"Damn it!"
Morkel punched the air in frustration as he processed the harsh reality.
"Nothing's gone right since we got here. The clone didn't listen to us, and neither did the original, and now look at the result—we've lost a 3-star planet and all the people Merlin's earlier attack didn't already kill."
Frustrated, he turned to Rosaline. "Now do you see why I wanted to kill him? He's an anomaly. Wherever he goes, destruction follows," he said, dissatisfaction evident in his voice.
He added, "Even the original is as dangerous as the clone. He's the real problem. We've never heard of a clone escaping the Null Void, yet his did—and look where that got us."
"Morkel, calm down," Kitsuri said solemnly. "Nobody knew he had Merlin's black hole, or that Suzan's attack, amplified by the clone, would create such a disaster when it collided with a black hole."
Morkel nodded lightly. He understood that the situation wasn't entirely their fault, but they had certainly played a part in it.
"Suzan, can you sense the clone?" he asked after a moment of thought.
"No," Suzan shook her head. "Could he be...?"
"No, he's too powerful to die that easily," Morkel dismissed her speculation. "Either he entered his separate space during all the chaos, or he escaped."
They nodded, but the atmosphere grew tense between them, and no one spoke.
"You were too careless."
At that moment, Kane appeared before them.
Morkel and the others turned their attention to him, their expressions darkening.
"Well, I have to go now," he said in conclusion.
"Aren't you sad that Merlin died?" Kitsuri asked suddenly. "Don't you feel anything? He was her father."
Kane, who was about to leave, stopped. His back faced the Ten Seats, so they couldn't see his expression, but they heard him clearly.
"Yeah, I'm sad, but what can I do about it? Nothing. People die every day—someone's father, son, mother, sister—when we waged war against the Zenithans, so many of their families were lost. But did we regret it? No. We only thought about expanding the human domain, and here we are.
If you really want to know what it feels like to lose someone dear, just visit a village or two of Zenithans and live among them for a while. You'll understand a lot."
Kane looked up at the sky and added, "To understand the law of the sword, the final law, I had to do many things I'm not proud of, but one thing I'm grateful for was visiting the Zenithans and living their life. In those moments, I finally understood how fragile life can be, yet how strong a bond can become if it attaches to someone. But what it truly taught me was the nature of life and death."
He turned to face them and said, "Believe me, life and death are complicated. Our concept of living and dying is false, or at least deviated from what it used to be—the true concept of life and death."
He added, "Only those who've experienced the common life of the Zenithans can truly understand what life and death are."
With those profound words, he was about to leave when Morkel asked, "Is your ambition related to the life you lived among the Zenithans?"
"You could say that," Kane answered vaguely and then disappeared from the scene.
Morkel pondered for a moment, watching Kane leave, then gave orders. "Search the entire area for the clone and the original. If you find nothing, report back in an hour."
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