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The Little Prince in the Ossuary-Chapter 93 : Lakefront Night (12), Santa Margarita Lake
Lakefront Night (12), Santa Margarita Lake
When he returned to the office, someone was dying.
A soldier without legs was gasping for breath.
"Lieutenant... Can't you... save me?"
Gyeo-ul held his hand.
"I'm sorry, page."
The soldier, stan Page, had been the machine gunner of the weapons squad. Near the end of the battle, a mortar round tore through his legs below the knees. Shrapnel wounds covered his body. There was nothing left to be done—Doc had prepared a lethal dose of morphine. Gyeo-ul received it. That was the commander's duty.
Page whimpered.
"It's strange..."
"What is?" 𝙧𝙚𝙚𝔀𝒆𝓫𝓷𝙤𝓿𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝙤𝓶
"I thought... that if I stayed... with you, Lieutenant... I wouldn't... die..."
"......"
"It's cold... and it hurts..."
The soldier was the closest to the fire. Opposite him were the pregnant woman and Doc. The pregnant woman wept silently as she watched the dying man. It wasn't from her own pain. She cried soundlessly, lying down, staring at him. Doc gently turned her face away.
Jeffrey asked,
"Hey, page. Is there anything you want to say before..."
"I... don't want... to die..."
His pale lips trembled. His eyes were unfocused, already gazing at some distant place.
Gyeo-ul injected the morphine. One dose, then another. The soldier's face relaxed. Strength faded from his hand.
"Uuuhh... khumm..."
Within minutes, his breathing grew steadily longer and shallower. Slower and slower, until at last, it faded away completely. It was a death like falling asleep.
There was only one body bag. The second dead had merely been covered with their own raincoat. Now, the third casualty was laid beside them. The squad observed a short silence. They saved their tears. Some civilians prayed as well. After returning to the base, there would be enough time to grieve.
Outside, gunshots continued. Occasionally, heavy explosions echoed. The frequency was slowly decreasing. And faintly, there was something like screams mingled with monstrous howls. Not much longer now.
Gyeo-ul called Doc over to a quiet corner.
"White. How's the pregnant woman?"
"Labor started right after the shooting began. She's currently in cervical dilation, I estimate."
"How much longer?"
"Honestly, I don't know."
Doc, who had worn a stoic expression until now, finally showed a deep weariness once there was no one else around. He began to rub his face, but remembered: he had just cleaned and sanitized his hands in boiled water. He clenched his fist, closed his eyes, and let out a sigh before continuing.
"I'm not an Army surgeon. I completed all training at Sam Houston, but none of that included obstetrics. Pulling bullets and delivering babies—those are two completely different domains..."
Fort Sam Houston was the site of the US Army Medical School. Even completing every course there only put a medic at a paramedic level. Gyeo-ul nodded.
"I see. I understand."
"When it comes to assisting childbirth, everything I know I only picked up from the medical corps. Still, I have to act like I know it all. I'm the only one those people trust."
"......"
"Damn it! I'm terrified I'll ruin everything. Every time they ask what to do, if it'll be okay... I get dizzy. Fighting mutants would be easier than this."
He faltered for a moment. Gyeo-ul silently waited. Sometimes, all someone needs is to be heard.
After steadying his harsh, suppressed breathing, white spoke again.
"The pregnant woman's in bad shape. Her body temperature is 38°C. I took the risk and gave antibiotics, but it hasn't helped yet. Maybe because she hasn't eaten properly—she's got severe muscle loss. I'm not sure her uterus can contract properly. I have no idea what malnutrition and infection will have done to the fetus. There's a very high chance this will be a difficult birth. For both mother and child... I'm not optimistic. I'm not confident about performing an emergency C-section. And I doubt the mother can tolerate much blood loss."
Just then, there came a suppressed groan: the pregnant woman was stifling her pain. Her husband massaged her desperately. How many hours had it been? All his motions were weak, but he didn't stop. He was desperate.
Doc hesitated to say what needed to be said. The rule was always to give up on hopeless cases. Just as they had helped Stan Page die in peace.
Reading his eyes and his turmoil, Gyeo-ul eased his burden.
