Mu Jiashi still says sternly, though, âyou shouldnât have kept this information to yourself.â
Selfish and Scapegoat didnât lie, true, but hiding crucial information is still a kind of distrust, a deception.
Selfish just goes âtchâ and replies, âIâm a lone wolf,â then adds, coldly, âreally, I was going to resolve this Nightmare myself. If this guy,â he points to Scapegoat, âwasnât with me at the service area, I wouldnât have worked with him.â
Scapegoatâs face is all red. His lips are trembling, yet he keeps them shut in the end.
He knows how lone wolves are.
Lone wolf-types in the Tower never believe in teams. They are selfish. They value themselves above all else. They are cold and scarcely offers any trust. They keep a clear distance between themselves and other Missiontakers.
Mu Jiashi might technically be a lone wolf now, but having been in a Golddigging team, he still has habits of cooperation from back thenââOr rather, he is someone who values the team above all else.
Lone wolves, more usually, resemble people like Selfish, and even more typical Missiontakers for that matter.
Scapegoat stayed speechless the entire time.
He is also someone who acts alone and doesnât team up; he knows lone wolves, but someone like Selfish, who openly shows âI donât care a single bit about any of you,â is quite rare itself.
Scapegoat looks down on the floor, while thinking to himself, all the eight Missiontakers in this Nightmare are all quiteâŚ
The three âbrothersâ that are their own team, the woman with the greenish-blue hairââPerhaps sheâs that Necessities Merchant, though he hasnât seen her, so he canât be certainââthe dalao with the game-breaking level of fighting power, the ruthless pragmatist, and an atypical lone wolf.
While Scapegoat is all mulling over stuff, Mu Jiashi is temporarily shocked by Selfishâs response. Then, he sighs dejectedly and says, âI donât really want to know what you lone wolves are thinking⌠anyway, just tell us everything you know, now that itâs come to this.â
Selfish shakes his head, answering, âIâve said everything; I told you already that the last time I was in this Nightmare, we didnât head into the fifth run.â
Mu Jiashi is still confirming with him, though, âare you sure there is nothing else to say? Was there not a single difference between the Nightmare you experienced earlier and this time?â
Selfish makes an impatient âtchâ but is still cooperative for now. He is recalling, âif I have to say⌠The fourth run, when we met each other at the service area, that guy⌠Laosan, was he? He was holding a newspaper, I think. We didnât discover that clue the last time.â
Mu Jiashi gives him a surprised look.
âWhat, didnât think I have good memory?â Selfish âtchâs again, as hateable as ever, as he continues, âI told you Iâm a lone wolf. You think lone wolves rely on nothing but being lonely?â
Mu Jiashi isnât interested in arguing for now, murmuring to himself, âso⌠You didnât get the clue from the bookstore.â
To be honest, Mu Jiashi himself came across that news entirely coincidentally and understood part of the background information of this Nightmare from that.
In this Nightmare, with how tight the time is, it is difficult to explore the entire service area thoroughly.
After a rough exploration, if people naturally come to the conclusion that only Dai Wu is an important NPC with information, then naturally all the other scenes in the service area are no longer significant.
But⌠Insignificant? Impossible!
The existence of any explorable scene must definitely be self-justified. Without a doubt, they must definitely provide clues related to the endings of the Nightmare.
Even the NPCs who look unimportant were the tool-persons to allow the scene of the man in blackâs mindless slaughter to play out back in the fifth run!
Nothing is ever useless in Nightmares;
In the fifth⌠No, wait, this is the sixth run. Dai Wu has recovered his earlier memories.
Then⌠what about Xß Beijin in the bookstore? What about people in the gas station?
Would there be any unexpected changes there?
Mu Jiashi quickly tells Selfish, âgo check out the gas station. Iâll go to the bookstore.â
If Laosan or Ding Yi were here, heâd definitely have asked them instead of Selfish, but this is what it is.
Then he runs right for the bookstore.
Selfish has his brows furrowed. He doesnât see a point to it, but follows the order while cussing still.
Meanwhile, the Nightmare enters its eighth minute. The bedroom team is probably already hurrying this way. Mu Jiashi rushes into the bookstore.
XĂź Beijin, shocked, raises his head at Mu Jiashi.
