Seoul (11)
After the talk, the Association members were sent out.
âIs it fine to do it like this?â
âNothing can be undone.â
Iâd said everything I wanted to, and I sent them out because I had nothing more to say.
âNo, I was talking about Park Min.â
That didnât matter either. There was no need to talk about it anymore. I was going to be the one to judge and punish.
It wasnât urgent, so I let him come and find me himself. Park Min had only two options: find a new way to deal with the mantis or come here in fear.
The former would be good if he could figure out something new, and the latter, heâd just have to deal with it.
âWhat about the government? You made that mess in the middle of the city yesterday,â asked Hochi.
When Hochi, who usually had no interest in such things, asked this question, I was a little surprised.
âFrom the novel Iâm reading, I got to know that the government would usually explode at times like this.â
âWhat kind of novel is that?â
Hochi replied that this happened in almost every novel like a cliché.
Kim Min-hyuk explained, âMaybe they wonât act right away. Arresting the Awakened who committed a crime usually requires cooperation from the Association.â
This meant that the governmentâs count of Awakened was low.
Their army was inadequate to subdue the rebellious Awakened in the heart of the city.
Come to think of it, the fact that the Association said it wouldnât intervene between the government and me meant that it could ignore the governmentâs request.
The man I sent home earlier was brave.
He had a good story to present to others. He could say anything he wanted without worrying about me getting angry since the government didnât bind him.
âThe judiciary will discuss punishment. But itâs impossible for the decision to be enforced. Thereâs no way the police can move alone. Maybe they will come up with a reasonable compromise.â
Instead of just letting me go for the Seoul Station incident, they would ask me a few things like trying to get me into pro-government groups.
Kim Min-hyuk explained some of his theories. They were plausible.
âItâs gonna take a while for them to get moving, regardless.â
âRight. They have to gather opinions internally and reach an agreement. Youâll have to pay attention to the media and the public to check on the situation.â
Then there was nothing bothersome left now. That was a relief.
âItâs been years since the Awakened had the power in their hands, and the government is used to compromising one way or another, so they wonât come up with an absurd proposal. They have brains, and they know what an angry Awakened can do. Of course, even if they come up with a reasonable offer, you...â
âI donât care.â
Kim Min-hyuk mumbled, âYes, thatâs where the problem will arise.â
It wouldnât be a big problem.
âThe first thing youâll have to worry about is the public.â
Kim Min-hyuk had explained the Korean citizensâ situation. Protests and public criticism of the Awakened had intensified.
âThanks to me, itâs going to be a little quiet.â
â...Isnât it just getting worse?â
âOf course. You can be mad at a dog whoâs supposed to be guarding the house for not doing what it was supposed to do. But if the dog grows out of control and doesnât recognize people, youâll be scared before getting angry.â
Kim Min-hyuk nodded with an impressed look.
âEven though you said dog metaphorically, it suits you.â
This b*stard.
âBut we still have to do something. You canât just turn your back on the people.â Kim Min-hyuk said firmly.
As he said, we must solve the problems of the public. Leaving them as they are would be a loss in one way or another.
What should we do? I wondered if there was some creative idea, but as always, nothing came to mind.
It would be better to go along with the most common wayâthe most frequently used method on the 61st floor.
âAnnounce it to the people. Iâll cure them of any disease. Just 30 people a month on a first-come, first-serve basis. Oh, even if theyâre dead, I can still save them.â
First-come, first-serve, regardless of the severity of the disease.
â...Is this possible? Did you bring any Elixirs?â
Of course, I had some. But it wasnât meant to be used here. Even without Elixirs, I could cure human diseases. I am a god after all
Kim Min-hyuk, who had been thinking over my proposal for a while, asked in an anxious tone, âWhat if thereâs backlash?â
Kim Min-hyuk talked about many plausible cases. If I continued being good, I knew what would happen.
People may blame me for not treating more people even though I had the ability. Besides, there may be those in power who want to ignore the first-come-first-serve order. There was no room for trouble.
I heard Kim Min-hyukâs explanation, but I didnât think it would be a big problem.
Volunteers who helped others out of goodwill were often treated as servants.
Humans are those who have become social through relationships, and a service done from goodwill could always reverse this relationship, making the receiver arrogant.
But that was the story of the powerless. Unfortunately, people couldnât ask me for anything.
Iâd already proven my strength by clearing Hell difficulty level and burning Seoul Station. And I would continue to show more.
People would know. Naturally, I didnât need to prove my power. Of course, there would be many desperate people. Some may beg for mercy and some may be enraged for their relatives who were about to die.
But as long as I gave priority to solidifying my relationship with them rather than giving credit to their desperation, there wouldnât be any change in our relationship.
Instead, their desperation was my power.
âTheir resentment could be big enough to cover everything.â
Kim Min-hyuk kept trying to make me understand the consequences of the deprivation and anger of those who couldnât make it to the first come, first serve.
