The Villain’s POV in the Academy

Chapter 113



Chapter 113

Chapter 113

Chzzik. Chzzzzzzik.

How much time had passed?

[System reboot initiated…… 0%]

My vision flickered blue as a new log appeared.

I felt the cooling motor fan at the back of my head begin to spin. Inside my skull, where a brain should have been, the spherical AI Core sparked and slowly began to restart.

Then, one by one, my senses returned, beginning with sight. The rest of my sensory control programs still seemed to be loading, as if there was a long way to go.

‘W-what on earth happened?’

My right eye seemed to be completely destroyed. No visual information entered it, only a black screen that occasionally flickered with red dots, like a broken LED monitor.

My left eye wasn’t much better. Each time I tried to move it, it shifted unnaturally, as though something inside was stuck.

The noise on the left eye’s feed was so severe that half my vision was obscured. In truth, I had lost three-quarters of my sight.

‘What… happened…?’

Perhaps the memory storage linked to my AI Core had been shocked. A great deal of stored information was either corrupted or wiped out. For a moment, I hadn’t even recognized who I was.

Fortunately, the data recovery system had activated, restoring fragments of memory one by one. Among them was the fact that my name in this world was Araya.

……It would have been better if that memory had never come back.

‘Haa… haaah…!’

The first memory that resurfaced was the moment the battle with Aaron Stingray began.

I had drawn in the surrounding mana. Since I had opened the ‘Well,’ there was no shortage of power.

The spell I had cast was a type of Necromancing magic: [Corpse Field].

It dominated the surrounding area, hacked into the opponent’s internal devices, blocked wireless signals, and even forced the hacked devices to emit poison.

Though it was called a Necromancing spell, the original protagonist had never used it.

If I had used a spell that appeared in the original novel, Aaron would have easily seen through it. That was why I had devised many ‘original’ techniques of my own.

[Corpse Field] was one of them—a spell inspired and named after countless fantasy works I had experienced in my previous world.

There was no way he could avoid it.

Since [Corpse Field] worked like a barrier, anyone who stepped within its range could not resist, no matter how strong they were.

The only way to counter it was to stop the spell before it was completed. Yet, as long as the ‘Well’ was open, Aaron could not touch me recklessly.

Even Evangeline, in her childlike form, would not easily be able to break the structure of my original magic—or so I had calculated.

‘But that calculation was wrong….’

The spell had indeed been cast.

But in the very next instant, Aaron appeared before me faster than the spell’s effects could take hold.

No—he didn’t approach. He simply appeared.

In the time it took me to blink, he had crossed dozens of meters. Like something out of an old horror film.

A black hand loomed into my vision.

The hand formed a circle with its thumb and middle finger, the other fingers extended straight. A pose for flicking someone’s forehead.

What was he trying to do?

Before the thought could even reach an answer, a tremendous impact struck my forehead.

Like being hit by a truck, my body was thrown back, and my AI Core shorted out, temporarily freezing my thought circuits.

Darkness filled my sight.

Had I been out for a second? When I came to, I hastily tried to assess the situation and pull myself together.

I didn’t understand what was happening.

But I had to come up with a countermeasure. My AI Core performed a split-second logical calculation, and I tried to retaliate with the fastest spell I could cast: [Magic Bullet].

But it was pointless.

Before the spell could be invoked, Aaron appeared before me again.

Before the visual data even converted to electrical signals to reach my AI Core, another impact crashed into me.

‘I couldn’t react at all…!’

And so it went, again and again. Every time I tried to regain the initiative, Aaron instantly appeared and flicked me.

To call it a mere “flick” was ridiculous—it was a monstrous attack backed by absurd physical power.

My body, though an outdated android model, had been built from unnecessarily sturdy materials. Yet every time Aaron’s flick landed, some part of me broke.

The first flick dented my forehead inward, distorting the bridge of my nose, and made both eyes bulge out like a frog’s.

When he flicked my arm, the limb twisted out of use; when he flicked my thigh, it shattered and flew apart.

The only reason my head hadn’t been blown off entirely from the start was simply that Aaron had been holding back.

‘Nothing I did mattered….’

I hadn’t expected to be so helpless.

Of course, I had known I could never defeat him. I had already accepted defeat, so I believed I wouldn’t feel regret even if my trump cards failed.

But I had been wrong.

It was humiliating. Infuriating beyond words.

Even though I had prepared everything, ready to sacrifice my life at the last moment, to Aaron Stingray, it had all been nothing more than child’s play.

He hadn’t even needed weapons, fists, or kicks. With nothing more than a playful flick of his fingers, he toyed with my life.

What a pitiful fight this was.

What a miserable end.

‘This is the end.’

I understood clearly.

Nothing would change like this.

Not as long as I clung to this life.

“Aaron… Stingray…”

I couldn’t defeat him.

Then the only thing left—

‘—is to give up my life to ensure he cannot win….’

With that resolve, I glared at Aaron and began shutting down my AI Core. No, I tried to shut it down.

But—

“Who said you could die without my permission?”

Damn it.

Aaron wouldn’t even allow me that.

“Keugh!?”

