• Van had just left Lalyn’s house after erasing Magus’s influence, undetected.

    ‘It’s for the best. She’s not a brutalizer like Anne, so she won’t lose herself…’

    ‘…Who am I kidding?’ He looked down at his palm, flexing his fingers. ‘I just didn’t want to be the one dealing with the fallout she’s gonna have.’

    ‘Whatever. I guess I’m done in this Capital. Last but not least would be to tell my plans to Varlog and Belial… and tell Amoria about what I decided to do with Marcy and Lalyn.’

    ‘After that, it’s over.’

    ‘…Until I go to the Dragon King, force him to stop, then the feline tribe to stop the war… ugh…’

    He looked up at the sky with a deep sigh.

    ‘I’m so not in the mood.’

    Van came to a stop, facing a figure standing in the darkness.

    “What’s up?” Van asked, his tone rasp.

    “I’m goin’ back to the demon realm,” Belial muttered, looking away, his eyes narrowed in frustration.

    “Thought you wanted to stay here, at least until I’m done with what I need to do. What happened?” Van asked as Belial pulled a teleportation stone from his pocket, juggling it lightly.

    “The stronger you are…” He cleared his throat. “The ‘closer’ you are to your God. At least me, who’s born fucking strong.”

    “Alright.” Van nodded.

    “I can hear him in my head, Van.” Belial sighed, letting the teleportation stone slip from his fingers. “A voice that tells me to return to that shithole.”

    Van hummed in curiosity, tilting his head.

    ‘The more I hear about the gods, the more reason I have to despise them… I guess whoever’s strong will be used. Whoever has strength must use it. They’ll never be able to stop fighting. And now, a god tortures someone strong just because they can…’

    His mind flashed back to his time with the Royal Guard. He grimaced.

    ‘What a dogshit world.’

    “Something’s gonna go down,” Belial growled. “Came to say my goodbyes. Out of all the fucks here, you’re the one who actually deserves it.”

    FAR FROM THE CAPITAL

    Knight slammed his fist against an invisible veil—a barrier. But no matter how hard he struck, it wouldn’t break.

    [Ah… Hello, Wretch.]

    The Goddess’s voice slithered into his mind, laced with amusement.

    [I was worried about your arrival, but turns out I was worried for nothing. I thought maybe—just maybe—you had some grand plan to warn Hellix about Belial’s powers. But…] A small pause. [I really overestimated you.]

    Knight growled.

    [Have you forgotten? The moment we ascend, we can no longer interact with mortals directly—until we gather significant followers. Like me.] There was a smirk in her tone. [We can only whisper. And even then, our whispers must be brief.]

    [And considering he doesn’t even acknowledge the Seed of Darkness…] She sighed mockingly. [Doesn’t even try to reach out to you… What a shame. You can’t warn him… And you came all this way.]

    Her gaze darkened.

    [His own resilience will be the thing that leads to his downfall. How poetic.]

    ———————

    Van exhaled. “…I see. Are you gonna use that to go back?” He motioned toward the teleportation stone.

    “Yeah.” Belial bent down and picked it up.

    “Send my regards to Alicia.”

    Belial scoffed, smirking. “Regards? Shit, I’ll tell her you asked about her.”

    The teleportation stone began to glow. Destination: Demonic Realm, Alicia’s castle.

    ——————————

    [No. Whore of a thousand nights.]

    Knight’s growl tore through the void.

    [..!?]

    The Goddess’s eyes narrowed. Something had changed.

    [This shan’t go in your direction.]

    A black whirlwind erupted around him, tearing through the darkness—roaring, burning, consuming everything in its path.

    [WHAT ARE YOU DOING, YOU WRETCH!?]

    Her voice thundered, laced with fury.

    Knight stood firm, the storm raging around him.

    […Something a whore like you could NEVER do…!]

    His growl was low, deep—absolute.

    [I AM A KNIGHT.]

    The void trembled. The black whirlwind around him surged—burning hotter, roaring louder.

    [I SHALL GIVE MY LIFE—MY ETERNITY—FOR WHAT I BELIEVE IN!]

    The storm cracked, swallowing everything in its path.

    [AND I BELIEVE IN YOUR DEMISE—IN THE DEATH OF YOUR VERY CONCEPT!]

    A sharp click of her tongue echoed through her palace.

    [Dauz…] Her voice was low, seething. [It seems you finally got what you wanted. Go. Grab him.]

    She turned away, frustration darkening her eyes.

    Dauz exhaled slowly, a smirk creeping onto his lips.

    ‘Knight… I always knew you had it in you.’

    His wings spread wide. And then, he dove.

    ———————————-

    Van turned just as Belial’s teleportation began.

    [A BEING VEILED IN SHADOWS SACRIFICED THEIR IMMORTALITY TO SHARE AN ABILITY WITH YOU TEMPORARILY!]

    ‘..? What the—’

    [ACTIVE SKILL: Abyss Knight’s Vision]

    [Description: You can see the person you look at’s stats and abilities.]

    Van’s gaze locked onto Belial.

    And his breath stilled.

    His heart sank.

    Demonic Attraction.
    Demonic Submission.
    Demonic Superiority.
    Demonic—

    He didn’t need to read their descriptions. He knew them by heart.
    Magus’s equivalent.

    [Strike him down, Van Hellix.]

    A voice slithered through his mind, the same voice that whispered to him when he first awakened the Seed of Darkness.

    [Take CONTROL of your destiny. PREVENT him from taking what’s rightfully YOURS.]

    It was filled with wrath.
    With vengeance.
    With the hunger for domination.

    Van took a deep breath.

    He was right.

    [KILL HIM. KILL THAT WHORESON BEFORE HE SNATCHES YOUR HAPPINESS AWAY FROM YOU…!]

    His hand moved. Instinctively. Reaching for the greatsword strapped to his back.

    “What the..?” Belial murmured as Van’s hand shot out—not for his sword, but for the teleportation stone.

    He yanked it away.

    His other hand clamped over Belial’s face.

    Van’s gaze bore into Belial’s.

    For a brief moment, he didn’t see Belial. He saw Magus.

    He was tired.

    He could see it so clearly now, as the glow of Belial’s skills burned in his Abyssal Vision.

    There would always be another plot twist.
    Another scheme.
    Another twist of fate waiting to throw him into battle.

    And in that moment, he wanted just one thing.

    To stop fighting.
    To love.
    To live.

    ‘You didn’t choose these skills… But they exist.’

    Van closed his eyes.

    They were tangible.

    Real.

    Now, something he could see.

    Like the wind. Like aura.
    Like armor wrapped around a body.

    Stuff.

    And what do you do with stuff?

    ‘You can swing it away.’

    Van’s eyes snapped open, glowing blue. His hand burned with the same light—

    The light of a skill being activated.

    “[HARD SWING]!”

    A whirlwind of aura exploded around them, spiraling into the heavens.

    Belial’s skills vanished one by one.
    His strength drained from his body.

    “Ah…! Hah… Hahaha…!!”

    Belial’s expression twisted from pain to ecstasy.

    “This… Hahaha… I…”

    The aura of the Archdevil surrounding him began to dissolve, fading into the night like embers in the wind.

    The storm raged.

    […] Knight’s voice went silent.

    “I don’t hear his voice anymore, Van…!! I…”

    Belial let out a ragged sob, his eyes locked on the sky, watching his own aura leave his body.

    “I’M FUCKING FREE NOW!! HAHAHAHA!!”

    His arms shot up, grabbing Van’s wrist, pressing Van’s hand harder against his face.

    Van kept swinging. The skill continued to strip Belial of the power that once enslaved him.

    “I’m taking your skills and strength away! Aren’t you mad!?” Van yelled over the roaring winds.

    “MAD!!? MAD THAT YOU AIN’T MARRYING ME, MORE LIKE!! HAHAHAHAHA!!!”

    Belial’s laughter rang through the storm, his entire body shaking.

    “KEEP GOING!! HAHAHAHA!! I’M FINALLY FREE, VAN!!!”

    Van smirked—a warm, knowing smirk.

    The last of Belial’s strength dissipated into red dust, piercing the heavens before vanishing completely.

    And then, Belial collapsed.

    A smile still on his face.

    He lay there, staring up at the clear night sky.

    Van lowered his hand.

    Abyssal Vision was still active.

    [NAME: Belial Asmodeus]
    [AGE: 44]
    [SEX: Male]
    [RACE: Demon]

    [LEVEL: 10]

    [STATS:]

    [VIG: 100]
    [STR: 100]
    [RES: 100]
    [DEX: 100]
    [MANA: 0]

    [SKILLS:]

    [NONE.]

    Belial stretched his limbs as far as they would go, fingers brushing lazily against the dirt.

    Van’s gaze flicked to him.

    ‘His stats are gone too…? Hm. Is it because I banished his demonic aura? The one that tied him to the Archdevil…?’

    “I can breathe now, Van… Fuck… HAHAHA… This is the best feeling I’ve had—ohhh…”

    He sprawled out further, sinking into the earth like he had never truly felt it before.

    “…I should fuck off from here, though. As much as I’d love to talk to people, I don’t have the magic to keep up a fake appearance anymore.” Belial exhaled, eyes shutting. “I’d rather not get slaughtered.”

    Van hummed. A thought flickered through his mind.

    “…I got an idea.”

    Arnolt’s image surfaced in his head.

    “You like blacksmithing, right?”

    “…!” Belial’s head snapped up. A grin spread across his face.

    “Blacksmithing, huh…?”


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  • “…Before you tell me what you wanna tell me,” Marcy interrupted, holding his gaze. “I feel like I need to get drunk first. I’m demanding.”

    “But you can’t—” Van began, then paused as Amoria’s voice suddenly echoed in his mind:

    “I don’t drink, but Marcy and the others do—they act like they can get drunk. Not because they need to, but because they want to keep a part of themselves alive… the part that remembers how fun it used to be.”

    Van exhaled, his shoulders relaxing.

    “…Fine,” he agreed quietly. “I guess I haven’t had a drink in a while.”

    Marcy gave a small, relieved exhale through her nose and smiled faintly, leading him down the stairs of the guild toward the storage area behind the counter.

    ———–

    Anne laid down on her bed as Misa nodded to them. “I’ll come check on you girls in a bit. Anne, try to get some sleep, alright?” Her voice was soft, comforting.

    Anne weakly nodded, saying nothing. With a short sigh, Misa stepped outside, leaving Anne alone with her tangled thoughts.

    “…Anne,” Lizzy’s hesitant voice broke the silence, barely above a whisper. They lay back-to-back, neither facing the other.

    Anne remained quiet for a moment, then replied, her voice drained. “What is it?”

    “You… um…” Lizzy paused, shifting nervously, as though unsure whether she should continue. “You like Van, don’t you?”

    Anne didn’t respond immediately, caught off-guard. Too tired to come up with excuses or defenses, she spoke honestly. “Yeah. I do.”

    “But it doesn’t matter,” she added bitterly. “He’s leaving anyway.”

    “You don’t know that,” Lizzy whispered. “Maybe Aunt will change his and his father’s minds.”

    Anne said nothing, eyes staring blankly into the darkness.

    Lizzy took a breath, her voice tight with guilt. “I… I want him to stay too,” she confessed quietly. “At least for a while. I didn’t even get to thank him…”

    “Then why didn’t you thank him just now?” Anne interrupted, sharper than intended. “Why pretend you were asleep?”

    “I didn’t want to disturb you and Aunt…” Lizzy’s voice grew softer, tinged with shame. “And… I felt ashamed. I trusted Michael. Trusted him even more than… forget Van—I trusted him more than you.”

    Anne’s silence stretched, taut with tension. Her breathing grew heavier, tremors shaking her voice. “Yeah. You did trust that leech. You SHOULD be ashamed.” Her voice broke, her anger cracking through her composure. “You damned fucking moron. This is the last fucking time I ever hang out with anyone you know.”

    “That fucker… That motherfucker…” Anne’s words dissolved into sobs, muffled cries punctuating her fury. “How dare he…” Her body shook, the pain overwhelming her anger. “How dare he…”

    Lizzy turned slowly, startled but understanding, and quietly embraced Anne from behind. Anne stiffened at first but soon surrendered, crying openly in her sister’s arms.

    “I’m sorry,” Lizzy murmured, holding her tightly as Anne’s tears continued to fall, raw and unrestrained.

    ————————-

    “YOU’RE NOOOOT ACTING DRUNK ENOUGH, HELMET-HEAAAAD!” Marcy’s voice boomed playfully.

    Van laughed awkwardly, glancing downward. “How does a drunkard even behave…?” he murmured between hesitant laughs. “I’m wobbling my head, not looking anywhere too long…”

    “You talk waaay too cleaarlyyyyyy! Drag your words out liiiiike thiiiissssssss!” Marcy gave him several firm, playful pushes.

    Van cleared his throat, exaggerating the sway of his head. “Liiiiiike thiiiis?”

    “You suuuck at thisss!” she teased, giggling. “Whateverrr… Now, take anotherrr drag from the jugggg…”

    Van obediently took another sip, feeling no burn or dizziness. The bitter taste lingered on his tongue, yet he felt nothing from the alcohol. Resolutely, he took an even larger gulp.

    He stared down briefly, feeling ridiculous yet oddly certain that indulging Marcy’s request was the right choice.

    “When caaan I taaalk about Maguuusss? It’s importaaant,” Van dragged his words, mimicking her exaggerated tone.

    Marcy lazily slapped her palm on his shoulder, chuckling. “You’re such a party-poopperrr… but at leeeast you’re playing alonggg…” She let out a loud, exaggerated hiccup.

    Her voice then quieted, becoming soft and subdued. “I feel liiike I knooow what you wanna tell me about Maaagus.” She rested her head on his shoulder, eyes distant as Van flinched lightly.

    “A girlll shouldn’t fall in love so fast, you know?” Her gaze softened, voice wavering slightly. “I left… my father… my tribe… my duties… all because some handsome stranger showed up… and… and I never even liked men to begin with…” She hiccuped again, voice dropping to a tender whisper. “I was… in love once before… before Magus…”

    Van swallowed hard, looking downward as her head leaned against him.

    “She was beautiful. Strong. And I cared deeply for her,” Marcy’s voice steadied, her drunken facade slipping.

    “But the moment Magus asked… I couldn’t stop myself. I abandoned her without a second thought,” she admitted quietly.

    “It feels strange, doesn’t it? It has to. I don’t even feel guilty about leaving her—or the tribe. I barely knew Magus, yet… I should feel terrible, but I don’t. Instead, I felt complete.” Her tone steadied further, “Even now, I still think it was the right choice.”

    Van solemnly turned toward her, eyes narrowing as the faint pink mist swirled around her head.

    Marcy’s gaze sharpened slightly, voice lowering to almost a whisper.

    “Magus… did something to me, didn’t he?”

    Van froze, body flinching subtly, eyes locked on her.

    Marcy let out a soft, knowing chuckle, feeling his muscles tense beneath her touch.

    “Feeling your… boulder of a body shift like that… It’s this, isn’t it?” she whispered quietly.

    “…Yeah,” Van admitted slowly, nodding. “He… has a mind-control spell that only works on women. He did it to all of you girls. I… I’ve known all along.”

    “Haaa…” Marcy exhaled, a faint laugh escaping her lips.

    “Marcy, don’t worry,” Van quickly added, his voice firm. “I’m going to remove it—I can do it.”

    “Oh… You… you can do that?” She looked up at him lazily.

    “Yes,” Van answered resolutely, gaze hardening. “Anne, Lizzy, your girls… They all had that spell on them. I’ve already removed it from everyone. Amoria is free, too. Only you and Lalyn remain.”

    “I see…” Her smile deepened. “I’m… I’m happy.”

    “I’ll free you now,” Van declared, raising his palm to remove the enchantment.

    “Don’t, Van,” she murmured, placing her palm gently against his, halting his motion.

    “Marcy, please,” he insisted, voice tightening. “I’m sorry, but you need this—”

    “I need it?” she asked, looking into his eyes, suddenly clear. “Or do you?”

    “…!!? YOU DO!” Van spat after a brief, stunned hesitation.

    “I… I don’t want to stop loving Magus, Van,” she confessed quietly, lowering her gaze.

    “You only think that because of this spell—don’t you see!?” Van nearly snapped.

    ‘Why am I even entertaining her!?’ he thought frantically, fist clenched painfully at his side. His eye twitched as Amoria’s confession about Magus flashed through his mind.

    ‘This ends HERE!’ He moved to act—but Marcy firmly cupped his fist, halting him once again.

    “I understand,” she said softly. “But what about afterward, Van?” Her gaze rose to meet his, intense and steady.

    His breath caught sharply.

    “I… I’m pretty batshit crazy when it comes to grudges,” she explained quietly, her head resting lightly on his shoulder. “You know me, Van. I’ll kill everyone who’s wronged me.” An image of Bernard’s brutalized body surged into Van’s mind. 

    “That’s how I was even before you came along. Our tribe would’ve slaughtered you two if it weren’t for Magus—just for trespassing, for your audacity. Gods forbid if we’d discovered your power… we’d have turned you into our eternal meat-sack.” She sighed deeply.

    “I wouldn’t have batted an eye. So…”

    “Who’s to say I won’t start hating my Anne after returning to normal?”

    “…!!”

    “You… You won’t…!!” Van nearly growled, tightening his fist again, yet now lacking even half his previous strength.

    “Do you know that?” Marcy’s voice grew softer, “Anne… she’s the reminder of his hold on me. Right now, I think about it… and I love it. I love that Magus took control of me. I love that he gave Anne to me. I love that she’s his child—and mine.”

    She paused, voice firm.

    “I love Anne.”

    “If you take this… Spell away,” she continued, “something tells me I’ll hate her. That everything will flip.” A quiet sob escaped her lips. “I don’t want to hate her. I don’t want to stop loving my daughter.”

    “I… I said you won’t…!!” Van’s voice broke, “Amoria—Amoria knows all of this! She knows, and she still loves her child! You won’t—”

    “I’m not her, Van,” Marcy interrupted, her voice quiet yet firm. “That priestess is smarter, more restrained, wiser than I’ll ever be. And I love her too—because of her ties to Magus. I love you, Van, for the same reason.”

    Marcy wrapped her arms around him, embracing him tightly.

    “Please,” she pleaded, “Don’t take my daughter away from me… And hate all of you.”

    Van froze, eyes wide and breath trapped in his chest. His fists slowly unclenched. In the heavy silence, his gaze drifted into the darkness at the corner of the storage area.

    There, barely visible in the shadows, sat Mika and Rika, their heads bowed, weapons limp in their hands.

    “It’s… it’s fake, Marcy…” Van mumbled, words stumbling weakly over his tongue. “It’s all… it’s—it’s fake…”

    “Heh…” Marcy exhaled. “Now you sound like a real drunk.”

