Episode 9
Emilia had already guessed Casper wouldnât be so generous as to offer her a carriage ride to the station.
Her suitcase felt heavier the longer she carried it, but sheâd been prepared for that too. So she kept walking steadily
toward the train station.
âThe skyâs so clear, but my heart feels heavy.â
If the sky had been full of dark clouds to match her mood, it mightâve been a bit of comfortâbut no, it was bright and
cloudless.
Now that the âvillainessâ was finally accepting her end and leaving, the main characters left behind would live happily
ever after.
The sky, just like always, refused to side with her. Emilia smirked.
âEveryone else is smiling. Thereâs no rule that says I canât smile too.â
All around her, people on the streets were laughingâparents and children, lovers, friendsâeach with their own
reason to be happy. The capital was alive and full of energy.
It made the Hermanns and the rest of the noble faction seem all the more rotten for trying to ruin such a sight.
And it made her realize she wasnât much different from themâsheâd resented seeing people happy when she herself
was not.
Well⊠Beaty wasnât entirely wrong.
Since landing in this world, Emilia had been forced to adapt to survive here.
One thing sheâd learned in that process was that nobles valued their honor above even their lives. There were
exceptions, sureâbut none of them would simply tolerate losing face. To them, honor was trust itself.
Which meant sheâd been nothing but a stain on the Casper name. The daughter of the noble factionâs leader as the
lady of the emperor factionâs head house? It was absurd.
A stain.
Her chest felt heavy. Sheâd never imagined sheâd hear that word so often in her life.
Other reincarnated heroines adapted, changed their fates, and ended up happy. Emilia hadnât achieved anything,
hadnât changed anything.
She was exhaustedâphysically, mentally, emotionally.
I really did love him.
As she walked, the same face kept popping into her mind, and her eyes stung with tears.
She had truly loved him.
In her bleak life, heâd been like a ray of lightâso warm that sheâd never wanted to leave his side.
The first and last kindness sheâd ever felt in this world. That one moment of warmth had been exactly what sheâd
needed, and so sheâd clung to it desperately.
Edwin Casper.
You were my only light.
Sheâd loved him, and sheâd wanted to stay with him forever. But if she stayed, heâd never be with the one he truly
loved in the original story.
And even if she managed to remain by his side, it would only be temporaryâuntil the day he dirtied his hands with
her blood.
She didnât want to put him through that pain. And she didnât want to die by his hand.
Being abandoned by the one you love was bad enoughâbeing killed by them would be unbearable.
If it was going to be like this, why did you make me Emilia?
She blamed God. Why make her Emilia of all people? If sheâd been Princess Diana, Edwinâs love could have been hers
completely.
Sheâd never been the type to envy othersâbut now there was one person she envied deeply.
Someone who could have what she never could.
Diana.
ââŠAlright. Forget it all.â
She decidedâshe would forget everything.
He was someone she could never have anyway. Sheâd been greedy to the end, sureâgreedy like anyone might be.
Sheâd tried her best, just like she had for the Hermann family, but in the end, she hadnât gotten the one thing she
truly wanted.
Now it was over.
Once she walked away from that house, her place there was gone. She would forget it all.
It wouldnât happen right away, but in time, she would forget.
And then fate decided to play a joke on her.
Edwin?
The station wasnât far now. Once she boarded the train, sheâd be gone from here for good. But right then, she spotted
a familiar carriage from the Casper estate.
She stopped without thinking, eyes drawn to itâdrawn to the man inside, with black hair like midnight and eyes just
as dark.
Her heart lurched.
It was his expression that stunned herâhe looked at her as though heâd just seen something he never should have.
Why⊠why are you looking at me like that?
And then
âWait! Hold on!â
She froze.
Edwin had leapt from the moving carriage and was running toward her.
For a moment, she almost ran to himâhorrified at the thought of him hurting himself like that. Sheâd been ready to
scold him for being reckless.
But then she stopped. She didnât have the right.
When she saw him charging toward her, instinct took overâshe turned and ran.
âEmilia!â
He shouted after her, but she kept going.
If she stopped now, if he caught her, what would happen? The Edwin she knew wouldnât care if she left.
Diana was different. She never let go of what was hers. And even if it had been for just a moment, Emilia had âstolenâ
Edwin. Diana would never forgive that.
If sheâd been the forgiving type, she never would have approached a married manâor shown Emilia such open
hostility.
No, Edwin must have been chasing her to hand her over to Diana. To give her revenge.
And Emilia didnât want to see them happy together. She certainly didnât want to die because of them.
So she ran. It was the only way to live.
Edwin⊠Edwin CasperâŠ
When she was finally out of sight, she hid and watched him.
He looked⊠relieved. The aide beside him looked uneasy.
Instead of heading back to the carriage, they went to a flower shop. Edwinâs face there was brighter than sheâd ever
seen it.
Emilia sank down against the wall.
So you can make an expression like that.
Sheâd never seen it once during their marriage.
She buried her face in her arms and cried quietly.
Sheâd wanted to leave without running into him. Sheâd been afraid seeing his face would make her long for him again.
But now⊠now she only felt bitter. Bitter that he could smile like that for another woman.
âYouâll forget me.â
Then Iâll forget you too.
She wiped her tears on her sleeve. The marks stayed, drawing glances from passersby, but she ignored them and
headed for the ticket counter.
âOne ticket to Grand Forest, standard class.â
A remote region on the empireâs borderâso far that sheâd never risk running into Edwin again.
It had been one of her contingency plans, in case the story played out like the original. Sheâd hoped never to use it.
But here she was, boarding the train to leave the capital for good.
As the train pulled out, she bit her lip and promised herself sheâd never come back.
âHm.â
She didnât know how many hours had passed. The train was emptier nowâfew people traveled all the way to Grand
Forest.
That was exactly why she was going. No one would come looking for her there. She even felt a strange kinship with
the place, isolated as it wasâjust like her.
Thereâd be no way for rumors about her to make it back to the capital.
I can finally shed the name Hermann.
It had followed her like a curse ever since sheâd arrived in this world.
Now, she could start fresh. Live a life where she wasnât instantly branded a villainess just for her name.
Still⊠there was a twinge of sadness. Not because she wanted to cling to the Hermann name, but because losing it
meant severing the last tie she had to Edwin.
But the train was already far from the capital. Holding on now would just make her a fool. The thought made her
laugh.
From now on, my nameâs Amy.
No title, no noble familyâjust Amy.
She liked the sound of it. Smiling faintly, she turned to watch the sunrise as the train reached its destination.
She picked up her suitcase, ready to step off and start her new life and shivered.
The windows and doors were shut, yet an icy chill slid over her skin.
She glanced around. Nothing seemed out of place.
But somewhere in the carriage, a man with a fedora pulled low over his face was smiling⊠right at her.
ugh creepy
?? Amy is creepy?