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Chapter 22: Trace (1)
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... ing straight to the truth. His eyes were direct, as if he believed his direction was the only path. Hesitation, doubt, fear, regret—none of these negative emotions existed within Deculein. He possessed only a confident self-belief, a dogmatic assurance in his own righteousness.
His arrogance and conceit, in the end, became signs of his nobility. Even his flaws appeared aristocratic. Epherene's father, who had taken his own life under Deculein's command, disappeared as if he had never exi ...
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