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 C31
by berryChapter 31
I barely stopped myself from lunging forward and punching him.
âWhat are you even doing here when there arenât any monsters around?â
As I said that, I pretended to glance around, quickly measuring possible escape routes. But when no reply came, I turned to look at himâonly to meet that cold, cutting gaze.
âTo see you.â
âWhat? Me? Why?â
âWhy else? To repay a debt.â
As Tyroc spoke, he placed one hand casually on his thigh, his stance crooked, his fingers resting dangerously close to something they shouldnât.
Anyone else watching mightâve thought he was trying to seduce me. Damn it.
Of course, I knew better. In my eyes, it was a silent warningâa threat that heâd carve a new wound into his own body just to get to me.
Unfortunately, that kind of warning didnât work on me. My temper flared.
âIf weâre talking debts, you owe me far morââ
Shit. No. Stop. Heâs humanityâs last hope. And you know he holds a massive grudge against the Adeye family.
If I charged him now, Iâd end up as a human soccer ball again. Or worse, he might actually try to kill me this time.
So there was only one answer. I quickly pointed behind him.
âThere.â
Tyrocâs brow arched. âWhat?â he said, glancing back.
That single second was all I needed. I bolted, yanking open the door Iâd come through and diving inside.
âHa.â
I heard a low, incredulous laugh behind meâbut this time, I could ignore it.
Yeah, laugh all you want. Iâm gone.
Running was the only logical choice. When I re-entered the room, the pervert Iâd tied up earlier was still wriggling on the bed, eyes shining with excitement.
âMmmffhh (My Queen has returneeedâ)â
Not now, freak.
I ignored him, sprinted straight past, and vaulted over the terrace railing without hesitation. It was the second floorâhigh enough to break something if I landed wrongâbut Mo had already given me a route.
[âLand on the first-floor roof, then slide down the right column. After that, cross the garden at your three oâclock to reach the main gate.â]
Thud!
The landing was loudâbut I wasnât the only one who made noise.
Before I could even move, another heavy bang struck the ground right in front of me. I froze, staring at the polished toe of a familiar boot.
Above me, his voice murmured with mild curiosity.
âHow the hell do you move like a cat?â
He never finished the thought, because I was already running again.
[âJump over the waist-high brush at four oâclock.â]
Following Moâs quick directions, I darted toward the dense shrubs and leapt.
Crack!
A branch snapped against my arm, but I managed to roll and land smoothly. Instantly, I reached for the teleportation scroll inside my jacket.
If I ripped it fast enough, I could get out of here. Easy plan, guaranteed success.
Except, before I could even open it fully, something flashed past my face.
I only realized it was a blade when the torn scroll fluttered to the ground in two pieces.
âAh, missed.â
His tone was flat, without a shred of disappointment.
Missed? If he hadnât missed, Iâd be sliced clean in half, you lunatic.
I bit back the curse, but I couldnât stop glaring at him. His golden eyes gleamed brighter under my stare, a faint smile curving his lips. But the smile didnât reach his voice.
âBite me again?â
âWhen did I ever bite you? Youâre imagining things.â
It was worth a try.
âNot with those eyes, youâre not.â
Damn it. I dropped my gaze, inching back a step. But he moved forwardâfast. The sword in his hand glinted.
Who the hell brings a weapon to a social gathering like this?
For a brief moment, I resented Dr. Lantua. If she was going to mess with the Tyroc family, couldnât she have done it anonymously? Thanks to her, I was about to die.
There had to be a way outâ
âDuke Tyroc! Is that you, my lord?!â
Ah, bless whoever that was.
A voice called from somewhere nearby, and Tyrocâs eyes flicked toward it.
I didnât waste that second.
Tapâ
I spun and bolted again. But the main gate was out of the question, so I sprinted down the only open pathâuntil Moâs warning flashed.
[âMaze garden ahead.â]
Not now, Mo!
If I hesitated, heâd catch me and probably kick me across the courtyard like a ball. I wasnât scared of the painâI was scared Iâd lose control and actually fight back.
You canât exactly save the world after youâve throttled its last hope.
So yeah, Iâd take my chances with the maze. I dashed straight in.
Thereâs no way heâd follow me into a magically trapped labyrinthâ
I risked a glance back.
And there he was. Golden eyes gleaming, lips curved in that calm, psychotic smile.
âShit!â
He was chasing me down with the kind of deadly focus only a lunatic could manage. Suddenly, Rueâs fear of this man made perfect sense. Compared to him, even the super-pervert was cute.
I sprinted deeper into the maze, breath loud in my ears. Every turn twisted and shifted around me, the magic warping the paths.
Panting, I glanced behind meâbut the corridor Iâd come from had vanished.
What theâ? The pathâs changing?!
At least he couldnât catch me now, I thought. But just in case, I kept running.
Then I turned another cornerâand stumbled.
âHaa, haaâHarder! Do it harder!â
âHarder than this? You greedy littleâugh!â
Two people. Mid-act. In broad daylight. Like dogs in heat.
âŠWhat the actual hell?
I gawked, frozen in disbelief. The pair turned their heads toward meâbut didnât stop moving.
âAre you two insane?! What the hell are you doing on a public path like this?!â
I pointed dramatically toward the blazing sun above.
âAnd in broad daylight! On bare ground! For godâs sakeââ
âAhaha! Adeye Rue?â
âŠShit.
âI didnât see anything. Carry on.â
I spun around and ran again. If I couldnât find the exit, Iâd just find somewhere quiet to hide.
Dr. Lantua would send someone to look for me eventually. Even if it took days, I didnât care. Iâd hidden from worse before. At least here, I wouldnât starve.
The problem was, quiet didnât seem to exist here. Everywhere I wentâmore moaning.
âMmm~ Yours is the best Iâve had today, honey!â
âPant, pantâSo Iâm number one? Then whoâs number two?â
âMmph~ Your fingers!â
It was a goddamn festival of degeneracy.
And they all sounded the sameânasal, breathy, and unholy. If I had to hear it for another minute, my ears would rot into fertilizer.
Every single one of them deserved a one-way ticket to hell.
Shuddering each time I passed another scene of depravity, I finally found a silent corner and crouched, panting.
âHaah⊠goddamn⊠perverts⊠the whole place is crawling with themâŠâ
ââGoddamnâ?â
I froze. Slowly, I lifted my head.
Those golden eyes stared down at me from above, cool and unamused.
Impossible.
I gawked at him, completely forgetting the whole âbe respectful, heâs the savior of the worldâ thing.
How the hell did he find me?
My expression mustâve amused him, because a faint smile played across his lips. Oh, that smug face. Normally, I didnât lose staring contestsâbut with him, it was infuriating.
He tilted his head slightly.
âYou use strange words as curses.â
Because they are curses!
âItâs just⊠an expression.â
I muttered, glancing around. This place was a warped labyrinth of magicâhow did he track me through it?
âYou made enough noise everywhere you went.â
He read my mind again, apparently.
âWell, what else was I supposed to do? People are justââ
Seriously. Naked on the grass, at noon. Were they trying to catch parasites?
And it wasnât just pairs. There were groups. Three, four people at once.
Where were the monsters when you actually needed them?
âThey act without shame,â I muttered.
âYou, of all people, shouldnât be talking about shame.â
His tone was flat, but it cut deep.