Ascendance of a Bookworm Part 4 Vol 1
Table of Contents
The Winter Playroom and Our Departure
My Retainers and Entering the Dormitory
The Advancement Ceremony and Fellowship
Gatherings
Royalty and Nobles from Other Duchies
Math, Theology, and Controlling Mana
Mana Compression and Creating a Highbeast
The Fourth Step of Mana Compression
Court Etiquette and Hirschur’s Visit
A Comfy Life with My Family by You Shiina
The 2nd Ascendance of a Bookworm Character Poll!
Prologue
“Ferdinand, I think it’s about time you told
me what happened over the past two years,” Rozemyne said with a firm look when
the man in question arrived at the High Bishop’s chambers. She was clean and
well dressed, no longer covered in the jureve. Her tone was bright and there
was a liveliness in her golden eyes, but her muscles had atrophied so much over
the past two years of sleep that they could no longer support her, so she was
lying limp on a bench, completely immobile.
Not a single person in recorded Ehrenfest
history had slept in a jureve for such a long time, so she would no doubt be a
valuable research subject when it came to analyzing the effects of using one
for such an extensive period.
Rozemyne noticed Ferdinand falling into
thought after glancing down at her. “Well?” she asked, just barely managing to
tap an impatient finger against the table. “Are we going to talk or not?”
“...There is much we cannot discuss here. May
we move to the hidden room?”
Not even in the temple could one carelessly
discuss what had happened in the castle. But rather than confirming the request
with a nod, Rozemyne simply closed her eyes.
“I don’t mind going to the hidden room, but I
can’t exactly walk.”
“A fair point. Have you felt any changes since
waking up? Are you slowly regaining the ability to move certain parts of your
body? Can you say how close you are to being as mobile as you used to be,
preferably in the form of an estimated percentage?”
As Ferdinand started listing off every
question that came to mind, Rozemyne gave a smile so bright that it was
blatantly fake. “You really are a (mad scientist),” she said.
Ferdinand didn’t know what a “mad scientist”
was, but he could tell it was an insult of some sort. Without a word, he
flicked her on the forehead.
“Ouchie!” She cried out as she usually would,
but she couldn’t reflexively rub her head. Her movements were too sluggish; it
took her some time just to raise a hand.
...If she is in this state now, just how long will
it take for her muscles to recover enough for her to move normally? What needs
to be done? She will ideally return to her usual self soon, but it is possible
the process will take too long for her to attend the Royal Academy in time.
Ferdinand silently opened the door to the
hidden room, pondering what medicine and magic tools could be used to get
Rozemyne out of this situation. Fran and Zahm carried her inside on the bench,
then promptly exited and closed the door behind them. The moment they were
gone, Rozemyne’s expression morphed into an unhappy frown.
“Just so you know, Ferdinand, I really feel
like (Urashima Taro) right now!”
“Who or what is that...? I do not understand
your words.”
“You were the first person I saw when I woke
up, but you look exactly the same as you always do, down to the creases between
your brows, so it didn’t really hit me that two years had actually passed. But
Nicola and Monika are both of age now; they have their hair up, their skirts
are long... And even Gil’s super tall now, so...”
Both Wilfried and Charlotte had left her
behind as well. Ferdinand was well aware of this, but he chose to remain
silent. Given that Rozemyne had worked almost foolishly hard to be an excellent
and respectable big sister, he didn’t even want to imagine how she would react
to learning that her little sister was now taller than her.
I suppose I will need to face the aftermath
eventually, though...
Ferdinand let out a heavy sigh, then
immediately realized Rozemyne’s mana was likely wavering. Her voice became
increasingly distraught, and her worried eyes shifted in color from their
familiar gold to a violently shifting rainbow.
“Everyone’s left me behind! I’m in a whole new
world, and I don’t know anything! It feels so... so terrible! So scary!”
“Rozemyne, calm yourself.”
“I can’t! I mean, everyone is different now!
Everyone but me...”
“That is not true—your mana flow has changed
over the past two years. But you are going to lose control over it if you do
not compose yourself.”
Ferdinand could already see Rozemyne’s mana
stirring. Having expected this, he took out a feystone from his back hip pouch
and pressed it against her forehead. It was filled with mana in the blink of an
eye, as was the next he pulled out, and the next.
Rozemyne gasped and opened her eyes. She
blinked several times, then inhaled deeply to catch her breath. Only once her
emotions were under control did she weakly stretch out a shaking hand to grip
Ferdinand’s sleeve, just as she had done upon awakening in the jureve.
“...Ferdinand, please tell me what happened
over the past two years. Everyone is so different now that I’m scared to even
go outside.”
“That is quite a broad subject. Where am I to
begin...?”
“Did you catch the kidnappers? Is Charlotte
safe?”
The kidnapping incident had ended two years
ago for Ferdinand, but to Rozemyne, it had essentially taken place yesterday.
Only now did this thought occur to him; it seemed filling in the two years of
missing experience would prove harder than he had expected.
“Charlotte’s kidnapper was revealed to be a
member of Rozemary’s family. He has already been executed, though he denied
involvement in your kidnapping and the poisoning. Viscount Gerlach drew much
suspicion for having previously owned the Devouring soldiers used in the
operation, but there was no evidence against him; he was confirmed to have been
inside the sealed grand hall when the attack was brought to our attention. It
was concluded that the guard knights had not acted improperly, but for failing
to protect their charges, they were punished with decreased salaries.”
“I’m glad that was their only punishment...
What happened with the winter playroom?”
“Wilfried and Charlotte both did their best to
lead using the instructions in your letters, according to the attendants there.
Damuel confirmed this as well, having been tasked with bringing books to the
castle and lending them out. It seems the two also received much assistance
from a laynoble by the name of Philine.”
The laynoble apparently idolized Rozemyne, and
her efforts were often brought up by Damuel, Wilfried, and Charlotte. It seemed
that Rozemyne recognized the name, as her worried expression instantly gave way
to a slight smile.
“I see. Philine did all that for us... She
wrote a lot of stories, didn’t she?”
“I believe so. The stories from the playroom
were all written in the colloquial speech of children, however, and your
attendants bemoaned that they could not be turned into proper books. In the
end, they were somewhat useless,” Ferdinand said, recalling the struggles that
Fran and Gil had endured.
Rozemyne let out a giggle, then looked up in
realization. “Ah! What happened with Hasse? Was Spring Prayer carried out
okay?”
“Charlotte performed Hasse’s Spring Prayer in
your place, determined to fill the hole you left behind,” Ferdinand explained.
It would have been more accurate to say he had ordered her to perform it, but
it wasn’t untrue that she had wished to compensate for her big sister’s
absence.
“Did Charlotte have enough mana for that...?”
Rozemyne asked, a worried look on her face.
“Of course not,” Ferdinand scoffed. “She used
the mana that had dissolved into your jureve. She and Wilfried performed the
Harvest Festival and this year’s Spring Prayer in your place as well, so be
sure to thank them. They have grown used to working with feystones.”
“That’s good to hear. They’ve... sure grown up
a lot, huh?” Rozemyne whispered sadly, lowering her eyes.
Ferdinand didn’t know how to console her. The
only words he could offer were a blunt, “Naturally. Two years have passed.”
“...Right. Well, what about the lower city? I
bet Dad and the others were really worried about me being asleep for two
years...”
This time, it was Ferdinand who lowered his
eyes. Her family treasured their bond even after the walls of status had torn
them apart; he could imagine they had been even more worried about her than he
had, since they were not able to check up on her frequently as he was.
“I do not receive reports on the status of
your family,” he said. “My only information regarding the lower city is that
the hand pumps have successfully begun to proliferate. Perhaps your attendants
in charge of the workshop can give you the answers you seek.”
“...I’ll ask Gil and Fritz later. Did the
printing industry freeze without me? How did the paper-making in Illgner go?
Things were going so well too...”
Rozemyne was making herself depressed before
she had even received an answer, so Ferdinand graciously told her what had
actually happened in Illgner.
“What? Volk is having a child?! I’m so glad
he’s found happiness.”
Upon receiving an update on the Harvest
Festival, Rozemyne rejoiced as though she had found happiness herself.
Ferdinand was endlessly baffled by her capacity to empathize with others.
“As for the printing industry, Elvira refused
to allow its stagnation, taking the initiative to establish printing workshops
within her home province of Haldenzel. The Gutenbergs were all mobilized for
this purpose, leaving for the province in spring and returning following the
Harvest Festival. Benno gave me his report on the matter just recently.”
“What? M-Mother got involved with the printing
industry?” Rozemyne asked, her eyes widening with surprise.
Ferdinand gave a firm nod. He had already been
overwhelmed with work, so Elvira had willfully taken his place, absolutely
dedicating herself to leading the industry her daughter had started. As an
archnoble, she was not very informed on the business practices of commoners, so
her unreasonable demands certainly put Benno through the wringer, but Ferdinand
appreciated the relief nonetheless.
“You owe much to Elvira’s motherly love,” he
said.
“I am grateful to her, but...” Rozemyne
trailed off uncomfortably, looking up at Ferdinand with a hard-to-read
expression. There was a pause as she struggled to find the right words, then
she closed her eyes and murmured, “I’m surprised you gave her your permission.”
“In all honesty, I did not have the time to
personally involve myself with the printing industry; it was such a great boon
that Elvira elected to handle it all for me.”
“That makes sense—all my work did go to you,
after all. You’ve done well. I’ll ask Gil and the Plantin Company about the
printing industry later on. So... has the former Veronica faction calmed down
yet?”
