Started translating this for fun and now Iâm emotionally bankrupt but too invested to quit every chapter feels like getting punched by god and I keep saying âone moreâ like a liar i hope you’ll love it too
Salvation Through Delusion C59
by berryChapter 59
Ottmar was moving againâso was I. A glowing arrow appeared in my vision, visible only to me.
Crash!
Her blade struck where I had been just moments ago. The floor stones shattered, fragments flying in every direction from the force of her blow, but I rolled away in the nick of time.
Thud. Crack!
Her sword chased me like a predator, every swing meant to kill. I rolled and dodged with everything I had, my lungs burning. The keyâmy goalâwas now just within armâs reach. But before I could grab it, the situation shifted again.
Boom!
The ground trembled violently. Dust and small stones rained down from the ceiling and walls. I lost my footing and fell hard.
Ottmar didnât miss the chance. Even as the chamber groaned and cracked around us, she came at me with the frenzy of a demon determined to destroy me. And this time, there was no way I could dodge her strike.
Damn it, Iâm going to lose an armâ
Whooshâ
Slice!
The sharp hiss of wind was followed by the chilling sound of flesh being severed.
Thud.
Clang.
Amid the falling dust, an arm dropped to the floor, followed by the clatter of a sword. Both landed near their owner.
It wasnât my arm. It was Ottmarâs.
She stared at it in disbelief, frozen, blood pouring down her shoulder. Slowly, her head turned toward the shattered wall.
Someone had entered.
What the hellâhow did he get here?!
âTyroââ
She didnât even finish saying his name.
Whoosh!
The air split againâsharper this time.
Slash!
Her head hit the ground first, rolling once before the rest of her body collapsed beside it.
Thud.
I stared at the corpse for a moment, then brushed the dust off my clothes and stood.
It had been a while since Iâd watched someone die up close. Iâd almost forgotten how abruptly life could end.
I was alive only by chance. Who couldâve guessed that the man standing before me would be the one to save me?
âHow did you get here?â I asked Tyroc.
He said nothing. Sword lowered, he simply stared at me.
âThereâs something wrong with this mansion. We need to find a way outââ
âWere you hurt?â
His sudden question caught me off guard. It took me a second to remember my faceâbruised and swollen from the fight. But seriously? Thatâs what he was worried about right now?
Even now, the floor trembled, the ceiling starting to crumble above us.
âCan you go back the way you came? The whole place is going toââ
He stepped closer, caught my chin, and forced me to look up. His eyes swept over my faceâexpressionless, yet burning with something unreadable.
âWhat are you doing?â
Only then did he meet my eyes. And he looked⊠furious.
âUnbelievable,â he muttered.
Then he released me roughly, shoving my face aside. I was too stunned to even be angry.
Really? Now was the time to pick a fight about my face?
I opened my mouth, but the floor shook againâharder this time. I staggered, and a large hand grabbed my arm to steady me.
Before I could even thank him, a massive chunk of the ceiling collapsed.
Boom!
Then, one after another, the beams and walls began to give way, collapsing like a chain of falling dominoesâfrom the entrance weâd come through.
Dust swelled like a storm, blinding us. Through the haze, I saw that half the entrance was already blocked.
Well. There goes that exit.
But Tyroc pushed me behind him and raised his sword. He was planning to force his way through.
But with the entire building coming downâcould even a Swordmaster survive that?
I stepped back and grabbed his arm. He turned slightly, eyes flicking toward me.
âDonât worry. Iâll keep you alive.â
âIâm not the one Iâm worried about,â I shot back, tightening my grip. In my other hand, I clutched the keyâthe one Iâd risked losing an arm to grab.
And before Tyroc could react, I yanked him toward the still-open mirage gate and jumped.
âThat leads to a collapsingââ
Whatever heâd meant to say died as the world changed around us.
Like turning a page, one chapter ended and another began.
Whooooshâ
Wind brushed against us, carrying the crisp scent of airâreal air, not the suffocating dust of the collapsing mansion.
