Chapter 26
Hiiing!
âAh!â
As if it had been waiting for the moment, the last remaining one lunged right at me.
Yellowed teeth and a long pink tongue filled my vision, and I sucked in a sharp breath.
Iâm going to get swallowed!
âGet down!â
At the shouted command, I dropped flat on the ground. The horseâs jaws snapped shut exactly where my head had been just a second earlier.
Biting down on nothing but air, the horse tried to move againâ
but in an instant, Jaeger vaulted onto its back and yanked the reins.
Twisting the horseâs head, he drew his sword and drove it straight down into the crazed animalâs skull.
Squishâ!
Blood sprayed everywhere. Moments later, the strength drained from the horseâs legs and it collapsed sideways.
Jaeger landed lightly, taking a single steadying breath.
He shook the blood off his longsword and slid it back into its sheath.
âAre you all right?â
âY-yeah⌠I think so.â
I answered blankly.
I never imagined Iâd feel relieved at the presence of Jaegerâof all peopleâthe man who hated me.
âThank you.â
ââŚâŚâ
Jaeger looked at me with an unreadable expression, then abruptly turned his head and wiped the blood splattered on his cheek with the back of his hand.
ââŚThereâs no need to thank me.â
Saying we should move, he walked ahead.
The light stone in his hand illuminated the bridge, revealing his pristine white uniform pants now stained red with blood.
I hurriedly stopped him.
âWere you bitten?â
âItâs just a scratch from the saddle.â
âAre you sure youâre okay?â
Jaegerâs brow furrowed sharply.
âI said Iâm fine, so donâtââ
That was when it happened.
From far away came the sound of weeds being crushed.
Kueeeek!
That disgusting zombie wail followed soon after.
âDamn itâŚâ
It hadnât even been long since we killed the horse, and they were already swarming in.
I glared at the zombies staggering out between the trees.
âOne, two, three, four, five, six⌠ha.â
I gave up counting and wiped the sweat from the back of my neck.
âTwo people, and this many? What is this, letâs all share one bean?â
Normally, the two of us could handle this without much troubleâ
but Jaeger was injured, the forest at dawn was shrouded in Darkness, and I was exhausted from dealing with the horse.
âDamn itâŚâ
Variables.
These damn variables were always the problem.
Crunch!
Clenching my teeth, I smashed the zombie closest to me.
Crunchâ!
Jaeger cut down a zombie that charged at him with its mouth wide open and shouted,
âThis place is dangerous. Run!â
I snorted and swung my hammer.
âHow about the injured person gets some rest?â
Jaeger strode over irritably and grabbed my arm, thrusting the backpack heâd been carrying over one shoulder into my hands.
âCanât you hear me? I donât think I can run, so at least you should escape.â
I shook his hand off and glared at him.
âSay one more word and Iâll throw you to them as bait.â
âWhat?â
Jaeger scowled fiercely, the scar on his brow twisting.
I shoved the light stone up toward his face.
Only now did I see how pale he lookedâcold sweat beading on his skin.
âYou called me a parasite before, and now youâre suddenly pretending to protect me while youâre injured?â
Jaeger stared at me, completely speechless.
âIf youâre injured, then act like it and listen to me.â
I hooked his arm over my shoulder and supported him.
âIâm not leaving you. Not alone. Ever.â
ââŚâŚâ
âHow could I leave you behind?â
For a moment, the obsidian-black pupils I met trembled violently.
This wasnât some flimsy hero complex.
It was simple logic.
If I ditch someone who already hates me and run, how am I supposed to deal with the fallout later?
On top of that, Redria was his first love.
Why should a third party like me have to bear that past?
Whether that first love was mutual or entirely his fault, I was going to save him.
Iâd save himâand make him shed those emotions right here in this zombie zone.
Even after leaving this place, I still had to live as âRedria.â
I had no intention of remaining bound by his feelings once everything was over.
With one hand, I swung my hammer; with the other, I supported Jaeger.
I expected him to refuse, but instead, looking oddly dazed, he leaned against me without protest.
Heâs ridiculously heavy. Is his body made of lead or something?
Panting, I kept swinging the hammer while holding him up.
Kwadududukâ!
Then, as if mocking all my effort, the earth roared in anger once again.
The ground surged upward like a raging tide, sweeping the zombies away as it advanced toward us.
