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 C72
by berryChapter 72
Haas startled and moved to grab her, but Ennya had already stepped right up to Black Bear, demanding sharply,
âAre you a swordsman?â
Before Black Bear could answer, Solongo cut in with a crisp warning,
âMind your manners.â
âBlack Bear, youâve clearly held a sword before. What is your real name?â
âYou donât need to know, Zanba-ga Ennya.â
Ennya flinched violently, stumbling backward as she drew her sword.
âH-how do you know that name?!â
Rick and Haas stared blankly, hearing their companionâs real name for the first time. Of course they hadâEnnya was a commoner with no surname. Then what was that name just now?
Black Bear had no intention of explaining. She merely replied, looking bored,
âYou should be asking what else I know.â
Ennya glared as though she might kill her on the spot, then finally stepped back.
Rick and Haas froze, mouths agape. To subdue Ennya that easilyâjust what sort of name had that been?
And then Rick himself was struck dumb when Solongo asked him casually,
âSince your infiltrator in Borhumi Castle was exposed, how many of the new targets you attempted to recruit have agreed to cooperate?â
Rickâs jaw practically hit the floor.
âH-how do you even know that?! Who toldââ
âIf there are any suspicious individuals being investigated within Borhumi, inform me at once. We will handle the payment.â
âNo one would betray Borhumi just forââ
âMoney is all they care about. Give them twice the amount and use them this one time before discarding them.â
She knows who it is?! Rick was so shocked he could only stare. Solongo ignored him and shifted her gaze toward Haas. Haas braced himself, determined not to be shaken.
ââŠWhat?â
âHas Duke Koonâs location been reconfirmed?â
âHah. And why, exactly, should I tell you that?â
âSo it has not.â
âN-no, thatâs notââ
âWhen it is confirmed, make sure to inform me first.â
Solongo instructed him with cool indifference, then turned away.
âW-why should I?!â Haas shouted belatedly, but his protest had no weight. Solongoâs mind was elsewhere entirely.
Outwardly calm, she was inwardly thrashing with worry.
If Rue truly was there, how confused and frightened must he be in such an unfamiliar place? And to make matters worse, the one with him was that infuriating Tyroc.
âLet us depart. We can use a teleportation gate up to Borhumiâs border, but once inside, their surveillance will attach itself to us, so we will need to switch to carriages.â
When neither man moved, Solongo snapped in Lamtuaâs favorite tone,
âMove. Hurry, hurry. Hurry up. Quickly!â
One thing Iâve realized fighting deadly monsters: sometimes the person who matches your rhythm best is the same bastard who drives you insane.
No matter how much you dislike someone, work eventually forces you together. And right now, I had met the partner with the best battle synergy of my life.
Unfortunately, he was unbelievably annoying.
âStop.â
Tyroc caught my arm from behind, voice low.
âThree to the right after the corner.â
I halted immediately. I was leading because I knew Borhumi Castle well; Tyrocâs sharp hearing covered what I couldnât see.
All we had left was to cross the inner wallâan absurdly easy journey so far. As much as I hated to admit it, we worked disgustingly well together.
We even communicated smoothly:
âAh, didnât expect another guard.â
âAnd if you had? Going to knock him senseless with that stick?â
ââŠIâd have knocked him a little less senseless. And you shouldnât alert them during an ambush either.â
âCanât help being tall.â
âThen crouch.â
âFine.â
âIâll swing lighter.â
âSure.â
We checked each otherâs combat ranges, nodded once, and moved on.
Soon enough, we realized the other was good at improvisation.
âWhat are you searching for in here?â
âThought they might check gate passes⊠Who are you?â
âThatâs my line. And whatâs with your face?â
âSmeared soot on it. And you somehow found clothes that fit⊠But how did you change your eye color?â
âArtifact for disguises. A ring.â
âAnd it changes only eye color?â
âYes.â
âOh⊠well. You did lower your bangs too. Theyâre long enough to cover your eyes?â
âRemember it now that youâve seen.â
âDo I need to?â
âYes.â
ââŠOkay.â
âSecond drawer. Gate passes.â
Disguised and with passes secured, we halted again at the final corner.
âTwo of the three are guards.â
Having someone with absurdly sharp hearing is useful.
However, right now it was an affliction.
Why did he have to lean so close when he whispered?
âMust you whisper like that?â I hissed, scowling back.
His lips curled slowly.
âShall I stop?â
âYes.â
âAll right.â
That smile⊠it was ominous. And sure enoughâdisaster arrived immediately.
As I leaned toward the wall to peek around the corner, suddenlyâ
Hoooo~
Hot breath hit my ear.
I nearly screamed, clapping a hand to my ear.
What the hell?!
He looked way too pleased.
âGood effect. Iâll signal like that from now on.â
âNo. Absolutely not. Thatâs horrifying.â
My protest did nothingâhis grin remained, his gaze deepening as he brushed his eyes over my ear.
âWhere do you feel the chills?â
This manâif he werenât a Duke, I wouldâve grabbed him by the collar.
Thankfully, loud voices erupted around the corner, saving him from strangulation.
âHow dare you try to smuggle water out!â
Water?
I peeked.
Two guards were berating a stout middle-aged woman pulling a cart almost the size of a wagon. She looked East-Asian like me, brows knotted as she produced a slip of paper.
âThis is payment from working at the castle forge. And hereâLord Fuan-nu Yanâs written promise.â
The guards snorted at the document.
âThis? This is permission to tend geese outside the castle. If you were a goose, itâd be valid. Hahaha!â
Her face went white. She couldnât read. The administrator had tricked her.
âT-then Iâll fetch Lord Fuan-nuââ
âYou dare summon such a busy man just to verify goose documents? Drop the water and leave!â
âBut there is no drinking water outside. My familyââ
âSmuggling water is one year of labor in prison. Be grateful weâre letting you walk. Now go!â
Drought in Borhumi? Strange. I had studiedâBorhumi was supposedly the most fertile land. Why would water be scarce?
As I pondered, Tyroc suddenly strode forward.
Whatâno, why?! Strategy before action!
But his long legs took him across the space in seconds.
âŠShould I just abandon him?
Sighing, I rushed after him. By the time I reached them, he had already snatched the paper from the guardâs hand.
ââLord Fuan-nu Yan, chief administrator of Borhumi Castle, promises five jugs of water as payment for labor,ââ he recited smoothly.
The guards sputtered.
âWho are you to suddenly barge in and spout nonsense?!â
The other thrust his spear forward.
I craned my neck to peek at the paper. It was absolutely the goose document. But Tyroc lied without blinking.
âMy mistake. It clearly says ten jugs.â
He increased the number.
The guardsâ expressions changedânot because they believed him, but because of the gold coin he held alongside the paper.
A gold coin stamped with Borhumiâs crest.
Wait.
Where did heâ
Oh.
The relic room.
He had swiped treasure without me noticing.
I stared at him the same way the guards didâutter disbelief.