Side Story Chapter 134 - Thousand-Year War (7)
Oh Kang-Wooâs head went blank for a moment. He couldnât understand what Balrog was talking about.
âWhat...?â
Kang-Woo turned to Balrog wide-eyed.
Balrog answered, âYou become the king of Hell and change it.â
âHah,â Kang-Woo chuckled at the absurdity. âChange what? The discrimination against the Halves? The gazes of contempt and scorn?â He burst into laughter. âFucking wow, we have a human rights activist over here! Or should I say, demon rights activist?â
Becoming the king of Hell for the poor Halves and freeing them from discrimination and oppressionâ it couldnât sound like more of a damn joke.
âWhy the fuck should I?â
Kang-Woo was indeed shocked by Kanileâs death and enraged by how the demons treated Halves like insects. However, he had no reason to become the king of Hell for them. He had no desire to or the obligation.
âI am not telling you to become the king for the Halves,â Balrog clarified.
âThen what?â
âIf there is something you do not like or annoys you to the point that you canât contain your rage...â
Bang!
Balrog stomped his foot and stood up. The towering five-meter red demon looked down at Kang-Woo.
âThe only way to resolve it is to become the king.â
Power in the Nine Hells was equivalent to absolute truth. If the Halves were as strong as adult demons, they would not be discriminated against.
âThe weak crawl. The defeated die. The only right the weak possess is to suffer. That is the only rule that exists in Hell.â
â...â Kang-Woo stayed silent.
âSo, will you become king?â
Kang-Woo averted his gaze from Balrog. His resolution of killing the princes of Hell and returning to Earth was unchanged, but becoming the king of Hell was entirely a different matter.
Power in Hell did not refer to individual combat prowess. Combat prowess, authority, political power, and leadership all fell into power. A strong demon without authority was but a strong idiot; authority without combat prowess was but a sand castle that could crumble at any moment.
âAnd...â
One couldnât become king just because they had enough power to kill the princes of Hell. One could only become king after reaching the pinnacle of all categories of power. It was not something an individual could accomplish. Accepting subordinates and growing oneâs army was the first step on the path to becoming the king of Hell.
âNo.â Kang-Woo shook his head without hesitation.
He had no intention of accepting demon subordinates and gathering forces. Accepting a subordinate was no different from pledging that he would be responsible for paying the price of their loyalty.
âIâm sure itâd be possible to get someoneâs loyalty without a corresponding return and with no strings attached.â
Kang-Woo could beat them up until they swore their allegiance or just threaten them with their life.
âBut I doubt itâd last long.â
Earthâs history has proven multiple times the wretched end that resulted from tyranny. To be a king, subjects needed to be unconditionally loyal to him. A king without loyal subjects did not deserve to be called a king.
âI donât want to become king,â Kang-Woo answered.
âHehe. You donât want to?â Balrog chuckled. He shook his head and continued, âYou mean you donât have the resolve.â
Kang-Woo flinched.
âDo you, a human, not have the confidence to earn a demonâs allegiance? Or do you not have the confidence to gain enough power to surpass the princes of Hell? Orââ Balrog stared at Kang-Woo coldly. âDo you not have the confidence to be responsible for a life?â
â...â
Kang-Woo bit his lip in silence. A crazy sense of displeasure and other disgusting emotions stormed in his mind. He recalled Kanileâs mangled corpseâ with his four horns pulled out and eyes rolled backward.
âI...â
The cold he felt from touching Kanileâs body spread through him like poison and froze him.
âI see,â Balrog remarked.
Kang-Woo wondered what Balrog had realized.
Balrog nodded and said, âI will go.â
âGo... where?â
âTo my hut. There is still a week left.â
â...â
Boom, boom.
Balrog walked toward the cave. Kang-Woo waited until he couldnât see him anymore.
âFuck...â
He fell to the ground with his back on the rock wall. He placed his hands over his forehead and bit his lip. The plethora of unfamiliar emotions jumbled in his mind. He had never felt such emotions even on Earth.
âI should never have lived here.â
Kang-Woo chuckled in self-hatred and stood up. His head felt like it was about to explode but he couldnât waste time sitting around. He still had things to do.
***
âA High-level demon... attacked our territory?â
Zeparâs expression hardened in disbelief. All demons carried contempt for Halves but only Low or Intermediate-level demons went out of their way to invade the Halvesâ territory to kill them. High-level demons were powerful enough to have a place in the princesâ armies; they did not waste time meaninglessly hunting Halves.
âItâs possible he was aiming for me.â
âYou, Sir Kang-Woo?â
âYes.â Kang-Woo nodded and continued, âThe bastard knew I was here. I might have been the only reason he was even here.â
âNo way...â Zepar slurred in pallor. He said reluctantly after some thought, âIn that case... it seems we have no choice but to leave this place.â
They did not know for sure if the High-level demon was here for Kang-Woo but as long as there was a possibility, it was far too dangerous to stay in this cave.
