When the blond-haired mage, Huey, opened his eyes, the first thing he saw was a pair of menacing eyes that made his heart drop.
ââ¦Hrk!â
He was already struggling to breathe, crushed by the suffocating pain and pressure inflicted by that nameless knight.
And now, upon regaining consciousness, he was once again met with that murderous gaze, threatening to send his mind spiraling into darkness.
But Huey was no ordinary manâhe was the Magic Towerâs top disciple.
Quick thinking and sharp judgment were second nature to someone in his position.
Scanning the desolate room, Huey quickly realized that only the man with the terrifying eyes remained.
âHeâs gone! That monster is gone!â
The freak who had kidnapped him from the VIP suite in the blink of an eye.
The one who had extracted all of the Magic Towerâs classified secrets using unknown means and radiated a monstrous killing intentâthat monster was nowhere to be seen.
Twitch.
And more importantly, his body could moveâjust slightly.
âThis is my chance!â
He was tied up, and the man before him seemed to be keeping watch, but without that horrifying monster presentâ
âP-please⦠s-spare⦠meâ¦.â
â¦perhaps he could escape?
His voice came out rough and broken, like a rusty harmonica, likely due to being deprived of water for seventeen hours.
Still, the fact that he could speak again was what mattered most.
Huey clung to that shred of hope and begged desperately for his life, pleading to the man with the terrifying eyes.
The Magic Towerâs top discipleâsomeone who had never bowed his head or begged anyone for anythingâwas now groveling with a pitiful voice.
If anyone from the Magic Tower had witnessed this, they would have doubted their own eyes.
But Huey was so desperate to escape the monsterâs grasp that he wouldâve gladly bargained with the devil himself.
Thatâs how close he was to his limit.
âIfâif you help me, Iâll give you anything you want. I swear on the Magic Towerâs name!â
ââ¦â¦â
âP-please, justâ¦.â
Logically speaking, it was absurd to expect the man with the terrifying eyes to accept such an offer.
But Huey was far from logical at the moment.
In a twisted way, it was impressive that he could still attempt to negotiate in this state.
And thenâ
âInteresting offer.â
â!!â
Hearing a positive response, Huey silently cheered.
Yes! This was exactly what he wanted to hear.
Huey hurriedly pressed on.
âT-then please, water and foodâ¦! I need to recover my strengthâ¦.â
His body was in shambles.
His stamina, magic, and mental strength were all drained.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
He couldnât even cast basic spells in his current state.
If he could just drink waterâno, even a bite of food would do!
If only he couldâ
ââ¦â¦â
âWh-what are you doing? Hurry up and bring me some waterâ!â
Despite his desperation, the man didnât budge, and Hueyâs impatience boiled over into anger.
It was clear how he usually treated those beneath him.
Andâ
âAh. So this is what it feels like to be underestimated.â
Huey had failed to consider how insulting his tone might be.
And thenâ
Schlkk!
âGaaaahhhhâ!â
A blade pierced Hueyâs chest.
âUgh⦠ughâ¦!â
Huey writhed in agony.
His flesh tore, and his ribs cracked under the pressure.
Drip, drip.
Blood poured down his body, staining the floor.
Huey could only thinkâ
âIâm going to dieâ¦.â
ââWake up. That was just a little prank. Overreacting, arenât you?â
âHaaah!â
Huey gasped, snapping back to reality.
ââ¦Huh? â¦Whatâ¦?â
He looked down at his chest.
It was intact.
But the pain, the terrorâeverything had felt so real.
Huey trembled uncontrollably, overwhelmed by fear, agony, and confusion.
It was the second time today that he had faced unimaginable terror.
At this point, staying sane felt more exhausting than losing his mind.
And soâ
âUghhhâ¦!â
Huey fainted again.
Thud.
ââ¦Ridiculous.â
The man frowned as he watched Huey collapse once more.
Despite his words, there wasnât even a hint of amusement in his expression.
And thenâ
âWhy so noisy when Iâm trying to rest?â
ââ¦â¦â
âTerrible hospitality.â
ââ¦Hmph.â
Raq merely furrowed his brows and closed his eyes, choosing not to respond.
âIgnoring me, huhâ¦.â
Ihan grumbled but didnât seem particularly surprisedâor disappointed.
Instead, he took another sip of milk.
ââ¦Damn.â
He had to admit it.
Raq wasnât lying.
This milkâ
âItâs so good I could cry. What the hell have I been drinking until now?â
It was hands down the best milk heâd ever tastedâacross both his current and past lives.
And for that, Ihan decided to forgive just about everything.
*****
Clink.
âPlease enjoy, Sir.â
âAh, thanks.â
âYouâre welcome. Itâs only proper hospitality since we invited you.â
ââ¦Are you really related to that stone-faced guy over there? How are you this different?â
âHaha, I get that a lot.â
The female knight who brought Ihan finely shaved milk ice and ice cream bore a faint resemblance to the spear-wielding man sulking nearby.
