"Useful and stupid often overlap," Lin Yi observed calmly, still challenging her black-and-white view of the world.
She stared at him for two full breaths, her gaze piercing, as if trying to see into the very core of his being, to understand the motivations behind his casual audacity. She felt a profound sense of exasperation.
"I truly cannot decide," she finally admitted, her voice tinged with a rare note of genuine perplexity, "whether you are incredibly reckless, or suprely confident." The line between the two, in his case, seed impossibly blurred.
"Those overlap too," he offered, maintaining his unruffled deanor, a subtle quirk of his lips.
That particular comnt, delivered with such nonchalant certainty, almost managed to draw a genuine smile from her. A fleeting glimr of amusent touched her features, a softening around her eyes, though it vanished as quickly as it appeared, suppressed before it could fully blossom.
Night was beginning its inexorable descent now. The already dense trees seed to drink in the last drops of light, darkening into deeper, indistinct silhouettes against the twilight sky. From the deeper, more dangerous regions of the hunting grounds, distant roars began to echo, guttural and prival, rolling through the silent air, a chilling reminder of the powerful creatures lurking within.
Zhao Yuexin’s expression, previously a mix of analysis and exasperation, sharpened once more, becoming stern and resolute.
"We leave," she stated, her tone leaving no room for argunt or debate. It was a command.
Lin Yi looked toward the deeper, increasingly shadowed forest, a faint longing in his eyes.
"I can continue," he suggested, testing her resolve, his voice quiet but firm.
"You can, undoubtedly," she conceded, her voice dry, laced with a heavy dose of sarcasm. "And then tomorrow morning, I would have the rather unenviable task of explaining to the esteed elders of the Zhao family why their distinguished guest was unceremoniously dragged away in pieces by a level 245 beast king, an incident which would cause no end of trouble." The implication was clear: such a scenario would reflect poorly on her and the family’s hospitality.
"That sounds inconvenient," Lin Yi remarked, his tone still utterly calm, as if discussing a minor scheduling conflict.
"For especially," she emphasized, her voice hinting at the massive bureaucratic and political headache such an event would entail for her personally.
Lin Yi nodded once, a brief, accepting gesture.
"Then let us by all ans avoid burdening you with such an inconvenience," he conceded, his acquiescence cloaked in politeness, though the glint in his eye suggested a hint of lingering disappointnt.
She turned then, her movents decisive, and began walking back along the well-worn path toward the distant family estate. The rhythmic crunch of her boots on the forest floor was the only sound for a few monts.
After only a few steps, she noticed, with a subtle internal prickle of surprise, that he was maintaining pace directly beside her, rather than following a respectful distance behind her, as most guests would. It was a small but significant detail.
"You adapt quickly," she observed, her voice carrying a nuanced blend of irritation and grudging admiration for his easy presumption.
"To what exactly?" he inquired, his tone innocent, as if genuinely seeking clarification.
"To acting as though you belong here, as if you are already an integral part of this place," she clarified, her gaze flicking sideways to et his for a brief mont.
Lin Yi’s tone remained easy, utterly unruffled by her pointed remark.
"If I am to remain here for a full year," he reasoned, a slight shrug in his posture, "it seems only logical that I should begin to walk and behave like a resident, rather than a re visitor."
"You may not, in fact, need a full year," she stated, her voice quiet, almost an aside, but loaded with unspoken aning.
He glanced sideways at her, a hint of curiosity in his expression.
"That sounded rather encouraging," he remarked, a subtle note of hopefulness entering his voice.
"It was not," she corrected him instantly, her expression remaining cool and unyielding, effectively crushing any budding optimism. "It was, in truth, a statent born of concern."
"Concern... for ?" he asked, a touch of surprise in his voice.
"For the hunting grounds," she clarified bluntly, her eyes sweeping over the landscape with a proprietary air, emphasizing that her anxieties lay with the potential disruption he represented, not his personal safety.
Lei Bao, in response to her sharp, unvarnished honesty, burst into a series of delighted, almost boisterous crackling laughter from within the blade, clearly finding the exchange highly amusing.
The two continued their journey through the deepening forest, walking in a asured silence that was punctuated only by the rustling leaves and the distant, increasingly bold calls of the creatures of the night.
After several minutes had passed, Zhao Yuexin spoke again, her voice notably quieter this ti, almost a murmur against the growing darkness.
"If tomorrow," she began, her words deliberate, "you still manage to level at this astonishing pace..."
Lin Yi waited, allowing her statent to hang unfinished in the air, patiently anticipating her conclusion. He could sense the shift in her approach, a new calculation.
She finished her thought, her eyes eting his once more, her expression serious and unwavering.
"Then I will personally escort you into the deep zone." The offer was a veiled challenge, an acknowledgnt of his power coupled with a clear intent to keep a close watch.
Lin Yi looked at her, a thoughtful expression on his face.
"Is that, I wonder, an offer of trust?" he inquired, seeking to understand the true nature of her surprising proposition.
"It is not," she stated flatly, her honesty as sharp and unadorned as ever, removing any ambiguity from her intentions.
He smiled then, a genuine, easy smile that reached his eyes.
"Close enough," he conceded, accepting her terms with a sense of quiet amusent, understanding that for now, was indeed the closest thing he would get to trust from her.
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