##Ch-37. **Lagos**
—
They said it would take fifteen days to get thereâbut by the time they actually arrived in Lagos, three full weeks had passed.
Unlike the journey from Aldor to Lutran, there had been no need to hurry this time. Whenever there was a nearby village or town, they made sure to stay at least a day before moving on. Only when there was truly nothing around did they camp outdoors.
Yuri couldnât complain about that.
He was curious about Lagos, sureâbut sleeping in a proper bed was better than in a bedroll, eating in a clean restaurant beat gnawing on rations or hunted game, and using a restroom beat keeping watch while doing oneâs business in the wild.
The fact that it was summer served as a convenient excuse.
In the end, the journey had been comfortable and leisurely.
âAnd yet weâve finally arrived.â
From the driverâs seat, Haryeong let out a long sigh.
Yuri was holding the reins in her place. Until now, wherever they went, he had gone with Elenaâand if Elena went, her bodyguard Haryeong naturally followed.
But after returning to Lutran, Yuri would be traveling alone. There would be no one to drive a carriage for him.
Granted, how often would a lone traveler even use a carriage? Still, one never knew. So he had asked Haryeong to teach him how to drive and manage one during the journey.
Heâd also learned how to ride a horse.
It wasnât some grand experience, but Lee Su-hyeok had ridden a horse before.
Jeju Islandâhardly anyone in Korea hadnât visited it on a school trip.
Except Lee Su-hyeok.
Heâd never gone on a school trip. No money. No friends.
At the time, he hadnât felt it was a loss. But as an adult, the fact that heâd never once gone on a proper school trip lingered unpleasantly.
When heâd saved up some part-time wages, heâd gone alone. Took his first flight. Ate black pork in Jeju. Even tried horseback ridingânot ponies, but still.
While learning to ride properly this time, he realized just how gentle and seasoned those tourist horses had been.
And how uncomfortable riding a horse truly was.
âHow did people in the old days deal with hemorrhoidsâŠ?â
His backside hurt terribly. Heâd learned how to ride, but he didnât particularly want to do it more. Heâd rather run.
Now he understood why people learned lightness skills.
âIf weâre already late, why not delay a little longer? I think I left something important behind in the last village.â
Haryeong had been openly reluctant about reaching Lagos.
The reason was obvious. Once they arrived, sheâd have more to do. Even weak monsters were still threats.
âNo.â
Elena answered immediately from inside the carriage, having opened the small window.
âWeâre already here. Whatâs there to delay?â
âMiss, I truly left something behind.â
âWhat?â
âA gift from my mother.â
âYou said before you didnât have family.â
âRelics can be gifts too.â
Haryeongâs expression was so serious that Elena flinched. As someone who was also an orphan, she knew how sensitive topics of family could be.
âIf⊠if you really forgot it, we can go back.â
âYour sincerity weakens my heart, Miss. But I didnât actually leave anything. Iâm not that careless.â
âWere you an orphan too, Haryeong?â
âI said I have no family. I didnât say I was an orphan.â
Wasnât that the same thing?
Yuri glanced at her skeptically while holding the reins.
âDonât tell me, Yuri, you felt a sense of inner kinship because I might be an orphan?â
âI didnât say anything.â
âYouâre speaking with your face.â
âIf youâre not an orphan, why donât you have family?â
âEveryone has at least one circumstance they canât speak about. Donât you have one too, Yuri?â
There was no hidden barb. Just her usual flippant teasing.
Yuri didnât take it seriously. Fortunately, his expression didnât change.
âYou two are pretty close.â
Elena leaned on the window frame and shot them a look.
âClose? Miss, please donât make such terrifying jokes.â
âThat bad?â
âYuri. I havenât forgotten what happened at the Le-Seun auction house. I thought we were closeâfriends, evenâbut you were the one who drew the line first.â
He didnât think heâd drawn it *that* sharply.
But he didnât argue.
Even as they talked, the carriage kept movingâand they reached Lagos.
In the game, Lagos had been nothing more than a wide-open hunting ground.
Reality was different.
It wasnât a metropolis like Lutran, but there were quite a few buildings.