    “Please,” Van whispered desperately, “You know it’s fake…”

    “I know,” she answered with a nod. “But it’s real to me. Everything I have right now—my feelings included—it’s real enough.”

    Van lowered his gaze, unable to meet her steady, bittersweet smile. His mind raced chaotically, unable to find the right words.

    “Just go,” she urged, holding his palms tightly, unwilling to break the connection just yet. “But come visit once in a while, alright? Anne will be happy.”

    “And so will I,” she added.

    Van remained silent, staring downward, lost in swirling thoughts he couldn’t piece together. Eventually, Marcy’s grip loosened, her fingers sliding away from his hands.

    She stepped back, straightening herself, and offered him a final playful smirk. “And who knows? Maybe you’ll finally take me up on my offer next time,” she teased, raising an eyebrow mockingly. “You know—considering how ‘easy’ the sloppy seconds I am, and all.”

    Van scoffed as he looked away awkwardly, “Psh. Enough of your nonsense already, dumbass.”

    Marcy sighed as she turned to leave, glancing back just once with softened eyes.

    “My offer stands,” she said, fading into silence as she disappeared into the shadows, returning to the guild and leaving Van to his thoughts.

    ‘I have all the power in the world right now,’ He looked at his palms, ‘But I can’t do shit about this.’ He clutched his fist, as tight as he could before letting it go.

    ‘I hate this so fucking much,’ he thought, leaning heavily on his elbow and rubbing a palm roughly over his face.

    “…Guardian of Wind, come out. Block the sound,” he muttered sharply.

    Immediately, she appeared, enveloping the storage area in a veil of silence.

    “FUCK!” Van screamed, seizing a nearby chair and smashing it violently against the dirt floor, splintering the wood into countless fragments.

    “FUCK, FUCK, FUCK—FUUUUCK! FUCK YOU, YOU PIECE OF SHIT! MAGUS, YOU—” he roared, voice tearing with rage. The Guardian remained silent, standing still in the corner, quietly watching as Van rolled in the dirt, each punch shaking the ground beneath him. His muscles strained, frustration mounting as he forced himself to hold back his strength, mindful of not destroying the guild.

    “FUCK YOU! FUCK YOU, MOTHERFUCKER!”

    At last, exhausted, Van collapsed onto his back, breathing sharply.

    “Haa… fuck…!” he exhaled harshly, staring blankly at the ceiling above.

    After several long moments, he steadied himself with a few deep breaths.

    ‘Well… guess I should visit Lalyn now,’ he thought, rising slowly with a heavy sigh. His gaze drifted momentarily toward the shadows of the storage area, where Mika and Rika still hid themselves quietly.

    “And you two?” Van asked, voice drained. “Got anything to say about what just happened?”

    Silence lingered in the shadows before the twins responded.

    “…Remember our deal…”

    “…Van.”

    “We won’t hunt you down…”

    “…until you remove everyone’s…”

    “…mind control,” they finished quietly, their voices blending into one.

    “I see,” Van replied flatly, turning away. “Take care of yourselves.”

    Without another word, he followed in Marcy’s footsteps, leaving the storage area behind.


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  • Van returned to the guild, stepping before the front entrance.

    ‘I bet there’ll be a mess… or not. I did leave in a hurry.’

    His thoughts flickered to Mika and Rika’s shaken expressions.

    ‘Was it right to just leave them like that?’

    His mind instinctively wandered to Amoria’s reaction to the news.

    ‘She knew about it and took it calmly… Maybe knowing in advance helped. I hope it did the same for those two.’

    Guilt gnawed at him as he took a few steps forward.

    ‘I shouldn’t have left them in that state. But I couldn’t risk that boy dying. That, plus… I told them about me and Alicia.’

    A sigh escaped him.

    ‘Maybe I’ve said it too abruptly. But if I didn’t do it now, I probably never would’ve…’

    His gaze lifted as he reached the guild doors.

    ‘Walk in. Let’s finish this.’

    He took a deep breath, pushed the door open, and stepped inside.

    Marcy’s head snapped up at the sound of the doors. Her eyes landed on Van.

    “Oh, didn’t notice you left,” she muttered, then frowned. “Where’s Michael?”

    Van’s gaze flicked around.

    ‘…So Mika and Rika left without saying anything.’

    A quiet sigh of relief. ‘Good.’

    “He had to leave,” Van said simply, walking past the counter.

    Marcy squinted at him. “What did you two talk about that was so important? And I know you or something blocked the sound.” Her tone was almost accusatory.

    Van barely reacted. “I’ll tell you soon. It’s not urgent right now.”

    He stopped in front of her.

    Marcy hummed, narrowing her eyes. “Fine. But I will ask. I find the whole thing suspicious. And if I don’t hear it from you, I’ll get it out of that boy.”

    “Fair enough.” Van said, still standing in front of her, looking into her eyes.

    She raised an eyebrow. “Want something else?”

    Van hesitated, then exhaled. “…You’re a great mother.”

    Marcy’s eyes widened.

    “Never let anyone tell you otherwise.”

    A brief silence. Then, she scoffed, shaking her head awkwardly. “A-are you seriously still upset about that? Chillax, it’s water under the bridge, I’m not mad anymore—”

    She cut off mid-sentence.

    Van’s grip tightened around her shoulders.

    Even she couldn’t shake him off.

    “Marcy.” His voice was steady, his gaze firm.

    For a moment, she stilled, caught off guard.

    “You have no idea how much I’d give to take Anne’s place as your child.”

    Marcy’s lips parted slightly.

    “You’re worth more than you can imagine in my eyes. I want you to know that. Okay? And what I said last night? I meant none of it.”

    Her face flushed red.

    She pushed at him—or tried to.

    Van didn’t budge.

    Instead, she stumbled back, flustered.

    “J-Just… Woah. What’s… gotten into you all of a sudden…?” She looked away, awkward. “I know that already.”

    Van held her gaze for a moment longer.

    “…Alright.”

    ‘Then, goodbye, Marcy.’

    His fingers subtly curled, preparing to activate [Hard Swing]—to erase Magus’s influence.

    But—

    “Miss Marcy, Anne is awake!”

    Misa’s voice rang from upstairs.

    Van froze mid-motion, lowering his hand.

    Both he and Marcy turned toward Misa.

    “C-Come on…” Marcy murmured, gently nudging his shoulder with her elbow. “She’s gonna want to see you.”

    Van watched her head toward the stairs.

    Then, with a sigh, he followed.

    ———————————–

    Marcy sat beside Anne, gently patting her head.

    “M… Mom…?” Anne murmured, her voice weak and weary.

    “I’m here, girl,” Marcy said softly, stroking her hair. “Why the hell did you wake up? You should go back to sleep.” Her tone was almost scolding, but her eyes were gentle.

    “I… I had a nightmare.”

    The room grew heavy. No one spoke.

    Marcy exhaled. “Well, it’s over now. We found out about the brand—and we removed it from all of you.”

    Anne’s breath hitched. Her eyes widened as tears slipped down her cheeks.

    “Ah… I… Mom… I…” She gasped between sobs, her words breaking apart. “I was… so, so scared… Th-thank you… haaaah…”

    Marcy pulled her into a firm embrace, pressing Anne’s head against her chest.

    “Shhhh… It’s okay. I’m here.” She whispered, her fingers threading through Anne’s hair.

    “This… Oh… This is real, right? I’m… This… I’m not dreaming, am I?” Anne clung to her mother, her voice trembling.

    “Of course not. You’re safe now. This is real.” Marcy reassured, holding her closer.

    Across the room, Lizzy lay curled up, facing away from them.

    Van’s gaze flickered to her. With his enhanced perception, he caught the faintest sound—quiet, muffled sobs. She was trying not to interrupt Anne and Marcy.

    After several long minutes, Anne’s crying softened. Marcy, still cradling her, turned her attention to Van.

    “V-… Van…?” Anne’s voice wavered as her eyes landed on him, widening in surprise.

    He gave a small nod. “Hey there.”

    Slowly, he approached, kneeling beside Marcy.

    ‘There it is…’ Van noted as his eyes locked onto the faint pink mist surrounding their heads. It was subtle, just like it had been with Misa.

    ‘Well, either way—it’s overstayed its welcome.’

    Raising a hand, he gently waved his palm near Anne’s head. The mist scattered and vanished.

    “H-huh…?” Anne blinked, confused by the gesture.

    Marcy tilted her head. “What was that?”

    Van ignored the question, shifting toward Lizzy. She flinched as he moved.

    He flicked his wrist, dispelling the mist above her as well.

    From across the room, Misa watched carefully. “…Let me guess,” she said, eyeing him. “A fly again?”

    Van shrugged. “Something like that.”

    “O… kay…” Marcy muttered, still puzzled but shaking it off. Then, her expression lightened, and she smirked.

    “Anyway, it’s thanks to this guy that you’re free.”

    Anne’s eyes widened. Her gaze snapped to Van as she slowly tried to prop herself up.

    Meanwhile, Lizzy flinched subtly at the words.

    ‘Him…? He… saved us?’

    She swallowed, recalling that night in her room. His words echoed in her mind—the reason he’d pushed Michael away.

    ‘I’ll take cruel if it means you get some sleep.’

    Her fingers clenched the sheets.

    ‘He… meant it, huh?’

    Biting her lip, she gripped the fabric tighter.

    “Anne, what are you doing? You need to lie down!”

    “I… I know, Mom… It’s just…” Anne sat up, her tired eyes locking onto Van.

    She hesitated. “I… stood you up on our date.”

    Van blinked—then chuckled.

    “Oh yeah,” he said lightly. “I was so heartbroken that I…”

    He trailed off.

    What sounds cool and reassuring—but not flirtatious?

    Nothing came to mind.

    Van awkwardly went silent.

    “Never mind. I’m just glad you’re okay. Think nothing of i—”

    Before he could finish, Anne and Marcy giggled.

    “Since you’re heartbroken,” Anne rasped with a small smile, “I’ll make it up to you. After I get some sleep, I’ll take you out on a real date. I swear to you.”

    Van’s smirk faded.

    “I…” He exhaled, his expression shifting.

    Marcy narrowed her eyes slightly.

    “I can’t.”

    Anne tilted her head, confused. “You… you don’t want to?”

    Van’s gaze flicked toward Marcy.

    “It’s not that,” he murmured. “My father leaves the capital today. And I’m going with him.”

    A sharp silence filled the room.

    “What…?” Anne’s voice barely rose above a whisper. Her eyes widened.

    Across the room, Lizzy’s fingers curled into her sheets.

    ‘He’s… leaving?’

    ‘I… I didn’t even get to thank him…’

    Marcy sighed. “You rest for a bit, Anne. I need to have a chat with Van here—see if I can talk some sense into both him and his helmet-head of a dad.”

    Anne nodded slowly, her eyes clouded with uncertainty.

    Van turned as Marcy stepped past him, leading him toward the door. He followed without a word, closing it behind them.

    Anne wanted to believe her mother could fix this.

    But something told her even Marcy wouldn’t be able to change his mind.

    ————-

    “I need to kill the Dragon King. You know that.” Van said, his tone firm.

    Marcy folded her arms, narrowing her gaze. “I get it. But something tells me that’s not everything. You’re hiding something, aren’t you?”

    Van exhaled. “As I clarified that night—everyone has their secrets.”

    She sighed in frustration, but before she could respond, Van cut her off. “But you deserve to know this one.”

    Marcy stilled, her attention locking onto him.

    Van puffed his chest. “Remember the Demon Lord?”

    “What about her?”

    “I married her.”

    Marcy blinked. “What?”

    “I married the Demon Lord. Our archnemesis. Married her. Her husband. Me.”

    “…… Ah.”

    A silence stretched between them.

    “… Well?” Van prompted.

    Marcy pursed her lips, but her expression remained casual. “I know you’re not lying… Uhh…” She scratched her head. “Huh.”

    As if a lightbulb went off, she muttered, “Is that why the demons are—”

    “Yep.” Van nodded. “They came to get me. Stayed as a gesture of goodwill. Now that the Holy Church’s corruption is gone and Amoria’s in charge, they can uncover the Gate’s power freely. I can go kill the Dragon King, maybe find out more from him, but then… I’m going back to the Demon Realm.”

    Marcy stared.

    Van raised an eyebrow. “…Kind of expected you to start swinging at me.”

    Marcy exhaled. “Look… She did some awful shit that I still have trouble forgetting. I’d definitely take a swing at her if I could, but…” She scratched her head, looking up in thought. “She’s fucking hot, so I get why you’d wanna wed and bed her… Damn. You’re really serious, huh?”

    “I am.” Van affirmed.

    Marcy scoffed, leaning against the door. “Anne’s gonna be heartbroken, you know. You’re her first boycrush.”

    “I’m 42, Marcy. Cut it out.” Van said flatly.

    She smirked. “Yeah, yeah, you and Magus and your odd definitions from your world. What’s wrong with a mother wanting a reliable guy who looks the part to date her? And she’s almost 17, so stop acting like it’s a crime.”

    “17 is a MINOR.”

    Marcy lifted an eyebrow, smug. “In my tribe, we married at 13.”

    Van’s expression deadened. “You’re omitting the fact that this is exactly why you became a warrior in the first place – so that you could opt out of it. No, we’re done talking about this.”

    “Fine, fine…” She sighed.

    “…”

    “…I’m gonna miss you, helmet-head.” Anne murmured, offering a somber smile.

    Van exhaled deeply, lowering his head.

    “No. You won’t.”

    He lifted his gaze, his expression firm.

    “There’s something else you need to know.” He said, looking into her eyes.

    “It’s about Magus.”


    Sorry for the short chapter and the cliffhanger! I wanted to keep the pacing tight without oversaturating it. If I had included their conversation here, the word count would’ve exploded.

    Thanks for reading and for your patience!

    BIG THANKS To my Patreon:

    SparkyZinger

  • “I…” Michael started as he inhaled sharply. This was it. Someone was onto him.

    And something inside Michael told him he could no longer deny it.

    But other than that… He felt like it wasn’t worth it anymore.

    So, he finally let it out before Van.

    “I didn’t just cooperate with Bernard,”

    His voice was quiet, yet heavy. He shut his eyes, recalling the way Melanie had looked at Van—the way Van had saved her life back at the manor.

    Slowly, Michael’s eyes reopened. Lazy, but no longer erratic.

    “I was the one who… branded them.” He spoke evenly.

    Van studied him, his expression unreadable. Michael’s voice was steady now. No more stammering. No more hiding.

    “…Bernard was the slave master, though.” Van replied flatly. Michael could feel it. Almost like he gave Michael a chance to rethink his words.

    But he knew that this isn’t something he could run away from. Nor something he wanted to run away from anymore.

    “He was.” Michael took a deep breath. “But he was the one who gave me the slave crest to brand them… which I did. Fully knowing what it was. You can say he manipulated me… But that’s just an excuse. It’s my fault.”

    He swallowed hard. The next word felt like poison on his tongue.

    “I believed that I was their…”

    His stomach twisted.

    “…Master.”

    Van looked down.

    Inhale.

    Exhale.

    He rubbed his face with his palms.

    “… Why did you do it?” Van asked calmly.

    “With all due respect,” Michael bit his lips as bubbling frustration began to surface, “why do you ask me why?” Michael voice started trembling, Van’s gaze snapped back to Michael.

    “I deserve to DIE.” His voice cracked. “I hurt Anne. I hurt Lizzy. I DESERVE TO DIE. You’re…” He gulped. “You’re strong enough to kill me quickly, right? Do that. Please.” His eyes welled with tears.

    “… Just tell me why you did it.” Van repeated.

    “Why do you want to know!? WHY DO YOU CARE ABOUT ME!?” He nearly yelled.

    “I’ll stop caring if you keep asking me that, and not answer my question.” Van said, his tone equal; though his eyes seemed to faintly glow with a warning.

    “…” Michael swallowed his tears, cleared his throat, his eyes becoming erratic again before steadying.

    “… Because of you… No… Because of me.” He finally rasped.

    “I… I thought… No, I WANTED to believe that you were doing something to Anne and Lizzy. Anne was never so quick to bond with someone, and the way you were at Lizzy’s house was suspicious… She seemed so… Focused on you after that, too. You had to have done something to them.”

    “….”

    “But that’s what I just told myself,” His shoulders loosened, Van’s gaze turned more attentive at his statement. “The truth was… They just grew tired of me, and I was too scared to admit it… Just like my mom and sister were when they left me and my father…. Late father.”

    Van stood up, walking around the room rubbing his face again. Recalling what Bernard did when he left him alive, even for a few moments longer than necessary.

    He glanced at Michael.

    ‘Do I kill him?’ He wondered. ‘If I keep him alive… Forget why he did it, he might just do it again.’

    ‘No, calm down.’

    ‘I’ll just tell it to Marcy.’ He shook his head slowly. ‘He’ll be imprisoned, probably for life.’

    ‘… No. She’ll kill him on the spot.’ He thought, recalling how Marcy didn’t hesitate to kill Bernard, brutally.

    ‘Wait, why do I care?’ He thought as he looked at Michael, the story about his sister and mother leaving him and his father dying replaying in his mind.

    ‘That’s his problem,’ Van tried to convince himself. ‘Considering how I haven’t seen the Duke’s wife around, who’s to say Bernard didn’t have a mother that left him?’

    ‘Right…’ He thought as he looked at Michael.

    ‘I care because I see myself in that boy.’

    ‘But still…’

    He breahted deeply.

    ‘He has nothing to lose. Which makes him dangerous…’ He saw Anne and Lizzy’s face, and the way Michael almost got away with it, if it weren’t for Michael’s terror when Van took him with him, Van would’ve found out.

    One more, violence. Terror was the factor that helped him find out that Michael was a perpetrator.

    ‘At the very least, I’ll be merciful.’ His gaze darkened.

    ‘I’ll kill him here, myself.’

    —SOME YEARS AGO—

    “I deserve to die, Magus.” Van muttered, staring at the ground, his body beaten, covered in mud, sitting like a dog in the corner of a jail cell.

    “It was an accident, Van.” Magus replied, sitting just outside the bars. “You didn’t mean to kill that woman.”

    “An accident,” Van scoffed. “I just HAD to show off.”

    “Had to,” he repeated, exasperated. “Had to prove they could trust me. That I could protect them. That I could be relied on. But instead, I—”

    “LOOK, IT DOESN’T MATTER!” Magus snapped, leaning in. “I’ll free you. I’m the HERO. I can pardon you. And we’ll be on the road again.”

    “No.” Van shook his head, lips pressed tightly together.

    “…What?” Magus frowned.

    “Let me be hanged, Magus.”

    “Fuck. THAT.” Magus spat.

    “LET ME BE FUCKING HANGED—” Van yelled.

    “NO, YOU DON’T GET TO FUCKING CHOOSE!”

    “LET ME HANG! YOU DON’T GET TO CHOOSE FOR ME EITHER!”

