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Now reading: Chapter 287: Invitation to Join from The Military Chef of a Ruined World, a Action novel by 마일드커피.

In truth,

getting rid of a human’s suspicion when they were suspicious of was simple.

‘Just feed them a dish.’

Feeding them directly would be hard,

but now that the effect of the ability called ‘Force-Feeding’ let feed soone without them even noticing,

if I sohow secured ingredients and ramd the food down by force,

erasing that suspicion wouldn’t be difficult.

But—

‘That rubs the wrong way.’

After the world changed like this,

what I guarded most carefully was my unit’s ntality.

To be exact,

I was afraid they’d lose their humanity.

And among those unit mbers,

I was included as well.

‘The more I overuse this power... the more it eats away at my humanity.’

The mont I start thinking I can control other humans at will,

my mind slips out of what belongs to an ordinary human and—

‘I might turn into a monster...’

That anxiety

always ruled my head.

That’s why,

unless they were people who’d committed extre cris,

I refrained from using this power to forcibly change their minds.

Right.

On humans, at least.

‘But on trees? Nothing says I can’t!’

They were things we used to burn for firewood.

They might be beings of special aning to Gang Jaeho,

but to , honestly, they were at the level of ‘uh, they’re just trees, right?’

Even if I poked at their feelings,

there wasn’t a single thing that would weigh on my conscience!

Right.

Since that man nad Gang Jaeho said he couldn’t trust human words,

the way to make him trust was extrely simple.

‘Seduce these trees.’

So,

I presented those trees with a dish steeped in profound [Happiness]...

“H-h-how...?”

The trees began radiating that happy emotion.

Confirming that feeling,

Gang Jaeho stared at with a flustered look.

Seeing that gaze, I thought:

‘A man who can no longer trust others easily...’

In a way, that too

could be seen as a loss of humanity created by this damned world.

Exactly what I’d been wary of—

and afraid of.

‘I can’t fix that for him right away.’

The shock of losing soone precious

isn’t sothing you can treat easily.

But—

‘Then keep doing what you’ve been doing: trust the trees.’

Those trees gained happiness because of ,

and on that basis they’re surely insisting he can trust .

‘So trust —just as the trees say.’

He’ll

be able to believe in .

‘And then... try trusting another human you’ve been doubting.’

A man who always only doubted—

to have the experience of trusting soone...

that would be a very hard step for who he is now.

‘Right—one step at a ti... like that.’

His suspicion and anxiety won’t disappear right away,

but piece by piece, like this—

“What on earth... what kind of man are you?”

“How many tis do I have to say it.”

as he keeps harboring doubts

and goes through the process of having those doubts resolved,

the sickness in his heart will gradually heal,

“The one who ca to help you.”

and the sense of loss rooted in his heart

will slowly recover.

****

Once the parched earth regained its shape,

not just the Druid who’d been about to attack ,

but—

“What in the world is this...!”

the Shaman who’d secretly decided to help but hid and watched in case things went wrong—

“Mr. Youngjun?”

“Yes.”

“When you said you’d solve the problem... was this what you had in mind?”

Han Iseo, too,

couldn’t hide her shock.

“The dry land... it suddenly turned moist...”

“Yes. Looks that way.”

“And the leaves on the withering trees— they suddenly started regaining vitality...”

“Ah, you saw correctly.”

“...You did this, right, Mr. Youngjun?”

“Yes.”

“...How?”

She spoke with eyes that said she couldn’t make heads or tails of it.

“Weren’t you an incredibly strong combat-class Awakener, Mr. Youngjun? I was sure you ant you’d help us expand our base elsewhere...”

“I only said I’d solve it; I never said I’d solve it by fighting, did I?”

“W-well, that’s true.”

Even at my answer, she still seed flustered.

‘T-then how did he survive beyond Monsterland if he isn’t a combat class?’

‘And this... what combat class could even do sothing like this...’

She began muttering to herself in a small voice.

Leaving her behind like that—

“So it really was... your doing.”

“Yes, well. As you can see.”

