NOVEL The Villian Who Broke The Story Chapter 38: Talk With Charlotte

The Villian Who Broke The Story

Chapter 38: Talk With Charlotte
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Chapter 38: Chapter 38: Talk With Charlotte

The cave had finally gone quiet.

Not completely silent — dungeons were never truly silent. There was always the distant drip of water against stone, the faint hum of mana running through the walls like blood through veins, the occasional crack of shifting rock somewhere deeper underground. But compared to the chaos from earlier, the stillness felt unnatural.

Bodies of dead wolves littered the ground around the cave entrance.

Some had been cut apart so cleanly it looked almost surgical. Others had collapsed mid-charge, their momentum carrying them several meters before death finally caught up. Blood soaked the stone floor in dark streaks, mixing with fragments of broken claws and shattered mana crystals.

Kael sat against the cave wall, breathing slowly.

His body hurt.

The wound across his chest had partially closed already thanks to {Infinite Adaptation}, but every movement still sent sharp pain through his ribs. His arms felt unbearably heavy after the constant strain of fighting while wearing training weights. Mana exhaustion pulsed through him in waves, making even maintaining consciousness slightly difficult.

Still, compared to how things used to be, this was manageable.

The old Kael would have died several times over by now.

Charlotte sat a short distance away from him, quietly holding the mana core she had absorbed from the werewolf boss. The residual energy surrounding her body hadn’t fully settled yet. Faint traces of mana still moved around her skin in unstable currents.

Kael glanced at her.

In the game, Charlotte had always been one of the stranger characters.

Not because she was particularly evil.

Not because she was especially cruel.

But because she was empty in a way that made her dangerous.

She chased strength with obsessive desperation, enough that she eventually allowed herself to be manipulated by forces that should have terrified her. Demons. Experiments. Forbidden contracts. Anything that could make her stronger even slightly.

At the time, players mostly dismissed it as poor writing.

Now that he was here, Kael knew better.

There was always a reason people became monsters.

"Charlotte," Kael called quietly.

She immediately looked up.

"Yes?"

Kael rested his head back against the wall for a moment before speaking.

"Could you tell me something?" he asked. "Why are you obsessed with getting stronger?"

Charlotte froze slightly.

The expression on her face shifted almost immediately.

Not anger.

Something closer to uncertainty.

For several seconds, she didn’t answer.

Kael didn’t push.

The torchlight flickered softly across the cave walls while distant dungeon noises echoed through the darkness around them. freēwēbηovel.c૦m

Finally, Charlotte lowered her eyes.

"...Because my younger brother told me to."

Kael stared at her quietly.

"What do you mean?" he asked.

Charlotte fidgeted slightly with her sleeves before speaking again.

"You already know I’m a commoner," she said softly. "I grew up in an orphanage outside the capital. It wasn’t anything special. Just a small place near one of the rural trade routes."

Her voice was calm, but Kael noticed the way her fingers tightened unconsciously.

"We were poor," she continued. "Most days we barely had enough food, but... we were still happy."

A faint smile appeared on her face.

"At least I thought we were."

Kael remained silent, listening.

"My younger brother was different from the other children," Charlotte said. "Even when we were little, he always acted like he understood things the rest of us didn’t."

She looked down toward the floor.

"He used to say strange things sometimes. Things like..." her voice weakened slightly, "’nothing good lasts forever.’"

Kael’s expression remained unchanged.

But internally, he understood immediately.

Children raised in unstable environments matured quickly.

Charlotte took a slow breath before continuing.

"One night, bandits attacked the orphanage."

The atmosphere around them changed instantly.

Even the dungeon suddenly felt colder.

Charlotte’s hands trembled slightly now.

"The government barely protects rural territories," she said quietly. "Small villages disappear all the time. Orphanages even more."

Kael already knew that.

This world looked civilized on the surface, but outside the major cities, survival depended almost entirely on strength.

"We woke up to screams," Charlotte continued. "The adults tried to protect us, but they died first."

Her voice had become frighteningly steady now.

Like someone repeating memories too painful to properly feel anymore.

"My brother grabbed my hand and dragged me away before the bandits reached our room. He took me to a storage space beneath the orphanage."

Charlotte swallowed slightly.

"He told me to stay there no matter what happened."

Kael already knew what came next.

"He said he was going to hide somewhere else."

A bitter smile appeared on her face.

"But he was lying."

Silence.

Charlotte hugged her knees slightly closer.

"I knew he was lying," she whispered. "I knew he wasn’t coming back."

Kael closed his eyes briefly.

"But I was too scared to stop him."

The dungeon felt unbearably quiet now.