Another flick struck, sending my AI Core into short-circuit again.

I blacked out once more.

* * *

“P-please, stop this! Didn’t you say it would take a long time before the Well could be closed? You clearly said you must not kill him before then!”

“You really don’t understand anything, do you?”

“What do you mean?”

“If I don’t keep doing this, this bastard will kill himself.”

I said that as I flicked Araya’s head once more, sending another shock through him.

The impact finally dislodged his dangling eye completely, leaving it swaying loose. Blue android blood streamed from his ears and nose.

It was a gruesome sight.

The only reason I could do this was because he was a machine. If he had been human, I could never have gone this far.

“I’m not trying to kill him. I’m just keeping him unconscious so he doesn’t ruin everything by ending his own life.”

“B-but if you only mean to knock him out, there’s no need to go that far….”

“Evangeline, he’s not human. Unlike ordinary humans, this kind of shock won’t kill him, nor is it easy to knock him out.”

“Eh? I-is that so?”

Evangeline didn’t really know what an ‘android’ was.

How could someone who barely even knew what a movie was tell the difference between an android and a human? She probably thought I had just beaten up a normal man half to death.

But if I had meant to kill him, I wouldn’t have dragged this out.

Since I knew Araya was an android, all I wanted was to give him just enough shocks to keep forcing him into short-circuit.

When I explained this, Evangeline closed her mouth and lowered her head slightly, ashamed for having raised her voice at me without knowing anything.

“M-my apologies. I had no idea and raised my voice against you….”

“If you’ve realized your mistake, then hurry up and finish your work.”

“Do not worry. Do you know how startled I was because of you? I constructed the ‘Well-Sealing’ ritual as quickly as possible to make sure nothing went wrong.”

“How much longer?”

“Thanks to you, I am now at the final stage. I daresay I have never completed a formula this quickly in my entire life.”

She said all that without slowing her work one bit. Honestly, I felt a little suspicious.

“You didn’t make a mistake, did you?”

“How could I possibly make a mistake on something this important? It’s almost finished. All you need to do is keep him from waking up until the end.”

If the expert said so, what else could I do?

It seemed we would finish much sooner than expected and head back. I even felt a small sense of relief, but….

‘Could there be more?’

The Junk Chip, this whole incident—

It didn’t sit right with me that someone who had always planned so meticulously had fallen apart so easily.

‘Is this really the end? Just forcing open that Well, dying, and triggering a rampage? Was that simple trap all there was to it?’

No matter how I turned it over in my mind, I couldn’t find an answer.

It seemed he had developed Shade’s necromancing in his own unique way. Because of that, my ability to fully grasp his powers was limited.

‘There has to be some clue. Something….’

I retraced every step of what had happened so far, refusing to let my guard down.

The Academy. The Mana Thread. The Well.

The hallucination incident, and the summoning magic that was never cast.

Joy Bennet and the rampaging android.

Could all of those really have been meaningless misdirections, only to end like this?

Even if I told myself it was just my nerves, the unease and sense of wrongness wouldn’t leave me.

What had I missed?

What was it that I…?

“Phew. It’s over now, Aaron. I’ve successfully sealed the Well. All that’s left is to deal with him and return.”

At that moment, Evangeline wiped the sweat from her forehead and spoke. Then, seeing my dark expression, she asked:

“Why do you look like that?”

“…I’m just thinking.”

“Thinking of what?”

A fierce alarm rang in my head.

Then suddenly, something flashed through my mind.

“Summoning magic… could it be that…?”

“Hm? Summoning magic? What are you talking about all of a sudden?”

Evangeline asked, but instead of answering, I questioned her.

“Evangeline. Last time, we analyzed that the puppet this guy controlled was trying to use summoning magic.”

“Y-yes, that’s true.”

“But was that really a spell to summon a high demon or elemental? Are you certain?”

“If you put it that way… no.”

Evangeline shook her head.

“Summoning spells generally have similar structures. From the overall shape and the mana he consumed, I only assumed so. But as for what he was actually trying to summon, I cannot say for certain….”

“Then what about the Mana Thread? Why, when he had opened the Well here, did he send it to the Academy instead of using it against me?”

“I-I don’t know. When I checked that great building, there was no formula constructed there. He was simply channeling vast amounts of mana into it.”

“And could that be used for something?”

“If one wished, anything could be done. If another caster had been present there, they could have used that massive mana. But in that state….”

“…There was. Another caster.”

“What do you mean?”

I didn’t answer.

But soon enough, she seemed to realize.

“C-could it be there was another puppet there too…?”

“Yes.”

Crunch!

I crushed Araya’s collapsed body completely underfoot. Blue android blood seeped out.

‘That damned trolling bastard.’

I knew he had decided to overturn the entire board no matter what.

But I had guessed the wrong place.

The Well, the so-called Mana Catastrophe—those were nothing more than diversions to temporarily tie me down.

I should have known.

Drawing attention one way and striking elsewhere—that was Araya’s method.

What he wanted to bring down wasn’t the world. It wasn’t me, either. His target was far more petty and small.

“We must return to the Academy.”

That was his goal.

It was the stage called ‘Academy’ itself.


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