreams and reality, Rosen muttered in a hazy tone. He tried to pass her water, but Rosen shook her head and grabbed his hand. He touched Rosenâs forehead.
âI shouldnât be sickâŚâ
âYou will be fine soon.â
âSir Kerner, you didnât know I wanted to live, did you? Donât be fooled. How do you know that everything Iâve said is the truth?â
âIs it true that you want to live?â
âYes.â
âAll right then. Nothing else matters.â
âSir Kerner is finally backâŚâ
Rosen laughed weakly, and then started talking nonsense again in a sing-songy melody. Ian stroked Rosenâs scattered hair and struggled to open his mouth.
âYou will never know how I felt the moment you said you wanted to live.â
In fact, he couldnât seem to express himself exactly. He thought he was happy, but on second thought, he felt more miserable than when he heard she wanted to die.
Rosen did not answer, her eyes still closed. It was also difficult to know exactly whether he had lost his mind or pretended to have lost his mind to run away from her confession. But Ian thought it didnât matter anymore.
â⌠I carried a picture of you from the newspaper.â
ââŚâ
âI denied it at the time. I didnât have anyone, but you were famous, and I could see you, so I held onto you⌠I thought I was just broken and crazy. But now I know. It wasnât that complicated. IâŚâ
ââŚâ
âI just wanted to meet you.â
Rosen coughed.
âI guess I havenât lost my mind.â
Ian offered her another drink of water but Rosen firmly shook her head. He didnât force it.
âIs there anything you want?â
âA cigarette. It feels like my insides are frozen.â
âNo. Your cough will get worse.â
âThen let me hear your voice.â
ââŚWhat voice?â
âYour broadcasting voice. Just like the show you did back then. I know you donât like that kind of thing, but Iâm so sick right now that I think it will cheer me up.â
ââŚâ
âActually, your voice was a great comfort. You wouldnât know. We⌠How much I loved it during that long war.â
Rosen burrowed into his arms and mumbled incoherently. At this moment, it felt like he was the one who needed to be comforted, not her.
âIt will be fine. You did your best. The war is over. Everything will be fine now, and you will live well. So, donât feel guilty about Leoarton or me. Understand?â
Ian Kerner recalled the day he first stood in front of the microphone. He had been dragged into it. He was twenty years old. In retrospect, the child, who thought he had grown to some extent but did not understand anything about the world, read the contents as instructed.
-Introduce yourself to themâŚAnd say youâll protect them.
-âŚ
-They need it. The people.
It was only when he was older that he truly realized why such lies were needed. He acknowledged the need. So he followed orders.
The 30-year-old started the same broadcast again, hugging the witch of Al Capez, who had escaped the city he had destroyed.
In a place where only one person could hear.
âThis is the Leoarton squadron. My name is Ian Kerner.â
ââŚâ
âI will protect you.â
His voice trembled.
It was a broadcast that he did countless times. But now, it was difficult to say those words casually.
ââŚYou will be safe. I will protect you.â
âIt was your job throughout the war to sacrifice the few for the many. In fact, thatâs the nature of war. Youâve never made a wrong decision because you were overwhelmed by emotions. I donât understand why you feel guilty now.â
He told an old lie, which he had repeated countless times, and finally admitted it.
âIs that right?â
âWas that right?â
No, that wasnât right. It was a necessary and inevitable choice, but it was definitely not the right thing to do. Even if there was no other way⌠He couldnât change that fact. He had to do it, but that didnât mean it was the right thing to do.
ââŚI will protect you.â
Rosenâs hand touched his eyes. Tears dripped down. It was only when he felt the unfamiliar sensation that Ian Kerner realized that he was crying.
Just like the day he visited Leoarton, which was in ruins. When he first met Rosen Walker, who was trapped in a black-and-white photograph.
***
In the afternoon, the cabin door opened.
âSir, itâs time. Even my father broke. He couldnât stand it any longer. Iâm sorry, but⌠Rosen should go to prison.â
âTake her, Henry.â
ââŚâ
âBring the blanket. I think her fever has gone down, but⌠Itâs cold in there.â
Ian Kerner rose from his seat.
He took a gold coin out of his pocket that he had hidden out of fear of being seen.
And he began to think as he watched the black sea through his cabin window.