The Yellow-Haired Villain in Soaring Phoenix's Novels Also Desires Happiness Chapter 35: The More You Think, the More Terrifying It Gets
Drip.
Drip.
In the dim space, so unknown liquid was dripping rhythmically, one drop at a ti, echoing through the silence like a ghost’s breath. The sound carried a bone-deep chill, like sothing out of a haunted domain.
Muen remained shackled, arms spread in that crucified position. His body couldn’t move—worse, the most sensitive and vulnerable part of him was completely exposed, unprotected. It was a posture that bred unease... and sothing else. A disturbing tension.
The whole situation reminded Muen of a rabbit about to be slaughtered. Or worse—of a certain kind of... roleplay. The kind that involved bindings ➤ NоvеⅠight ➤ (Read more on our source) and power imbalance.
And in his current state... it could honestly go either way.
Because Anne, usually the picture of refined dignity, had transford into sothing else entirely—like a seductive serpent, her soft, curvaceous body coiled tightly around him, greedily devouring everything that was Muen.
“H-Hey... Anne, could you maybe, um, get off first? I think we should talk.”
Muen swallowed hard. The physical sensations pressing against him were sending heat into places he did not want heated right now. He ntally chanted every calm-heart mantra he knew, struggling to keep his voice steady.
Anne rose slowly, her tongue trailing across her glossy lips.
“What does Young Master wish to talk about?”
Her cheeks were still unnaturally flushed, her eyes slightly glazed. Deep in those eyes shimred a mix of leftover hunger... and the quiet irritation of being interrupted.
“Well...”
Muen hesitated, trying to find the right words.
“You like , right?”
“Of course~”
Anne smiled sweetly. “I’ve always liked Young Master. Liked you, and liked you, and liked you and liked you and liked you and liked you and liked you and liked you to the point of madness.”
“N-No need to say ‘liked’ that many tis.”
Muen tried to wipe the cold sweat from his forehead—only to rember, of course, that his arms were still chained.
And that’s when Anne bent down and licked it off for him.
Her soft, warm tongue slid over his skin, collecting the salty moisture.
“Mmm... Young Master’s taste...” she murmured, wearing a blissful expression as if she’d just sampled a fine delicacy.
“......”
Muen froze.
Before he could even process what just happened, his jaw started trembling again.
This was bad.
This was really bad.
Anne’s level of yandere insanity was way more intense than he thought.
But it was too late to back out now. He had no choice but to press on.
“You know, Anne, you really... you didn’t have to go this far.”
“Hm?” she tilted her head, puzzled.
“I an, you like , right? So we could’ve just, I don’t know—started dating like normal people. Like a regular couple.”
Muen rushed the words out, clinging to the one possible escape route.
“You might not know this, but when Father left, he told himself—he doesn’t care about class or status. So even though I’m the Duke’s son and you’re a maid, no one would stop us from being together.
You really didn’t have to do all this,” he added, glancing at the shackles. “This is literally a cri.”
“I see... so that’s how you think of it, Young Master?”
Anne rested her chin in her hands, her eyes dreamy, face full of pure bliss, like she was envisioning so radiant future.
“To truly beco one with you, Young Master... just imagining it makes happy.”
“Yes, right, that’s great. So just, uh, let go now?”
Sensing a chance, Muen pushed harder.
“We can start fresh. Just date like a normal couple, get to know each other, build mutual trust, and then—”
“Ah, that won’t do.”
Anne’s soft voice cut him off.
“...Huh?”
Muen blinked in confusion, only to et her eyes—
Now icy. Razor-sharp.
The temperature in the room seed to drop ten degrees.
“Dating you would be nice,” Anne said quietly, “but it wouldn’t even co close to satisfying my needs.”
“...Needs?”
“I already said it, didn’t I?”
Anne’s tone turned tender again. “What I want... is everything of Young Master.
If we dated, would you give everything? Every thought? Every cell? Every breath? Would you be mine, in full?”
“No! That’s way too much to ask!” Muen growled, anger rising. “I’m a living person, not soone’s goddamn possession!”
“But I’ve spent ten whole years working toward that exact goal.”
Anne didn’t flinch. She gently stroked his face, eyes brimming with obsession.
“I failed. That’s true. And it’s unfortunate. So this... was the only thod left.”
“...Ten years...?”
Muen’s gut twisted. He didn’t understand what she ant.
But so part of him—deep down—was already bracing for sothing horrible.
Sothing foundational.
“What do I an? Of course I’m talking about everything I’ve done for you, Young Master.”
Anne’s voice was so calm. So loving.
“I guided you. Protected you. Spoiled you. Slowly, day by day, I turned you arrogant, proud, ignorant. I helped you beco a useless, hated young master. Especially hated by all those simpering noble swine.
I made sure no one could ever truly approach you but .
So that the mont you left ... you’d be completely helpless.”
“For ten years, I’ve been doing this—without pause—so you’d belong to only .”
“...What?”
Muen’s brain detonated.
He stared at Anne, paralyzed, and saw the horror reflected in her maddened gaze—his own face, twisted in terror.
Wait.
What was she saying?
That in the original novel, Muen Campbell only turned out so useless because of her?
Because of Anne’s manipulation?
That couldn’t be. No one could be that insane. No one would go that far just to possess another human being—
...
No.
Maybe they would.
Because now that he thought about it, both the original novel and his own mories backed it up.
Muen trusted his maid Anne deeply.
So much so that even when he drugged the princess, he hadn’t hidden it from her.
Wait. No—
Co to think of it, wasn’t it Anne who suggested drugging Celicia in the first place?!
A light snapped on in Muen’s brain.
In the original story, Muen had grown furious seeing Celicia grow closer to the protagonist.
And Anne had said—
【In that case, why not make the princess yours, completely?】
That’s it. That was the mont.
That was when the original Muen made the decision to do it.
“...But why? Why would she do that? Wouldn’t that get her killed?”
In the original story, Anne had supposedly died as an accomplice.
Muen stared at her now, heart thundering, as a terrifying thought surfaced.
Did she really die?
If she was just an ordinary maid, she should’ve been executed without question.
But based on what she’d already shown—knocking him out in one move—did she really die that easily?
After all, the novel only described her death in passing.
What if she faked it?
What if she used so trick to make everyone think she was dead?
And then—
What if the original story’s “fated encounter,” where the protagonist caught Muen mid-cri... wasn’t fate at all?
Given what Muen had seen and learned since arriving in this world, “destiny” seed a lot less reliable.
And what if—
What if the Muen Campbell of the original story didn’t lose his limbs and beco a beggar because of debt?
What if he had been running away...
From soone?
The deeper he thought, the colder he felt.
The more he thought—
The more terrifying it beca.
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