So, using this moment to memorise the faces of all those traitors was a good chance he wouldn't miss. He went to the side, almost a hundred metres away from the elders before sitting on a big sofa with the two girls.
"Are we going to be alright?" Tina said in a shaky childish tone.
"Sorry for all the trouble we brought for the young master," Lina said in a sincere apologetic tone.
Since the beginning, the girls never spoke a single word. But since things became clear about what was going on, Tina was scared, and Lina was burdened with guilt.
"It's nothing much," William could read through the two girls' minds, "in fact I'm destined to cross paths with such people sooner or later. So, no harm in doing this early on."
He wasn't trying to console them. In fact, he felt gratitude for his own luck this time.
Knowing about his enemies from earlier was a blessing not a curse for him. The most dangerous enemy to him was the one he was ignorant about.