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My Three Vampire Queens In The Apocalypse-Chapter 43: Emergence of Laughter [1]
I walked for a while with my hands in my pockets, enjoying the rare moment where nothing was actively trying to kill me or tamper with my mind, and that alone made the situation suspicious enough to deserve caution.
I had sent Juli to do something.
Everything looked normal around me, which was exactly why it was not.
The sky remained clear, the air felt steady, and there was no pressure lingering at the edge of my senses, but experience had already taught me that peace in a situation like this was never real, it was only a delay.
"Alright," I said, glancing around with mild disappointment, "who is next, and can you at least try to be creative this time?"
Silence answered me, which was expected and still annoying.
I continued walking, but my awareness sharpened. I already knew the order, and I knew what should come next, and if I was being honest, I would have preferred something simple like a direct attack instead of whatever this was going to turn into.
Then I heard it.
A small laugh slipped into the air, so faint that it almost blended into nothing, the kind of sound most people would ignore without a second thought.
I stopped immediately.
"...you have got to be kidding me," I muttered, staring ahead as if the ground had personally disappointed me.
Nothing followed.
No dramatic entrance, no visible distortion, just silence returning like nothing had happened.
"That is your opening?" I said, slowly looking around. "A single background laugh? You are really lowering expectations here."
For a moment, there was nothing.
Then it came again.
A soft chuckle from behind me, quiet and contained, like someone trying not to laugh in a serious situation.
I turned at once.
There was no one there.
Of course there was no one there.
I stared for a second, then let out a quiet sigh.
"Right," I said, rubbing my temple. "Laughter. Of all the options, it had to be you."
Another laugh echoed from my right, then one from my left, then one from somewhere above, as if the sky itself found something amusing.
They were not loud, but they were consistent, and more importantly, they were multiplying.
"Pick a direction and commit," I said flatly. "This surround sound nonsense is unnecessary."
The response came immediately in the form of more laughter, slightly louder now, overlapping in a way that felt unnatural despite how subtle it still was.
I stood still and listened, then exhaled slowly.
"I remember this," I said. "You start small so people ignore you, and by the time they notice, it is already too late."
Another chuckle appeared directly in front of me.
I focused on that point, narrowing my eyes.
"At least show yourself," I said. "I just dealt with someone who refused to exist properly, so do not tell me you are going with the same strategy."
No answer came in words.
Only laughter.
Soft, amused, and unmistakably directed at me.
I stared at the empty space, and that was when something felt wrong.
I was smiling.
I blinked once, then again, but the expression did not change.
"...excuse me?" I said, lifting a hand to my face as if it had betrayed me.
A quiet laugh slipped out.
From me.
I went still.
There was a brief moment where I simply processed it, and then I nodded slowly as understanding settled in.
"So that is how it works," I said. "You are not outside. You are inside."
Another laugh rose in my chest, stronger this time, like my body was reacting before I gave it permission.
I forced it down and exhaled.
"No," I said firmly. "We are not doing this."
The laughter around me grew slightly, as if it found that statement entertaining, which was honestly getting irritating.
"There is nothing funny here," I muttered, more to myself than anything else.
A pause followed.
Then I let out another short laugh.
I frowned immediately.
"That does not count," I said. "I am not laughing. That was... external interference."
The laughter layered over itself, different tones blending together in a way that should not have worked but somehow did, and while it was still manageable, I could already feel the shift happening.
It was building.
Not in strength, but in persistence.
It did not push.
It stayed.
It repeated.
I rolled my shoulders and took a slow breath, steadying my thoughts.
"This is annoying," I said. "At least the last one tried to fight me. You are just standing here waiting for me to lose to my own reactions."
Another chuckle escaped me, and I pointed forward immediately.
"That one was you," I said. "I am keeping count now."
The laughter grew louder in response, spreading more evenly through the space, and I could feel something shifting in my mind, not forcibly, but subtly, like my reactions were being guided instead of controlled.