Rozemyne had given Ferdinand praise and then
changed the topic as though it were the most natural thing in the world. She
hadn’t criticized him for entrusting some of his work to someone else, and it
was perhaps due to this consideration that he then allowed himself to show a
kind of vulnerability he would never dare show to anyone else.
“The former Veronica faction has shown no
signs of mobilizing. Viscount Gerlach has been deftly avoiding our attempts to
prove his wrongdoings, and while I was told to trap and extract evidence from
him, I was too busy with the work in front of me. As such, I have not captured
the one who kidnapped you. Forgive me.”
Rozemyne’s workload was immense—far more than
one would expect a child to have. It had proven too much for Ferdinand to
shoulder alone, and so he had needed to seek much assistance from others. Her
temple work alone was a heavy burden, but she was also involved with
ceremonies, the orphanage, the workshops, and the Plantin Company. All that,
combined with him no longer having her services as a calculator nor her
guarding against the castle exploiting his labor, meant the dam holding back
the water had finally burst.
Ferdinand had been summoned to the castle more
frequently, where he would receive unreasonable demands from both Sylvester and
Bonifatius. The latter in particular constantly demanded that he put into
action some scheme or another to capture Viscount Gerlach, and that he do
something to wake Rozemyne as soon as possible.
Perhaps I would have been able to capture Gerlach
by now had Bonifatius not been so invigorated...
Eckhart had initially helped Ferdinand as his
assistant, Damuel had worked in place of his charge, and Brigitte had provided
her assistance where possible, but all three were abruptly snatched away by
Bonifatius to engage in a brutal training regimen. Had Ferdinand kept them by
his side, perhaps he would have had more options for trapping Viscount Gerlach.
He had few retainers he could trust, however, and with Viscount Gerlach being
extra cautious ever since he was summoned for questioning, Ferdinand lacked the
leeway to properly lay out a trap to gather evidence from him.
“We were able to block Georgine’s return, and
we are currently working to prevent any official interactions between
Ahrensbach and Ehrenfest, which I imagine is leaving them unable to make any
moves. Lamprecht, however, is a cause for concern in this regard. There is a
chance he may sow the seeds of conflict.”
“Lamprecht? My brother?”
Ferdinand furrowed his brow as he thought back
to what had happened over the past two years. “At the end of the winter you
fell into your long slumber, Lamprecht attended the Royal Academy’s graduation
ceremony to celebrate his lover’s graduation. He had possessed less mana than
her while he was at the Academy, so her father had been reluctant to bless
their relationship, but your mana compression method had resulted in his
capacity increasing a little over the winter.”
“And that was enough for her father to accept
their marriage?”
“Yes. He was told that his mana continuing to
grow would be enough. As such, when Lamprecht returned from the Royal Academy,
he asked Sylvester and Karstedt for permission to marry her.”
Rozemyne nodded excitedly and gestured for
Ferdinand to continue, her eyes glittering with hope. Ferdinand truly did not
understand why women were so enthralled with the romance of others. He sighed,
then continued. She certainly wasn’t going to like how it ended.
“However, as his lover is an Ahrensbach
archnoble, his request was denied on the spot. He knew ahead of time that they
would reject him based on recent Ehrenfest politics, and so after an
unsurprised nod, he sent a farewell letter to his lover.”
No matter how much a couple wanted to marry,
it could never happen without their parents’ approval and the archduke’s
permission. They were allowed to have personal relationships based on feelings
up until their graduation, but after that, society ruthlessly clamped down on
them. It wasn’t rare for marriages between nobles to contain no love
whatsoever.
“Lamprecht is
Wilfried’s guard knight, I suppose... It would be problematic for him to marry
a high-status Ahrensbach girl,” Rozemyne said. Her brow was furrowed slightly,
but her tone made it clear that she understood the situation.
“Under normal circumstances, a situation such
as this would have ended with the farewell letter. Lamprecht’s lover, however,
is the niece of an archduke, and during last year’s spring Archduke Conference,
Aub Ahrensbach demanded to know why Sylvester had refused to permit the
marriage.”
“Yikes...”
After being accosted at the Archduke
Conference, Sylvester had managed to fend off Aub Ahrensbach with as many
excuses as he could muster. For one, there were nobles other than Lamprecht who
wanted to marry Ahrensbach girls, but with so few nobles at the moment, no
archduke would want to allow their archnoble women to go to other duchies
instead of producing powerful children for their home duchy. Ehrenfest was also
weaker than Ahrensbach, so no matter how much Sylvester wanted to allow the two
to be together, he couldn’t afford to lose a powerful archnoble by allowing him
to marry into another duchy, nor could he permit Lamprecht to marry while
denying others with similar ambitions.
“It is expected that he will again be accosted
during this year’s Archduke Conference,” Ferdinand continued, “so you will need
to learn what you can about the current state of Ahrensbach politics after
entering the Royal Academy.”
“Haah... Well, I’ll do what I can, I guess.”
Rozemyne’s blatant lack of interest prompted
Ferdinand to rub his forehead. “Were you listening to a word of what I just
told you?”
“Yes, but since Lamprecht’s marriage is
guaranteed to fail for political reasons, I’m a lot more interested in what
happened between Brigitte and Damuel.”
“You are more interested in a marriage between
your guard knights than the marriage of your own brother...?”
“Absolutely. I’ve spent a lot more time with
them than I have with Lamprecht.”
Ferdinand sharply inhaled at her unexpected
reply. She had shown such devotion to Wilfried and Charlotte that he had
assumed she treasured anyone who was legally her family, but as it turned out,
it wasn’t blood or technicality that determined her attachment to someone, but
the amount of time she had spent with them. This was his first time realizing
that she clearly delineated between those who were her family and those who
weren’t, which he hadn’t expected from the girl who treated everyone with such consideration
that her family seemed to grow by the day.
“Ferdinand, what happened with Damuel and
Brigitte?”
“I am sorry to disappoint you, but they did
not end up marrying one another.”
“Why not?!” Rozemyne exclaimed, her eyes wide
with shock. “Didn’t they both love each other?! There aren’t any interduchy
politics at play here either...”
Ferdinand was equally surprised—not because
the marriage hadn’t worked out, but because she had truly believed there was a
chance it would actually happen.
“Their hopes and dreams simply were not
aligned. There was nothing that could be done.”
“Mutual love isn’t enough for things to go
well, huh...?”
“There are countless things that depend on
outside circumstances, are there not? Surely you understand this, having come
of age once before in a past life.”
“I read about it a lot in books, but, well...
I’d never actually met a couple who didn’t have a good relationship after
mutually falling in love.”
This was enough for Ferdinand to realize that
the world Rozemyne came from was only deceptively similar to his. There were
many substantial differences, and he could guess that the way people perceived
marriage was among them.
“There were two possible paths they could have
taken to make their marriage a reality: one was for Brigitte, the little sister
of a landowning mednoble, to descend to the rank of a laynoble and live in the
Noble’s Quarter; the other was for Damuel, the second son of a laynoble, to
become a mednoble through marriage.”
“What’s the problem with Damuel becoming a
mednoble? Surely that’s an improvement for him,” Rozemyne said casually, which
revealed just how little she knew about nobles.
“That would require Damuel to step down from
serving as your guard knight and move to Illgner. While that would be
acceptable for an average layknight, his position is rather unique: not only
does he owe both his position and his life to your kindness, but he knows too
much about you to be safely let go,” Ferdinand explained. For obvious reasons,
neither the public nor Brigitte knew Damuel possessed information about
Rozemyne’s time as a commoner.
“Can’t I just give him my permission to quit?
Like, right now? Could they get married then?”
“It is too late for that. Elvira introduced
Brigitte to a new man, to whom she got married this summer. She has now
returned to Illgner.”
“That happened way too fast... I can’t believe
it.”
She had been more than ready to release Damuel
and send him to Illgner despite everything he knew about her, all to ensure
that their relationship worked out. Ferdinand had no choice but to respectfully
applaud Elvira, who had sensed this danger and swiftly prevented it from
happening before Rozemyne could wake up.
Ferdinand had no intention of telling Rozemyne
this, since she was so emotionally weak when it came to matters of death, but
had Damuel chosen to go to Illgner, he would have experienced a sudden and
mysterious demise by the end of the month. Keeping such critical information
about the archducal family private was more important to Ehrenfest than the
life of a single laynoble.
“Speaking of which, your personal chef
requested permission to get married,” Ferdinand added. “These arrangements
could also not be made while you were asleep. They are still awaiting an
answer, so I would rather you settle this matter than dwell on the past.”
“I guess Hugo’s spring has finally come...”
Rozemyne said, feebly attempting to smile. “I’m happy for him.” Despite her
words, the expression on her face was the same one she had worn when voicing
her fears about how much everyone had changed.
“I imagine your attendants will know more
about the orphanage and workshop than I do. It would be best for you to ask
them any further questions.”
“...Right.”
Noticing the anxiety in Rozemyne’s stiff
expression, Ferdinand paused in thought, wondering what he could do to ease her
concerns. He knew many people who had used a jureve before, but they had slept
from ten days at the least to a season at most; someone remaining asleep for
two whole years was simply unheard of. And more than anything else, he had been
watching her so closely over the years, so desperately praying for some kind of
change, that he could not quite empathize with her feelings of worry over the
changes she saw. Rather, he felt more empathy for her attendants and relatives,
who had spent the past two years worrying themselves to death over when she
would wake up, or whether she would wake up at all.
