The Delicate Female Lead Only Wants to be Loved by the Villainous Young Ladies Chapter 30
“Na?”
“Adele.”
“Class and contact information?”
“Class E, Year One. My contact information is…”
Adele dutifully provided the necessary information to the woman in the white coat, her gaze flitting around the small, cluttered office.
Once the formalities were out of the way, the nurse, her face adorned with a cheerful smile, turned to Adele, her voice brimming with a disconcerting enthusiasm.
“So, Miss Adele, what brings you to the infirmary today? What seems to be the trouble?”
Adele couldn’t help but wonder why the nurse seed so happy to see a patient. Shouldn’t she be hoping for… fewer patients?
She hesitated, unsure how to answer.
“I have a slight fever,” she finally said.
“Oh, that’s wonderful!” the nurse exclaid, her smile widening.
“?”
Adele’s suspicions grew. There was sothing… off about this nurse.
As if realizing her gaffe, the nurse quickly added, “I an… that’s… sothing we can easily treat here at the infirmary.”
It was true. Besides colds, flus, and the occasional sprained ankle, the infirmary wasn’t equipped to handle much else. And vampires, being naturally resilient, rarely got sick. To have a patient like Adele, a vampire who had actually caught a cold… it was a rare occurrence.
And more importantly, it ant that the infirmary wasn’t completely useless after all. She could finally put her dical training to good use.
“…Thank you,” Adele said, relieved that the nurse hadn’t revealed herself to be so kind of… dical sadist.
“Don’t ntion it, dear,” the nurse said, her voice warm and soothing. “I’ll prepare a tonic for you. Once you’ve finished it, you can rest in the next room until you’re feeling better. I’ll write you a note for your professors.”
“Just relax and take it easy for the rest of the morning,” she added, her generosity stemming from the novelty of having a patient who actually required treatnt.
Adele’s eyes brightened. This auntie… she was alright!
Of course, if the nurse knew that Adele was ntally referring to her as “auntie,” she probably wouldn’t be so generous.
“And you, dear?” she asked, turning to Linlang, who was standing awkwardly beside Adele. “Is there anything I can do for you?”
Linlang blinked, her cheeks flushing as she shook her head.
“N-No, I’m just… accompanying her,” she stamred.
“I see.”
Linlang nodded quickly, eager to escape the nurse’s scrutiny.
The nurse bustled around the office, preparing a concoction for Adele. It was probably just a mixture of common cold dicine and so… unique ingredients from the world of the arcane.
Hopefully, it didn’t involve toad eggs or beetle scales…
But then again, those were often the key ingredients in arcane redies, their properties and uses discovered through trial and error, often at great personal risk to the pioneers of arcane dicine and alchemy.
Adele watched nervously as the nurse stirred the tonic, the steam rising from the cup carrying a faint, herbal scent.
The nurse handed her the cup, her smile encouraging.
Adele took a deep breath, steeled her nerves, and downed the tonic in one gulp, resisting the urge to pinch her nose. It was lukewarm, thankfully, so she didn’t have to worry about burning her tongue.
The taste… well, it was surprisingly pleasant. Sweeter than regular cold dicine, with a complex, almost fruity flavor. But it left a slightly bitter aftertaste, like… persimmons.
Overall, it wasn’t bad. And it seed to be working. She already felt a warmth spreading through her stomach, easing the cramps.
She handed the empty cup back to the nurse, her gratitude evident in her voice.
“Thank you, nurse,” she said. “May I… go rest now?”
“Of course, dear,” the nurse said. “But there’s another patient in the next room. Please try to be quiet.”
“O-Okay.”
Adele’s heart skipped a beat. Soone else is here?
She suddenly felt a little… nervous.
She rose from her chair, and together, she and Linlang walked towards the door that led to the resting room.
They exchanged hushed whispers as they pushed the door open, their gazes drawn to the drawn curtain, separating the second and third beds.
It was an unspoken rule, a matter of personal space, like leaving an empty seat between yourself and a stranger in a movie theater or a cafeteria.
Adele chose the first bed, the one furthest from the mysterious occupant behind the curtain.
Linlang, her task completed, lingered for a mont, her gaze lingering on Adele’s face, a flicker of sadness in her eyes.
