Chapter 9
âAhâŠâ
The sight that unfolded before Yenaâs eyes was horrifyingâ
her teammates, bloodied and barely conscious.
They had somehow escaped fatal injuries,
but it was clear they couldnât keep fighting.
As the dust slowly settled, the orc turned its thick neck,
searching for its next prey.
Thankfully, it hadnât noticed them hiding in the tall grass.
GrrrkâŠ
It let out a low rumble as it glanced at the two mangled bodies.
Deciding they werenât worth finishing off, it began scanning the area.
Theyâre not dead yet⊠but theyâre bleeding out fast.
Right now, what they needed most was quick, decisive leadership.
Juhyeok turned to Yena beside him.
ââŠ.â
Even though every second mattered,
Yena was frozen in shock, her mind blank.
Seeing her teammates crushed so easily had broken her composure.
She was the leaderâyet she just stared.
He wanted to slap her awake, but any noise could expose them.
So instead, he reached over and pinched the inside of her arm hard.
âMmph!â
âSnap out of it. Think.â
Heâd pulled her out of danger with split-second timingâ
but if she kept spacing out, it would all be for nothing.
He didnât have the experience she did.
Right now, they needed her instinct as a seasoned leader.
He forced her to look at the grim scene, then laid out two options.
âBefore the dust clearsâeither we grab one each and run,
or we lure it away and fight together.â
Given their current condition,
those were the only two viable choices.
For Juhyeok, whoâd never been in a real-life emergency like this,
it was hard to know which gave them the better odds of survival.
âYouâve got five seconds. Pick the smarter one.â
There was no time to hesitate.
They had to move before the dust cleared
and the orc spotted the wounded.
ââŠ.â
The pain snapped Yena out of her daze.
Her brown eyes darted between her teammates and the orcâs silhouette.
After a few tense seconds of calculation, she made her decision.
âWe run.â
A strategic retreat.
âIf that orcâs holding a weapon, itâs at least D-rank.
Our support and frontliner are downâthereâs no way we can handle that.â
âUnderstood.â
Juhyeok nodded at her answerâ
but one word in her explanation caught his attention.
D-rank?
A D-rank monster meant a far better mana stone than any F-rank.
And since this one was armed, it had to be a mutantâ
stronger, faster, and packed with higher-purity mana.
Itâs not every day you find something like that.
He still didnât know how many mana stones heâd need
to fill his mana gauge completely.
That D-rank mutantâs stone was an opportunity too tempting to ignore.
Can I win?
The fact that it wielded a weapon meant it had intelligence.
Could he handle a creature that thought while it fought?
Honestly⊠I donât think Iâd lose too badly.
If it was intelligent, that was actually good.
It meant the combat skills heâd honed in human duels
would work here, too.
But can I show my real ability in front of her?
So far, heâd only been fighting at about half his strength.
If he went all out now, rumors would spread fast.
He wanted to grow quietlyâwithout drawing attention.
Caught between risk and opportunity,
he finally asked her quietly,
âIf itâs a mutant, it might be faster than a normal orc.
You accounted for that possibility?â
âEven if I did,â she said, âthat just makes it worse.
Two of us canât take that thing head-on.â
She was right.
The sheer power it had shownâand now maybe speed, tooâ
made fighting it suicidal.
But another problem arose.
âRememberâour supportâs scan couldnât detect it even within 200 meters.
That means it jumped at least that far in one leap.â
Something that moved that silently and that quickly
was no ordinary monster.
âCan you carry two people and cross 200 meters in under ten seconds?â
ââŠ.â
She couldnât answer.
If they didnât have injured teammates,
escaping wouldâve been possible.
But now, with two bleeding hunters to carryâ
and the orc ready to attack any sign of movementâ
it was nearly impossible.
âThatâsâŠâ
Her planâs weakness was obvious now,
and her lips trembled with frustration.
Juhyeok seized the moment.
âIâll lure it away from the gate. You take them and run.â
âWhat?â
âIâll hold it off for an hour. Come back for me then.â
He rose to his feet before she could argue.
In situations like this,
someone always volunteered to stay behindâ
and the others would fall silent, knowing there was no choice.
He expected the same reaction from her.
But insteadâ
âNo!â
Yena grabbed his arm tightly.
