I'm the Villain, But the Heroines Keep Choosing Me-Chapter 99: The Truth
The investigation of the weapons forge had been productive, if disturbing.
They’d found evidence of human collaboration – tools left in specific patterns that could only have been intentional signals, guard rotations that had been deliberately weakened, supply manifests that showed someone had known exactly when the forge would be most vulnerable.
Seria had documented everything with military precision. Elara had blessed the site and spoken with survivors, gathering accounts that painted a picture of calculated assault rather than random violence. Damien had examined the patterns, the tactical choices, the intelligence requirements.
All of it pointed to what they already suspected: organized conspiracy with deep roots in imperial systems.
They’d returned to the capital exhausted, filed their initial report with Lady Cassandra, and retreated to their residence as evening fell.
Now, lying in bed with Elara curled against his left side and Seria against his right, Damien should have been sleeping. His body was tired enough. The day had been long, the investigation mentally taxing, the constant vigilance required in an unfamiliar city draining.
But his mind wouldn’t settle.
Something had been nagging at him since the palace briefing. A pattern he couldn’t quite articulate, pieces that didn’t fit together properly.
The System’s original demand echoed in his memory:
*Change the story. Free the heroines from their roles or be locked into yours.*
He’d interpreted that as saving them from their narrative fates – Elara from being the Church’s puppet, Seria from being the hero’s loyal soldier. And he’d succeeded, hadn’t he? Both women had chosen different paths, broken free from their scripted destinies.
But what if that wasn’t the complete picture?
The demon attacks. When had they started increasing?
Eight months ago, according to Lady Cassandra’s records.
Eight months ago.
Exactly when he’d woken up in this world. Exactly when he’d transmigrated into Damien Valcrest’s body.
The correlation hit him with cold certainty.
The Demon General’s knowledge. It had known his name, known about the anchor bonds, known about his corruption management. It had spoken to him like it understood exactly what he was.
Some of the attacks hadn’t just been strategic – they’d felt targeted. At him specifically. At his connections, his methods, his vulnerabilities.
As if something was testing him. Pushing him. Forcing him to adapt and grow stronger.
Why?
Damien carefully extracted himself from between the two sleeping women, moving with practiced silence. Neither stirred – both were deeply asleep, exhausted from the day’s efforts.
He dressed quickly in dark clothing and moved to the window.
That’s when he saw it.
A trail of darkness – not quite shadow, not quite substance – leading away from the residence toward the edge of the city. It pulsed faintly, visible only to his enhanced perception, like a path meant specifically for him to follow.
He stared at it for a long moment.
This was obviously a trap. Obviously something designed to lure him away from his anchors, from safety, from backup.
He should wake Seria and Elara. Should report this to imperial intelligence. Should not, under any circumstances, follow a mysterious shadow trail into unknown danger alone.
The trail pulsed again, almost beckoning.
Damien turned away from the window, climbed back into bed, and tried to sleep.
---
He lasted two hours.
The trail was still there when he looked again at midnight. Still pulsing. Still beckoning.
And now, lying between his two anchors, the questions wouldn’t stop circling.
Why did the demon attacks start when he arrived?
Why did the Demon General know so much about him?
What was he really brought here to do?
The System had been oddly quiet since they’d arrived at the Imperial Capital. No new quests, no notifications beyond basic status updates. As if it was waiting for something.
Or someone.
Damien looked at Elara, peaceful in sleep. At Seria, her face relaxed in a way it never was while awake. They trusted him. Loved him. Depended on him to make good choices.
Following mysterious shadow trails into the night was not a good choice.
But not knowing what was waiting at the end of that trail felt more dangerous than any physical threat.
He extracted himself from the bed again, this time with grim purpose. Left a brief note on the nightstand – Followed a lead. Back by dawn. – in case they woke.
Then he followed the trail.
---
It led him through the sleeping city, past guard patrols that somehow never quite looked his way, through districts he didn’t recognize, and finally out through a small postern gate that stood conveniently unguarded.
Beyond the city walls, the trail continued into the forest – old growth trees that had probably stood for centuries, creating a canopy that blocked out the moonlight.
Damien’s shadow manipulation stirred instinctively, responding to the darkness. He could feel power here, old and vast and patient.
The trail led to a clearing where a single figure sat on a large stone, silhouetted against the faint starlight that penetrated the canopy.
Human in form, but with curved horns emerging from their temples. Dressed in simple clothes that somehow managed to look both elegant and threatening.
"I thought you’d never come," the figure said. Male voice, cultured, carrying amusement. "You resisted for hours. Impressive willpower."
[SYSTEM ALERT]
[ENTITY DETECTED: ARCHDEMON]
[THREAT LEVEL: CATASTROPHIC]
[RECOMMENDATION: FLEE IMMEDIATELY]
[WARNING: Flight success probability: 0.003%]
Damien stood at the clearing’s edge, every instinct screaming danger. The presence emanating from this being was overwhelming – not hostile exactly, but so powerful that hostility would be irrelevant.
If it wanted him dead, he would be dead. Simple as that.
The knowledge was terrifying and oddly liberating.
"Who are you?" Damien asked, keeping his voice steady despite the fear.
"Irrelevant," the Archdemon replied. "What you should be asking is what I want from you."
"Fine. What do you want from me?"
"A conversation. Nothing more, nothing less." The Archdemon gestured to another stone across from his perch. "Sit. This will take time, and there’s no point in being uncomfortable."
Damien considered running. Considered trying to fight. Both options were equally futile, so he walked forward and sat.
Up close, the Archdemon looked young – mid-twenties perhaps, with features that were almost beautiful if not for the wrongness of the horns and the ancient weight in his eyes.
"Better," the Archdemon said. "Now. Let’s begin with a question: Do you remember your mission Ryan...I mean, Damien Valcrest?"
The use of both names – his original and his current – sent a chill down Damien’s spine.
"You know what I am."







