He was Orgaf. Thief of the Golden Scales. Elite Ranked adventurer. A [Nightcrawler Shadower]. He was someone of great import, and he had been… embarrassed.
Humiliated.
He had a reputation to uphold, but it had been ruined.
It had been a gathering of very many powerful people. Those who were held to high esteem. However, what they thought of him didn’t matter— he couldn’t give a rat’s ass whether his standing fell in front of a bunch of posh nobles.
However, there were some present whom he’d respected. And to be left red-faced and ashamed in front of them? In front of the one woman in the world he even held in high regard? He couldn’t forgive it.
undefinedHe left the gathering because of his embarrassment. He didn’t even hear of the Wyvern attack on Catark until it was too late. His chance of redeeming himself was ruined. It irked him.
And it was all because of that damned girl. He blamed the girl for what happened. He wouldn’t forget this humiliation he felt. No matter what.
I made a promise to my companions. I’d help them grow stronger. It was just like before the Plaguelands all over again. After my brief contribution in the company war where I killed Stepehen and saved Edithe’s life. My companions came to me, and I helped them overcome their weaknesses and become something more.
It was the same scenario. Except, this time, I… didn’t know where to go.
I tapped a finger on my chin as I paced around the gilded room. I’d been given a place to stay in the grand palace of Alyras since I was Rana’s friend, so I didn’t have to stay at the dingy campsite just outside of the city. Saffron Merryster sat to the side, watching me as I tore my hair over what to do.
“Maybe I could bring them to the Plaguelands again? But the Lich is dead. The undead are leaving the land in droves, and the blight is disappearing. It’s not as dangerous as it was anymore. What about the Bloodied Gulf? No— the Matriarch Centinel would definitely kill me if I returned…”
I mulled over my options, and Saffron lowered her cup of tea. Her butler, Matthew, took the cup as she stood up and faced me.
“Salvos… first of all, I’m going to ignore the fact that you somehow angered the Matriarch Centinel of the Bloodied Gulf to the point that it holds a grudge against you—”
“I didn’t really anger her. I just killed one of her children, and she’s mad now or something. I don’t know.”
“Right.”
Saffron didn’t waver. She stared at me, arms-folded.
“Secondly, what exactly are you stressing about now?”
“Oh, it’s nothing.”
I waved a hand off casually. Saffron Merryster quirked a brow, and Matthew answered from behind me.
“It seems to me that Ms Salvos—”
“Salvos.”
I corrected him. The butler nodded.
“Salvos appears to be concerned about her other companions, Daniel Song and Edithe Dawnrise. If I had to guess, they made a request to her and she’s struggling to fulfill them despite promising she would do it.”
Saffron turned to me inquisitively, as if checking if Matthew was right. I snapped a finger and pointed at him.
“Yep! How did you know? Can you read minds, Matthew?”
I gasped, leaning closer. He shook his head.
“Unfortunately, I cannot. But I have been listening to you murmur to yourself for the last hour while Lady Saffron has been preoccupying herself with her notes.”
“Notes?”
I cocked my head, and Saffron shrugged.
“Helena Warshade called a meeting. A bunch of kings and queens from all around the Helbir Plains will be gathering next week. We’ll need to figure out how we’ll deal with that second Primeval Demon and the Inoria Empire.”
“Why can’t you just declare war on them?”
I asked the obvious question. Both Matthew and Saffron exchanged a glance. The pink-haired noble sighed.
“It’s far more complex than that.”
“But you guys have proof that they’re taken over by Demons, right? Emperor Rowyn said so.”
“That is correct. But we’d be forced to fight against an army of our own kind to get to them, Salvos. And revealing the fact that we know about these Demons ruins the element of surprise we have on our side. We can’t act brashly. We need to collect ourselves then retaliate in one swift blow.”
She spoke simply, wagging a finger as she explained the situation to me. I listened to her carefully. My brows furrowed as a thought crossed my mind.
“What about Belzu?”
“That Primeval Demon… I don’t know. But last we heard, its army was shattered. It would take a while to build its army back to size.”
“Then isn’t the best time to deal with him right now?”
