Chapter 1. I didn’t know back then (1)
Normally, when you look into a fantasy light ,
The main character would either get a special weapon, a special skill, or in some cases, the main character would even drag a goddess with him (doesn’t seem all that useful, though).
Or in sometimes, the main character already happened to be learning magic, and would get transported into a world that had a very primitive form of magic. In some other cases, the main character would actually reincarnate as a monster like a slime or a goblin, and still manage to wreck shit.
But, my dear readers, this is all fiction! It ain’t real!
It works quite a lot like fiction in kdramas. You don’t meet rich-ass sons of bitches just by bumping shoulders with them on the street. We all know this is all just bull. No way these rich kids would be eating shit oden in a random food cart, or eat out at a hole-in-the-wall restaurant. Nope, that kind of stuff never happens in real life.
I don’t know specifically what kind of steak they eat, and in which 5-star hotel they eat it at, but I know for sure that these people don’t go around food carts eating cheap food. Ah well, I suppose the part of the dramas that’s actually fictional is the main heroine being some sort of a legendary creature that was an orphaned beauty who went through all kinds of hardships in life. Well, whatever. Back to our talk about the bs in fantasy stories. Take a look at this load of bull. In a lot of light s, main characters are able to understand the languages of the world they reincarnate in. Hell, even in our world, there are hundreds of different languages that get spoken in one continent. Why would the people in a different dimension of all things all universally speak Korean? Well, in reality, they don’t. Because of this, I had to spend five years of my life learning how to speak. Normally in this world, kids would speak by the age of three, and learn how to write by the age of five.
I became able to write properly by the age of ten. My parents almost decided that I was hopelessly stupid by that time. Thankfully, I managed to change their minds with my math skills.
But this was a world that recognized kids as a math whiz as long as they could add and subtract pretty well. People in my village almost thought I was a genius at math because I was able to multiply and divide. And as for the knowledge I had other than math… all useless. There were no computers, so my knowledge in computers were all gone to shit. I spent half of my life in a place called school, but in the end, the only thing that became useful was knowing how to add and subtract… Truly, the Korean education system was total trash. And once again, I was reminded that fiction, in the end, was fiction.
Yeah, modern knowledge. It’s pretty useful. But so what? Knowing what a chair looks like, and knowing how to make a chair are two totally different things. The specialized tools to make a chair are nigh impossible to recreate in this world. If making just a chair is this hard, how much effort do you think goes into making a gun? Even if you know what guns look like, how would you create the parts of the guns? If you don’t have the skills, all you have are dreams. Even if you know about something that already exists, it just ends up becoming a part of your imagination!
In the end, I decided to inherit my parent’s farm. The knowledge I accumulated in school was useless, but the skills I accumulated in the military weren’t! As expected of Korea’s brutal military training! Korea’s most advanced form of weaponry, the shovel, applied in just about any situation!
My skills in using the shovel almost made my father say “you truly were a child born to shovel!” Really, all my talents lay in farming!
…I used to have those moments in life.
When I was thirteen, my parents passed away.
The reason? An evil wizard’s experiment! …that wasn’t it.
The whims of a corrupt noble! …that wasn’t it either.
The demons that wrecked havoc during the demon season! …Nope.
Their true cause of death was electrocution. An evil wizard blocked a magic spell from the hero, and the remnants of it happened to bounce off to my parents.
Just like the innocent cars that randomly hit each other and explode in action movies during a car chase, my parents died while trying to pay taxes and sell their crops in the city.
To think I’d be this unlucky… I wondered for a bit how I should lead my life as the new family head, but in the end, I decided to farm. After all, the country still paid me some reparations for the damages, right? I still have land and crops to back me up!
…There was a time when I thought that, too.
“Hohoho.”
I could only laugh as I watched my crops burn. It’s been a year since my parents died. It’s been only a year, and our feudal lord just decided to give me a big fuck you… rather, he gave the country a big fuck you.
A gold mine was found on the borders between our nation and some other nation, and that place happened to be close to our fief.
Our lord, after getting several suggestions from his subordinates, decided to conquer the mines. He defeated the troops stationed there by a fief lord from a different country.
Right. So far, this seems to be all good. But the fief lord became overexcited by taking over the gold mines, and charged into the country across the border!