“Rozemyne, I do not know what you are afraid
of, but all of your attendants have been waiting for you to awaken. They
followed the instructions you left behind and managed your chambers, the
orphanage, and the workshop in your absence. They dedicated themselves to
making new books and doing whatever work they could to ensure your happiness
when you returned. You should not fear their growth, but rather celebrate it.”
“You’re right!” Rozemyne replied
enthusiastically, a big smile now spread across her face. It was the same
expression she always wore, and it was for precisely that reason that Ferdinand
let out a long sigh of relief.
Just Call Me Urashima Taro
I came out of the jureve feeling entirely like
Urashima Taro, a man from Japanese folklore who went to the undersea Dragon
Palace for a few days, only to discover that a hundred years had passed when he
returned.
Ferdinand hadn’t changed in the slightest, so
I had barely even felt the passage of time at first; in fact, I had mainly just
been upset about not getting to experience being nine years old. But once he
carried me out of the room, I saw that Nicola and Monika had come of age—their
hair was up, they wore long skirts, and their chests were bigger. Gil must have
gone through puberty as well, because despite being only up to Fran’s chest in
my memories, he now stood far above Fran’s shoulders. His voice was also so
deep that he sounded like someone else entirely.
Those two years of sleep were like a single night
to me, so waking up to find everyone having grown up so much is equal parts
weird and terrifying...
I alone was the same as always—in fact, I was
arguably in a worse position than before, because my muscles had atrophied so
much that I couldn’t even move properly. I was basically paralyzed, at the
complete mercy of those I technically knew but didn’t recognize as they
stripped off my clothes and bathed me.
While I was scared and nervous beyond words, I
couldn’t ask them to stop or say I would handle things myself. I desperately
tried flapping my mouth, moving my legs, and opening my hands. Slowly but
surely, I got used to moving my immobile body, plastering a smile on my face
all the while to hide the fear dominating my heart.
Ferdinand gave me a concise version of the
events that had occurred while I was asleep, and hearing how much everyone had
worried about me had eased my nerves a little. But now, with the unstoppable
flow of time being thrust right into my face, it felt as though there was an
obstacle in front of me that could never be surmounted. I needed to get my life
back in control as soon as possible, so that I could get to work adjusting to
this new time period.
“I’ll get things back to normal starting
tomorrow!” I announced. “If something can be done about my body, that is.”
Ferdinand abruptly stood up as though my words
had reminded him of something. “I wish to fetch a magic tool. Would you prefer
to wait here or come outside with me?”
“...I’ll wait here. Could you hand me one of
those books before you go?” I asked, pointing with my eyes to the stack Gil had
made while I was asleep.
Ferdinand picked up the top book, set it on my
stomach, then turned around and left.
“A new book! Yay! Eheheh.”
After pumping myself up, I slowly moved my
hands to touch it, the sensation of a new book bringing a broad smile to my
face. I tried to open it with my weakly shaking hand, but it was harder than I
had anticipated—even gripping and turning a page was an immense challenge.
“Ah...”
I couldn’t properly support the book as I
tried to open it either, so it ended up sliding off my stomach and thudding
onto the floor. Despite my best efforts to pick it back up, my arm just
pathetically hung off the bench, too heavy for me to raise with my own
strength. No way could I retrieve the book when I couldn’t even raise my arm.
I can’t believe I’m so weak that I can’t even
read a book...
Even after sacrificing a whole two years of my
life, I didn’t feel the slightest bit healthier than before. In fact, everything
was worse—my body hadn’t grown, my muscles had atrophied, and I had even more
mana. What was the point in forcing a smile onto my face? The remaining
strength drained from me in an instant, and tears started to well up in my
eyes.
“I am back,” Ferdinand announced. “Why are you
crying?”
“I... I can’t even read books. My hands
don’t... I can’t turn the pages. I hate this...”
Ferdinand sighed, then grabbed my left hand
and stuck some fancy bracelet-looking thing around my upper arm. It shrunk in
size like a magic ring, clinging to my skin before starting to suck up my mana.
“Ferdinand, what are you...? Wha? I can move
my arm?”
“These are magic tools for reinforcing
enhancement magic. I used them in the past in order to grasp the fundamental
technique of physically enhancing oneself with mana. They should be perfect for
you, since you are presently overflowing with excess mana. I expect they will
allow you to move normally. Hold out your other arm.”
He stuck a second bracelet around my other
arm, and with that, I could move my entire upper body with ease. It was
incredible. I spun my arms around experimentally.
“Now I can read books!”
“...Could you please get excited over
something else for once?”
“But why? I’m more moved and grateful right
now than I’ve ever been in my life.”
Ferdinand shook his head, appearing to have
immediately given up on the matter, then held out two more bracelets. “Attach
these to your legs later on,” he said.
I took them from him and tilted my head. “Why
aren’t we putting them on now?”
“They require contact with skin to function.
Do you intend to expose your bare legs to me? I cannot say I am fond of such
immodesty. It does not concern me if you are an exhibitionist, but at the very
least, I ask that you satisfy such urges somewhere I am not present. I would
rather not be mistaken for one of your kind.”
I was currently wearing socks that were
attached by string to a belt around my waist, like a crudely made garter
without a hint of sexiness, beneath a pair of old-fashioned drawers. In other
words, for the leg bracelets to touch my skin, I would need to remove my
underwear and have them clasped around my thighs. Given that I couldn’t move my
legs on my own right now, asking Ferdinand to put the bracelets on for me was
akin to me asking him to take off my underwear.
“Excuse me?! I’m no exhibitionist! I just
assumed you could put them around my ankles or something. It’s your fault for
not explaining that they need to touch the skin, Ferdinand. Now go call Nicola
and Monika so they can put them on for me.”
Ferdinand exited the hidden room, with Nicola
and Monika arriving a moment later to take his place. They removed my clothes
and secured the bracelets around my thighs. I tried swinging my legs around,
and much to my excitement, they moved just fine. The two girls widened their
eyes in surprise at my once drooping limbs suddenly becoming so mobile.
“Ferdinand allowed me to borrow these to help
me move again,” I explained. “Could you lend me your hands? I want to try
standing up.”
“Of course.”
I put some strength into my legs and managed
to stand up just as I wanted to. I slowly let go of their hands, walked a lap
around the room on my own, then struck a victory pose.
“Yes! I’m finally healthy again!”
“The High Priest’s magic tools certainly are
incredible...” Monika mused.
“I’m glad to see you smiling again, Lady
Rozemyne!” Nicola exclaimed, now wearing a relieved smile herself. They had
evidently realized that the smile I worked so hard to force while they were
bathing me was completely fake.
“Sorry for worrying you two.”
With that, I went to exit the hidden room on
my own two feet. Never had I thought that simply being able to move my body
could feel so good. Reveling in the glory of my new health, I skipped to the
door and threw it open.
“I can move on my own again thanks to you,
Ferdinand. I thank you ever so much.”
Fran and my other attendants looked at me with
shock, then broke into relieved smiles. Ferdinand, meanwhile, merely nodded as
though it had been obvious that the magic tools would work.
“Rozemyne, you are to leave for the castle
three days from now. Once there, you will be educated on what you need to know
for the Royal Academy, and then it will immediately be time for winter
socializing.”
“The Royal Academy...? Do I really need to go
there, even in this state? Can’t you just delay it for a year so I don’t have
to cram anything?” I asked, grimacing at the very thought. There was no chance
Ferdinand would show me any mercy—he would expect results appropriate for the
archduke’s adopted daughter, despite the fact I was recovering from a coma and
needed magic tools just to move. His brutal teaching regimen was not something
I was looking forward to right now.
No matter what happens, I’m not going to the
Royal Academy! Ferdinand’s crazy expectations will definitely kill me!
“You will not be considered a noble until you
graduate from the Royal Academy, as each noble undergoes their coming of age
ceremony and their graduation ceremony at the same time. If you delayed your
attendance by a year, you would not be considered an adult in noble society
even after turning fifteen. This would make it harder for you to marry, find
work, or do anything as a noble; it would introduce a considerable weakness for
others to exploit.”
“Mm... Well, my noble life started with me
pretending to be one year younger than I really am, and I already have a ton of
weaknesses like being sickly, having been raised in the temple, and so on. I
don’t really think holding back on this for now will change much, plus delaying
my coming of age ceremony means I get to spend an extra year in the temple,
right?”
When it came to attending the Royal Academy, I
didn’t feel there was any need to rush whatsoever. The longer I went before
coming of age, the longer I could spend in the lower city.
Ferdinand appeared to have fallen into
thought. “All children go to the Royal Academy upon turning ten, and it is my
honest opinion that you will find things more peaceful there. If you stay here,
expect to spend the winter enduring strange looks from nobles and countless
questions about whether the child of an archduke can survive after having their
schooling delayed by a year.”
“That may be true, but I have the Dedication
Ritual and the Lord of Winter hunt to take care of, plus I’ll be staying in the
temple to recover, so I doubt I’ll see many nobles at all over the winter.”
Ferdinand gave a nod, but the contemplative
look on his face remained. While I had managed to deflect his attack, he still
intended to make me go to the Royal Academy. I prepared for his next move,
determined to remain steadfast no matter what.
“Consider that if you delay your schooling by
a year, you will end up in the same grade as Charlotte. You already look
younger than her due to having slept for such a long time; if you end up in the
same grade as well, where would your status as an older sister go?”
...Bwuh?! Missing a year will put me in the same
grade as Charlotte?!
Now that was a serious problem. My heart
wavered, and as if sensing my weakness, Ferdinand allowed his lips to curve
into a grin. “Charlotte was devastated that she was responsible for your going
into a coma,” he said. “If she ends up in the same grade as you, her dear older
sister, as a consequence, she will surely regret her deeds each and every day
you spend together in the Royal Academy. Do you truly wish to put her through
such emotional turmoil?”
