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How to Make the Perfect Demon Lord-Chapter 43: The Stranger In The Bar
[Gulliver Area 1, House K, Room 2]
The light shone bright inside the house, the aroma of cooking clinging thick in the air, carried far by the breeze outside. ๐ณ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐.๐ฐ๐ ๐ฆ
In the sitting room, Jamie worked out, push-ups, relentless and precise. Sweat slicked his face, rekindling memories of the forest, of the assassins whoโd once ambushed him. But this was different. He was stronger now. He had a tangible goal. His mind and soul were fixed on one thing: becoming strong enough to deliver justice to anyone who deserved it.
Theyโd finished their part of the mission. The journey had brought them to a bar, spacious, with an aquarium tucked in one corner. Not as packed as youโd expect a Midworld bar to be. It was handsome, really, more so than its surroundings, a hidden gem, underrated but full of character. Along the way, theyโd been met consistently by a few working girls.
"You wanna have fun?" one purred, voice dripping like honey laced with poison, as if a roll in the sheets might cure them of some fatal plague.
They flashed their bare, shapely legs, a well-worn trick to rouse the kraken sleeping in every man.
"Weโre good, love!" Bray would reply, his British lilt smooth as silk, charming even as he turned them down.
*Squeak.*
He pulled himself onto an empty tall barstool. Next to him sat a wiry old man, back bent like a question mark, dressed head to toe in โ90s threads, right down to the faded baseball cap perched crookedly on his head. His eyes were lost in his beer, golden beard untrimmed for weeks, wrinkles etched deep like battle scars. This bloke had seen things, lived them.
Across the table lounged a curvy woman in nothing but a black bra. Long hair, golden highlights catching the dim light, perfectly tousled for the occasion. Behind her stood four transparent tubes, each filled with a different brew, glowing faintly under the barโs ambient lights.
"Give me what heโs having!" Bray said with a grin, pointing to the large transparent cup the old man cradled like a holy relic, something that did him more good than any woman ever could.
The man jolted slightly. A stranger referencing his drink? In the slums, that wasnโt just small talk, it was code. *I see you. You seem interesting. Letโs speak.*
The bartender slid a matching cup beneath the tap, then moved to the second spout, letting the amber liquid trickle slowly into it.
"Whatโll you have?" Bray asked, glancing back at Jamie, who stood behind him like a silent sentinel.
"I donโt drink," Jamie replied flatly.
"You donโt?" Brayโs voice climbed an octave. "Blimey, youโre joking!"
"Iโm seventeen," Jamie added, as if that settled it.
The bartender handed Bray his full cup. He took it with a wink so practiced it couldโve charmed a nun out of her habit. The woman behind the bar smiled back,warm, promising, the kind of look that hinted their conversation might go somewhere... interesting.
"Youโre missing out, mate," Bray teased, then took a swig. His face twisted instantly, bitter, sour, like heโd just licked a battery.
Jamieโs ear twitched toward the aquarium on his right.
"Iโll be at the aquarium," he said, already stepping away.
"Break a leg!" Bray called after him, though his attention was already tangled in the drink and the man beside him.
Silence settled for a few beats, but not in Brayโs mind. He was waiting, calculating the perfect moment to begin the information mining heโd come here for.
"You new round here, mate?" the old man finally asked, voice rough but laced with that unmistakable British cadence, East End, maybe, or South London, worn down by years and regret.
"Yes, I am!" Bray replied, perking up. Rare to have your mark open the door for you.
"Nameโs Bray. Yours?"
"Rascal," the man croaked, then broke into a wet cough. "Ah, sorry, mate. Just got a bit of beer in your breather!"
"No worries!" Bray said easily.
The old man nodded, brushing it off, not wanting pity.
Bray scanned the nearly empty bar, then leaned in slightly. "Has it always been this empty?"
"Nah, mate," Rascal said, swirling his drink. "Most of the lads saved up their Midbucks for tickets to the Third Reckoning."
He smirked, eyes distant. "Fancy a shag? Sure. But watching noobs get carved up trying to pass the Third Game? Now thatโs proper entertainment."
The memory flickered behind his eyes, chaos, blood, screams swallowed by the roar of the crowd. Proof, if any were needed, of how Midworld twisted folk into something unrecognizable.
"Do yourself a favour, kid," he added, voice dropping, serious now. "Donโt you go signing up for any of those games."
Bray opened his mouth, maybe to argue, maybe to reassure but Rascal cut him off, sharp as a switchblade.
"Seen it all before. I came to this very bar years back, hunting for intel. Cost me my whole team." His gaze fell to the bar top. "We watched the Third Game, thought we had it figured. Didnโt know they change it every time. Made one mistake... and they died."
"They change it?" Brayโs eyes widened. "Then watching itโs useless!"
"Exactly," Rascal muttered. "Back to square one."
"Iโm sorry you had to go through that," Bray said, voice low but firm. "But no matter what, itโs ten games. And weโre finishing all of them."
Rascal looked up, surprised. There was fire in the boyโs words, not bravado, but resolve. Against all odds, this kid wasnโt backing down.
"This lad... heโs not broken. Not yet. And bugger me if I donโt feel like believing in him." He pondered.
"Iโll be rooting for you," Rascal said, a flicker of warmth returning to his voice.
"I wonโt disappoint you, sir!" Bray declared and snapped off a crisp military salute.
The old man froze. Then his eyes softened. He knew. Knew the weight behind that gesture. Knew the life it came from.
Slowly, deliberately, Rascal raised his own trembling hand in return.
"Alright, soldier," he said, voice thick with pride and memory. "Carry on."