Charlotte stared blankly ahead while speaking.

"I stayed hidden until morning."

Her voice cracked slightly for the first time.

"When I came out..."

She stopped talking.

Kael didn’t interrupt.

"...Bodies were everywhere."

The words came out hollow.

"Children. Caretakers. Everyone."

Charlotte’s eyes had turned red from holding back tears.

"Some of them were barely ten years old."

Kael remained still.

"I searched for my brother," she whispered.

Her breathing shook slightly now.

"And eventually..."

Charlotte looked away.

"I found him."

Kael said nothing.

Charlotte forced herself to continue.

"He was still alive when I got there."

That surprised Kael slightly.

"But barely."

Tears finally rolled down her face.

"He smiled when he saw me."

Charlotte laughed weakly through tears.

"He actually smiled."

Her voice trembled violently now.

"And then he told me..."

She clenched her fists tightly.

"’No matter what happens... get stronger.’"

Silence filled the cave again.

"’Protect yourself.’"

Charlotte wiped her face quickly, frustrated with herself for crying.

"I couldn’t save him."

Kael stared at her quietly. ƒree𝑤ebnσvel.com

"And after that," she continued weakly, "I realized something."

Her eyes slowly hardened.

"No one protects weak people."

The words carried absolute certainty.

"Humans don’t."

"Governments don’t."

"Nobles don’t."

Charlotte looked directly at Kael now.

"So if I want to survive..." she whispered, "I need strength no matter what it costs."

Kael understood immediately.

That was why she could eventually betray humanity in the original story.

Because humanity had already failed her first.

To Charlotte, demons and humans weren’t fundamentally different.

Both sides killed.

Both sides abandoned the weak.

The only meaningful difference was power.

Kael sighed softly.

The game never explained any of this.

To players, Charlotte had simply been another unstable side character corrupted by ambition.

But reality was always more complicated than simplified narratives.

Kael slowly raised a hand and placed it lightly on her shoulder.

Charlotte froze slightly.

"Don’t worry," Kael said calmly.

She looked at him quietly.

"I’ll help you get stronger."

Charlotte stared at him in disbelief for a moment.

"...Why?" she asked softly.

Kael leaned his head back against the wall.

"Because strength by itself isn’t evil," he replied. "What’s dangerous is desperation."

Charlotte remained silent.

Kael glanced toward the cave entrance.

"And because if someone like you falls into the wrong hands..." he muttered, "the future becomes extremely annoying for me."

Charlotte blinked in confusion.

"What?"

"Nothing."

Kael slowly pushed himself to his feet.

Pain shot through his body immediately.

"...Tch."

Charlotte quickly stood as well.

"You’re still injured," she said worriedly.

"I’m fine."

He absolutely was not fine.

But compared to the demon attack in Velcrest City, this barely registered anymore.

Kael stretched his arm slightly before walking deeper into the cave toward the dungeon core.

The massive crystal pulsed slowly with unstable mana.

Now that the boss was dead, the dungeon itself had become significantly calmer.

Charlotte followed behind him quietly.

"...Shouldn’t we leave now?" she asked carefully.

Kael shook his head immediately.

"Not yet."

Charlotte tilted her head slightly.

"Why?"

Kael stared at the wounds on his arms.

"{Infinite Adaptation} works best under strain," he explained. "If the academy healers fix everything immediately, I’ll lose valuable enhancement progress."

Charlotte stared at him like he was insane.

"...You’re intentionally staying injured?"

Kael glanced at her.

"Growth requires stress."

"That’s not normal."

"Neither am I."

Charlotte honestly couldn’t argue with that anymore.

Kael approached the dungeon core slowly.

He checked his current status window internally.

Most of his stats had risen slightly during the fight.

Strength: D+

Agility: D+

Mana Capacity: D+

Durability: D+

Still not enough.

Kael clicked his tongue softly.

Breaking through ranks was becoming increasingly difficult.

Even with cheat-level abilities like {Infinite Adaptation}, progress wasn’t instantaneous.

Which meant the real monsters in this world were even more terrifying than he originally thought.

Especially the higher-ranked individuals.

Especially the people connected to the future war.

Kael frowned slightly.

Charlotte looked at him curiously.

"What is it?"

"Nothing."

Kael placed his hand against the dungeon core.

The crystal immediately reacted.

Mana surged violently through the cave as cracks spread across the massive structure.

The dungeon had officially been cleared.

The cave began collapsing almost instantly.

Charlotte panicked slightly.

"Wait—"

A bright light swallowed both of them before she could finish speaking.

The next moment—

They vanished from the dungeon completely.

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