~Chapter 69~
âAre you feeling okay, Rina?â
âThanks to you, yes. The hospital was a mess with emergency patients, but since I was treated as a victim, I even got a day off. Iâm probably the healthiest healer here.â
âThatâs a relief.â
The last time Iâd seen Rina, sheâd been lying in the hospital corridor after the phantom ghostâs attack. It seemed she had no lasting aftereffects. Relieved, I asked about another concern.
âHow are the villagers who were brought to the hospital?â
âFortunately, most of them have been discharged. There are only a handful worse off than you, Your Highness.â
âThatâs really good to hear.â
âThat means your condition is one of the worst, though. You keep worrying about othersâŠâ
She looked at me with pity.
âItâs not that bad. I even heard I might be discharged soon.â
âThat was before you overexerted yourself. You inhaled smoke while you werenât fully recovered, and it severely damaged your airway. Your shoulder was also dislocated. With injuries like these, you must have been in terrible painâyet you didnât come straight to the hospital. Donât tell me you canât feel pain?â
ââŠâ
My silence made her eyes sharpen.
âThere are psychic-type EshafĂ©s who habitually block pain entirely, ignoring the fact that itâs a signal to protect the body. Donât tell me youâre one of themâŠâ
âIt was⊠an urgent situation.â
âIâm reporting all of this to the Duke.â
âRinaâŠâ
âLooking at me like that wonât help. You need someone to stop you from reckless behavior.â
Just then, someone knocked on the door.
When it opened, Rina muttered, âPerfect timing. Someone who can stop you.â
I took a breath and looked up.
It was Nocturne.
Rina really did report to Nocturne. I could tell from the way his expression darkened while listening to her.
Had I really managed to purge his madness yesterday?
I remembered refusing his kiss and only holding him. I suddenly worried whether that had been enough.
He walked toward my bed. I glanced at his eyes, then quickly looked down.
At least theyâre blackâŠ
But I was sure I saw a faint blue flicker.
Standing by my bed, Nocturne spoke.
âHowâs your body?â
âIâm fine now.â
âIn that case, Iâd like to revisit yesterdayâs conversation. I wasnât in my right mind then.â
âAhâŠâ
I nodded and asked, âWho came with you?â
Iâd expected his aide, but instead it was a familiar doctorâthe same one who had helped with my counseling here before. Nocturne explained he wasnât from this hospital; he had invited him personally.
âThis is Dr. Wood, a mental health specialist. Heâll just observe from the side and wonât hear our conversation, so donât mind him.â
Dr. Wood greeted me politely, then sat at a comfortable distance. He put a small device in his ear and gesturedâit seemed to be a sound-blocking artifact, meaning he wouldnât hear us.
I wondered why we needed a psychiatrist for this talk, but looking at Nocturneâs expression, I didnât ask.
Nocturne sat beside my bed and, after a moment of silence, spoke.
âOne thing I want to sayâif something like this happens againâŠâ
His gaze sank deeply, as if recalling yesterday. I tensed instinctively.
âDonât try to handle it alone. Tell me.â
I blinked at his controlled tone.
Judging by his face, Iâd expected something like, If this happens again, Iâll lock you up and never let you see daylight.
But what came out was a reasonable request.
He seemed to choose each word carefullyâmaybe the doctor had coached him beforehand.
âIâm sorry for worrying you.â
He let out a long sigh.
âIt wasnât just worry. When I found you thereâŠâ
By âthere,â he meant the burning building where I had saved Kane.
âYou used your ability even though it worsens your condition, sneaking into the Cambiataâs base.â
ââŠWhat?â
âI heard from Tita that you nearly died from blood loss breaking my brainwashing. Jason told me about the infiltration.â
ââŠ.â
Apparently no one around me could keep their mouths shut. Tita, JasonâŠ
âWhat were you thinkingâŠâ
He rubbed his face in exasperation. My conscience ached.
âYou said youâd only become my pair if I called you Vis.â
âYes⊠I thought about it for a long time before deciding.â
âIâm curious what that long thinking involved,â he said, but didnât push further.
âIâve been putting this off because of your condition, but now I need to tell you the truth.â
He looked at me with dark eyes.
âIâm reaching my limit.â
âWhat truth?â
After a pause, he said:
ââVisâ is not your name.â
When I frowned, he pulled a few photos from an envelope.
âThis is the woman you claimed was you, right?â
It was the face from the Cambiata lab documents. I nodded.
âYes, thatâs right.â
âBut her name isnât Vis.â
He explained calmly.
âHer name is Ragey Barnett. Inside Cambiata she used another code name, but it was completely different from âVis.â You must have mistaken something written in a reportââVisâ wasnât a name.â
His gaze locked onto me.
ââVisâ is Cambiata slang meaning âfailure.ââ
âWhat?â
âYou seem surprised. You call yourself Cambiata, but donât even know their slang?â
ââŠâ
âAnd you claim to have Cambiata memories without even knowing your own name?â
His voice dropped lower.
âYouâve lied to me more than once.â
I bit my lip, avoiding his eyes.
âVisâ meant failureâŠ
Faced with the harsh truth, I mostly felt embarrassed.
âThis name is all I have left.â
All my confident statements about âVisâ being my name replayed in my head, and shame followed.
If Iâve recovered so many Cambiata memories, why didnât I remember such basic slang?
Only now did I realize:
âThen the reason you never called my name until now⊠was it becauseââ
ââŠâ
From his silence, I could read the answer.
It wasnât that he didnât want to acknowledge meâit was that he couldnât call me a failure.
Not knowing he was protecting me, I had stubbornly demanded he call my name. It was both embarrassing and guilt-inducing.
With everything exposed, denial was pointless. I should start by apologizing.
Iâd lied because I thought claiming to be a perfect Cambiata would be cleanerâbut from his side, it must have felt like a betrayal.
âIâŠâ
âI should apologize.â
He cut me off, and I looked at him in surprise.
âYou made that choice that day because of me, didnât you?â
By âthat choice,â he meant when I drank the poison. He had clearly taken my drunken words to heart.
I quickly spoke.
âNo, Iâm the one who should apologize. If I were in your placeââ
I stopped before finishing âIâd be disgusted by someone like me.â
But he seemed to read my thoughts and sighed deeply.
âWhen I first saw you at the palace, I did feel a sense of rejection.â
He spoke calmly.
âYes, I thought you were a cheap imitation of the original. Everything was similar but with a strange wrongness.â
âThatâs because Iâm not the real thing,â I said plainly.
He studied me for a moment, then spoke.
âBut now itâs different.â
His voice carried certainty.
âWhen I saw you again at the lab, that rejection vanished. In fact, I thought the exact opposite.â
âOpposite?â
Nocturne looked me over slowly.
âIf Aria had miraculously survived, she would look exactly like you.â
Yay for communication!
This is Really really interesting. If I was Nocturne, I’d also be tornđ„č. I really think she has her soul. Like howd ya even explain the similarities and the power??