Staring at the withered hand wreathed in those seductive, demonic flames, the maidâs gaze remained calm.
She raised her right handâthe one gripping the daggerâand placed it before the skeletal hand.
Its bony fingers slowly curled inward, gradually closing around her wrist.
Ssshhhhh...
The infernal flames leapt higher, and the stench of scorched flesh filled the room.
The maid's face turned pale. Cold sweat beaded on her forehead. She looked like she was enduring an unbearable pain.
But in her eyesâ
There was fervor.
The kind of fervor only seen in a true believer witnessing a miracle.
Moments later, the withered hand released her wrist and withdrew back into the black, swirling vortex.
The oppressive, otherworldly aura vanished, as if it had never been there to begin with.
Yet the unholy flames remainedâstill burning on the maidâs right hand, engulfing the dagger as well.
âA cult priestess?â
Celiciaâs voice returned to the world, carrying with it a fury too vast to name.
âYou sewer rats still dare show yourselves in front of me?â
âRats? To a noble princess like you, yesâweâre nothing more than vermin.â
The maid lifted her eyes. Reflected in their cold surface was the flicker of flame and Celiciaâs pale, beautiful face.
She sneered.
âBut, Your Highness...
You're about to be killed by one of those lowly rats.â
The maid vanishedâ
âAnd reappeared directly in front of Celicia.
The flaming dagger thrust forward from a wicked angle, mercilessly targeting Celiciaâs heart.
âTch, dream on!â
Celicia let out a cold snort. An even more terrifying chill erupted from her slender frame, and everything around her was shredded by frost and storm in an instant.
But only for an instant.
It wasn't enough to stop the maid, who was already close enough to strike. The sudden burst of cold only managed to slightly deflect her dagger.
Because the next momentâ
That frost aura vanished.
No buildup. No warning. No transition.
It just disappeared.
Celicia froze for a moment, stunned. Then she swiftly turned her gaze to the flames burning on the maidâs right hand.
âSo it really is a power designed to counter mine...â
Celiciaâs ice wasnât mere magicâit was divine. A blessing from a goddess.
It wasn't frostâit was a rule.
A rule that could freeze all things.
Even flames.
Under normal circumstances, she could freeze even these.
But right now, her powers werenât responding.
She couldnât even conjure a basic ice blade.
Because a different law, one that directly countered her own, was burning in those infernal flames on the maidâs hand and dagger.
âBut do you really think that alone can kill me?â
Celicia quickly regained her composure.
Her strength wasnât just divine favor.
Before the maid could strike again, Celicia suddenly stepped in. She didnât retreatâshe advanced.
Her slim fingers pressed together into a palm strike, internal energy swirling with a sharp, icy breath.
She drove her hand straight into the maidâs chest!
âTch. I almost forgotâHer Highness is also no slouch at martial arts.
But, alas...â
The maid didnât dodge. She met the blow head-on.
Their auras clashedâice versus flameâin a brief deadlock.
The intense pressure from the clash sent the maidâs neatly trimmed bob fluttering in the wind.
Her expression never changed.
âAlas, because you usually rely on your ice sword, and specialize in swordsmanship, you didnât bother carrying a normal sword for self-defense.
And thanks to your overconfidence, you didnât see the need to wear a single defensive magic tool.â
â!â
Celicia remained calm. But deep in her eyes, something flickeredâsubtle, but there.
âWhich meansââ
Suddenly, the maidâs aura reversedâher internal force pulled instead of pushing, locking Celiciaâs palm in place.
Taking Celiciaâs full strike had wounded her badlyâbut it also left Celicia with no escape.
âWhich means, yes...
I can kill you.â
Her right hand was already raised.
She reversed her grip on the dagger, aimed directly at Celiciaâs vitals.
Everything about the angle, force, and timing was calculated for one purpose:
A single, fatal blow.
The reaper raised her scythe.
This timeâthere would be no miracle.
****
âWhat â NĐŸvĐ”lŃĐłht â (Donât copy, read here) the hell am I even thinking?â
Curled in the corner of the room, Muen suddenly slapped himself hard across the face.
He had to snap out of it. Out of those seductive, selfish thoughts that should never have taken root in the first place.
He couldnât believe it.
Heâd just been thinking...
That maybe itâd be better if Celicia died.
That if that assassin actually killed herâ
His problems would be solved.
âYeah... If Celicia dies, no one would pursue the whole âassaulted the princessâ thing.
Iâd get to live, at least for now...â
âBut after doing that to such a pure girl... how the hell can I sit here and wish for her death?â
âWhat kind of ultimate-grade, face-lacking, rotten scumbag am I?
Celicia... she didnât do anything wrong!â
Muen slammed a fist into the floor. The searing pain helped clear his head.
And with that came the rising tide of guilt.
Because from beginning to endâ
Celicia had been innocent.
She hadnât done a damn thing wrong.
She was only in this room because of his cowardice.
Only drugged because of his vile scheming.
Only stripped of her purity because of his idiocy.
And now, she might dieâ
Because he let the timeline deviate.
Because he was careless.
Because he made one misstep too many.
She didnât deserve this.
She deserved the story she was supposed to haveâ
To meet someone she loved.
To live a happy life.
She wasnât supposed to die here.
âNo... I canât just watch her die.
I have to help her!â
Muen clenched both fists, a hint of resolve rising in his eyes.
But the moment he raised his head and looked at the battle unfolding before himâ
That resolve vanished.
âHow... am I even supposed to help?â
He couldnât even follow the assassinâs movements.
He had no divine blessings.
He recognized that ritualâthat [prayer]âfrom the original novel.
A dark rite used by cult priests to draw power from forbidden gods.
That wasnât a power someone like him was even supposed to see yet.
He was the pampered son of a duke.
A disposable yellow-haired villain.
A stepping stone for the protagonist.
He was just a first-year at Saint Maria Magic Academy.
And heâd spent most of that year slacking off.
The only spell he could remember was a useless lighting charm.
He couldn't help Celicia.
âMaybe...
Maybe not interfering is the best way I can help her?â
Like those overly helpful drama heroines who mess everything up with good intentionsâ
Maybe it was better to just not get in the way.
âCeliciaâs going to win.
She will.
Sheâs strong. She doesnât need me.â
Muen mumbled under his breath, like he was trying to convince himself.
****
Click.
A crisp sound echoed behind him.
Like a door unlocking.
âItâs almost over now.
You may leave, Muen Campbell.â
That same voice as beforeâ
Faint. Weak.
But unmistakably near his ear.