    The words clashed in the air, their voices overlapping—until silence settled between them.

    Van exhaled, his voice softer now. “I can come back, Magus.”

    Magus’ expression hardened.

    “So please… let me be hanged. I… I WANT to be punished for it. At the very least.” Van inhaled shakily. “I’m… used to it, aren’t I? We’ll be back on the road either way, won’t we?”

    Magus clicked his tongue, his hands balling into fists. Without another word, he stood, turned his back to Van, and slammed his fist against the bench.

    “Fine. Choke to death for all I care, you motherfucker. Enjoy the noose.”

    Magus spat the words over his shoulder before storming off.

    ——————-

    Van exhaled slowly, his gaze locked on Michael.

    “Kill me.”

    The words cut through the silence. Van flinched.

    Michael’s voice was hollow. “No one cares about me. Lizzy and Anne will tell the truth when they wake up. My father and mother are gone… I’ve got no one.” He sighed. “Kill me. Please.”

    Van’s fist clenched. ‘…There’s no choice.’

    No version of this ended with Michael walking free. Van wasn’t going to hide what happened. Wasn’t going to cover for him. ‘I do want to keep them safe. And either way, what waits for him outside this room… is death.’

    His steps were slow, deliberate, as he moved behind Michael.

    “Fine.”

    His palm settled gently against Michael’s neck. Michael tensed—then relaxed.

    “T… Thank you…” His eyes drifted shut.

    Van’s fingers tightened. His muscles tensed, ready to snap his neck. But then—

    “Stop.”

    Van froze.

    “…Van.”

    Two voices. One completing the other. Behind him.

    “Mika. Rika.”

    Van exhaled, still keeping his back to them. ‘I was so focused on him, I didn’t notice… Even with my perception so high. I guess I can still slip if I’m not attentive enough, huh?’ He sighed, relieved.

    “We don’t know what happened yet that brought you to this, but…”

    “… let him go.”

    Michael pressed his lips into a thin line, his heart twisting at their words.

    “Why?” Van asked, his expression remained unreadable.

    “If he did a crime that warrants death, then let him run…”

    “… with his loving mother and sister, at the very least.”

    Van’s eyes widened. Michael turned, faster than him.

    He looked at the two assassins—then beyond them.

    Two fragile figures stood there.

    Michael’s breath caught.

    “M…Mi…chael…?” The voice was soft, trembling.

    Michael choked on his words. It couldn’t be.

    The mother who had abandoned him. The sister who had left with her. Standing there. Looking at him.

    His fists clenched, his confusion and longing swallowed by the rising surge of rage.

    “DO YOU THINK I’LL FORGIV—”

    Mika moved swiftly, pressing a gentle hand over Michael’s mouth.

    “Listen to what they have to say.”

    Van stepped aside, arms crossed, watching.

    Michael swallowed hard. Mika lowered her hand.

    His mother’s voice was unsteady. “We never meant to leave you, baby…”

    Pain shot through him, a jagged wound reopening.

    “…We were… enslaved.”

    His sister stood beside their mother, clutching her cloak.

    Michael’s breath hitched. His face went pale. He lowered his gaze.

    Then, the truth spilled forth. Every word. Every horror.

    Michael and Van listened in silence.

    Van frowned. ‘So they were freed after I killed Salem… Fuck. I didn’t stop to think there were more out there. He had Mika and Rika—so of course, he had a network.’

    His fingers curled into a fist. ‘How many more had he broken before I smashed his skull? Sick fuck.’

    Again, violence.

    Michael’s mother hesitated, then took a step forward. “T-that’s why… Michael. We don’t care what happened to you. We’re here now…”

    She reached for him, her fingers trembling. “And I… missed you and your father so much—”

    Michael slapped her hand away.

    “Then, this time, leave me for real.” His voice was raw.

    “Michael…? Please, baby… we’re here now…” Her voice softened.

    His sister, standing weakly, glanced at him. Her gaze softened too.

    “…Father is dead.”

    His mother stiffened. His sister gasped.

    “He died earlier today.”

    She staggered. “Oh… Oh… Mikey…”

    Her voice cracked. She looked at him—the son she had lost, now returned to her in the worst way.

    Then she ran to him. Hugged him. Held him tightly.

    Michael’s eyes shut. He felt her warmth.

    .

    He felt unworthy of it.

    ‘Goodbye, Mom… for real this time.’ He pushed her away.

    “Don’t do something you’ll regret,” his voice wavered. “I’m… I’m going to tell you something, Mom. So… save that hug for someone who deserves it.”

    Van flinched, watching him.

    Michael took a breath.

    “I… enslaved some girls here. Made them my slaves.”

    Van’s eyes narrowed.

    “You know them, actually. Lizzy and Anne.”

    ‘Fuck.’ Van internally scoffed. ‘You got to it faster than I did with my little secret. You got some balls, I’ll give you that.’ He observed Michael carefully.

    ‘Now, let’s see if these people will take it as kindly as mine did.’ His thoughts drifted to Amoria’s acceptance.

    ‘After all… she had every reason to hate me for it. But all I saw in her eyes was love… That’s…’

    ‘Rare, right?’

    For a moment, he forgot his surroundings.

    Michael’s mother took a shaky step back. “N-no way… What are you saying?”

    Mika and Rika paled. His sister, too.

    But Michael kept talking.

    “The reason I’m detained is because of that. As proof, I know how it looks.” His voice rasped. Then, he described the crest. The words he used to brand them. He let it all out.

    Then he looked up. “Well? Still want to hug me, Mom?”

    Silence.

    For a moment, a sliver of hope slipped through.

    But it shattered.

    His mother’s face—skeptical at first—now twisted in fear. His sister mirrored her, wide-eyed. They stepped back, as if his words had cursed the ground they stood on.

    ‘Haah… I really have nothing to live for anymore.’ Michael thought as he took in his mother’s expression. As if she looked at a murderer. A monster.

    Probably how Lizzy and Anne would look at him if they saw him.

    ‘I deserve this.’

    Mika and Rika then turned to Van. Their eyes filled with wrath and bloodlust.

    “…Okay, Van. You can kill him…”

    “…Or… we’ll even do it for you.”

    Their voices were grim. Their hands steady.

    Van exhaled through his nose as Michael looked down.

    “Kill me.” His voice echoed.

    His mother’s hand twitched. For a moment, she reached for him. Then, as if his words burned her, she recoiled.

    “As you…”

    “…Wish.”

    Mika and Rika moved, knives drawn. Certainty in their eyes. They made sure that he could hear their steps. That he knows exactly when his end comes around.

    Michael smirked bitterly. ‘Guess I’ll be seeing you first, Father… Nah.’

    A dry chuckle escaped his lips. ‘I’ll be going straight to purgatory for what I did. Eternal torment—that’s all that’s waiting for me.’

    His eyes fluttered shut, resignation settling into his bones.

    Yet, as the darkness closed in, cold dread surged through his veins. ‘Eternal torment… suffering forever. No, no, no—I don’t want this. I can’t—I won’t!’

    His body curled instinctively, teeth sinking into his lips until blood dripped onto his tongue.

    ‘NO… NO… NO!! I DON’T WANT TO DIE! I DON’T WANT TO SUFFER LIKE THAT! NO…!! NO!! FATHER, HELP ME… I DON’T WANT TO GO TO HELL! ANYONE…!’

    Then—

    “…What are you doing, Van?”

    Michael’s eyes snapped open; and he saw how Van stood between them. A solid wall of flesh and steel.

    Michael gasped.

    “What did you say?” Van’s voice was steady, sharp. “No matter what crime he did, I’ll let him run away, right?”

    He turned his head slightly. “Let’s do that, then.”

    “…!!!”

    Michael’s breath hitched. “I— I D-DON’T DESERVE THIS! LET ME DIE—”

    “SHUT.” Van’s voice sliced through the air.

    Michael froze instantly, while Mika and Rika’s gazes grew cold.

    “…That ship has long since sailed. Scum like him…” Mika began.

    “…deserves to die,” Rika finished.

    Their mother flinched again, visibly shaken at the thought of Michael’s death. Her own son, the child she’d longed for, was now facing execution. Yet, no protest arose from her lips. Her throat closed, paralyzed by a mix of anguish and understanding.

    She knew this punishment wasn’t unwarranted. She knew, intimately, the scars Michael had inflicted—scars identical to those branded onto her soul.

    But even so…

    She couldn’t say he deserved this fate. She couldn’t bear to witness it either.

    So she remained silent, eyes shut tight, lips pressed together in quiet torment, refusing to witness her son’s final moments.

    Van inhaled deeply, then broke the tense silence with his next words.

    “I married the Demon Lord.”

    He lifted his chin, holding their gaze firmly.

    “This is—”

    “Hardly the time for jokes,” the sisters chimed.

    “I’m serious,” Van affirmed sharply. “She is my loving wife.” He stepped forward confidently, a faint smile tugging at his lips. “The same woman who slaughtered thousands of humans—she’s mine. I courted her for two years before arriving at the capital, and she finally said yes.”

    He paused, letting the truth sink in before continuing.

    “I’m not trying to diminish your suffering. But if you’re prepared to kill Michael simply because he did what he believed was right, yet you’re willing to let me walk free—even though I knowingly did something you consider unforgivable, something I take pride in…”

    Van’s eyes sharpened.

    “…then you’d better try and kill me too.” His voice was calm, unwavering. “You’ve already repaid your debt by returning my armor and sword, haven’t you?”

    The sisters grimaced, a heavy silence lingering as they scrutinized his expression, searching desperately for any hint of deception. They found none. He meant every word. Not even the faintest trace of jest marred his sincerity.

    Only then did it dawn upon them: this explained his connection to Varlog—and clarified precisely why demons had come here.

    To aid their ally.

    “You really…”

    “…really are…”

    “…scum,” they whispered in unison.

    Van didn’t flinch. Instead, a grin spread across his lips as power hummed through the air around him.

    “Fuck you too,” he replied playfully.

    They froze in confusion, their bodies momentarily paralyzed as he stepped closer, waving his fingers before their eyes. With a single motion, the thick cloud of pink mist swirling around their heads dissipated into nothingness.

    Their hands trembled as awareness returned.

    “What have…”

    “…you done to us?” they asked, panic rising in their voices.

    Van watched their shaking closely.
    ‘This confirms it. Each reacts differently… I’d better finish quickly. They’re unstable.’

    “I’ve lifted Magus’s mind control from you,” he stated plainly. “I’ll do the same for Marcy, Lalyn, and their children. So cut me some slack until then. Afterward, feel free to hunt me down all you want.”

    Without waiting for a reply, Van turned back to Michael.

    Michael sat frozen, staring blankly ahead—his thoughts tumbling wildly.

    ‘Magus…? Mind control…? Marrying the Demon Lord?! I don’t understand… W-who… Who the hell is he?!’

    Van’s voice snapped him back to reality.

    “Kid.”

    Michael flinched.

    “You’re coming with me.”

    Michael swallowed hard. “Why… are you help—…” Michael stopped himself.

    Van raised an eyebrow impatiently. “Weren’t you listening? I just said I married the Demon Lord. Who am I to judge you for doing what you thought was necessary”

    “B-but… Marcy killed Bernard!” Michael protested, voice breaking. “I DESERVE…” He stopped himself again.

    Van didn’t deny it.

    “She did. You do.”

    Van replied coldly. “This is purely my selfishness.”

    He grabbed Michael by the shoulder firmly—and vanished.

    The sisters stood frozen in stunned silence.

    “Where did…”

    “…he go?”

    Their mother’s trembling voice broke through softly, barely audible.

    “…Michael… Come back… I’m… sorry…”

    Yet deep down, she already knew the truth.

    She would never see her son again.

    ———-

    “Haah… Where… are we?” Michael gasped, collapsing onto the grass. The capital lay kilometers behind, now just a distant blur on the horizon.

    “Somewhere you won’t be prosecuted,” Van replied flatly, his voice unreadable.

    Michael stared silently at the ground, catching his breath. Finally, he let out a long, exhausted sigh.

    “Thank you,” he murmured softly. “Just… Thank you.”

    Van raised an eyebrow. “Huh. I expected you to beg me to kill you again.”

    Michael managed a weak, somber smile, shaking his head emphatically. “No… NO! I don’t want that!”

    He nearly shouted it, startling himself. Pausing to steady his breathing, he took a moment before continuing quietly:

    “My mother and sister are safe now.” He exhaled deeply, looking up at Van. “They hate me for real this time. All this time, I thought they always had—but it was just because some scumbag enslaved them. Now they’re free, and I can finally see real hatred in their eyes.”

    His fingers dug into the soft earth beneath him, releasing a bitter chuckle. “Is this irony?”

    Michael’s eyes focused on the blades of grass gently brushing against his fingertips. He felt strangely calm despite everything.

    “But… now that I think about it, I don’t want to die. I don’t want to discover if purgatory is real, because if it is—that’s exactly where I’m headed. And that terrifies me.”

    He swallowed hard, finally meeting Van’s eyes.

    “I’m genuinely in your debt. Even if by some miracle I was forgiven, I couldn’t bear facing Lizzy, Anne, or Melanie ever again. And the thought of rotting in prison… I’m terrified of that too.”

    Michael slowly pushed himself to his feet, shoulders weighed down yet posture firm.

    “I’m a coward,” he admitted quietly. “It’s about time I stopped pretending otherwise.”

    With a sincere, steadying breath, Michael reached out his hand toward Van.

    “Thank you, Van Hellix. I’ll… make the most of this second chance.”

    Van stared thoughtfully for a moment, lips twitching into something close to respect. He chuckled quietly, grasping Michael’s outstretched hand firmly.

    “Try not to die too quickly, alright?”

    Michael nodded earnestly, the resolve shining in his eyes.

    “I’ll try. I really… really will try. As hard as I can.”

    And then, he turned and walked away.

    The fresh air crashed against his face, the scent of freedom both intoxicating and cruel.

    Tears welled up in his eyes.

    And as he stepped forward, alone, he let them fall—mourning the people he could never return to.

    Crying into the arms of the wind.


    [SIDE NOTE: I’m considering a Michael spinoff in the future, Inspired by Kingdom Come: Deliverance! Let me know if you’d be interested. It would be more of an underdog story. No overpowered protagonist this time. :)]

    BIG THANKS To my Patreon: SparkyZinger

  • This chapter was a tough one to write—I was feeling a bit burnt out. I decided to split it into several parts rather than rush the ending of this saga. Hope you enjoy it! 🙂

    —————–

    “Go, Van.” Amoria whispered in his ear, her voice barely cutting through the roar of the cheering crowd.

    Van hesitated. “You sure?”

    “Yes.” She nodded. “I’ll handle things here—calm the crowd, coordinate with the demonic advisor, and figure out what lies beneath the portal. It might take time to decipher, but with their help, we’ll manage.”

    “Meanwhile… get ready.” Her voice softened. “And then… you should go to the Dragon King’s place.”

    A pause.

    “Will you be alright?” she asked, her eyes scanning his face.

    “It won’t take a minute.” Van let out, his tone steady—but his mind wasn’t.

    “Right…” Amoria looked down, a somber smile crossing her lips, as if she wanted to believe him.

    The moment lingered.

    “…Will you?” Van asked just as he was about to take off.

    She smiled at him before swiftly pulling her arm from his grasp.

    “Of course!” she said, her voice full of forced cheer—but he saw it. The way she bit her inner lip. The way her fingers twitched before letting go.

    Van lingered. ‘What can I even say to her?’

    ‘Who knows how long she’s been captive? How long she’s been waiting for a moment like this…’ But she was standing here now, determined.

    ‘Still… I can tell.’

    Time slowed. His heightened perception sharpened every detail—the subtle tremor in her breath, the way her smile didn’t quite reach her eyes.

    ‘I can tell that you bite your lip.’

    ‘That you’re hurting.’

    His fingers twitched. He almost reached for her—almost cupped her cheek, almost tried to help her fight that war within.

    But he stopped.

    ‘Right.’

    ‘Magus’s influence is lifted, sure. But… she’s not the woman I love anymore.’

    ‘So then… why do I feel like touching you?’

    ‘To comfort you? To tell you it’s okay? That I can share the burden, even just a little?… To help fight that war within you?’

    He swallowed, the weight of his own words pressing against his chest.

    ‘…Yeah… I’ve fought quite a bit, haven’t I? Wherever I’m needed. And seeing as even you up above have something against me, Goddess… there’s still so much more to be done. So much more fighting, things to resolve.’

    He took in the roaring crowd, their cheers echoing in his ears.

    Their reason for cheering?

    The body of the bishop—the one he had split himself.

    ‘Violence, huh?’

    The crowd cheered louder.

    ‘Force.’ He recalled Ami and the Feline Tribe’s hostile takeover. Then Alicia—how she waged war against the humans.

    ‘Manipulation…’ His thoughts drifted to the bishop, how he had remained in power for so long—as long as he had slaves around him.

    ‘Mind control.’ Magus.

    The way Amoria’s heart, which had once beaten for him, had started beating for Magus instead.

    ‘Will it ever be over?’

    ‘Will I ever have the chance to fully concentrate on Alicia? On what it means to love? Does it even exist? To just… be with her, without the weight of war clinging to my back?’

    He pondered, recalling Varlog’s advice—how he would have to act the part once they started living in the Demonic Realm together.

    What awaited him there was just another war—one of a different nature.

    A war to keep her eyes on him at all times.

    A battle of exhaustion, endless in its cycle.

    Because war never truly ends.

    Win one battle, and another waits just around the corner.

    And now, with the Goddess herself standing against him, that truth had multiplied a million-fold.

    “Van?” Amoria’s voice pulled him from his thoughts, her eyes searching his for an answer neither of them could say out loud.

    “Sorry, lost in thought… Then. I’m leaving.” Van said as he looked at her, his expression flat.

    “I have to sort some things in the city though.” Van looked at her evenly.

    “Okay.” Amoria nodded with a smile. “I’ll see you later, then.”

    “…” A moment of silence, the loud cheering of the crowd drowned between them.

    “You bet.” Van replied silently before vanishing from sight entirely, the crowd gasped in confusion; Amoria immediately worked on quelling them, as Nickelson climbed up the stairs, and discussed a game plan.

    ————-

    “Marcy,” Van let out as he walked in, spotting her standing at the counter.

    “Ooooh, what’s up, Mr. Hero?” she asked, flashing him a sly smile.

    “I’M TERRIBLY SORRY, MR. HELLIX!” The guild’s maid, Misa, suddenly bowed deeply before him as he entered. “I HAD TOO EASILY BELIEVED A LIE ABOUT YOU THAT CAUSED YOU GREAT MISFORTUNE! I HUMBLY APOLOGIZE!”

    Van blinked down at her hunched form, her face hidden from view. “Ah… Don’t worry about it,” he said, waving it off. “Happens more than you think.”

    Just then, Gary – a Royal Guard member and Mongol waltzed in behind him.

