When I Finished Playing the Terminally-Ill Villainous Omega C9
by berryChapter 9
âCedric.â
I had just finished lunch and was headed toward my room when Cassian called out to stop me.
âWhat are you playing at? Wasnât it you who hated that brat even more than I did?â
Though he never named him, his meaning was obvious.
I pretended ignorance, widening my eyes.
âHm? Which brat?â
A faint vein pulsed across Cassianâs temple.
âMy darling little brother has grown quite the nerve. Iâm honestly shocked these days. I wonder if youâre even the same child I used to know.â
I had been shocked as well latelyârealizing that the person I was forced to call my brother was this much of a snake.
I stared back blankly, expression unchanged. Cassian scoffed.
âDo you know what I heard recently?â
âNo idea?â
âJust rememberâthis mansion has ears and eyes everywhere, even if you donât see them.â
âOh? Ears and eyes? Monsters? Ew. Disgusting.â
ââŠIt means donât bring shame upon our noble house.â
He threw his parting jabâterminal illness doesn’t exempt you from noble dignityâand then shouldered past me.
Perhaps you should worry more about your own neck.
I climbed the stairs, glaring at his back, then returned to my roomâonly to freeze. Locke stood before my door, motionless.
âAh!â
Apparently, I also needed to protect my own neck betterâbecause I shrieked and stumbled back, panic immediately flaring. On instinct, I scanned the hall for danger in case a mission was about to trigger.
We were alone in the corridor. My shoes were clean. No dust. No bystanders.
Only then did I dare face Locke properly.
âWhy are you here? I told youâyouâre free unless I call for you.â
Despite having just screamed like a startled cat, I approached him with practiced nonchalance.
âI wished to ask you something.â
âTo me? What is it?â
Locke wanting to ask me somethingâit unexpectedly pleased me.
âEarlierâŠâ
He paused, biting his lower lip and lowering his gaze.
I am not the Cedric you once knew. Donât be afraid.
I softened my features, taking a step closer.
âItâs all right. Ask comfortably.â
Perhaps that was the permission he was waiting for; his lips parted.
âAs far as I recall, you did not assign me any errands today. So I wondered whether I misremembered⊠or if I misunderstood your words earlier.â
Ah. That.
I replied gently,
âThereâs no need to complicate things. I simply didnât like seeing my brother torment you.â
ââŠYou were helping me?â
âYes. Anyone would see I was trying to get you out of there. Yet you doubt my goodwill every timeâhonestly, it makes me a little⊠no, sorry. Forget it. My feelings are fine. Just⊠donât glare at me like that.â
I began indignantly, then shrank immediately under his stare.
âI wasnât glaring. I simply⊠find it hard to believe.â
âWhat part?â
âThat you continue to help me.â
âI told you, didnât I? Youâre my person. Bullying you is insulting me. Why would I allow that?â
âIn the past, you did. Did you not? You evenââ
His fists clenched tightly.
Seriously, why clench your fists instead of talking like a civilized humanâŠ
I shrank instinctively, and Locke bit his lip, swallowing the rest of his sentence. A faint tremor seemed to pass his mouth.
I could hardly blame him. To suddenly be treated kindly by someone who had tormented him relentlesslyâanyone would be confused. Someday, I hoped my sincerity would reach him.
âAnd thatâs the only reason you help me?â
âWhat other reason could there be? Iâll keep treating you well. My answer will always be the same. You donât have to ask me every time.â
âWith my foolish head, I cannot fathom your intentions.â
âThen how about this? I need allies in this house.â
Locke fell silent, staring.
âI want someone loyal and trustworthy, just like my brother has. Aside from Mother and Father, I have no one on my side. Because Iâm dying, everyone assumed I wasnât worth aligning with. It frustrated me. So I changed my thinking. Does that help you understand my actions?â
âYou wish me to become your ally?â
âSounds shameless, but yes. Iâd like you on my side. In return, Iâll protect you from othersâlike I did earlier.â
âWhy me?â
His question was sharp. Depending on my answer, I might earn his trustâor provoke hostility.
I lowered my gaze, pretending to ponder, expression tinged with quiet melancholy. Outside the window, servants laughed as they headed toward the garden beds.
Locke wasnât easily swayed by emotion, but I had no other tools. I could only hope he had even a grain of sentiment somewhere inside him.
âYouâre the only one who endured. Every attendant before you quit within a week. No matter how badly you were treated, you never once missed giving me my medicine. You never tried to tamper with it.â
A dying noble was a perfect target for those seeking escapeâswapping medicine was an easy option.
Yet Locke never didânot even while fleeing.
âIt seemed⊠loyal. Oddly loyal, for someone with such a fierce nature.â
His eyes sharpened.
âI was Lady Cecilâs faithful hound. That is why your request confuses me even more.â
âWhat part?â
âIf I remembered every slight⊠every cruelty, and planned to repay them? If loyalty were merely a mask hiding my clawsâwould you still hand a blade to someone who might stab you?â
Blade? If he would only be my ally, Iâd be further from death, not nearer.
He didnât understandâbut how could he? From his perspective, I was suspicious. And from mine, he was maddeningly difficult.
Clever beast. Couldnât he be dumb just once? Who talks like thatâsounds like a villain already practicing his throne speech.
Stillâthis was progress. I could not waste this chance.
âThatâs my karma. I canât erase what was done to you just by treating you kindly now.â
After all, it was still me choosing the systemâs commands. Even if this Cedric hadnât done those things, the original had.
âBut Iâll continue being good to you. Until you forgive me.â
âAnd if I choose not to?â
âThen Iâll just keep trying. Forever, if I mustâwell, until I die, at leastââ
Grrrrrgle.
His stomach growled loudly. We both froze.
Of courseâhe had been dragged around all day without eating.
I scanned quickly, then gently took his wrist. The kitchens wouldnât serve food at this hour.
Fortunately, I have the perfect thing.
âCome here.â
I expected him to pull awayâbut he followed quietly. Inside my room, I retrieved the orange Iâd prepared and held it up to his face.
He blinked as though waking from a dream.
âYou didnât get to eat properly earlier, right?â
He stared at the orange for a long time before speaking.
âWhat is this?â
âOh, this is a fruit called an orangeâbrought from the Westernââ
âI meant, why give this to me.â
âYou said you dislike grapes.â
ââŠIs this kindness given in hopes I will stand at your side?â
âNo?â
It was just an orangeâwhy was he reading philosophy into it?
âIâm giving it because itâs delicious.â
He stared blanklyâthen let out a small, breathy laugh.
Whether it was a laugh or disbelief, I couldnât tellâbut air definitely escaped his lips.
âYou are⊠difficult, sometimes.â
His fingertips brushed my palm lightly as he accepted the orange. A faint tremor danced across my skin.
Did it work? Did he accept it?
Heart pounding, I swallowed hard and waited for the verdict.