In his past life, Ihan had often envied people who traveled abroad without hesitation.
He couldnât help but admire their âfreedomâ to venture into countries with different languages and cultures.
For someone like him, who barely had time or money for domestic travel, foreign lands felt like another world entirely.
In his early twenties, he felt enviousâand perhaps a little bitterâtoward such people.
It was immature of him, proof that he was still young.
But as he grew older, even if he hadnât been able to travel abroad, he had at least managed some domestic trips.
And that taught him something:
âAh, so traveling isnât just about having fun. Itâs a form of education that broadens your perspective and mindset.â
With that realization, he made a goal.
Once he was discharged from the military, he would take a plane and travel the world.
He wanted to gain experience, to witness the cultures and environments of foreign lands.
Was it a spirit of adventure? Or perhaps evidence that he, too, had a curious nature?
In that moment, he had started crafting a bucket list for his life.
â¦It was a fleeting moment, though.
ââ¦If Iâd known things would turn out this way, I wouldâve quit earlier and gone on a backpacking trip across Europe. Damn it, what was I saving all that money for? I canât take it with me when I dieâ¦â
ââ¦â
âDonât you guys agree?â
âS-Sir Knight, Iâm not sure what youâre talking aboutâ¦â
âWhy?â
â?â
âWhy donât you get it?â
ââ¦.â
âWhy donât you get it, you damn bandits?!â
Thud!
âArgh!â
âP-Please forgive us!â
âM-Motherâ¦.â
Ihan mercilessly pummeled the bandits.
They had been caught pillaging a village, and Ihan had disabled them one by oneâbreaking arms, shoulders, and legs.
These bandits wouldnât be able to steal anything anymore.
In fact, theyâd be too crippled to even worry about surviving day-to-day life.
âYou bastards. I was being nice, and you couldnât even understand what I was saying.â
ââ¦Who would? You suddenly started ranting and expected them to agree with you.â
âNot my problem.â
ââ¦Youâre insane.â
âHa! Whoâs calling who insane?â
At least Ihan had only left them crippled.
But the other guyâ¦
âYou turned them into minced meat.â
ââ¦.â
âIf Iâm insane, then youâre a damn butcher.â
ââ¦Thatâs discriminatory toward my profession.â
âOh, come on.â
Hearing such words from him felt oddly out of place.
Maybe arguing so much had improved his speaking skills.
Just thenâ
âSir Knights, thank you so much. I donât know how weâll ever repay youâ¦â
The village chief approached them, expressing his gratitude.
He looked to be in his early fortiesâa relatively young man who seemed like a retired mercenary.
Though his muscles had sagged slightly, he still seemed competent enough.
âNo need for thanks. Honestly, you probably couldâve handled it yourself.â
âI might have, but the villagers wouldâve suffered heavy losses. Iâd likely have been severely injured as well.â
The chief had witnessed how the knights had dealt with over a hundred bandits in an instant.
He knew one thing for sureâthey were strong.
In all his years as a mercenary, he had never seen knights of this caliber.
Their aura alone rivaled that of generals he had seen on the battlefield.
While grateful for their help, he couldnât help but wonderâwhy had such powerful individuals come to this remote mountain village?
âDo whatever you want with the rest. Use them for labor or kill themâI donât care.â
âThank you. But wonât you at least stay the night? Leaving so suddenlyâ¦â
âWeâre in a hurry.â
âThanks for the offer.â
The two knights shook their heads and took off, leaving only a brief farewell.
They ran so fast that they kicked up gusts of wind, their speed rivaling that of horses.
ââ¦Hah. Itâs like seeing fairies.â
They had run toward the mountains, but their figures had already disappeared.
Even wild animals couldnât scale the slopes that quickly.
â¦But still.
âWhy are they climbing that mountain?â
The chief tilted his head in confusion.
The Red Mountain Range.
The largest mountain range separating the South and the Central regions.
It was also known as the [Mountain Range of Despair], filled with nothing but jagged peaks.
The knights were heading toward that ominous place, and the chief couldnât fathom why.
âBeyond there⦠itâs just cliffs. Donât tell me theyâre planning to cross into the Central Continent?â
â¦No way.
âHaha. Thatâs ridiculous. Who in their right mind would try to cross the Red Mountains to reach the Central Continent? Hahaha!â
Even he found the idea absurd.
The Red Mountains were so dangerous that even those attempting suicide avoided them.
Crossing that range to reach the Central Continent? It wasâ
âSuch a stupid idea.â
â-So if we cross this range, weâll get to the Central Continent quickly, right?â
âWell, the terrain is treacherous, filled with cliffs, poisonous creatures, monsters, and labyrinthine natural formations. But if you want to get there in four days, this is the shortcut.â
ââ¦Hmm. That description is a bit concerning, but hey, a shortcutâs a shortcut.â
Cliffs, poisonous creatures, and monsters?
Sure, that could happen.
Natural [wonders] forming labyrinths?
Sounds like Vulcan.
In other wordsâ
âItâs definitely a shortcut.â
Ihan accepted it without hesitation.
*****
âDo you really have to go?â
That was what Isis had said to him at dawn the day before, when he told her he was handing over the mage and heading out immediately.
He could still picture her expressionâthe sheer disbelief on her face.
âThe Empire? Do you even realize how far the Central Continent is?â
âMore precisely, Iâm heading to the Magic Tower.â
âSame difference. Even if someone walks diligently, itâll take over a month to get there.â
âThen Iâll just run instead.â
ââ¦When did you start barking nonsense like a dog?â
âHarsh words, Your Highness.â
She had looked displeased.
And who could blame her?
Who would react positively upon hearing someone planned to cross continents?
