Chapter 7
[F-Rank Hunter License]
[Name: Jeong Juhyeok]
âItâs finally here.â
At lastâthe F-rank hunter license had arrived.
It was a small plastic card, similar in feel to an ID card, but holding it in his hands felt strangely emotional.
âGuess Iâll head out right away.â
Just as planned, the moment it arrived, he looked up the nearest gate online and headed out.
[âŠDonât get hurt, okay? Promise me.]
He left home under his motherâs worried gaze.
The gate wasnât far.
There were about fifty F-rank gates scattered throughout the capital region.
After about a thirty-minute bus ride, the area was reclassified as a military zone.
Public transportation wasnât allowed within two kilometers of a gate, so he got off at a suitable stop and began to walk.
After ten minutes, he arrived at the entrance.
Only a few people in military uniforms stood guard ahead.
âGood thing I chose this one.â
He had deliberately picked a low-reward, high-difficulty gateâthe least popular one in the region.
If he wanted to collect mana stones, a higher-reward gate would have been better.
But crowded places meant attention, and that was the last thing he wanted.
He chose the safest methodâstaying invisible.
âPlease wait a moment.â
As he approached the entrance, a soldier stepped forward.
It was quiet and nearly emptyâno tension in the air.
âTo pass through, Iâll need to see either your hunter license or a gate access permit.â
âHere it is.â
He took out the brand-new hunter license heâd just received that morning.
The soldier glanced at the card, then at Juhyeok, before speaking again with mild curiosity.
âJudging by the issue date, you mustâve graduated from the academy this year?â
âYes, thatâs right.â
The soldier nodded slightly, then looked around and lowered his voice.
âYouâre not with a party?â
âNot yet.â
âYouâre aware that entering a gate alone is prohibited, right?â
âYes. I was planning to find a party at the entrance.â
The soldierâs tone softened a little, maybe because Juhyeok sounded well-prepared despite being a rookie. He handed the card back with a faint smile.
âNot many people around today. You might have trouble finding one.â
âIs it really that empty?â
âWell, even if there are people, new hunters usually have a hard time joining a group.â
Inside a gate, a single wrong move could mean death.
Who would willingly take an inexperienced rookie into their team?
And Juhyeok wasnât just inexperiencedâhe was an unproven F-rank hunter.
To any party, he was a walking liability.
âWell⊠I guess thatâs why you came all the way out to an unpopular gate.â
âThatâs right.â
It wasnât just to avoid peopleâs eyes.
At popular gates, there were already plenty of experienced hunters looking for parties.
Who would pick him over them?
But here, at a dead zone like thisâ
âParties must have four members minimum, so maybe theyâll let me tag along as the extra.â
Calling himself an âextraâ hurt his pride, but it was the truth.
A gate rookie with no experience and F-rank skillsâno one would see him as more than that.
âYouâre in luck,â the soldier added. âA group of three just went in ahead of you.â
That was the best news heâd heard all day.
Feeling sympathetic, the soldier pointed in the direction theyâd gone.
âThey looked like veterans. Try talking to themâyou might get lucky.â
âThank you.â
âGood luck.â
Following the soldierâs directions, he headed toward the area where the group was waiting.
Sure enough, three people who looked like hunters were gathered at a table, chatting as they waited.
âLetâs go.â
There werenât many people around, and it was still early.
At an unpopular gate like this, finding another group would be difficult.
If they were veterans, maybe theyâd let an extra tag along.
With that small hope, he approached.
As he got closer, the hunter sitting in the middleâa woman with short brown hair and a bow on her backâmet his eyes.
She stood up at once.
âHeâs here.â
âReally?â
At her words, the other two turned toward him.
Their sudden attention made him stop in his tracks.
Something felt wrong.
His instinctsânever once mistakenâsent a chill through him.
âHello. Youâre Hunter Jeong Juhyeok, right?â
âŠOf course.
â…Who are you?â
To be called by name by a complete strangerâit wasnât confusion he felt first, but suspicion.
Maybe that was what being bonded with an artifact did to you: made you wary of everyone.
Sensing his guard, the woman gave an awkward smile and took out a business card.
âIâm Ahn Yena, scout for the Mir Guild.â
âI see.â
He accepted the card. It bore the Mir Guildâs emblem and her title clearly.
