LTTH C64
by berryChapter 64
Maybe it was the glow of the orange streetlamps.
After passing through several alleys bathed in their warm light, Hansol finally spotted the restaurant they were looking for.
âOhâitâs already started!â
Unlike before, when the place had been quiet, the street in front of the restaurant was now packed with tables. People moved between them, raising glasses, shouting, laughing. No one looked like theyâd come just to eat.
This feels more like a reunion than a dinner.
The easy laughter, the way everyone mingled without restraintâit stirred memories Hansol hadnât realized he still carried.
âYouâre not planning to join that, are you?â
âOf course we are. Youâre the guest of honor, Hansol.â
ââŠGuest of honor?â
âThe star of the night.â
Kassie beamed, but just hearing it made Hansol feel tired. Guest of honorâthose words hadnât applied to him since childhood birthdays.
âOh! Itâs the Saint!â
âShouldnât we call him God now?â
âSaint sounds better, doesnât it?â
âYeah!â
âRight! Once a Saint, always a Saint!â
What began as awkward greetings quickly turned into loud cheers, as if alcohol had flipped a switch in everyone at once. Their flushed faces and unfocused eyes said it all.
âItâs their first celebration like this. Theyâre a bit overexcited. Forgive them,â Kassie said gently.
Forgive them? Hansol had never been anything but a guest here.
âYouâre thinking something weird again, arenât you, Hansol?â
âNoâŠ?â
âSomething like, âIâll be leaving soon, so I shouldnât get too close.â Right?â
Not exactly.
But close enough.
âThis scene exists because of you. Without you, this wouldnât be a partyâit would be a mass funeral.â
Kassie said it casually, but the people around them nodded without hesitation. Drunk or not, they all understood.
âSo tonight is yours. Enjoy it. Okay?â
âŠMaybe just for tonight.
ââŠOkay.â
He would leave soon. But eating and drinking with themâjust onceâcouldnât be wrong.
âThis way.â
Kassie wove through the crowd, Hansol following behind. When they reached the table, Hansol stopped short.
Golden hair. Blue eyes. A face usually carved from stone.
Isaac.
âŠHeâs drunk too, isnât he?
Hunters were known for high alcohol tolerance. Just how much had he had?
âHansol, sit here.â
Kassie dropped into the seat beside Isaac and motioned for Hansol to join them. With a sigh, Hansol satâhalf willing, half pushed.
The moment he did, Isaac stared at him with unfocused eyes.
Yeah. Completely drunk.
âHow much did he drink?â
âWho knows? Heâs always been terrible with alcohol, despite his size.â
Kassie teased him, but Isaac didnât respond. Normally, he would have snapped back instantly.
âAs I mentioned before, the meat here is good. Iâd recommend these.â
Kassie slid over a menuâjust words scrawled in marker on thin wooden boards. Hansol glanced at it, then sighed. The translation magic wasnât working.
He handed it back. âOrder whatever you think is good.â
âOh? Perfect. Iâll choose things youâll like.â
Kassie looked oddly pleased. Hansol let his gaze drift instead.
The atmosphere was bright, warmâhalf festival, half chaos. Without monsters. Without Gate Breaks. Maybe this was what their daily lives could have been like.
The thought that he had helped protect thisâeven a littleâfilled him with quiet pride. A smile crept onto his face before he noticed.
âHansol.â
Kassieâs voice cut in suddenly.
âYes?â
ââŠDo you really have to go back to Korea?â
The question froze him mid-smile.
Hic.
A loud hiccup echoed nearby. Normally it would have drawn laughterâbut now every gaze turned toward their table.
ââŠCanât you stay?â
Kassieâs eyes held his, earnest and desperate. Hansol couldnât look away.
ââŠâŠâ
He had to return.
Even if Korea held no warmth, no attachmentsâhe still had to go.
âWeâll take care of you better. Please⊠donât leave.â
When Hansol didnât answer, Kassie reached out and grabbed his hand, gripping it tightly.
Hansol understood. He really did. A healer who could come here freelyâof course they would want him to stay. Kassieâs desperation made sense.
But it wasnât about dislike. Or dissatisfaction.
ââŠKassie. Do you remember the Day of Catastrophe?â
ââŠWhy bring that up now?â
The sudden shift made Kassie look up, thinking. A long pause followed.
ââŠIf you mean the Catastrophe, it happened around the time Britain was drowning in Gate Breaks. But details? I donât really remember.â
That made sense.
âI think society was barely holding together back then. But noâI donât remember much.â
Kassie rubbed his chin, then glanced at Isaac. Isaac didnât speak, but he nodded slowly.
âWe were all too busy trying to keep our towns alive.â
Of course.
Who had the luxury of pondering history when survival demanded everything?
Hansol turned his glass slowly, fingers rubbing the rim as he gathered his courage. The foam had nearly faded by the time he finally spoke.
âThree years after Britainâs Gate Breaks, the Catastrophe happened. If Gate Breaks unleashed countless kinds of monstersâeach unfamiliar, endless in numberâŠâ
He paused, breathing in deeply.
ââŠthen the Catastrophe brought only one kind. And that single kind nearly wiped out humanity.â
ââŠWhat kind?â
Kassieâs voice had dropped, careful.
âGods.â
The sky had been blue that day. Just like now.
They took forms beyond descriptionâshapes no human mind should have witnessed. Some had writhing tentacles. Others resembled massive plants, mouths opening and closing. None were alike, yet they shared one truth.
Servant of the Outer God, Shumas, has been summoned.
The message had echoed across the cityâheard by hunters and civilians alike. That was the moment Hansol lost his family.
He hadnât awakened yet. He wasnât special. And still, the system had spoken.
And then the world burned.
There was no time to resist. No time to wait for hunters. Everything was erased in an instant.
The only mystery was why he survived.
Why, out of everyone in that city, had the gods overlooked him?
ââŠGods? The kind we worship?â
âI donât know which gods you believe in. But these were outer gods.â
âOuter gods⊠then not our gods.â
âProbably not.â
Kassie laughed bitterly.
Hunters. Gates. Gods.
This world had stopped being normal the moment the Gates appeared. Still, humanity had adapted. Endured. Survived.
But for thirty years now, the world had never stopped changing.
âSo⊠youâre looking for that god?â
ââŠYes.â
After the Catastrophe, nations scoured the world. They probed Gates, searched ruins, hunted for traces of the same beings.
Years passed. Battles, experiments, failures.
Nothing.
The gods never appeared againâas if that day had been a dream.
But Hansol knew better.
The screams.
The smell of blood.
The moment his family was torn away.
None of it had faded.
None of it was a dream.