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Transmigrated into Eroge as the Simp, but I Refuse This Fate-Chapter 283: Topics (2)
"You try to wing it. Badly." ππΏπππ ππππ¨πππ.ππ π
Damien laughed, and to his credit, didnβt argue.
"And after that?"
"Math."
That made him smile again. "I figured youβd loop it back around."
"Youβre already decent. You just donβt practice."
"Well," he said, leaning his head against the seat, "I suppose thatβs fair."
Then, after a pauseβ
"Thatβs good. I donβt want to burden you too much, either."
She blinked. "What?"
"I mean, tutoring someone like me," he said, tone still light, but there was something steadier underneath it. "Not exactly in your schedule, is it?"
She didnβt respond right away.
Becauseβwellβno, it hadnβt been in her schedule. Not in her projections. Not in any version of her semester sheβd planned. It wasnβt optimal.
And yet, here they were.
"I can handle it," she said finally.
He gave her a look. Something unreadable, but not unserious.
Then leaned forward slightly, resting an elbow on his knee, eyes still on her.
"Donβt worry," he said. "Soon enough..."
A pause. Not dramatic. Just exact.
"Iβll be right behind you in rankings."
Isabelle met his eyes fully now.
"Weβll see about that," Isabelle said quietly.
It wasnβt dismissive.
It wasnβt mocking, either.
Just... even. The way someone might acknowledge the claim of a challenger who hadnβt proven anything yetβbut might.
Damien didnβt respond with words.
Just a small, satisfied breath through his nose and the flick of his gaze back toward the window.
The car began to slow.
A soft chime sounded through the cabinβsame composed tone as before.
"Arrival confirmed. You may exit here. Parking will be handled automatically."
Isabelleβs fingers shifted slightly against her bag strap. Before she could react, Elysia was already opening her door.
Efficient as ever.
Damien stepped out the other side, a quiet thud following as his door shut behind him. The moment Isabelle stepped out and her shoes hit the ground, the door closed neatly at her back, and the Selvenhardt eased itself away, turning smoothly into the autonomous lot entrance just across the street.
She adjusted the strap of her bag and looked upβ
And paused.
Her eyes widenedβjust a little.
The place Damien had brought them to...
"This place..." she murmured.
It wasβ
Well, nice.
But not in the obnoxious, gold-plated kind of way.
The building stood like it belongedβglass-paneled walls framed by dark oak inlays, minimalist signage etched in subtle matte silver: Delva Commons. Modern, but not trying too hard. The front patio had a quiet set of steps leading to a recessed entrance surrounded by clean greenery. Inside, visible through the glass, were high tables with built-in charging ports, recessed lights set in a warm honey glow, and scattered wall shelves lined with real booksβnot decoration pieces, but actual used copies, dog-eared and out of order.
The vibe wasnβt exactly academic.
It was quietly professional. Clean, structured, with just enough warmth to not feel clinical.
Though it looked... expensive.
Definitely more than what Isabelle would normally even consider.
But it wasnβt flashy. Not gaudy. The people inside were seated far apart, voices low. Some had laptops open. Others scrolled through projection pads, sipping drinks in silence.
"This isnβt a cafe," Isabelle said after a beat. "Itβs a hybrid study lounge."
Damienβalready walking ahead toward the doorsβglanced back with that usual smirk tugging at one side of his mouth.
"Yep," he said.
Isabelleβs eyes narrowed slightly as she caught up to him near the door. Damien had already scanned something on his watch, and the entry panel gave a soft blink of confirmation. The door whispered open.
She didnβt step through.
Not yet.
Instead, she looked at him. Really looked.
His posture was easyβalways wasβbut his eyes were sharp today. Focused in a way that was starting to bother her.
"How did you know about this place?"
Damien glanced at her, smile flickering again. "I just figured it out on the internet."
"..."
She didnβt say anything for a moment. Just stared at him in silence, thoughts ticking through like flipped index cards.
βSo he searched for this.β
That alone shouldnβt have surprised her. But it did.
This guy is really strange sometimes, she thought.
He didnβt even blink under her scrutiny.
"Come on," he said, nudging the door open wider. "Enter."
She stepped through. The transition from soft exterior air to the buildingβs gentle climate control was seamless. Warm wood, clean light, quiet conversations. Her eyes swept the interior once againβautomated drink bar to the right, soundproof booths along the far wall, and those glass-walled study pods near the back.
No wasted space. No unnecessary noise.
He really did pick this place with purpose.
Damien approached the concierge terminal and booked a booth for two without hesitation. A subtle blue light lit up around a pod window in the far right quadrant.
And then Isabelle noticed.
Elysia wasnβt following them in.
She stayed outside, standing just past the entryway under the shade of the side awningβstraight-backed, hands folded neatly in front of her.
"Wait," Isabelle said. "Why did she even come with us if she wasnβt going to enter?"
"She?" Damien asked, then followed her line of sight. "Ah. You mean Elysia."
"Yes," Isabelle said flatly. "Do you need your maid with you at all times?"
There was a beat.
And thenβhe chuckled.
"Class Rep," he said, "sheβs not just my maid."
Isabelle blinked. "What?"
"Sheβs also my guard."
"Guard?"
"Yep."
He leaned in a little, conspiratorial, eyes gleaming just enough to make it unclear whether he was teasing or not.
"You may not know it," he said casually, "but sheβs the strongest person here."
Isabelleβs brows furrowed. "Sheβs... an Awakened?"
Damien just smiled.
"Guess."
Isabelle let out a quiet humph, her gaze sliding toward the window where Elysia stood.
Damienβs tone had been casualβhalf-joke, half-truthβbut still...
It made sense.
She did look like someone who wasnβt just trained, but disciplined. There was no wasted motion in how she stood. No softness in the line of her shoulders. Her stillness wasnβt passiveβit was attentive. Controlled. The kind of person who didnβt just react to danger, but anticipated it.
βA person of duty,β Isabelle thought. βAnd precision.β
It clicked now. That faint, strange pressure sheβd felt back in the carβthe way Elysiaβs eyes had brushed over her like a scanner. It hadnβt just been courtesy.
It had been assessment.
And then another thought crept in.
Of course she has a guard.
She turned her head slowly toward Damienβwho had already taken his seat, leaning back against the boothβs plush interior with that same maddening calm.
She sometimes forgot.
Sometimes he made it easy to forget.
That Damien Elford wasnβt just some annoying boy in class with too much charm and too little care.
He was an Elford.
One of the oldest and most prominent names in Vermillion City. A family woven through the cityβs governance, economy, and whatever else moved quietly beneath polished surface layers. Sheβd heard the name in council addresses. In school donation plaques. On the marble wall near the libraryβs entrance, etched just above "primary patron."
And yet...
Damien didnβt act like it.
Not in the loud, look-at-me way sheβd come to expect from children of power.
But now and thenβlike todayβheβd do something so seamless, so intentional, that it reminded her exactly what kind of world heβd come from.
And exactly how far removed from hers that world really was.
She took her seat across from him, eyes still faintly narrowed.
"I suppose having a guard makes sense," she said under her breath.
Damien raised an eyebrow. "Hm?"
"Nothing."