I stared at Saffron with a raised eyebrow. She shrugged.
“Perhaps. We already have [Scrying Mages] trying to track down its location, but it is not easy. Its magic is masking its movement. We just know that it is somewhere in the Motharis Mountain Range with an army less than a tenth of the size it had been before Mori Gladius and the Remembered Order Company faced it.”
“Huh.”
It made sense that the adventurer army led by Mori Gladius dealt quite the blow to Belzu. They were all elite fighters— and I didn’t mean it in the sense that they Elite Ranked. Adventurers just tended to be higher-leveled than common soldiers.
However, to challenge Belzu’s army to the extent that it did? It didn’t make sense to me. Not unless Belzu’s army had already been weakened while in Inoria. And that was very much a possibility.
There were a lot of things to consider. But none of it was really my problem. There was a possibility I considered.
“Hm, maybe I could find Belzu and kill him right now with Daniel and Edithe…”
“Uh, did I just hear you right, Salvos?”
Saffron blinked at me a few times. I shook my head and spun around.
“Nope, it’s nothing. Just a thought.”
She didn’t look like she believed me. Instead, she just gave me a resigned expression and gestured vaguely around her.
“Look, before you do anything reckless, just consider asking your princess friend for some help. Alyras is sure to have a plethora of information that can aid you in not getting yourself killed, Salovs.”
“You’re right!”
My eyes widened. I leapt out of the room and burst down the corridors, waving at Saffron.
“Good luck with your meeting thingy! I’ll be hanging out with princess Rana!”
I beamed, excitedly searching for the princess.
—--
When I found Rana Alyras, I was reprimanded. I’d caused a bit of a ruckus by running around the palace. The princess wasn’t the one who scolded me, of course. Neither was it her father, the king. It was actually her maid.
Sevika folded her arms and spoke in a stern voice.
“I understand that you are a guest here, and we have offered you our most luxurious lodging. But I must ask that you reciprocate our kindness with your own by, at the very least, maintaining the peace of the palace.”
“Princess Rana… your maid is being mean to me.”
“There, there.”
I sulked, hiding behind Rana Alyras as she comforted me. The maid glared at Rana, and the princess jerked back. She straightened, creaking her head slowly to turn around. Sevika sighed.
“And princess Rana, please don’t indulge Salvos’ mischief.”
“I wasn’t being mischievous! I was just excited!”
I protested. Sevika wasn’t like Saffron who was tired of dealing with me. She didn’t sigh or give me an exasperated look. All she did was speak in a stricter voice.
“Then I ask you to curb your excitement the next time this happens.”
I pouted, and she spun around. The maid left us alone. I looked at Rana as the princess smiled.
“So, what did you need of me, Salvos?”
“I’m looking for, um, dangerous places.”
“Dangerous… places?”
“Yep! Full of wild monsters that want to hurt me! Not monsters that are nice. I don’t want to fight nice monsters. Just wild monsters.”
I nodded eagerly as Rana sat there, listening to my explanation. She scratched her cheek uncertainly.
“That sounds like you’re describing a Dungeon.”
“Woah.”
I was taken aback. That was right. I’d been to far too many dangerous regions lately that I forgot Dungeons existed. I narrowed my eyes.
“Wait, but are there any Diamond Ranked Dungeons nearby?”
“There aren’t very many Diamond Ranked Dungeons, Salvos. Those are incredibly dangerous. If they’re left unchecked, they can end up bringing destruction to entire cities. Small countries, too. So they’re usually exterminated once they’re made known.”
“Huh.”
Rana shrugged as I hesitated.
“Aw, that sucks.”
She watched me twiddle my fingers together, looking up at her hopefully.
“But surely you’d know of some super secret Dungeon that Alyras is hiding, right?”
“Unfortunately, keeping such a secret would be harmful to all the countries of the Helbir Plains. And as the head of the Helbir League at this moment, my father would never do such a thing.”
My shoulders went slack. I deflated. Rana pursed her lower lips as I dragged myself away from her room.
“Well, I’m sorry for causing trouble over nothing…”
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