Of the Aerlev stories I have ever read, perhaps the most impressive one is There's No Love In the Deathzone (BL). The story is too good, leaving me with many doubts. Currently, the manga has been translated to Chapter 494 - 487. Pursuit. Let's read the author's There's No Love In the Deathzone (BL) Aerlev story right here.
Bassena watched until the last person, Julian, disappeared inside the right hole before turning around to observe the path he would enter. Now that he was standing in front of the entrance, he could feel what Zein had sensed earlier; the leftover corrupted mana of the Fragment.
The compass was pointing steadily into the hole, but Zein had yet to feel the presence of the shards, which meant they were still considerably far away from the shards. That, or the presence of the Fragment overshadowed the guide’s senses.
He turned toward Zein, who was staring anxiously at the dark path. "We’re pressed for time, so--"
"Just carry me."
Unlike usual, Zein readily let Bassena handle him. Usually, he would just run like any esper, unless it was a large jump that was impossible for his physique. But this was an emergency, and Bassena couldn’t use teleport in an unknown terrain.
Bassena pressed his lips. He would have made some flirting comment if it wasn’t for the serious face. "Alright, just concentrate on sensing the shards."
They had no idea how far the shards were, and how many days ago had the Fragment moved. Of course, Zein knew the shards would be able to hold on since there were two of them, but the fact that the Fragment made a move meant it had a way to go past the shards’ barrier.
Perhaps, just as Zein could destroy the fragment, so did they to the shards. And that was what frightened him.
He felt guilty for shoving away his concern about the kids that were pursuing the Specter and a horde of beasts, but between the two options, his priority would always be the shards.
"Do you think that perhaps, the shard at the base could finally sense the twins because they were actively sending out emergency signals?" Bassena asked the guide as he ran through the path. "Maybe they sensed the movement of those beasts around the system and decided to test their luck."
"Maybe," Zein nodded. In that case, it wasn’t a coincidence that they arrived just a few days behind the beasts. "But then the emergency signal caught the Fragment’s attention."
"Along with the receiver," Bassena muttered.
"You think that was why they split their force?"
Bassena hummed in response, slowing down when he passed another intersection. He looked around every time he saw another hole in the wall, scrutinizing the entrances. Zein gripped the esper’s coat tightly, pressing his head on the broad shoulder while mulling over the theory.
It might be no more than a conjecture, but honestly, it made sense. And that was because Zein didn’t like thinking about the other alternative--that they might move to gather with more forces. Because if that were the case, then the danger those kids faced would be multiplied.
"Hey, maybe we can catch up just fine," Bassena tapped on the clearly distressed guide. He pointed at an entrance they just passed with his chin. "There are traces of entering and exiting from the paths we had been passing."
"...meaning?"
"It seemed like they had to check every path one by one to see if they go in the right direction," Bassena said. "Since they won’t have a compass like us. If all they sensed was the signal as the shard did, it wouldn’t give them a precise position...right?"
"So...you were saying they would be slower?"
"Considerably so," Bassena nodded, glancing back with a smile. "Hang tight--I’ll run faster so we’ll catch up soon."
Zein stared at the bright eyes that always exuded confidence. Yeah--yeah, those were the eyes that convinced him of everything; of life, of love, of the future.
And so he hung tight, letting the esper carry him swiftly through the dark tunnel.
* * *
"Aren’t you tired?" Leehan looked up at Banner, who had been carrying him and Dheera in his arms as the group ran along the tunnel while following the traces that Kei could see.
The defender scoffed and replied with a lighthearted laugh. "The two of you combined are lighter than the shield I always carried."
"Whoaa...really? You’ve been carrying a hundred-plus-kilo shield all the time?" Dheera gasped. The shield in question, at this moment, was stored in the squad’s dimensional storage.
"Since I’m a physical type," Banner smiled, looking at the guides in his arms amusedly. They really were as talkative as people said, even in this tense situation. Or perhaps, it was their way to drown it.
Banner had always been staying in the front of the formation, so he rarely conversed with the guides, who always stayed in the back. But this time, the ones who took the frontline were the warriors and the scouts, while he stayed in the back with Julian and the support espers.
There was a gap between the vanguard and the rearguard that was both intentional and unavoidable. The scout and the warriors, who had more speed, were going fast so they could try to catch up to the horde of beasts. The rest of them, who weren’t as fast, unavoidably stayed a bit behind.
But it was also intentional; a safety measure because they had no idea what would be waiting ahead. In case they were found out and attacked, at least they wouldn’t be at risk of total annihilation. That was why the flare papers were placed in the hand of someone with the highest survival possibility among them; the only healer and five-star of the team.
"What about you?" Banner asked the guides back. "Are you fine being carried like this?"
"You mean like a sack of potatoes?" Dheera muffled her giggle so it wouldn’t echo in the narrow tunnel. "Captain used to do this to me during training; he said I’m the perfect weight for a barbell substitute."
"Just..."
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