The Rift of Chaos in Lagos had existed for decades. At first, simply holding back the abnormal monster surges had been overwhelming. But over time, the adventurers gathered here adapted to the phenomenon itself.
To fend off many monsters, you needed many people.
And when many people gathered, they needed infrastructure.
Thus, a sizable town had formed.
As they left the horses and carriage at the stable near the entrance, Yuri lifted his gaze beyond the town.
A mountain.
âLagosâ was the mountainâs name.
The Rift lay within it.
Yuri narrowed his eyes.
âThatâs not mana.â
A dark red mist coiled around the mountain, ominous and sinister.
Seeing it in person, he understood why it was called a ârift.â
The long, drifting crimson haze looked like a tear in the world itself, and the mountain stood embedded within it.
Even now, monsters were being born there. And people who came for various reasons were killing them.
This town was for those who visited Lagos.
Most necessities for operating in Lagos were sold here. Lodgings, restaurants, tavernsâand other entertainments as well.
âCouldnât we have just bought gear here?â
âWhich do you think is better? Equipment sold in Lagos, or in a major city like Lutran?â
Elenaâs logic was sound.
Haryeong, who claimed to have been here before, took the lead.
Oddly enough, the touts grabbing passersby didnât approach Haryeong at allâso Yuri and Elena, walking with her, didnât have to shake off any either.
âLetâs hire a guide first.â
âHaryeong, werenât you guiding us?â
âMiss, I told you I came here when I was a child.â
The Rift of Chaos was where the Evil Godâs divine power pooled.
Mountains were treacherous even without that. This era had no well-maintained hiking trails. Dangerous monsters and beasts roamed freely.
And terrain around a rift could become a mazeâeven on flat ground.
A guide familiar with Lagos was necessary.
âItâs true that Iâm a versatile assassin skilled in both martial and literary arts, and that I drive a carriage wellâbut honestly, Iâm not confident as a Lagos guide.â
It was true sheâd trained here as a child.
But much time had passed.
And her training back then had not involved guiding.
âIf youâre unfamiliar with this region, hiring a guide is natural. Of course, we wonât die in the mountains without oneâbut weâll certainly suffer.â
A guideâŠ
Elena didnât look pleased.
She disliked unfamiliar people intruding into their comfortable group. She wasnât especially sociable to begin with.
It was only because of the barrier of childhood friendship that she had opened up quickly. When theyâd reunited in Aldor, sheâd been cold, prickly, and blunt.
Lenient with her own people.
Walls up with everyone else.
âMBTI wasâŠâ
Yuri vaguely recalled personality types from Lee Su-hyeokâs world, but nothing clear came to mind.
Lee Su-hyeok had never believed in such tests anyway. Heâd thought people obsessing over MBTI were pitiful trend-followers.
âSo where do we hire a guide?â
âUsually at the Adventurersâ Guild. Some hire them off the streets or in back alleysâbut weâre not looking for some secret location or anything shady, are we?â
What they needed was a normal guide who knew Lagos well and would keep them from getting lost.
Such guides were easily found at the Guild.
They had to visit the Guild anyway to take on a request. And since the Rift was under Guild management, entry required permission.
âOfficially, yes.â
Haryeong spoke flatly.
âAnyone who wants to sneak in will sneak in. Plenty of people donât want to report their entry. Of course, if the Guild patrol catches you inside, that becomes troublesome.â
âDid you sneak in back then, Haryeong?â
âNot sneak. I entered under a different identity for assassin training.â
âWhat happens if someone reports that?â
âPlease. Iâd rather not have to kill you, Yuri.â
She said it in her usual toneâbut it didnât sound entirely like a joke.
Before heading to the Guild, they chose a decent inn among the many available.
While Elena paid in advance, Haryeong spoke quietly.
âWere you hoping to share a room?â
âI genuinely want to report you.â
âNo sneaking into our room at night, understood? Iâm sharing with Lady Elena. If you insist, at least inform me beforehand.â
âYou know I lived in the same house as Elena for half a year, right?â
âMy, have you already snuck into her room before?â
He hadnât.
In half a year, he had never once entered her roomâeven when she wasnât there.
