Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 186: They Said Running Is Good For Business from I Only Summon Villainesses, a Fantasy novel by Hatetheauthor.

I stared at them for a few seconds, blinking. My mind was still catching up to what had just happened.

I hadn’t expected this level of support. Not from any of them, but especially not from Derry. From Derry, I’d expected one hell of a scolding — I’d eavesdropped on his conversation, ignored his orders, and struck people we could’ve just passed peacefully.

But here he was. Not angry. Not even disappointed.

It wasn’t my fault though. I knew myself well enough to recognize when sothing had shifted in . I’d always been like this — enraged and uncontrollable — whenever people spoke ill of what was mine. I’d tried not to care so much over the years and just et things slide.

But this was different.

Kassie was the one person who had stord into my life and made everything feel right. She wasn’t slavery. She wasn’t property. No one got to reduce her to that word, not after the life she’d lived and the person she’d beco.

My jaw tightened as I thought about it. That little standing up of mine had been deeply unsatisfying.

’But it’ll have to do. For now.’

I turned to Derry, still slightly confused by his reaction.

"That’s going to be all? You’re not going to scold ?"

Derry folded his large arms across his chest and looked at with genuine confusion, like I’d asked him why water was wet.

"Scold you? Why would I do that?"

"Won’t this affect you all in the future?"

"Most certainly will." He shrugged those massive shoulders. "But when has anything not affected us? Think about it. We are criminals — we don’t just enjoy living this way. We enjoy this life!!"

He shouted the last part for no reason I could understand.

’You could’ve gotten the point across without the volu, pal.’

Po materialized beside . I hadn’t heard him move at all — the boy just appeared in places like he had silent steps stitched into his boots.

"And Mr. Cade!" Po said, leaning in conspiratorially. "There’s no way Derry will scold you. He hates Mr. Fargo. That man is so..." His face scrunched up like he’d bitten sothing rotten. "Urgh!"

I couldn’t help it. A chuckle escaped .

’Urgh indeed.’

I gave Derry a more serious look, forcing myself to focus on what ca next. "So... what’s the way forward?"

"Nothing special." Derry rubbed his chin, unconcerned. "It’ll take a minute for the ssage to reach the dock. In that minute, we’d have to bypass them once again. It’ll be one hell of a race."

I tilted my head slightly, considering. "Or we could just fight them. My win, at the very least, is guaranteed."

Derry shook his head, eyes half-closed like a teacher dealing with a promising but naive student.

"You know nothing, kiddo. This is the life of a criminal — running comprises the most part of it." He raised a finger before I could interrupt. "We do not run because we are weak. We do not run because we’re scared of engaging. If anything, after seeing the prowess of you and your summon, I’m confident in our ability to win."

He paused, letting that sink in.

"But we are a service company. This isn’t about fighting — it’s about providing service and avoiding damages." His voice took on a practiced rhythm, like he’d explained this to hotheaded passengers before. "When we engage them in combat, we don’t worry about who will win. None of that matters. What matters is damages. We have to calculate the damages — and trust , battles with these kinds of people co with plenty of them. Damages affect our services to other clients. It’s a bad na for us as a company."

I stared at him for a mont, processing the strange logic of professional criminals who ran not from fear but from good business sense.

"I guess... that makes sense."

Even I could hear the uncertainty in my own voice. But there wasn’t much I could do about it. They had their rules, their way of operating, and I was just a passenger here. At the very least, they knew what they were doing.

A mischievous grin spread across Derry’s face — the kind of grin that preceded a sales pitch.

"Although..." He drew the word out. "You could always place a service request if you want us to fight. Direct confrontation usually costs a lot of money." He held up a finger. "Starting from one thousand gold."

"Oh."

’They don’t miss a single opportunity to make money, do they?’

You’re right — my mistake. They’re on the Black Snow Company’s ship, approaching port. Let rewrite this properly.

The conversation faded after that. Everyone settled back into the rhythm of the voyage — Derry returning to the helm, Po disappearing into the cabin with that silent-step movent of his.

I found a spot near the railing and watched the water roll past.

Kassie ca beside , her red hair catching the wind and streaming behind her like a banner. She didn’t say anything. Just stood there, close enough that I could feel the warmth of her presence against the ocean chill.

’I wonder if she heard what I said back there.’

The thought ca unbidden, and I pushed it away. It didn’t matter. What mattered was that I’d ant every word.

The sea stretched endlessly around us, but the horizon ahead had begun to change. What had been an empty line of blue and grey was now broken by shapes — distant at first, growing clearer as the hours crawled by.

Every ti the ship crested a wave, I found myself tensing.

Word traveled fast when people had sothing to gain from it. A Naval Prefecture officer, bloodied and humiliated on a Black Snow Company vessel — that was the kind of story that spread like wildfire. Even though Derry said not to worry, I was really curious if truly there was no way for the ship to contact the port authority between here and Crystalis or Derry had just said that to prevent from worrying.

Anyways, the sun traced its arc across the sky, bleeding from white to orange as afternoon bled into evening.

"You’re thinking too hard."

I glanced at Kassie. She was still watching the horizon, her expression unreadable.

"Am I?"

"Your jaw’s been clenched for the last hour." She tilted her head slightly, wind whipping strands of crimson across her face. "Either you’re thinking too hard, or you’re developing a grinding habit. Neither is attractive."

I grinned. "You wouldn’t happen to consider attractive before now."

She turned away from . "Relax your jaw."

I sighed and forced my jaw to relax. She wasn’t wrong — there was a dull ache spreading through my teeth that I hadn’t noticed until she pointed it out.

"Just thinking about what Derry said... is there any world where running is right?"

Kassie glanced at and scoffed.

"I have fought many battles. Many of which I had been wise enough to run. It indeed is foolish to run. But it’s wise to know when to run and when not to. Many are not wise but a lot of people are foolish."

You are reading I Only Summon Villainesses Chapter 186: They Said Running Is Good For Business on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Book of The Dead cover
Same genre

Book of The Dead

RinoZ ·Fantasy

Withonetouchofthestone,TyronreceiveshisClassandhislifechangesforever.Inan...Readmore Withonetouchofthestone,TyronreceiveshisClassandhislifechangesf...

Lust Devil's Rise cover
Same genre

Lust Devil's Rise

TheDragonSlayer ·Fantasy

ArchangelLuciferishumanity'sguardian,lockedinanendlesswaragainstotherarchangelsontheplanetEden.Theysubordinateracesastheirproxies:elves,dwarves,and...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.