    “IT IS HIM, RIGHT?!” Mongol, the Royal Guard’s archivist, blurted out, his eyes practically glowing with enthusiasm.

    Gary, however, lingered at the entrance, his gaze flicking to the side, refusing to meet Van’s eyes.

    “THE ONE WHO FREED THE BISHOP’S SLAVES AND UNCOVERED THE TRUTH!” Mongol declared, studying Van as if he were a statue.

    “VAN HELLIX! Magus Veil’s former companion! Thanks to this, I will personally record your name in the archives as someone who accomplished what not even Magus Veil did! You will go down in history as an unprecedented HERO!”

    ‘That bastard almost spat on Hellix’s name a bit ago…’ Gary growled internally.

    “I… Uh…” Van murmured, glancing away, while Marcy smirked knowingly.

    “OH, ARE YOU NERVOUS?! YOU’RE NERVOUS, AREN’T YOU?!” Mongol beamed. “Understandable! After everything you’ve been through, I bet even the slightest bit of attention sets you off—just like how Magus Veil set off Marcilla Veil’s tribe chief—who happened to be her father—by sleeping with her—”

    “OKAY, THAT’S ENOUGH!” Marcy suddenly barked, her face flushing red.

    Mongol froze mid-sentence, as did Gary and even Misa, who had still been bowing.

    Gary wasted no time stepping in, grabbing Mongol by the shoulder. “Sorry, Miss Veil. He insisted on coming here.” His eyes darted toward Van—just for a second—before he quickly looked away.

    “H-huh?” Mongol muttered, now studying Van more closely. “Where’s your signature helmet? And why are you wearing a helmet from the Von Brayle collection?”

    ‘…So the Royal Guards haven’t caught on yet on what happened at their estate. Strange. It was quite the commotion. Someone must have worked to keep it quiet.’ Van thought.

    “I lost it,” he shrugged.

    “WHAT!!?” Mongol nearly roared. “THAT’S A HISTORIC RELIC! IT’S IMPORTANT! YOU HAVE TO FIND IT AS SOON AS—”

    “We’ll leave you be,” Gary cut in, his voice quick and subdued as he dragged Mongol out of the guild.

    “Haah…” Van sighed.

    “Hah, indeed.” Marcy sighed even deeper, leaning against the table.

    They both looked at each other.

    “Look, Helmet-head. I wanted to apolo—”

    “Apologies are all mine. That… and…” Van trailed off, his gaze sharpening as he noticed a dense pink mist swirling around her eyes. “You might want to hold on to that apology.”

    “Just let me apologize!” she huffed, pouting.

    “No.”

    “Why!?”

    “I’ll tell you after I talk to Michael. Is he here?” Van asked.

    Marcy sighed deeply.

    “Yeah. I told him to wait in the storage room… Had no idea he was a slave too. Thankfully we took care of that.” Marcy said, subtly shaking her head as she looked down in frustration.

    “… Right. Thanks. How are the girls?” Van asked.

    “Still sleeping soundly, thankfully.” She glanced toward one of the rooms up the stairs.

    “…Good.” Van muttered as he passed by Misa. Just before fully walking past her, he gave her a glance.

    ‘Ah, right.’

    The same faint pink mist lingered around her eyes.

    ‘Makes sense. She interacted with Magus… I’ll have to remove it from the children, as well as her.’

    Without hesitation, Van swung his palm sharply, then waved it in front of Misa’s eyes—

    …Dissipating the mist entirely.

    “…?” She hummed in curiosity.

    “Ah, there was a bug,” Van let out casually.

    ‘She was only mildly affected. She probably won’t even notice the shift in her emotions right away.’

    Without another word, he moved behind the counter, passing Marcy.

    ‘…I’ll remove hers when I leave the guild.’

    His grip tightened slightly.

    ‘Since she loves Magus… and saw some of him in me… she might completely detest me once the mind control is lifted.’

    To avoid trouble, he’d deal with it when he was gone.

    ‘…Sorry, Marcy. Soon, you’ll be free.’

    Van walked past Marcy and stepped into the guild’s storage room.

    Without hesitation, he removed his helmet and placed it on a shelf before approaching the youth slumped in a chair.

    Van then lowered himself onto the ground, meeting Michael’s gaze—a gaze that was vacant, defeated.

    ‘…’

    “Guardian of Wind, come out.” Van whispered, his voice barely perceptible.

    [“…Hello, Van.”]

    A soft voice responded as she materialized beside him—invisible to Michael and any unseen stalkers.

    “Seal this room. Make sure no one hears anything from the outside… Please. Is it possible, considering you manipulate wind?” Van asked.

    [“Of course. Already done.”] She nodded, her expression unreadable.

    [“…And… I accept your apology. From earlier.”]

    She turned away, her tone quiet.

    Van exhaled softly. ‘Almost like a second Lalyn…’

    “Thanks,” He let out causally and turned to Michael.

    “Michael.”

    The young man flinched, slowly looking up.

    “Ah… Van…” His breath hitched as his eyes widened.

    “I’m… sorry. I… I was just a slave when I blamed you, and—”

    “Stop.” Van’s voice was gentle as his eyes drifted to the wooden ceiling.

    “…?” Michael hesitated, watching him.

    “Yes, you were a slave. I could tell.” Van lowered his gaze again. “But no one forced you to put the blame on me. I know that for a fact.”

    “…Ah… Huh…? I… I don’t… But… I was enslaved..! I didn’t mean any harm, or—” Michael stammered, his words crumbling as his gaze darted anxiously.

    “When I dragged you out of the guild, you started begging me to stop. Saying you were sorry.” Van’s tone was flat.

    Michael stiffened.

    “No branded slave can do that. Go back on orders. This was all you.”

    Van sighed, then leaned in, locking eyes with him.

    Michael’s heartbeat pounded in his ears.

    “Just tell me. I’m used to people treating me like shit. Part of this ability I have.” Van exclaimed.

    “…Tell you…?” Michael asked, his expression twisted into a grimace.

    “Tell me. Why did you cooperate with Bernard?”

    Michael’s fingers dug into his pants. His throat tightened.


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  • “…And that’s why I came back to the Capital after all this time. But… she said yes a bit later.” Van sat on one of the benches inside the cathedral, his voice quieter now. Amoria sat beside him, her hands resting on her lap.

    A moment passed before Van spoke again, almost too quickly. “Are you sure you don’t want to talk somewhere else?”

    Amoria slowly shook her head. “It’s alright.”

    Van studied her expression. “Is it…?” His voice softened as he met her gaze.

    Amoria turned toward him, her expression warm, a relieved smile crossing her face.

    “As long as you’re with me… we could be in a damp cave, and I’d be more than fine.” A blush crept up her cheeks as her smile grew.

    Van let out an awkward chuckle, looking to the side. “Some reference.”

    Amoria smirked. “I pride myself on it.”

    A quiet minute stretched between them.

    Then—

    “There’s…” Amoria’s voice wavered.

    Van turned his head.

    She wasn’t looking at him anymore. Her gaze was fixed on the wooden bench ahead, her lips pressed together as though trying to swallow something down. Her hands clenched into fists in her lap.

    “No chance I could seduce you, right…?” Her voice trembled.

    Van felt something tighten in his chest.

    “To… keep you with me?”

    Her question lingered between them, fragile, desperate.

    Van lowered his head, exhaling softly. His voice, when it came, was barely above a whisper.

    “I’m sorry, Amoria.”

    There was nothing else to say.

    He could feel it. They were compatible. They always had been.

    But he had already chosen someone else.

    Amoria let out a shaky breath, lifting her head toward the cathedral’s ceiling. “I… I get it, you know?” She swallowed hard, forcing her voice to stay steady.

    “She’s beautiful… she’s strong… and…” Amoria trailed off, her fingers curling slightly over her palms.

    She took a deep breath, then turned to him with a gentle smile.

    Van exhaled slowly, watching her.

    ‘She… isn’t the slightest bit angry, is she?’

    He sighed, feeling the weight in his chest begin to lift.

    ‘Right. It’s Amoria, after all. Before everything… every time I came to that cave, I always felt at ease with her.’

    A quiet realization settled in his mind.

    ‘There was nothing to worry about in the first place.’

    His armor began repairing itself.

    The wound in his heart began to mend.

    Amoria’s smile didn’t waver. “She can keep you company for many years. Much longer than I ever could. She’s the obvious winner. As for me…”

    She looked down at her smooth hands, studying them as though they already bore the signs of time.

    “I’ll just grow old. Used. Wrinkled, while she’ll stay as beautiful as ever.”

    Van’s chest tightened. “Amoria, it’s not about that. I—”

    “Van.” She cut him off, placing her hand on his shoulder.

    She looked into his eyes, her own shimmering with unshed tears.

    “You… YOU, of all people, deserve to be a little superficial.”

    Van stiffened, startled by the conviction in her voice.

    She smiled, blinking back tears. “You appreciate beauty. That’s natural. We all do.”

    A short pause. Then she laughed softly, though her voice trembled.

    “I’m just happy that someone like you found me beautiful, even for a little while.”

    Her lips trembled, but she held her smile.

    “I would never dare ask you to stay with me. Not when I know the truth.” She took a shaky breath, her fingers tightening around his.

    “Knowing you’ll stay youthful while I… slowly fade into something I don’t recognize anymore. I’ll grow ugly… And unsightly. I won’t let you take care of me in that state, when you should be having fun and living your life.”

    “Amoria, you will never be—”

    “STOP.” Her voice cracked.

    She squeezed his hand, staring straight ahead. “Don’t comfort me. Don’t lie. We both know the truth.”

    A deep breath.

    She intertwined her fingers with his, her grip firm—not clinging, but accepting.

    And together, in the vast stillness of the cathedral, they simply sat.

    Amoria swallowed, her gaze lifting toward the statue of the Goddess.

    “Just…” Her voice was quiet, but steady. “If something happens… if you ever feel unwell, in any way… at ANY time…”

    Her fingers grazed his palm as if sealing a silent vow.

    “I’ll wait for you. And accept you with all of me.”

    She turned to him, eyes filled with unwavering resolve.

    Van exhaled, his throat tightening. “….”

    Then, he cleared his throat. “Not enough. You need to include your roast, as well.”

    Amoria blinked, then pouted. “DUMMY. That’s A PART OF ME, isn’t it?”

    With a huff, she playfully smacked his head, then leaned back against the bench, her hand naturally resting against his once more.

    Her expression softened. “Still… that explains so much. You being married to her. That’s why the demons were here. They wanted to get you back…” She let out with a relieved chuckle, “… So there’s no reason not to trust them anymore.”

    She let out a deep sigh, tilting her head against the back of the bench. “With the Bishop gone, there’s no one left to handle the church. And thousands of priestesses and emissaries are suddenly… free.”

    Her gaze swept over the grand hall. “Speaking of which, the cathedral should be flooded with an angry mob any moment now.”

    Van glanced at her. “Then, let me take you away from here.”

    She blinked, then laughed. “Hah, how bold.” A sly smile tugged at her lips.

    Van’s expression remained firm. “You don’t need the rest?” His concern was clear.

    Amoria smiled, but her exhaustion was evident. “Oh, I DO. But that can’t come at the expense of everyone who suffered under the Bishop.”

    Her fingers curled slightly around his.

    Her choice had already been made.

    “I’ll take his place. I’ll lead them. As for you…” She turned to him, her expression firm, her gaze unwavering.

    “Before you rest… you know what you need to do, right?”

    Van’s expression hardened. He met her gaze with equal resolve.

    “Yeah. I’ll stop the Dragon King and—”

    “Obviously.” She cut him off with a slight smirk. Then, her voice softened as she leaned in. “But more importantly…”

    Her expression grew somber. “You need to find Magus, and stop him from influencing ANYONE ELSE, of course after removing his influence from all the girls. And then, find out why the Goddess harbors ill will toward you.”

    She hesitated, her fingers tightening into a fist.

    “Despite everything… I…” Her voice wavered.

    She swallowed hard before finishing. “I’m sure that once she gets to know you, she’ll change her mind… if it’s possible.”

    Her gaze drifted toward the towering statue of the Goddess, now cracked—damaged by Van’s own sword.

    A deep breath.

    Amoria straightened her posture and stood. “Now… I’ll leave. Van, you can escape undetected. I’ll quell the angry mob and—”

    She stopped mid-sentence.

    Van had stood up beside her, his hand gently taking hers.

    His grip was firm, steady.

    “At least,” Van spoke, his voice quiet but unyielding, “let me go out there with you.”

    Amoria blinked, momentarily startled by the gesture.

    Then, she smiled.

    A genuine, grateful smile.

    She squeezed his hand, returning his strength in her own. “Then… let’s go together.”

    With that, they marched forward, stepping into the unknown.

    Van, once again, donned the display helmet from the Von Brayle estate.

    Together, they pushed open the massive cathedral doors, stepping into the cool night air.

    Van braced himself, expecting an angry mob, fists raised, voices shouting in outrage. He steeled his nerves, preparing for whatever threats came their way.

    But instead—

    Something astonishing lay before them.

    A sea of people, stretching far into the distance.

    Not rioting.

    Not screaming.

    Kneeling.

    Van’s breath hitched as thousands of voices boomed in unison—

    “ALL HAIL VAN HELLIX!”

    Amoria let out a quiet chuckle, turning to him with a smirk. “Huh… I guess that explains why the mob never arrived.”

    Van remained frozen, his mind struggling to process the sheer scale of the moment.

    Then, stepping forward from the kneeling masses, Nickelson emerged, his expression resolute. With deliberate movements, he drove his sword into the ground and bowed deeply.

    “FOR FREEING ALL OF THE HOLY-CHURCH’S BELIEVERS FROM THE BISHOP’S CONTROL, I, SIR ALISTAIR EALDRED IGNATIUS NICKELSON, THE KING’S HAND—THANK YOU FROM THE DEPTHS OF MY HEART!!”

    Beside him, Cerille stepped forward, mirroring the gesture, her sword lowered in deep reverence.

    Van’s heart pounded violently against his ribs. Sweat beaded along his skin.

    ‘That fucking Bishop… How the hell am I supposed to deal with this now!?’

    A sudden squeeze on his palm pulled him from his spiraling thoughts.

    “Van.”

    Amoria’s voice was calm, grounding.

    He turned to her, her gentle yet knowing gaze bringing him back to reality.

    “….”

    Van cleared his throat, exhaling sharply. He looked over the countless expectant faces staring up at him.

    Waiting.

    Expecting a speech.

    A long moment stretched between them.

    Then, after what felt like an eternity, Van finally muttered—

    “You’re welcome.”

    The words hung in the air.

    Silence. Shortly followed by a quiet chuckle from Amoria.

    She looked at him with a mix of admiration and playfulness, her eyes glinting with amusement.

    Meanwhile, Nickelson let out a deep sigh in his mind.

    ‘Haah… Meaty, meaty, meaty…’

    He immediately shook the thought away.

    ‘No.’ He corrected himself, forcing his gaze to settle on his daughter. ‘Van Hellix is your name.’

    His resolve hardened.

    With a booming voice, he declared—

    “THANK YOU FOR YOUR KINDNESS!!”

    The crowd erupted in thunderous cheers. [Recommended Background Music: Don Diablo – Thousand Faces]


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  • [WARNING: VIOLENCE, GORE, SEXUAL THEMES]

    “I see. They’re good friends with the church…” Van murmured, exhaling as he spoke to Marcy.

    But his gaze had already shifted—locked onto Amoria who drew near with Lalyn.

    His expression didn’t change.

    But for a brief moment—his fingers curled slightly at his side.

    A small pause. A shift in his breathing.

    Something in his eyes hardened—then smoothed over almost instantly.

    “Van? You here?” Marcy’s voice pulled him back.

    He blinked.

    “What is it?” His voice was steady. Unchanged.

    Marcy frowned slightly but continued. “They have to be killed, Van,” she said, blunt as ever. “They’ll just be pardoned if we let them be.”

    Van inhaled, “Fine,” he exhaled evenly, then, turning to her—

    “I’ll handle it.”

    A beat. A pause so small it was almost imperceptible.

    “And… do me a favor.”

    — LATER —

    “You’re so forward,” Amoria murmured, eyes flickering between their entwined arms as they navigated the capital’s streets toward the Holy Church. “Was it really that important to talk to me?”

    “It was, among other things,” Van replied, his tone unreadable.

    Amoria tilted her head. “Other things? We’re not talking right now?”

    Van offered her a small, knowing smile.

    “Later. Right now, I know you’re occupied, so I’ll just escort you.”

    “…I see.” She lowered her gaze, a solemn smile playing on her lips.

    A minute of silence passed between them, their footsteps echoing against the stone streets.

    “How are you feeling?” Amoria finally asked.

    “I feel fine,” Van said simply.

    “Van.” Amoria sighed, tightening her grip around his arm slightly. “If you’re really going to walk with me like this… holding my arm this way—can you at least be truthful?”

    Van’s expression didn’t shift.

    “I feel normal,” he said. “But the reason I hold your arm and escorting you isn’t because I need a heart-to-heart. Or because I want to tell you how I felt having to kill them.”

    Amoria pressed her lips into a thin line.

    “Then why?” she asked, voice quiet. “To make amends for yesterday? To… Maybe apologize for disrespecting the Goddess’s will?”

    “No.” Van shook his head, not missing a beat or even questioning Amoria’s fixation over the Goddess. “I just want to be here for you. You’ve carried quite a lot, haven’t you?”

    A slight tremor ran through her fingers as she clenched her free hand into her gown.

    “…What’s that supposed to mean?” she whispered, frustration creeping into her voice. “Just… why are you so cryptic?”

    Van studied her for a beat longer, his gaze subtly shifting—just for a moment—to a spot slightly above her head.

    “It means Magus controlled you,” he finally said, voice softer. “But despite that, you fought him off until the bitter end. If only he didn’t exist… I bet we’d still be together today.”

    “Don’t say that.” The rejection was instant, sharp. “He still gave me Liz. He made me strong. And… while crude, and questionable, he was still there for me.” Her grip tightened against his sleeve.

    “You weren’t. You were only part of my life for a fraction of what he was. Despite everything, before you ran.”

    Van inhaled deeply, as if steadying himself.

    “Right. I almost forgot, you—”

    “…I what?” Her voice was wary, her body tensing.

    Van examined her carefully.

    “…Nevermind.” His voice was quiet. “Just know that everything is going to be okay.”

    Amoria exhaled sharply, turning her gaze away from him.

    ‘Really… What is it with him today…?’ she thought, feeling an odd mixture of exasperation and something else she couldn’t quite name.

    ‘The years have been rough for you, haven’t they?’

    She scoffed internally, her mind running bitter. ‘You can’t see beyond yourself. Saying something so careless, when you don’t know the extent of others’ anguish… Saying those words.’

    And yet, his touch felt warmer this time.