I had rushed out the window to save my cute
little sister, not to cause her further hardships. The thought alone made my
heart sink, and it annoyed me how much Ferdinand understood that.
“You will not have to cram as much as you did
prior to Charlotte’s baptism, and the magic tools allowing you to move will
assist you greatly. You may have lost two years of your life, but you can still
remain an older sister she respects, if only you try.”
“...Fine. I’ll do it. As Charlotte’s big
sister, I have to.”
“Good. In that case, I will see you in the
castle three days hence. If you wish to meet with the Plantin Company before
then, do so sooner rather than later.”
Ferdinand opened the door to the hidden room,
signaling that our conversation was over. I had completely and utterly lost.
The minutiae of noble politics didn’t really matter to me, but as Charlotte’s
older sister, I absolutely needed to go to the Royal Academy.
“Lady Rozemyne, may we give our reports on
what happened while you were asleep?” Fran asked.
I looked up to see my attendants standing in a
line before me. Fran, Zahm, and Monika were grouped together, since they had
collectively managed my chambers, while Nicola stood alone to give a report on
the kitchen, where she had predominantly worked over the past two years. Then
there were Wilma and Rosina, who would give a report on the orphanage—it seemed
that Wilma had at some point conquered her fears of entering the noble section
of the temple, as she was confidently standing right next to Rosina. At the
very end were Gil and Fritz, ready to give reports on the workshop.
“Please do,” I replied.
“No major incidents occurred within your
chambers,” Fran explained. “Zahm, Monika, and I spent each day working in the
High Priest’s chambers to assist him with his workload. During Spring Prayer
and the Harvest Festival, Lady Charlotte and Lord Wilfried traveled across the
Central District in your place. They struggled somewhat during the first year,
but during the second, they handled the divine instruments brilliantly and gave
generous blessings to all.”
“I see. I’ll need to thank them later.”
“Their visiting the temple before and after
the ceremonies has also resulted in a change of attitude among the blue
priests—more have begun to take their duties seriously to earn their favor,” he
continued. That motivation was definitely the result of greed, but I supposed
it was better than nothing. “What we were most worried about was the High
Priest’s use of potions. He is relying on them as much as he did previously, so
we ask that you please encourage him to stop, as you did before. He merely
shrugs off our advice.”
I gave a nod, trying to ease the worry in
Fran’s eyes. The workload Ferdinand had endured was so immense that not even
regular potion usage was enough for him to do it all himself, so there was no
doubt in my mind that warnings from his attendants wouldn’t have even come
close to getting him to cut back.
“I suppose I will need to help him with his
work so that he doesn’t have to continue using those potions...” I replied.
Once Fran’s report was concluded, Nicola
stepped forward with a wooden board in hand. “Thanks to you, Lady Rozemyne, I
got to spend two years working in the kitchen as an assistant. I’ve learned to
make all the recipes you left us, plus there were cooking competitions between
Hugo and Leise that produced even more new ones.”
Cooking competitions? What the heck? Those sound
like so much fun!
“I’m looking forward to the new recipes, but
who won?”
“So far, they have won one each.”
“I look forward to the tiebreaker, then.”
“Also, Hugo and Ella have asked to get
married. Hugo wanted me to tell you as soon as you woke up.”
...Come again?! Ferdinand never mentioned that Ella was the person Hugo wants to marry!
“It is apparently tradition for noblewomen to
quit their work after getting married, but Ella wishes to remain a chef. If
possible, I would appreciate you handling this matter for her.”
“It’s nice that she wants to keep working even
after getting married, but... how will we handle their quarters? I’ll speak to
Ferdinand, but for now, let’s arrange for them to get married next summer.”
“Aah, Hugo is going to be so happy! I thank
you ever so much.”
Nicola completed her report by mentioning that
the recipe book had been completed, then moved aside for Wilma and Rosina to
step forward.
“Here is our report on the orphanage,” Wilma
began. “We received three new orphans during the two years you were asleep. Two
were found abandoned at the gate, while the third was born from a gray shrine
maiden named Lily, who had previously served Brother Egmont.”
I knew Egmont—he was the villain who had
wrecked my book room in the past.
And now he impregnated one of his attendants,
then sent their child to the orphanage? Um, hold on a second. Is that normal
here, or am I allowed to get mad about this?
I was too taken aback to respond immediately,
and in the end, I decided to entrust the ethical debate to someone else rather
than try to figure it out myself.
“Should I take that to mean she gave birth in
the orphanage?”
“No—as there was nobody there who knew how to
serve as a midwife, we were unable to care for her ourselves. We discussed the
matter with Tuuli and the Plantin Company, then moved her to the monastery in
Hasse so that the people there could help.”
Ferdinand had apparently told them to leave
Lily alone and allow the baby to be born on its own. Wilma had been uneasy
nonetheless, and so she had consulted Tuuli and Lutz, who naturally pointed out
that this was definitely not the case.
Good work, you two.
There were about twenty women in the
orphanage, but none had any experience helping with a birth, so they had moved
Lily to the monastery with the gray shrine maidens at Benno’s direction. Nora
took the lead there, since she had assisted with a birth before, and with other
women from Hasse helping out as well, things proceeded smoothly without any
major complications.
It seemed that Benno had yelled at Wilma for
her unwillingness to accompany them to Hasse, despite her being responsible for
the orphanage, so she was ultimately forced to go along as well.
“That... That must have been very hard for
you,” I murmured. “Are you, um... Are you okay, Wilma?”
Getting shouted at by Benno was scary enough
already, but with her fear of men, I could imagine it had been outright
terrifying for Wilma. I couldn’t see how it would have accomplished anything
other than reinforcing her existing trauma.
“It certainly was difficult, yes, but it was a
valuable experience,” Wilma explained. “The mother and child are now staying in
the orphanage. We are using our experience with Dirk and taking turns to look
after the baby.”
“How is Dirk, by the way? Have you been
draining his mana?”
“Yes. Once he shows signs of a buildup, we
immediately send Fran to inform the High Priest, who in turn responds at once.
As a result, Dirk has had no problems whatsoever.”
Dirk was in a tough spot, since a mana buildup
would put his very life in danger, so it was good to hear he was doing well.
“The musical training in the orphanage is
going splendidly as well,” Rosina added. “We allowed them all to touch the
harspiel, though only those who expressed an interest were taught how to play.
As far as I can tell, only one has the talent necessary to become a personal
musician, but the fact they do not enjoy practicing means they will most likely
never make use of said talent.”
Nobles had to study music for their debut, but
the orphans had no such obligation. My only goal here was to identify the
children with both talent and the drive to learn. There would almost certainly
be children who were talented but had no interest in music, and there was no
point in focusing on those who weren’t properly motivated.
“However, there is a child who seems to have a
future as an artist. They love to draw, and whenever they have the time, they
mimic Wilma’s art on their own stone slate.”
“I see. Feel free to buy as many replacement
pens as you need.”
“Understood.”
It seemed that Rosina was taking her job of
teaching the children in the orphanage very seriously, which came as a huge
relief. I had been worried she would outright refuse, since this kind of work
wasn’t normally expected of a musician.
“Now for the workshop,” Gil said in his
shockingly deep voice. He was so tall and looked so much like an adult now that
I couldn’t believe it.
He summarized the events of the past two years
for me. They had run out of manuscripts they could print, so they had decided
to borrow a book from Tuuli. In return, she and Lutz were taught proper
etiquette in the orphanage.
“I believe they now observe etiquette well
enough to be presented to mednobles,” Fritz said, having taught Lutz.
Wilma nodded in agreement, having taught
Tuuli. “They have both shown much ambition and worked incredibly hard. They
regularly visited the orphanage, and their help raising Dirk and assisting with
Lily’s birth proved crucial.”
“I suppose I will need to thank them both as
well,” I replied.
Gil suddenly looked up as though he had
remembered something. “Tuuli recommended we make books that teach etiquette,
and we finished printing them last winter. They are selling well among the rich
upper class, since they cover noble greetings. You should thank her for that as
well.”
...You know what? Tuuli might just be a real
angel.
Five books in total had been released as
products while I was asleep: the collection of knight stories, the collection
of Mom’s stories I had given to Tuuli, a recipe book written by Nicola and
illustrated by Wilma, and two books about manners that had been put together by
my attendants at Tuuli’s suggestion.
“There was also a manuscript given to us by
Lady Elvira, but since we were given a strict deadline to print them, we only
made as many as were needed. Lady Elvira requested ownership of all copies,
even those with errors, so we no longer have any versions at all,” Gil
explained.
His wavering eyes told me everything—of course
Elvira wouldn’t allow any loose copies to be left lying around the temple. Were
Ferdinand to catch even a glimpse of one, he would no doubt fly into a rage and
put his all into completely obliterating the workshop.
Mother, did you really want a book about him so
badly that you would risk everything?
Gil had a progress report on Haldenzel as
well: The Gutenbergs had mobilized on a large scale to establish branches of
the Plant Paper and Printing Guilds in the province, whereupon they had
negotiated the distribution of profits and such. They had then gone to the
workshops Giebe Haldenzel had prepared to share our technology with the
workers.
“We brought the metal parts needed to make the
printing presses with us from Ehrenfest, since Johann wasn’t sure he could make
them without his usual tools. We shared the schematics with the workers, but
tools aside, they don’t even have the technical skill to put the parts
together.”
