Font Size
15px

Chapter 477: Chapter 466: Help for the fragnt?

[Realm of Little Alice]

The past was fundantally irrelevant to Grimm.

It was not that he failed to understand the argunt—that the past shaped the present, carved the path one walked, and influenced every choice that followed. He had heard it countless tis, seen it argued with conviction, even watched others build their entire identities upon that belief. He understood it intellectually.

But he had never accepted it.

The past could not be altered. Not on a whim, not with strength, and not with will. It was fixed—unchanging and immovable, sothing already decided. And because of that, he found it difficult to assign it any real importance.

Why should sothing that could not be changed dictate the present?

Why should it hold power over the future when both the present and the future remained malleable—things that could still be acted upon, shaped, broken, or remade?

To him, it was simple.

The present could be changed.

The future could be changed.

The past could not.

And so, he had never understood those who clung to it so desperately—those who lingered on what had already happened, dissecting it, lanting it, trying to extract aning from sothing they had no power to influence anymore. They could question it endlessly—why it happened, how it happened—but in the end, it remained the sa.

It was unmoving and essentially worthless.

And despite that, once again, he found himself before soone who longed for it.

Not in passing or idly, but almost desperately.

Alice.

She still wore that self-satisfied look from earlier, that small, almost childish pride at having managed to spite the other versions of herself. It sat lightly on her features.

But beneath it—behind it—there was sothing else.

Expectation.

He saw it in the way her gaze lingered just a mont too long. In the way her posture held, not quite relaxed and not quite tense. In the way she waited—whether she realized it or not.

Grimm already understood what she wanted.

"You want to rember," he said at last, his voice unhurried. As he spoke, his helted head turned slightly, his gaze drifting past her—toward the distant horizon where the sky stretched wide and blue, where the sun burned steadily overhead, where the endless fields of grass rolled without resistance. "That is the core of it, isn’t it?" he continued, his tone analytical. "The reason you called

here, the reason you kept extending this conversation, indulging it longer than necessary..."

A brief pause.

"...is because you believe proximity will yield results."

His head tilted ever so slightly.

"You think that by staying close to —soone who, by your own admission, held so significance to the whole of ’Alice’—you may recover sothing you lost." His voice lowered just a fraction. "mories, feelings, or maybe aning."

Little Alice did not answer imdiately.

She did not look surprised either.

There was no sharp reaction and no attempt to deny it. If anything, the silence itself confird it. She had not truly tried to hide it to begin with—her intentions had been too apparent and loosely guarded.

Eventually, she spoke.

"At first..." she began, her voice quieter than before, though still trying to hold so of her composure, "I was only interested in you because you resembled Ddraig." Her eyes settled on him fully. "That was the only reason I bothered paying attention."

A small pause followed before she continued, more honestly this ti.

"But, I will admit you are correct," she said, the words coming with less resistance than expected. "You hold more value this way. Far more than I initially assud."

"A useful tool, then," Grimm mused, finally lowering his gaze to et hers, there was no offense in his tone.

"I doubt sothing like that would hurt your feelings," Alice replied, and there was the smallest hint of amusent in her voice.

Grimm exhaled softly through his helm—sothing that might have been a breath, or sothing closer to thought.

"It is a logical approach," he said, shifting slightly as his arms folded more comfortably across his chest. His tone took on an academic edge, as though he were dissecting an idea rather than engaging in conversation with her. "If you are truly an aspect of a greater whole, then it stands to reason you are not entirely isolated from the rest." His head tilted again, just slightly. "Fragnts rarely exist in perfect separation. There are always overlaps—traces or residual impressions."

He paused briefly, then continued.

"If that is the case, then exposure to sothing familiar—sothing tied to the original whole—may act as a catalyst." His voice held intrigue at the prospect. "It may trigger dormant connections. Induce recognition. Stir fragnts of mory that were not originally allocated to you."

"Sothing along those lines," Little Alice said quickly, clearing her throat in a way that felt just a touch too fast, as though she were smoothing over the fact that his explanation had gone slightly beyond her own understanding. "Yes, that is essentially it." She straightened slightly. "You will be helping

rember."