Adele, sensing her reluctance to leave, pulled her into a quick hug. Linlang’s body was soft and warm, and for a mont, they simply stood there, their embrace a silent expression of their… friendship?
And then… a sound, a muffled thump, ca from behind the curtain, as if soone had punched the mattress.
They exchanged confused glances, but Linlang, her heart heavy with unspoken emotions, finally turned and left, her steps slow and hesitant.
Adele settled onto the bed, the soft mattress and crisp white sheets a welco respite from the hard, uncomfortable chairs in the classroom. She closed her eyes, a sigh of contentnt escaping her lips.
The last ti she had felt this relaxed, this at ease… was in Hermione’s bed.
That big, soft bed… the mories were still vivid. And Hermione… well, she was… sothing else entirely.
Adele had thoughts, desires, that she wouldn’t dare voice aloud. For now, her interactions with the Ice Queen remained strictly… professional.
But Hermione wasn’t as unapproachable as she had initially seed. Maybe…
Her thoughts drifted, ti lting away as she surrendered to the comforting embrace of the soft mattress.
She appeared to be asleep, her breathing slow and even.
And that… was Celeste’s cue.
She had been waiting for this mont, her heart pounding with a mixture of anxiety and guilt. She had to leave, to escape before Adele woke up.
After yesterday’s… incident, and in her current state, her pride shattered, her confidence in tatters… she couldn’t bear to face Adele. Not now.
She had lost the right to be near her, to breathe the sa air.
The re thought of facing Adele, pure and innocent Adele, filled her with a sha so profound that she could barely breathe.
But that… that was nothing compared to the sha she had felt when she had wrapped her hands around Adele’s throat, her fingers tightening, her mind consud by a jealous rage.
I was a fool… a monster…
If she could go back, she would change everything. She would never make that mistake again.
She would even… kneel at Adele’s feet, beg for forgiveness, lick her shoes… anything to atone for her sins.
But she didn’t dare. She couldn’t even bring herself to hope for forgiveness.
She was a rat, scurrying through the shadows, seeking refuge in the darkness, unworthy of Adele’s light.
Adele deserved a cat, a dog… not a filthy, disgusting rat like her.
Her heart sank, her spirit withered.
The silence in the room was broken only by Adele’s steady breathing and the frantic beating of her own heart, a rhythm that echoed her pain, her despair.
It was a reminder that she was still alive, that she hadn’t yet beco a walking corpse.
But once she left this room, this space she shared with Adele… would her heart still beat? Would it still ache?
She had heard stories of vampires whose hearts had stopped beating, yet they lived on. She had never tested that theory, never wanted to.
But even if her heart continued to beat… without Adele… it would be no different from being dead.
An empty shell, a withered soul.
But even so, she couldn’t face Adele. Not now.
She had to escape while Adele was asleep, like a rat fleeing the sewers, seeking refuge in the shadows, no matter the cost.
She would rather be crushed beneath the wheels of a car, or stoned to death by an angry mob… than let Adele see her in this state, broken and defeated.
Tears welled up in her eyes, blurring her vision.
She reached out, her hand, scarred and trembling, slowly pulling the curtain open just enough to slip through.
She tried to be quiet, to avoid making any noise. If she woke Adele… she would flee barefoot, her sha outweighing her need for shoes.
She slipped on her shoes, her gaze fixed on the floor, her reflection a pale, ghostly image.
And then… a voice, soft yet clear, stopped her in her tracks.
Adele hadn’t been asleep. She had been watching her, her pink eyes, clear and unwavering, following her every move.
“Celeste…” she whispered, her voice a mixture of surprise, curiosity, and… sothing else. Sothing that sounded suspiciously like… concern?
Celeste forgot why she was running. She looked up, and there was Adele, sitting up in bed, her face pale but flushed with a faint blush as their eyes t.
Her lips moved, as if she were searching for the right words, the right expression. Then, she smiled, a shy, tentative smile that sent a jolt of warmth through Celeste’s heart.
It was a smile that had captivated her long ago, back when the world had seed full of promise, back when she had believed in happy endings.
But ti had passed, things had changed. She had accepted her fate, her humiliation, her unrequited love. She had given up hope.
And yet… her heart, which should have been frozen solid, ached with a longing so intense that it felt like it might burst.
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