AAGULT Ch 161
by berryChapter 161
ââŠâŠâ
This situationâleft alone with the Boss in a white voidâwasnât to his liking. The Boss stared holes into him, the only remaining human, making it impossible to focus on the roil of feelings stirred up by Aiden.
âJaeha.â
ââŠâŠâ
âJaehaaaa.â
Especially when the toneâhalf whining child, half clingy friendâbelonged to the Boss of this Gate.
ââŠYes.â
His answer came flat. âFlatâ was the most accurate word for how he felt.
âStrange. You humored me better when I was Sasha.â
ââŠThatâs because I thought you were human then.â
âSo, you discriminateâhuman versus inhuman?â
ââŠâŠâ
He didnât answer, considering what to say to avoid ruffling him for the next five minutes. What if offending him meant never leaving the Gate?
âJaeha. Jaeha, Jaeha.â
ââŠYes.â
âGuess why I kept you for last?â
ââŠI donât know. Why did you keep me for last?â
Instead of answering, the Boss shifted posture, then set a massive upturned palm to the floor, as if inviting him to climb on.
ââŠâŠâ
He understoodâbut had no desire to step onto the hand of something over five meters tall. It was unlikely that hand would stay on the floor, and he wasnât sturdy enough to survive a fall.
ââŠâŠâ
But there was no point in digging his heels in here. He knew whoâd lose that contest.
Forcing strength into trembling legs, he crept onto the palm. It was like climbing a rugged stone ridgeâhard to keep balance.
Once he was on the palm properânot the fingersâthe hand lifted immediately. It felt like riding an elevator without safety rails. Standing seemed even worse, so he crouched low, bracing his hands on that palm. Gravity tugged at his gut with a nauseating pull. The floor dropped away in a blur that made him squeeze his eyes shut.
ââŠâŠâ
When the ascent slowed, he opened his eyes.
The Bossâs face loomed before him.
It felt statue-like, yet had no carved features. The darkness glimpsed between the deep cracks felt like eyes. When lightning flickered in there, it was like slick pupils catching the lightâhair-raising.
âJaehaaa.â
Come to think of it, how was it speaking with no mouth? The thrumming voice drilled into his ears. With nothing solid to lean on, he kept his body taut, hands planted. The Boss seemed to smirkâno visible grin, but the feeling of one.
âYour essence is pretty.â
ââŠThank you?â
Heâd been repeating that like a mantra, and Jaeha still didnât understand it. He didnât dare ask. Fortunately, the Boss spoke on.
âYou knowâstuff polished by lots of hardship, shining because itâs been ground down. Like sea glass rounded by waves. I like that.â
ââŠAm I⊠sea glass?â
âYouâre green. Soju bottle, then? Hahaha.â
ââŠâŠâ
Was that a compliment or a taunt? The words suggested the latter, the tone the former. Peculiar.
âOutside, glass can shatter againâturn sharp. After all that cute rounding.â
ââŠâŠâ
âOutside is hard. Humans are always betrayed, tripped, abandoned.â
He hummed along as if singing, pale and cheerful.
âSome walk forward, some go back.â
The hand suddenly dropped, a swift plunge. Jaeha squeezed his eyes shut at the falling lurch, catching a finger to steady himself. A laugh rolled down from above; apparently it looked funny.
The hand put him downâ
âSo, little round one.â
âright between the two gate exits.
âUghâŠâ
He staggered, then clambered off. It was nauseating; he hoped never to repeat it. He wasnât afraid of heights, but the lack of safety made it terrifying.
âWhere are you going?â
The voice came bright with interest. He forced himself upright, swallowing dizziness, and looked up. Even crouched, the Bossâs mass forced him to tilt his head until his neck ached.
âFor the record, one option is you stay here with me, cozy-like.â
âIâll pass.â
âHahaha. Then Iâll just watch how you break.â
ââŠâŠâ
He turned without answering. He looked left, then rightâthen back up at the Boss. Truth was, heâd decided long ago. And the Boss knew it.
