I Became the Villain Alpha's Omega (BL)-Chapter 114: The Scent of a Manufactured Apocalypse
The far corner of the camp felt like a different world, or at least a very sullen neighborhood of the one they currently occupied. It sat well away from the shouting at the command center, but still within the camp’s protected area. Someone, likely a weary logistics guard with a dark sense of humor, had dragged a couple of reinforced supply crates together to form a jagged, splinters-and-all worktable.
Across its scarred wooden surface, the evidence lay in a row. A handful of Hearth Stones, some still glowing with a sickly, rhythmic amber pulse, others smashed into glittering quartz shrapnel.
Cherion stood over them, his arms stiff at his sides, glaring at the rocks as if they’d just insulted his mother in a particularly creative dialect. He looked, quite frankly, like he was one bad minute away from starting a fight with an inanimate object.
A few paces off, Reiner was leaning against a tent pole, looking as strangely bubbly as a man can look when surrounded by the debris of a near-massacre. On the opposite side of the "table," Marielle stood like a blade driven into the earth. She didn’t move, didn’t fidget, she just watched the stones with a clinical, razor-sharp focus that made Cherion feel like his own skin was being peeled back for inspection.
The silence stretched. It wasn’t the peaceful kind. It was the kind of silence that happens right before a thunderstorm, or a very awkward family dinner.
Cherion cleared his throat, the sound rasping in the quiet air. He shifted his weight, his mind a chaotic mess of "What now?" and "How did I end up in this novel again?" He didn’t know where to start. He wasn’t a geologist, and his knowledge of magical engineering was... well, let’s call it "experimental" at best.
So, naturally, he leaned down, picked up a jagged chunk of stone, and took a long, deep sniff.
Reiner’s eyes widened, blinking rapidly. Marielle’s left eyebrow climbed so high it threatened to disappear into her hairline.
"...What exactly are you doing, My Lord?" Reiner asked, his voice wavering between genuine concern and suppressed laughter.
Cherion didn’t look up. He took another whiff, his nose wrinkling at the faint, ozone-and-burnt-sugar smell of the stone. "Checking."
"For what? Dirt? Lunch?"
Cherion paused, the stone inches from his face. "...Something."
It wasn’t a helpful answer. To be brutally honest, he wasn’t entirely sure what he was looking for either, but "We’re in a novel and the author didn’t bother explaining this" wasn’t a great conversational opener for the Northern elite. He set the stone back down, the clack of rock on wood sounding hollow. He began tapping the surface with a fingernail, turning it over to trace the deep, rhythmic gouges left by the Velkyn. They weren’t random. They were obsessive. They were trying to dig something out.
Marielle finally moved.
It was a small motion, barely a twitch of her fingers, but a faint, crystalline shimmer of mana gathered at her tips. It wasn’t the flashy, "look-at-me" magic of the capital’s court wizards. This was compressed. Mean. Precise.
She let the spark drift onto the stone, and for a heartbeat, the stone twitched. A gossamer veil of violet light flickered across the claw marks before snapping back into the dark.
Cherion froze. His heart did a weird, thumping little jig in his chest. He hadn’t expected that, the sheer, casual mastery of her control. It was like watching a master jeweler work with a sledgehammer.
"...That’s really cool," he muttered. The words slipped out before he could filter them through his usual layer of "don’t-sound-like-a-clueless-novice" pride.
Marielle glanced at him. It was a brief, flickering contact, her expression as flat as a frozen lake, but something in the set of her shoulders shifted. She relaxed a tiny bit, just a little. Maybe that was her version of acknowledgment. 𝒇𝓻𝓮𝓮𝙬𝙚𝒃𝒏𝓸𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝓬𝓸𝒎
"It’s basic," she said, her voice a cool monotone. "If your senses weren’t so cluttered, you should be able to feel the resonance too."
Cherion let out a ragged little breath, a mix of genuine amusement and the kind of embarrassment that makes your ears turn hot. "Right. Of course. Cluttered senses. I’ll just... add that to the ’to-do’ list. Right after ’not getting eaten’ and ’figure out what any of this means.’"
Reiner, ever the diplomat, stepped in with a grin that didn’t quite reach his worried eyes. "What Lord Cherion is trying to say, Lady Marielle, is that your thread-work is remarkable."
Cherion nodded so fast he nearly gave himself whiplash. "Yes. That. Exactly that. What he said."
Marielle exhaled, a tiny puff of white mist in the cold. She turned her attention back to the table, but as she reached for another stone, she spoke again, almost as an afterthought. "You’re not entirely useless either. I saw you last night. You didn’t stop treating the injured, even when you looked like you were about to collapse. Most Southrons would have bolted away."
Cherion blinked. Compliments in the North were rare, compliments from Marielle were practically mythical.
"...I mean, that’s just the job, isn’t it?" he mutters, his fingers busying themselves with a loose thread on his sleeve. He felt a bit like a kicked puppy that had suddenly been offered a steak. "I couldn’t really just stop halfway and walk off."
Reiner’s lips curled into a true smile this time. The tension was still there, just not as sharp as before.
Then, the focus snapped back to the stones.
"There’s concealment magic here," Marielle stated, her tone shifting back to business. "Layered. High-level. It’s designed to mask a secondary frequency, but the veil is beginning to fray where the beasts clawed at it. The question is... what were they hiding?"
Reiner leaned in, his expression turning uncharacteristically grim. He said it way too calmly for something that definitely shouldn’t be said calmly. "There are substances. Alchemical compounds. They aren’t poisons or explosives. They’re... lures. Difficult to detect because they’re often inert until they hit a specific trigger, be it high heat, prolonged mana exposure, or simply time. Like a slow-burning fuse made of scent."
Cherion went absolutely still.
You could almost see the gears in his head grinding against one another, bits of half-remembered monster lore finally lining up.
"...Like a pheromone thing?"
Reiner looked at him with an expression of pure enlightenment, as if Cherion had just explained the secret of the stars.
"I read it in... in the book," Cherion scrambled, his voice gaining speed as the horror set in. "I didn’t even know monsters could be drawn in by that, but... apparently it does."
Reiner looked like he’d been struck by lightning. "Gods... to think we’ve been hauling those things in our carts since we arrived! We’ve been burning them in our tents!"
The silence settled over the crates like a shroud, but Cherion’s mind wouldn’t stop screaming. Something in the dark, dusty corners of his memory from when he was just a reader sitting in a safe, warm room, was scratching at his brain.
Unnatural frenzy of the beasts.
His fingers tightened against the edge of the supply crate until the wood bit into his palms.
...No.
Not inevitable. Not natural at all.
His gaze dropped back to the claw-marked stone in his hand, the light fading into a dull, lifeless grey. Slowly, the pieces started falling into place, and he really didn’t like what they were forming. The palace hadn’t just been sending supplies to help the North hold the line.
So that was what it was.
The palace hadn’t been helping them hold the line.
It had been making sure it would break.
Cherion clenched his fists. Well... not on my watch.







