But Klaus smiled, "They'll get it even if they don't use my strategies. Instead of telling them to do sothing this way, you should tell them to learn to strategize as they go along. Missions are not the sa, ever. There will always be variations, whether by power, skills, or opponents. If they were to use one and the sa strategy every ti, they're going to fail more than they'll win."
"That would be in the long run, and I don't think we need to get to it."
"Haha, well, who knows? Maybe soone would fail on their first chance to use it and scare the crap out of the rest."
They both stared at each other after this small but stinging talk in which neither wanted to give in.
Sua had her reasons; she wanted to make the organization great. But Klaus had them, too.
'The main reason is that I can't tell you that I succeeded so quickly, solely because Ronan lacks capable subordinates. If I told you, I would lose my lead in this situation, which would be foolish.' Klaus thought.
In the end, Sua lost the staring match and sighed. "Forget it; I can't force you to do sothing you don't want to, " She said, pulling out a new docunt. Enjoy new chapters from empire
"Since I read this, I realized that a big part of what it says here is a lie. Now that I don't have the main problem on the table anymore, I think it's ti to talk, " she said, staring at him.
"There's not much to talk about."
"Maybe, but I'm curious, why do you want to give Carion so much of the credit? I don't think you guys are very close."
"I also don't think you've been there to know if I'm giving him credit or if he deserves it."
Sua shook her head, grumbling. "I asked him a few questions before I ca, and I'm sure he had almost no relevance to anything you ntioned here. He may have relevance, but not to the point of having been the one to have discovered everything about Ronan. In fact, if there's one thing you don't know that I do, it's that Carion isn't very good at thinking up stratagems. He's pretty bad, in fact." She smiled and made Klaus feel frustrated.
"Tsk, so in the end, I would lose over sothing so small." He grumbled, realizing he couldn't keep up his bluff. But he wasn't angry; he continued to stare at Sua.
"He deserves it; he's worthy of receiving it. Give him status and resources, and he will amaze you." He replied.
"How are you so sure?" Sua asked, frowning.
"Because he has the ntality." Klaus's firmness in answering astonished Sua.
"ntality is not enough." She shook her head, and Klaus shrugged.
"I'm not here to convince you of that, Miss Sua. I'm just here to deliver the mission and the rest of the information I have. I'm just saying what I know and that you ask ." After saying this, Klaus pulled out several written docunts and a few more items to hand over to her.
Sua sighed visibly. "You're kind of obnoxious, you know?" she said, looking at him. However, after seeing that Klaus didn't plan to act, she read the docunts quickly and nodded.
"There's not much ti today for this, Klaus. We didn't manage to grab Ronan, so we had to start looking for him again. Let's talk about this tomorrow morning. I'll co visit you at the apartnt to deliver what you asked for, OK?"
"Okay, Miss Sua. Then it will be like this. See you tomorrow." After that, Klaus stood up and started walking before stopping after reaching the door.
He looked at Sua once again.
"Talent is just a set of innate abilities developed specifically towards sothing specific. If it's a sport, you can get better faster at it and outperform your counterparts because of your talent, but, in the long run, that sport is just a very centralized set of small branches. Each one is different, and you have to get better at them, but at the end of the day, they're little branches."
"Talent will make it easier for you to reach the pinnacle of each branch, but the ntality will help you stay in that perfect state of understanding. Also, with a good ntality, a person who is not talented can still improve in each of those branches and reach the pinnacle, although it will possibly take longer than the talented one."
"But, at the end of it all, the right ntality reached the pinnacle more than talent. The difference is that the right ntality can hold that pinnacle longer than talent. Now, when you are both standing on the pinnacle of those branches, tell , what is talent good for?" At this point, Klaus smiled.
"It has only one use: to create. It will create new branches within the sport but won't go higher than the ntality. Both are standing on the sa pinnacles; only now does talent have the slight advantage of being a bit more versatile. Eventually, the ntality will manage to learn that branch and catch up to the talent again. And that's where the fascinators of the right mindset co in."
"Talent has a limit; the limit is in the mind. No one can create things infinitely, not even a correct ntality. Therefore, when talent runs out of ideas, he will decay because he cannot maintain it. But the ntality will remain firmly standing on a pedestal, always remaining strong."
"It is the ntality that will make you a person to be feared, not your talent." After smiling at her one last ti and waving goodbye, Klaus walked through the door and left without looking back.
His words left Sua deep in thought.
'A right mindset can hold power longer than talent, eh? If you put it that way, I guess it makes a lot of sense. Although, if I had to say sothing, you've skipped a lot of things to say that, Klaus.' Though she thought so, the smile on her face could not be hidden.
Sohow, she felt her bet had hit the nail on the head. 'I knew it; there's no way a person who wrapped up The Professor so easily and quietly would be normal. Even more so because he managed to keep in his hand at all tis. The gamble was a risky one, but I got a treasure.' She smiled but also looked a little worried.
"Treasures attract treasure hunters; treasure hunters attract trouble. But this guy is also a walking source of trouble..." She muttered. "Even though the bet was right, trouble cos with it. Winning a bet always attracts consequences, after all."
Her words vanished in the wind, as did her figure.
.
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