Font Size
15px

Inspired by a certain Harry Ludvig Donovan, I raised the tip of the dagger (which was more of a chef’s knife) towards Richard, whom I did not share mories with.

Though I did not intend it, a string of blond hair was split in half in the process.

The others, besides for a light-brown-haired girl, gasped even further.

"So it was true. It’s always the quiet ones, ya know," he said, grinning and looking for approval from the others as a bead of sweat ford near his hairline. "What you did in your first year of college—"

"It’s not, but believe what you want," I retorted calmly.

I only wanted to monger fear.

He bit his bottom lip which was dry and cracked, putting his hands up in surrender.

I dropped my knife.

Every one of them looked at in genuine shock, in fear of what I might do next.

George sighed, "Let’s go inside."

-

As we walked further through the entrance, the dirt walls beca stone bricks.

Most of them walked with Chris and Richard who walked on one side, while I was walking beside a girl with light brown hair and George Hamilton. Not even Justin walked with , which made think that he really was not the Justin I knew of.

I did not strike a conversation with said light haired girl in fear that I might let out the truth: that I was not ant to be part of this group. She kept staring at , still.

But she started one anyway.

"Reverie," she said, in a voice that could not be heard by George or the others. "You don’t know any of us, right?"

I stopped in my tracks, so did the girl, but the others walked along anyway.

Now that she has raised suspicion on , I could not lie.

Smart girl.

"That is true."

"I had a feeling." She sighed. "Do you know who I am?"

"I think I do but at the sa ti I don’t quite rember."

She groaned and scowled.

"What a long way to say you have no idea," she ruffled her light hair which was layered, reminding of a raccoon. "I’m Harriet. Is Reverie your real na? People call Harry, sotis."

"Is it or is it not?" Then I frowned. "No way I’m calling you that, the fuck."

I did not expect to think of soone like The Federation’s Harry at a ti like this.

"Be serious, for angel’s sake."

I chuckled internally, erasing the thought of Harry Donovan, then pointed to the direction of the empty darkness at the end of the dungeon we were now in.

"Oh," I said in a joking and dramatic manner. "They have left us."

"Yeah, they’ve been doing their best to avoid you. I heard them talk."

"Damn, what did they say?"

"That the quiet ones are mostly the ones with a few screws loose."

"How rude."

She let out a laugh that was more of a squeak akin to a mouse.

I burst out laughing at her hilarious attempt at a laugh. Loud enough that it echoed and bounced off the dungeon’s hallway.

Glaring at , though I wasn’t sure if it was in the way pick- girls would do or if she was sincerely pissed off, she slapped my shoulder.

Though, even if it was either of the two, I would have still laughed.

Oh, I thought, she’s the type to stomp her foot when she’s playfully mad.

Her appearance reminded of soone—I’m not sure who, though.

But that can’t be, for she was a fictional character written by . I didn’t even ntion her appearance once in the novel. She was ant to have died sowhere along the way.

In other words, an extra.

And yet, she had this much personality.

At that point, I raised a hypothesis in my mind.

What were the chances she was inspired by soone I knew once upon a ti?

Had my novel beco reality or was my novel reality all along?

What happens to a fictional character if they realize they are fictional?

-

The two of us walked further down the cobblestoned hallway.

While it was quiet for the most part, it wasn’t an uncomfortable silence. It was unlike the silence I have been experiencing for a while now.

I felt somber around her.

She spoke:

"For what reason would you need to feign murder?"

I stopped, thinking. "I only did that to cause fear."

"Why?"

"Easy," I said. "They have no idea where the nephilim reside. Do you?"

She shook her head, her brown doe eyes glimring.

"If I had showed them that I was able to read the hieroglyphics—"

"So you could read them!" said Harriet with a snap.

"—and knew where the nephilim slept, they would rely on ." I shrugged. "In other words, I’ll be used."

"In other words, weaponized incompetence," she retorted.

I grinned and she rolled her eyes, but I could not miss the small yet pretty grin she made.

After a few more monts of walking, we got tired and sat with our backs on the stone-bricked walls, with a fiery lit torch from above.

She gave a canteen of water and I accepted it, taking a swig.

"Shall I request this lady’s full na?" I said, cringing slightly at my attempt at conversation. I wasn’t used to this, but, hey, if I was going to be an outcast, a comrade in arms wouldn’t hurt.

She cringed as well, giving another slap on my shoulder as she sat next to .

"It’s Harriet van Gogh."

"Any dreams?"

I gave her ti to think.

"I wanted to be an artist. Never ended up doing anything about it, though. And maybe an astro—"

"And I, a writer," I said, raising a toast with the canteen of water she gave . I didn’t an to interrupt her. "What a pair of failures we are."

She giggled slightly, but I could tell how much she regretted not pursuing her dreams.

Truth be told, I could not tell if she was an actual person or a fictional character, at that point.

I rember writing her as one of the mbers of Lucifer-180, but never going any further than that.

Strangely, for a fictional character, I could converse with her quite well.

She was very...human, for a fictional character.

Right.

A fictional character.

"I’m curious about one thing, Harriet," I said, turning to face her.

Not Harry, fuck that.

"How did you find out that I’m not a part of your circle of astronauts? I an, Lucifer-180?"

"Astronauts?" She looked at in pure confusion. "I’m a girl from the countryside. I work as a baker."

You are reading Ghost's Viewpoint Chapter 23: Extra or Human? 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.