Chapter 446: Those Who Handle Numbers
Water Magician
Editor: Tseirp
While a fierce battle was unfolding between a swordsman and a magician at âSogyokuteiâ, an equally intense conflict was taking place in the grand conference room of the Manyamya government office.
âWe have reported to the capital and are awaiting a response. Please wait a little longer at the inn.â
âI understand it takes time to decide on our treatment. However, we are not criminals. What do you mean by not leaving the inn!â
âGiven the current situation. We ask for your cooperation to ensure your safety.â
âI cannot accept that!â
Administrative Chief Remengesas bowed his head as he explained. An elderly gentleman fumed with anger.
âRonk, thatâs enough.
âBut, Princessâ¦â
âThe people of Manyamya are doing their best. Chief Remengesas, Ronk is acting out of concern for me. Please donât take offense.â
âNo, your words are too kindâ¦â
The elderly gentleman called Ronk was pacified by Princess Iliaja, the sixth princess, while Chief Remengesas bowed his head.
Two days had passed since the royal ship of the Suje Kingdom had fallen into the city of Manyamya.
During that time, there had only been a message from the capital of the Komakyuta Principality, instructing them to âentertain them until a decision is madeâ.
Chief Remengesas really wanted them to hurry up with the process.
Logically, there should be no other option but to âtransfer them to the capitalâ.
Is the delay due to the request to âsend a ship that can carry the hundred asylum seekersâ?
Itâs possible.
However, that request had to be made. Because the Manyamya government did not have a ship of that size.
Even so, the response is slowâ¦
They have a hundred asylum seekers.
Moreover, they likely include the sole surviving member of the old royal family, the princessâ¦
The longer it takes, the more unpredictable the situation around the princess becomes.
First Sea Lord Kabui Somal, who led the rebellion, is known as a shrewd individual by neighboring countries.
Because of this, he should understand the need and method to address the situation before problems ariseâ¦
It wouldnât be surprising if he decided that it was best to dispose of the surviving member of the old royal family as quickly as possible and acted on it.
Kabui Somal is shrewd and never lenient.
Itâs his ruthless decisions that make him sharp.
Hence, Chief Remengesas thought.
âI want the asylum seekers to leave the city as soon as possible.â
However, no mistakes must occur while they are in the city.
If by any chance an assassination or abduction happens while they are here⦠it would undoubtedly be his responsibility.
Therefore, the area around the âLovely Fountain Innâ was fortified with a guard of three hundred.
This was almost the entire reserve force of the city.
Having finished the meeting with the princess and others, Chief Remengesas returned to his office.
Waiting for him was an instruction from the capital.
He read it immediately.
âWhat in the world⦠are the people in the capital thinkingâ¦â
The words squeezed out in a very low, low, truly low voice.
Chief aide Nij, listening beside him, also shrank his neck involuntarily.
However, he remained silent.
He understood Remengesasâs feelings.
And sometimes he wondered.
Why are the instructions or decisions from the capital often so disconnected from the actual situation?
He himself would probably be serving as a government official in the capital in ten years, working on a national level.
In other words, the ones issuing these instructions now were Nijâs seniors and were supposed to be competent individuals.
Yet, whyâ¦
However, Nij shook his head slightly to dispel the unnecessary thoughts.
Now, he had to focus on the problem at hand.
âTransfer the asylum seekers to the capital⦠the method is left to usâ¦â
âYesâ¦â
Chief Remengesas read the instructions from the capital once more. Slowly, slowly.
Nij, understanding Remengesasâs feelings, nodded with a grimace.
âYou told them⦠there is no ship in Manyamya that can carry a hundred people⦠including the princess, rightâ¦?â
âYes. I confirmed that part, but they insisted that we handle it.â
Chief Remengesas asked bitterly, and Nij answered in a sinking voice.
âDo they expect us to split them into groups and send them on different ships? Thereâs no way they would accept that⦠they are people who fled the rebellion. If you tell them to board different ships away from the princess, weâll be overpowered. Half of the hundred are military personnel, including the princessâs guards. They threw everything away for her asylum. Those people wonât get on separate ships. The people in the capital only see numbers, so they make such decisions. They should come to the field.â
âExactlyâ¦â
Remengesasâs voice was calm due to his extreme anger.
Nij nodded vigorously at the part about only seeing numbers.
One must not forget that behind numbers, there is always the reality of the situation.
And that people have feelings.
Because human feelings do not appear in numbers, those who handle numbers must be able to imagine reality from them.
Bureaucrats and executives are the ones who need this ability the most⦠but how many of them are truly aware of this�
They used to be able to do it.
Even if not perfectly, they made an effort to understand.
But at some point, they lost that ability.
Losing the ability to do what they once could⦠is it due to aging?
No, it is mere laziness.
Itâs a consequence of failing to continually be conscious and make an effort.
âTo accommodate a hundred asylum seekers⦠in addition to a crew. Moreover, to restrain them and, if necessary, to protect them, marines must also be on board. Even if we accommodate the same number, thatâs two hundred. Two hundred people apart from the crew. Such a ship⦠does not exist in the government. Handle it on-site? Some things can be done and some things canât⦠why donât they understand this? And despite being explicitly told, they refuse to understandâ¦â
Chief Remengesasâs words were filled with anguish, and Chief aide Nij nodded at every point.
The next day.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
As expected, the persuasion by Chief Remengesas and Chief aide Nij failed.
Steward Ronk of Princess Iliaja, the sixth princess, steadfastly refused to agree to travel on separate ships.
It wasnât just him; it was everyone, including Princess Iliaja and the royal guards standing behind Ronk, who listened in silenceâ¦
Both Remengesas and Nij could deeply understand their feelings.
However, the reality was that there was no ship available.
The meeting adjourned without any decisions.
âChief, after all, the only option isâ¦â
ââ¦Nij, donât say it so easily.â
Nij spoke, and Remengesas responded with a look of anguish.
Of course, Remengesas understood that Nij wasnât speaking lightly.
Nij was urging a decision fully aware of the problems that the solution might cause.
But this was solely as the chief aide to the government.
Nij was not someone born and raised in Manyamya, with children living in the cityâ¦
The measure they might have to take could, in an exaggerated sense, cause trouble for generations to come.
Such a measure.
âIs it still unavoidableâ¦?â
After shaking his head several times, Remengesas finally made up his mind.
âNij, contact the Sogyoku* Trading Company.â (TLN: Blue Jade; as in Sapphire)
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