Font Size
15px

169 Monster [Prince Grant]

The banners of Blasten, Feenno, Lomarel, Thornland, Goldburg, and Contine fluttered behind as our procession advanced through the thinning forest. Their colors snapped sharply in the wind, proud crests carried by proud fools. They believed they were marching toward glory. In truth, they were marching to their appointed graves. I almost pitied them. Almost. The idea of heredity, of noble blood granting authority, had stained this world for generations. Soone had to end it, and it might as well be .

“That’s right,” murmured the voice in my ear, warm as breath and sharp as temptation. “A world stuck in this level of civilization is a dreary thing. But first, you must kill that madman. Dr. Ti is clever, slippery. Do not underestimate him.”

The devil had been with ever since I awoke from my coma. He was my teacher, my adviser, and the whisper that peeled back the ugliness of this world layer by layer. Whether it was truly a devil, a fragnt of my own mind, or a being beyond comprehension didn’t matter. Its guidance had never once failed .

“I’ve prepared as much as I can,” I said under my breath as I rode. “It was unfortunate losing Hall and Shadow, but I still have the slave, Abner, the rcenaries, the spymaster, and you. I don’t see myself losing.”

The devil gave a soft snort. “Once, I thought the sa. But truly? Devil? You insist on calling that.”

I allowed myself a faint smile. “Please don’t take offense. It’s simply my way of staying sane, considering everything you’ve promised .”

“Oh, I am wounded,” the voice teased, “but I accept your quirks. And I remind you again, I have not lied. You have immortality waiting for you, limitless power, wealth, influence… all of it within reach. A fitting reward for the burdens you must carry. Democracy requires blood to take root, but I believe you can bring your world out of the Dark Ages with fewer corpses than most.”

The road widened as we reached the slope of the mountain. I rode ahead while the larger bulk of the army looped around to flank the dragon’s supposed lair. A pigeon descended and landed neatly on my gloved hand. I untied the ssage and scanned the contents. It was from the repurposed bandit coalition the Royal Guard had forced into service. They claid they had taken their positions and were ready to encircle the army from afar.

“Hm. I wonder if Nielong is slacking again,” I muttered. “I gave him a woman to reward him, and to watch him, but I haven’t heard a whisper of progress. Not even from her.”

“What do you think, Devil?”

“Your victory is assured,” the voice crooned. “After all… I am on your side.”

The trees thinned further until a gray mouth of a cave lood ahead. The nobles gathered behind , armor gleaming, expressions taut with a mix of excitent and fear. The script was simple: I was supposed to deliver a grand speech about valor, unity, and the triumph we would achieve by slaying the dragon inside.

But as we approached, the atmosphere twisted.

Sothing was wrong.

A soldier shouted, stumbling back. Several nobles drew their weapons in reflex.

Then I saw it.

A body lay at the cave entrance, slumped, head at an unnatural angle, armor cracked, blood pooled beneath him. The tallic scent drifted toward us on the cool morning wind. The sigil on the corpse’s cloak was unmistakable.

A Royal Guard.

Lady Thornland’s voice sliced through the hush. “Your highness… what is the aning of this? Why is a Royal Guard lying dead at the entrance?”

Every lord and lady rode forward, their horses stamping nervously as they surrounded the fallen Royal Guard. The cave lood like a throat swallowing light, and the corpse at its entrance ruined everything. The Royal Guard were supposed to wait inside, hidden deep within the cave until the nobles entered. The hypnotized and obedient bandit coalition should already be encircling the mountains to cut off escape. Everything had been arranged. Everything had been perfect.

So why was a Royal Guard dead outside?

The nobles muttered sharply among themselves, their voices overlapping.

“Why is a Royal Guard here…?”

“Was he scouting?”

“No one inford us of an outpost.”

“Where’s the rest of his unit!?”

Suspicion was a spark, and I saw it spreading rapidly.

Soone called out, “Bring forward Abner! He was Royal Guard once, so he should know sothing!”

Abner, disheveled from his supposed survival, nudged his horse through the crowd. His eyes flicked to the body too quickly, and the nobles noticed.

A lady snapped, “Abner, explain this. Why is a Royal Guard lying here dead?”

Abner bowed. “The Royal Guard were ordered to make base here, my lady. They were positioned as an advanced outpost.”

The mont he finished, sothing in cracked. I couldn’t believe he dared spout such a story.

“What are you saying, Abner!?” I shouted. “How dare you speak such lies!?”

“But your highness,” a lord murmured, “the body is here. How can we ignore that?”

Eyes shifted. They no longer searched the corpse. Instead, they searched .

That was when the devil’s whisper curled into my ear, patient and amused. “Soone is using Empathy to stir distrust. I cannot detect their exact location, but their range is wide. Your ntal suggestions remain, but suspicion grows. Handle this carefully.”

I clenched my reins. Fine. If they wanted a villain, I’d give them one they could understand.

“Treachery!” I pointed at Abner. “You killed this man!”

“I did,” Abner answered without hesitation, turning every head again. His calmness rattled . “Because he was a traitor, your highness. Just like you.”

For a heartbeat, the world fell silent.

Lord Feenno barked, “How dare you! Prince Grant is your liege lord!”

