Transmigrated into Eroge as the Simp, but I Refuse This Fate - Chapter 296: Lesson

Chapter 296: Lesson
Dominic’s hands didn’t rise into a stance.
Not yet.
They hung loose, calm—like he wasn’t preparing for a fight, but for a demonstration. His eyes, however, were sharp. Not cold. Not warm.
Just exact.
They met Damien’s without wavering.
“You’ve killed a monster,” Dominic said softly. “A real one. Not a simulation. Not a training golem. Not a sparring partner under mana suppression.”
His voice wasn’t proud. It was factual.
“And you didn’t just kill it. You stayed standing in its pressure. You walked through it. You even let it burn you a little.”
Damien said nothing, but his jaw flexed once. Acknowledging.
Dominic took a step forward.
“That means your Partial Awakening is real. It’s not some misfire. It’s not just an anomaly from contact with the Vault. It’s taken root. Started evolving. You’ve already integrated enough Authority to stabilize your core under live threat.”
He didn’t say “impressive.” He didn’t need to.
Because Damien knew what that meant.
That wasn’t beginner-tier. That was already well beyond what most experienced in their first cycles of awakening.
And that was why Damien had been so confident.
Why he believed he could endure the Cradle.
He trusted that pressure. Trusted the mutation inside him. The pain. The density. The fight he’d survived and shaped and sharpened.
But Dominic’s eyes didn’t soften.
“If that’s what you believe will get you through the Cradle,” he said slowly, “then you’re still missing something.”
Damien’s brow twitched, just slightly.
And then Dominic moved.
He didn’t strike.
He didn’t speak.
He simply released it.
The pressure.
BOOM—
It wasn’t an explosion. It wasn’t even sound.
It was presence.
Raw, unfiltered weight—Authority, compacted and refined across a lifetime, released in a single breath.
Damien’s knees buckled.
His ribs caved inward slightly, his body instinctively trying to protect his core. Blood rushed up the back of his throat.
KHHHCK—!!
He choked once—hard—his hands snapping to the ground to stop himself from faceplanting.
He was kneeling.
Spine bent. Elbows shaking. Vision pulsing.
His father hadn’t moved an inch.
“Do you feel that?” Dominic said quietly.
No mockery. No joy. Just command.
Dominic’s Authority bore down like gravity that had forgotten how to be kind.
Damien’s throat clenched tight against the blood that tried to rise. His vision blurred at the edges—throbbing with static, edged in red—but he didn’t collapse.
Not all the way.
His hands grounded him. His will kept him upright. He gritted his teeth and forced breath into lungs that felt like they were wrapped in iron wire.
This—this pressure—it wasn’t just about force. It was clarity. Intent. The density of someone who had mastered themselves over decades and turned that mastery into presence.
And this was only a fraction of what the Cradle might subject him to.
Dominic watched him without pity, his expression exact. But something shifted—just slightly—when he saw Damien not break, but adjust.
Breathe.
Stand it.
Dominic’s brow rose by a hair’s breadth.
Then he spoke.
“In the Cradle, your body will be tested. But so will your mind. Your capacity to hold yourself together. Your ability to remain… yourself, while everything tries to rewrite you.”
He didn’t reduce the pressure.
Just stepped closer.
“Right now, this is just me. Just a focused projection. But inside the Cradle? It won’t come from a person. It won’t even come from a will. It will come from the mana itself—old, saturated, hostile to weakness.”
Damien trembled—but he didn’t falter.
Dominic nodded, slowly. Then, in the same breath, he asked, “Do you know the Elford family’s affinity?”
Damien blinked, lips parting—but no sound came.
Dominic didn’t wait.
“Elford’s affinity is Dominion, yes—but in elemental terms, it’s aligned to Force.”
His voice sharpened, every word deliberate.
“Not just strength. Not just kinetic output. It’s the raw concept of pressure applied. The world bends when we assert our presence. That’s why our bloodline doesn’t produce many mages. But we breed monsters on the battlefield.”
He took a breath, not for himself—but for the weight of what came next.
“Your mother’s line—Valeheart—is different. Mystic-aligned. Their element is Thread. Less seen. More felt. Their power lies in perception, causality, emotional weight. It lends itself to intuition, foresight… manipulation of ties between thoughts and people.”
Damien’s eyes narrowed slightly.
“Thread?” he echoed.
Dominic nodded.
“They were feared in the old dynasties for their ability to ’know.’ Not just information. But secrets. Intent. Possibility.”
He stepped closer, his Authority still crushing the air.
“That’s why,” Dominic continued, voice calm but razor-edged, “your mother is feared in the higher circles. Not because of her status. But because of her eyes.”
He let the words settle, his gaze unmoving.
“Vivienne Valeheart doesn’t just listen in rooms. She unravels them. People speak carefully around her not because she commands silence—but because she sees through what they won’t say.”
Damien coughed, hard—his breath rattling as he pushed back against the pressure, blood still tasting sharp in the back of his throat.
“…Could see that…” he muttered, voice hoarse but wry.
Dominic waved his hand, and the pressure broke like fog clearing.
Instantly, the crushing weight lifted, leaving Damien gasping in cooler air, limbs still quivering from the strain.
Dominic waited a beat, then spoke again—this time measured, instructive.
“Oftentimes, a person’s affinity mirrors their bloodline. It’s inherited—not always dominant, but usually present. Something shaped by history, culture, even subconscious training.”
He stepped away now, giving Damien space to straighten up.
“But deviations happen. People are born with elements that don’t match their lineage. Sometimes it’s a hidden recessive. Sometimes… it’s something the world chose instead.”
He folded his arms, voice steady.
“It’s not uncommon. But it’s not always welcomed, either. I’m telling you this not because I expect you to align perfectly with either side—but so you know what may come.”
His eyes flicked back to Damien—sharp again.
“You might not awaken to Force. You might not awaken to Thread. But whatever answers you… you’ll have to own it.”
Dominic didn’t give him long to recover.
“Stand,” he ordered.
It was going to be a long night after all.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by novlove.com
