Supreme Hunter of Beautiful Souls-Chapter 465: A quick morning chat

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Chapter 465: A quick morning chat

Dawn arrived silently over the Ainsworth mansion, tinging the sky with soft shades of gold and pale blue, while the air still carried that light freshness that only exists before the sun truly takes over the day. The garden was tranquil, almost still, as if the world were still awakening—but Kael had been awake for a long time.

His body moved in a steady rhythm.

Controlled.

Push-ups.

One.

Two.

Three.

The movement was clean, precise, without apparent effort, but full of intention. His muscles tensed and relaxed in perfect cadence, sweat slowly trickling down his skin, reflecting the soft morning light. To any observer, it would seem like just physical training—something commonplace.

But it wasn’t.

For Kael, it was... silence.

It was a way to keep his mind occupied.

To prevent thoughts from accumulating.

To maintain control.

The world around him might be on the brink of silent collapse—infiltrated vampires, a hidden princess, a king manipulating his own race—but at that moment, right there, he only needed to count repetitions.

And continue.

Five.

Six.

Seven.

He exhaled slowly.

The cold air entering his lungs.

And then—

He felt it.

It wasn’t a sound.

Not a movement.

It was... a look.

Scanning.

Analyzing.

Longing.

Kael didn’t stop.

He didn’t slow down.

He didn’t even turn his face.

"Are you admiring?" he asked, his voice steady, as if commenting on the weather.

The silence lasted a brief moment.

And then—

Soft footsteps on the grass.

Careful.

Controlled.

Elizabeth appeared in his peripheral vision, walking slowly through the garden. A dark umbrella hung open above her head, shielding her from the increasingly intense sunlight—an almost instinctive reflex, natural for someone in her condition.

She looked... different.

Clean.

Recovered.

The signs of the previous night—wounds, extreme fatigue, fragility—had almost completely disappeared. Her posture was firmer, her gaze more stable. There was still something delicate about her, something that wouldn’t be easily lost... but she was no longer that figure on the verge of collapse.

Still... there was weight.

In her eyes.

In the way she walked.

As if she carried something she couldn’t simply leave behind.

She stopped a few steps from him.

"I’m just walking," she replied naturally, though her voice carried a slight trace of hesitation.

Kael made a small sound through his nose.

Almost a laugh.

But he didn’t comment.

He continued.

His body rising and falling, the rhythm unchanged, as if her presence wasn’t enough to break his concentration—or perhaps as if he were simply used to ignoring distractions.

Silence settled between them for a few seconds.

It wasn’t uncomfortable.

But it wasn’t light either.

It was... observant.

Elizabeth looked away for a moment, as if truly analyzing the garden—the trees, the stone paths, the way the light touched the leaves. But inevitably... her eyes returned to him.

To the movement.

To the discipline.

To the calm.

"I found some vampires," Kael said suddenly, still without stopping, his voice escaping between breaths. "Who were looking for you."

Elizabeth stood still for a moment.

Her body tensing slightly.

"...I understand," she replied, lowering her gaze slightly.

Kael continued.

Ten.

Eleven.

Twelve.

"They’re not on the king’s side," he added. "They fled too."

Silence returned.

But now... heavier.

Elizabeth closed her eyes for a brief moment.

She took a deep breath.

And then slowly released it.

"This is going too far..." she murmured, almost to herself.

It wasn’t just worry.

It was... exhaustion.

Guilt.

Confusion.

Too many things happening too fast.

Kael finally stopped.

He remained in position for a second, his arms supporting his own weight, before calmly standing up, rotating his shoulders slightly, relaxing his muscles.

Sweat trickled down his skin.

But his expression remained the same.

Controlled.

He picked up a nearby towel, wiping his face, and then looked at her for the first time that morning.

"Yes," he said simply.

Without softening.

Without denying it.

The confirmation came directly.

"That’s why I’ve already started organizing things."

Elizabeth looked up, focusing on him more intently now.

"Organizing...?" she repeated.

Kael nodded, resting the towel on his shoulder.

"The vampires on our side can’t remain scattered," he explained. "Alone, they’re easy targets. Frightened, they make mistakes."

He took a few steps across the garden, not out of unease, but as if naturally in motion, while he spoke.

"I asked them to gather. Discreetly. At specific points."

Elizabeth frowned slightly.

"And they agreed?"

"They don’t have many options," Kael replied.

Simple.

Direct.

Real.

She was silent for a moment, absorbing it.

"And... do they know about me?" she asked cautiously.

Kael looked at her again.

"They know you’re alive."

A pause.

"And they want to see you."

The air seemed to grow heavier for a moment.

Elizabeth gripped the handle of her umbrella lightly, her fingers tensing almost imperceptibly.

