Chapter 358 --358
Chapter 358 --358
People looked.
And once they looked, they couldn’t stop.
Right now, however, Heena remained blissfully, dangerously unaware of the storm she was stirring.
She was far too consumed by her personal war against the suffocating heat to notice the dozens of gazes quietly locking onto her.
The icy water she had dumped over herself had soaked straight through the thin linen of her robe. The damp fabric clung shamelessly to her frame, tracing the gentle slope of her shoulders and the hollow of her collarbone, subtly revealing the slender elegance beneath her carefully maintained disguise.
Her skin, already fair, had flushed into a vivid, heat-kissed pink. Damp strands of dark hair clung to her neck. Her lips parted slightly as she exhaled in frustration, lazily fanning herself with diminishing energy.
She looked—
Intoxicating.
Like something sweet and dangerous, placed carelessly within reach.
The entire inn had gone quiet.
Conversations died mid-sentence. Chopsticks stilled. Cups hovered forgotten in the air. Men and women alike found their attention utterly captured by the sight of the flushed, disheveled "young master" struggling against the heat.
Under normal circumstances, she would have been surrounded within moments—an eager crowd forming around her, offering drinks, fans, conversation... anything for a scrap of attention.
But not a single person moved.
Not one.
Because Samuel was there.
He stood beside her, close enough to touch, carefully dabbing the lingering moisture from her neck with quiet precision. His expression remained calm, composed—almost gentle.
But the aura around him told a different story.
It was heavy. Oppressive.
Lethal.
He didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t need to. The sheer presence of him—the height, the stillness, the restrained strength in every line of his body—pressed down on the room like an invisible weight.
As his hand paused briefly at her jaw, his gaze lifted.
Slowly.
Deliberately.
His dark eyes swept across the inn.
It wasn’t a glare.
It was a verdict.
A silent, absolute promise that needed no words:
’Take one step closer... and you will not leave this place alive.’
The effect was immediate.
The room broke.
People dropped their gazes as if burned. Conversations resumed in awkward, forced murmurs. Half-eaten meals suddenly became the most important things in the world.
No one dared look again.
And yet—
Despite the blistering summer heat, a cold shiver passed through the crowd.
Because everyone understood.
The beautiful "young master" at that table...
Was already claimed.
Despite looking moments away from melting into a puddle not long ago, Heena now walked through the bustling capital market as if the heat had never existed.
Her steps were steady. Her posture, immaculate. Not a hint of discomfort showed on her face.
It was as though the sweltering sun had simply... stopped applying to her.
The System was horrified.
’[What the hell?]’ the golden lion muttered, padding alongside her. ’[You were just dying a moment ago, and now you’re strolling around like it’s a pleasant evening breeze?]’
Heena didn’t answer.
She stopped.
Abruptly.
Samuel halted the instant she did, his presence tightening as his gaze swept the crowded street. Only after confirming there was no immediate threat did he lower his eyes to her.
"What is wrong?" he asked quietly.
Heena raised a hand and pointed toward a stone pavilion in the distance. "I’m thirsty. Get me some water from there."
Samuel followed her gesture, then looked back at her. There was a flicker of hesitation—subtle, but unmistakable. Leaving her alone, even briefly, clearly did not sit well with him.
"...Fine," he said at last. "Wait here."
The moment he turned and disappeared into the crowd—
Everything changed.
The oppressive heat didn’t vanish.
But around Heena, something colder took its place.
Her expression flattened. The warmth drained from her eyes, leaving behind something sharp. Still. Dangerous.
She lowered her gaze slightly.
And looked at the lion.
’I’ve been noticing something these past few days,’ her voice echoed in its mind—calm, stripped of all playfulness. ’You’ve gotten... bold.’
The System froze mid-step.
The light along its golden frame flickered faintly.
’Rowdy,’ she continued softly. ’Disrespectful.’
A thin, invisible pressure settled over it.
’Do you want me to correct that?’
The lion’s body stuttered, its form glitching at the edges as fear spiked through its core processes.
’[I—I’m sorry, Host,]’ it rushed out, voice trembling. ’[I thought we were joking. I thought it was allowed...]’
Heena’s gaze didn’t soften.
’Casual speech is fine,’ she said. ’Informality is fine. We are partners.’
A pause.
Then her eyes sharpened.
’But don’t confuse that with equality.’
The words landed like a blade.
’Know your place.’
The lion dipped its head instantly, movements jerky and unsteady. It understood. Completely.
It had crossed a boundary.
And just as suddenly—
The pressure vanished.
The cold receded like it had never existed.
Heena smiled.
Warm. Easy. Almost lazy.
She lifted her hand and lightly patted the air where the lion’s head hovered. To anyone passing by, it looked like nothing more than an idle, absent-minded gesture.
’Good,’ she murmured. ’I’m glad we understand each other.’
The System didn’t respond.
It was still recovering.
Right then, Samuel returned.
He handed her a clay cup filled with chilled water. Heena took it without hesitation, drinking deeply. The coolness spread through her, easing the dryness in her throat.
She let out a soft, satisfied breath.
Free.
That was the first thing she noticed.
And perhaps the most surprising.
The pavilion she had pointed to wasn’t a shop, but a public water station. Large ceramic pots rested in beds of damp sand, draped with wet cloth to keep the contents cool despite the relentless heat. Anyone could approach. Anyone could drink.
No payment.
No questions.
Just water.
It was... rare.
In a world filled with greed, corruption, and quiet cruelty, this small act stood out. A handful of ordinary people choosing, for no gain at all, to make life a little more bearable for strangers passing through the sun-scorched streets.
Heena handed the empty cup back to Samuel, a faint smile touching her lips.
Not everything in this world was rotten.
And for now—
That was enough.
Heena caught a glimpse of the System from the corner of her eye.
The once-proud golden lion—who usually walked beside her with his head high and his tail swaying in quiet arrogance—was... diminished.
His head hung low. His ears were flattened. His tail dragged limply across the dusty stones.
It looked small.
The sight hit her harder than she expected.
A sharp, unwelcome pang of guilt tightened in her chest.
She wasn’t heartless.
She liked the little thing.
...but she crushed the feeling down without hesitation.
This wasn’t optional.
Right now, the System belonged to her. It could joke, it could be casual, it could even be a little insolent—and she would tolerate it.
But the future?
The future was uncertain.
Missions failed. Hosts died.
And when she died, the System would be reassigned.
The multiverse wasn’t kind.
It was filled with monsters far worse than her—paranoid tyrants, sadists, people who wouldn’t correct a mistake...
They would erase it.
Or worse.
If the System carried that same careless attitude into the hands of someone like that, it wouldn’t survive long enough to regret it.
naaapseattle