“That doesn’t surprise me,” I replied. With
Johann handling my precise orders one after another, his technical ability was
only continuing to improve. At this point, he was basically on a whole other
level from anyone else.
“They’ll try making their own metal letter
types over the winter, and they wish for us to check their quality come
spring.”
“Very well. I appreciate you having traveled
so far for this, Gil.”
“It was for the sake of spreading the printing
industry,” he responded, breaking into a grin that reminded me so much of the
younger him that I couldn’t help but smile as well.
“I understand well how hard you have all
worked in my absence. Thank you. I would expect nothing less from my
attendants,” I said, praising everyone once their reports were done.
With our business concluded, Fran put me to
bed with several wooden boards. “I received these from the High Priest today,
Lady Rozemyne. Please rest and spend your time reading them. He made it clear
that you are not to overexert yourself whatsoever.”
“But I need to write letters...”
“Fear not—I have already contacted the Plantin
and Gilberta Companies. You may rest now and leave the meeting arrangements to
us. In three days’ time, you will be leaving for the castle, and from that
point onward you are expected to cram until it is time to depart for the Royal
Academy.”
I nodded, then leaned back on my bed and
started looking over the boards. On them were long lists of everything I needed
to know before entering the Royal Academy, sorted in order of priority. At the
top were country history and geography, the ranking of duchies based on mana
and economic power, the names and histories of the royal family, and the names
and histories of the archduke candidates attending the Academy at the same time
as me. As far as I was concerned, this was perfect.
Eheheh... Eheheheheh. I bet there are going to be
sooo many books for me to read. I... Hm? Wait, I need to practice... dedication
whirls? And Grandfather is going to put me through a physical training regimen?
Am I going to die before I even make it to the Royal Academy?
Fran had organized my meeting straight away.
It would be held tomorrow afternoon, so my morning schedule was the same as
always.
Now that I was awake, Damuel would come to the
temple as soon as second bell rang to serve as my guard knight. His youthful
air had vanished completely, such that he now came across like a full-grown
adult. I initially assumed that the visible exhaustion on his face was due to
his lost love, but it was actually because Bonifatius was working him to the
bone during training.
“Lord Bonifatius has spent every day training
the archducal family’s guard knights to ensure you will not be put at risk
again. Both Angelica and Cornelius have gotten so much stronger that I can
hardly believe it.”
“I see. That makes me look forward to going to
the castle a little more.”
I practiced the harspiel with Rosina after
breakfast, but I was so rusty that I could barely move my fingers properly.
“They say that three days without practice
will change one’s sound, and you have spent two years asleep, so there is no
avoiding a slight deterioration in your playing ability. I must say though, you
are getting back into the flow of things quite quickly. Perhaps it is because,
from your perspective, the last time you played was only a few days ago.”
“Am I good enough to avoid embarrassing myself
at the Royal Academy, I wonder...?”
Due to my time in the jureve, I was still
playing at the level one would expect of an eight-year-old, which surely wasn’t
ideal when I was going to a place packed with nobles who had practiced until
they were ten.
“There is no need to worry; simply continue
practicing and you will be fine. The study plan the High Priest arranged for
you increased in difficulty quite rapidly, so once your fingers are moving
properly again, you will not need to worry about embarrassing yourself.”
Even then, I could guess I would just barely
be reaching a passable level. It was hard to make up for lost time in
skill-based things like this, but my only choice was to continue practicing to
the best of my ability.
At third bell, I went to help Ferdinand in his
chambers. His attendants practically wept tears of joy when I arrived there
with Fran and Zahm, which went to show just how painful the workload had been
for them.
“Please be aware that I will soon be going to
the Royal Academy, so I will only be helping today and tomorrow...” I warned
them.
“Even just receiving fewer summons from the
castle is more than welcome. We now have the strength to go on.”
Grr! Sylvester! How dare you exploit Ferdinand
again!
In any case, I did my best to blast through
the math I was given, determined to lessen Ferdinand’s workload as much as
possible. When I was done, he gave me a nod with an exceedingly satisfied
expression.
“Very good,” he said, handing me a
rejuvenation potion.
“Thank you ever so much.”
I accepted the potion, though I actually felt
pretty conflicted about doing so, whether the taste was improved or not. That
said, I knew Ferdinand had made it out of... whatever kindness he possibly had
in his heart, so I needed to at least act grateful.
After lunch, I went to look over the orphanage
and the workshop, both to announce my recovery and praise everyone for their
hard work. Gil and Damuel accompanied me, with Monika and Nicola returning to
my orphanage director’s chambers ahead of time to make the necessary
preparations.
The orphanage had changed in many ways:
Several of the apprentices had come of age, and some of the kids who hadn’t
been any bigger than me were now full-fledged apprentices. As for the
pre-baptism children, Dirk and three babies were crawling around. Delia had
always looked pretty, but now she was a jaw-dropping beauty, while Dirk was a
toddler without much of a baby face anymore.
I guess Kamil is about this big now too...
If they kept growing at this rate, Kamil and
Dirk would end up taller than me before long. The thought alone filled me with
an instinctive sense of dread.
“Lady Rozemyne, the Plantin Company has
arrived,” Fran announced as I was sitting at my desk, looking over the
workshop’s balance sheet I had received from Gil.
Benno, Mark, and Lutz climbed up to where I
was on the second floor. While he hadn’t grown as much as Gil, Lutz was much
taller now, reaching all the way to Fran’s shoulders. He wore a sharp
expression, and perhaps due to him having been forged in the fires of constant
busyness, I sensed the aura of a capable workingman radiating from him.
After the standard tedious introductions, I
went into my hidden room. Gil and Damuel followed, as they usually did when I
was dealing with the Plantin Company, and no sooner had the door closed than I
leapt straight into Lutz’s arms.
“Lutz, you’re so tall now!”
There was an audible thump as he caught me.
Instead of my head reaching his shoulders like I was used to, it ended up
buried somewhere between his chest and lower stomach. The fifteen-centimeter
gap between us had evolved into something like thirty centimeters, and my mood
plummeted in an instant.
Benno walked over, patted my head as I clung
to Lutz, then blinked a little in surprise. “Rozemyne... have you shrunk?”
“No! I haven’t gotten taller, but I haven’t
shrunk either, you meanie! It’s not like I slept because I wanted to...”
I could feel the floodgates inside of me give
way as the words left my mouth. Before I knew it, tears were streaming down my
cheeks, and maybe because I wasn’t usually permitted to show my emotions, there
was just no stopping them.
“Er, sorry about that... Has anyone else
mentioned it? Or have you just been holding back those tears for a while now?”
Benno asked, which really made me think.
“Ferdinand told me not to get emotional; I’ve
got even more mana now, so I can’t risk losing control. I guess I really did
want to cry after all, though...”
“Isn’t losing control of your mana really damn
serious?!”
“It’s okay, really. I’ve got four physical
enhancement magic tools on my limbs.”
“Alright. Cry as much as you want, then. This
is probably the only place you can do that, huh?” Benno said, ruffling my hair
before stepping away.
Lutz gave a small smile and patted me on the
back. “Yup, yup. Cry all you want. Honestly, I’m glad to see you haven’t
changed much. I was talking to Tuuli the other day about what it’d be like if
you suddenly ended up a totally new person.”
“Luuutz...”
Knowing that I could freely let out my
emotions at last caused all the tension to drain from my body. I clung to Lutz
and cried so hard that I even surprised myself, until eventually it was all out
of my system. I felt a wave of relief, like all the fear and frustration that
had built up inside of me had flowed out along with the tears.
I looked up and saw Lutz’s face, which was
higher up than I remembered it being. It was nice to see that his jade eyes
were the same as ever, at least.
“Lutz, you feel a lot different than you used
to; you’re all hard and muscle-y now. Both you and Gil have grown up way too
much. Plus, you both look so manly now, and Gil sounds like an entirely
different person... Not you though, Benno. You just look old.”
“Gah! What was that, you little brat?!”
I giggled and stuck out my tongue while using
Lutz as a shield, but Benno still managed to grind a fist against my head with
a grimace.
“Gyaaah!” I cried out. “It hurts! It hurts!”
“This feels like a decent enough punishment.
It’d do you good to remember how hard we’ve worked for you.”
“Aww! But we’re here to talk about exactly
that, aren’t we?!”
“Then quit screwing around and pay attention!
I’ll tell you everything that’s gone on.”
I nodded and sat down... on Lutz’s lap.
Benno sat across from me, then shot me a cold
glare. “You being serious?” he asked.
“Let me have this; I haven’t yet recovered
from my Lutz deficiency. Plus, I need to cram two years’ worth of studies in
before going to a school full of nobles for a while, so I need to charge up now
while I still can.”
“Right, right. Do what you want. I’ll just go
ahead and give my report.”
Benno brought me up to date on the progress
and status of the printing industry in Haldenzel. Unlike in Illgner, where we
had only needed to teach them how to make paper, we had apparently needed to
teach the locals how to make metal letter types and manage other crucial
aspects of the printing industry. One season ultimately hadn’t been enough, so
their plan was to visit the province again next spring to check up on
everything. There were also several other things that had been stalled, since
they required my approval.
“Right. We’ll shoot over there next spring on
my highbeast, then blast through all the work that needs to be done,” I said.
“Blast through it, huh...? Couldn’t ask for
anything more. For now though, I’m just glad you finally woke up. We really
need you to rein in your people; I can’t take any more meetings where a bunch
of archnobles stare me down while the High Priest gives me a sympathetic look.”
I quickly averted my gaze. It wasn’t hard to
imagine Benno in that situation, surrounded by Haldenzel nobles questioning
whether printing would really bring them a profit, while Elvira stood eagerly
at their side, driven to establish a workshop by her own ulterior motives.