âYou might be talented for a rookie,
but you seriously think you can last an hour against that thing?â
Her hand was trembling.
No matter how composed she tried to sound,
her fear was leaking through.
âThere has to be another way. Justâgive me a second to think.â
ââŠ.â
He had thought she was kind,
but he hadnât expected her to reject a self-sacrifice like this.
Most people wouldâve accepted it silently.
But sheâshe was different.
Someone who couldnât bear to let others die for her.
Thatâs⊠kind of moving.
If not for the artifact inside him,
he mightâve accepted her guild offer on the spot.
Shaking off the thought, he gently pried her fingers off his sleeve.
âThereâs no time left to think.â
âButââ
Before she could finish,
he filled his lungs with airâ
âand roared.
âRRRRAAAAAAHHHHH!!â
Grrrk?!
The orcâs head whipped toward the sound,
eyes locking on their patch of grass.
Perfect.
Heâd drawn its attention.
He gave Yena a calm look and said,
âWell? What are you waiting for?â
ââŠ.â
She stared at him blankly,
then looked past himâ
at the orc slowly stomping toward them.
ââŠDamn it.â
There was no time left for debate.
Grinding her teeth, she smacked his shoulder hard.
âIâll be back in thirty minutes. Youâd better still be alive.â
âDonât trip while running.â
With that, Yena dashed off through the foliage,
moving with the speed of a true archer.
The orcâs gaze snapped toward her motionâ
âbut Juhyeok muttered,
âNot that way.â
The moment its body turned,
he saw an opening.
If I strike now⊠maybe I can finish it instantly.
But the orc reacted on instinct,
blocking the surprise attack aimed for its neck.
âTch.â
If that had worked,
he couldâve brushed it off as a lucky hit later.
But of courseâ
it wasnât that easy against a creature with intelligence.
Grrrk! GRRRRRAAAHH!
Enraged, the orc swung its massive sword downward.
Juhyeok rolled away in the opposite direction from the wounded,
avoiding the crushing blow by inches.
Thankfully, its swings were powerful but unrefinedâ
not true swordsmanship.
Figures⊠sheâs already gone.
He could no longer sense Yena or the injured nearby.
Good. That meant no one was watching.
He no longer had to hold back.
ââŠAlright.â
His body tingled with anticipation.
Since the tournament, he hadnât truly unleashed himself.
Heâd always restrained his speed and power under othersâ eyes.
Nowâhe didnât have to.
A small, fierce smile crept up his lips.
âLetâs do this.â
GRRRRAAAHH!
The orc charged.
And the life-or-death battle began.
Yena stumbled through the forest,
hauling both unconscious teammates over her shoulders.
Every step felt like dragging lead.
[What are you waiting for? Hurry up and go.]
Heâd saved them.
A rookieâbarely six months out of the academyâ
had calmly analyzed the situation,
chosen the only survivable option,
and offered up his own life without hesitation.
âHa⊠haâŠâ
If only sheâd spread the team out faster when the scan failed,
maybe no one wouldâve been hurt.
If only sheâd thought of a smarter plan sooner,
maybe Juhyeok wouldnât have had to stay behind.
Each breath carried the weight of regret.
Everyoneâs going to hate me for this.
A D-rank mutant had appeared,
and the team leader fled while a rookie stayed to fight.
It was a humiliation sheâd never live down.
Her chest burned with guilt and self-loathing.
The only thing keeping her going
was the image of Juhyeokâs final stanceâ
the brief, razor-fast movement heâd shown
when ambushing the orc.
Sheâd seen enough to know.
He was holding back all along.
That sharp, fluid attackâ
so much faster than when he fought goblins.
Maybe he hadnât needed to go all out before,
or maybe heâd just been hiding his true ability.
Please⊠just hold out a little longer.
She didnât dare hope heâd win.
She just wanted him to liveâ
so she could face him again without shame.
A prayer escaped her lips.
For someone whoâd never believed in any god,
she prayed to every one she could think of
as she dragged her half-dead teammates forward.
Finally, after what felt like hours,
the shimmering shape of the exit gate came into view.
âYouâre⊠a little lateââ
The gatekeeperâs bored greeting cut off mid-sentence
when he saw her bloodstained form.
Yena, still clutching her two teammates,
met his eyes with a desperate, trembling voice.
âPlease help us⊠thereâs still someone insideâŠ!â