Terrain change.
Darkness at our backs.
Geological upheaval locking arms with it.
âNoâno, thatâs not it.â
I dropped the light stone and grabbed Jaegerâs hand where it rested on my shoulder.
His rough, large hand twitched faintly.
Kraaaackâ!
Grass and dirt surged upward in massive waves.
With death looming, I squeezed my eyes shut.
And at the very moment we were swallowed by the earthâ
âŚJaeger clasped my hand back.
ââŚâŚâ
The ground spun us around like laundry in a washing machine before finally stopping.
Quite some time passed after that.
I wonder if the Crown Prince and Sien are holding up okay.
But we had no room to worry about themâour own situation was dire enough.
To put it simply, we were trapped in a tunnel.
Weâd barely avoided suffocating by wedging my hammer between the collapsing earth before it folded in on us like paper.
Kueeeeek!
The zombies, however, were unavoidable.
It was pitch-black, impossible to see clearly, but they crowded like wild dogs, forcing their hands and heads into the narrow gaps. Dirt rained down over us.
Thankfully, as long as the terrain deformation held, the earth was supposedly hard as stoneâso at least it wouldnât collapse further.
I shook my head, brushing soil from my hair.
Itâs a relief the tunnelâs stable, butâŚ
The position Jaeger and I were stuck in was extremely awkward.
Both my arms were pressed against some solid, hot part of Jaeger, while my feet braced against the wall.
And my hips were sitting on some part of his body.
I groaned and shut my eyes.
This is bad.
The discomfort was one thing, but my hair was caught on somethingâso painful it made my eyes water.
If I relaxed my legs, my weight shifted onto Jaeger.
If I pushed up, my upper body lifted and my scalp felt like it would tear.
First, I need to find the light stone.
When we were tossed around earlier, the depleted light stone had smacked into my head several timesâit had to be somewhere in the tunnel.
As I groped around, Jaeger swallowed a groan beneath his jaw.
He grabbed my arm irritably.
âWhat are you doing?â
âIâm looking for the light stone.â
Avoiding his hand, I felt along the damp earthen wall again.
It has to be somewhere down here.
Thenâ
beneath Jaegerâs clothes, I felt something hard, tense, and unmistakably there.
Jaeger jerked his lower body back and growled,
âWhere do you think youâre touching?â
Startled, I yanked my hand away.
âŚWhat did I touch?
I didnât knowâand I definitely didnât want to know.
Meanwhile, my scalp still felt like it was being ripped apart.
ââŚActually, my hairâs caught and it really hurtsââ
âDonât lift your head.â
âThis position is kind ofââ
âDonât move.â
What is this, the army? Am I a recruit and youâre my drill instructor?
I was in pain and overly sensitive, almost snapping backâ
âbut I didnât even have the energy to argue.
âŚI kind of understand why heâs reacting like this.
This situation was awkward for both of us.
Then Jaeger reached toward his chest, feeling around for my hair.
Suddenly, my scalp was yanked hard.
âOw!â
âItâs caught on a button. Bear with it.â
He tried to free it with one hand, but when that didnât work, he brought his other hand over.
The position made it seem as though he was holding me. His heat seeped through the thin fabric between us.
This feels⌠strange.
Being trapped in a narrow tunnel, pressed against a man Iâd been fighting with until recently.
Kueeeek!
âŚOf course, that man hates me, and zombies are swarming right above our heads.
Just as I was resignedly accepting the fate of an apocalypse romance fantasyâ
Jaeger pulled his hand away.
âAll done.â
Carefully, I lifted my head.
The pain that had felt like my scalp was tearing was gone.
âThank you, Duke.â
I cautiously braced myself against the wall and slid down to the ground.
Seeing Jaeger exhale and finally adjust himself more comfortably, he mustâve been just as uncomfortable.
âOhâright. Your leg. Is it okay?â
The silence felt awkward, and as I searched for something to say, his injury came back to mind.
Luckily, Jaeger still had the backpack containing food and relief supplies.
I pulled a soundproof sticker from my pouch and stuck it onto the wall.
A transparent membrane inflated like a balloon, enclosing us. The kueeeek of the zombies was cut off.
(It was a one-time item lasting 24 hours, so I hadnât used it in places like huts where some soundproofing already existed.)
I reached my hand out toward Jaeger.

