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AliNovel > Bow Craft - Ex-Assassin in a World of Hobbies > Chapter 13: Advice to a Straw Man

Chapter 13: Advice to a Straw Man

    <b>


    Chapter 13: Advice to a Straw Man


    </b>


    Amacus folded her wings behind herself. She walked down the steps,


    each dull thud somehow telling Craft he was in trouble — even though


    he’d done nothing of the sort.


    He snapped out of it and stood up to greet her, but he paused. How


    should he approach her? They knew each other, but they were


    acquaintances, not friends. On the one hand, he had the impression she


    was a business-like person, so it might be a safe bet to act along those lines.


    He extended his hand. “Amacus,” he greeted.


    “Mr. Bowen,” she greeted back. She continued walking, however, not


    extending her hand — and her shoulder went right through his. He stepped


    aside, dodging on instinct the moment the temperature fluctuated, but


    there hadn’t been any force. It was just like the passing sweep of an


    air conditioner. “I’m only here with a spiritual body today,” she


    said.


    Something like an astral projection? Craft thought. Even if


    the mechanism might be different, he was familiar with it. “I’m a little


    surprised.” His jaw hung loosely, but he shook his head. Her visit had


    been too sudden. “What gives?”


    “I had only wanted to see how you were doing, Mr. Bowen.” She fixed


    her gaze on Nightshade, then looked back at him, a halo-like shine in


    her eyes appraising him. “But it seems you’ve been doing more thinking


    than doing.” She tilted her head towards Nightshade, and only then did


    Craft realize she was still passed out on the floor.


    He jogged over to her side, checking her pulse. It was only in the


    middle of doing it that he realized it was unnecessary; true death here


    was hard to come by. Regardless, he did it for his own peace of


    mind.


    He held her wrist and felt her neck, feeling rhythmic bumps against


    his fingertips. “Well, she’s alive.”


    “Of course she is,” Amacus said. “If she weren’t, she’d have


    respawned by now.”


    He pulled away. “It’s still weird how that works.”


    “And strange that you haven’t befriended her yet.”


    Craft looked up at Amacus, furrowing his brows. A part of him knew


    what she was talking about, but the other part required confirmation. He


    rarely acted without it.


    “You’re making it sound like I haven’t.”


    “Because you haven’t.” She held his gaze on him, piercing right


    through him. The swiftness and directness with which she’d answered was


    enough for him to fill in the rest of the blanks, intuiting that she


    wanted to move the conversation in a particular direction, but that


    needed to wait. Nightshade was still on the floor, and he’d feel bad for


    her neck once she’d woken up — that, and he wasn’t ready.


    He carefully scooped her up. “She said something about a guest room a


    while ago. Let’s get her settled in first.”


    Amacus said nothing. He took that as a go-ahead and took his first


    steps out of the room. Nightshade was lighter than he’d expected, but


    holding her like this and with Amacus’ words hanging at the back of his


    mind, he began to wonder why he wanted the “perfect distance” between


    himself and Nightshade in the first place.


    It was a reason he recalled easily: he just wasn’t ready. It wasn’t


    as if he intended to divorce himself from the possibility of any


    friendship. Rather, wasn’t taking things one step at a time the obvious


    and sane thing to do?


    He came out to a long hallway, at the end of which was an arch-shaped


    exit. He could see grasses and branches swaying with the wind and set


    aglow by the sun of the outside world, but that wasn’t where he wanted


    to go for now.


    Stopping by a door halfway down, he bumped into it with his back,


    proving it was shut closed. With his hands preoccupied, he considered


    kicking it open, but the building manager in his hands wouldn’t


    appreciate day-one damage to public property.


    Just like in a horror movie, the doorknob turned on its own, and the


    door swung open. It gave him visions of near-death, and he took a quick


    step back, expecting an axe to come out swinging.


    “I can still open doors for you,” Amacus said. Craft spun around to


    find her putting her hand down, a small cloud of magic around it


    dissipating into the air. She gestured towards the door. “Walking


    through them, however, is your prerogative.”


    He took a moment to calm down. “Right. Appreciate it,” he said, and


    he carried Nightshade inside.


    He set her on a bed beneath a window, kneeling down to pull a blanket


    over her. They were in a simple but generous room with the bed in the


    corner, a wardrobe set against the foot of the bed, and a circular


    dining table for four offset from the middle. There was an odd amount of


    extra space, probably for another bed that’s been tucked away in


    storage.


    “I’m surprised,” Amacus said. He turned around to find her leaning on


    the wall beside the door, arms crossed.


    He furrowed his brows and got on his feet. “What’s surprising?”


    “You treat her so carefully. Don’t you actually have a favorable view


    of her?”


    “Well, I don’t hate her.”


    “So you do?”


    “That’s” —


    “Be definitive, Mr. Bowen, or you won’t know how to act around her in


    the future.”


    He furrowed his brows. She was being unexpectedly pushy. Just what


    was she doing?