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The fact of the matter was, that country across the border happened to be the empire, the strongest nation in the continent. Our fief lord, who had believed that his army had been blessed by the gods, got got pathetically killed by the enemy. At the same time, the empire took this as a declaration of war, and attacked the nation the very next day. They managed to topple the capital in two months.
Ah, by the way, the sea of flames in front of me was caused by the empire, who decided to make an example out of those who acted out against the empire. They set fire to the lands of our fief, and my land happened to be in it. That’s right. Farming just went to shit! Fall was still quite far away, but I couldn’t farm using just ashes!
“Kuh!”
That’s why, that’s why the reason why I became a gangster was because of the world! I wanted peace, but the world didn’t let me have it!
Ah, and by the way, I’m not one of those loan sharks or anything. I just mug people.
I have no idea if this is really a good thing or not, but the nation I lived in ended up getting split into seven pieces. Originally, the empire took only a fourth of the nation, but the king ended up getting into a coma from shock, and the princes ended up fighting for the throne. A count even managed to join the battle for power at some point. In any case, at a time like this, a lot of people decided to either turn into bandits or thieves. I had pretty decent sword skills, so I decided to earn cash from that. I was thinking of going to the empire once I had enough cash.
I teamed up with one or two people, and sometimes collaborated with other groups I shared info with to raid some villages. Sometimes I got together with some old bandits and a noble to beat up some nobles as well.
Once I earned enough money like this, and began searching for a smuggler to get me into the empire, someone came to meet me.
“How is it?”
I was being scouted. Hoho, I remember working myself to the bone, close to the point where I actually died in the past. Even then, I wasn’t scouted because I had no talent at what I did. I do some bad things, and whazam, someone comes to get me in a red carpet. From the biggest evil organization in the empire at that.
“The pay is pretty good.”
“Incentives are nice as well.”
“Seems pretty dangerous.”
“Well, it’s similar to what you’re doing now.”
“Do I have to kill myself if they tell me to do so?”
“Yes. You just need to be careful, though.”
I need to really put my life on the line. But unlike my previous life in hellish Korea, the pay was actually good. Enough to make me want to risk my life.
“I’ll do it.”
Like this, I, a to-be fifteen year old, joined an evil organization.
Chapter 1. I didn’t know back then. (2)
With this, my age became forty. I spent twenty five years of my life dedicated to the organization.
I took a pretty safe job of an instructor. I currently have a job of a senior instructor, training young trainees in the way of evil. Ah, this is the life. No risk of dying, good pay, really good incentives to boot.
Evil organizations are the best, everybody!
“I’ll go with the format from before. I’ll take one through fifty, and nine hundred fifty to a thousand.”
The other instructors all shut their mouths when I said this.
“You’re taking the top ones as well?”
“That and the lowest ones… can’t you just take the children in the middle ranks?”
The other instructors voiced their dissent. But I had made my decision already.
“One through fifty, and nine hundred fifty to a thousand.”
There are a few people like me who gets scouted to the organization, but most of the members of the organization who get in begin as either orphans or slaves. We train these kids for about two years.
We feed them and beat them until they become fit enough to become proper members of the organization. That is our job as instructors.
Among all these thousand kids, the ones I like best are the first fifty, and the last fifty!
The kids at the very front are the cream of the crop. The worst among them are still good enough to pass as a middle-class member of the organization. Sometimes, you’ll even find geniuses among them. The incentive for training them is low, though. That’s why I fill that gap with the last fifty of the group to cancel out the disadvantages of training the geniuses. A lot of the kids from the last fifty are useless, but sometimes you end up getting one of them to the top, and the incentive you get from that is immense. As a result, my rank as an instructor goes up, and the number of zeros in the incentive I get increases by one!
That’s why I always pick the first fifty and the last fifty. The ones who are tenacious among all these kids always survive anyway. And my method of education allows kids to always survive as long as they can endure. Other instructors manage to kill tens of kids every time they pick trainees, but I managed to become a model instructor with zero casualties under my belt. There’s a reason why I’m a senior instructor!
“They say there are quite a lot of talented kids in this group, so… I expect about five would survive?”
“The quality of this group’s pretty damn high, so I’m thinking about ten.”