I didnât ignore it because I didnât understand it. Of course, the resentment would be enormous.
It wasnât bad to be the center of the gossip. Helping isnât something that goes unnoticed.
If the topic heated up, it would naturally lead to mudslinging. Each side would argue and criticize the otherâs opinions.
It would be enough for me to stay out of the mud. Of course, the question of why I wonât save everyone even though I could would still remain.
I had a reasonable answer for that.
âYou do not have faith in me.â
That was a fantastic answer.
With that answer, I could classify me and every other human being differently, and bind all humans.
I could pass on the fault to people.
There would be many who criticize me. The more desperate they are, the more they regard me as their only hope, and the more they sanctify me and protect me.
The explosion at Seoul Station would also turn into a symbolic event that meant something, and not just my whim.
An ignorant man fills his ignorance with his imagination, and soon, he assumes it to be the truth.
âWhat should I do with this? Huu...â
Kim Min-hyuk eventually gave up persuading me. Instead, he seemed to be brainstorming how to deal with this matter.
âIn the second month, youâll be healing the 31st person first, right?â
âNo.â
Of course not.
âIn the second month, weâll ask for thirty people again. On a first-come-first-serve basis.â
â...then the 31st person from the first month?â
A bummer for them.
The waiting list cannot be extended to the following month. If the waiting list got too long, people would stop struggling for salvation and dismiss it as someone elseâs business.
The feelings that would appear wouldnât be desperation, but jealousy and loathing. Every month, everyone should be able to participate and have expectations.
â...No matter how much I think about it, thatâs crazy. Wouldnât it be better to do a raffle instead of first come, first serve? Itâll be a real mess if we do it like that. Whether it be online or offline.â
It would be a mess, yes.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âThe selection itself will be difficult. Hundreds, thousands of people are coming in in a second, so how can we decide the order? If thereâs anything else we can do...â
âLetâs draw.â
Letâs just go do a lottery. Iâd have to sort out the order of people every month myself. That would be annoying.
âThis should be enough.â
At this rate, faith would naturally grow when left alone.
My power and symbolism were enough, and the method of transfer would be the miraculous act of healing.
I would be left alone but would also get faith.
When faith and a connection with believers get established, a religion would be built by giving rewards and care to some believers, as long as I show my presence and powers a few times.
It wasnât difficult. It was only a matter of time, after all. If you spend a lot of effort, it will settle down quickly, and if you spend less, it will only take a little longer.
Religion was what humans built after all.
All the gods had to do was prepare a story that would be the foundation of their religion.
It was amazingly easy to ignore the problem of time, although I had felt it several times on the 61st floor.
And of course, thereâs no god who was pressed for time. Thatâs why even those monsters became gods and ran wild.
After talking to Kim Min-hyuk, I saw the mantis quietly kneeling beside me.
Perhaps because of me telling it to be quiet when the association had arrived, it remained silent even after the people left.
Would this mantis become a god on Earth if it had a bit more time?
Perhaps it was because of this that it had decided to live among humans and get used to life on Earth.
âMantis.â
âYes! Shall I tell you how I met with the president of the Association?â the mantis asked me as if I had waited to hear this.
âWhy did you have mantis forearms and wings?â
It had a human figure, even if it was mimicking Earthlings. Why had it been half-human and half-mantis again?
âWere you originally a mantis?â
âNo, I liked mantises.â
âIn what way?â
Whatâs good about mantises?
âDaddy! Itâs ready!â
As we were talking, Yong-yong was coming down the stairs from the second floor. I glanced to see if he had prepared the mantisâ house.
âI saw it in the grass, and the female mantis...â
Yong-yong, who was approaching, quickly hit the mantis on the back of its head.
* * *
I had already dug up all the information about Rulers from the mantis. Then I handed the mantis over to Yong-yong.
Yong-yong had prepared a small bug box from back when he did his elementary school vacation homework.
It had strings that let him hang it around his neck. When Yong-yong opened the box, it sucked up the mantis like a squeezed plastic bottle would suck air.
It was a box with all kinds of protective effects on the walls, making the mantisâ body smaller by spatial distortion and forced transformation.
It was handy.
Smaller than a miniature piece, the mantis slammed the walls and shouted from the inside of the box.
âYou told me Iâd be let free! I gave you all the information! It was valuable information!â
It shouted, but it only sounded like a mosquito buzzing, either because its body became smaller or because the box dampened the noise.
Still, I decided to answer.
âOh, sorry, I lied.â
The information given by the mantis was useful. To be honest, it was more useful than I had expected.
But I didnât want to let it go. Yong-yong would be sad.
The mantis jumped and shouted with a shocked look, âHow could a god lie like this?!â
âOh, but I can.â
My divinity had little to do with honesty. If necessary, I was willing to get beat up or even humiliated.