For a moment, I couldnât speak. Couldnât even breathe.
The key⊠had actually worked?
I glanced down at my hand, then turned to look behind us.
The chamber weâd come from was collapsing in on itself, fading until the doorway vanished completely.
We were safeâbut not out of danger.
The world around us glowed red, drenched in the light of a setting sun. Or so I thoughtâuntil I realized it wasnât sunlight at all.
âWhat the hellâŠâ
The crimson glow shifted suddenly, replaced by another hue as the wind surged again. It was as if the air itself carried color.
Wind?
My eyes lifted.
High above, vast waves of glowing wind rolled through the skyâshimmering currents of light, rippling like an ocean made of air.
It stole my breath.
I lifted my hand into the light. The wind brushed against my fingers, soft and warmâlike velvet.
Could wind really feel this gentle?
It was mesmerizingâso much so that I nearly missed the quiet murmur beside me.
ââŠThe Crimson Tide Forest.â
Tyrocâs voice.
Only then did I remember he was with me. But before I could respond, he stepped in front of me, raising his massive sword once more.
âWhatâs wrongâ?â
Then I saw it.
Between the trees, between the bushesâfigures.
Inhuman figures.
When had they gathered?
Iâd seen non-human creatures before, but never so manyâand never such a strange mix of forms.
Tiny spirit-like beings flitted near the ground, some small and glowing like Venomous One, others absurdly shaped, like clumps of fur with eyes.
There were chicken-like things with twig-arms, lizard-centipedes with dozens of legs, short-legged deer that looked like corgis, even pebbles wearing long leaf âearsâ like rabbits.
It was like stepping into a living fairy tale.
Tap.
Tyroc took a step forward, sword still poised. Instinctively, I reached out to stop him.
âTheyâre not dangerous. Lower your sword.â
âHow do you know that?â
He shot me a cold glare. I gestured at the creatures.
âThey donât look dangerous.â
âThose⊠things?â
Oh. Right. Iâd forgottenâI was still using the filter. To me, they looked whimsical. To him, they probably looked horrifying.
âIâm, uh⊠not very sensitive to appearances,â I said quickly.
âHm.â
âHm?â I echoed, narrowing my eyes.
He smirked. âYou never cared what they looked like, as long as they had a dick.â
Iâwhat?! Thatâs notâ I mean, okay, mostly not!
I wanted to protest, but not a word came out.
ââŠYeah, letâs call it aesthetic equality.â
Tyroc barked a laugh, mocking, and looked down at me.
Then the wind struck again.
It wasnât gentle this time. It roaredâhowling, luminous, painting the world pink.
The beauty of it stole my breath againâuntil I heard a sharp grunt beside me.
âUrgh.â
Tyrocâs body sagged. He dropped to one knee, his sword sinking into the earth as he used it to stay upright. His teeth clenched, his face twisted in pain.
ââŠDamn windâŠâ he hissed through gritted teeth.
Wind?
I looked closer. Every time the air surged, his body stiffened, his breath caught. The same breeze that felt so pleasant to me was hurting him.
Why?
[Leave that human and come to me instead!!!]
A familiar exclamation mark blinked before my eyes. Waitâonly one creature used that much punctuationâ
Thump. Thump. THUMPâ!
The ground shook with enormous footsteps. From the forest burst a colossal black boulder, towering two stories tall.
I called it ârunningâ because, impossibly, it had short, stubby stone legs that pattered frantically beneath its bulk.
The enormous rock lumbered up to me, lowering itself like it was bowing.
Heyâdonât come that close! Youâre terrifying!
I stumbled back a step, heart racing.
But the boulder stopped politely, then dipped its head again. The long leaf âearsâ sprouting from its top swayed forwardâdangling right in front of my nose.
[USELESS HUMAN!!! USELESS HUMAN!!!]
âŠWait.
âDiamond?! Thatâs you?!â
The massive boulder vibrated happily.
So⊠its true form was a giant rock?!