âWell, youâre next door, so let me know anytime. And if anything dangerous or suspicious happens, be sure to scream.â
âWhy?â
âEven if this isnât a cheap inn and has decent security, places like this always attract petty thieves looking to cut open adventurersâ bags.â
âYou donât have to worry about that.â
Elena answered, having finished paying.
âIâll set up magic before we leave. I already got permission. And I asked that room cleaning only be done while weâre presentâso no one will enter while weâre out.â
âAre you perhaps feeling hot? Your face is red.â
âIâitâs summer.â
The answer came stammering.
Haryeong didnât laugh outright, but she found it amusing.
Sheâd said she would sort out her feelings and confess once they returned to Lutran⊠but maybe something might progress first here in Lagos? Maybe it would be better to make some excuse and deliberately leave them alone.
Letting personal feelings interfere with duty wasnât proper for an assassin.
And yet this cold, ruthless killer found herself entertaining the mischievous thought anyway.
âWe should hire a guide before taking any requests,â Haryeong whispered as they entered the Adventurersâ Guild.
âThereâll be plenty of requests since thereâs a Rift, but if we hire a guide first, they can advise us on which ones to choose. If youâre not familiar, shall I handle it?â
âYeah, please.â
The building was large, and there were several counters. While Haryeong headed to an empty desk to arrange a guide, Yuri got dragged by Elena to another one.
âWeâd like to register as adventurers.â
If you wanted to make a living as an adventurer, Guild registration was mandatory.
Honestly, registering under the name âYuriâ didnât sit well with himâbut he had no choice for now.
âOnce I can alter my appearance, Iâll get another identity and register again.â
Seeing Haryeong use a different identity had made it seem easy enough. After registering himself, he understood why.
No matter how much magic replaced science here, it couldnât match the accessibility and convenience of modern tech.
This world didnât even have computers.
There were ID cards, sureâbut no database you could query with a few clicks.
You just presented your ID, stated your birthplace, name, and age. Done.
After filling out a form, an adventurer certificate was issued on the spot.
For rank, he wrote **Tier 2**. Apparently Tier 4 and above required verification, but for a fledgling Tier 2, there was no such process.
Mages listed their specialty spells. Martial artists listed their weapons.
There was no need to lie.
He wrote: **Fists**.
âA martial artist?â
The clerkâs expression turned odd.
Then he muttered,
âIf youâre a Tier 2 martial artist, itâll be hard to find a party. You know that, right?â
Ah. That was it.
Heâd heard this before from Haryeong and Bakered. PreâTier 4 martial artists had more drawbacks than advantages.
In game terms: bad DPS, bad tanking.
Tier 3 at least had some use. But Tier 2?
Frankly useless.
You couldnât even use them as a meat shield. No armor, no shieldâwhat kind of shield was that?
And adventurers mostly fought monsters. Martial artists specialized in fighting people, not monsters.
So low-tier martial artists had almost no role.
âThen what kind of requests do Tier 2 martial artists usually take?â
âIf youâre specialized in external training, you might get recruited as a porter. Or if desperate, wear armor and carry a shield for frontline duty. Otherwise bounty hunting or bandit suppression⊠survival rates arenât great.â
âDonât do anything dangerous alone.â
Elena whispered sharply beside him.
âMages really get treated differently. Even Tier 2 mages can join most parties.â
âYou just trained in the Magic Tower at Tier 2.â
âNot talking about me. I mean mages in general.â
The adventurer badge resembled a dog tag.
A small metal plate engraved with his name and: **Grade 1, Tier 2 Martial Artist**.
Holding it felt strange.
His old ID belonged to dead orphan Yuri.
This one belonged to the current Yuri.
But remembering that orphan Yuri had once dreamed of becoming an adventurer gave him a complicated feeling.
âAdventurer grade rises with achievements.â
âWhat grade are you?â
âGrade 4.â
âDidnât you only take one request?â
âIf you register at Tier 4, they assign your grade accordingly.â
So everything changed starting from Tier 4.
Even during the trip, Yuri practiced the **Evil-Quelling Heavenly Principle Technique** dailyâbut he still hadnât broken into Tier 4.
He could feel the inner energy in his dantian burning.
