Raw Chapter 461 Yuusha Party O Oida Sareta Kiyou Binbou Free Apr 2026
“I don’t need them to,” Kyou said. “I need them to be loud enough to be seen.”
A child noticed him then — eyes too big and shoes too small. She curled her bare toes against the bench and said, loud enough for the whole room, “Are you the one they chased out? My aunt says heroes leave when trouble comes.”
Kyou understood the plan then: the ledger had been forced into hiding before the names inside could be fully claimed. The ghost, an echo of the ledger’s wrongs, had been left to rot as a ward so no one could set the accounts right. The merchant house expected to profit from the silence. raw chapter 461 yuusha party o oida sareta kiyou binbou free
The mourning woman’s face softened — a millimeter, a hint — and the faces behind her showed the relief of an exhale. “Balance,” she said, not as command but as consent.
“We expose them in a way they cannot contain,” he said, and the plan was as simple as it was dangerous: the ledger would be copy-bombed — a term he’d heard once from a clerk in a port town. Make as many copies as possible, distribute them to every hall where law lingered, to every preacher and tavern, to every mother who had had a child taken in the night. Flood the city with truth until silence was impossible. “I don’t need them to,” Kyou said
Kyou’s laugh went dry. “Sometimes leaving is the only way to get back.”
For the first time in months, Kyou felt a possibility that was not hollow. He had no love for triumph; his victories were small and often lined with cost. But this was different: it was not just a win; it was a reckoning. Talren’s opening of the archives did not come cleanly. There were delays, and then poison. A caravan carrying their records caught fire on the road; an anonymous donor paid a string of guards to be elsewhere. Talren’s allies whispered of defamation suits and private tribunals. They vowed retribution with the kind of certainty reserved for men who had sculpted fairness out of the misfortunes of others. My aunt says heroes leave when trouble comes
“Then why stay a hero?” Mikke asked. “You can be other things. My cousin says heroes are like cows: they keep getting milked until they’re nothing but leather.”