Mir wasnât one of the massive guilds, but it was solidly mid-tierâa well-known organization.
There was no reason for someone from Mir to be recruiting at a forgotten F-rank gate.
The moment he realized that, his face almost twisted, but he held steady, forcing calm.
âIâm surprised the Mir Guild knows my name.â
âCome on, Hunter Jeong is a hot topic these days.â
Her smile was bright, practiced, almost dazzling.
She looked like the type who made friends easily in school and probably received a dozen confessions a year.
âAn under-200-ranked student taking on the vice top in the final tournament and winning in such an overwhelming way! I was there, you knowâI couldnât believe my eyes!â
âIs that so.â
âLucky me, running into you today. What a coincidence.â
âCoincidence,â huh.
She said it so smoothlyâwithout even blinking.
A lie so transparent it was almost impressive.
Still, she chatted away as if nothing were odd.
âI was going to reach out through your instructor, but I heard you werenât planning to join a guild yet. Is that true?â
âYes, it is.â
âWhy? Waiting for an offer from a major guild?â
âNo. Even if one came, I wouldnât join.â
ââŠHmm.â
Her brows furrowed slightly at his immediate, unwavering response.
No hesitation. No interest at all.
That was rare.
Most graduates chased guild contracts as soon as they got their licensesâit was the logical next step.
But Juhyeok wasnât like most.
He had cut guilds out of his life entirely.
After a brief silence, Yena spoke again.
ââŠAre you here to clear the Stump Gate too?â
âYes. As you probably know, this is the only one an inexperienced F-rank like me can realistically enter.â
âHaha~ youâve got that right.â
The way she emphasized âas you probably knowâ told him everythingâsheâd been tracking him.
He didnât know how, but sheâd found out which gate he was heading to among dozens.
He didnât like it one bit.
To make that clear, he let just a trace of irritation show.
âTrue, itâs not easy for a rookie like you to find a party unless you go to a place like this. Smart move, really.â
Yena didnât flinch.
Whether it was her nature or her training as a scout, she wore a perfect poker face.
âBy the way,â she added casually, âhave you found a party yet?â
He could tell she already knew the answer, but she asked anyway.
âNo. I just got here.â
âReally?â
Her lips curved upward again.
There it wasâthat hint of real satisfaction behind the polite smile.
She turned to the two hunters beside her.
âPerfect timing. Weâre short one memberâwhy donât you join us?â
âThree peopleâŠâ
Juhyeok glanced at her teammates.
âThat makes two up front, a bow user, and a support mageâtextbook four-person formation.â
And with Mir Guildâs name behind them, they were probably experienced.
âI didnât want to get involved with guild people, butâŠâ
There wasnât time to look for another party, and the odds of finding one here were slim.
For an F-rank rookie, this was a golden opportunity.
Still, it bothered him.
âIf I go with them, theyâll only stick to me harder afterward.â
They had tracked him down the day his license arrived and even waited for him at the gate.
If he accepted, theyâd definitely keep hovering in the future.
For someone who wanted to stay away from guilds, that was troublesome.
As he weighed the decision, Yena struck againâright at the perfect moment.
âWeâll let you have all the loot from the gate.â
All the loot.
Mana stones, weapons, monster materialsâeverything.
Even at an F-rank gate, that could be a lot of money for a rookie.
And for Juhyeok, who needed mana stones, it was an offer he could hardly ignore.
He met her smiling eyes and spoke in a low voice.
ââŠThatâs a very generous offer. Generous enough to make me suspicious.â
âDonât overthink it. Letâs just call it goodwill toward a promising young hunter.â
Goodwill, she said.
But guilds were organizations built on money and results.
They didnât act without reason.
âThis way, maybe youâll think better of our guild in the future, right?â
An investment, then.
ââŠThis much should be fine.â
They werenât signing a contractâjust teaming up for one run.
A bit of âinvestmentâ from their side wouldnât hurt him.
âThe markings on my arm are completely covered anyway. Thereâs no way theyâll notice.â
He mentally went through every risk one by one.
Everything seemed under control.
Finally, he reached his decision and extended his hand.
âIâll gladly accept your goodwill.â