Font Size
15px

I didn’t waste another second. Even in this state, I could feel the faint tug through the system, a thin thread pointing toward Beelzebub’s direction. West. The connection was weak, but it was enough. I had to go that way, no matter what waited in between.

A few guards tried shooting down as I crossed over the outer battlents. Pathetic attempts, honestly. Even exhausted and half-dead, dodging them was still easier than dealing with Silver. Well... aside from the one arrow now lodged in my foot. That one hurt like hell. But we can ignore it for now, hehe...

Blood dripped down my heel, warm and annoyingly steady, but the wound began to close the longer I flew. My body was running on fus, yet it refused to give up. Each beat of my wings carried over another tower, another stretch of stone that wanted dead. Golden light kept firing from every direction, painting the mountains and walls in a holy glow that made my eyes sting.

I was still far from fully escaping, still within reach of their magic and their killing intent. But none of it mattered. My wings kept moving. My heart kept pushing forward.

Nothing was going to stop now.

The wide plains stretched out the mont I crossed a relatively large mountain. Even from this distance, I could still hear the bells ringing through the air, the towers blazing with fire as they signaled an enemy attack and called for more troops.

Part of hoped the woman who saved managed to escape too. I wanted to trust her, but it was hard to believe anyone could slip out of that place, even with power like hers.

All I had left of her was the small round object resting in my palm, sothing I hadn’t even had the ti to properly examine yet. It pulsed faintly against my skin, almost warm, almost alive.

In a way, I felt both happy and guilty.

Ti began to drip like water lting from a glacier, slow and steady, stretching across my long flight. Even the sun had started to sink behind the horizon, painting the sky in fading gold that eased my nerves just a little.

I crossed several towns and countless fields where villagers worked themselves half to death for nothing more than a handful of wheat, sothing small enough to barely make dinner. So of them noticed passing overhead. The mont their eyes caught my silhouette, their faces twisted with fear, even though I didn’t touch them, didn’t even approach their hos.

It made understand even more clearly how unwelco I was in these lands.

But where else was I supposed to go?

There were only two paths from Ashvale: the Demon Lands, or the Holy Empire. Ashvale sat right in the middle like a miserable buffer zone, a place owned by nobody and hated by everyone.

If I went back to the demon continent with my current strength, I would fall right back under Lyssandra’s control. Even being hunted across these holy lands was a better fate than becoming her puppet again.

Maybe, just maybe, I could flee to the far edges of the world. The lands beyond the empires, where monsters road freely and no kingdom claid authority. There was also the Shadowlands in the far north, ho of the undead. They were the only race that never submitted to either humans or demons. They lived free, unbound by the chains of this world.

But even there... I doubted I would fit in.

Still, the idea of exploring it all sent a strange thrill through .

And far, far to the east lay the lands of giants. But unless I sohow found a ship powerful enough to carry across the endless Black Ocean, I could forget about reaching that place with wings alone.

Yet even with all these places floating through my mind, none of them felt like a ho. Not a single one. I kept flying, letting the wind cool the heat in my skin, letting the mountains and plains pass beneath , but the hollow feeling inside my chest didn’t fade. It only settled deeper, like it finally understood that no matter where I went, I would always be an outsider in this world.

A part of hated that truth. Another part had grown used to it.

The sky darkened little by little, turning from gold to crimson, then to that quiet shade of purple that always felt like the world was holding its breath. My wings grew heavier with each flap, but I refused to stop. I had soone waiting for . Beelzebub. Elira. I had responsibilities now, bonds I didn’t expect to form, yet I couldn’t abandon them.

Sowhere beyond these plains, beyond these frightened villages and towering mountains, lay the only path I could choose for myself. Even if it led straight into more danger... it was still my choice.

And for the first ti in days, that thought made my chest feel warm.

Soon, the days blurred into weeks, and weeks into a month. I flew when my strength allowed it, rested when my wings refused to lift anymore, drank from rivers and slept in trees like so wandering bird. My ankle still ached from the damn arrow, my ribs felt like cracked stone, and my clothes had suffered so much that calling them clothes was generous at this point.

But that warm pull kept guiding west, softly, patiently, as if a tiny creature was tapping at the inside of my soul, saying:

"This way. Hurry up."

One evening, when the sun dipped low and painted the horizon orange, I finally saw it. A tiny figure shot into the sky in a bright streak, wobbling like a drunk star.

Then it rushed straight at .

Before I could even brace myself, sothing small, warm, and fluffy slamd into my chest and wrapped its little limbs around like a living plush toy.

"Beelzebub...?"

His tiny claws dug into my torn shirt, wings fluttering like they could never decide if he wanted to scold or cry. His little body trembled against mine, and for the first ti in a long while, the tightness in my chest eased. I held him closer without thinking, feeling a warmth spread through that no sun could match.

You are reading Cursed POV: I'm Just an Extra, But I'll Kill the Villainess Chapter 77: Across Plains No One Welcomes Me on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.