    A memory flickered—the way he had responded when she questioned whether the Brayles should be killed. While everyone else had judged her, he hadn’t.

    Despite her conflicts, despite her doubts—she clutched his arm tighter.

    Then, her voice broke the silence.

    “Say…” Amoria murmured. “How did you know the Duke was guilty? That Bernard was the one controlling our girls?”

    Her grip on his arm tightened.

    “I have to know, Van. For me, and for Liz.”

    Van met her gaze, carefully weighing his words.

    “Bernard boasted about it to Michael next to me, thinking I was some weak idiot,” he finally said, his expression unreadable. “I guess Untrusted worked in my favor, huh?”

    Amoria’s eyes narrowed slightly.

    “Is that… the truth?” she pressed.

    “100%.” Van nodded. “I also told Marcy to keep Michael at the Guild. I still need to debrief him.” His voice remained steady.

    “It’s your kid, Amoria. And you.” His tone deepened. “When something this grand is tied to either of you, I won’t pull any punches if it means keeping you safe.”

    His words should have sounded reassuring.

    But they felt hollow.

    Then again… so did everything else he had told her in this timeframe.

    Amoria lowered her gaze.

    “I see… It’s tragic, in a way… Your passive, again. And Marcy said that Melanie had a panic attack when she saw all that blood, and couldn’t breathe… Good thing that it wasn’t anything serious.” she murmured. “The poor girl.”

    “But I’m grateful. Thank you. Really…”

    Then, the church came into view. A grand, gothic monolith of stone, towering above the city like a monument to faith and control. It was reminiscent of the one she had taken Van to before—to remove the runes Salem had carved into his body.

    But this one was far, far bigger.

    Dozens of priestesses and women in modest yet ornate robes moved in measured steps, their hushed voices weaving through the air. They gathered at the foot of the massive, open doorway, their presence both serene and suffocating.

    Amoria exhaled.

    “Well… you escorted me.” Her voice was quieter than before, almost reluctant.

    Slowly, she let go of his arm—a hesitation in the movement, as if she expected him to hold on.

    Van didn’t.

    “I have,” he affirmed, his tone steady. “I won’t be gone for long. And I won’t leave until I’ve resolved your issues. Don’t worry.”

    “Okay,” Amoria murmured.

    But she was already drowning out his words, dismissing them as empty reassurances, as nothing more than an attempt to maintain some semblance of dignity; as she’s well aware Van has lots of insecurities. And she currently didn’t have the capacity to bear them.

    She gave him a hollow smile, one that never reached her eyes, and turned away—disappearing into the sea of priestesses.

    Van remained outside, watching her go.

    His gaze darkened.

    Not at her.

    At the church.

    ——

    When Van returned sixteen years later, my knees gave out beneath me. Because… it wasn’t just that he reminded me of Magus.

    It was that I could love him, despite what the Goddess urged me to do. To me—he represented freedom… And healing. That I could heal his heart. With him, I truly felt like a priestess every time I gave him attention and care.

    I thought that if you came back… if I just saw you again—I’d finally be free.

    Like that time, when you rescued me.

    Like that moment, when you pulled me from that cursed place, where all my past party members died.

    But, Van—I’m still standing in that trap.

    And you… you can’t see it. So you can’t save me. You’re not there with me, so I can’t help you either…

    And I know it’s not your fault, because you’ve been through so much, you can only see your own wounds. Your own suffering.

    That’s okay.

    Amoria clutched her knees, burying her face against them; surrounded by darkness and corpses.

    But Van—if you keep telling me that you’re here for me, when you can’t even see me… When no one can… I’ll just raise my head in expectation.

    And when I do—when I reach for that light—I’ll only see the darkness again.

    So please… Don’t give me hope.

    Just let me starve in peace.

    —————-

    Amoria stepped into the cathedral, letting out a slow, deep sigh.

    Without hesitation, she reached for her robe—slipping it off her shoulders, letting it fall open.

    The heavy fabric pooled at her elbows as she stepped forward, her bare skin prickling against the cool air. She left it hanging by the door.

    Her eyes were vacant, hollow as she walked down the aisle—past dozens of rows of benches, past the towering statues of saints and the Goddess herself.

    With each step, the scent thickened in the air.

    Sweat. Musk. Sex.

    The faint burn of aphrodisiac incense lingered at the back of her throat.

    At the end of the hall, just a few meters from the grand altar, she lowered herself to her knees.

    Slowly, she bowed her head.

    “I greet the Grand Bishop,” she murmured, her voice flat, empty.

    The answer was not words.

    It was the sound of wet, squelching flesh meeting her ears. The heavy, labored breathing of bodies in motion.

    She didn’t have to look up to know what she would see, but she was given no choice.

    “Look up.” The command came, and the crest on her breast burned. A sharp, searing pain. A reminder. A leash.

    Her head snapped upward. The sight before her was one she had seen too many times before.

    The Grand Bishop sat at his throne—surrounded by flesh; a woman knelt between his legs, her head bobbing rhythmically.

    Two more curled into him, perched on either of his knees, licking at his face and ears.

    Another stood behind him, her hands digging into his shoulders, massaging his tension away.

    And above them all—the great statue of the Goddess loomed.

    Watching.

    Always watching.

    “Good evening, Bishop,” Amoria murmured, her voice soft, lifeless. “How are you feeling today?”

    Her tone was even, but her gaze betrayed her for a single second— flickering toward the woman at his lap. The Bishop exhaled a deep, satisfied sigh, leaning back as his fingers combed through a woman’s hair.

    “You tell me how I feel, Amoria.” His eyes were already on her. Cold. Expectant.

    “You failed to stop their deaths,” he said, lazily rolling his shoulders. “Duke Von Brayle was a good friend of mine.” The air tightened. A muscle in Amoria’s jaw twitched, her body tensing instinctively.

    “I’m… terribly sorry, Bishop,” she whispered. “I really tried, but… if I pressed any harder, the others would have grown suspicious.” Her fingers curled into her lap.

    “Please…”

    The Bishop let out a long, heavy sigh—as if she were exhausting him.

    “Haah… just tell me.” His voice was smooth, but beneath it, there was something sharp. Something dangerous.

    “How did Van Hellix know about their involvement? That they were the ones responsible for the branding?” His eyes narrowed slightly. “Be truthful. That’s an order.”

    A jolt of pain.

    The crest on her skin burned—a violent, scorching heat spreading through her chest.

    Amoria swallowed hard.

    “…He confidently stated that Bernard boasted about it to Michael, believing him to be a weakling due to his Untrusted passive skill,” she said, her voice steady despite the pain.

    “He trusts me. His trust in me seems to have deepened for some reason. He wouldn’t lie.”

    For a long moment, the Bishop said nothing. Then, he exhaled sharply.

    “I see.” His fingers tapped against the armrest of his seat.

    “So, in the end, it was all due to the brat’s incompetence and need for validation.” A slow smirk curled at his lips.

    “How dull.”

    The Bishop let out a slow, languid breath.

    “Fine. I forgive you…”

    Amoria exhaled, a quiet, trembling sigh of relief—

    “But the Goddess won’t.”

    His voice was smooth, almost gentle, but his gaze glowed unnaturally, pinning her in place. Her breath hitched—Her pulse pounded in her ears.

    “No…” She let out.

    “Though, don’t you worry.” His lips curled, as if amused. “She doesn’t claim too high a payment.” He tilted his head.

    “She just wants you to dedicate yourself fully.”

    Amoria swallowed hard.

    “Please,” she whispered. “Please… at least let her recover—”

    “Seventeen soon, isn’t she?” The Bishop tapped a finger against his chin, as if in thought.

    “Ripe…”

    His eyes flickered with something darker.

    “Ripe indeed to be a servant of the Goddess. To devote herself… just like her beautiful mother.” His smirk deepened. “Who is, unfortunately…”

    He sighed theatrically, shaking his head.

    “Starting to grow too old for the Goddess’s tastes.” The words dug into her.

    She then snapped.

    “YOU DON’T NEED LIZZY!” Her voice rang through the cathedral.

    Her fists slammed against the marble floor, shaking with fury.

    “You have ME.” Her breathing was ragged, desperate. She staggered to her feet, staring him down, her eyes wild with emotion.

    “I am prettier than MOST—NO, ALL women in THE CAPITAL!” She threw her arms out, gesturing to herself.

    “Even at my age, I remain youthful! More vibrant than ANYONE!” Her voice cracked.

    “I take care of myself JUST FOR YOU. YOU DO NOT NEED LIZZY. She doesn’t need to join the chur—”

    “Silence.” The word cut through her like a blade.

    Her body seized as her lips snapped shut against her will.

    The Bishop rose from his chair.

    The women surrounding him stepped aside silently, their movements graceful, practiced.

    His footsteps echoed against the cold marble as he strode toward her.

    He stopped before her.

    “Kneel.” Came the order.

    Her body betrayed her.

    She sank to her knees, her breath trembling as her eyes met his obscene member before her.

    She refused to look.

    But she could smell it.

    “You dare raise your voice at me?” His voice was calm. Soft.

    Almost… Mocking.

    “Here… in the Goddess’s abode?”

    Amoria’s fingers dug into her lap. Her head bowed slightly, but her shoulders shook.

    “If the next words out of your mouth are not a profound apology to both me and the mighty Goddess, I will rethink what to do with your precious daughter.” A pause.

    “Speak.”

    A shudder ran down her spine. Slowly—deliberately—she bowed her head, pressing her forehead against the cold floor.

    Her voice came out as a whisper.

    “Please… please…” Her shoulders trembled.

    “Oh, Grand Bishop…”

    Her voice quivered.

    “I’m sorry for disrespecting you.” Her fingers curled, nails pressing into the marble. “But please…” Her voice cracked.

    “You have me. Please… let her be a child for a little longer… Please…”

    She begged. The Bishop once more let the silence afterward linger in the air.

    Then—

    “You vile woman.”

    Amoria barely had time to react before he bent over her, his hand catching her chin effortlessly.

    His fingers tilted her face up, forcing her to look into his deep, indulgent stare.

    “You say this…” His thumb brushed against her cheek.

    “…As if I were some cruel man.”

    He smiled, his voice lulling her into a false sense of calm.

    “As if I concern myself with such earthly things as vanity.”

    His hand lingered for a beat too long, then—he leaned closer.

    So close, she could feel his breath against her ear.

    “But…” His voice dropped to a whisper.

    “You are growing old.”

    A violent shudder ran through her. His fingers trailed away—cold, detached.

    He straightened, his smile widening.

    “And your daughter…”

    His voice was smooth, almost amused.

    “She’s really ripe, you know?”

    A quiet, lingering sneer followed as the Bishop licked his lips.

    “Really… truly… ripe.”

    ‘No.’

    ‘No… NO.’

    ‘Lizzy… NO.’

    ‘Please… Please… Anyone…’

    Amoria broke into a cold sweat, her pulse pounding as the room began to spin. Her vision blurred at the edges.

    ‘Save me…!’

    ‘PLEASE—’

    “The reason I didn’t kill Bernard right away…” A voice rang through the cathedral. Cutting. Sharp. Decisive.

    “Who—!?” The Bishop snapped toward the source.

    Behind Amoria, at the doorway—he stood.

    The same bloodied armor, still soaked from the massacre at the Von Brayle estate. But now—his face was no longer hidden.

    Van’s gaze swept the room—past the women, past the young girls amongst them, eventually landing on the Bishop.

    His voice remained even. “… Was because I believed myself to be strong enough to solve this while managing to retain Melanie’s innocence.”

    ‘Van..!’

    Amoria’s breath hitched as light returned to her face. She looked up from her knees, still trapped in that dark place—that deathtrap where she had believed no one would ever reach her.

    But there he was. Reaching for her, all over again.

    “You came for… me..?”

    And in an instant, everything he had told her earlier struck her.

    He had meant every word.

    He could see her.

    “VAN… HELLIX!”

    The Bishop’s voice rang out, filled with fury.

    Van barely acknowledged it.

    “That almost got her killed. Letting Bernard live, being considerate toward others while destroying your enemies almost got her killed.” he continued. “And she was saved by sheer luck and convenience… And I—”

    He lifted his sword.

    “Never make the same mistake twice.”

    Van’s eyes glowed.

    The sword left his hand, bulleting through the air.

    Steel tore through flesh.

    The Bishop choked as the blade pierced his chest, impaling him against the Goddess’s statue.

    Blood trickled down the pristine marble.

    “GAAAHHH!” He coughed, thick red spilling from his lips.

    Van didn’t move. His gaze remained fixed.

    Behind him, Amoria staggered to her feet, compelled by the crest.

    “HEAL THE BISHOP!” she shouted, her bare chest rising and falling with panicked breaths.

    Her arm snapped forward, palm raised at Van. “STOP THE INTRUDE—”

    “Rest for now, Amoria.” Van’s voice was soft.

    In a blink, he appeared before her, pressing his thumb into the space between her shoulder and neck. The tension left her body as her limbs went limp.

    For a brief moment—just before she slipped into unconsciousness—her face almost looked peaceful.

    She surrendered to sleep.

    Van turned back to the scene before him; the Bishop, pinned.

    The women shielding him, bodies pressed against him in a final, desperate act of worship; most definitely due to the mark; he reasoned.

    Van took a slow, deliberate step forward.

    “I wanted to be sure.” His voice was measured, composed.

    “I escorted her here and decided to watch. To see if you had a trick up your sleeve before I intervened.”

    The women struck him, fists slamming against his armor, against his body, but he treated them as nothing. Like air. Like ants beneath his boots.

    Unflinching. Unrelenting.

    He moved them aside with the ease of brushing dust from his sleeve.

    “But after a while…” he sighed, his expression unreadable. “I guess I snapped a little bit.”

    His gaze fell upon the Bishop, watching him drown in his own fear.

    “So, instead of just killing you outright,” Van tilted his head, his eyes gleaming in the dim cathedral light.

    “I took away your ability to command.”

    The Bishop flinched.

    Van stepped closer, his words sharp as a blade.

    “Because I wanted you to feel it.” His fingers twitched.

    “Really…”

    Van crouched.

    “Really feel it.” He growled.

    And then he grabbed the Bishop’s inner thighs.

    The man screamed as Van began to pull.

    Teeth crunched as the Bishop clamped his jaw down too hard, breaking them from the strain.

    The first thing to snap was the tendons beneath his groin. The wet, ugly pop of muscle separating from bone.

    The second was his scrotum, tearing open.

    Blood spilled freely now, coating the floor beneath him, thick and steaming.

    Then his groin. His rectum. More flesh split apart, wet and raw. The air filled with the scent of copper and filth as the Bishop lost control of his bladder.

    Still, Van kept going.

    Skin. Flesh. Bone.

    The pelvis cracked open next.

    His spine strained, his ribs bending, his organs spilling onto the blood-slick floor.

    A single squelch.

    Then another.

    By now, the loyal women had stopped fighting.

    They stared. Watched in horror.

    One gagged. Another dropped to her knees, retching violently.

    He was NEVER this angry before.

    And he reveled in it.

    The Bishop was still alive when his belly button split apart, his intestines slipping free from their cage of flesh.

    The air was thick with death.

    The scent of blood overpowered the incense of the aphrodisiac.

    His inner skeleton was now visible. Spine. Pelvis. Ribcage. Shaking. Bloody.

    And still, Van continued.

    A final howl. One last wretched, strangled breath came from the Bishop.

    The tear reached his chest.

    The heart split.

    A second passed. Then another.

    The Bishop slumped. Unconscious.

    Van watched. Waited.

    Then, at last, he ended it.

    With a single, decisive movement—Van ripped the body in two, tossing the halves aside.

    The women didn’t look at the Bishop’s mangled corpse, they looked at themselves.

    The slave crests on their breasts… were gone. The women were awestruck, thunderstruck, and terrified.

    Van’s gaze fell on Amoria as her breath hitched in sharp, uneven gasps.

    Van could see it clearly.

    Veil of smoke choked her, coiling around her throat like a noose, from Van’s perspective.

    A deadman’s switch, just like what Bernard did to Melanie in his final moments.

    Only this one had been there for far, far longer. The Bishop had made sure—long ago—that if he couldn’t have her… no one would.

    Veil of dense pink mist spiraled around her head, blinding her.

    The same one he had seen around Marcy. Around Lalyn. Faintly, even around Melanie.

    This was it, he concluded.

    The aura of Magus’s mind control.

    Veil that had long since overstayed its welcome.

    “Leave. All of you.”

    He didn’t need a slave crest to command them. They bolted.

    And then—only he and Amoria remained.

    Van bent over, fingers curling around her head.

    “[Hard Swing.]”

    He cast.

    ——————-

    “Stay back!” She shouted, gripping her scepter and pointing it at him.

    “R-relax! I’m here to help!” he said, raising his hands slightly.

    The girl didn’t lower her guard. Her robes were soaked in blood, her expression hard and untrusting.

    “Help me? Are you an idiot!?” Her voice was sharp, exasperated. “Do you not see what this place is!?”

    She gestured at the runes encircling her.

    He glanced at them, then scratched the side of his helmet as if trying to scratch his head through it.

    “Sorry… I can’t read runes all that well. What is this place, then?”

    “A death trap,” she said flatly. “I’ve been stuck here for days. My… all my teammates died in this dungeon.”

    There was no grief in her voice—just exhaustion.

    “Sorry to hear that… Must be rough,” he muttered, lowering his gaze.

    She scoffed. “Aren’t you apathetic.”

    “I didn’t know them,” he admitted. “I can’t feel sorrow for strangers, but… just, sorry.”

    She studied him for a moment, as if debating whether to respond.

    “Anyway,” he continued, “how do I get you out?”

    “You can’t. So leave.”

    She sighed, rubbing her forehead. “It’s called a death trap for a reason. If I step past these runes—or do anything to them—I die on the spot. Same goes for anyone else.”

    “I see…” he exhaled, then, without hesitation, sat down and opened his bag.

    Her brow furrowed. “…What are you doing?”

    He rummaged through his supplies. “What happens if I toss you some bread or meat?”

    He pulled out a sandwich.

    Her stomach growled. Loudly.

    A flash of annoyance crossed her face.

    “Really?” She tilted her head slightly, almost amused by his forwardness. “I can’t leave. Doing me any favors like that would just prolong my suffering. You’d be better off throwing me some poison. You seem like the type.”

    “Just eat,” he said, tossing her the sandwich.

    She caught it—almost too quickly—then stared at it in disbelief.

    Her gaze flicked back to him.

    His gear was pristine. Not the kind worn by someone who had braved a dungeon like this.

    She narrowed her eyes. “Are you a bandit?”

    Still clutching the sandwich, she watched him carefully. “Your buddies will start asking questions if you don’t get back to them.”

    “…” He remained silent for a moment, then shrugged. “Probably.”

    She scoffed. “Then what is this? Why are you staying? You won’t get my items even after I die.”