âYes. You will have to get ready to leave,â Kang-Woo remarked.
âWhat about you...?â
âOf course, I will accompany you until you find a new hideout.â
Zeparâs expression hardened. He thought about the meaning behind Kang-Wooâs words.
âAre you perhaps... leaving us?â
â...â
Kang-Woo nodded in silence. He wanted to stay in the village longerâ no, he wanted to be with them forever.
âI canât.â
Kang-Woo shook his head to shoo away the temptation. This place was far too different from the Hell he had experienced until now. It was not cold, lonely, or painful.
âThatâs exactly why... I have to leave.â
He couldnât stay here any longer.
âI... understand.â Zepar slowly stood up and bowed deeply to Kang-Woo. He smiled brightly in a way that one wouldnât think he was a demon and said, âThank you very much for protecting this good-for-nothing village all this time. If it werenât for you, we would have continued to spend every day trembling in fear.â
â...â
Kang-Woo was about to say something but stopped himself. He grabbed Zeparâs hand and shook it. Unlike his abnormally muscular left arm, his right arm was pitifully withered.
âI will tell the children to pack their things,â Zepar said.
âOkay.â
Zepar went outside. Kang-Woo, left alone in the hut, looked around with a blank gaze.
âThree years...â
He had spent the past three years in this hutâ the first place he thought of as home ever since he fell into Hell.
âIt was only three years.â
The three years he spent here were far more memorable than the nine millennia of his desperate struggles to survive. He felt like they would be engraved into his memories forever.
âBut I... have to go.â
Kang-Woo stood up. Since Balrog said he was going to leave in one week, he might also have to bid him farewell.
âItâs okay.â
He just needed to go back to his life several years agoâ the life he had experienced for millennia where all he thought about was staying alive with just the thought of returning to Earth driving him. He just needed to go back to the life he was all too familiar with.
âI can do it.â
He would survive like he had always doneâ no matter how wretched and desperate it was.
âForward.â
He would walk forward.
âJeez, I guess I should pack up too.â
Kang-Woo had a few things to pack as well since he had spent three years in the same place.
âOh.â
His expression froze when he saw the old cup on his table as he was packing things into his bag. It was the cup Fel used to brew him tea with the bloodlight plant. He was about to pack it as well but stopped himself.
âI... wonât need it anymore.â
Kang-Wo wouldnât need to taste that disgusting tea any more either. They were going to leave as soon as preparations were complete and he was going to leave the Halves once he found them a secure hideout.
Shatter.
He crushed the cup in his hand. The cold fragments poked his hand. He brushed them away and wore the bag.
Creak.
Kang-Woo opened the door and came out of the hut.
âS-Sir Kang-Woo!â
âI-Is it true that youâre leaving us?â
Firean and Fel approached him in tears. Kang-Woo smiled faintly and patted the two demonsâ heads.
âIâll be with you until we find a new hideout.â
âNo way...â
âSniff, waaaaaahh!!!â
Fel burst into tears as she grabbed Kang-Wooâs clothes. Tears flowed from her six eyes.
âSniff! P-Please donât go, Sir Kang-Woo...â
Felâs appearance did not look hideous to Kang-Woo at this moment for some reason.
âYou guys hurry and pack your things too.â
âYes... sir.â
âSniff! Sniff!â
Firean and Fel nodded in tears.
âHaaa...â Kang-Woo sighed deeply and turned to the cave entrance. âHuh?â
He noticed someone standing at the entrance. It was not Balrog; it was a demon far smaller, close to Kang-Wooâs size.
âWho is that?â
Kang-Woo narrowed his eyes and stared at the unknown demon that appeared at the entrance. He couldnât tell what the demon looked like because he was shrouded in darkness.
âH-Huh...?â
All he could see were two shining yellow eyes.
âSir Kang-Woo!! A-A demon!!â
âA strange demon appeared!!â
The little demons near the entrance shouted as they pointed at the demon.
âWait...â
A chilling sense of uneasiness traveled down his back.
[I found you.]
The demon at the cave entrance took a step forward.
Slashâ!!
âAaaaaack!!!â
âKyaaaaahhh!!!â
The little demons pointing at the demon were sliced into pieces as they screamed.
âHaaa, haaa,â Kang-Woo panted heavily and stepped backward wide-eyed.
He could barely breathe. His teeth clacked loudly. His mind had turned blank and he couldnât even think. His legs were shaking so much that he felt like he was about to collapse any second.
âWhat... the...â
[Allow me to introduce myself.]
At the entrance wasâ
[I am death. I am the end.]
[I am the father of all wrath, and I am wrath itself.]
[I am...]
â Despair itself.
[Satan.]