“Well, er... what can I say? My sympathies.”
Benno went on to explain that they had
struggled with an ultra-express order from Elvira that she had needed done in
time for winter socializing. When he was finished, I handed Lutz a letter for
my family.
“What should I do with this?” he asked. “I’ve
been living in the Plantin Company since last summer, and Tuuli’s living in the
Gilberta Company now.”
“Wha? Oh, right. She’s a leherl too...”
Back when Tuuli had turned ten, the Plantin
and Gilberta Companies were in the midst of relocating after becoming two
separate businesses, so she hadn’t been able to move into the store
immediately. Benno’s group were now staying on the second floor of the Plantin
Company, while Corinna and Otto had moved from the third to the second floor of
the Gilberta Company. Only once this was all done was a room prepared for
Tuuli.
“You can deliver it straight to her house,”
Benno chimed in. “Just hold on to it for now, Lutz.”
“Understood, Master Benno.”
With that settled, I explained that we
wouldn’t be able to meet for a while, since I was going to the Royal Academy
from the winter onward. Benno asked me to speak to the nobility about the
printing industry in Haldenzel, after which my meeting with the Plantin Company
came to an end.
“Gil, crouch down. I’ll give you a head pat
for having worked so hard,” I said. His eyes widened in surprise as I reached
out my hand.
“Lady Rozemyne, I’m too old for that now.”
“Whaaat?! Oh, um... Okay. Right. Sorry.”
Gil wore such an uncomfortable expression as
he turned me down that I reflexively pulled back my hand. While he had
certainly grown taller, I had thought he was the same person on the inside, but
only then did I remember he was a fourteen-year-old right in the middle of
puberty.
The Gil I knew who loved head pats is gone
forever... I feel kind of sad now. After two whole years, I guess it only makes
sense that he would change on the inside too.
But as I slumped over sadly, Gil knelt down
and lowered his head in front of me. “E-Er, actually... I just remembered that
I do want head pats. Please go ahead.”
I knew that he was just saying it for my sake,
but I didn’t want to rebuff his kindness. I reached out for his grown-up head
and gently stroked his hair, which felt a little coarser than I remembered it
being. This would probably be the last time I ever got to praise him like this.
“You worked really hard over the past two
years, Gil. I can’t describe how happy I was to wake up and see five new books
right next to me. Thank you. Keep up the good work.”
“...Right.”
Moving to the Castle
Time seemed to pass in the blink of an eye,
and soon enough, it was time to leave for the castle. I prepared my Pandabus
and called for Rosina, Ella, and Hugo to climb inside, at which point
Ferdinand’s attendants started loading it with boxes of work stuff. It seemed
that Ferdinand intended to stay in the castle and continue his temple duties
while observing my high-density cramming lessons.
Talk about a workaholic...
“I will be returning for the autumn coming of
age and winter baptism ceremonies. Do not fail to prepare for both,” Ferdinand
said to his attendants. Deciding to follow his example, I turned to my own
attendants.
“Even after being asleep for two years, I
awoke to no problems whatsoever. I trust you all to perform your duties while I
am away for the winter. Be well.”
“We pray for your safe return.”
I climbed into Lessy and followed Damuel’s
highbeast up into the air. Then, with Ferdinand staying close behind, we made
our way to the castle.
Angelica and Cornelius were kneeling in wait
when we arrived, while Norbert came over to greet us. “Welcome back, Lady
Rozemyne,” he said. “It is good to see you well again.”
“I am glad to be back.”
“Norbert, have this luggage brought to my
office,” Ferdinand instructed.
Norbert rang a bell that he must have pulled
out from somewhere, and in an instant, servants came pouring out of the castle
to take the boxes we had brought from Lessy. Ferdinand called for me without
even sparing them a glance.
“Rozemyne, come to my office once you are
finished changing. I have books and documents that you will need to read.”
“Okay. I’ll try and be quick.”
“No, do not rush. You need to develop the
grace and dignity expected of a ten-year-old.”
...Okay, you’ve lost me. What exactly is “the
grace and dignity expected of a ten-year-old”?
Deciding to ignore that which I didn’t
understand, I instead focused on Cornelius and Angelica. Cornelius was fourteen
now, and it only took a glance to see he wasn’t a little boy anymore—he looked
much more like an adult, and while he wasn’t super muscular, he was about as
tall as I remembered Lamprecht being. He had resembled Elvira a lot in the
past, but now that he looked more masculine, I thought he was a bit closer to
Karstedt.
“I am glad to see you are healthy, Lady
Rozemyne.”
“You picked up Lessy’s feystone, didn’t you?
I’ve been wanting to thank you for that, Cornelius.”
“Such praise is wasted on me. I am a failure
of a guard knight—one whose mistake forced you to sleep for two years.”
“Oh? But you saved Charlotte for me just like
I wanted you to, right? To me, this all happened just the other day, so please
allow me to express my gratitude. I thank you ever so much, Cornelius.”
“I am honored.” He looked up to meet my gaze,
and we gave each other small smiles.
Angelica was the next to speak. “I have been
awaiting your return, Lady Rozemyne.”
She was fifteen and due to have her coming of
age ceremony at the end of winter. Her light-blue hair was bundled in a
ponytail that swayed each time she turned her head, and she looked at me with
deep, ocean-blue eyes. Her dainty and pretty features had only gotten prettier,
and while I knew from Damuel that Bonifatius had been training her hard, I
couldn’t tell that just from looking at her.
Her looks have always been
deceiving though, so I guess that makes sense...
“I’ve been worried about you ever since I
learned how much time has passed,” I replied. “Did you manage to pass the
fourth and fifth grades?”
“Fear not—thanks to Lord Bonifatius, Damuel,
and Cornelius teaching me, and Stenluke learning alongside me, I just barely
managed to scrape past them.”
“Just barely...? Well, erm... I’m glad to hear
you have been doing your best.”
My apprentice guard knights were both looking
very much on the verge of adulthood. I made my way into the castle, heading
toward my room with them and Damuel.
“Rozemyne, use your highbeast,” Ferdinand
said.
“Hm? But I can walk to my room just fine.”
“You are far from healthy. While you are able
to move thanks to the magic tools, your body is so weak that even sitting up in
bed should be beyond you. Walking around the temple is one thing, but the
castle is much larger. Use your highbeast.”
I noticed a rush of tension shoot through my
guard knights as Ferdinand repeated his warning. Cornelius’s eyes were wavering
with worry, and so I immediately brought out my one-person Pandabus and got
inside.
We were making our way to the northern
building when I suddenly froze in place. We were right before the hallway where
I had been attacked, and an overwhelming fear washed over me as I remembered
the kidnapping.
“Lady Rozemyne, is something the matter?”
Cornelius asked.
It seemed I was the only one showing any
hesitation. I quickly continued forward, hoping my guard knights wouldn’t
notice my stiff expression.
“...My apologies. I just remembered that the
attack took place here.”
“That is understandable,” he replied. “There
was a time when both Lord Wilfried and Lady Charlotte seemed apprehensive about
walking down this hallway as well. Even we guard knights remained tense for
quite some time afterward.”
It was a relief to know I wasn’t the only one.
When I arrived at my room, Rihyarda and
Ottilie were waiting inside to welcome me. “We are so glad to see you well,”
they said, their tearful eyes speaking to just how worried they must have been.
“Lord Wilfried and Lady Charlotte are in the
middle of studying right now,” Rihyarda explained, “though they are so eager to
come and see you that they are practically fidgeting in their seats.”
“Everyone has been waiting for your return,”
Ottilie added. “Lady Elvira has been sending new rinsham and the like to your
room, and Lord Bonifatius is so excited to see you that he mistakenly came a
day early, much to his devastation.”
I’ve barely interacted with Grandfather, so I
don’t really know him that well, but is he actually a bit of a goof?
The two changed my clothes as they talked,
then I made my way to Ferdinand’s office with Rihyarda and my guard knights.
“Excuse me,” I said upon entering.
Ferdinand glanced at Rihyarda before pointing
to two boxes. “Rihyarda, could you take these to Rozemyne’s room? They are
filled with documents that she needs to look over before leaving for the Royal
Academy.”
“Certainly, my boy.”
“Rozemyne, I believe I already gave you the
overview. Study the documents in line with their listed importance. They are
notes and transcriptions from my time in the Royal Academy, in addition to
newer material organized by Damuel. And here is a schedule from now until you
leave for the Royal Academy. Review it sooner rather than later.”
“Okay.”
I looked over the schedule while Rihyarda gave
instructions to the servants behind me. It was mostly packed with studying,
which wasn’t actually so bad considering that this was pretty much just reading
time. What was bad, however, was the physical training
and dedication whirl practice.
“Sit down and read these before dinner
tonight,” Ferdinand said.
“What are they?” I asked, sitting on the chair
that he gestured to and tilting my head. The board had a long list of names on
it.
“They are the names of every duchy in the
country and their current rank.”
“Um, I know a lot about Ehrenfest, but I don’t
know much about the country itself...”
“Ah, yes, I suppose your studies two years ago
were predominantly focused on Ehrenfest.”
Ferdinand stood up, opened a locked box, then
placed two maps on the table. They were hand-drawn, and judging by the
handwriting marking the locations, I could guess he had made them himself.
“This is an old map, and this is a new one,” he explained once they were both
spread out.
There had once been twenty-five duchies, but
due to the civil war that had taken place in the Sovereignty, they had since
been restructured. Now there were twenty-one duchies: four greater duchies,
nine middle duchies, and seven lesser duchies, plus the Sovereignty in the
center of the country where the royal family ruled.
