Becoming the Dark Lord [LitRPG]

Chapter 255: The Lost Survivor


In the dim glow of the street, the ninja woman stood before him. The dark fabric of her clothes seemed to drink in the light of the distant torches. In one hand, she flicked a fan open and shut with lazy precision, as if bored by the tension weighing down the air.

"Evangeline?" Luke's voice was low, wary. He had heard that name before, from Angelica herself. The memory struck sharp now, like an echo from the past.

She stepped forward. Her eyes were half-lidded, playful sparks glinting in them, an odd contrast to the knife-edge atmosphere. Instinct tightened his muscles. Luke pulled the bowstring back farther, the arrow aimed steady at her chest.

"Isn't it obvious by now, idiot? I'm not with Bartholomew. You lived inside the Safe Zone for almost three weeks, your identity was discovered by me. If I were on his side, you'd have been exposed, or dead, a long time ago."

His eyes narrowed.

"You still haven't explained how you tracked me here," he said flatly. "Not then, not at the market, even after I stripped off the tracker."

Evangeline's lips curved in a sly smile, as though she had been waiting for that exact question. A shadow cut across the night sky. A black crow descended with a smooth glide, perching neatly on her shoulder as if it had done so a thousand times.

"This is Jerry. My familiar."

"Jerry!" the crow croaked, head cocking as its beady eyes fixed curiously on Luke.

A familiar. Of course.

"You didn't need a tracker. That damned thing can follow me from the air," he muttered.

"Exactly. I've known where you were since the first time we crossed paths. Jerry's been tailing you ever since."

Luke lowered the bow slightly, eyes locked on the bird. Jerry tilted its head back at him, unblinking. Then Luke's grip shifted. He raised the bow again, this time, the arrow pointed straight at the crow.

"In that case, I just have to kill Jerry."

"K-Kill Jerry?" the bird squawked, wings flaring in alarm before it clumsily fluttered off into the night.

Evangeline let out a long sigh, the sound of someone all too used to this kind of nonsense. "Fine, Jerry's a coward. But he'll come back eventually. And if you kill him, it's a pain bringing him back to life."

Luke studied her in silence for a long moment before lowering his bow once more, this time for real. Her presence was strange, layered with contradictions, but pieces of the puzzle he had been chasing were beginning to click into place.

"You're from the first generation of this place?"

"Yes. I was eighteen when I got pulled into this tutorial. That was eight years ago. I was one of Bastion's founders. When we entered the first fortress, there were fifty of us. We triggered a special event, fought hordes of Dead Watchmen led by a Midnight Warden. It was brutal. A massacre. In the end, only four of us survived. I was one of them, obviously."

Her gaze hardened slightly, though her tone stayed light. "Noticed the parallel? Back then it was Wardens. Now, in the second fortress, we face another swarm, plus a Warden Captain. The difficulty's scaled up. Like this world is adapting to us, or maybe to our stubbornness."

Her eyes slid back to his, a playful spark returning. "So? You going to keep staring at a beautiful woman on your doorstep, or are you going to invite me in?"

Luke raised an eyebrow. "I don't have a house. And we're standing in the middle of the street."

"You still don't trust me, do you?" she said, folding her arms.

"Can you blame me?" Luke's voice was sharp. "We barely know each other."

Evangeline closed her fan with deliberate calm. "Fair enough."

She stepped closer. "But I know you well, Luke of Maine."

In an instant, the bow was up again, the string tight, the arrow aimed straight at her chest. "How the hell do you know where I'm from?"

"Because a few months ago, Angelica came to me," Evangeline replied smoothly. "She said someone named Luke from Maine had gone missing, and she asked for my help finding him. You vanished for a month and then showed up claiming you'd gotten lost in the orc forest. Ring any bells?"

The pieces fell quickly into place in his mind. That had been during the time he had tracked the renegades and ended up stranded deep in orc territory.

You might be reading a stolen copy. Visit Royal Road for the authentic version.

"I owed Angelica a huge favor," Evangeline went on. "One I could never repay in full. She helped me fake my death when I needed to disappear. So when she asked, I did as she wished. I started digging. To do that, I needed to know everything about you. Everything she could tell me. That way, I could trace your way of thinking. Angelica had a knack for reading people. She said you were an idiot, but not a bad one."

She moved another step forward. "Then you came back from the dead out of that orc forest. I kept investigating, trying to figure out what had happened there. And somehow, that territory had… quieted. I had traveled through those lands before, and trust me, they were never peaceful."

The fan flicked open again in her hand. "So I pushed further. I even went into the Orc Lord's territory. First time in all these years I dared to do that. And then? I return, and I find out the ants invaded… and Angelica died."

She closed the fan and took another slow step toward him. Luke shifted back, refusing to let her get too close.

"And I learn that Angelica's killer was you. And that Paul had gone missing. Do you know what happened to him?"

