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CHAPTER 04
āYou seem awfully sure of yourself.ā
āAnd if Iām not? Even if I stayed, what could a kid like me have done other than become someone elseās burden? If you think I shouldāve stayed and died just because Iām of royal blood, then I donāt know what to say.ā
You were just a child back then. No matter how amazing you were, you were still just a little kid.
Despite his attempt to provoke her, the princess responded with the same calm indifference.
āI knew that much.ā
āThen whyā!ā
Why even ask? Youāre just making me feel guilty!
āBut⦠Governor, are you mad?ā
āI am not.ā
āYou seemed upset.ā
āI was not upset.ā
āYou know how sometimes you can kind of tell somethingās off, but youāre not exactly sure what? Like, is it just a little bland or really bland? Should I add salt? Or is it just tasteless? That kind of thing. I can tellājust not exactly.ā
āWhat are you evenāā
You āknowā? And what exactly are you comparing me to?
As Claude tried to suppress an unexplainable sense of frustration, she added in a more thoughtful tone, as if offering an excuse:
āStill, I thought there might be more to it than just justification or duty.ā
Justification, my foot.
āIf weāre talking justification, then that makes your actions even more wrong.ā
āOh, does it?ā
āIf you died, the bloodline of Izariz ends with you. If thereās any hope of reviving the nation, we have to make sure you survive. The heir is the symbol of unity and hope.ā
Claude fired off his arguments point by point, then looked like he couldnāt believe what he was saying.
After all, he was supposed to crush her spirit, steal her land, and claim her birthright.
Why did I go and say all that?
And why was she looking at him like that?
Making me uncomfortable, seriously.
Realizing Claudeās odd internal struggle, Terry went quiet for a moment.
It was oddly comforting to see someone who cared enough to argue back, get flustered, and even feel guiltyāespecially about things she had long since grown numb to.
Grateful in a strange way, she gave him a faint smile when their eyes met. Claude, however, immediately turned his head away.
āPlease forgive me. Iām not very good with words.ā
āItās okay. I understand.ā
More than understand. As someone who was plopped into an unfamiliar world, if she couldnāt trust the protagonist, who could she trust? She needed to stay on good terms with him if she ever wanted to get back home.
Claude seemed like he had more complaints about how quickly she forgave him, but he dropped it and continued.
āLet go of the past. Focus on the people who are still alive.ā
āThe people who are alive?ā
āYou seem unaware, so Iāll say this: there are survivorsāhere in the hotel, and in the herbalistās district. Theyāve made it. Theyāre living their lives. Go see for yourself.ā
The hotel, sureābut what was the herbalistās district?
Terry racked her brain trying to recall anything like that from the game, but no matter how hard she tried, that name never came up.
āWhere is it?ā
āEast of the old city. Itās in ruins. Most of the remaining Izariz people have gathered there. You can think of it as a refugee settlement.ā
The princess might not have been a welcome sight to Claude, but to the mages, it would be a different story.
Those prickly, arrogant mages might end up bawling their eyes out.
Now that would be something worth teasing them about. Claude licked his lips in regret, only for Terry to suddenly ask:
āWhen are you free?ā
āā¦Free?ā
Free? My time? Why?
āWhy do you askāā
āYou told me to go see it.ā
āAnd why exactly are you asking me about my schedule?ā
āYou said to ask if I needed help, remember?ā
Wait, donāt tell me⦠with me? Together?
His eyes flickered with panic.
āI donāt know the way. Iāve never even heard of the herbalistās district. And I donāt know anyone here.ā
So now Iām your closest acquaintance? Claude looked like he wanted to argue, but unfortunately, it was true.
The person Terry felt most familiar and comfortable with in this world was none other than himāher protagonist.
He took a deep breath and gave a clean, decisive refusal.
āIf I go there, Iāll be killed.ā
āKilledā¦? Oh. Right.ā
āEven imperial knights avoid going near that place. If I show up, theyāll come running with their staffs ready.ā
āTo bash your head in?ā
āā¦Must you put it so bluntly?ā
That place was home to diehard Izariz loyalistsāthe real, hardcore magesāwho saw Claude as nothing more than an invader. If he showed up, theyād treat him like prey in a lionās den and try to roast him with magic.