    “Oh?” She raised an eyebrow. “Is it possible that you’re aiming for


    the ‘perfect distance’ ?”


    His brows shot up. It was like she’d pulled the words straight out of


    his brain.


    Even so, what about it? He had a fresh start, and no one here knew


    about his past. Until the day he found someone he could trust with his


    full story, wasn’t it reasonable to feel out his next step before taking


    it?


    “I’m just taking things slowly,” he replied. “Maybe one day she’ll


    show up to my barbecues, but for now, I’m just confused as hell” —


    “And I’m telling you now, that is a mistake.” She pointed at


    him, lining up her eye, a knuckle, her fingernail — putting Craft at the


    end of it. “Are you afraid of proving that no one can understand you,


    Mr. Bowen? Have you come to believe that you are somehow special and set


    apart from everyone else?”


    If you stumble upon this narrative on Amazon, it''s taken without the author''s consent. Report it.


    The finger she used to point at him, she brought closer — and pointed


    to herself. “The proof isn’t far. Thinking yourself out of confusion is


    a trap.”


    ‘Don’t think; just do’ — was it? It wasn’t the first time


    he’d heard this kind of thing. It was generally good advice, but he


    wasn’t the type to just take it. “Don’t think; just do” only really


    worked for people whose knowledge exceeded their practice. He wasn’t


    such a person. He knew approximations, but not the things themselves,


    making him a person who knew nearly nothing.


    Because this was the first time he’d ever encountered such thoughts,


    he had to think about it first, or else every inevitable


    mistake he’d make would have consequences he wouldn’t be able to


    comprehend.


    A mistake he couldn’t learn from was a mistake best left avoided.


    He opened his mouth to reply, but what came out was a pained groan. A


    twisting knot of hurt had shot through his brain, and he clutched the


    side of his head. How many times has it been today?


    Amacus’ expression loosened. “Are you alright?”


    The headache subsided. “No, I’m okay.” He shook his head. “I’m


    okay.”


    “How many times?”


    He looked at her. “What?”


    “How many times have you had that headache?”


    “I” — he shook his head — “this is the second time, I think?”


    Amacus cupped her mouth, looking at the ground for a moment, then


    back at him again, lowering her hand. “Have you had any


    hallucinations?”


    Hallucinations? His encounter with the impostor came to


    mind, but was that really a hallucination?


    “I’ll take that silence as a yes,” Amacus continued.


    He shook his head. “There was something. It felt so real, though. I’m


    sure it was real.”


    “Post-summons hallucinations are very common, Mr. Bowen, and they all


    say the same things. If you don’t believe me, then answer this: did it


    have anything to do with your insecurities? Anything to do with how you


    would fit in this world?”


    “That’s… That’s right.” He nodded. Had it all just been his fears


    taking hold of him, after all? No, that can’t be. When it came


    to illusions, he had been subjected to lifetimes of them. It was always


    difficult to tell, certainly, but a better-than-a-coinflip chance of


    distinguishing between illusions and reality was something no one else


    had accomplished, and to be capable of that in the first place, he had


    to trust himself more than he trusted anything he heard or saw — more


    than he would even an ally.


    Amacus lazily extended an open hand. “Give me your hand,” she said,


    curling her fingers to beckon him.


    He looked at her hand, then at her. “What for?”


    “Three days. If the hallucinations don’t stop after three days,


    contact me, and I’ll do something about it. I’m giving you a channel to


    do so.”


    He approached her. As soon as he was close, Amacus took his arm and


    took out a stamp, pressing it against the back of his hand. It left a


    simple pentagram in purple ink.


    “I think I just instantly got transported back to grade school,” he


    muttered.


    “Touch this star and say my name. Use it like the ‘phones’ of your


    former world.”


    Making light of a bad situation was also a survival tactic. He


    chuckled. “I’m glad user experience is designed into the magic


    here.”


    He’d chuckled, but Amacus didn’t. Her expression turned somber. “I


    had only wanted to check on you, Mr. Bowen, but the moment I saw you


    pick up that child, I witnessed the moment a soldier chose to be a


    warrior.” She chuckled to herself. “Seeing ghosts of yourself from a


    long time ago — you know how that feels, don’t you?”


    He couldn’t say he did. He’d only watched his life play on a silver


    screen once, but that was nothing like what she’d described. And he and


    she being the same once upon a time? Well…wasn’t that just silly?


    She glanced over his shoulder. “You are still a burdened man,


    Mr. Bowen, and it is frankly impossible for you to work through it


    alone. Although that child isn’t a sage of wisdom, among everyone in


    this town, she is the most willing to open up to anyone about anything,


    and she will not take offense to your history, believe it or not — and


    you know I know your history.”


    Her gaze flittered to him. “Go your own way as much as you like. Make


    your own mistakes and discoveries; just like the ghost, I’m certain


    you’ll learn the ropes the end of it. Befriend that girl, however, and


    you won’t have to head down that ghost’s millenium-old path.”