But for Ihan, there was no other choice.
âThereâs a mage there, so I have to go. Whether to kill him or, well, crush him.â
ââ¦Arenât killing and crushing basically the same thing?â
âEnough. Iâm leaving now. You handle the Sultan. Iâm counting on you.â
âAnd who do you think youâre talking to?â
âAnyway, Iâm off.â
âHahâ¦â
She couldnât bring herself to tell him to come back safely.
Instead, she brushed her hair back and saidâ
ââ¦Make it quick.â
âI know. Iâve only got an 8-day leave, so Iâll be back before then.â
âYou and your pointless sense of responsibilityâ¦â
With those parting wordsâhalf encouragement, half grumblingâIsis had seen him off.
He quickly left the capital and found his guide waiting for him.
ââ¦Why are you here?â
âBy Her Highnessâs command.â
âTch. Seems like a poor choice of personnelââ
âUngrateful bastard!â
Whether Galahad was genuinely trying to help or just knew the Magic Tower was after the cursed sword, heâd assigned Ihan a spear-wielding escort.
They might have the relationship of cats and dogs, but Ihan at least acknowledged his companionâs skills.
âIf you canât keep up, Iâll leave you behind.â
ââ¦Friendly guide, arenât you.â
Despite some bickering, they took off running.
Shed of heavy armor, Ihan carried only his sword and axe, while his guide wielded a single spear.
They raced without exchanging another word.
And true to his word, the guide didnât slow down even slightly.
Through fields, forests, and cliffsâthey sprinted.
The guide proved his arrogance was justified, running along cliffs as though they were flat ground. Ihan matched him step for step.
And how did they defy the laws of physics?
âYou just run before you fall.â
âItâs all in the toes.â
â??â
â?â
Their explanations differed, but the important thing was that it worked.
After half a day of nonstop running, leaping across mountains and cliffs, they finally entered the Red Mountain Range.
The direct route to the Central Continent was across these peaks.
Normally, travelers would take long detours and cross vast rivers by boat, but the Red Mountains offered the only straight path.
Yet no one dared cross them.
Three hundred years ago, an Imperial army of 100,000 had triedâand all of them perished.
And now, Ihan and his guide were voluntarily entering the range that had devoured an entire army, carving a path where none existed.
Butâ
âItâs a shortcut, so who cares!â
Speed was what mattered.
They ran and ran.
ââ¦â¦â
ââ¦â¦â
Once they entered the Red Mountains, their words faded.
Or rather, they were forced to fall silent.
[Krr!]
[Kaaa!!]
[Kieee!!]
Monsters poured out endlesslyâcreatures that called the Red Mountains home.
Goblins and gnolls were just the start.
There were also plant-like monsters known as Wood Ghosts (목ê·).
Common in forests, these monsters were scattered throughout the Red Mountains.
Crack! Slash!
But it didnât matter.
They cut them down, tore them apart, and pressed forward.
The monsters were easier to handle here.
All they had to do was kill them.
What was harderâ
Rumble!
âAnother earthquake?â
âNo. Itâs a windstorm. â¦And it looks like a rockslide is starting.â
âwas the mountain itself.
The Red Mountains werenât just a natural barrier; they were an enigma, akin to Vulcan.
Not divine, but wild and unpredictableâ
Rumble!
The ground shook, rocks fell, and fierce winds howled.
Whoosh!
Rain poured down, blinding them. Fog thickened, obscuring the path.
And thenâ
Crack!
Hail rained down.
Fist-sized chunks of ice hammered the earth.
Yetâ
Thud!
âAre we still on the right path?â
âIf you donât trust me, go your own way.â
âWhy so touchy? It was just a question.â
âDonât distract me.â
âGeez, youâre sensitive.â
â!!?â
âEyes forward.â
They kept running.
Two nights passed without rest, yet neither showed signs of exhaustion.
When hungry, they chewed dried meat and fruit.
They drank water on the move.
Always moving forward.
Cliffs? They jumped.
Rivers? They swam across.
No obstacle could stop them.
Earthquakes, winds, rockslidesâmere nuisances.
Fog, torrential rainâslight inconveniences.
And thenâ
Whoosh!
The temperature rose sharply.
A wave of heat swept through the area.
And thenâ
Fwoosh!
ââ¦Looks like this mountain doesnât like us.â
âNo, it hates humans.â
âSame difference.â
A wildfire erupted.
It spread rapidly, as if determined to consume them.
A sudden, irrational disaster.
To cross this fire was suicidal.
Butâ
âWeâre going through.â
ââ¦â¦â
To them, it wasnât even an obstacle.
Crack!
Ihan grabbed a massive treeânearly 5,000 kilograms.
Once, he wouldâve needed a mageâs help to pull this off.
But now? He did it alone.
âPiercing Lance.â
Boom!
The tree shot forward like a cannon shell.
ââ¦That actually worked?â
âIdiot. If this was possible, you shouldâve done it earlier.â
âI didnât think it would work, okay?â
Ihan defended himself, but inwardlyâ
âI canât believe that actually workedâ¦â
Heâd copied something heâd seen in an old manga, and it worked.
With the right strength, technique, and timing, it was possible.
Soaring through the air like they were on a planeâ
Crash!
And slamming into a cliff.
ââ¦Flight time was too short.â
ââ¦â¦â
One minute in the air.
Stillâ
âWasnât that longer than the Wright brothersâ first flight?â
As they were swept downriver, Ihan felt strangely proud.
Two and a half more days laterâ
âWeâre half a day behind schedule.â
ââ¦I canât believe we made it.â
ââ¦You werenât sure either?â
ââ¦â¦â
âHey!â
Four and a half days.
And they had crossed to the Central Continent.