Which was completely understandable. The princess here was the odd one out.
That was close.
Always a staunch protagonist supporter, Terry almost forgot her new role.
Princess and knight.
In other stories, maybe that turned into romance. But not in this game.
If anything, she shouldāve poisoned his juice and tried to assassinate him. Or at least slapped him, or glared.
And I did nothing.
And then, to top it off, she yawned wide.
āAh, sorry. That was rude. I barely slept last night.ā
āOf course. You were busy killing things.ā
Claude replied flatly, as if he knew everything.
āYou handled quite a few of them in the forest.ā
āWell, thatās becauseāā
Sheād fought them before. Sheād beaten them countless times.
The moment she clicked āYESā with the mouse, her screen had gone black and sheād been dropped into the middle of the forest.
Without knowing what was happening, she fought off monsters in a desperate frenzy, saved a bloodied elf, and eventually found her way to town by piecing together her memory.
Thankfully, sheād encountered almost all the monsters at least twenty times before.
She knew their weak spots, where to land critical hitsāenough to survive.
Though I wasnāt hunting alone.
An unhinged elf with a murderous streak had definitely helped.
āYouāre not hurt, are you? Though you look healthy enough without me having to ask.ā
āIām fine.ā
āThen whose blood was that?ā
The question was sudden, completely out of context.
āThe elfās.ā
Terry answered without hesitation.
āThere was an injured elf with me.ā
Claude seemed suspicious at how easily she admitted it, but Terry kept going.
āProbably a high elf. I saw high-level spirits following him.ā
āAn elf⦠here?ā
āThey mustāve had their reasons. I donāt know what they were doing there, though.ā
āDo you know them?ā
āNo. Never met them before.ā
Then why are you talking like you do?
Claudeās expression said it all. Terry gave a small chuckle.
āConsider it my payment. I did bug them a lot.ā
She thought back to that elfāIzriel.
āThough to call it a āmeetingā would be a stretch.ā
Sheād picked up his dagger mid-battle, got cursed out, returned it, and happened to head the same way for a while.
Even then, heād been spitting venom the whole time.
A key NPC who shifted between ally and enemy. Terry had recognized him at a glance and wisely kept her head down.
āIāll pay the rest of the price later. Maybe Iāll have another chance.ā
She glanced at the sword hanging at Claudeās waist, and he instinctively turned his torso to shield it.
āLetās get along, okay? I think Iāll need a lot of help. But Iāll be helpful to you, too.ā
Just that morning, sheād been drowning in despairābut now, she allowed herself a bit of hope.
If this man could take down the dragonāif she could help him do thatāthen maybe she could finish the game and return home. Like always, she just had to grit her teeth and survive.
What is this? Why are we teaming up now?
Claude was genuinely flustered. The princessās sudden declaration of partnership hit him like a truck.
He stood up abruptly, as if trying to flee.
āIāve overstayed. I really must go. I have a mountain of work waitingāā
He added a half-hearted excuse as he tried to escape, but the princess didnāt get the hint and followed after him.
āWhy are you following me?ā
āIām seeing you off.ā
Seeing me off? Youāve got to be kidding me.
He made it clear he preferred to be alone, but she still cheerfully waved him to the door.
Once he escaped this swirling mess of emotions, heād be free. Claude braced himself, about to leap down the descending stepsā
Then her hand reached out and grabbed his sleeve.
āWait!ā
What now?!
āIf I want to see you again, where should I contact you?ā
She didnāt ask āCan I contact you?āāshe asked where.
Did she think he was her personal assistant?
But he had no right to say no. He was the one whoād started this whole mess with his big mouth.
Heād offered help. Heād started teasing.
For the first time in his life, Claude was asked for his address by a woman.
She handed him a pen and a tablecloth sheād hurriedly grabbed.
And there, on that crumpled bit of fabric, he reluctantly scrawled out his address, one painstaking letter at a time.