    His response was calm, almost indifferent. “Maybe I just want some company that can’t run away from me. Someone who’s got no choice but to focus only on me.” He exhaled. “I’m selfish like that.”

    She stiffened.

    “Anyway,” he continued, “cut the tough girl act. If you really wanted to die so badly—or be handed poison—you’d have already taken a bite of that sandwich, wouldn’t you?”

    Her expression faltered. “…What?”

    Without answering, he removed his helmet and took a deliberate bite of his own meal.

    “Here,” he said, tossing it to her.

    She caught it instinctively, blinking in surprise.

    ‘He anticipated I’d be distrustful…?’ she thought, staring at him.

    ‘Well, as expected. He did admit to being a bandit.’

    After a moment, she tossed back the first sandwich he had given her earlier.

    “Eat that one instead,” she said flatly.

    His expression didn’t change. “…No. Then I’d die from the vicious ant venom I laced it with.”

    Her eye twitched.

    “…Forget it. I’m not hungry.” She scowled, throwing the bitten sandwich he gave her onto the stone floor.

    “That was a joke—”

    “I don’t care.” Her voice was sharp. “I don’t trust you. And if you’re the type to joke about something like this…” She exhaled, gaze cold. “You deserve not to be trusted.”

    Silence stretched between them.

    Then, he sighed. “I’m sorry. I guess I’m new to this. Even after all this time.”

    Without another word, he took another sandwich from his bag, unwrapped it, and took a full bite.

    Then, he tossed it back to her.

    She caught it again, hesitating.

    “…” Her eyes flickered between him and the food.

    “Only because you ate it first,” she muttered, finally taking a bite.

    The Next Day

    “You again?” she muttered, eyeing the armored figure as he settled onto the ground, opening his bag.

    “What can I say? My life lacks excitement.” He shrugged before tossing her a piece of meat.

    She caught it but didn’t eat it right away, her gaze narrowing.

    With a sigh, he reached into his bag, took out another piece, and took a bite in front of her—chewing, swallowing. Then, without a word, he tossed the half-eaten portion to her.

    She watched him for a moment before finally taking a bite herself.

    Two Days Later

    “What did you bring me today?” she asked, this time with something close to anticipation.

    “Braised wyvern tail with spiced root vegetables,” he said, unwrapping a portion of meat glazed in a rich, dark sauce. The aroma of roasted herbs and smoked marrow filled the air.

    Her eyes lit up. “Ooh!”

    Without a second thought, he took a bite first, then tossed the rest to her.

    She sniffed it suspiciously before taking a tentative bite. The meat was tender, rich with the flavors of fire-roasted herbs and aged spices.

    “…This is actually good,” she muttered, chewing thoughtfully.

    A Week Later

    “Tell me about the outside,” she said suddenly. “I miss it a lot, after all.”

    “Green. Green, and more green,” he answered, almost dismissively.

    “That’s boring. I don’t care about that. Tell me about the birds, the trees, the wind…” Her voice carried a rare spark of excitement.

    “Uh… they exist?” he replied.

    She stared at him, exasperated. “Seriously?”

    “I don’t like it that much, I suppose.” He looked down, absentmindedly picking up a stone and tossing it at the nearby wall.

    “I like it here more,” he added after a beat, glancing around the cavern.

    She let out a short laugh. “Why? Is it the gloom? The spiderwebs? The rodents? The scent of rotting corpses?” she teased.

    He didn’t answer right away.

    Then—

    “You.”

    She blinked.

    “…What?”

    Her head tilted slightly as she studied him, as if trying to decipher his meaning.

    “Is this a confession? Have you fallen for me?” she asked. “Because even if it is, you can’t touch me, you know. Or even get near me. Not that I’d let you, even if you could.”

    “Correct,” he said, his voice quiet. “But you’re here. Even if you can’t leave, you listen. You talk to me. You… look at me.” He lowered his gaze.

    “Sorry,” he cleared his throat, “My ‘bandit’ buddies need me. I’ll leave.”

    And then he was gone. For two days, he didn’t return.

    She had food—more than enough—but that wasn’t what she found herself longing for.

    It was his presence.

    She realized that in the same way he had relied on her, she had begun to rely on him. Not for survival, not for protection, but for something quieter—something deeper.

    Comfort.

    Even if he wasn’t physically wounded, she could feel it—her words had a way of soothing him, of healing him in a way she had never quite experienced before.

    And as a devoted priestess, that feeling, with him… felt fulfilling.

    When he finally returned, she looked at him—her gaze expectant.

    He unpacked his bag as if he had never left. His movements were slower, his posture heavier. More sluggish. More discouraged. He pulled out a sandwich, about to take a bite before tossing it to her.

    “Stop.”

    Her voice was quiet but firm, making him pause, subtly turning his head toward her.

    “You don’t have to… do that anymore. Not with me.”

    She reassured him, her voice softer now.

    And when she saw it—his slight gasp, the way his eyes widened just a fraction—she felt it again.

    Her words healed him.

    And with him…

    … It was intoxicating.

    Before long, she wanted to touch him herself.

    “There’s… something I haven’t told you.”

    She shifted, sitting closer to the runes than ever before. He did the same on the other side.

    “This death trap… it can be solved. Somehow.” She exhaled deeply, as if the words themselves carried weight.

    “…Then why haven’t you said anything?” He inquired.

    His reaction wasn’t what she expected. It wasn’t hopeful, or eager.

    It was disappointment.

    Why?

    “Because… it requires a life. A sacrifice. If I die, the runes will die… but if someone from outside steps onto them and dies… I’ll be free.”

    Her lips tightened as she recalled her fallen party. “I’m a devoted priestess of the Goddess. I didn’t want someone else to die, too…”

    “I see.” His voice was quiet.

    “I can get you out. Don’t worry.”

    His tone should have been reassuring. But something about it was wrong.

    “What’s wrong?” She asked.

    She was less worried about his certainty, more worried about that look of quiet defeat on his face.

    She had assumed he meant to bring someone else—someone to serve as a sacrifice.

    And yet, even knowing that, even realizing what he might intend…

    She was still that desperate to feel him.

    To heal him, once more.

    “There’s… a man out there. My party leader.” He hesitated, choosing his words carefully. “He has this… effect on women. I…”

    “Why, aren’t you bold.” Her tone was almost amused.

    “You already assume I’m yours, that you’re worried about me being stolen away?” She teased, a playful glint in her eyes.

    He lowered his head, his fingers clutching at his sides.

    “Don’t worry.”

    Her voice softened, dipping into something almost tender—softer than the bread from the sandwiches he had given her.

    “No matter what… I’ll be with you.” She assured.

    And after a moment of silence, he spoke.

    “Okay. Then…” He stood up, and stepped onto the runes.

    “WHAT ARE YOU—!”

    Before she could finish, his body hit the ground, lifeless. The runes glowed brightly, flaring one final time before fading into nothing. She was free.

    And he was dead.

    Shock swallowed her whole. Her breath came in short, ragged gasps, her pulse pounding in her ears. Her knees buckled, lowering her toward him—toward his still body.

    But before she could touch him, his body dissolved. Armor, flesh, everything. It all dissipated into thin air.

    “Wha—?”

    Before she could even register what had happened, he reappeared. Standing before her, intact, as if nothing had happened.

    “I guess this place registered as a safe zone,” he mused, dusting himself off. His gaze flicked to her, studying her reaction. “Even with you in it. How weird.”

    He stepped closer, lowering himself to one knee. He reached out, offering his hand.

    “H-how… is this possible…? Is… this a dream…?” Her voice trembled, her wide eyes shining with disbelief.

    Van smiled—a weary, yet warm smile.

    “I’m Van.” His hand remained outstretched.

    “Nice to meet you.”

    “Haaah… Haa…” Her breath hitched, her chest rising and falling as if she had just surfaced from deep water.

    “I-I’m… Amoria…” She exhaled, a warm, trembling smile forming on her lips. Relief flooded through her as his touch steadied her, as if grounding her in reality.

    She stepped forward, over the runes that had once trapped her, and he led her out—out of the darkness, out of that suffocating, endless night.

    And finally…

    Her eyes opened.

    She blinked, adjusting to the dim candlelight of the church. His face was the first thing she saw.

    Youthful. Unchanged— The same face he had worn back then.

    Her breath caught in her throat as she stared, mouth slightly agape. He held her, his black hair falling slightly over his eyes as he gently tilted her head upward, his fingers entwined in her golden hair, supporting her.

    “Van…”

    The name left her lips in a whisper, her voice barely audible, trembling.

    “I… see you…”

    Tears welled, blurring her vision before spilling freely, tracing warm paths down her cheeks, dripping onto the marble floor.

    “I saw you moments ago…” She choked out, her voice raw, filled with something she couldn’t quite name. “But… it feels like forever…”

    Her fingers trembled as they reached for him, pressing softly against his cheek, tracing the contours of his face as if to confirm he was real.

    “I finally… see you…”

    A broken sob escaped her lips, and then—

    “You’re so beautiful,” she whispered tenderly.

    Van’s breath hitched. He looked down at her, his expression unreadable, his voice barely above a rasp.

    “Amoria…”

    She tilted her head slightly, searching his eyes, her own gaze filled with quiet anticipation.

    “What is it?” she asked, her voice soft, her thumb grazing against his cheek in gentle reassurance.

    His lips parted. A pause.

    Then—

    “When Magus did what he did to you. To us… when you… and I were… Betrayed, I met the Demon Lord.”

    ——————

    BIG THANKS TO My Patreon:

    SparkyZinger

    If you’d like to support my work, consider checking out my Patreon—every bit of support, even at the lowest tier, truly means a lot!

  • Short Announcement.

    My absence this time wasn’t due to writer’s block. It was apathy.

    Everything I wrote—even when I let myself write garbage—felt dull. Predictable. Empty.

    And after some time, I figured out why.

    Fear.

    Fear of how my real story—the one I truly want to write—would be received.

    But I’m done with that. I won’t be afraid of you anymore.

    Though, I can’t say the same for you.

    Whether you stay or leave, I’m done shaping my story to fit others’ expectations.

    This time, I write for myself. However, I will keep your criticisms at arm’s length, as I still appreciate them.

    I hope you enjoy the read.

    —————————-

    [Now… I just want it to hurt Hellix.] The Goddess expressed coldly to the Archdevil. [Maybe it will break him. Maybe not…]

    She paused for a moment before continuing.

    [But will your protégé finally listen to your orders? The Wretch is drawing near the Capital, after all. Time is of the essence.]

    {…}

    {He is near breaking.} The Archdevil rasped, exhaling a weary sigh as his gaze darkened. {Even the mightiest break after enough… nudges.}

    [Good. Make it happen.] The Goddess turned away. [I have to prepare for the childbirth… If you’ll excuse me.]

    ———————-

    “Lord Belial.” Mirias’ voice was soft, but insistent.

    “I’m sleeping. Leave me alone.” He grumbled, waving her off without opening his eyes. The apartment above Galdo’s tavern where they resided was dark and moody.

    “I know you said we shouldn’t return to the Demonic Realm. That you want to stay here, but—”

    “But shut up. It’s final.” Belial spat, shifting to bury his face deeper into his pillow. “I’m not going back to that place. Everything here is just… so bright. So full of color. I’m not going back to a realm filled with puppets like you.”

    A pause. Then, quieter—almost swallowed by the fabric of his sheets—”Even she will become a puppet. I know she will.”

    Mirias hesitated. “…My lord. I hear the Archdevil’s voice. Surely, you can’t ignore—”

    “I CAN.” His growl cut through the air. “That bastard will quiet down eventually.”

    But the voice in his head didn’t quiet. It pulsed, distorted, commanding him—

    Return to the Demonic Capital.

    “Why the hell is he so insistent?!” Belial clenched his teeth, rubbing his temples as if he could crush the voice out of existence.

    Mirias sat beside him, her presence unwavering. “Lord Belial…”

    He tensed.

    “I don’t know what the Archdevil thinks, or why he says what he does. But if it’s about the people… won’t Van Hellix be enough?”

    Belial inhaled sharply.

    “He has to return eventually, doesn’t he? When he’s done here?” She hesitated, then placed her palm lightly on his shoulder.

    “Then, you won’t be alone. You’ll finally have a friend you see as an equal. Someone you actually like… Won’t you?”

    She pursed her lips, swallowing the words she truly wanted to say—

    ‘I wish, Lord Belial… that I could be that friend for you. That you would gasp and sob this way over me.’

    “As for the Demon Lord,” she continued, steadying her voice, “she is married now. And more than that—she’s no longer the love-sick child she once was.”

    “She won’t drool over you the way she did before. Not anymore. Surely she knows you two are just cousins by this point.”

    “….” Belial inhaled deeply, exhaling through his nose.

    “Fine. Just… fine.” He sighed, rubbing his face before pushing himself off the bed. “My pops is in the city, right?”

    Another deep sigh.

    “I’ll drop by before I leave.”

    He stepped out of the apartment. The sun was setting, casting long shadows over the streets. For the first time in what felt like forever, the voice in his head fell silent.

    ‘Man… it’s even more beautiful than before. This sun. This city…’ He swallowed hard, his lips pressing into a thin line. ‘These people.’

    He let his gaze linger on the passing crowds, as if trying to etch the sight into his memory.

    “Alright, Mirias.”

    “Lead the way to where my pops is staying.”

    ———————————-

    “You’re really something, ain’t ya?” Marcy remarked as she and Van followed behind Michael and Melanie, exiting the Von Brayle estate. “Peeling off a brand like that… You crazy bastard, just how strong have you gotten?” She gave him a playful shove.

    Lalyn and Amoria stood outside, waiting. The moment Melanie appeared, Lalyn nearly sprinted toward her, her usual mask of cold detachment nowhere to be seen.

    “Right…”

    Van’s gaze swept over Marcy, Amoria, and Melanie—but lingered just a moment longer on Amoria.

    “Wait a second.” He stepped toward her, Marcy tilting her head curiously as he passed.

    “Amoria.”

    “…Hey, Van.” Her voice was hesitant, reluctant, as her eyes drifted toward Melanie, still clinging to her mother.

    Van studied her for a beat. “I need to tell you something. Can you wait until I’m done inside the mansion before you leave? I understand you have to report to the bishop, right?” His tone was steady, but beneath it, there was something… softer.

    Amoria blinked in surprise. “Yes, of course. I’ll let you escort me to the church, then.” She offered a small, delicate smile.

    “Great… Great.” Van nodded, but his eyes lingered on her—longer than they should have.

    Amoria tilted her head. “Is everything alright?”

    “Ah, nothing.” He shook his head, pushing the thought aside. “I’ll go back to Marcy before she decides to handle things herself.”

    “…Alright.” Amoria nodded slowly as he turned. Then, almost too quietly, she asked—

    “Are… are you sure this is the way?”

    Lalyn and Marcy both snapped their heads toward her, sharp eyes narrowing at her words.

    ‘That damn priestess…’ Marcy clenched her fists. ‘Her daughter was a slave… What do you MEAN, ‘is this the way’!?’

    But Van didn’t react with the same heat. Instead, he turned back to Amoria with an expression so soft, so unreadably calm, that her breath caught in her throat.

    “Everything is going to be okay, Amoria. Just wait for me, alright?” His words came out slow, smooth—measured.

    ‘Why are everyone so tense…?’ Melanie thought, ‘Isn’t he just going to wait for The Royal Guard and arrest them like aunt Marcy said?’

    Amoria’s fingers twitched, subtly clenching the fabric of her gown.

    ‘Haah… The way you say it. Why are you saying it like that…?’

    Van reached Marcy’s side.

    “You’re really soft on that girl,” she muttered. “Even she needs reprimanding from time to time.”

    A silence stretched between them before Marcy finally sighed, rolling her shoulders.

    “Say… are you sure you want to handle this yourself?” She cracked her neck, her fingers twitching at her sides. “Honestly, I’d feel good killing them myself.”

    “Why risk getting branded?” Van replied, his tone even. “Just leave it to me. My resistance is too high for them to do anything to me.”

    Without another word, he turned back toward the mansion.

    “Oh, and…” His gaze flicked toward Michael.

    “Yeah?” Marcy raised an eyebrow.

    “There’s something I need to talk to the kid about once I’m done. Take Michael to the Guild, please.”

    “Yeah, yeah, I got it. Just go and get it over with.” She sighed.

    Van nodded and started walking away when—

    “Oh, Van.” Marcy called out, making him pause. “Just wanted you to know that—”

    “VAN!”

    A voice cut through the air.

    Melanie.

    She sprinted past Marcy, straight toward the armored man.

    “Melanie.” Van greeted as he turned, his gaze meeting hers. Marcy and Michael watched the exchange in silent curiosity.

    Melanie stepped closer, her voice soft yet steady. “I want to thank you. Please… this is the second time you’ve saved me, and I don’t even know who you are or what you look like.”

    Her expression remained neutral, but her half-lidded eyes carried that same detached, uninterested gaze her mother always wore.

    Van tilted his head slightly, amused.

    ‘Huh.’ He let out an internal chuckle. ‘More forward than her half-sisters, that’s for sure. Even more than Anne. I guess she’s the brave one.’

    “My face ain’t that impressive, kid. And if I remove my helmet here, someone might figure out who I am—”

    Before he could finish, Melanie moved.

    With swift, deliberate hands, she lifted his helmet just enough to expose his mouth. Van barely had time to react before she leaned in, pressing her lips against his—calm, controlled, resolute.

    Marcy whistled in amusement. Michael turned away awkwardly. Lalyn almost smiled in quiet triumph as Amoria just smiled warmly, but faintly.

    Van’s eyes widened in sheer surprise. ‘Is she… serious!?’ His mind scrambled, momentarily thrown off balance. This wasn’t reckless impulse or flustered hesitation—this was a choice.

    Before he could even think to pull away, Melanie was already stepping back.

    “There. Now I didn’t see your face. No one will know your identity. And I got to thank you… crudely.” Her voice was even, but there was a quiet warmth beneath it. A light nod. A controlled retreat.

    “I’d say I got what I wanted… Good day, Sir Van.”

    She turned gracefully, but as she walked away, the faint blush on her cheeks betrayed her composure. A single sideways glance, fleeting yet unmistakable.

    Van watched her go, his gaze unreadable—until the corners of his lips twitched, a faint smirk forming.

    And then—

    “And from what I did see of your face, youdiddntlookthatbadokay!”

    She blurted it out all at once, voice dipping into barely-audible embarrassment before vanishing into the distance.

    Van blinked. Then exhaled, shaking his head in amusement.

    ‘Yeah… definitely the bravest.’

    ‘Now then…’ He turned once more to the mansion.

    ‘Let’s end this.’

    The Duke sat alone in his office, seething. His son, Doyle, sat beside him, silent.

    “Unforgivable… UNFORGIVABLE…!” His fists slammed against the desk, his breath ragged, his body trembling with rage. “They think they can just walk out after KILLING BERNARD?! After EMBARRASSING ME LIKE THIS?!”

