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Now reading: Chapter 96: A Choice Of Trust from Building The First Adventurer Guild In Another World, a Fantasy novel by MysteriousGhost.

Silence hung over the Guild Hall like a drawn blade. It wasn’t the fragile quiet that follows fear or the brittle stillness of shock; it was sothing heavier, more profound.

This was the silence of inevitability, the kind that settles in when all possible outcos have been weighed and dismissed, leaving only one path forward, a path no one wanted to take but everyone could see.

Sage stood with an air of calm, leaning lightly against the desk with his arms crossed and his expression composed and unreadable. He didn’t press his advantage or break the silence; he let it work for him.

Across from him, Mina’s elder sister stood rigidly, shoulders squared and chin lifted, her gaze fixed straight ahead. The murderous intent that had once filled the hall had receded but not vanished; it coiled tightly around her heart like a restrained beast.

She was deep in thought.

Sage could see it in the subtle tightening of her jaw and the way her breathing slowed into sothing controlled and deliberate. He noticed how her fingers flexed at her side, opening and closing as if testing an invisible chain’s weight.

This woman was neither impulsive nor reckless. She was a leader, and leaders don’t lash out blindly when cornered; they weigh their options carefully.

Sage straightened slowly, uncrossing his arms and placing both hands flat on the desk behind him.

"You want your sister out of the Guild," he said at last, his voice calm and steady as it carried across the hall. "That much is clear."

Her gaze flickered toward him for just a mont before darting away again, she didn’t deny it.

"I know you don’t trust this place," Sage continued. "You don’t trust or anything built by n. Given your experiences, I won’t insult you by pretending that mistrust is irrational."

A low murmur rippled through the Adventurers present.

"But intent doesn’t override structure," he added. "And strength, no matter how overwhelming, doesn’t rewrite established rules."

Her eyes sharpened as she looked up at Sage.

He lifted a hand slightly, palm open as if signaling restraint, not for her but for the tension thickening in the room.

"This Guild exists because it has rules," he explained. "Not because I am powerful or clever, or even benevolent."

A few Adventurers shifted uncomfortably at his words.

"It exists because it is predictable," Sage continued. "When soone enters, they know what is expected of them; when soone leaves, they know what must be done."

He paused to let that sink in before adding, "You are not being singled out, and neither is your sister. The rules apply equally to everyone here."

The sister exhaled sharply, a low breath devoid of humor escaping her lips. "Spare your justifications," she replied coldly. "You enjoy this."

Sage t her gaze with unwavering steadiness. "No," he replied firmly. "I endure this."

His words struck harder than any shout could. He stepped away from the desk, moving slowly and deliberately until he stood a few paces closer, close enough to speak without raising his voice, yet far enough not to intimidate.

"There are only three outcos available to you right now," Sage said. "Let lay them out plainly."

Despite herself, her attention remained fixed on him.

"First," Sage said, lifting one finger, "you refuse. You walk away. Your sister remains an Adventurer. Permanently."

Mina flinched at this revelation, looking blankly at her sister.

"You may protect her from the outside," Sage continued unflinchingly, "but you cannot remove her from the Guild. She will continue taking missions, earning rewards, and building connections here under my authority."

The sister’s jaw tightened as the air around her seed to warp.

"Second," Sage said, raising a second finger, "you attempt to use force."

A ripple of tension passed through the rcenaries present.

"You already know how that ends," Sage stated simply. "You can destroy this hall; you can kill everyone here. But the consequences will follow you forever. Your reputation will rot, contracts will vanish, and your people will starve, not because you failed them in battle but because you chose pride over responsibility."

His gaze shifted briefly toward the rcenaries behind her.

"You know that," he added quietly.

Of course she did. Her shoulders tensed, not in denial but in acknowledgnt.

"Third," Sage said, lifting his final finger, "you accept the rules."

"You complete the conditions," he continued. "You withdraw your sister legally and cleanly, without bloodshed or rumors and without consequences for your group."

Her eyes burned with anger. "And how," she asked slowly, venom lacing every syllable, "do you expect to fulfill conditions designed to chain people here for years?"

Sage didn’t hesitate. "You don’t," he replied.

Her eyes widened slightly.

"You don’t complete them alone," Sage clarified. "As stated earlier in the rules: if you want to bring her away, she must fulfill all the conditions herself and can enlist others to help her, you can mobilize manpower and work efficiently together."

Understanding crept into her expression like an unwelco dawn.

"You’re suggesting..." she began hesitantly.

"I’m stating," Sage interrupted gently, "that the quickest way to free your sister is for you to beco an Adventurer yourself."

The words settled over the hall like falling ash. Mina inhaled sharply; her sister’s expression froze in disbelief.

For a long mont, silence hung between them.

Then she laughed, a short, brittle sound that lacked any trace of humor. "You want ," she said, her voice trembling with restrained fury, "to wear your emblem and submit to your authority. To fight under rules written by a man."

Sage t her gaze without flinching. "I want you to make a choice," he replied. "One that aligns with what matters most to you."

Her breathing quickened. "You’re asking to betray everything I am," she snarled.

"No," Sage responded calmly. "I’m asking you to protect what you value most."

As he spoke, he glanced toward Mina. Her sister followed his gaze and saw Mina standing quietly, hands clasped in front of her, golden eyes fixed on her elder sister’s face, filled not with fear but with trust. Unconditional, infuriating trust.

In that mont, sothing cracked inside her chest.

Sage continued, his voice steady but lower now. "This Guild does not own your sister," he said firmly. "It offers her opportunity, structure, protection. If you wish to take her away, do so properly. Show that you can provide sothing better without burning bridges behind you."

Her fists clenched tightly until her knuckles turned white. "You’re forcing ," she said hoarsely.

"I’m showing you reality," Sage corrected gently. "And reality doesn’t negotiate."

The hall fell silent as everyone watched the two of them standing there.

She closed her eyes for a mont; for the first ti since entering the Guild Hall, the iron wall around her emotions began to waver. Images flooded her mind, battlefields soaked in blood, fallen comrades, contracts won and lost, the faces of those who depended on her leadership. And beneath it all was one constant presence.

Mina.

Small, stubborn, and smiling, a reminder of the vow she had made long ago to protect that smile at any cost.

When she opened her eyes again, they were no longer ablaze with blind rage but heavy with resignation and clarity. She exhaled slowly; it felt as if she were releasing a burden she had carried for years.

Sage observed quietly but didn’t speak.

The entire Guild Hall seed to hold its breath.

Finally, she lifted her head and looked directly at him.

"...I’ll do it," she said.

Mina’s eyes widened in shock as her mouth fell open; even the other rcenaries stiffened in surprise.

Sage did not smile as she continued steadily despite the revulsion twisting in her gut: "I’ll beco an Adventurer." Her gaze hardened as she added firmly, "...and when I’m done helping my sister complete the conditions..."

She paused for emphasis before finishing resolutely: "...my sister walks away free."

Sage inclined his head slightly in acknowledgnt. "That is the only way," he affird.

"And so the most dangerous piece joins the board. Right where I need her." He thought inwardly as a strange glow flickered in his eyes.

His words echoed through the hall as the path forward was set before them.

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