I'm the Villain, But the Heroines Keep Choosing Me-Chapter 72: Someone That Understands

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Chapter 72: Someone That Understands

"I’m telling you that if you become my anchor out of obligation or manipulation, it won’t work. The bond requires genuine emotional connection. So yes – leave. Think. Decide what you actually feel versus what I’ve positioned you to feel. Come back only if you want to, not because you think I need you to."

She stood, feeling lost in ways that had nothing to do with tactical uncertainty.

"This is – you’re impossible to figure out. Are you manipulative or honest? Using me or respecting me? I can’t tell."

"Both. I’m both. All of it simultaneously." He stood as well. "I’m a manipulative person trying to be honest with you about my manipulation. A user trying to respect your agency while admitting I need you. Someone fighting corruption while asking you to help carry that darkness. I’m contradictory and complicated and probably not worth the effort."

"Then why am I considering it?" Her voice was almost a whisper.

"Because you’re trapped too. Just like me"

He paused before continuing.

"By duty, by need to prove yourself, by isolation that comes from competence. And maybe – maybe – you see in me someone who understands those traps. Who might help you escape them while you help me stay human." He moved closer but didn’t touch. "Or maybe I’m just very good at making manipulation look like understanding. You’ll have to decide which."

[SERIA: MAXIMUM INTERNAL CONFLICT]

She left without another word, her mind churning with contradictions.

---

The next week was professional hell.

Aldric requested transfer to eastern border patrol – as far from the capital as possible while remaining in active service. His departure was quiet, bitter, a friendship ended without resolution.

The guard restructuring continued, with Seria working eighteen-hour days to rebuild institutional trust. She was good at it – excellent, even – but the isolation was crushing.

She’d lost Aldric. She was avoiding Damien. Her professional relationships were tainted by the corruption scandal. And at night, alone in her apartment, she replayed their last conversation endlessly.

I need a second anchor. Someone who helps keep me human.

Was that truth? Or manipulation?

The connection we’ve built is genuine. I didn’t manufacture your competence or intelligence.

True? Or exactly what a skilled manipulator would say?

Take time away from me. Decide what you actually feel.

Respect for her agency? Or reverse psychology banking on her returning?

She couldn’t tell. Every analysis circled back to the same problem: Damien was too intelligent for her to assess his honesty objectively. Either he was genuinely conflicted and trying to be honest about his needs, or he was masterfully making manipulation look like honesty.

On day eight, a demon attack in the merchant district required her response.

The demons were organized – the remnants of Marcus’s network, operating without leadership but still dangerous. Seria led the response, and her guards performed well, but there were casualties. Three soldiers died protecting civilians.

She’d made the tactical calls. The soldiers had followed orders. People lived because of those deaths.

But she felt the weight of command in ways she never had before.

That night, she found herself standing outside the Valcrest estate, not sure how she’d gotten there or why.

Margaret opened the door before she could knock.

"He’s in the study. Working late as usual. You know the way."

Seria climbed the familiar stairs, knocked on the familiar door.

"Enter."

Damien looked up from tactical maps, saw her expression, and immediately stood. "What happened?"

"Demon attack. Three casualties." Her voice was flat. "I made the calls. Soldiers died following my orders."

[SERIA: SEEKING COMFORT]

[INSTINCTIVE CHOICE REVEALING EMOTIONAL TRUTH]

"How many civilians saved?"

"Forty-three. Confirmed count."

"Then you made the right calls. Terrible calls, but right ones." He moved around the desk. "Does that make it easier?"

"No. It makes it necessary, which is different." She realized tears were sliding down her face. "I came here. I don’t know why. I should have gone home, or to headquarters, or – but I came here."

"Because you know I understand." He didn’t touch her, just stood close. "Because I’ve made those calls. Spent lives to save more lives. Carried the weight of necessary decisions. You don’t have to explain that burden to me."

"Is this part of it?" She gestured between them. "The anchor thing? Me instinctively coming to you when I’m breaking?"

"I don’t know. Maybe. Or maybe you just know I won’t judge you for making hard calls. That I understand command means carrying deaths." He paused. "Does it matter which it is if the support is real?"

She didn’t have an answer.

He guided her to sit, poured wine, let her process in silence.

After a while, she spoke. "I haven’t decided. About the anchor thing. About what I feel versus what you’ve positioned me to feel."

"I know."

"But I keep coming back here. To you. When things get hard, you’re who I think of. And I don’t know if that’s because you’ve manipulated me into emotional dependence or because you’re genuinely the person who understands."

"Both, probably. Some manufactured, some genuine, all tangled together until neither of us can separate them." He met her eyes. "Does that make it less valuable?"

"I don’t know." She took a shaky breath. "But I do know that sitting here, with you, feels more right than anything has in weeks. And I hate that. Because it means you’ve won somehow."

"Or it means you’ve found someone who sees you completely and doesn’t require you to be perfect." He smiled slightly. "That’s not winning. Just connection."

[SERIA: RECOGNIZING HER OWN NEED FOR CONNECTION]

[SLOW CORRUPTION: CONTINUING DESPITE RESISTANCE]

She stayed for two hours. Talking about the demon attack, the guard restructuring, the weight of command. He listened, offered perspective, understood in ways no one else could.

When she finally left, she felt simultaneously better and more confused.

Because Damien was right – sitting with him, being understood, did feel right.

Which meant either she’d found genuine connection, or he’d successfully manipulated her into believing manufactured connection was genuine.

And she still couldn’t tell which.

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