The light coming from the window had turned a dull blue, with the scenery darkening as well, showing it was roughly evening outside.
Getting food had been rather easy. I was pleasantly surprised when I found a delivery option in the interface, which I promptly used. Couldn’t say I was in the mood to go searching for the cafeteria today.
The food lived up to my expectations too, even though it’d been a mystery hamburger with mystery at, mystery veggies, and a side of mystery drink. It was one of the best als I’d had in my life, possibly in both of my lives, but then again this was the academy after all. The scions and heirs of noble clans were in attendance here, food of this level was probably just the bare minimum.
’Praise be to the nobles, I guess.’
Still, sothing had been bugging recently. Even after I’d eaten, rested, and ssed with the interface for a while, I couldn’t rember anything about the previous Victor. This wasn’t how it was supposed to go.
I was familiar with transmigration stories, even niches like authors being reincarnated in their own work. I had beco an avid reader of webnovels during the last year of my past life. Typically, after the initial confusion of transmigration, the transmigrators experienced an influx of mories from the body’s previous owner. Sotis it ca flavored with headaches or migraines too.
I’d been hoping to suddenly get that influx of mories at so point today. Yet the sky was already turning dark, and the influx was still nowhere in sight.
’I should just give up at this point.’
With the chance of suddenly regaining my mory dwindling, I’d taken to searching the room to see if any belongings could spark recognition.
I had already checked my contacts using the interface, but there was only one person there. A person by the na of Anna.
’Is that the girl on the wallpaper?’
I tried checking the ssage logs, but it seed they weren’t in the habit of texting. I could only see so logs of calls, but none were recorded.
I certainly wasn’t planning on calling this Anna person to find out who they were. They’d notice sothing was off with my behavior, and sure, I could chalk it all up to losing my mories. Still, it was better to find sothing about my previous self before making any attempt at contact.
That’s how I found myself digging through the wardrobe in search of any personal effects the old Victor might have had. As I moved to pick up the combat uniform, my hand brushed against sothing solid beneath it. Pushing the clothes aside, I found a thin, worn-out book.
’Strange...’
Books weren’t rare in this world, but they had been phased out in favor of the interface. It would be rather hard for an orphan like the old Victor to get his hands on one.
I picked it up, carefully inspecting its surface.
It was well taken care of, that much I could tell. Any tears or wrinkles in the cover had been neatly sealed with duct tape. Scribbles covered its surface, ranging from flas, flowers, to the number ’007.’ All of them surrounded the center, where a tall pink stick figure held the hand of a shorter blue one. Written neatly above them was a single word.
"My diary."
I felt a pang in my chest as I read it. I’d been running away from it since yesterday, but I couldn’t anymore. It didn’t matter if I did it unknowingly, the fact was that I’d killed the old Victor the mont I took this body.
There hadn’t been anyone who fainted before the first class in the original story. So my transmigration had to have been what killed him. Given his original potential of B Rank, the boy had likely been an unknown extra in the story. Maybe he eventually died during one of the assassinations, the end-of-the-year massacre, or one of the nurous tragedies in my novel.
But he never even had a chance this ti. He died without even knowing what killed him. The boy would never have the chance to enjoy being lifted out of poverty, after all he’d suffered. It would all be for nothing.
It reminded of my old life a bit. All worlds, it seed, had the habit of playing cruel jokes on people.
I didn’t bla myself, I never asked to be transmigrated after all. But the realization left with a strange sense of guilt and numbness.
Still, this was what it was.
I sighed, sitting on the bed before opening the book. A lot of pages seed to have been torn out before the actual first page of the diary.
’Reused, huh?’
There was a small note on the first page.
Well, I wasn’t a skinwalker, so it didn’t count. The note continued.
I flipped to the next page.
The rest of the entries halfheartedly recorded events that occurred in his life. It didn’t seem to be written on a daily basis either.
Soon enough, I was at the final entry.
I sighed, closing the diary.
"What a cruel world."
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