General Hawan was naturally overjoyed, secretly delighted, and had Black Shark's previously promised reward increased to five times what it was before. This was indeed an immense squeeze, and Black Shark, under the pressure of the situation, had no choice but to agree.
This action was indeed unethical, with no sense of trustworthiness.
However, General Hawan was never one to keep promises. He had agreed with the head of the Poisonous Dragon Mercenary Corps to rescue Black Shark, motivated by money, naturally not someone to keep promises, treating the rescue merely as a business transaction.
What Hawan wanted to do was to use the deaths of his subordinates to exchange for more capital for himself.
This was a highly profitable business, and Hawan naturally wanted to seize such an opportunity.
As for the lives of his subordinates, they were mere worthless lives, he wouldn't care.
In fact, he hoped the more his men died, the better, so he could ask for even more capital.
