Episode 2
I climbed out of bed and walked over to the mirror standing in the corner of the room.
The reflection staring back at me wasnāt āYuhana.ā Nor was it āRuel,ā the body I had possessed in the first round.
Noāthe woman in the mirror was a stranger with soft platinum hair flowing down to her waist and eyes of luminous amber.
Her name was Elses Rohine.
I had just coaxed the name out of a maid a little while ago. By gently steering our conversation, Iād managed to get a quick grasp on my situation.
āElysion Year 294. Three years since both Ruel and the Demon Lord Rezantia perished. Which means⦠three years have passed after the ending, just like in the real world.ā
And as for the woman whose body I had takenāElses Rohine:
āAge twenty-two, only daughter of Baron Rohine. Her father, the baron, died a month ago in a cargo shipwreck. Her only family, gone.ā
The maid seemed to think my odd manner of speaking about her late father was nothing more than a sign that I had been left half-mad from the shock.
āWell, that hardly matters.ā
What truly mattered was that this Elses⦠was branded the āVessel of the Demon Lord.ā
Why in the world was this body chosen as the Demon Lordās reincarnation?
I leaned closer to the mirror, studying my face.
āPretty enough, I suppose⦠but fragile. Definitely not the look of a hero.ā
In Last Heroesāthe game I had spent my real life grinding away atānone of the countless heroes had this appearance or this name. The woman looked utterly ordinary, with no ties to the Demon Lord whatsoever.
āStatus window.ā
I called it out, but nothing appeared. That was why Iād had to pry Elsesās name and background directly from the maid earlier.
I tried again. Still nothing.
āSo, because Iām not a player but the final boss, I donāt get a status window?ā
After all, the role of the final boss was only to stand and be slain by the players. No need for them to know their own stats.
Realizing the truth, I let out a sigh deep enough to sink the floor.
āWhat the hell kind of situation is this?ā
I didnāt understand why, but one thing was absolutely clear:
āIām screwed.ā
And not just a little.
āIf Ruel died and returned to the real world⦠does that mean if I die, Iāll wake up back home too?ā
I clutched my head, recalling what had happened right before I ended up here.
āWaitāI was hit by a car before this, wasnāt Iā¦?ā
The next memory I had was opening my eyes in this body.
The first possession had dragged me here out of the blue. But this time, it felt like I had arrived after dying.
Which meant recklessly testing the theory by dying again was far too dangerous.
āSo then⦠what the hell am I supposed to do now?ā
I had no desire to play the villain, but I couldnāt just sit idle either. The heroes would eventually come for the Demon Lordās powerācome to kill me.
And the fate of the final boss in any game?
āDeath. With nearly one hundred percent certainty.ā
I ground my teeth in frustration at my predetermined bad ending.
āNo, the more I think about this, the more unfair it gets! Iām supposed to just sit here and let the very heroes I raised cut me down?ā
If I had known my own heroes would one day come to kill me, I never would have slaved away grinding them up in the first place!
āWhat is this, some kind of mafia game? One round Iām the innocent villager, the next Iām the mafia?ā
The creator of this gameāor the so-called āgodā who had thrown me into this worldāclearly had some perverse streak.
āIf I ever meet that bastard of a developer, I swear Iāll wring his neck!ā
Just then, a knock came at the door.
āMy lady, Iāve brought your meal.ā
I quickly shoved down the chaos of emotions boiling inside me and answered in a carefully composed tone.
āCome in.ā
A maid named Leni entered, setting the tray down on the table where I sat. But she lingered, hesitating instead of leaving.
I looked at her quizzically, and she ventured cautiously:
āMy lady⦠are you truly certain you donāt wish for a physician to be summoned?ā
She clearly thought my behavior strange.
āWell, to be fairāI forgot my fatherās existence overnight, even forgot my own age. Suspicious, indeed.ā
I answered lightly, āIām fine.ā
And it was true enough. But more importantlyā
āNow that Father is gone, I am the head of this house. If word spreads that the new baroness is unwell, vermin will come crawling from every corner.ā
I couldnāt yet tell if Leni was trustworthy. Best to hide all weaknesses.