Before I could retort, Lord Contine stiffened in his saddle. His eyes widened, his gift of the mind catching sothing the others could not.

“We’re surrounded,” he shouted. “House of Contine! With ! We’ll break through and settle this in the Royal Court! Move!”

The Contine riders wheeled away instantly. Panic rippled through the nobles, and every house reacted in kind, spurring their horses and pulling their elites with them. They weren’t loyal to . They weren’t loyal to Abner. They were loyal to self-preservation, the one thing I had counted on them abandoning once fear and awe seized them.

But instead of awe, they scented a trap.

They fled.

And all my ticulous preparation crumbled at the sight of that single corpse. Months of hypnosis, manipulation, bandit repurposing, and Royal Guard planning were all rendered useless, because of Abner’s interference.

“It cannot end like this.”

Even if they ran to the Royal Court, the “king” sat comfortably under my hypnosis. I could still win that way. But it would cost too much ti. I needed the noble bloodline severed now, while they were gathered and vulnerable.

I could not let this mont slip from my grasp.

I rose in my saddle, teeth clenched, voice ripping out of .

“My people! TO ARMS!”

The mountains answered with echoes, and the trap ant for the nobles snapped shut on chaos instead.

The bandit coalition surged from the ridges the mont I gave the order. Their horses thundered downhill, crashing into the nobles’ scattered formations. Foot soldiers scrambled to form a line, but the charge tore into them before they could arrange anything. Screams blended with steel, dust, and the crazed howls of n who believed they served a divine cause.

Several gifted erupted into the chaos like sparks in oil.

Jon, the giant with invulnerability, barreled straight through the rcenaries who had refused my hypnosis. Their weapons bounced off his skin as if they were toys. He crushed one rider with a backhand and ripped another straight off his horse.

Renry, lean and ruthless, carved her way through grouped soldiers. Her movent gift let her twist and weave around blades, while her loyal rcenaries kept pace, hacking down anyone too slow to dodge.

Ernesto charged Lord Feenno with a bellow, slamming the man from his saddle and snapping his neck in the dirt, not even bothering to unsheathe his sword.

As for Abner? Of course he ran toward the cave.

He shouted over the carnage, “Lords and Ladies of Alr Kingdom! If you want to survive—enter the cave!”

To my annoyance, his reputation saved him. Three noble houses, weaker and carrying smaller retinues, chose to follow him on foot. Fear drove them. Trust in Abner sealed the decision.

The devil whispered, amused, “Rember the Empath. Even a lesser psychic can push emotions. Doubt is a simple thing to encourage in frightened minds.”

Of course I knew. He had taught everything about power classifications and how they interacted. Empathy might not dominate thought like hypnosis, but it shaped fear, trust, and suspicion with irritating ease.

I snapped, “Jon! Renry! Ernesto! After them!”

The rcenaries stord into the cave after the fleeing nobles.

I dropped from my horse and pushed hypnosis inward, flooding my body with artificial adrenaline. My ten rings humd at my fingertips, each one a weapon, and each one a disaster waiting to happen in the wrong hands. One held teleportation. Others offered strength, speed, regeneration, and elental tricks. I was a walking arsenal.

Lady Lomarel rushed first. Perfect target.

With sharpness activating in my sword, I swung once and beheaded her cleanly.

“You bastard!” she shrieked, grabbing the head and slamming it back onto her neck before launching a spray of poisoned blood. “Die!”

The droplets stung as they hit my skin. Her blood was venom distilled over years of deliberate poisoning. It would kill most people on contact.

But regeneration flared in my rings, burning the toxins away as fast as they entered my system.

She stared at in disbelief. “How is this possib—”

She never finished. Super speed wrapped around my limbs and my blade flashed again and again until she fell apart in twitching chunks, unable to reform.

The devil roared with laughter. “Nothing beats being overgeared! HAHAHAHAHA!”

I blurred forward, reaching Contine before he could escape the bandit wave slowing him. His expression tightened, and he hurled himself upward with telekinesis, floating as lightly as a leaf.

“So you’ve finally shown your true colors!” he shouted. “Then it’s true you sold my sister like livestock to advance your sches! She loved you!”

“Just a piece of trash in a long line of trash,” I said, forcing my body to flood with more adrenal strength. Regeneration nded my bruised throat as I built heat in my palm. I sheathed my sword for an instant, then drew it in one clean motion.

The blade clashed against the air, sparks forming into blazing arcs as pyrokinesis joined the cut.

“Burn and be severed.”

The sword sliced through his telekinetic grip like it was paper. A beam of fire-rimd steel carved straight across his torso.

Contine’s body split open. Entrails dropped like wet ropes as he tumbled to the ground.

I landed hard, slid a few paces, and rose to watch him choke on his own breath.

He tried to speak a final word, but the blood in his lungs swallowed the sound.

"Monster,” I spoke aloud what I think I heard. “Hah~! Never been more accurate!”

You are reading Unheroic Life of a Certain Cape 169 Monster [Prince Grant] 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

Immortal Paladin cover
Same author

Immortal Paladin

Alfir ·Action

Ihadfinallydoneit—achievedtheultimatePaladinbuild.Maxedstats,impenetrablearmor,andsomanyresistancesthatdeathitselfhadgivenuponme.Iwasanunkillableta...

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