Transmigrated into Eroge as the Simp, but I Refuse This Fate - Chapter 326
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- Chapter 326 - Chapter 326: Clicked
Chapter 326: Clicked
The smirk didn’t fade.
It hardened.
Because now he understood.
Not just the attack. Not just the silhouette.
Everything.
From the very start—when he was dropped into this cradle of madness, when the world around him bled illusion and shape, when breath came like knives and his thoughts fractured into survival—this had always been the point.
Every single moment had been shaped like a blade, honed to slice him open until only instinct remained.
That colossus that shattered the sky?
The invisible predators that moved like whispers across his spine?
They weren’t random.
They weren’t challenges.
They were pressure.
Designed to force him to the edge—not just physically, but deeper.
Mentally. Spiritually. Existentially.
He remembered now.
That exact second—when his body gave out, when his mind began to slip into some screaming, directionless dark—
That’s when something clicked.
Not by choice.
By necessity.
The moment of collapse had birthed his awakening.
He hadn’t studied mana breathing. Hadn’t meditated. Hadn’t followed rituals or scrolls or charts.
He survived into it.
Because in that moment of near-death, his body had decided it didn’t want to die.
It had learned to breathe mana.
To feed on it.
And the moment he had done that—
He’d started seeing them.
The monsters.
Not just their shapes—but their intent. Their rhythm. Their truths.
He then killed all of those monsters.
Yet, the Cradle didn’t stop.
And still—they didn’t stop.
He’d been hunted. Again. Pushed. Again. This time by the nature itself, not because a monster was hunting him.
Until the mana he’d taken in burned through his limbs and forced him to run. To move with purpose. To channel. To weaponize the very energy that had nearly torn him apart.
And still—that wasn’t the end.
Because when the world stripped him of mana again—when silence filled the air and the pool of power dried—
What did he do?
He learned to draw it in. To feed.
And when that threatened to drown him, when it coiled inside with no shape or exit—
He created structure.
Circulation.
Control.
None of this had been taught.
It had been extracted.
Each breakthrough had come not through guidance—but through the crush of extremity.
The forging of survival.
And now…
Now that the nest inside him had begun to take shape—
Now that the circuit had formed, and the storm was stabilizing—
That’s when the silhouette came.
Not before.
Now.
‘It’s not just trying to kill me,’ Damien realized, the thought ringing like steel across his skull. ‘It’s trying to stop what’s happening inside me. This wasn’t supposed to succeed.’
This wasn’t supposed to succeed.
That was the key.
The phrase hung in Damien’s mind like a lock clicking open.
Because suddenly—everything fit.
The colossus. The predators. The storms. The endless, silent dread of the Cradle.
And the bath.
The Sanguis Bath—that beautiful, ritualistic trap. The System had called it a high-tier alchemical catalyst, but that hadn’t been the real danger.
It was the infection.
The passive psycho-reactive agent. Subtle. Almost undetectable. Aligned to memory. Influence. Emotional drift.
At the time, he’d thought it was just someone trying to implant suggestions. Maybe a political ploy. Some Authority’s leftover imprint to shift loyalties.
But now?
Now he understood what it was for.
It wasn’t designed to control him.
It was designed to break him.
A fuse, laid long before the fire ever reached him.
‘Goddamn clever,’ Damien thought, eyes narrowing. ‘And completely fucking malicious.’
Because everything the Cradle had done—everything—was built to push the mind past its limit. Body, soul, mana—sure, those were tested too. But they were tools. Vessels.
The mind was the foundation.
And if that cracked?
If someone’s sanity faltered even for a second—
They were gone.
Permanently.
He could see it now. Not just in hindsight—but in design.
Most who entered this place probably never even awakened.
They died screaming.
They died because something inside them—some deep root of fear or identity—snapped.
And with that mental infection from the bath, what chance did they ever have?
‘The infection wasn’t just there to influence me,’ Damien thought, a chill threading through his gut. ‘It was to prime me. To weaken my mental structure. To make sure that when the Cradle began to squeeze—I’d crack wide open.’
And if he had?
If he’d lost focus at the wrong moment—if he’d hesitated, or doubted, or fractured—
He would’ve died.
Just like the rest.
And the Cradle?
It would’ve stayed quiet.
No anomaly. No system notification. No ripple.
Just another failed ascendant.
Another corpse buried in silence.
Because the infection wasn’t a direct killer.
It was preventative.
A lock.
A safeguard installed in the minds of potential threats before they even entered the gate.
A way to ensure no one made it through.
‘Which means…’
Damien’s breath slowed.
His eyes flicked to the battling silhouettes before him—the guardian and the invader locked in a war of claws and corrupted mana—but his mind was miles deeper.
‘Whoever set the bath up didn’t just want me softened. They wanted everyone dead. They just needed a method to guarantee it looked like failure… not sabotage.’
He clenched his fists slowly, the storm inside his core stabilizing into rhythm again.
‘If you know the Cradle breaks people… then all you have to do is plant something in their minds that guarantees they can’t bend—they shatter.’
And suddenly—
It wasn’t just sabotage.
It was prevention.
Because if no one could survive the Cradle—
Then no one could awaken like this.
No one could bypass the old channels. No one could emerge changed.
The Cradle wasn’t just a test.
It was a threat to whatever system ran the world above.
And Damien?
He was succeeding.
Despite it all.
And that’s why this thing came now.
This wasn’t random.
This was containment.
An emergency failsafe—triggered when the infection failed, when the mental collapse didn’t happen, when the candidate survived anyway.
Damien’s smirk returned, dry and razor-sharp.
“They sent a reset button,” he muttered, voice low. “And I’m the bug that didn’t crash.”
He stood fully now, spine rising with purpose, every line of his body coiled around the storm stabilizing in his core.
And he stared down that invading silhouette.
“I see you now,” Damien said quietly. “I see all of it.”
The threads of power spiraled tighter inside him.
Not just survival anymore.
This was war.
And he’d already broken the rules just by existing.
He loved this.
Every second of it.
The madness. The trap. The elegant malice of it all.
It was so perfectly tailored—so thoroughly stacked against him—that it almost made him laugh.
Of course they had tried to break him.
Of course they planted a mental infection.
Of course the Cradle had been tuned like a guillotine’s edge, silent and swift and impersonal.
And now—when all of it had failed?
They sent a monster to finish the job.
A corrupted, spitting silhouette armed with claws of fire and hatred—like a line of code written just to delete him.
It was beautiful.
And it was too late.
Because he wasn’t crumbling.
He wasn’t collapsing.
He was becoming.
The pressure inside his chest rolled again, not wildly this time—but like a living pulse. Each breath brought more clarity, each heartbeat a deeper echo of that core forming at his center. The storm wasn’t just stable now.
It was his.
He watched the guardian lunge again, tearing at the invader’s twisted limbs, the sky above the pool fracturing with soundless cracks of raw energy.
And Damien?
He stepped forward.
Not recklessly. Not arrogantly.
But inevitably.
That same dry smirk curled at the corner of his mouth. Subtle. Knowing. Unshaken.
The silhouette turned, even mid-fight, as if sensing the shift in the air. Its gaze pierced across the battlefield toward Damien once more—burning, screaming, demanding.
But Damien didn’t flinch.
Didn’t blink.
He looked it in the eye—the thing born of code and terror and last-ditch control—and said, calm and clear:
“I will come for you all.”