But unlike him, she had gentler eyes and spoke with grace, exuding elegance.
A familiar face.
She was the Galahad knight who had looked after Irene Windler when she fainted during the monster attack the other day.
Ihan hadnât expected to see her again here, let alone be served milk ice and ice cream by her.
Stillâ
âFood is food.â
Ihan began eating without hesitation.
After all, heâd already been impressed by the milk he drank earlier after his hot spring bath.
And since this dessert was made with the same milkâ
ââ¦Damn, this is insanely good too.â
Once again, profanity slipped out as a form of praise.
âItâs a rare delicacy produced only by cows blessed by fairies. It strengthens your bones and keeps you full for three days without the need for food.â
ââ¦And why have I never even heard rumors about this?â
âThatâs only natural. The cows are incredibly difficult to raise, and theyâre exclusive to Galahad. You could say itâs one of Galahadâs specialties.â
âHmph. So, to taste this again, Iâd have to become part of Galahad? Thatâs⦠actually kind of tempting. No wonder Galahad has so many talented peopleâ¦.â
âI-I doubt anyoneâs been lured in by milk before.â
âYou never know.â
Clink.
Ihan set his spoon down.
In less than a minute, he had emptied the dish.
It might have looked like binge eating, but he had savored every bite, leaving him thoroughly satisfied.
âWould you like some more?â
âNo, as tempting as it is, too much of a good thing can make it lose its charm.â
âThen Iâll bring you a cup of warm tea.â
The knight left the room, and Ihan thought she seemed like a decent person.
âI canât believe sheâs related to you. Sheâs so polite and hardworking.â
ââ¦â
âWhy are you looking at me like that?â
ââ¦That vicious thing has never treated me like this, tch.â
â??â
The spear-wielding knight seemed annoyed by her behavior, and Ihan shrugged, wondering why anyone would complain about having such a thoughtful younger sister.
âUngrateful brat.â
What a sour personality.
Then againâ
âGiven the killing intent he carries, I guess itâs no surprise heâs so twisted.â
Ihan glanced at Huey, who was still passed out on the floor, foaming at the mouth.
His face was frozen in terror, as if heâd had a near-death experience.
Not that Ihan particularly cared whether a mage had faced death or lost a limb.
But what did interest him was the âtechniqueâ the spear-wielding knight had displayed.
âItâs like he projected killing intent to make his opponent feel pain and fearâalmost as if it were realâ¦.â
It seemed as though he had induced an illusion of âdeath.â
âIs that even possible?â
Even with immense killing intent, using it as an actual form of attack seemed unbelievable.
It wasnât like those fictional martial arts realms where âthought equals death.â
âHmph. Is it just a natural talent?â
An overwhelming aura and murderous intent like his werenât something one could acquire just by surviving battlefields.
It felt more innateâalmost supernatural.
Could it beâ
âIs this guy one of the Heavenly Killers?â
One of the Thirty-Six Heavenly Stars, born under ominous constellations and said to bring disaster.
But Ihan quickly dismissed the thought.
ââ¦I must still be tired.â
He let out a small chuckle, brushing off his wild imagination.
This was a romance fantasy world.
There was no way such absurd martial arts nonsense could exist here.
âYeah, no way.â
Shaking his head, Ihan decided not to dwell on the ridiculous idea any longer.
*****
âAre you done playing around now?â
âYeah, Iâm done.â
ââ¦â¦â
âWhat?â
ââ¦I guess I shouldnât expect normal conversations with you.â
âQuit picking fights. So, did you read my notebook properly?â
ââ¦â¦â
âYou think I wouldnât notice you sneaking a peek?â
âHmphâ¦.â
Even as the spear-wielder fidgeted awkwardly, Ihan remained calm.
He had already expected this outcome.
There was no way this guy had brought him to Galahadâs safehouse out of friendship.
Clearlyâ
âHe wanted the information I gathered.â
Too bad for him.
ââ¦I couldnât make sense of half of it.â
âShameless bastard.â
ââ¦â¦Iâll deliver milk to your house every week.â
ââ¦Why is that so tempting?â
Ihan doubted the guy could decipher much of the notebookâs contents anyway.
He had intentionally scribbled parts of it to make it unreadable.
Not in the language of his past life, of courseâdoing that wouldâve made him look like a linguistic genius.
Instead, he used a combination of military ciphers and Morse code heâd learned during his time as a soldier.
For the record, Morse code existed in this world too.
So why couldnât this guy read it?
âWhat does âswimming upstream like salmonâ even mean?â
âItâs a song lyric.â
âA song?â
âYeah, songs like that exist.â
ââ¦And âIâll live, Iâll liveâ?â
âThatâs a poem.â
ââ¦â¦Youâre surprisingly artsy for how you look.â
âWhatâs wrong with how I look?â
ââ¦â¦â
âHey! Answer me!â
Believe it or not, in his past life, Ihan might have become a poet instead of a soldierâif only his family had been wealthy enough.