Chapter 302: Fiona’s Hidden Agenda (3)
Chapter 302: Fiona’s Hidden Agenda (3)
“Don’t tell me...all this recklessness was over a single slave?”
“Partly that, and partly to take care of an Evil God’s Apostle. Two birds, one stone.”
I shrugged, but all I got in return were stares that suggested I wasn’t in my right mind.
Even among lunatics, being looked at as though I were unhinged felt unfair.
I’m innocent...!
But no one took my side. Everyone was more curious about the part where it was “for Carla.”
Elisha brushed back her elaborate, drill-shaped hair and asked,
“You? For Carla? What do you mean by that?”
“It’s nothing. Just that Carla became a slave under circumstances similar to yours.”
“Mine? You mean... through spirit summoning?”
“...No, that was Iris. You just got caught up in the schemes of the Boiling Silence Church while tagging along.”
“Oh.”
At that, Iris, who had been standing behind, flinched at the mention of her spirit-summoning attempt. Not a false accusation, so she had nothing to say in defense.
Anyway, the fact that Carla became a slave due to a false charge also meant that her father, Theodore Lindelheit, was falsely accused of being a cultist.
The most shocked by this revelation was Havel, who had personally led Theodore to the execution platform.
“What... what do you mean? Theodore was innocent?”
“Yes. All the so-called evidence of his cultist activity was fabricated by the Boiling Silence Church. The head butler of the Lindelheit family, Servis, was a spy.”
“I... I...”
Havel stood frozen in shock. Wasn’t this supposed to be a Swordmaster? Shouldn’t his mental fortitude be stronger than this?
Then again, considering the recent turmoil, it was possible he was already mentally exhausted.
After all, Fiona’s scheming didn’t stop at the Lindelheit family—it extended to Havel himself.
“Sir Havel, you’re no exception. Every time you tried to buy Carla to fulfill her father’s last wish, something just happened to go wrong at the palace. Don’t you think it’s an awfully convenient coincidence? And what about how a Swordmaster of your caliber ended up so impotently cooped up?”
“......”
Havel remained silent, his head hung low.
Ordinary poisons don’t affect a Swordmaster’s body. But poisons of the mind are a different story.
Repeated failures. The powerlessness of being unable to act. Endless terror. And yet, the unyielding loyalty he was bound to maintain.
What happens when someone who has risen to superhuman status through conviction starts doubting and regretting their path?
Even if they seem fine at first, over time, the blade that is Havel would have dulled and rusted.
Because the most dangerous poison is the poison of the mind.
Perhaps that’s why he ultimately failed to land even a single meaningful blow on an Apostle like Fiona in H&A and died.
Of course, this was only speculation.
As Havel mulled over my words, he raised his head again, his eyes a storm of anger and killing intent.
The moment Havel took a step forward, I immediately blocked his path.
“I told you. Someone else will kill Fiona.”
“......”
Havel stared at me without a word. But soon enough, the sharp intensity in his gaze subsided, and his grip on the sword loosened.
“...You’re right. That’s not my role, at least not now.”
Havel muttered in a low voice and stepped back.
Fiona, having watched this entire exchange, looked at me incredulously.
“How... how do you know all this? There shouldn’t have been any evidence. And that form of yours...”
“Who knows?”
I smirked and gave Carla a gentle push forward.
“Do you think you need to know?”
You’re about to die, after all.
“Ah, yeah. If that’s what you want, Carla.”
“Yay!”
Carla raised her clasped hands and pointed them toward Fiona with a bright smile.
Fiona, unable to process the sudden change in circumstances, could only roll her eyes, while Carla aimed her trademark mischievous grin at her.
“I’ll show you Lindelheit magic, feared even by Evil Gods.”
“What? Have you gone mad? Or could it be...?!”
Fiona looked at me with an expression of disbelief.
I wish she wouldn’t look at me like that, as if I had trained Carla in something unspeakable.
But once again, I wasn’t given a chance to explain myself. Before I could open my mouth, Carla’s mana began to flow.
If this continued, Carla would end up casting magic on her own. I sealed my lips and focused on drawing out my mana.
“—————.”
“—————.”
We began casting together, hands intertwined.
Perhaps because I had learned magic from Carla, our chants, which should have been unique to each of us, synchronized perfectly.
The same words. Different voices. Yet the rhythm was harmoniously blended.
As if we had been one from the very beginning, our chants merged seamlessly.
And it wasn’t just the chants.
Our mana resonated as well.
My core, which should have been resonating with the ambient mana, instead synchronized with Carla’s core.
The overlapping wavelengths collided, cracked, and eventually fused into something far greater.
Whooong.
Perhaps because I hadn’t undone my dragonized form, the moment our cores connected, I could sense everything about Carla, just as she could sense everything about me.
It felt as if I had become Carla, and Carla had become me.
This unprecedented sense of unity exhilarated me.
Following that exhilaration, our mana surged in unison.
Flash!
A small flame formed in front of our clasped hands, drawing in an immense amount of mana.
The experience was both thrilling and new, but all things must come to an end.
Even what feels eternal is ultimately just a fleeting moment.
Before I realized it, our chanting had finished, leaving only a single trigger word.
Fiona, foreseeing her demise, shook her head frantically.
Carla and I exchanged a glance and nodded.
And then, the final word.
“Incinerate!”
The ultra-high heat flame that could burn even bone latched onto Fiona’s body.
Whoosh!
That was it.
Before she could even scream, Fiona’s body was reduced to a handful of ash.
The ash scattered in the wind, blowing through the broken windows. Carla, who had been watching it drift away, turned to me and smiled brightly.
A radiant smile, like a flower in full bloom.
“Shall we go now, Master?”
Her smile reminded me of the blue flower ornament said to symbolize the Lindelheit family.
And that shimmer—surely, it was like dew reflecting the morning sunlight.
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