Chapter 301.1
Living As the Villainess Queen
Eugene let out a sigh of relief. âThank goodness.â
The truth was that she didnât want any part of this if she could have helped it. It might have been selfish of her, but she wanted to secure her happiness above all else. If the Muens worked with Sang-je, it would have just complicated things so much more.
She needed to do something about it, she knew that even if she didnât want it to be true. There was a big chance that her world and Sang-jeâs would collide, and she couldnât be caught unawares.
He was trying to gain control over the Anikas. He was making it particularly so that the Anikas and the king wouldnât become close. And any Anikas that werenât under this control simply wouldnât do. Just like that queen who had died.
Sang-je was also obsessed with Ramita. There was no guarantee that she would be able to keep lying about her level of Ramita and, if her true Ramita was revealed, he would definitely try to keep her in the Holy City. Even if she returned to the kingdom, he would do everything he could to bring her back.
At least with the Muens not on his side, she wouldnât have to fight her motherâs family.
Alber watched her suspiciously as she took in the news. âYou believe me?â she asked. âYou arenât even surprised?â
âOh, Iâm definitely surprised,â she said. âI wouldnât have thought that Sang-je was a lark.â
She stared back at the older woman and realized that this wasnât the only thing she was supposed to be surprised about. She had come back to this world not too long ago so her grasp of what was normal and what wasnât was very different from a regular personâs.
Since she didnât subscribe to religion, the concept of God having an agent was more of a fascination to her than a solid belief. She was just surprised that he was a monster, not much else. If anything, she was relieved.
She didnât have to fight her family anymore or even another person. He was just a lark. If she had fought another person, there would be no clear line between good and evil. But with a lark, it was pretty obvious who the true enemy was.
She had grown to not believe everything she saw. If anything, she might have believed Sang-je was a sexual predator more than she would have believed he was an agent of God.
âWell, I do want to believe you,â Eugene finally said. âBut there are a few things I donât understand.â
âWhat things?â
âWell, Aldrit said that a legendary creature can never take the form of a human,â she said. âWas he wrong?â
Alber flinched at that. âNo, heâs right.â She sighed. âLarks canât turn into humans.â
âThen how does Sang-je do it?ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
Alber looked away. It was her fault that the creature could do what he did. âAncient magic was advanced,â she said. âIt was also precise. It wasnât something that could be created in a lab. In fact, there is a way of contacting others without meeting them in person in magic.â
Like a phone?
Eugene wondered.
âYou could materialize a personâs likeness and have it remember what you were going to say as a message,â she explained. âLike a letter.â
Like a video call?
âWhen it first came to be, you could only leave brief messages,â Alber explained. âWhen it improved, people could start to talk through their likenesses in real time.â
Thatâs amazing. Eugene thought. When she had first learned about magic, she had believed it to be some kind of urban legend. Or a strange mystical thing like dark magic that only few could participate in. But the more she learned about it, the more it started to seem like a different kind of science that had developed.
âIf you could take over someoneâs form, then it would be a problem,â she said. âYou could commit any crime in a fake form. There would have to be a limit. Perhaps it shouldnât be completely human.â
Alber nodded. âYou learn quickly.â She smiled. She was always so proud when she met a bright Muen child. It was just like when she met Lesa a few decades ago.
Eugene smiled awkwardly, shy from the compliments she was getting.
âBut that wasnât a problem,â Alber told her. âPeople could see through the forms that the magic created so they couldnât confuse them with real people.â
So, what about Sang-je? Eugene wondered. Why does he seem completely normal?