Chapter 74
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nWhen Shang heard what he had to do, his mind quickly changed directions.
nHe put his earlier thoughts to the back of his mind as his old instincts from the wilderness returned.
nWithout saying anything, Shang shot towards the Wild Forest. Mervin watched him from afar and slowly followed him from a distance.
nAs soon as Shang reached the first tree, he jumped to one of the branches in near-perfect silence. Then, he simply jumped from branch to branch with practiced ease.
nShang looked at the ground of the forest for the entire time while always quickly checking the tree he would jump to next.
nShang hadn’t even realized that Mervin had essentially made it harder for Shang than necessary.
nPest Cats were only active at night. Right now, it was morning, and the sun was already shining down from above. This meant that the Pest Cats were hiding inside their nests, which were nearly impossible to find for someone that didn’t know about the Pest Cats’ habits.
nWhen Mervin saw the methodical method at which Shang was searching for the Pest Cats, he sighed.
nHe wanted to teach Shang a lesson. Shang had acted in a self-destructive way by not at least pretending to be polite, and Mervin wanted to make it a bit harder for Shang as a lesson.
nAction and consequence.
nShang wanted to make his life harder? Sure, Mervin would comply and make it a bit harder.
nHowever, Mervin had underestimated Shang.
nShang had been living in the wilderness for over half a year, and he had been forced to learn the habits of the beasts around him. After all, if he didn’t, a Pest Cat might have jumped out at him from its nest if he didn’t notice it prior to that.
nPest Cats might only be active and hunt at night, but if some prey decided to directly stroll right past its home, it wouldn’t decline the meal.
nAfter a couple of minutes of jumping from tree to tree, Shang noticed some dried drops of blood on the ground.
nPest Cats hunted every single night because they needed a lot of food to produce offspring. Pest Cats were famous for their astounding ability to reproduce quickly.
nWhen Pest Cats hunted at night, they carried their prey to their burrow to consume it over the day. The Pest Cats had an impressively fast metabolism, and their stomachs were very efficient in digesting food.
nHowever, there was still only so much Pest Cats could eat at once, and they often hunted rather big prey.
nBecause of that, they had to eat their prey over half a day, one stomach-load at a time.
nAfter around a minute of following the trail, Shang found an area with light scratch marks and some dried blood here and there.
nShang looked over, and he saw a small but wide hole below a tree. The hole looked like an enlarged version of a mailbox’s slit, thin and wide.
nDue to their form, Pest Cats could make themselves very small while still being able to move very quickly.
nWhen Shang found the small hole, he looked at the tree from all sides. Sure enough, there was another slit on its other side.
nShang didn’t climb onto the tree above the two slits since the Pest Cat would be able to feel the vibrations.
nThen, from the other tree, Shang readied himself.
nSHING!
nShang threw his sword towards the entrance of one of the slits. His sword hit the ground in front of the slit and vibrated.
nShang looked at the other slit and readied himself.
nBANG!
nSuddenly, Shang heard a commotion from the other slit, and he looked over with some surprise.
nThe Pest Cat had jumped out of the first slit and had attacked the space above the sword, which was something Shang had not expected.
nHowever, Shang quickly adapted and shot toward the Pest Cat by pushing himself off the tree with all his power.
nThe tree creaked under the power of Shang’s legs, and Shang shot with incredible speed right at the Pest Cat.
nThe Pest Cat was still confused about why there was no enemy in front of it, but it was already too late.
nBANG!
nShang’s kick hit the Pest Cat’s spine near its chest, easily breaking it.
nThe Pest Cat collapsed, and Shang also broke its neck. His body was more powerful, which made it rather easy for him to kill it from such a position.
nThe task had been completed.
n“Well done,” Mervin said as he silently appeared beside Shang. “You can go back to the academy. I’ll quickly catch up with you.”
nShang looked at the corpse below him. “What about the corpse?” he asked.
n“You can keep it or sell it to the academy,” Mervin said. “By keeping it, you can sell it for gold. By selling it to the academy, you can get some contribution points.”
nSHING!
nSomething appeared in Mervin’s hands.
nIt was a large, black blanket.
n“That’s a Beast Sack. As its name implies, it’s something to transport beasts. You can’t just drag a bloody corpse through the streets of the cities since that would make the entire city stink of blood and guts. That’s why you have to carry it inside a Beast Sack. They’re inexpensive, and they’re meant to be used only one time,” Mervin explained. “You can have that one.”
nShang nodded. “Thanks,” he said absentmindedly as he grabbed the Beast Sack and put it around the corpse of the Pest Cat.
nShang didn’t think of his actions, but Mervin noticed it.
n‘Interesting,’ Mervin thought. ‘Earlier, he had issues with thanking me, but now, he does it easily.’
n“No problem,” Mervin said. “Get on with it. I still have something to do.”
nHowever, Shang didn’t go, and he looked at the burrow of the Pest Cat. “Are you going to deal with the offspring?”
nMervin frowned. “That’s not something you have to be concerned over. You’ve done your task, and that’s that.”
nShang looked at Mervin with a neutral expression. “Do you think I can’t deal with the image of several babies being killed?”
nMervin’s frown deepened. “It’s not about being able to deal with it or not,” he said. “It’s about if you should or not. Even if you can deal with it, you shouldn’t have to. You are a new student, and you aren’t even an adult. Killing a dangerous enemy is different from killing something that is no danger and hasn’t threatened you.”
nAs Shang heard Mervin’s words, he got reminded of the night he had killed the several beggars.
nShang rarely thought of the night since thinking about it always made him uncomfortable.
nMervin noticed that Shang’s eyes became absentminded for a second when he said that, and Mervin quickly realized what that meant.
n‘He has already done something like that before,’ Mervin thought without changing his expression. ‘That explains quite a lot.’
n“Go,” Mervin ordered.
nShang threw one more glance at the burrow.
nAs soon as he had seen the Pest Cat jump out of the wrong hole, Shang had realized that it had probably offspring in its nest. That was the only explanation he could come up with.
nPest Cats in the Wild Forest should be used to humans, and humans should be the biggest danger around here. No sane Pest Cat would attack a human with a weapon that had suddenly appeared in front of its nest.
nUnless it had something to protect.
nIn the end, Shang took a deep breath, put the Beast Sack over his shoulders, and walked off.
nFor some reason, it was rather difficult for Shang to just leave like this.
nWhen Shang had left, Mervin looked at the burrow of the Pest Cat with narrowed eyes.
nThen, a green bottle appeared in his hands, and he poured the contents into the hole.
nAfter making sure nothing left the burrow, he left the forest and caught up with Shang.
nThe job was done.
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