"Do your best as long as you can. Don't worry about the outcome. We can't give up. She's a civilian. We're soldiers."
"... Haaa, yes, sir. God help us."
"White."
Gyeo-ul stopped the medic, who was about to turn away.
"Soon, a mutant group will approach. Even if we lure them away, this place mustn't have any light. Can you continue everything while wearing night vision?"
The medic's face twisted in disappointment, but he still nodded.
"I'll try. But if the fire goes out, how do we keep the place warm?"
"Collect the heating packs from the rations and use them to heat water."
Gyeo-ul issued orders to the squad immediately. They pulled out cabinet drawers to fill with water, then stuffed heating packs inside. From the three days' rations for thirty-one people, they had about three hundred heating packs.
A single pack could keep the water near boiling for over twenty minutes. By refilling, it could be kept hot—hot enough to last until morning if used wisely.
As the soldiers estimated what to use, Gyeo-ul said,
"Don't hold back now. Once the place is warm, maintaining it won't be hard."
"Understood."
Every riverside window, left open for the smoke, was now closed. When the glass fogged with condensation, even sharp-eyed mutants would have a hard time peering into such a darkened building.
Jeffrey approached Gyeo-ul. He listened at the door before speaking.
"Captain Harris might already be dead... Ha, he had it coming. What's next? Are we just keeping the lights off and waiting quietly until those things pass?"
"No. Keeping quiet will be hard. The pregnant woman's here. No matter how loud the river gets, or what the weather's like—if even one of those things has sharp hearing, it's dangerous. I plan to go out and lure them away. If there's a visible target, they won't focus on small noises. And they'll get noisy themselves."
"Luring them? That's insanely dangerous."
"It's not. I'll lead them from across the river."
"Ah."
The Salinas River's upper stretch was about ten meters wide. With the dam gates open, the current was even rougher—too wide for mutants to cross easily. Maybe one or two at their highest enhancement could jump it.
'At most, only a few could try.'
Gyeo-ul believed he could handle that much. If it was a ghoul, he'd take its head off before it even landed. No real worry.
"Tell the soldiers outside to set up a few crossing lines. I'll be going soon."
"Lines... It'll be easier than before. How many are you taking this time?"
"One squad. Jeffrey, prepare them."
"That's not the problem—I mean, only one squad again? We don't know when mutants might show up on the other side... Why not take more? Didn't you almost get buried alive coming here?"
Gyeo-ul tilted his head.
"Elliot told you? ... Well, then you know—it wasn't a matter of numbers."
"I just want to be prepared, in case."
"Do as I say. It'll be fine. Above all, protecting civilians comes first."
"How about letting me go instead? People say I'm a lazy platoon leader anyway."
"I don't trust you enough."
"What did I ever do to deserve that?"
Still, despite his half-serious grumbling, Jeffrey didn't waste time. He gave orders over the radio, spread the word, and started prepping the team.
Before setting out, they'd need to agree on the movement plan and a rendezvous point in case they couldn't return.
So many questions—I'll answer all at once here.
― Is the Noblesse serialization stopping?: No. I promised already. The editor-in-chief's permission was arranged from the start.
― So, are there any issues?: There are, but it can't be helped...
― Will it also be on platforms like RidibookX?: Yes. The timing will differ, though.
― When's the print edition out?: There's no date yet. It'll take a while.
― How many volumes worth are serialized so far?: About four volumes.
― Will there be much revision?: I plan to revise the first chapter, since many find it hard to read... Also, mature content will be altered. Other than that, I'll fix punctuation or minor wordings that misrepresented my intent.
― Any signed editions or postcards?: Well... absolutely no plans for print editions yet. And... do you really want my autograph? Planning to use it for a spell or something...
#Innocence and Anger
Reading the comment section last chapter was a little painful. Some readers got angry. In the online world, everyone gets angry so easily.
It's natural enough to request shorter author's notes and longer chapters. After all, you just want more of the story. No need for anger.
Above all, reader anger means the author hasn't provided enough innocence. People full of innocence rarely get angry. They just smile, and, when the time comes, utterly destroy their target. That is innocence.
Folks! If you drain all my innocence like this, where do you spend it all?
The author's vitality withers again today...







