The deputy of the surveillance unit talks about the discomfort he feels.

"I don't know why, but it seems that Theodoram's people are blind to known gold mines - they haven't actually brought out gold ore - because they're convinced of the existence of something more valuable than that"

"Right...... I think it's a reasonable guess"

"You should have some more idea about the place than you are so strongly convinced. And if the certainty is based on the information obtained from that adventurer's body, in other words, if you got any clues from that adventurer's body, it's within six days of that adventurer being found dead."

Here the deputy hung up once and stared at the superior officer.

"Six days today since the guys at Theodoram increased their troops to start a full-scale dungeon offense, there's still no way they've found what they're looking for. But..."

Substitute General Fiddle will represent you for the continuation of your deputy's doubts.

"... Theodoram's people never seem in a hurry..."

Here, too, the deputy general was able to swallow the discomfort he felt. As vague as it may be, something is definitely wrong.

What they're looking for will be worth more than that, beyond the fact that the guys at Theodoram are blind to known gold mines. There should be no error in this premise. And how can you not see the rush, even though after six days you don't look like you got anything?

Six days is wrong? But if you get information from the adventurer's body, you can't move the distance the adventurer was able to reach in his lifetime, up to six days in days. So the presumption that you got information from an adventurer is wrong?

"But given the timing of Theodoram's move, I just think that the body of that adventurer was the hang-up. Because there is nothing else that seems to hang up. There is a chance that it will remain..."

A slightly irritated deputy general prompts the conversation to continue against a rarely mouthed deputy. There will be no such thing as pulling this far and shutting up.

"What are the chances of staying?

"... I was wondering if it was Petten set up by the Dungeon Master..."

"Petten, huh!?

I recall being Fiddle's deputy, who raised a barbaric voice when I heard words that I couldn't even think of, but it was only myself who said "(probably)" earlier. I just ran my mouth without thinking deeply, but by accident, I was shooting at you...?

"... bad. Go on."

"Yes. If the word Petten is too much, may I say the message of the Dungeon Master? The point is that the Dungeon Master may have intentionally left some information behind."

No matter, the truth is different.

The fossils and scales left behind by Crowe without deep thought were only unexpectedly misunderstood as important.

Theodrum is a theodrum, and I didn't even think about the number of days when it came up to the possibility of water and coal, but I don't even know about such an amusement attic from the end.

"... Assuming the Dungeon Master's set Peten moved the Theodrum, you can't count on a number of days, such as six. Then, if you're trying to guess the motion of the Theodoram, you'll get to the point where you don't think of anything else that should be noticed."

"Hmm... what do they want until they throw out the gold ore..."

"And it has to leave a clue in the adventurer's body."

The deputy general takes into account the words of the deputy. It's too vague, and there's no place to catch it. But I don't feel like it's golden as I was thinking at first...

"What if it's not gold?

"I thought it might be water"

"Water?

The deputy officer's answer was also a shock to the deputy general's intentions.