Supervillain Idol System: My Sidekick Is A Yandere
Chapter 631: Persistence (Part 1)
Redstarâs gaze moved slowly, taking in the field, the stands, the broken edges of what used to be structure.
Her brow pulled in slightly.
"If they sent S-Class immediately..." she muttered, voice low, the accent thick, "this would not happen." đłđŤđđ˛đ đđŻđđ¨đđđš.đ°đźđş
Her lips pressed together.
"Hmph."
She scoffed softly, the sound carrying no weight beyond the moment.
"Damned capitalists," she added under her breath, eyes narrowing faintly. "Always calculating... always waiting. Maybe there is profit in this, da... they wait, let damage grow."
Her head tilted just slightly as she continued to look.
No anger held.
No pride either.
Just observation.
A brief flicker of something closer to pity passed through her expressionâand left just as quickly.
She exhaled.
Then rose.
Her body lifted higher without effort, drifting upward past the height of the stadium lights, past the surrounding buildings, climbing steadily into thinner air.
The wind picked up slightly as she ascended, brushing against her skin, tugging faintly at her hair and the towel around her neck.
The campus shrank beneath her.
Shapes became patterns.
Movementâwhat little remainedâbecame easier to isolate.
She continued upward.
Clouds approached slowly, their lower edges stretching across the sky like a thin barrier waiting to be crossed.
Thenâ
She stopped.
Mid-ascent.
Her body stilled without drift.
Her head turned slightly to the side.
Something moved.
Far outâstill distantâbut closing.
Her eyes focused.
Jets.
Multiple.
Formation tight, speed high.
The faint roar reached her a second laterâlow at first, then building as it carried through the air.
"Mm."
She studied them briefly, gaze narrowing as she tracked their approach path, their altitude, their spacing.
"Four minutes," she said quietly. "Maybe less."
Her tone remained even.
No urgency.
No concern.
Her attention shifted.
Away from the incoming aircrafts.
Toward the city.
From this height, it all opened.
The scale.
The spread.
Her senses extended without restriction now.
She heard it first.
Not clearlyâtoo many layersâbut enough.
Screams.
Different pitches. Different distances. Some cut short. Others drawn out. Voices calling names. Others just noise, breaking apart under fear.
Children.
That much stood out without effort.
Her jaw tightened just slightly.
Her eyes followed.
She saw movement across multiple districtsâstreets broken, vehicles abandoned, people running in uneven lines.
Some fought back. Most didnât last long enough to matter.
Infected moved through them.
But not all the same.
Her gaze narrowed further.
"There..."
She shifted focus from one group to another.
Then another.
Then another.
Hordes.
Not one.
Several.
Scattered.
Moving in patterns that didnât align.
Some tore through anything in front of themâhumans, structures, even infected.
Others... ignored certain targets.
Adjusted.
Redirected.
Her eyes sharpened.
"Not same..." she murmured. "Not behaving the same."
Her head tilted slightly as she watched one cluster break formation to collide with anotherâviolence immediate, no hesitation, no coordination between them.
"They fight each other..." she said, quieter now.
A pause.
"Why..."
Her gaze continued to move, scanning, comparing, isolating.
Something wasnât consistent.
Something underneath the movement differed.
Her expression shiftedâsubtle, but present.
Thenâ
It stopped.
Her eyes locked.
Far across the city.
A single structure.
Ebon Crest Tower.
Its height made it stand out even from here, its edges catching what little light broke through the haze above the city.
Her focus tightened.
Something was happening there.
At the roof.
Her eyes narrowed further.
Then widened.
She saw him.
Don.
Just over the edge.
Body angled forward, weight balanced at a point where one wrong shift would send him down.
And belowâ
Closer to the side of the structureâ
The female infected.
Her form hung against the surface, limbs positioned in a way that defied normal movement, fingers embedded into the wall for grip.
Her hair spread outward, lifted slightly by the wind at that height, framing a face that didnât look away.
Her gaze was fixed on him.
Unmoving.
Unblinking.
And hisâ
Locked right back.
Redstar didnât move.
Didnât speak.
Her eyes remained fixed on that single point across the city.
The rest of the noiseâ
The screams.
The destruction.
The incoming jetsâ
All of it fell away from her focus.
For the momentâ
Only that mattered.
âââ
Don felt the edge leave his boots as the destruction he caused made it collapse.
There was no surface under him anymoreâonly open air and the long drop waiting below.
For a fraction of a second, his body stayed aligned with the roofline, momentum carrying him forward even as gravity took hold.
His eyes never left the female infected. Her figure tipped over with him, her grip on the structure gone as both of them slipped past the edge.
Wind rushed up immediately.
It hit hardâdragging at his attire, pulling at his limbs, forcing his descent faster with every passing second.
The city stretched beneath them in a blur of broken streets and scattered movement, but Don didnât look down.
His focus stayed locked.
He had one move.
Telekinesis.
He reached inward and pushedâaiming to catch himself, to redirect his fall back toward the roof.
Butâ
Her hair.
It was already too close.
Even in that instant, he saw it.
Movement.
Subtle at firstâthin strands shifting against the wind in ways that didnât match the fall. Then more followed, the mass beginning to spread outward like something alive waking up.
âToo close.â
His jaw tightened.
He dropped the attempt immediately.
Instead, his focus snapped outwardâ
Toward her.
His will pressed against the strands, forcing them back, driving the mass away from his position.
The air between them warped faintly under the pressure as invisible force clashed against the unnatural movement of her hair.
It resisted.
Not fully.
But enough.
The strands jerked, slowed, forced back halfwayâonly to surge again, pushing against his control as if something beneath them refused to yield.
They were fighting over it.
Mid-fall.
The distance between them barely held.
Wind roared louder as they dropped faster, the pressure building against his face, dragging at his eyes, forcing them to narrow just to keep focus.
Aboveâ
Sound.
Movement.
Don heard it even through the rush of air.
The horde inside the tower.
Closer now.
Too close.
His jaw clenched harder.
"The infected are getting closer to the roof!" he shouted, voice cutting through the air as best it could. "You have to leave now!!"
The words tore out of him, thrown upward toward the edge they had just fallen from. Whether they heard him or not didnât matter anymore.
He already knewâ
He wasnât getting back up there.
Not like this.
His focus snapped back.
The ground was approaching.
Fast.