The Villainous Me Turned the Losers into Blackened Bosses - Chapter 297 - The One Born from "Death"
For two days since emerging from âDemon Castle Zero,â Shuna had asked herself...
Why go to Will? đ»đđŠđŠđžâŻđ·đđ°đâŻđ.đ€đ°đź
Why return to him after he told her to leave, again and again?
Why fish him out again and again, after he kept falling into traps he himself created, tormented by various womenâs twisted affections? Once was okay, twice forgiveable, but three times?!
Indeed, sheâd thought about it while wandering in the pure white void of âWillâs memoryââ
Let those three women have him. They canât truly hurt him, right? Let them play with him. Maybe eventually heâll realize I, the stable one, am best.
But...
The image that haunted her was the Boss sheâd faced in Willâs memory. The one who was... her.
He called himself Shu. Black hair, black eyes, like her. Similar moves. Similar aura. Similar eyes.
But they were different. Shuna knew it the moment he tossed that coin, willing to let chance decide everything.
In Shuâs heart, the âWillâ that mattered was gone. Heâd lost more than a person; heâd lost hope itself. She didnât know why he existed in Willâs memory, why he was so like her, or if he was out there in the world somewhere now.
But if he was, then he was merely living on the inertia of âloss.â
She didnât want that.
Too...
Too ugly.
A candle with its wick pulled. A machine with its gears stripped. A rabbit with its heart gouged out. The shell remained, standing as if nothing happened, perhaps even capable of a few steps. But empty inside.
Shuna glanced out the carriage window. The scenery was stark. Winter had arrived, stripping the leaves from even the most perfectly aligned trees. The clean-swept road was bordered by dirty, frozen snowâevidence of a long, heavy snowfall.
Night was falling.
Yes.
After a brief rest, she had decided to go to the Hysterm estateâs annexâthe place sheâd last seen in Willâs memory. Luckily, it wasnât too far from the capital, though sheâd likely arrive at night.
The man sheâd met in Willâs memoryâhe felt like her âfuture,â or a version of her that could exist. She wouldnât become that ugly.
âStill some time. Been a while since I slept... Not sleepy, but maybe I can close my eyes and think.â
Sitting in the carriage, Shuna closed her eyes.
What had Shu gone through? If he was âlikeâ her... Black hair, black eyes, âbornâ in a dungeonâperhaps a child born in the dungeon, a child who killed the Dungeon Emperor?
Maybe her first memory in this world was the answerâ
Like facing her fears in Luciferâs dungeon, she could easily replay that first memory.
Eyes slowly opening to hands covered in blood, gripping a dagger. Mechanical, detached, swinging at the monster on the ground, again and again. The wounds were so deep, the blood flowed sluggishly.
âWho am I?
âWhere am I?
âWhat am I doing?
She felt her hands slow, regaining control of her body. The strength became that of a 13-year-old girl. The ultimate questions flooded her mind.
But worse than having no answers was the instant presence of answersâ
âKill...
âKill everything in the dungeon...
âKill everything of the dungeon you see...
âGo, go, go, good girl.
She picked up the dagger, the tip glinting as her trembling fingers turned it toward her throat.
âRight.
âYou are born of the dungeon.
âYou are part of the dungeon.
âDo it. Everything in the dungeon must die by your hand.
She obeyed the âanswers,â watching the blade tremble. She knew it wasnât someone else speaking; it was her.
Who am I? âYou are a monster born in the dungeon.
Where am I? âYou are in the dungeon.
What am I doing? âYou are a Godseeker; you must kill dungeon life to progress. Strike.
Smooth, closed-loop answers. Logic riddled with holes, yet terrifyingly self-contained. Thinking back, Shuna never feared the blood or her own ruthless attacks. She feared...
The self who could turn a blade on her own throat, emotionless, utterly detached.
But she hadnât succeeded. Just as the tip touched her skin, a dungeon-clearing party arrived. Urgent, coincidental. She didnât remember their faces, only that the leader was a kind-looking man.
They were âgood people,â rescuing the enigmatic âorphanâ found within the dungeon. They told her she was humanâmarked by the Godseekerâs symbol, a blessing from the goddess Rievaulx, and free of dungeon magic traces. Theyâd send her to the Polrol orphanage for a good education. Polrol children could attend Entark Second Academy, becoming skilled dungeon fighters. She could explore dungeons if she wished, but needed a reliable team.
They said many things. Though she didnât understand why she, born in a dungeon, understood their language, they saw her as âhuman,â believed in her potential, even planned her future.
âThat child... somethingâs off.â
âYeah. No records before thirteen years ago. Not from adventurer parents.â
âAre you crazy? What adventurer couple takes a kid into a 50-floor dungeon?! And no bodies?!â
âYouâve got a point. But the kid killed the Boss with a dagger. She might be talented.â
âSigh. Hope she makes it. Tough start for a kid.â
âUm... excuse me...â
She interrupted the orphanage caretakers. Their eyes held fearâfear of âdeath.â
âIâm confused...â
âWhat does it mean... to âliveâ?â
Theyâthe adventurers, the caretakers, the orphanage investorâtold her everything about the world outside. Except this one thing everyone seemed to take for granted...
What âdeathâ was, what âlivingâ was.
But...
She understood death. The blade against her throat, closing inâthat was death. She feared it, yet longed for it. Was it because her first act was to kill, her second to kill herself? Or was she born for death, for death in the dungeon?
The colorful books they showed her felt meaningless. The toys were just blocks. Natureâs beauty was merely life destined to wither.
She was born of death. Born with the Emperorâs demise. Marked by the Goddessâs blessing, facing her own blade, her first memory was the fear of death. A blank slate, yesâbut inscribed with death.
She understood death from birth.
But not âliving.â
Not until...
She picked up that help letter.
...
âMiss? Miss?â The coachmanâs voice jolted her awake. She opened her eyes, breathing shallowly.
Now, the memory no longer held power. Waking from it was just a breathâback to the self who craved life.
âAre you sure you want to go to the Hysterm estate annex, miss?â
âYes. I know itâs probably empty. But an old friend asked me to pick something up.â
âAlright. But... I donât think itâs a good place.â
âWhy?â
âWeâve reached the limit. Miss, why donât you... step out and take a look?â
Shuna stepped down. Before her stood a castle of ice and snow, like something from a childâs fairy taleâor a dungeon. The Hysterm estate, from roof to trees, was buried in thick snow.
Itâs winter, of course, she thought. Nothing strange.
But then she saw the clear sky, the bright sun, the melted patches everywhere else.
Only here...
The Hysterm annex and its surroundings remained locked in the grip of a fierce, recent blizzard.
â
Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.