āLeave me be. Iād like some time alone.ā
Expecting at last to eat in peace, I picked up my utensils.
But to my surprise, Leni suddenly went pale, trembling as though about to cry, bowing low.
āF-forgive me, my lady! I overstepped by speaking out of turn. Please, donāt cast me out. I swear it wonāt happen againā¦!ā
āHuh? I wouldnāt dismiss you over something like that.ā
I waved my hands awkwardly, startled.
āSo⦠the original Elses must have been a real tyrant of a master.ā
Feeling pity for the poor maid, I forced a smile and said:
āThank you⦠for worrying about me.ā
It wouldnāt erase the past, but it was something.
Leni blinked at me in shock.
āThe young lady⦠has changed?ā
The original Elses had been moody and mercurialāgenerous when she was pleased, vicious when she was not. Since her fatherās death, life under her had been like walking on a knifeās edge.
But today, she had thanked Leni.
The maid stumbled over her words of gratitude, bowing repeatedly before backing toward the door.
āGo have your own meal now, Leni. You must be hungry.ā
I was about to dismiss her when a thought struck me, and I called her back.
āLeni, waitāI want to ask you something.ā
She straightened quickly. āYes, my lady! Anything.ā
āDo you remember the heroes who saved this world from the Demon Lord three years ago?ā
Surely anyone would know of them. I had lived with them for over a decadeāof course I was curious what had become of them. Perhaps they could even help me now.
But at the mention of āheroes,ā Leni flinched.
āAh⦠those peopleā¦ā
Her expression looked more like she was speaking of villains.
I pressed her gently:
āHave you heard any recent news about them?ā
Still wary, she stammered out an answer.
āLord Astaireāyou know, my ladyāhe became a cardinal, and recently he was transferred to the Imperial Cathedral. Everyoneās clamoring just for a glimpse of him these days.ā
āAstaire⦠a cardinal?ā
I had never seen the heroesā lives after the ending. Once the final boss fell, the story ended; mobile games werenāt designed to let players see the āend.ā Only endless new scenarios, to keep the money flowing.
And Ruel had vanished along with Rezantia, so I had never known.
āGood for you, Astaire. You really made it.ā
I couldnāt help but feel proud.
But Leniās face darkened again as she continued:
āAs for Lord Rasiel⦠he became Tower Master three years ago. Since then, heās never left the Mage Tower. There are rumors heās researching black magic⦠though I canāt say for certain.ā
My eyes flew wide.
Black magic was forbidden by law. To research it meant standing against the Empireāand the entire continent.
āN-no, that must just be rumor. My boy Rasiel would neverā¦ā
I shoved the thought away, clinging to denial.
āLord Cassian, I donāt know about. And Lord Tezet⦠well, I imagine youād know better than I.ā
āBetter than me? What, are we related or something?ā
I wanted to ask, but feared looking even more suspicious. If we were that close, Iād find out soon enough anyway.
āYes⦠I suppose.ā
I nodded, and Leni, taking the hint, excused herself.
āPlease call if you need anything.ā
Left alone, I turned to my meal, sorting through the information.
But something caught my eye.
āā¦Werenāt there six cookies on this plate?ā
I tilted my head. Maybe I was imagining it.
Still thinking, I finished the bread absentmindedly and reached for dessert.
āā¦Huh?ā
There were only four cookies now.
My breath caught.
āā¦Iām the only one in this room.ā
I hadnāt feared ghosts since grade school. Humans were far scarier. But faced with this inexplicable phenomenon, I felt a cold shiver down my spine.
I stared at the cookies in a daze. Then, pretending to drop my fork, I bent downāand snapped my head back up.
And froze.
Across from me, a stuffed rabbit doll, wreathed in dark miasma, was shoveling the cookies straight into its mouth.
The doll froze too, meeting my eyes.
Clatter.
The empty plate slipped from its paws and hit the table.
Silence descended.