“The last group was said to be the best in the history of the organization, and only seven survived.”
“Well, Naruan’s training is quite infamous for being brutal, after all.”
“But the kids in this group probably have their pride, don’t you think? If everyone other than five or seven gets knocked out again, they’d be completely useless. I’m betting on their tenaciousness. Thirty thousand gold on having ten survive.”
“Hoho, going strong, aren’t you? Forty thousand on five.”
“Twenty thousand on seven.”
“Thirty thousand on five as well.”
“I’ll try… thirty thousand on complete annihilation.”
But it seemed that the other instructors didn’t really have the mindset of a model instructor like me. Just look, to think they’d be betting on how many of the kids I pick would survive…
“How many do you think would survive, senior instructor?”
One of the instructors asked the question towards me. How many would survive?
“As long as they’re tenacious, they’ll survive.”
“…Tenacious, is it.”
I don’t push people until they die. The ones that don’t last are the strange ones. Right. I’m not the strange one here, the ones who don’t survive are strange!
“Yes. As long as one is tenacious, one will get strong.”
That’s right. After all, I, a person without mana, survived this long in a world of magic where elves and orcs thrive. Seriously, if you don’t manage to survive even when you have mana, you’re just strange.
I’ve lived thirty years in my past life, and lived forty in this life. I’ve managed to survive seventy years just by working my ass off.
#1 Their Story: A Certain Trainee
This is crazy. Absolutely crazy. Maddening, almost.
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“Hohoho, they did mention that you were one of the best groups in history. I suppose they were right, seeing how well you kids are doing.”
Magic was raining down from the skies. Only five days after the start of the higher class training, 30 people survived.
On the midnight of the first day, the sudden magic bombing on our sleeping quarters knocked out half of the group. The length of time we’ve survived for during this five days was still quite long, I’ve heard, but even then, we were reaching the limit.
“Hmm, I have high expectations for this batch.”
I could see instructor Naruan, who was talking to the communication wizard to direct the bombings every once in a while with an emotionless face.
I had heard that he was the one who shaped most of the powerhouses in the current organization by himself. I had heard that I might get the chance to become one of those people.
But whenever I heard those words, the other instructors all smirked and said this: [Even so, it’s usually about one in twenty who make it to the top. Sometimes, it’s one out of fifty.] Most of them come back next year to be trained again.
When I heard those words, I thought that I’d become one of those succeeding people.
I had cast away my war-torn village to step into the path of darkness.
My resolve was different from the kids who had come here because they had no choice.
In fact, this resolve of mine allowed me to rank twenty-seven out of a thousand other children.
But still… Isn’t this really too much?
I went to sleep, excited about what I was to learn the very next day. And the moment I closed my eyes, a siren went off and our living quarters were destroyed within a minute. I come out confused and lost, and I’m told that if I don’t make it to a specific location within a set time, I’m out.
The thing I’ve heard when I arrived at that location was perhaps the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever heard.
“Ooh. I’ve heard forty nine had survived the first attack, but to think forty nine would be here as well… As an instructor, I am exceedingly happy! I am so, so, soooo happy, in fact, it feels like I might as well be crying tears of joy right now!”
His delighted voice didn’t fit his cold expression at all. His chilly eyes and trembling lips almost suggested that he was restraining his laughter.
“Ahh, it is said that the teachings of a teacher is akin to the heavens itself, but to think you’d make me cry… The gods above must be crying in joy with me as well.”
Naruan looked up as if he was waiting for something, then looked down at us again.
“Right. It seems that the tears of the heavens would be falling upon us soon, so prepare your umbrellas.”
The first thing I had in my mind was: was he crazy?
There were not a single clouds in the sky. There didn’t seem to be any sign of rain. Plus, the “umbrella” that was provided for us was more like a wooden branch. It was incapable of blocking a single drop of water.
“…Hold on, this is?”
The one who rid me of my confusion was a high-pitched voice. When I turned around, I could see a girl ranked ten ranks higher than me, trainee number seventeen.
“Oho. So there’s already someone who can recognize the umbrella. Things’ll be simple, then.”
Snap.
The moment Naruan snapped his fingers, someone appeared next to him.
“Please make it rain here.”
At the same time, silver rain began to fall upon us.