Her gaze held his.

Grimm regarded her for a mont before responding.

"...Why would I help you?" he asked, the question delivered flatly, without inflection and any attempt to soften it.

Alice did not seem particularly surprised by the response.

If anything, she had expected it.

"Because," she began, and then smiled sweetly and disarmingly. It was a smile that did not match the words that followed, "Perhaps I will refrain from erasing your existence for being a complete and utter prat."

Grimm did not react.

"Are you capable of providing an actual reason," he replied evenly, "one that might aningfully influence my decision?"

There was a pause.

Alice sighed.

A small sound—more tired than annoyed.

("Right...") she reminded herself inwardly, her fingers tightening slightly against her arms. ("This man is the kind of idiot who genuinely believes he can contend with things far beyond him.")

Threats would not work.

Not in the way they were supposed to.

So, if she wanted sothing from him, she would have to approach it differently. From an angle that would actually reach him.

"You would do well to remain on my good side," Alice began, her voice carrying that practiced, almost rehearsed composure again—chin lifting ever so slightly, with her posture straightening as though she were reclaiming so invisible authority. "After all, I am not rely powerful in na. I am sothing far beyond what most would even begin to understand." There was insistence behind her words now, sothing that felt less like a threat and more like a reminder she needed to assert.

"I am powerful as well," Grimm replied without pause, his tone still flat. He did not lean forward or shift with interest—if anything, he seed even more settled where he sat. "So I fail to see why that statent, in isolation, would influence my decision in any aningful way." His helt remained angled toward her, unreadable as ever.

Alice’s eyes twitched slightly at that, the composure she had just gathered threatening to crack at the edges. She resisted the urge to roll her eyes outright, though the impulse was clearly there.

"My power is not sothing so simplistic," she pressed, leaning forward just slightly now, her voice shifting with a mix of frustration and insistence. "You would no doubt reduce it to sothing crude. What I possess is not brute strength alone—it is far beyond that." Her fingers curled lightly against the tablecloth. "There are benefits. Tangible ones. If you choose to assist , it would not be a one-sided exchange."

"I don’t particularly care for how powerful you are," Grimm said, cutting through her explanation with the sa tone as before. There was no hostility in it, just his blunt lack of interest. "That alone holds no appeal." He paused, then added, almost as an afterthought, "I am, however, interested in your personality data. You present as an anomaly worth observing. You would make for an interesting subject of study."

There it was, clear and unfiltered.

Alice’s expression faltered for just a mont.

Her eyes twitched again—more noticeably this ti.

"I see," she said slowly, though the strain in her voice betrayed her irritation. She straightened, folding her arms with care, as though containing the reaction before it could fully surface. "So that is how you choose to fra this interaction." Her gaze sharpened on him. "Treating a dignified young lady as though she were nothing more than a specin to be examined, dissected in thought, reduced to observations and notes." Her tone dipped. "You truly are a man entirely devoid of sha, aren’t you?"

"I only see a brat here," Grimm replied without hesitation.

Alice inhaled sharply through her nose.

For a brief mont, it looked as though she might snap back imdiately—but she stopped herself.

"You will not provoke

with that again," she said instead, her voice steadier, though a small huff escaped her regardless. "That tactic has already grown stale."

Silence lingered for a second between them.

Then—slowly, almost reluctantly—she moved.

Her small, delicate hand lifted from where it had rested near her side. The movent lacked the earlier confidence she had carried, replaced instead with sothing more uncertain. She extended it across the table, fingers outstretched, the gesture simple.

"...Just..." she began, and for the first ti since their conversation had taken this turn, her voice softened—not in refinent or in performance either. "Just help

rember."

The words ca out lower than before.

Less composed and almost hesitant.

Her gaze did not fully et his this ti. It lingered sowhere between his helm and the space just below it, as though she were unwilling to fully commit to the vulnerability of the request.

Seems she there were no more threats or bargaining.

Just that.

A small hand, extended across the table and a request she could not dress up as anything else.

You are reading A Journey Unwanted N Chapter 477 - 466: Help for the fragment? on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading
No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.