Mu Jiashi stares at him, asking, âlaoban, do you remember our promise? I said that Iâll go visit you in the Tower after the Nightmare is over.â
XĂź Beijin hesitantly but firmly nods.
Of course he nods because he was allowed toââActors of course remember everything that happened in the Nightmare, damn it, but whether they can reveal that they have ârecovered their memoriesâ depends on permission from the Server. It decides when they can look like they âremember.â
The lower the level of an Actor, the less free they are in the Nightmare, though as Nightmares crumble, Actors can act more and more freely in Nightmares in general.
Since XĂź Beijin saw that Dai Wu was all âI remember,â he followed suit to also look like âI remember,â pretending he just now recalled what Mu Jiashi planned with him earlier in the Nightmare.
Though it seems to make Mu Jiashi misunderstand, somehow.
Mu Jiashi gives XĂź Beijin â this mysterious, handsome man with pale skin â a rather deep gaze.
From what he now know, not just in the Tower, but even in Nightmares his identity seems rather strange as well.
Mu Jiashi thought that it was reasonable the cashier recovered his memories because of how important his role is in the Nightmare;Â he was the trigger for the whole case of the murdered wife, despite his complete innocence.
But why would XĂź Beijin recover his memories too? Did he still have more information to tell?
Right now, Mu Jiashi is suspecting XĂź Beijin.
If the man in black wasnât outside and still yelping in pain, then he would even begin suspecting XĂź Beijin of being the killer that killed his wife in the first placeââThis Nightmare never said anything about the job of that murderer, now, did it?
Or rather⌠Thereâs another possibility.
Dai Wu told them that, after leaving the supermarket, the jealous husband was still lashing out at his wife, and their argument drew in a crowd. There was someone who was sympathetic to the wife and wanted to help, but was scolded all the same by the husband instead.
Assuming this bookstore owner was also part of the service area staff at the time, then perhaps, he was among the crowd, and even, he might be the person scolded himself.
The person is handsome, and more specifically, devilishly handsome. He definitely leaves a big first impression of being a big, bad guy, which would explain why the paranoid husband might have suspected his intentions.
Mu Jiashiâs logic is leaping several steps ahead as he continues to speculate on XĂź Beijinâs role in the Nightmare.
If XĂź Beijin knew what Mu Jiashi was thinking about, he would surely leave two clear trails of tears.
Speaking of which, no matter which Nightmare he was in, he would always be suspected of being an antagonistâŚ
Mu Jiashi looks like he still wants to say something, but he pauses and keeps his mouth shut for now, instead, first looking down at the newspaper in front of the counter.
He immediately grabs a copy, staring right at the title.
âPOLICE: âKILLER STILL AT LARGE;â WARRANT ISSUED!â
This is no longer the previous newspaper. Both the contents and the date have changed.
The issue number and the date suggest it is a few editions after the previous one⌠At least, in terms of content, the previous one described the crime, while this one mentions directly that the killer is at large and the police are still searching for him.
Mu Jiashi quickly skims through the contents in the newsââThere was no more substantially different information.
Yet why would the date have changed? Is this part of the crumbling of the Nightmare at the fifth run?
While thinking about it, Selfish is walking towards the bookstore quickly.
As soon as he enters, he says, âthe news showing on the TV in the gas station is not the same one those two people said earlier!â
Mu Jiashi, speaking with an excitation and aspiration not even he could understand very well, asks, âwhat was on the news?â
Selfish answers, â the reporters are doing a live broadcast, it seems the police have largely isolated the killer, and have now fanned out to search for him.â
Mu Jiashi pauses to think.
The TV in the gas station seems to be showing events that take place even later than the newspaper in the bookstore, which actually makes sense, because of the inherent differences in recency between televised and paper media, not to mention the TV is showing a live broadcast.
But if thatâs the caseâŚ
Mu Jiashi falls deep into thought.
A factor that they have ignored us thus far is gradually bearing its fangs.
XĂź Beijin, through the screen of the stream and watching the two people directly on-scene, has understood whatâs happening even though he didnât see the newspaper or the news on the TV.
After thinking for a moment, a word suddenly strikes his mind.
In the stream, the detective dalao has also understood, typing on the comments excitedly, âThe time! The time in this instance is not static!â