That was the real problem.
It felt natural.
It felt like it belonged to me.
I frowned slightly and shook my head.
"I am not losing a fight because I accidentally found something funny," I said.
Another laugh rose, longer this time, and I had to press my lips together to stop it.
"This is ridiculous," I muttered. "I am literally fighting the concept of comedy."
The laughter swelled again, filling the space, no longer scattered, no longer hiding, and I could feel it getting harder to resist, not because it was overwhelming, but because it was constant.
It did not give me space to reset.
It stayed.
I exhaled slowly and straightened.
"Alright," I said calmly. "If this is your entire strategy, then you better hope I have a bad sense of humor."
I paused for a moment, then tilted my head slightly.
"Actually, now that I think about it, that might be your biggest problem."
Another laugh slipped out, but this time I did not react immediately. 𝑓𝓇𝘦ℯ𝘸𝘦𝑏𝓃𝑜𝘷ℯ𝑙.𝑐𝑜𝓂
I listened to it.
Analyzed it.
Then I shook my head and smiled faintly.
"You are not making things funny," I said. "You are lowering the weight of everything else."
The laughter surged, louder now, pressing in from all sides, but this time I paid attention to what it was trying to take away rather than what it was trying to add, and the pattern became clearer the longer I observed it.
It was not creating humor.
It was erasing resistance.
It was smoothing over tension, dulling urgency, making everything feel lighter so that reacting seriously started to feel unnecessary.
It was not about laughter.
It was about indifference.
"And that is a problem for you," I continued, my voice steady as another quiet chuckle slipped out and I simply let it pass without reacting. "Because if nothing feels serious, then you do not feel important either."
For a brief moment, the laughter lost its rhythm.
It was small, almost unnoticeable, but I caught it.
That hesitation told me everything.
I smiled a little wider.
"So that is it," I said softly. "That is your limit."
The laughter returned instantly, louder and sharper, almost desperate now, trying to bury the thought before it could settle, but the shift had already happened and it could not take it back.
I cracked my neck lightly and took a step forward, my gaze steady despite the noise pressing against my mind from every direction, because now that I understood the mechanism, the pressure did not feel overwhelming anymore, it just felt predictable.
"Alright," I said.
"My turn."
The laughter surged again, trying to swallow everything.
But this time, I did not listen.
Because I had already figured it out.
And once that happened...
the joke stopped being funny.
I did not move immediately after saying that.
There was no need to rush.
If anything, rushing would only make it easier for it to slip back in.
I stood there, listening to the laughter as it kept rising and falling around me, trying to find a new rhythm, a new angle, something that would work now that the first approach had failed.
It almost sounded irritated.
That alone was... kind of funny.
I let out a quiet breath, steady and controlled, and focused on the feeling instead of the sound. The laughter was still there, still brushing against my thoughts, still trying to loosen that grip I had just regained, but now that I understood what it was doing, it felt a lot less impressive.
It was not some unstoppable force.
It was just persistent.
Annoyingly persistent.
"Honestly," I thought, "this is less of a boss fight and more of an annoying background effect."
Another chuckle slipped out of me, but this time I did not even react to it.
That was important.
Reacting gave it value.
Ignoring it made it meaningless.
The difference was small, but in a fight like this, small differences decided everything.
I shifted my weight slightly and glanced around, not expecting to see anything, but still checking out of habit. If it showed itself now, even for a moment, that would be enough.
Everything had a point of failure.
Even this.
Especially this.
"If you cannot scare me and you cannot confuse me," I thought, "then all you have left is endurance."
And endurance was something I was very familiar with.
I had survived worse than this.
Much worse.
The laughter swelled again, louder, sharper, like it was trying to prove a point, but all it really did was confirm mine.
I exhaled slowly.
"Yeah," I thought, a faint smile forming again, "you are running out of options."
And that meant...
it was almost time to end this.