Ehrenfest seemed to be a border duchy at the
northeasternmost point of the country. Despite being decently sized, its
population and ranking made it clear that it was basically as close to being a
lesser duchy as a middle duchy could be.
Frenbeltag to the west is where Florencia is
from, right? And to the south is Georgine’s Ahrensbach.
I started by focusing on the parts of the map
with names I could recognize, and it was then I noticed something extremely
important—there was an ocean to the south of Ahrensbach. Perhaps it was the
land of tasty seafood.
Maybe they have kombu and wakame! Aah, I might
even get to eat sashimi again if I ever go there!
I had long since given up on eating
Japanese-esque food here, but now my eyes glittered with newfound hope. My new
mission was to make friends from Ahrensbach in the Royal Academy and acquire
seafood from them, but just as excitement swelled in my heart, I remembered the
cruel reality and sadly slumped over.
The political situation right now won’t exactly
allow for that, will it? Tch.
“Ehrenfest’s influence and power is about the
median, as you can see,” Ferdinand said, pointing at the board in my hands.
It seemed Ehrenfest had previously been at the
bottom of the rankings due to being a country province without any specialty
goods. We had risen up to just below the middle thanks to having emerged from
the Sovereignty’s civil war unscathed, but that was simply because other
duchies had lost power, rather than having anything to do with our own merits.
“However,” Ferdinand continued, “our students
have been doing increasingly well at the Royal Academy over the past few years.
I imagine our ranking will be a place or two higher next year.”
“Um, Ferdinand... The Royal Academy is a place
for kids, right? Why would their grades impact the duchy’s influence?”
“Those who graduate from the Royal Academy
will either work in the Sovereignty or in their home duchy. Better grades show
that the duchy is raising more skilled individuals, and generally indicates it
will wield more influence in the coming years.”
I gave an understanding nod, and so he
continued explaining the situation in greater detail.
“Angelica, Cornelius, and Ernesta received
higher grades in the knight course thanks to your mana compression method, and
some of those who learned with your study materials in the winter playroom have
since begun schooling as well. It seems other duchies have been probing us to
find out why our performance has improved so suddenly and so drastically.”
“That’s nice.”
“A lukewarm answer. Do recall that you are
about to be attending this school yourself,” Ferdinand said with an annoyed
glare, but I was only going there under duress after being emotionally
blackmailed. I just wanted to survive the year without having to deal with any
funny business, so I wasn’t interested in anything except what I absolutely
needed to learn.
“I’m going to the Royal Academy because I
don’t want to end up in the same grade as my little sister, but I don’t have
any interest in the place myself. I’m not in great health right now, so I’m not
even going to give my studies my all. I just want a passing grade fit for an
archduke candidate,” I explained, hoping that would be enough for Ferdinand to
allow me to cram less. No way could I give studying my all when I couldn’t even
move without the aid of magic tools.
Unfortunately, Ferdinand seemed to have some
kind of attachment to Royal Academy grades. “That simply will not do,” he said.
“It’ll have to. My options are limited here,
and there are some things that I just don’t want to do. I haven’t got enough
leeway to work hard for someone else’s sake right now.”
Ferdinand looked at me with slight surprise,
then fell into thought. “I suppose Charlotte alone is not enough motivation for
her...” he muttered. A shiver ran down my spine as I realized he was about to
corner me again.
“I-In any case, you certainly know a lot about
what’s going on at the Royal Academy, don’t you?” I asked, trying to swiftly
change the subject. I had assumed that not even Justus could infiltrate the
Academy, but Ferdinand was evidently getting his information from somewhere. He
rubbed his forehead and gave me a deeply exasperated look.
“You are the one who instructed the students
to gather information at the Royal Academy, are you not? Damuel organized
everything they gathered; I merely reviewed the report. He paid them a flat fee
and said that he wanted you to pay extra based on the value of the information
they brought.”
Oh yeah. I asked them to gather information.
That said, I hadn’t asked them to spy on other
students or anything like that. I just wanted to know what books were there and
what kinds of stories other duchies had. My explanation had apparently been
lacking though, as what they were bringing me wasn’t at all what I had
expected. I decided it would probably be best to confer with Ferdinand about
the value of the information, since I would consider certain things more
worthwhile than he would.
“Thanks to your efforts, Ehrenfest now has its
own specialty product; we will only grow in strength from this point onward.
Furthermore, when archduke candidates are attending the Royal Academy, the
morale of students from their duchy always rises. Charlotte and Melchior will
follow after you and Wilfried, which in turn means Ehrenfest will have archduke
candidates at the Academy for quite some time. We would like for you to
motivate the other students and raise the duchy’s overall grades yet further, and
judging by what I am told about the winter playroom, that is your specialty,
correct?”
I couldn’t help but blink in confusion. I
hadn’t said anything of the sort, as far as I remembered, nor did I even
believe I was particularly good at that kind of work.
“Actually, that’s not my specialty at all. I
just thought teaching kids to read would lead to more people reading books, and
more people reading books means more people that might be interested in writing
books. That’s all,” I explained, puffing out my chest with pride.
I was thinking about getting more people to
write books, and getting more people interested in reading to encourage the
opening of a library at the public’s expense. The thought of increasing the
duchy’s influence in the country by raising our overall grade point average
hadn’t crossed my mind for even a second.
“...It seems I yet again underestimated your
passion for books,” Ferdinand murmured, placing a hand on his forehead and
slowly shaking his head. My answer had apparently come as a considerable
surprise to him. “However, I now understand how to motivate you properly. I
have not mentioned this in detail before, but the Royal Academy has a library
with the second-largest book collection in the entire country. It is
incomparable in size and scope to the book rooms you are familiar with in
Ehrenfest.”
“Whaaat?! The second-largest?!” I exclaimed,
suddenly struck with the urge to leave for the Royal Academy at once.
As he watched me eagerly wiggle in place,
Ferdinand’s lips curved into a slight grin. “You will surely be allowed to
spend your time outside of classes in the library, though naturally, you will
need grades befitting an archduke’s child.”
“Of course. It’s only normal to have one’s
reading privileges taken away as punishment for bad grades,” I replied. My mom
had used that method all the time back in my Urano days to ensure I kept up
with my studies, and that memory alone made me nostalgic for the time I had
spent in that world as a student. I would go to the school library at lunch,
then visit another nearby library when all my classes were over.
Maybe I could get into a similar routine at
the Royal Academy—visiting the library during lunch and after my classes, just
like I used to. That realization blew away all my despair about going to the
Academy, and now the place shone like a beautiful castle in my mind.
“I’m going! The Royal Academy’s library
awaits! I’ll do everything I can to go there!” I declared, throwing myself into
my studies with a sudden change of heart.
“Milady, it’s about time for you to get
changed,” Rihyarda called as I was busy studying. I looked at Ferdinand,
certain that I hadn’t done nearly enough to visit the library without being
chastised, but he merely pointed at the board.
“You have made good progress today. Study up
to this point by tomorrow.”
“Understood. I thank you ever so much. See you
at dinner,” I said, beginning to stand up, but he raised a hand for me to
pause.
“Tonight’s dinner is going to be in
celebration of your recovery. Karstedt’s family will be in attendance,
Bonifatius included. Although it is true he was somewhat careless while
handling you, it is extremely likely that the antidote would not have been given
to you in time had he not found you so quickly. He has been exceptionally
worried about you over the past couple years, and that includes him worrying
about how he almost killed you by accident. Please make sure to thank him—for
his help, that is.”
In all honesty, when it came to Bonifatius, my
thoughts were kind of dominated by the fact he had violently shaken me around
in a bag, then launched me toward a tree at such tremendous speed that I surely
would have shattered every bone in my body had Ferdinand not caught me. Still,
it was true that I probably would have died anyway had he not come to rescue
me. Thanking him was probably for the best.
“Okay. I’ll write out a letter of gratitude
before dinner.”
“If you are going that far, then be sure to
thank him for training the guard knights as well. He has been quite active in
improving the entirety of the Knight’s Order, with a particular focus on the
guard knights protecting the archducal family, all to ensure you are not put in
such danger again.”
Ferdinand was underplaying it somewhat, but I
could tell Bonifatius had been working like crazy to boost Ehrenfest’s military
might over the past two years.
“Additionally, when you hand him your letter
of gratitude, you would do well to ask him about physical enhancement magic. To
Bonifatius, it comes as naturally as breathing. I believe he has been teaching
one of your guard knights to use it as well.”
Grandfather and Angelica, huh...? They do seem
like they would get along great as a muscle-headed duo. Is that heartwarming or
terrifying? I’m honestly not sure.
“Milady, it has been decided that I will
accompany you to the Royal Academy as your attendant,” Rihyarda said on the way
back to my room. Students were allowed to bring one adult attendant to their
dorms with them.
“My my... I will feel much better with you at
my side, Rihyarda.”
She had been serving as my head attendant
while simultaneously overseeing Wilfried’s studies, so I could imagine she was
chosen because she was capable enough to manage the entire Ehrenfest Dormitory
if necessary. When I mentioned this to her, however, she merely laughed.
“Ohoho. No, milady—I was chosen in case you
decide to hole yourself up in the library and need to be dragged out. That was
Ferdinand’s biggest worry.”
“O-Oh my... My goodness... I would, ahem, I would certainly return to my room upon closing time.
Ohohoho...”