The Druid who’d been charging to kill barely a minute ago—

Gang Jaeho ca up to and asked,

“How... did you do it?”

“Mm.”

If I could have it my way, I’d have liked to say, ‘A dish.’

But this was a part that felt awkward to reveal right now.

“Trade secret.”

“...”

At my evasive answer,

Gang Jaeho stared at blankly, as if at a loss.

“...A trade secret. Sure, I suppose that’s possible. Then—can you keep doing what you just did?”

He seed to mull over his words,

then asked that question.

“If that was a one-ti secret technique or sothing, please say so. That way we won’t get our hopes up for nothing...”

“If I have ingredients, I can do it as many tis as needed.”

“You can do... this... repeatedly?”

“I heard there are other survivor bases nearby. If you want, I can do a few more.”

“N-no. I think that won’t be necessary.”

Of course it wouldn’t.

Even back when I was an Interdiate Cook, it was a power that fed a high-tier plant-type monster like an Alraune.

Granted, right now my ‘Cooking Proficiency’ was weakened by the penalty for crossing regions,

but the skill and stats I’d gained by becoming a War Cook and resolving incident after incident hadn’t gone anywhere.

Even in this weakened state, my cooking skill and stats were stronger than during the Alraune days.

‘I can stuff a place like this ordinary land full any ti I want.’

With the fertilizer I’d just spread over the earth,

this land had likely beco the most fertile soil in the world.

Not only within the Wall’s boundary—

I wouldn’t be surprised if so of the effect reached even beyond.

“That these trees could show emotions this joyful...”

And the one who could feel it most acutely—

wasn’t , but that man.

‘It can’t be helped that he doubts human words.’

He’d been through enough.

It isn’t strange that he’d doubt anything to make sure he never had to regret it again.

But—

‘Could he doubt nature’s words, too?’

Crass as it sounds,

those trees had probably tasted true ‘deliciousness’ for the first ti since they were born.

It was a dish that had made even that picky Alraune yield.

By now, that nature

was surely spilling lavish praise for what I’d done.

If he heard that content,

that man... surely—

“...What Iseo said wasn’t a lie.”

—would say exactly this.

I’d been certain.

“So—do you trust a bit now?”

“...Yes.”

He—

as if his attitude of suspicion toward had never existed—

“I’m sorry for doubting you.”

bowed his head to nearly a ninety-degree angle

and spoke like that.

“Uh... no. You don’t have to apologize that much.”

He looked around my age, or maybe a little older; when he ca off that courteous, I was a bit wrong-footed.

But—

“No—it’s only right I apologize.”

Still bowing,

he spoke on.

“If what I heard from Iseo was right, you’d just returned to human territory. And with goodwill—the intent to help others.”

“...”

“And we dragged you in here just because you’d been in Monsterland with other criminals and because your look was fierce. We jumped to an absurd conclusion.”

Well.

Even by my account, I really had rotten luck there.

Also, because my look was fierce? That was part of it too...?

“After doing that, I didn’t even believe your claim of innocence. It’s clearly my fault.”

Maybe my making the land fertile carried that much weight for him.

“This is sothing I should apologize for.”

“...R-right.”

He said it with a sober expression.

At that, Han Iseo tilted her head and asked:

“Is it really okay to believe him so suddenly?”

“Iseo? What do you an?”

“I an—you doubted Mr. Youngjun because his past was so opaque, didn’t you?”

As she said,

his reason for doubting was actually pretty reasonable.

She herself had said

that if her own ability hadn’t confird my words weren’t lies,

she never would have believed .

Anyway,

one might wonder if this single act of reviving geovitality should be enough to lift suspicion this much.

“Well, we can hardly do otherwise, can we?”

“What do you an—hardly?”

“I doubted him because I feared he might harm the group. But—”

Mid-sentence, he suddenly turned his back and stepped deeper into the Orchard,

heading to a certain tree.

‘That one...’

Back when

I’d watched him work, he’d had trouble because it wasn’t bearing fruit—

that very tree.