Luke didn't flinch, didn't bother with excuses or pretty lies. His answer was plain. "He's dead. I killed him."

For a moment, Evangeline just studied him, weighing the words, the way he carried them.

"The story you told back at the Haven," she said at last, "was that Angelica had been poisoned, betrayed by Paul, working under Bartholomew. I half believe it. After all, I was betrayed by Bartholomew once too." A faint smirk touched her lips. "He thought I was Marshall's spy at the time."

Her story held together. Or at least, it seemed to. But Luke couldn't ignore the gaps. Small rips in the fabric of her logic, threads she never pulled. Especially her silence about the mechanisms. If she knew so much, why hide it for so long?

"Then why didn't you ever tell the truth about the mechanisms?" His voice cut sharp, steady. "Why keep up the lie, when you knew Bartholomew never had any intention of activating them? Why didn't you warn anyone that he doesn't want us leaving this world?"

Evangeline's expression twisted into something caught between exasperation and mockery, as if the question were almost insulting.

"It's painfully simple," she said. "Simpler than everything else you've been breaking your head over."

She paused, drifting a few steps to the side as if arranging her thoughts before setting them loose. "I'm not an idiot, Luke. You really think I could go around shouting the truth to everyone? That I'd paint a target on my back for Bartholomew, for Kruger, for every lunatic who'd rather stay chained to this world?"

She gave a bitter laugh, low and sharp. "Then there was Marshall, and the renegades… they all knew, and they all helped bury the truth. If I had opened my mouth back then, it would've been me against all of them. And you know what one person alone can do?"

Her gaze sharpened. "Nothing."

Her tone softened, though the edge didn't vanish. "Sorry, but I value survival. After I faked my death, I enjoyed my retirement. I was alive. I was free. And alive, even in hiding, beats dead and noble any day."

Luke said nothing, his eyes locked on hers, absorbing every word.

"Back then, young padawan," she went on, lips curling into a half-smile, "it really was just me against the Empire. There were so few people in this tutorial, and most of them were fresh recruits, barely awakened to the system."

She spread her hands. "What's one Jedi supposed to do alone against the whole damn regime? I had to wait, for more people to arrive, for them to grow stronger, or at least to see whether Bartholomew and Marshall would tear each other apart."

Her jaw tightened. "And don't think I didn't try to trigger the second mechanism. I nearly died a dozen times in there. Alone, it was impossible. Especially once I hit the rank limit."

"Rank limit?" Luke asked, curiosity flashing.

She smiled slyly. "The free info ends here. From now on, I only talk if Batman agrees to join the Justice League."

Evangeline stepped back, letting the silence stretch, leaving questions dangling like bait on a hook. Luke weighed her words, trying to fit them into what he already knew, but too many gaps remained. Especially where Bartholomew and the mechanisms were concerned.

"I didn't know back then that Bartholomew never planned to leave this world," she admitted. "I thought his inaction was fear, that Marshall would kill him the moment they left the fortress. So I stayed neutral."

Her voice dropped. "But Marshall's dead now, and that bastard still sits on his throne, doing nothing. Angelica's death weighs on me, and here we are, just us, staring down Palpatine."

A crooked smile touched her lips. "Lucky for us, though, we've got a Skywalker."

Luke ignored the jab.

"Answer me this," she pressed. "Were you really planning to go in there alone and fight those things? What's your brilliant plan, and why the hell did you dig that hole?"

"Secret," Luke muttered.

She let out a long sigh. "So, allies or not?"

"Tell me something first. When did Bartholomew change? And why?"

One brow arched. "Free info again? Hate to break it to you, but the trial period's over."

Luke exhaled through his nose, irritation flaring but not surprising him. He was already used to her games. He studied her face a moment longer before asking, "Is it really just us two? Or do you have more?"

A mischievous smile curved her lips. With a flourish, the fan vanished from her hand. "Jerry counts. That makes three."

"I'm being serious."

"So am I. But fine, jokes aside, like I said, the Justice League already exists. You're just the missing member, the loner making trouble all over the place. By the way, the chaos you stirred in the Safe Zone? Impressive. The only reason I took so long to find you is because Jerry lost track of you, and we thought you were still hiding there."

"Who are your allies?" Luke pressed.

She tilted her head, expression playful. "Oh, you don't know?"

Her voice dropped a little as she stepped closer. "Your friend Allison is with us. Practically all of Haven is. She sent me a message for you, actually. Said, 'I haven't forgotten the promise.' She told me to repeat it word for word. Thought it might earn your trust, or at least make you think about it."

Evangeline leaned back, studying his reaction. "So, what's it going to be? Will you come with me to my hideout and meet them? Or keep playing Han Solo in the Safe Zone?"

If you find any errors ( broken links, non-standard content, etc.. ), Please let us know < report chapter > so we can fix it as soon as possible.


Use arrow keys (or A / D) to PREV/NEXT chapter