    She had it hard too, huh? But it’s exactly because of that


    that he found her words hard to believe. She may have been experienced


    and wise in the ways of problem-solving, but she had overlooked one


    crucial point: they weren’t the same people, and they weren’t facing


    the same problems.


    He looked over his shoulder, half to look away from Amacus’ judgment,


    and half to see if Nightshade was okay. He found nothing wrong about the


    witch, but if he turned his inquiries inwards, he found everything wrong


    about himself.


    He believed relationships should be equal, yet he had nothing to


    offer Nightshade; the only end he could see was one where only he reaped


    any benefits. Certainly, he hated nothing about her. In fact, a future


    where he confided in her seemed almost magical, like a pot of gold at


    the end of a rainbow. Life, however, had taught him that looking for the


    ends of rainbows was a fool’s errand: rainbows were infinite, and by


    thinking he’d find happiness at the end of one, he would doom himself to


    working hard for no good end — even getting himself killed.


    This wasn’t just about himself, but also about someone else.


    “I’ll be happy once I befriend her” ? He knew that to be wrong.


    Depending on someone else for his own happiness didn’t sit right with


    him. Burdening other people with a load that he couldn’t even begin to


    weigh…was wrong.


    That was why, he thought, a superficial relationship would be enough;


    working slowly would be enough; a low-stakes, small-talk-only


    acquaintanceship would be enough.


    But one-sidedly closing doors was also wrong, which was why until the


    day he figured it all out, it should be enough for everyone around him


    to know that he didn’t hate them at all.


    …Save for this angel, but hate was too strong of a word.


    Displeasure, annoyance, off-putness — whatever it was — he didn’t


    appreciate how she thought she knew him, and if this went on, she’d just


    keep doing this. He had to draw a line.


    “You said I should be definitive.” He faced Amacus again. “Yeah, I’ve


    got my definition. What you’re asking me to do” — he frowned and shook


    his head. “You don’t even know me that well. Only Enty’s taken a peek in


    this thing” — he poked the side of his head — “so it bothers me you’re


    so confident in saying the lady behind me’s ought to be my first good


    step. Deciding what’s best for me isn’t something you can just do with a


    few glances. Draw your cards and prophesize the weather all you want,


    but if you aren’t looking at me, then it’s not me you’re giving advice


    to. You and I both know that.


    “I don’t even know myself that well yet, and you’re telling me to


    tell her about myself. ‘One plus one equals three’ just isn’t something


    I can do. So I won’t. This speed is just enough for me.”


    Amacus narrowed her eyes. For a moment, he was afraid he’d angered


    her somehow — but then he didn’t care. He believed his own words, and


    there was very little anyone could tell him to prove him otherwise.


    “You’ve given me…a lot of work, Mr. Bowen,” Amacus continued. “Very


    well. Go your own way, but remember, I’m not your enemy. If you find


    there’s too much on your plate” — she began to sink backwards through


    the wall — “call me, and I will be there.”


    She had gone, leaving him alone facing a blank wall. I can’t


    believe I said that, he thought, and she took that so


    well. He could probably stare at the wall for a while longer,


    thinking to himself just what he could’ve said better, comforting


    himself that he could’ve done worse.


    He looked at the star on the back of his hand. Amacus had given it to


    him if the ‘hallucinations’ didn’t stop. The impostor’s real,


    he assured himself. If he assumed they weren’t, then he’d only feel


    regret if the impostor went back on their word and dragged Nightshade


    into a fresh mess.


    Of course, the possibility of the mess could have ceased to exist if


    Amacus had just believed him, but that would just be too convenient.


    She’d made hallucinations out to be like the common cold around here,


    and there wasn’t any reason for her to think it was anything else. In


    her place, he would have made the same judgment.


    On the bright side, should the impostor show up again, he’d be able


    to call for Amacus’ help — but damn it, he was the one who’d


    rejected her, and now here he was thinking ‘how convenient she’s here’ ?


    The balance was off. No matter how much her approach upset him,


    it didn’t change the fact that he felt real gratitude and deference to


    her and Enthusia for having given him the time he’d needed.


    He owed everyone around him more than what he could pay back. How


    could he possibly ask for even more?


    The bedsheets ruffled, and he turned to find Nightshade getting up


    and rubbing her eyes.


    “Hey,” he called. At least he didn’t owe this one that much. He


    approached her and pulled a chair along with him, flipping it around and


    sitting down, resting his arms on the chair’s backrest to talk to her.


    He forced a polite smile. Regardless of how near or far he’d be from


    her, he wouldn’t act like a stranger.


    “W-what happened to the Law?” she muttered.


    A couple of things clicked for him, and he knocked on the side of his


    head. Screwing up twice in a row wasn’t that unusual, at least.


    He resigned himself to the outcome. “She — er — she left.” He


    sighed.


    Nightshade glanced at him. She had a slight frown. Craft frowned,


    too. What did I do?


    “Did… Did you mean it?” She looked at him, and his eyes widened as he


    realized why she’d said that. “I-I’m sorry,” she continued. “I’ve been


    awake for a while…”
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