Saaaa—

When Gang Jaeho laid his hand on it,

plump fruit ford in an instant on what had been a barren tree.

“If my food supply becos impossible, that ans the supply of food to humans itself will drastically drop. At that point, many would have no choice but to starve.”

“In other words...”

“If he’d co here to harm us from the start, he could’ve just done nothing.”

The mont he helped with that matter,

it could only be judged that he had no intention to harm.

“...Honestly, I’m still anxious. I still wonder if it’s really okay to trust him as is.”

“Goodness—still?”

“Fundantally, the reason I couldn’t trust you had personal roots... but it was also because I thought a human couldn’t survive beyond Monsterland.”

But—

now he’d changed that thinking,

and decided to try trusting .

“Frankly, what you just showed is even more shocking than the story about surviving beyond Monsterland.”

With a helpless little laugh,

Jaeho continued:

“If soone can do this... if soone is supported this actively even by nature...”

“...”

“Then maybe... just one more ti, I could trust him—assuming I’m being fooled for the last ti.”

Only after hearing that

did I think of the first objective I’d set once I crossed into Gyeonggi.

“So then, my question is this.”

Making contact

with a friendly survivor group—

I felt that objective

had finally been achieved.

“First off, as I ntioned to Ms. Iseo before—there are people I want to find.”

“People.”

“I said I ca down to help people... but to be honest, finding those people cos first for .”

Most important of all,

was looking after the people of my unit—my people.

“Understood. I’ll actively cooperate on that front as well. Then—besides that?”

And once

that purpose was fulfilled to a certain degree—

“There are just a few things I’d like you to tell .”

“Pardon?”

“Since arriving near here, I’ve felt the survivors’ situation doesn’t look that good. I want to know the overall state Gyeonggi’s survivors are in, why it beca that way, and... to resolve those problems—”

the next step

was to move forward.

“—what I should do.”

****

After I resolved the problems this group was facing—

chief among them the food shortage—by restoring geovitality,

“Allow to introduce myself again. I’m Gang Jaeho.”

“I’m Han Iseo.”

the next day,

I could finally have a proper talk with them.

After we’d gone through a certain amount,

the two who were now willing to extend so trust.

And—

“I’m Park Junggu.”

the very first person I’d t among them.

The massive middle-aged man ca up and offered a handshake with his big hand.

“First impressions were bad... but let’s get along from here on.”

Whatever else you say,

unlike Gang Jaeho, he’d more or less trusted from the start.

There was no benefit to getting along badly, so I accepted his handshake—

SKRRR—...

Right before I moved to shake,

I looked down at the hand clasping mine.

‘...Hoo.’

From the outside it probably looked like a normal handshake,

but the strength gripping my hand... was awfully rough.

‘What is this, a kid’s show of strength? ⊛ Nоvеlιght ⊛ (Read the full story) How juvenile.’

I slid my eyes up to look at his face.

He was grinning, as if curious how I’d respond.

‘Combat maniac.’

Park Junggu stared at with eyes like fire.

‘Those eyes... they say “I really want to square off at least once,” don’t they.’

Well, sure.

My unit had a few combat-maniac types too.

When you face soone who looks strong, the itch to clash—

I understand it well enough.

I do, but—

‘I’ve already declined him a few tis. At this point, couldn’t he just let it go?’

He’d expressed the desire to spar with again and again.

I’d told him no again and again,

but the man, as if my wishes didn’t matter,

kept picking little fights like this.

‘I’ve got plenty to worry about already... and now I have to spend brain cells on this?’

At first, it reminded a bit of Gwangil and all that,

so I’d let it slide.

But to be honest—

I was starting

to get irritated.

“...Yes. Let’s get along.”

SQUEEZE—!

“...!”

A hand that looked twice the size of mine.

I put a touch of strength into the hand gripping mine and gave it a shake.

When the brief handshake ended,

Junggu stepped back, eyes wide in surprise,

and looked down at his own hand.

‘That’s gonna sting.’

It sounds like bragging out of my own mouth,

but my lack of combat skills is the problem.

