I Am a Villain, So What? - Chapter 148: Manual
"...As expected, the legend of that person survived the Great Collapse," he said softly. "But no. I am not the Executioner. I was a Shadow-Blade. I fought alongside them, yes, but I could never reach even the hem of their cloak."
My mind raced. šš³šššš¦š£šÆā“š£š¦š.š¤šš
If the Great Collapseāthe catastrophe that destroyed the Holy Empireāhappened over a hundred years ago... how was this man standing here?
Was this Dungeon trapped in a time loop? Or was it a spatial anomaly born from the lingering regrets of the dead?
"This world," the revolutionary gestured to the sickly yellow sky, "feels like itās blocked by an invisible barrier. Impossible to leave. For the first few years, I fought that tree demon over there. But no matter how many times I cut it down, it rose again. There was no resolution. It was as if the world itself was delaying our final showdown."
He sighed, resting his hand on the hilt of a sword at his waist.
"So, we formed a silent agreement not to interfere with each other. The demon corrodes this forest, burning it in an endless cycle, and Iāve been observing it. Like a hamster running on a wheel."
"We call this place a Dungeon," I explained, lowering my rifle slightly. "We entered through a spatial tear in the Fern Kingdomās Ecological Park."
"The Fern Kingdom..." The man murmured.
"Itās been over a hundred years since the Holy Empire fell, old man."
"...Ah. I see."
He fell silent. There was no shock, only a deep, profound resignation steeped in regret. He looked at his pale, slightly translucent hands.
"Then I am already dead. I am merely a component of this Dungeon. An echo."
The Holy Assassin reached into his tattered robes and pulled out a thick, leather-bound folder. He held it out to me.
"Please, deliver this to the Executioner."
"Iāve only heard the legends," I replied, shaking my head. "I donāt know where they are. Besides, I canāt take physical items out of a Dungeon anomaly like this. Once the boss dies, the space collapses, and everything native to it turns to ash."
"So many restrictions," he chuckled bitterly. "It wouldāve been nice to meet the Executioner in person one last time."
He shook his head and moved to tuck the folder back into his robes.
But my gut screamed at me. That folder was a hidden piece of lore. A legacy item. I couldnāt let it slip away.
"Wait," I said quickly. "Thereās someone you might know."
"Hm?"
"Someone who, under his mentorās orders, denied all the morals and beliefs heād learned his entire life. He acknowledged āevilā just to barely escape the Churchās purge. The former Chief Researcher of the Lumeveil Dimension Research Institute... Merle."
The revolutionaryās eyes widened. A genuine, warm smile broke through his weary facade.
"Merle...?" He exhaled a shaky breath, pulling the folder back out. "Itās a relief that young friend survived. I owed the Instituteās Director so much. It weighed on me that I was adding to that debt without even paying the interest."
He looked at me, his gaze piercing.
"The will of the dead is carried on by the living, isnāt it? Faith never falters."
"It doesnāt," I agreed.
"Sorry for burdening you. Since you canāt take it out, itād be good if you could at least memorize it. What is your name, distant descendant?"
"Lucien. Lucien Ashborne."
"Alright, Lucien. This manual compiles my martial arts and training methods. Its origins might be lost to history, but it will surely help you... a man who has already awakened the Divine Force."
I flinched.
He noticed.
Then, the puzzle pieces clicked together. The "familiar yet unfamiliar" presence I had felt when he appeared... it was the resonance of Divine Force.
"You have the spark, but you donāt seem to know how to use it, do you?" the revolutionary asked, his eyes crinkling in amusement.
"Thatās right."
Thanks to the game, I knew the superficial mechanics of Divine Force. But in Asteria Online, there was no system setting to actually learn how to manifest it properly, because the only people who knew how were wiped out a century ago. It was a lost art.
"Well, referencing this manual will be a good experience for you. Seeing a comrade wielding that light after so long puts me in an excellent mood."
He tossed the folder. I caught it.
"While you handle that," the nameless revolutionary drew the twin swords from his waist. The blades hummed with a brilliant, blinding white light. "Iāll go put an end to this endless cycle."
FWOOSH.
With a flash of pure light, he vanished.
He didnāt run. He teleported. It was the Holy Empireās supreme secret footwork: [Flash (Blink)].
[GAAAAH! MY NEMESIS!]
The Treantās roar shook the earth as the revolutionary materialized directly above it, his twin swords glowing like miniature suns.
"Letās end this, old friend!" the ghost shouted, diving into the fray alongside the stunned Protagonist Party.
With him joining, the raid was going to end in minutes.
āI have to hurry.ā
While the sky lit up with explosions of holy light, ice, and fire, I opened the leather folder.