She looked away.

Thinking.

Processing.

"That makes sense..." she murmured after a few seconds.

Her voice was lower now.

More introspective.

"Even though I’m... adopted."

She let out a small sigh.

"Many still see me as the princess."

Kael observed.

Without interrupting.

Without judging.

She looked up again, but now there was something different in it—not just uncertainty.

But... responsibility.

"I can’t just ignore this," she continued. "If they’re risking their lives... running away... hiding..."

She paused.

Her lips pressed slightly together.

"Then I can’t hide forever."

The silence that followed was longer.

But it wasn’t empty.

It was... decisive.

Kael crossed his arms slowly, studying her.

"I expected nothing less," he said.

There was no praise in his voice.

But there was no doubt either.

Elizabeth raised her chin slightly.

"Is that a problem?" she asked.

Kael let out a small sigh.

"It’s inevitable."

He looked at the sky for a moment, the sun higher now, the light more intense.

"You will find them," he continued. "But not today."

She frowned. "Why?"

Kael looked back at her. "Because it’s not safe yet."

Simple.

But firm.

She didn’t answer immediately.

Silence stretched for a few seconds.

"You don’t trust them?" she asked.

"I trust what they said," Kael replied. "I don’t trust what might be following them."

That made Elizabeth fall silent again.

More thoughtful now.

"So you think... someone might use them to find me?" she asked.

"I don’t think so," Kael said.

A pause.

"I assume so." The weight of that answer fell between them.

Heavy.

Real.

She looked away, absorbing it slowly.

"So... what do you suggest?" she asked, calmer now.

Kael rested the towel back on his shoulder, completely relaxed, as if he were discussing something simple.

But he wasn’t.

"First," he said, "we confirm they are clean."

"How?"

"By observing," he replied. "Movement. Behavior. Patterns."

He tilted his head slightly.

"And then... you find them."

Elizabeth nodded slowly.

"And if they are being followed?"

Kael shrugged slightly.

"Then we deal with that."

The naturalness in his voice... was almost frightening.

As if it weren’t a risk.

But just... a step.

She observed this.

In silence. "You talk as if it were simple," she said.

Kael looked at her.

"It’s not simple."

A pause.

"But it’s not complicated either."

Silence returned.

But now... different.

Less heavy.

More... aligned.

Elizabeth took a deep breath, slightly adjusting the umbrella above her head.

"I will find them," she said finally.

Not with doubt.

But with decision.

Kael nodded.

"I know."

She looked at him for a few more seconds.

As if trying to understand something.

"Why are you helping me?" she asked suddenly.

The question hung in the air.

Direct.

To the point.

Kael didn’t answer immediately.

He looked away, staring at the garden for a moment.

Thinking.

And then— "Because this isn’t just about you," he said.

She frowned slightly.

"Then what is it about?"

Kael looked back at her.

"About what comes next."

Silence.

Elizabeth stood motionless.

Processing.

And, for the first time that morning... she didn’t have an immediate answer.

Because, deep down...

She knew.

This was no longer just an escape.

It was the beginning of something much bigger.

The silence that followed wasn’t uncomfortable—but it wasn’t light either. It carried something deeper now, as if they were both finally seeing the same invisible line stretching before them. It wasn’t just about surviving anymore. It wasn’t just about escaping anymore.

It was... about what would come next.

Elizabeth remained still for a few moments, her gaze lost beyond the gardens, as if trying to visualize something that didn’t yet fully exist. The idea of ​​"next" was uncertain, fragmented, full of gaps—but still, inevitable.

She exhaled slowly.

"So this isn’t going to stop, is it?"

The question held no accusation. No fear. It was... acceptance.

Kael picked up the water bottle beside the stone steps and took a sip before answering. His gaze wasn’t on her, but on the distant horizon, as if he were measuring possibilities that only he seemed to see completely.

"No," he said simply.

Without softening.

Without consoling.

Elizabeth nodded, absorbing it with a calmness that didn’t match the gravity of the situation. Perhaps because, deep down, she already knew.

"So..." she began, adjusting her posture slightly, "this means that, at some point... I’ll have to go back."

The word wasn’t spoken with affection.

Nor with longing.

But with... weight.

Go back.

To the place she had fled from.

To the center of it all.

Kael closed the bottle and put it back in its place, crossing his arms afterward. He didn’t answer immediately, as if carefully choosing what was worth saying. "—Not necessarily," he said finally.

She looked at him.

Surprised.

"No?"

He shook his head.

"You don’t need to go back to what it was."

A pause.

"But perhaps you need to go back to where it started."

Her gaze narrowed slightly.

Thinking.

"The castle..." she murmured.

"Perhaps" Kael replied. "Or whoever is controlling the castle."

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