âNo regrets?â
ââŠI might.â
âAt times like this, youâre supposed to say you wonât.â
âHaha⊠I donât have that kind of backbone.â
He smiled awkwardly and walked. Weakness and second-guessing made him glance back at the opposite gate, but his feet took him to the right gate.
ââŠShould I go now?â
âMm. Off you go.â
ââŠâŠâ
He looked once more at the left gate.
Honestly, he was afraid.
If he went out and his parents were still dead, heâd regret it. If he went out and they were aliveâwonderfulâbut also problematic. Who knew what the boss had changed out there?
âJaeha.â
ââŠâŠâ
âNervous?â
Of course the Boss saw it immediately. Jaeha nodded, knowing lies wouldnât work here. The Boss asked:
âWant me to tell you something?â
ââŠâŠâ
âDo me a favor in return.â
His brow furrowed. Instinct recoiled. He shook his head.
ââŠNo. Iâm fine.â
He wouldnât trade for âinformationâ whose importance he couldnât gauge, to salve an anxiety that would resolve in moments.
âYeah? Then go on.â
ââŠâŠâ
âEyes forward.â
Certainty and marching straight ahead werenât his strengths. Heâd look back, sometimes. But heâd learned how to move forward anyway.
ââŠâŠâ
He turned to the gateâand stepped in without fuss.
Light rippled and flooded his vision. He had to close his eyes against the sting.
And that was all.
Left alone in the white, the Boss giggled like a mischievous child, then waved once; the gates winked out.
âWhen did I ever promise they could take memories to the past, hmm~â
Humming, laughing at the humans to his heartâs content, he stood and stretched in a long yawn.
âEither way, well.â
A sly chuckle.
âGood choice, little round one.â
Outside was cold.
Considering he had entered the gate in early summer, it meant a long time had passed outside. He remembered from briefings: outside time could move far faster than inside. Not surprising.
âHaaâŠâ
Pale breath fogged the air. Something cold pricked his skin. Snowâfalling thick. It was dead winter.
People throngedânoisy, chaotic. Maybe because tension unraveled the moment he emerged, all sound blurred like underwater, muffled.
ââ! â-!â
â-! Separate the injuredâ â!â
As soon as he stumbled out, the white gate behind him faded away. The vanishing made a strange noise; he staggered forward, away from it.
âOne more survivor!â
âGate has vanished!â
âDecember 25, 2:12:23 PM. Confirmed.â
Association staff, corralling the scene, had spotted him. With reports shouted, a few ran toward him. He ignored them.
He had to find someone.
Someone who might not exist anymore if the world had changed.
âPlease identify yourself. Are you alright?â
âWeâre going to assess your condition.â
They reached him. He didnât answerâjust scanned the crowd. Deciding he couldnât speak, they lifted his arm and tried to examine him. He jerked free.
He had found him.
âExcuse me!â
âWhere are you going?â
They called after him, grabbingâhe ran. Ran and ran. He nearly slipped on the snowy pavement once, but didnât fall.
A laugh bubbled up. Relief, joy, the need to show the love barreling out of him.
âAiden-ssi!â
He shouted for the man who was turned and being tended. That slumped body went rigid, then turnedâslowly, disbelieving. Jaeha understoodâthe world had not changed. He still knew him, still saw him, still loved him.
Whatever he yelled, Jaeha didnât hear. Aiden tore free of those around him and ran at Jaeha. His face crumpled into something near tears, and Jaeha couldnât even pace his breathingâhe laughed, out loud.
And thenâ
Thud. Hard enough to sound, their bodies crashed together, clutching tight. Jaeha had run harder and longer; they tumbled, rolling into Aidenâs side. No groansâonly shallow gasps, half-sobs.
âNo wayâŠâ
Aiden panted, stunned.
âAiden-ssi.â
Iâm here.
Jaeha had never smiled so happily. The moment was sweet beyond words. There would be falls ahead, betrayals, abandonment; he knew that.
But in this perfect moment, he had to say it.
No bouquet, no ring, no cheesy lines, no blushing, shaking face. Clutching him hard enough to crush, he confessed:
âI love you.â
Snow was pouring down.
Their second winter.