Raw Chapter 46.1 Yuusha Party O Oida Sareta Kiyou Binbou File
The ink was still wet on the dismissal notice, though “notice” was a generous word for a crumpled sheet of parchment shoved into Kael’s chest by the Hero’s own gauntleted hand.
But clever poor people don’t just survive.
They didn’t want clever. They wanted shiny.
Effective immediately. Your services are no longer required. Reason: Incompatible with party synergy. Raw chapter 46.1 YUUSHA PARTY O OIDA SARETA KIYOU BINBOU
“Let’s see how long he lasts alone,” the Mage said, loud enough for Kael to hear. “Poor people don’t become heroes. They become footnotes.”
And Kael knew exactly where to invest his first three copper pieces. End of Raw Chapter 46.1
He was the “Kiyou Binbou”—the clever poor person. The one who could stretch a single copper piece into a week’s worth of trail rations. The one who could repair a torn leather boot with tar, spider silk, and sheer desperation. The one who never had the right bloodline, the blessed lineage, or the flashy天赋—but who always, always kept the party alive. The ink was still wet on the dismissal
Kael adjusted the strap of his sack. He didn’t argue. He never did. Words were expensive. Arguments cost energy. And he had exactly 43 copper coins to his name.
Kael read it three times as the campfire crackled behind him. Synergy. That was the word they used after he had calculated the exact angle for a Ricochet Arrow to pierce a Lich’s phylactery through three walls of bone. Synergy was what they claimed he lacked when he suggested rationing the high-grade mana potions instead of letting the mage use them as chasers for his morning ale.
They kicked out the clever poor person.
They compound .
But as he walked into the darkening woods, he allowed himself a small, quiet smile.
The Hero’s party didn’t know that the “minor dungeon of negligible threat” was actually the abandoned laboratory of a miserly Archmage who had hidden his fortune in puzzles no noble-born fighter could solve. They didn’t know that Kael had been decoding the napkin map for six months, using their campfire hours to memorize patterns while they slept. They wanted shiny
So now Kael stood at the edge of the forest, his belongings in a burlap sack that smelled of old potatoes. His entire net worth: 43 copper coins, a bent sewing needle, half a loaf of black bread, and a map drawn on a tavern napkin that supposedly led to a “minor dungeon of negligible threat.”
The Hero’s party had already turned their backs. The Warrior was laughing. The Priestess didn’t even look up from her prayer book.