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 C78
by berryChapter 78
âSomeone tried to take water outside the walls, paid with gold, and you simply let them go?â
Yan hurled the accusation at the guard dragged before him, his voice reverberating through the room.
âIf they had this gold in the first place, would they have needed to toil for water as forced labor? You basically released a suspicious intruder!â
The guard paled, stammering in defense.
âB-but the one who paid the gold was a relative of the blacksmith. She seemed in danger, so I thought naturally heâd help her, so Iââ
âA relative? Why would a relative hand over such a large sum?â
If she had a wealthy relative, she would have borrowed money long before. Which meant the relative was a fake. Yan instantly sensed the thieves he sought were the very people the blacksmith had been with.
âBring the blacksmith. Immediately.â
His expression brimmed with irritation, but not yet true fury. It was merely a petty theftâthat was all he expected. But the moment the blacksmith opened her mouth, the situation turned dire.
âTh-they said⊠they were heading to Crystal Lake.â
Crash!
Yan shot to his feet so violently that his chair toppled backward. Everyone stared in shock, but Yan saw nothingâhis mind was consumed.
Why Crystal Lake of all places? Dorgo had explicitly ordered that no one must ever be allowed near it!
âSend soldiersâat once! Immediately!â
The closer they came to the lake, the more animal carcasses they encountered. And when they reached a barren land where even grass and trees had withered, a towering palisade rose before them like a wall. One glance at the impossibly high wooden spikes confirmed itâwhatever was poisoning the water lay beyond this barrier.
âWhy the Crystal Lake of all placesâŠ?â
Tyroc murmured under his breath as he gazed up at the wooden wall. Its heightâand sharp, unforgiving topsâmade it clear that scaling it would be nearly impossible.
âReinforcements will arrive in two or three days.â
I cast him a look, silently asking, Reinforcements for what?
He did not glance away from the wall as he answered slowly.
âYou donât need to go inside.â
âI do. I have to enter if Iâm going to find the key.â
âAfter everything is dealt with, you can go.â
Dealt with? What did he expect to find inside? And if it was dangerous⊠ah. He was trying to keep me out. Touching, yesâbut if we had leisure to wait for reinforcements, we wouldnât have been marching nonstop to get here.
âIâll look for myself. If it seems too dangerous, Iâll step out.â
I rejected the kindness as politely as I could and surveyed the watchtowers along the barrier. The blacksmith had said security was strict. What on earth were they hiding inside? If they built this kind of structure and cast black magic strong enough to cloak an enormous region in illusionâŠ
âI promise I wonât cause trouble.â
He didnât respond outwardly, but now I knewâhis silence meant consent. If he disliked something, he spoke plainly.
âBefore anything, we need to figure out how to get in.â
A ladder? Perhaps we could climb once it grew dark. While I weighed possibilities, Tyroc simply began walkingâstraight toward the gate.
âAh? Why are you going that way?â
âThatâs the door.â
I KNOW that. The issue was the guards and the watchtower aboveâ
Surprised, I started after him, but he stopped me.
âCome to the gate in thirty minutes.â
What? This wasnât a date at Exit 8 of Myeongdong Station before going for kalguksu.
But thirty minutes later, I realized entering Crystal Lake was infinitely easier than getting lunch.
Tyroc had subdued every guard in the vicinity and was standing casually by the gate, waiting.
âYouâre late.â
ââŠIâm right on time.â
âAh, I must have finished too quickly.â
He gave a smooth, wicked grinâthe kind that probably ruined people. I greeted it with a deadpan stare.
âThis is no time for jokes.â
He only chuckled faintly and stepped aside.
âGo in.â
âWhat if there are soldiers insideââ
âThere arenât.â
He checked that too? Did his Sword Master power return? Skepticism rose, but his voice dropped into a calm register.
âEvery one of them was afraid to enter.â
âWhy?â
âThey said simply⊠it gave them chills.â
I stepped inside. Ascending a shallow slope, I immediately understood their fear. Tyroc came to stand beside me.
âWhat do you see?â
âA blue lake. You?â
âA completely dried lakebed.â
But that wasnât what mattered.
âThere are bodies piled up. Too many to count.â
What should have been a clear, shimmering lake had become a basin coated in blackened, dried blood. A literal lake of blood. Why? Who had killed these people? And who were they?
ââŠSlaves, most likely.â
Tyroc made his assessment, but their identities didnât matter to me.
What mattered was that the same hand had killed all of them.
Every corpse had its throat half-severedâexplaining the sheer volume of blood covering the lakebed.
Not monsters. Not an accident. A mass killing by human hands.
The same cold, heavy weight that had grown inside me in the forest now pressed once more against my chest. Not shock. Not horror. Just a heaviness⊠and anger.
Tyroc said nothing, simply waiting beside me. When I finally looked at him, he asked quietly:
âCan you find the key?â
âI have to.â
This was Borhumi territory. The culprit could be Zab. Or that man called Dorgo. Tyroc turned toward the lake again.
âAre you sure you can walk through that?â
Only then did I understandâhe was asking if I could traverse the field of bodies.
Ah. Right. I was a ânoble young master.â But right now, I didnât want to pretend to be Rue.
âOf course.â
Compared to the corpses Iâd seen before, this was nothing. But just as I was about to step forward, he stopped me.
âWait.â
He knelt, pressed his ear to the ground. I blinked, confused.
Moments later, he rose and spoke evenly:
âSoldiers are coming.â
âWhat, after us?â
He nodded.
âThe blacksmith was captured faster than expected. It seems Yan isnât just a greedy fool skimming money.â
True. Their pursuit was swift. We didnât know how much time we had, but it wasnât much. The logical choice was to withdraw for now. If the soldiers saw us here, theyâd know we were after something.
My mind understood thisâyet my feet did not move. My lips refused to part. I stood frozen, and Tyroc said simply:
âYou find the key.â
âNow? What about you?â
âIâll hold them off.â
âWhat if there are a lot of them?â
He flicked a glance to the side, answered lightly:
âThere arenât.â
Was that confidence or certainty? I bit back the urge to ask. Instead, I stared uneasily at the sword he drew.
âYour Sword Master power still isnât back, correct?â
âI donât need that to stop them.â
How could I search while he fought alone? My silence must have been obvious, for he smiled again.
âYou look like you want to kiss me.â
âWhat nonsense are you spouting?!â
My shout only delighted him further.
Even now, in a situation like this, he found ways to torment his enemy. No wonder Dr. Kim had spent years trembling at the mention of his name.
His victorious smirk only deepened. Irritated, I snapped:
âIâm not grateful at all.â
âAll right.â
ââŠâ
âSearch however you like.â
You are in no position to say that so casually! I bit down my frustration and looked again toward the lake.
Even if he allowed it, finding the key now would be impossible. We should withdrawâ
Then something caught my eye.
A faint hollow in the distance.
Through the light mist, I had assumed the entire lake was dry. But far off, barely visible in a corner, was a small pool. Almost impossible to notice unless one stared very closely.
Strangely, even inside the mist, the water shimmered a vivid blueâexactly the color of Borhumiâs divine beast.
âForty minutesâno, thirty. Just thirty minutes.â
Without waiting for Tyrocâs reaction, I sprinted toward it.