But he hadnât crossed the wall yet.
StillâŠ
The flames were growing stronger.
That excited himâand honestly frightened him.
The technique was demonic in nature.
If he lost control, he might be swallowed by the flames and suffer deviation.
What if one day the fire consumed him?
Turned him to ash?
And it wasnât something he could consult anyone about.
He had to endure alone.
âI wish I could meet LorelliaâŠâ
Sheâd said they might meet again someday.
But he couldnât go find her.
He didnât even know where the hidden sanctuary of the Order was.
And she wasnât someone you could just meet because you wanted to.
Most likely, only she could come to him.
The last contact had been that letter in Aldor.
âWhat is she doing now?â
What punishment had she received?
Surely she wasnât deadâ
The moment the thought crossed his mind, her crimson eyes and bright smile came to mind.
âNo way.â
One of the Two Saints of the Supreme Realm.
The Calamity Saint.
Not someone whoâd die so easily.
Even back in the waiting room, sheâd felt overwhelmingly strong.
Now that heâd stepped into martial arts himself, he understood it even more clearly.
âMy nameâs Jake.â
About an hour later, a shabby-looking man approached.
âYou were looking for a guide suitable for Grade 3 requests, right?â
Jake had worked as a guide in Lagos for ten years.
Early forties. Tier 3. Grade 4 adventurer.
Average talent. Average appearance.
Trained in martial arts. Used multiple weapons. Primarily a spear, sometimes a crossbow.
Knew the terrain and monsters well.
The scars on his faceâeither proof of experience or mediocre skill.
Someone who knew many things but excelled at none.
Typical Tier 3 guide.
Someone whoâd hit the wall and stopped climbing.
Probably started with just a spear, then learned everything else just to survive.
âHaryeong, Tier 3 Grade 1. Elena, Tier 4 Grade 4⊠correct?â
Haryeong had registered anew.
Of course, her Tier 3 was fake. The fact she could use voice transmission meant she was at least Tier 4.
âAnd Yuri, Tier 2 Grade 1⊠martial artist.â
Jakeâs look mirrored the clerkâs.
âNot hiring a frontline tank?â
âNo need.â
Elenaâs attitude turned cold immediately.
Jake seemed used to it. A Tier 4 mage at age twenty, Magic Tower-affiliated.
He smiled and bowed.
âUnderstood. Then Haryeong and I will take the front, and Yuri will handle porter duty?â
âNo.â
âYes.â
Two answers at once.
Jake blinked.
Elena glared at Yuri.
âWhy would you be a porter?â
âGotta do something, right?â
âYou donât need to. Just stay beside me and watch. Fight something if you feel like it.â
âThe luggage isnât heavyââ
âIf we need a porter, weâll hire one.â
She cut him off and turned to Jake.
âWeâre not interested in monster materials, so no porter. Only subjugation requestsâno gathering.â
âHmm⊠understood. Then may I gather some materials for myself? In exchange, Iâll take only half pay after guiding.â
âThat seems excessive for off-duty compensation.â
âThen one-third.â
ââŠFine. But if your guidance isnât satisfactory, we terminate the contract.â
âUnderstood.â
After arranging to meet tomorrow morning with suitable requests, Jake left.
âIsnât it rude to ask someone you just met if theyâre a porter?â
Elena shot back immediately.
âIsnât glaring coldly at someone you just met rude too? Heâs practically old enough to be our dad.â
âIâm paying him. And Iâm stronger and higher tier. Iâll be doing most of the fighting. Iâm not being rude. Not talking down to him is already polite enough.â
She lifted her chin proudly.
Yuri silently thoughtâ
âThank goodness she was born in this worldâŠâ
On Earth, sheâd be canceled for power harassment.
Still⊠she wasnât wrong.
âMonsters suitable for Yuri at Grade 2âŠâ
After thinking, Haryeong spoke.
âBeasts are tough. Demi-humans might work. There are goblins.â
She smiled faintly.
âIâm very much looking forward to tomorrow.â
âWhy?â
âIâll get to watch Yuri engage in a life-or-death duel with a goblin.â
ââŠâ
âI firmly believe youâll win.â
âŠShe was clearly teasing him.