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The cook wiped his tears using his forearms. One rough drag across each eye. And when his face erged from behind those flour-stained sleeves, sothing had shifted.

Resolve.

He patted the bag of coins sitting in front of the woman and spoke with a voice still cracked but no longer breaking.

"But I promise you. Your daughter will not go through the sa fate. As long as I am standing. As long as this town stands."

He looked across the crowd. Every face that t his carried the sa guilt. The sa awakening.

"And we won’t let you face your battle alone anymore. We will join your war."

His hand rested on the bag.

"I promise you that you will soon see that girl smile again. Brighter than ever before. We will depart to the city. To the holy church. And forget about the money. We will cover everything. You don’t have to pay any of us back."

His voice broke one more ti. But he pushed through it. "Because we owe you far more than just money."

The woman didn’t know how to react. A minute ago her life existed in a place where darkness was the only color she could rember. Where every road ended at the sa wall. Where hope was just a word other people used.

And now there was light. Coming from every direction at once.

She couldn’t process the feeling. Should she thank god for this? Should she thank the kindness of people who were beating her monts ago?

Then her senses returned. Her eyes started scanning the crowd. Searching. Looking for a particular face among the dozens surrounding her.

I knew exactly who she was looking for.

So I tucked myself behind my team. Specifically behind Aria. Because I had zero interest in so thanksgiving ceremony and even less mood to deliver another lecture.

Aria noticed hiding behind her and spoke without turning around.

"And here I thought I would see an entertaining bloodbath."

I said to her quietly. "I was expecting the sa from myself."

She glanced sideways at .

"Seeing that woman on the ground... I wanted to kill every single one of them. Swing my axe at their throats and watch them slowly die. Slowly feel the pain she was going through. That was my instinct. Her condition dragged out a haunting mory I keep buried and it nearly consud ."

I leaned against the carriage wall.

"But then I thought about it. What would a massacre bring? It was the easy thing to do. And I wouldn’t even face consequences of death because the world can’t afford to lose its hero."

I paused.

"But what happens to her? I would have released her from the pain in that mont. But she would have lived with a new one. The pain of being the reason behind it all. She would have cursed for destroying families. For taking soone’s mother or father or child. For putting them on the sa page as hers."

My eyes drifted to the crowd gathered around the woman.

"And whoever was left alive would have inherited the sa hatred. Followed a path that only led to more ruin. Violence would have ended people from the inside and the outside. And I didn’t want that."

I looked at Aria. "So I chose sha instead."

She was listening now. Actually listening.

"Sha is different. Sha doesn’t attack the body. It attacks the mirror. It rewrites what a person sees when they look at themselves. And a person who can no longer stand their own reflection will spend the rest of their life trying to beco soone worth looking at."

I let those words breathe.

"So I gave them a mirror instead of a grave. And I let their own faces do the damage."

Aria studied after that. Her red eyes were doing sothing I hadn’t seen before. Not analyzing for weakness. Not asuring for threat. Sothing deeper. Like she was weighing my words against sothing personal she had been carrying for a long ti.

Then after a silence that stretched long enough to feel deliberate, she asked.

"You think people can actually change? Just from seeing what they are?"

I said. "I think people are never just one thing. The cook who slapped her is the sa man who just emptied his life savings and is now on his knees begging forgiveness and crying like a child. Both versions are real. Both live inside him. The only difference is which one gets fed."

Her expression shifted. And that shift told everything.

The question was never about the crowd.

It was about her.

So I gave her more.

"The world loves to tell us that we are what we’ve done. That our worst mont is our truest self. That once you’ve crossed a line, you live on the other side of it forever."

I placed my hand on her shoulder gently. "But that’s a lie. And the proof is standing right there."

I gestured toward the crowd.

"Forty people who were monsters twenty minutes ago are now emptying their pockets for a woman they drew blood from. If they can cross back over that line in twenty minutes, then no line is permanent. No darkness is final. No version of yourself is the only version."

A faint smile touched Aria’s lips.

But behind it was sothing far more painful. Sothing that had been living inside her for years. Sothing my words had poked without aning to.

She closed her eyes.

Then I noticed the stares.

Every mber of my team was looking at . And at my hand. Still resting on Aria Halloway’s shoulder. Like I had casually placed my palm on a live grenade and was asking everyone why they looked nervous.

I slowly pulled my hand back. Thanked every god in existence that Aria’s eyes were still closed and her focus was sowhere else entirely.

Movent caught my attention from the crowd.

The cook had reached for the piece of at the woman was still clinging to. He took it from her hands gently and she offered no resistance this ti. Her fingers simply opened and let it go.

He held the filthy, dried, dirt-covered thing in his palm. Stared at it. Then slapped himself across the face with it.

"This..." His voice shattered. "This is what I beat you for. This worthless piece of dried nothing. I..."

He was breaking again. Pressing the at tightly in his grip. His eyes going from the pathetic condition of the food to the pathetic condition of the woman who had protected it with her body.

He dropped to all fours.

"What have I done? I can’t even ask for forgiveness for the sin I’ve committed." His tears dripped onto the dirt. "My one action... the one that boy pointed out so clearly... would have been the ruin of a family. The ruin of a mother. And..."

His forehead nearly touched the ground.

"And a child."

While he sobbed and begged, a hand pressed gently onto his shoulder. Pushing him upward.

When his eyes t the woman’s gaze, she was smiling.

Smiling.

"You don’t have to ask for forgiveness."

His mouth fell open.

"Your action was the reason everything changed for . Every head that refused to help is now bowing and doing whatever they can. If it weren’t for you, I would never have escaped my misery."

She squeezed his shoulder.

"So don’t feel the way you’re putting it. You didn’t know my situation. How could you? It was obvious you would react the way you did."

He processed her words. Looked at her trembling bony hands resting on his shoulder. Then wiped his tears with his forearms one final ti. The sa motion as before. But this ti it carried sothing different.

He threw the at to the ground.

"I swear to the gods that as long as I breathe, you will never know what hunger is. Not you. Not your daughter. Not anyone who cos to my door with an empty stomach and an empty pocket."

He rose to his feet.

"Just wait for . I will cook sothing so delicious that it will make your girl get up from that bed even without divine magic. I will make it so good that you won’t stop asking for more. And I won’t stop providing."

He sprinted toward his shop. Full speed. Like the food he was about to prepare could save a life.

Because it could.

I was climbing into the carriage. Relieved. Done. Ready to leave this place behind.

"Please wait." The voice ca from behind. The sa woman.

I turned.

"I don’t know your na." She was standing. Sohow. On those malnourished legs that had no business holding a person upright. "I don’t know where you ca from. But whatever life gives you from this point on... know that there is a woman and a little girl in this town who will carry your face in their prayers for the rest of their lives."

I smiled.

"Don’t carry my face. It’s not that pleasant to look at." I scratched the back of my head. "But if you still insist on rembering sothing from today, rember this."

I paused. Let the noise of the crowd fade behind my silence.

"Fate didn’t change because god suddenly decided to look your way. And it didn’t change because of ."

I looked at her.

"It changed because a mother refused to stop. Refused to quit. Refused to let a world that gave her nothing convince her that she deserved nothing."

I stepped into the carriage.

"So next ti the darkness tells you that you’re alone. That there’s no point. That the world has already written your ending."

I grabbed the door. "Rember today."

You are reading SSS-Rank Pervert: Reincarnated in the World of Summoners Chapter 111: I Wanted To Show A Mirror Instead of a Grave on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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