TGIC Ch 114
by berryChapter 114
I stared at the pitch-black pupils reflected in the glass, lost in thought.
Since I was on my way to China, I had wanted, just this once, to leave with a lighter heart, free of Vasily. But after our call ended, I realized that was impossible.
It was only natural I felt shaken. Vasily had always been cold and high above, never once showing weakness in front of me.
Yet he had begged me not to goâvoice low, unsteady, trembling. That sound lingered in my ears like a hallucination.
ââŠIf only heâd shouted at me instead, told me not to go.â
If he had, I wouldnât feel this tangled mess of emotions, wouldnât find my steps so heavy just before I left.
Heaving a deep sigh, I faced the truth: I couldnât leave Vasily alone and unsettled. Unbuckling my belt, I stood.
âEsper, Iâm sorry. I canât do this after all.â
âYouâre not going to China?â
ââŠNo. Iâm very sorry, especially since you prepared this opportunity for me.â
âNo, itâs fine. It was just my way of repaying you, since thanks to you I gained useful information.â
Huai Yan let me go without complaint. I had feared he might insist it was too late, that we were airborne already and I couldnât disembarkâbut fortunately, he didnât.
Apologizing over and over, I stepped off the plane just before departure.
Back in the terminal, I watched Huai Yanâs private jet take off. I followed it with my eyes until it vanished into the sky.
Though I felt a twinge of regret, my heart was oddly at ease. If Iâd truly left, I would have been restless and useless the entire time I was in China.
Yes. Iâd go back to Vasily, apologize, and endure another six months. That cursed suppression chipâsurely if I bore with the discomfort, half a year would pass quickly enough.
I left the airport and boarded the subway back toward Seoul.
Switching on my phone to check the time, I found nothing but a black screen. Ah, rightâIâd turned it off after my call with Vasily.
Booting it back up, I was greeted by the simple base wallpaperâand a flood of emergency alerts.
Emergency alerts?
Had a Gate opened nearby? But scanning them quickly, I realized it wasnât that. It was an Esper Rampage notice.
[Currently, an S-rank Esper is rampaging near Hangang Bridge. All citizens nearby are urged to evacuate immediately.]
âWhat?â
An S-rank? I blinked in disbeliefâjust as a station announcement blared:
â Trains bound for Seoul Station will only run up to the next stop due to the Esper rampage. All passengers must disembark.
Even subway operations were being suspended. Shocked, I stood frozen on the spot.
In my memory, up until my death in the first timeline, no S-rank Esper had ever publicly rampaged. The only time I had witnessed such a thing was when Vasily lost control inside a Gate.
So then⊠who was it now?
ââŠSurely not.â
Of course, only Vasilyâs face came to mind.
Following the stream of passengers off the train, I fumbled with my phone, trying to load news, but the servers were overwhelmedâjust refreshing endlessly.
While I struggled, a call came from the Association. That would be more reliable. With trembling hands, I answered.
âGuide Kwon Gidam! Are you still on the plane?â
The workerâs voice was panicked. Taking a breath, I calmed myself to reply.
âNo, I disembarked just before takeoff. But⊠by any chanceââ
âThe report says Guide Kwon Gidam didnât board after all!â
The worker cut me off mid-sentence, probably shouting the news to colleagues nearby.
I pressed on with my question:
âIs the Esper rampaging right now⊠Vasily?â
âYes, thatâs correct! Where are you currently?â
âIâm at Hongdae Station. I was heading back when the subway stopped and we had to get off midway.â
âPlease head to Exit 1! Weâll pick you up immediately!â
âUnderstood.â
Calmly ending the call, I tilted my head back and muttered quietly:
âDamn itâŠâ
I had prayed it wasnât Vasily. But I had forgotten: misfortune always clings to me.
Climbing the station steps outside, I surveyed the chaos. Sirens wailed everywhere like in a civil defense drill; crowds streamed out of buildings, murmuring anxiously.
My phone buzzed incessantly with fresh evacuation alerts from the Association. Yet above, the sky was flawlessly clear.
Not like when I froze to death inside a Gateâthere was no cold. Could Vasily really be rampaging? It felt unreal.
Screeech!
That was when the Associationâs vehicle screeched to a stop before me.
A black van emblazoned with the Esper Associationâs seal swung open, and a staff member waved frantically.
âGuide Kwon Gidam! Quickly, get inside!â
I nodded and leapt in.
âThereâs no time. Change into this, fast!â
The moment I stepped in, they thrust battle gear and heavy winter garb into my arms. Knowing the urgency, I quickly changed while asking:
âWhen did Esper Vasily start rampaging?â
âThe moment he heard your plane had taken off!â
ââŠâŠâ
There was no denying it anymore. The cause of Vasilyâs rampage⊠was me. Screwing my eyes shut, I tried to escape the crushing weight of the truth.
âHe started at his homeâso far there are no civilian casualties. If we can just get you to him and calm him, itâll be fineâŠ!â
If it began at his residence, then the altitude at least made it so the cold wouldnât hit the streets instantly. That bought us some time.
But not much. When Vasily rampaged inside a Gate, he froze that vast interior in an instant.
The fact that casualties were still minimal meant there was still some fragment of his consciousness left. That meant we had to reach him before total collapse.
âWeâre here. Out, quickly.â
Anxieties and dread churned in me as I exited the car⊠only to realize we werenât at his apartment complex. Instead, the familiar Association building loomed before me.
In the yard stood a waiting helicopter. I nodded in understanding.
Right. To reach him quickly, the air was best. Climbing floors by stairwell one by one would just get me frozen before I arrived. And with him rampaging, even the stairs wouldnât be safe.
Jaw tense, I strode toward the helicopter. Around it stood the team of Espers who would accompany usâand among them, a familiar face.
âI remember saying I hoped we wouldnât see each other for a while. If Iâd known it would be this soon, Iâd have chosen different words.â
It was the squad leader. Sighting me, he lifted a hand in a half-wave, joking lightly as though to ease my tension.
âCalled in from home again, were you?â
âPretty much. Today was actually my wedding anniversary, you know.â
âThen youâd best return quickly if you donât want to be in trouble with your wife.â
âShe said as long as I came back in one piece, late didnât matter.â
ââŠIâll do my best to see that through.â
Though our words were light, the air buzzing around us hummed with grim weight.
Every Esper present wore a grave face, checking their gear one by one. If things worsened, Vasily might freeze all of Seoul to an icy grave. The human toll would be catastrophic.
If we failed to stop him here, the Association would eventually send other S-ranks to eliminate him outright.
Grinding my teeth, I remembered that wavering voice clinging to me over the phone. Noâthat, I could not allow.
Then came the briefing from the Esper in charge.
âWeâll take the helicopter straight to Esper Vasilyâs residence. The Espers will smash the window and enter the bedroom first. Guide Kwon Gidam, you will follow immediately after, using the ladder, and begin guiding.â
âUnderstood!â
âCan you handle this, Guide Kwon Gidam?â
This was no less than a special operation. Everyoneâs eyes doubted whether I, a civilian among the extraordinary, could manage. But I knew otherwise.
Donât underestimate six years of Gate experience.
âI can.â
I answered without hesitation, and climbed aboard the helicopter.