My eyes scanned the ancient, handwritten pages. The text burned itself into my retinas, the diagrams and mana pathways downloading directly into my brain.
As I read the first few pages, my breath hitched.
"...My God."
****
The battle against the Primordial Blight-Root lasted nearly an hour, turning the rotting valley into a cratered wasteland of ice, fire, and acid.
Mariella summoned torrential storms to douse the corrosive green flames, while Elishaās arrows relentlessly targeted the Treantās weak pointsāthe glowing, sap-filled hollows that served as its eyes and mouth. Even as the enraged giant swung its massive, whip-like roots, Bordonās Earth Avatar held the frontline, allowing Kael and Celestia to tear into the monsterās hardened flesh.
And then, the vanguard was joined by a ghost.
The nameless revolutionary moved like a streak of pure starlight. Wielding his twin swords, he bypassed the physical defenses entirely, his blades slicing through the corrupted mana cores hidden deep within the wood.
[Ahhh! It burns! It burns!]
The Blight-Root let out a final, agonizing shriek that shook the very fabric of the spatial anomaly.
[Even if I die... my kin arenāt here to see the rot spread! Aaargh!]
With a blinding flash from the revolutionaryās cross-slash, the colossal Treant imploded. It collapsed in on itself, turning into a mountain of gray ash that blew away in the suddenly still wind.
"Haa... haa...!" Bordon dropped to his knees, his shield dissipating. "That was... tough!"
"We protected the frontline well today, too!" Mariella cheered weakly, using her staff to stay upright.
"We... we actually did it," Elisha breathed, lowering her bow, her hands shaking from mana exhaustion.
As the party prepared to savor their hard-fought victory, Kaelās focus remained fixed on the sudden ally.
āThat person...ā Kael thought, his grip on his golden sword tightening.
Though dressed in shabby, soot-covered clothes, Kael couldnāt miss the fabricās once-noble quality. More importantly, he recognized the faint, glowing embroidery of the crossed guns and the sunāthe lofty crest of a forgotten belief.
Kael approached the figure, who was slowly sheathing his twin swords.
"Are you, perhaps... a Holy Assassin?" Kael asked cautiously.
The revolutionary paused, turning his weary eyes toward the young swordsman.
"Hm? You recognize this crest, young man?"
"How could I not?" Kaelās voice trembled with a mix of reverence and hidden sorrow. "My grandparents were from the Holy Empire."
And I am a Crown Prince without a country, inheriting the Imperial bloodline. Kael swallowed the latter part. It was a secret he couldnāt reveal, not even to his closest friends.
"Itās classified," the ghost chuckled softly, "but with the Empire gone, thereās no need to hide it anymore. Yes. I was a Holy Assassin. I served the Executioner. And I heard... you are from a hundred years after the Great Collapse?"
"Thatās right," Kael bowed deeply. "I am Kael Ardyn. My grandparents escaped the Holy Empire during the Great Collapse and sought refuge in the Aurelian Empire."
Kael hadnāt been born during the Empireās fall. But through his grandparents, who had lived through the apocalypse, he inherited the Empireās spiritāits radiant glory, its martial arts, and its unyielding faith in the grand cosmic order of the Divine.
"Hm. I see," the ghost smiled, a look of profound peace settling over his translucent features. "Today is a special day. To hear news of my homeland, and to meet its descendants twice in one hour."
Kael flinched. Twice?
Now was the time to ask.
"Um...!" Kael took a step forward. "You were talking to Cadet Lucien earlier, werenāt you? Is Lucien also from the Holy Empire? Is he... is he the Executionerās successor?!"
RUMBLE!
The question was cut off by a deafening roar. The ground violently shook.
"Eek!" "Whoa?!"
It was a tremor so intense that even seasoned warriors like Bordon lost their balance. It wasnāt just an earthquake; the spatial walls of the Dungeon were crumbling. With the boss dead, the pocket dimension was collapsing to return to reality.
"It is time," the Holy Assassin said, his legs already turning into motes of golden light. "Time to part, young heroes of the future."
Kael reached out desperately. "Wait! I have to know! Who is Lucien Ashborne?!"
The revolutionary looked at Kael, his form fading into the wind.
"Ask that Lucien fellow himself."
With those final words, the nameless revolutionary vanished like smoke, ascending after completing his century-long mission. Into eternal rest.
Kael stood there, lowering his hand. He deeply regretted not getting a straight answer, but in his mind, he was already completely certain.
āLucien is a member of the Executioners. Or a direct descendant of the Executioner...
Kael offered a silent prayer for the loyal servant of their fallen homeland, his respect for the "Trash of the Academy" skyrocketing to dangerous levels of misunderstanding.
The world trembled as it began to reconstruct.
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