    His voice grew hoarse, but the fury inside him only burned hotter.

    “HELLIX… VAN HELLIX… YOU MOTHERFUCKER…!” His teeth clenched so hard his jaw ached. “I’LL MURDER EVERYONE YOU CARE ABOUT… I’LL CHASE AFTER YOU… I’LL DESTROY YOU!!!”

    Doyle said nothing. He simply watched his father unravel, his expression unreadable.

    Then—

    The door creaked open.

    “I knew you’d do that.”

    The Duke’s body stiffened. His breath hitched.

    “..!!!”

    Van stepped inside.

    Slowly, effortlessly, he closed the door behind him. Click.

    His voice was calm. Inevitable. “They always do that.”

    A slow exhale.

    “That’s why…”

    His eyes glowed—a deep, piercing crimson.

    “That’s why we always kill enemies like you.”

    The room seemed to shrink. The air grew heavier.

    Van’s voice remained steady, too steady.

    “That’s another thing we learned on our journey to defeat the Demon Lord.” His words carried no malice, only certainty. “That someone like you will never stop. That someone like you has to be completely crushed.”

    He exhaled through his nose, his gaze dropping slightly—not at the Duke, but at himself.

    “Because even I’m not strong enough to have the luxury of letting you live.”

    A flicker of something passed through his expression. Regret? Resignation? It barely lasted a moment before it was gone.

    His voice remained the same.

    “You have to die. Don’t take it personally.”

    “GUARDS!!!”

    The Duke sprang up, his chair screeching against the floor. His face twisted in rage and desperation.

    ‘ALL AT ONCE. WE MUST FIGHT WITH EVERYTHING WE HAVE, RIGHT NOW!’ The Duke resolved.

    Doyle flinched, recoiling in fear, his hands gripping the arms of his chair as if that would somehow steady him.

    Van didn’t move.

    “They’re all dead.” His voice was quiet. Absolute.

    The Duke’s breath caught.

    Van stepped forward, the trail of crimson behind him stretching from the doorway—a silent testimony to just how many had already fallen.

    The Duke’s pulse thundered in his ears. A cold sweat ran down his spine.

    ‘No way… I… I didn’t NOTICE HIM KILLING THEM ALL?!’

    His eyes darted to the corpses behind Van, to the still-wet blood that had yet to fully settle into the carpet.

    ‘WHO… WHO IS THAT MONSTE—’

    His thoughts were abruptly cut short.

    Van vanished from his sight.

    Before he could blink, before his body could even register the threat—

    A hand gripped his skull.

    CRACK.

    His neck twisted sharply, snapping in an instant.

    His body collapsed lifelessly onto the desk, his mouth still frozen mid-scream.

    Doyle’s stomach churned. A sharp, acidic nausea surged up his throat, but he couldn’t move—he couldn’t even breathe.

    His father’s corpse lay just inches away. Van was already turning toward him.

    A cold dread seeped into Doyle’s bones.

    His vision blurred. His body trembled uncontrollably.

    A warmth spread beneath him.

    The sharp stench of urine filled the air.

    He had soiled himself.

    And yet, he couldn’t even feel ashamed.

    Van exhaled softly. His gaze fell on Doyle.

    “I’m sorry.”

    He took a step forward.

    Doyle’s body trembled violently. His breath came in short, desperate gasps.

    He knew.

    Even if he ran.
    Even if he threw himself out the window.
    Even if he fought with everything he had—

    It wouldn’t matter.

    Nothing would matter.

    Van would always be faster. He knew it by flesh as he clutched the shoulder Van had pierced earlier with a rock when he used his ability.

    Doyle swallowed, his throat dry and raw. His lips quivered, trying to form a word, a plea—

    Van reached out.

    “I hope you’re born into a warmer family next lifetime.”

    A flick of his wrist.

    CRACK.

    Doyle’s head twisted sharply to the side. His body slumped, lifeless, onto the chair.

    Silence.

    And then—

    A wet, shuddering cough.

    Van’s eyes flicked sideways to the Duke’s table.

    The Duke was still alive.

    His broken, mangled form barely clung to life, his twisted neck forcing his gaze toward his son’s lifeless body. His lips trembled, but no sobs came—

    He couldn’t cry.

    Only watch.

    Van stared at him.

    A pause. A breath.

    “…I’m sorry.” He expressed. He wasn’t really sure if he meant it.

    “I should’ve known that wasn’t enough to kill you.”

    He took the Duke’s head between his palms, lifting it up to meet his face. Looking at him in the eyes. His palms pressed against the Duke’s skull.

    “I guess, like Marcy did with your other son… I’ll have to be sure.”

    CRUNCH.

    His skull caved in under Van’s grip.

    Bone. Blood. Flesh.

    It splattered across the desk, the walls, and Doyle’s corpse—painting the room with the final remnants of a dying house.

    Van stepped over the mess, his crimson gaze shifting toward Doyle.

    One final inhale.

    His fingers flexed.

    He pressed Doyle’s head down the same way he did his father’s.

    Another sickening crunch.

    Blood. Tissue. Bone.

    Gone.

    Van straightened. Without a word, he turned to leave—then stopped.

    His eyes flicked toward the Royal Bathroom just down the hall.

    A pause.

    ‘I’ll clean myself first.’

    He stepped inside.

    The silence stretched as warm water ran over his hands, washing away the blood, the fragments, the final traces of the early evening’s work.

    His reflection in the mirror stared back at him, expressionless.

    Van stepped out, his footsteps muted against the marble. He had taken a fresh set of clothes from the mansion, while his bloodied armor rested in a leather bag slung over his shoulder.

    A lone figure stood outside, waiting.

    “Hey.”

    Amoria.

    She stood by herself, hands clasped lightly in front of her, her gaze unreadable.

    Van met her eyes. “Sorry for making you wait.”

    She hesitated. “…It’s alright.”

    A breath.

    “Let’s walk?” He suggested as he extended his arm gently toward her.

    For a moment, Amoria simply looked at him. Then—a faint, fleeting smile.

    She then, in return, gently placed her arm through his.

    And together, they walked toward the church.

    ——-

    BIG THANKS To my Patreon:

    SparkyZinger

  • “I assume you’re Pops and Bro,” Van said, tossing Bernard aside like a ragdoll.

    “And who might you be?” Mardallyone asked, approaching slowly. His chin was raised high, though subtly pulled back in caution as he moved past Doyle.

    “Call me Van,” he replied, his tone cold. “And don’t bother asking why I’m here. I trust you’re not so mentally deficient that you can’t put two and two together.”

    Doyle tensed visibly, his unease mirrored by Mardallyone in Van’s imposing presence.

    “Kid,” Van said, turning his attention to Doyle, who flinched ever so slightly.

    ‘He called me… Kid?! He sounds no older than Bernard.. But it feels like there’s a second Duke standing there..!’ Doyle thought before being cut off by Van’s voice.

    “You were right. He won’t be truthful in the face of an obvious threat.” Van’s words came casually, his gaze shifting to Bernard, who lay on the ground clutching his arm in pain.

    “I suppose it was wrong of me to pose such an ultimatum,” Van admitted, almost mockingly.

    “…A-and yet, you brutalized him, unable to control your emotions—”

    “Don’t start.” Van cut Doyle off sharply. “Your brother committed a crime, he deserved getting beaten up this way. Speaking of…” His eyes narrowed as he caught sight of something behind Mardallyone’s back—a faint, swirling black cloud.

    “Seems like you’re in on it, too,” Van said, his voice laced with disgust.

    “I can smell it—the slave crest you’re hiding behind your back, old man.”

    The Duke flinched, his composure cracking.

    ‘How… how did he see it?! Is he clairvoyant?’ Panic momentarily seized him before he steadied his breathing.

    “Unbelievable,” Van sneered. “Trying to guilt-trip me while planning to brand me as your slave. I guess being an absolute dogshit excuse for a human being runs in the family.”

    ‘Van…’ Melanie trembled where she stood, her wide eyes fixed on his unwavering form.

    ‘He came… to save me?‘ She clutched her chest, feeling her heart race. A faint sense of relief washed over her, despite the tension in the air. ‘Again…’

    ——————————

    “Mother,” Melanie said, her voice soft as she walked alongside Lalyn. Their silver hair danced in unison with the cold night wind, the day Van had first climbed his way into the Capital.

    “What is it?” Lalyn asked, her tone even as she kept her gaze forward.

    “Uhm… You know pretty much every strong person in the Capital, right?” Melanie ventured hesitantly.

    “What of it?” Lalyn replied, not breaking her stride.

    “Do you… happen to know a ‘Van’?” Melanie asked, her voice more timid. Lalyn flinched ever so slightly.

    “He wore armor and flung Bernard with his spirit like he was nothing… I-I’m asking because…” Melanie trailed off, looking down and fidgeting with her fingers.

    “I didn’t have a chance to thank him,” she admitted quietly, her voice trembling with sincerity.

    Lalyn paused for a moment, her expression unreadable. Finally, she spoke.

    “Hm… I hate talking too much. But I will say this.”

    Melanie looked up, her eyes wide with curiosity as her mother continued.

    “I’m not sure if you two are ever going to come across again.”

    Melanie lowered her head, disappointment colored her features as she frowned.

    “I.. See.” She let out. Lalyn glanced at her expression, a moment of silence roamed between them.

    “He’s…” Lalyn then let out after looking at her daughter’s expression. Melanie immediately snapped her attention to her mother, noting the softer tone in her usually cold demeanor.

    “Reliable though, isn’t he?” Lalyn said with a faint smile.

    “…!” Melanie’s breath hitched, as she watched her cold mother smile in nostalgia.

    —————————-

    Melanie exhaled shakily, her breath unsteady as her gaze lingered on Van’s form. The tension in her chest began to ease, replaced by a quiet sense of trust.

    “So, let’s make this fair,” Van said, his voice cold and measured.

    “You, or him, will tell me whether he assaulted her before or after branding her as his slave—”

    Van then fell silent as his gaze landed on Melanie, her face pale and frozen in place, thunderstruck by everything unfolding before her, yet in her dismay, she looks over to him.

    ‘Right. Forget about that for now. Retribution can come later.’ Van took a deep breath.

    ‘You need to get her out of here first.’ Van thought as he took yet another breath, taking in her face that was on the verge of tears.

    “Never mind.” Van let out, startling them with his sudden tranquility, “… Just remove the mark from her. From all of them, and I’m leaving. I don’t suppose you want more chaos tearing through your house, and I’d rather not be the one to introduce murder to a bunch of children. For clarification: I am said chaos. Your brat here can be patched up with a decent healer. Don’t make me cross that line,” Van said, his tone softening as the weight of his words hung in the air.

    “ARROGANT…” The Duke’s growl shattered the tense silence. The ground beneath and around him trembled as his teeth clenched and his fury radiated outward like a shockwave. Michael, Bernard, and Melanie flinched, feeling the weight of his rage, while Van stood unfazed.

    “You come into MY home…” The Duke’s voice deepened as he took a menacing step forward. Everyone held their breath—except Van.

    “Hit and shame MY son…” His eyes blazed with fury.

    Doyle’s heart pounded in his chest.

    ‘There it is… The Duke has finally decided to act. He’s equal to Lalyn Veil in magic power and summoning. He’s about to unleash everything he has on this intruder.’ A glimmer of hope crossed Doyle’s face.

    ‘Van… this is where you die.’

    “AND NOW YOU MAKE DEMANDS OF ME—” The Duke roared, his power surging like an erupting volcano. But before he could finish, a deafening boom cracked through the air as Van blurred forward, faster than the eye could follow, and appeared directly in front of him. The Duke froze mid-sentence, his breath hitching.

    “..!!!!!!!!!”

    “Pretty much,” Van said casually, his voice cold and unbothered. His hand pressed firmly onto the Duke’s shoulder, forcing him down.

    “Now sit… There are children next to you.” He scolded.

    The Duke’s knees buckled under the sheer pressure, and he fell into a kneeling position, his entire body trembling.

    ‘I… I can’t move…!! Who… WHO IS THIS!?’ His thoughts spiraled as his strength faltered, overwhelmed by Van’s overwhelming presence. ‘He said his name is Van… VAN HELLIX, MAYBE!? HOW IS HE THIS STRONG!?’

    Doyle stood frozen, his jaw slack as he stared at the sight of his once-invincible father kneeling. Bernard, still gasping for air, could only watch, wide-eyed, his earlier confidence shattered into dust.

    Doyle, shaking himself out of his daze, disappeared in a blur of motion.

    ‘D-Doyle just activated his power!’ Michael thought, his eyes darting to the empty spot Doyle left behind.

    ‘He has one of the rarest magic forms—perception manipulation. He slows down his own perception of time and moves faster than anyone can follow. Even S-Rankers can barely keep up with him!’ Michael thought, his heart pounding.

    Van, still focused on the Duke, didn’t even flinch as Doyle vanished in a blur. Moments later, Doyle reappeared, gripping Melanie tightly from behind, his palm aimed at her throat.

    “Haah…!!” Melanie gasped, her breath hitching.

    “Even breathe,” Doyle snarled, his eyes wild, “and I’ll slit this bitch’s throat!”

    “Mel!” Michael cried, panic filling his voice, but he stayed rooted in place. He knew any sudden move would only make things worse. His helplessness was written all over his face.

    ‘Good… GOOD… DOYLE!’ the Duke thought with pride. ‘With this mark in my hand, I’ll brand him. And then he will be our permanent slave!’

    Melanie’s wide eyes darted to Van. For a fleeting moment, fear consumed her, but then her expression hardened. She glared at him, her jaw tightening as if to send him a silent message.

    Do what you have to do. She gave him a small nod.

    Van chuckled softly, the sound so out of place that it sent a chill through the room.

    “You’re really brave, aren’t you?” he said, amusement flickering in his eyes.

    “STOP MOCKING ME!!” Doyle screamed, tightening his grip. “I WARNED YOU!”

    Doyle’s mind raced as he activated his ability.

    ‘I’ll activate my perception manipulation now.’ The world around him slowed to a crawl, colors fading into monochrome as time seemed to freeze. He smirked, confident in his advantage.

    And then—he felt it.

    A pinch in his shoulder.

    Doyle’s eyes darted down. A small rock had embedded itself deep in his shoulder, its speed so incomprehensibly fast that it had bypassed even his enhanced perception. Blood trickled down his arm as his grip on Melanie faltered.

    His palm snapped away from her throat as he stumbled backward, clutching his shoulder in disbelief.

    Melanie stumbled forward, free, gasping for air. She turned to Van, who stood exactly where he had been the entire time, his hand lazily extended as though he’d tossed the rock without a second thought.

    “Was that fast enough for you?” Van asked casually, his voice calm, almost mocking, as Doyle crumpled to the ground, groaning in pain.

    Michael’s breath hitched.

    ‘… What… what just happened?’ He couldn’t process what he’d just witnessed.

    Van stood tall, turning his unyielding gaze back to the Duke. “Now, how about you free them?”

    The room fell into tense silence. The Duke’s eyes scanned his surroundings, his sharp mind racing for a way out, but none came. Finally, he spoke.

    “Bernard,” the Duke rasped, his voice low and strained as he addressed his son. “Do it. Release them. This is not an enemy we can defeat.”

    “B-BUT FATHER!! OUR PRIDE—” Bernard protested, his voice cracking under the strain of his injuries and humiliation.

    “DO AS I SAY!!!” the Duke thundered, his booming voice silencing Bernard. Bernard recoiled, trembling as he lay on the floor, gritting his teeth in frustration.

    After a long pause, the Duke exhaled heavily.

    “We’ve… met our match. Do as I say,” he repeated, his tone subdued but firm.

    Michael’s eyes widened as the realization sank in.

    ‘Unreal… In just a few minutes, he made the Duke Von Brayle… this docile and compliant. Just… who have I made an enemy out of?’ He looked down, his chest tightening as memories of Lizzy and Anne flooded his mind. Shame clawed at him.

    ‘Man… I’m so fucking stupid.’ Michael’s shoulders slumped in defeat. ‘That’s probably why Mom and Sis left in the first place. Why Father called out her name… and not mine.’

    His gaze shifted to Melanie.

    ‘Yeah… I have to accept it. They’ll never forgive me. Not after this.’ Michael clenched his fists, his head lowering further. ‘I won’t try to play the victim anymore. I’m done…’ His body sagged as he planted his face to the floor, as if trying to vanish into it like an ostrich burying its head in the sand.

    Van remained steady, his expression unreadable. He didn’t spare Bernard a glance but instead addressed the room, his voice cutting through the tension like a blade.

    “Well?”

    Bernard opened his mouth, his lips trembling before he finally croaked, “Rellales…” His voice faltered, and his jaw clenched tightly. He bit down his frustration, refusing to say more.

    The Duke’s sharp gaze locked onto his son, his expression darkening.

    ‘Don’t get any ideas, Bernard! If we live through today, we can fight another day! Just release them for now!’

    The words hung in the air, heavy and suffocating.

    Van’s eyes narrowed as he studied Bernard’s hesitation. ‘Something’s wrong… What’s he thinking?’

    The tension snapped as Bernard’s lips curled into a manic sneer, his voice echoing across the field.

    “Melanie. Stop breathing until you fucking die. That’s an order!” he shouted, his fingers making a sharp motion over the slave crest etched on his arm.

    A collective gasp rippled through the group. Melanie’s breath hitched—once, twice—and then stopped. Her eyes widened in terror as she clawed at her throat, her body trembling. Bernard’s twisted grin deepened as he took in the horror around him.

    “BERNARD, NO!!!” the Duke roared. Michael’s head shot up, panic flooding his face as his gaze snapped to Melanie, who struggled to inhale but found no air.

    “MELANIE!!” Michael screamed, rushing to her side as her legs buckled. He caught her in his arms, holding her upright as her face turned pale and her movements grew sluggish.

    Van clenched his teeth, his gaze darkening. ‘Alright. I guess I’m going to have to kill—’

    Before Van could finish his thought, Bernard’s head and torso were obliterated in a single, crushing blow. A sickening crack echoed as blood and flesh splattered across the grass.

    Van’s eyes shifted to the source. Standing over Bernard’s remains was a tall, red-headed, tanned warrior woman. A crude mace, soaked in blood and tissue, rested in her grip. Her cold, unflinching gaze swept across the scene.

    ‘Marcy…!’ Van recognized her immediately.

    “I wasn’t sure whether to destroy the head or the heart to annul the slave crest,” Marcy said coldly, her voice as sharp as her actions.

    “So I did both.” She stepped forward, her boots crunching over the crimson-stained grass. “I heard everything. Be grateful I’m stopping with this.”

    Michael’s jaw dropped, his mind racing. ‘She… She just killed him!’

    The Duke and Doyle stared in wide-eyed disbelief, their faces pale and frozen.