In raw stats, I don’t lose to anyone.

A simple contest of strength—

and the simplest of them all, a grip-strength contest—

I just thought it was childish, so I never started it.

“...Kuk-kuk. You’re a very interesting one.”

Even if I wanted to lose—

I couldn’t.

****

“As I ntioned, we’re the Northern Branch of the Gyeonggi Association.”

Maybe they’d missed the nerves between and Junggu,

because the other two leaders, thinking the handshake had ended normally, spoke to naturally.

“I heard the gist.”

Because Gyeonggi was so vast,

this Association seed spread out in all directions from the center.

“Four places if you count Central and exclude the West, to be exact.”

“Hm? Why not the West?”

“Ah, that’s because...”

Gang Jaeho answered as if it were obvious.

“Seoul City is on Gyeonggi’s west.”

“Ah.”

“There’s a Wall of Fire erected around there, too. Thanks to that, the area nearby keeps a barely livable temperature. We operate in that vicinity as well.”

“I heard monsters crowd near the Wall...”

“They do, but that Wall is relatively closer to where the extre weather rolls in. Most monsters have crowded to the more distant outer Walls. Honestly, those outer areas are more livable for them.”

They pulled out a map,

uncapped a pen, and drew a line across it as they spoke.

“To be precise, we think the center where the extre weather originated is here.”

Southwest—

toward Hwaseong and Pyeongtaek.

“The farthest from that cold, and therefore where monsters crowd the most, is here.”

She checked the area I’d co across—

Gapyeong and Pocheon.

And

the human domain—

‘The center of Gyeonggi, is it.’

Centered on that Wall around Seoul City—north, east, and south—

that center was apparently the region survivors currently held.

“To be precise, about this much.”

Goyang, Uijeongbu, Namyangju, Guri, Hanam, Seongnam...

and also Bucheon, Gwangmyeong, Siheung, Ansan, Anyang, Gunpo, Uiwang, Gwacheon, etc.

Listed out, the number was higher than expected.

Most of the major cities of old Gyeonggi were included in practice,

but—

“Compared to all of Gyeonggi, that’s very narrow.”

“Yes. Far too little.”

The area where humans operated

didn’t look like even 30% of Gyeonggi as a whole.

“Even within that, most are just zones where we operate. The places humans can truly be said to have occupied are far fewer. By the ratios in [Territory War], it’s under 20%.”

When I’d heard Gyeonggi’s humans had gathered under one faction,

I’d wondered if maybe they were ahead of our unit in Territory War.

But unlike us—who’d already occupied over 30% of Gangwon by the ti I left—

they still hadn’t even reached 20%.

‘And given ti, it’s questionable whether more occupation will even be possible.’

That natural environnt was too deadly to humans.

It was a fairly bleak situation—

though unlike us, it was fortunate that humans had at least clustered together sohow.

‘Life got harder because of this environnt... but conversely, because of this environnt, people could unite under one faction.’

Because livable zones had shrunk to the extre,

consolidating those gathered there would’ve been much easier.

The difficulty was on a different level from rounding up humans scattered across wide-open Gangwon.

“Honestly, a big reason we united under one faction is that there are major benefits to joining a Guild.”

“Guild?”

“Yes. It’s the term for an organization of at least a hundred Awakeners. The mont you join a Guild, you get quite a lot—your stats go up, you receive Guild Skill effects...”

“Mhm. Think of it like equipping two or three well-crafted gear items.”

At the ntion of Guilds,

Gang Jaeho’s gaze fixed on .

“In fact.”

The instant I received that gaze,

I guessed what he was going to say.

“If possible, we’d like to have you join our Guild, Mr. Youngjun.”

At that,

I could only go—whoops.

‘I already belong to a Guild.’

Or—do I call it belonging?

The largest Guild in Gangwon—

the Guildmaster of the [Iron Legion] is .

But—

to these people, I was soone who hadn’t joined a Guild, hadn’t even t others.

‘If they tell to join their Guild...’

...This could get

very ssy, couldn’t it?

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