I Really Didn't Mean To Be The Saviour Of The World-Chapter 1132 - 672 Completing the Incomplete Puzzle_1
Chapter 1132: Chapter 672: Completing the Incomplete Puzzle_1
This content is taken from fгee𝑤ebɳoveɭ.cøm.
Chapter 1132 -672: Completing the Incomplete Puzzle_1
The father and son’s figures shifted, appearing in a base ship’s pre-battle preparation room.
Roger Baker pointed to a man and woman saying their goodbyes, “This is Oswell Mali and Jennifer Omor. They are a married couple. Oswell is an S-class Warrior, specializing in controlling multiple intelligent warfare devices at the same time, similar to your specialty. Jennifer is an intelligence analyst, skilled in finding missing pieces from complex background interference that artificial intelligence overlooks, particularly adept at dealing with complex space physics environments.”
The so-called space physics environments include two aspects: first, the interference caused by physical properties such as magnetic fields, plasma fields, electromagnetic wave fields, and radiation fields; second, obstruction caused by actual materials, such as Saturn’s rings, asteroid belts, cosmic meteorite fragmentation zones, and nebulous clouds.
“Each specialized operations team has a clear division of labor, organically combining individuals with different strengths. This division of labor is very strict, utilizing the barrel effect to the extreme. The more elite the team, the more each member’s strengths must complement each other without any gaps. In past missions, this couple had been inseparable on the same team. However, during the Z-Star March Battle, their action team suffered heavy casualties, and their team had to be reorganized. They faced a choice a month later.”
“They could either separate and join different corresponding teams based on their abilities, or they could continue to force a combination. But, under the principle of being responsible for others and themselves, they would have to maintain the double team mode and could only join a secondary special operations team, utilizing their stronger individual abilities to make up for the deficiencies in their organic combination.”
Nico Ross asked, “How did they choose?”
“They chose to separate. A month and a half later, Jennifer’s team was surrounded by the enemy after completing 33 missions and was annihilated.”
Nico Ross: “Oswell shouldn’t have any regrets, right? After all, there’s the mark of fate.”
“No, he regretted it. He cried for about ten minutes and then abandoned his bereavement leave, throwing himself back into the mission. When the psychological interventionist asked him, he said that although he regretted it, given another chance, he would still choose the first option with his wife. In one of the 33 tasks completed by Jennifer’s team before, she discovered some anomalies and changed the plan during tactical formulation, allocating ten times more military strength, and we counterambushed the enemy. Without Jennifer’s excellent performance in reconnaissance, Oswell would have been killed earlier. In addition, Jennifer’s team had completed several over-fulfilled tasks before sacrificing, reducing many losses for us and achieving greater results.”
Nico Ross: “So Oswell doesn’t blame fate, because Jennifer’s sacrifice allowed more people to survive?”
“Yes, do you have any thoughts now?”
Nico Ross pondered for a moment and said, “Driven by collective needs, individuals of a civilization are truly small and fragile.”
Roger Baker was secretly shocked.
He could never have imagined that Nico Ross would say such a thing.
Nico Ross was very likely to be the reincarnated Harrison Clark, the mightiest contributor currently recognized by all mankind. How could he harbor such a narrow-minded concept?
“Nico Ross, you…”
“But I think that when Oswell and Jennifer made their decisions, they both received a sense of peace strong enough to last until they died. This is very great. They may be small, but they are not humble.”
Upon hearing this, Roger Baker breathed a sigh of relief.
Nico Ross continued, “I hope that one day in the future, no one will have to face such choices.”
Roger Baker: “That would signify that we have achieved eternal peace.”
“Yes.”
“Let me show you some other people.”
In the next half hour, Roger Baker took Nico Ross deep into the details of the battle, witnessing the farewells of countless husbands and wives, fathers and sons, fathers and daughters, mothers and sons, mothers and daughters, and blood-sworn friends.
Roger Baker showed Nico Ross how people in the war era dealt with all kinds of personal emotions, such as family affection, love, and friendship on the front lines.
Each of these stories, from an individual perspective, ended mostly in tragedy, but if their contributions and marks left in the universe before their deaths were considered, they would all be “happy endings” in some sense.
“Over the past thousand years, it is these countless bittersweet tragedies, filled with regrets, that have shaped our present. They have allowed us to withstand the onslaught of the Compound-Eyed Observer’s three-pronged attack in the Cloudtop Star Region, giving us a glimpse of victory for the first time. Today, I showed you the Z-Star March Battle, and your understanding of sacrifice mainly occurs on the battlefield. But, if we go back further in time, countless scientists, workers, politicians, and entrepreneurs have been working tirelessly for more value in human life. Among these people, many have already acquired time, financial, and life freedom, but they still struggle for their whole lives. If we talk about sacrifice, death in battle is sacrifice, as is tirelessly working and struggling throughout life, enduring the pain of living. Nico Ross, what do you think their motivations were?”