    Marcy’s lip curled as she turned her furious gaze toward the Duke.

    “Your son shouldn’t have fucked with my daughter… or my half-daughters.” Her voice dripped with venom, her expression a mix of hatred and disgust.

    Michael, though horrified, felt a flicker of hope as he turned to Melanie, desperate to see her breathing again.

    But Melanie… still couldn’t breathe.

    “What…!? But she killed him!” Michael shouted, his voice frantic as he supported Melanie’s weakening body. “Melanie!! You can breathe now! Come on!”

    Melanie flailed helplessly, her hands clawing at her throat as her eyes darted around in panic. Marcy’s expression faltered as realization struck her.

    She rushed toward the Duke, her mace hanging loosely at her side as she crouched beside Van and grabbed the Duke by the hair.

    “If you don’t tell me what’s going on, I’ll kill your other son next,” she hissed, nodding at the pained and bleeding Doyle.

    The Duke remained frozen, his lips trembling as he struggled to comprehend the chaos.

    “She’s still… branded, somehow,” Van interjected, his calm voice cutting sharply through the panic. His gaze lingered on Melanie, his expression unreadable.

    “What…!? Wasn’t he the slave owner?!” Marcy shouted, her fury bubbling over as her knuckles tightened around the Duke’s hair.

    “He was,” Van replied, his tone steady, though a hint of thoughtfulness crept in.

    “I can tell… but…” His words trailed off, his eyes narrowing as if dissecting an invisible puzzle.

    ‘There’s still that cloud of black smoke around her. Except now, there are no strings… it’s just wrapped tightly around her. Is this some sort of dead man’s switch Bernard activated?’ Van thought, analyzing the ominous aura clinging to Melanie.

    “MEL!!” Michael’s desperate scream snapped Van out of his thoughts. Michael clutched Melanie tightly, panic consuming him as her movements grew slower, her strength draining rapidly.

    Van glanced at his hand, flexing it slightly, his expression calm yet focused.

    ‘…Hmm… Would this work?’

  • “IT WAS HELLIX! IT WAS VAN HELLIX!” Misa cried out as Marcy and Amoria rushed into the guild, alarm etched on their faces.

    “What?!” Marcy exclaimed, narrowing her eyes at Misa.

    “Michael admitted it right in front of me! He called him his ‘Master.’ Said his plan had failed! Then Van grabbed him and escaped through the upper window!” Misa pointed upward, her voice rising with emotion. “He’s the one who branded them—he was giving Michael the orders!”

    Amoria and Marcy exchanged a puzzled glance, their expressions more confused than outraged.

    “W-What about Lizzy and Anne? Are they safe?!” Marcy pressed, her tone sharp as she shook her head at Misa.

    “They’re safe,” Misa assured her quickly. “Van asked if they were in the guild after Michael confessed. The fact that he knew they were in the next room… he must’ve known. But Van only took Michael and left. Lizzy and Anne weren’t touched.”

    Marcy frowned, her gaze flicking to Amoria again. “… Sounds a little…”

    “…Too perfect,” Amoria finished, her tone calm yet cutting.

    “W-What…?” Misa stammered, staring at them in disbelief.

    ‘Michael hates Van. Why would they work together?’ Amoria thought, recalling how Van had shooed Michael away at her apartment with barely a glance.

    Both women’s thoughts seemed to align at once. They remembered Michael standing up to Van, going so far as to rile up an angry mob against him.

    “You’re wrong, Misa,” Marcy said firmly.

    “Van would never do something like that. And frankly, I don’t care what Michael said—he despises Van,” Marcy spat, her tone unyielding.

    “W-What…?” Misa’s voice faltered, her gaze darting between the two.

    “Where did he go?” Amoria asked, cutting through the tension.

    ‘Why are they protecting him…!? Isn’t it obvious it was him!?’ Misa thought, her mind swirling in disarray as she narrowed her gaze at the two women. Still, she relented.

    “H-He escaped through the window. I’ll show you,” Misa finally said, guiding them to the room and pointing to where Van had dashed off.

    “I couldn’t follow him at all… I’ve never seen anyone move so fast,” she admitted, gesturing toward the direction he’d run.

    “Escaped, huh?” Marcy said skeptically, crossing her arms.

    “Isn’t it obvious?!” Misa pressed, frustration building in her voice.

    “Our guild is close to the city’s exit,” Amoria said thoughtfully. “Someone as fast as Van, who even outran you, could’ve blitzed past the guards easily. But… he ran in the opposite direction.”

    “…!!!” Misa’s eyes widened in realization.

    “He must’ve found something,” Amoria concluded, glancing at Marcy, who nodded in agreement.

    “Let’s follow that helmet-head,” Marcy said, already moving. She cast a quick look back. “Misa, stay here and protect Anne and Lizzy.”

    The two women left the guild, urgency in their steps. “Let’s go—” Amoria said, riling up Marcy as they started to pick up the pace. But just as quickly, Amoria suddenly stopped in her tracks.

    Marcy turned, confusion flashing across her face. “Amoria!? What are you doing!?” she yelled.

    “…The Bishop is calling all the priests,” Amoria said quietly, her hand reaching into her dress pocket to pull out a faintly glowing [Vibration] stone.

    “FORGET THAT FUCK! Let’s save our daughters!” Marcy snapped, her voice cutting through the tension.

    Amoria stood silently for a moment, pressing the stone close to her mouth. She whispered something too low for Marcy to catch, then held it to her ear, her expression unreadable.

    “…?!” Marcy’s eyes narrowed suspiciously, frustration bubbling beneath her calm façade.

    Amoria finally tucked the stone back into her pocket.

    “…Alright. Let’s go,” she said, her tone neutral as she started running again, casting herself with a speed buff.

    Marcy’s frustration boiled over.

    “…Quit that church,” she said coldly as they sprinted side by side. “To pay them any mind when your daughter’s in danger? Seriously. You’re too religious. What the hell are you thinking—?”

    “Marcy,” Amoria cut her off sharply, her tone rigid. “Don’t disrespect the Holy Church, or the Bishop. Not in my presence. We’ve gone over this, haven’t we?”

    Marcy let out a humorless chuckle. “Wow. Just wow.”

    “What now?” Amoria asked, her voice calm but firm.

    “You. Talking about that kid’s dead father like he was nothing more than burnt wood—no compassion, no hesitation. Then recognizing the signs of a slave mark before even me, on burnt wood, no less. And now, asking for that fuck’s permission to save your own daughter. And you still expect me to shut up about it?” Marcy spat, her frustration spilling out like a dam breaking.

    “If I didn’t know you, I’d swear you were in a cult.”

    “It’s what I believe in, Marcy. It’s what I hold on to,” Amoria replied without missing a beat, her tone unwavering but slightly softer.

    “Calling it a ‘cult’ is unfair—and untrue.”

    She paused briefly, as if choosing her next words carefully.

    “As for those things… Considering I’m the strongest priestess in the capital, the Bishop has taught me much—things that are unconventional. I have to recognize that mark. If I don’t, I risk getting branded myself. I’ve learned to focus better, to investigate better. Discipline… is part of that. It’s one of the things I’ve been taught extensively as well.”

    Her gaze held steady as she continued, her tone measured.

    “Is it wrong? Obedience is something you value too, considering where you come from. Besides, he ended up permitting it, didn’t he?”

    She paused for a beat before adding, “Let’s move on—and focus on our daughters.”

    Marcy fell silent, her eyes narrowing as she tried to read Amoria’s expression. For a moment, neither woman spoke, the sound of their boots striking the ground the only noise between them.

    “Whatever,” Marcy muttered at last, shaking her head. “Let’s just get this over with. I feel sick thinking my Anne is still under someone’s control.”

    They continued running, the tension hanging thick in the air.

    Meanwhile, the manor was thrown into turmoil. The guards were on full alert the moment Van forced his way inside, though none could determine his whereabouts.

    “SOMEONE JUST BROKE INTO THE ESTATE!!” a guard bellowed as he barged into the grand, opulent chamber of Duke Mardallyone Von Brayle.

    “Calm yourself,” the duke said stoically, his commanding tone immediately silencing the frantic guard. The duke’s room was dignified, every inch radiating power and control.

    “Sir… someone has infiltrated the manor.” The guard, gasping for breath, struggled to compose himself under the duke’s cold gaze.

    From the shadows of the room, another figure stood upright, quietly observing. This man, Doyle—Bernard’s older brother—watched the exchange with keen eyes.

    “I sensed it,” the duke said, his voice low and dangerous.

    “A vile aura tearing its way into my estate. So, someone was foolish enough to challenge us. Do you have any idea who it is?” His glowing blue eyes narrowed as he stood, his chiseled jaw and pristine white hair and beard accentuating his formidable presence. Despite his advanced age, his physique was that of a man still in his prime, exuding power and authority.

    “No, sir…” the guard stammered, his voice trembling slightly.

    ‘Even after years of serving here… it’s still overwhelming to stand in the same room as the duke. An S-Rank by power, yet deliberately choosing to remain an A-Rank for convenience… Haah, his very presence feels suffocating.’ The guard swallowed hard, forcing himself to push through the tension before shaking his head and continuing.

    “Whoever broke in moved too fast for any of us to see. We have no idea where he went. My team is currently searching the entire manor—”

    BOOM!

    An explosion rocked the opposite end of the mansion. Smoke billowed upward, visible from the tall windows of the duke’s chamber. All three men turned their attention to the source of the disturbance.

    “… Haah.” The duke sighed deeply, rubbing his temple as if exhausted by the sheer audacity of it all. “Down there. That’s Bernard’s wing. My foolish son must have made himself an enemy.”

    He turned sharply to the man in the shadows. “Doyle. You’re coming with me. We’re both going.”

    “Both of us…?” Doyle asked, narrowing his eyes. “Father, let me handle this alone. You shouldn’t trouble yourself with something so trivial—”

    “Bernard’s new slave,” the duke interrupted, his tone sharp.

    “Melanie Veil. If this intruder is one of the Veils seeking retribution, you wouldn’t even lay a hand on them alone. But with the two of us… and this—” He reached under his desk, pulling out a metal slave crest, its dark runes gleaming faintly in the dim light.

    “We might secure ourselves a high-quality asset. Thankfully, we know it’s not the priestess.”

    “Why not? Is she too powerful?” Doyle asked, stepping closer.

    “No.” Mardallyone’s response was curt, almost reluctant. “She’s actually the weakest wife of Magus Veil, being a healer. But she is untouchable. Not someone I can… brand so easily. The others… they are fair game.”

    “Because of her ties to the Holy Church?” Doyle pressed as they exited the chamber, the guard trailing behind them.

    “… Yes, in part,” the duke admitted, his voice laced with subtle irritation. “The Holy Church is an ally of ours, and I am a personal friend of the Bishop. To act against us is to act against the Holy Church—something he would never allow her to do. And she follows his commands perfectly, without question.”

    He paused, his sharp eyes glinting dangerously as his tone grew colder. “The crude nature of this intrusion suggests it isn’t her. We support the Holy Church, after all. Whoever this is… came alone. I can feel it.”

    A faint, dangerous smirk crept across Doyle’s face. “How foolish. They’re about to learn just how terrifying we can be.”

    The duke’s gaze hardened, his glowing eyes narrowing.

    “Indeed. Whoever this intruder is, they’ll regret ever stepping into my house.”

    ‘What… What just happened…?’ Bernard thought as he lay sprawled on the grass, chunks of rubble scattered around him. He stared up at the sky, his breaths coming short and labored, his chest heaving. His bloodshot eyes stung as a thin trail of blood trickled from a cut at his hairline, matting his dark locks against his skin.

    ‘A moment ago… I was in my room with Mel. Then… I saw that armored bastard.’ His mind reeled as he clenched his eyes shut, struggling to piece together the moments that followed.

    He remembered the surge of anger, the fire that burned in his chest. The overwhelming wrath. He’d called for Amu-Rah, his fire spirit—or at least, he’d tried. In the split second he began the incantation, Van had grabbed him by the collar like he weighed nothing, flinging him straight through the opposite wall. And then… darkness.

    ‘Haah… That fucker…’ Bernard gritted his teeth as he pushed himself up, trembling slightly. His hands dug into the grass and debris for leverage, forcing his battered body upright. ‘It was the same with Amu-Rah. I remember now… He’s…’

    His thoughts burned with indignation, anger giving him strength as he steadied himself. ‘He’s physically strong. But THAT’S IT—’

    “Kid,” a deep voice interrupted his thoughts.

    Bernard’s head snapped toward the sound. Van stepped onto the grass with deliberate slowness, the faint crunch of the ground under his boots mingling with the settling rubble. The knight’s imposing figure loomed as he stopped a few paces away, staring down at Bernard through the visor of the helmet he’d taken from the display in the house. The faint glint of his eyes behind the steel was unreadable, cold, and unyielding.

    “I don’t have a lecture for you,” Van said calmly, standing a few meters away, his tone flat yet razor-sharp. “Nor will I waste time teaching you not to do bad things. Or to stop making people your slaves.”

    ‘What the!? HE KNEW!? HOW…?’ Bernard’s eyes widened, his thoughts racing wildly as he noticed Michael slumped on the ground next to Melanie, just inside the house, behind Van.

    ‘That… FUCKER…!! He survived!?’ Bernard’s mind spiraled into chaos, his breath quickening.

    “THAT BITCH BEHIND YOU!!” Bernard shouted, his voice cracking as he pointed a trembling finger. “HE’S THE ONE WHO BRANDED THEM!! I NEVER—”

    “SHUT.” Van’s single word cut through the air like a guillotine.

    His oppressive aura crashed down on Bernard like a wave, suffocating him. Bernard’s words died in his throat as his eyes widened in fear, his face pale. The pressure of Van’s presence pinned him in place, leaving him trembling.

    Van took a slow, deliberate step forward, his eyes locked on Bernard. The weight of his approach felt like an executioner’s blade hanging above Bernard’s head.

    “I’m going to ask you something,” Van said, his tone calm yet ice-cold. “And depending on your answer, you’ll either be scalped by me and die, or just beaten half to death.”

    A cold sweat broke across Bernard’s forehead, trickling down the side of his face. His breath hitched, dread wrapping around his chest like chains.

    Van’s growl deepened, his voice like the edge of a blade poised to strike.

    “Did you. Touch her?”

    Behind him, Melanie stood frozen, her breath caught in her chest. Michael slumped to the ground beside her, staring at Van with wide-eyed disbelief.

    “W-WHAT’S IT TO YOU!? WHO THE FUCK ARE YOU!? WHY ARE YOU ALWAYS AFTER ME!? I JUST WANT TO BE ACKNOWLEDGED BY MY FATHER—”

    Before Bernard could finish, Van appeared in front of him in a blur; a deafening supersonic boom shattered the air as he moved.

    Van’s gauntleted hand crashed into Bernard’s face with the force of a thunderclap. In the next microsecond, Bernard’s head slammed into the ground with a crack, the impact reverberating like a shockwave. His vision blurred as his body convulsed upward from the sheer force, a second explosion following as the earth cratered beneath him.

    Van’s metallic gauntlet left its imprint on Bernard’s cheek, blood pooling on his tongue as several teeth scattered from his mouth. The sharp taste of iron flooded his senses as he gasped for air, his body trembling and struggling against the shock coursing through him.

    “I’m not here to indulge your little self-jerk session,” Van growled, his voice cold and dripping with disdain. He grabbed Bernard by the hair, lifting him effortlessly like a ragdoll.

    “I’m not here to solve your inferiority complex. Nor do I care why you did it, or what your reasons are,” he added, his tone venomous.

    Michael, still slumped nearby, shivered uncontrollably. His throat bobbed as he gulped hard, unable to tear his wide-eyed gaze away from Van. His mind raced, but not a single coherent thought formed, paralyzed by sheer terror.

    He brought Bernard’s face closer, his own helmet glinting ominously in the faint light.

    “Answer me,” Van snarled, his tone a low, predatory growl. His grip tightened, and Bernard’s breathing grew erratic as his body trembled.

    “Did you…”

    Van’s voice sharpened to a deadly edge.

    “TOUCH HER?”

    “You’re not very bright, are you? Everyone in his spot would claim they didn’t touch her,” sneered a voice from behind Van.

    The voice belonged to Doyle, who stood in the ruined hallway of the house, his father, Duke Mardallyone Von Brayle, at his side. The duke’s cold, calculating gaze watched the scene unfold in silence.

    ‘D… Doyle..! Father..!!’ Bernard thought in alarm, panic flashing through his mind as his wide eyes flicked to the figures in the doorway.

    Michael, slumped on the ground nearby, looked up at them with a mix of awe and fear, his body trembling uncontrollably.

    ‘T-… That’s… The Duke… and Doyle,’ Michael thought, shivering as his body trembled uncontrollably. His mind raced, still trying to process how he had ended up here. Not a minute ago, he’d been at the guild. His gaze flicked to Melanie, standing stiffly beside him.

    ‘She’s… also a slave?’ Michael’s thoughts spiraled into chaos, a tangled mess of confusion and dread that refused to settle.

    He slumped further against the ground, his ragged breathing barely audible. Neither Melanie nor the Duke and Doyle spared him a glance, their full attention locked on the confrontation unfolding before them.

    “Seriously,” Doyle continued, stepping forward from the ruined hallway and into the yard.

    His tone was mocking, confident.

    “You’re new to this, huh? The fact that you took a helmet from our display… You’re stupid. Coming here unprepared, then saying you’ll scalp someone if they tell you something and won’t kill them if they tell you something else – then expecting them to be truthful? Pathetic.”

    Behind him, dozens of guards flanked the Duke, their presence looming as they stood at attention. Yet none dared step forward.

    Van didn’t so much as flinch. His calm remained unbroken as he took a slow breath. His grip on Bernard tightened. Without turning around, his gauntleted hand shifted slightly, securing Bernard’s arm in an iron hold.

    CRACK.

    A sickening snap echoed across the yard as Van’s grip crushed Bernard’s arm like a twig.

    “AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!” Bernard’s scream tore through the air, his body writhing in agony as blood began to seep from beneath Van’s unyielding gauntlet.

    Melanie’s face paled even further, her lips trembling as she fought to remain steady.

    ‘H…He just… broke his arm…!!’ Michael’s breath hitched, his eyes wide as he shivered in place, unable to tear his gaze away from the brutal scene.

    Van turned slowly. His bloodstained gauntlet glinted in the faint light as he faced Doyle and Mardallyone, Bernard’s now-useless arm dangling limply from his grasp. The younger man’s face twisted in pure agony, his sobs ragged and barely audible.

    “You wanna try that again?” Van growled lowly; his voice raspy.

    Doyle’s sneer faltered, the confidence in his expression wavering. Even Mardallyone narrowed his sharp eyes. He took a measured step forward, his cold gaze flicking between Van and his now-crippled son, his jaw tightening imperceptibly.