Back in my Urano days, I would almost always
leave the library when it got late—that is, aside from one occasion when I was
so busy reading in a corner that I missed closing time. That had only happened
once, though. They had nothing to worry about as far as I was concerned, but it
seemed they had stopped trusting me long ago.
When we arrived at my room, Cornelius knelt in
front of me. “Lady Rozemyne, as I will be attending this dinner as well, I
humbly request to be relieved of guard duty for the rest of today and permitted
to temporarily leave your person.”
“Certainly, Cornelius. I am looking forward to
eating with you soon.”
He couldn’t sit at the table in his knight
armor after having received an invitation from the archducal couple. To put it
simply, he needed to change into fancy noble clothes with those massive
sleeves.
I entered my room with Angelica, while Damuel
stood guard outside the door.
“...It feels lonely without Brigitte here.”
Brigitte, who I knew so well from all the time
she had spent guarding me in the temple, was nowhere to be seen. There was no
helping that, considering her age, and I was happy about her marriage, but
there was no escaping the inevitable sadness when someone you were close to
just... left. In the temple, the only one I could talk to about this was
Damuel, but I felt hesitant to bring it up around him for obvious reasons.
“Brigitte is Giebe Illgner’s family, after
all,” Ottilie said with a calm smile, going on to explain the situation a bit
more in detail while changing my clothes.
Illgner had apparently been put in an
incredibly tight spot due to the death of the previous giebe, Brigitte
canceling her engagement, and her former fiancé subsequently antagonizing their
family. The nobles who had previously served the giebe mostly moved elsewhere,
and with dramatically fewer nobles to support the land, the giebe’s family had
needed to gather together to protect the province.
“In order to help end this terrible situation,
Brigitte agreed to become your guard knight, Lady Rozemyne, and obtained your
support. It is only natural she would hope to marry and expand her family. At
the moment, she is doing her best to support Illgner as the paper-making
industry introduces more and more changes.”
“Lady Elvira found Brigitte a good husband so
that your connection with Illgner would stay strong, milady. He will do right
by her,” Rihyarda added. Elvira loved romance and was quite a socialite, unlike
me, so I could imagine she had found someone who was excellent for both
Brigitte and her home.
“If this is the path Brigitte has chosen to
walk, then I am fine with it. Speaking of which... has a replacement female
knight been found for her yet?”
“At the time, nobody had ever seen you before,
so most declined due to the fact they would need to enter the temple. Now,
however, there are quite a few knights who wish to serve you. You may choose
whomever you feel comfortable entrusting your life with,” Rihyarda said.
Ottilie nodded. “Angelica is due to graduate
this year, so starting next year, you will also need a female apprentice knight
to accompany you at the Royal Academy.”
“It would be best to pick an archknight or a
medknight with a high mana capacity. Now that Brigitte is gone, your only adult
guard knight is a laynoble.”
Rihyarda wasn’t wrong, but I was pretty
comfortable with the current situation and didn’t really want to change things.
Damuel may have been a layknight, but just as one would expect of someone who
claimed to be more of a scholar, he was excellent at tutoring the two
apprentices and keeping everyone on good terms. My guard knights got along so
smoothly because Cornelius and Angelica—an apprentice archknight and medknight,
respectively—recognized Damuel’s good qualities and trusted him despite his
layknight status. I cared more about someone who could work well with that
dynamic than someone with a lot of mana or status.
“I will discuss this with my guard knights and
make my decision later. Not even a strong archnoble with plentiful mana would
be worth ruining the cooperation my knights have right now.”
I don’t want everyone to be all prickly and
hostile with each other... All I want is a comfy atmosphere to read books in
without having to worry about everyone around me.
Dinnertime
After getting changed, I wrote Bonifatius a
letter of gratitude just as Ferdinand had suggested. I was using allegras
paper—that is, paper with red clover-like allegrases mixed into it—which was
now being made exclusively for my use thanks to Elvira having negotiated with
Benno. I relied on my Earth memories to structure the letter properly, then
folded it as I would the notes I used to pass to my school friends.
It’s a good thing I remember how to fold paper
into a heart shape. This looks a lot like the leaves of an allegras, which
makes it even cuter.
I wrote “Grandfather” on the heart as a
finishing touch, then got in my highbeast and drove to the big dining hall
where we were having dinner. I would not only be eating with the archducal
family today, but with Karstedt’s side of my family as well.
“You seem excited, milady.”
“Indeed. My father and brothers usually serve
as guard knights during dinner at the castle, not to mention during ceremonies
and feasts, but this time we will finally be eating together in the same dining
hall. I really am quite excited.”
The cherry on top was that we were going to be
eating Hugo’s new recipe and Ella’s new dessert. I couldn’t wait.
“Lady Rozemyne has arrived,” a servant
announced, opening the doors to the dining hall for us. Inside were the
archducal family and Karstedt’s family, including both Ferdinand and
Bonifatius.
“Rozemyne!”
“Sister!”
Both Wilfried and Charlotte called out to me,
then Wilfried rushed over. He looked so much more like an adult now, having
grown quite a bit taller over the past two years; in fact, he hardly even
resembled the little prankster in my mind anymore. In the past, we had just
about looked the same age thanks to me having repeated my seventh year—albeit
with him being on the bigger side and me on the smaller side—but that was
evidently a thing of the past. The height difference between us was now so
significant that we looked like a fifth grader and a first grader standing next
to each other.
Aw... No way are people going to believe we’re in
the same grade now.
“Hm? Were you always this tiny, Rozemyne?”
“I-I’ll grow taller too! Just you wait!”
Since seventy to eighty percent of my mana
clumps had now dissolved, exercising wouldn’t make me abruptly pass out
anymore; I’d finally be growing at the same rate as a normal girl.
“I’ve worked hard the past two years so that I
can protect you. I think I’ve pretty much caught up to you now,” Wilfried said
with a confident grin. I wanted to shoot back that he was still far behind me,
but I couldn’t act smug until I’d seen how much he’d really improved for
myself. After all, I wasn’t even ready for the Royal Academy yet.
“You don’t need to grow any taller, Sister.
You are more than cute enough as you are now,” Charlotte chimed in. She had
grown as well, having transformed from an adorable child into a beautiful young
woman. She was taller than me, enough that if we stood next to each other,
everyone would think I was her little sister.
I wanted to cry. My pride as an older sister
was in tatters.
“I wish to protect you now, Sister, so I have
worked even harder than Wilfried.”
“No! I’m your older sister! I’m going to
protect you, not the other way around!”
“Oh my!” Charlotte exclaimed, her indigo eyes
gleaming with excitement as she looked down at me. I could tell from her
expression that she thought my declaration was cute; from her perspective, I
was just a little child trying to look tough.
How could this be happening? I’m supposed to be
the big sister here...
I slumped over sadly, at which point Ferdinand
rested a hand on my shoulder. “Rozemyne, they are only being enthusiastic; it
is not yet possible for them to surpass you. Show them your dignity as an older
sister now, before you depart for the Royal Academy. Leave no doubt in their
minds that you are on an entirely different level from them.”
I’ll study as hard as I can before leaving for
the Royal Academy and show them what a real older sister is made of. Sure,
they’ve learned a lot over the past two years, but they’re just kids. I can
burn through everything they’ve learned without any trouble at all. I’ll have
Charlotte’s respect again in no time.
I shot my head up and clenched my fists,
steeling my resolve, and it was then that I noticed Bonifatius impatiently
clearing his throat. Status dictated that I greet the archducal couple first
though, so I stepped before them and knelt.
“My deepest apologies for any worry I’ve
caused you,” I said.
“Stand, Rozemyne. I cannot see your face like
that,” Sylvester replied with some audible bemusement. I did as he asked, only
for him to get on his knees to meet my gaze.
A stir ran through all those present while I
merely blinked in surprise. It was unthinkable for the archduke to kneel before
someone of the duchy. I had no idea how to react, but Sylvester ignored the
commotion entirely. He placed his hands on my cheeks and pulled me a little
closer, carefully peering over my face before pinching my cheeks.
“Yup, it’s good to see you’re better.
Ferdinand didn’t let anyone else check on you after you were put in your hidden
room in the temple, y’know. We were all worried about you.”
I could certainly remember Ferdinand saying
something about eliminating all those who would attempt to disturb my sleep. He
had apparently taken this duty very seriously, having stopped even the
archducal family from checking up on me.
“Rozemyne, there’s something I’ve wanted to
say to you every day for these past two years,” Sylvester continued, letting go
of my cheeks to take my hands instead. It came so suddenly that I had to fight
the urge to reflexively pull away.
“What might that be?” I asked, tilting my head
in confusion.
“I’m saying this not as the archduke, but as a
father. Thank you for saving my children. Thank you,” he said, pressing his
forehead against my hands. The gesture was presumably a very significant way of
expressing one’s gratitude, as his retainers standing by the walls all gasped.
You’re grateful, I get it! Let go already!
Everyone’s staring!
I looked to Florencia for help, since she was
standing a step behind Sylvester, but that only made things worse. “You have my
utmost gratitude as well,” she said, kneeling beside him. “You are more than
the Saint of Ehrenfest to me. In my eyes, you are my savior—the saint of my
family.”
This was killing me. I’d gone on an
irresponsible rampage to save my cute little sister; I hadn’t done anything to
deserve the archducal couple bowing their heads to me.
“That will do for now. Rozemyne is clearly
petrified,” Karstedt said, saving me in my time of need.
Sylvester stood up, now having to look down at
me again as per usual. “Ferdinand has told me you need to make up for the two
years you have lost before you leave for the Royal Academy. That will not be
easy, but I trust you to accomplish what you must.”
“You often push yourself much too hard,”
Florencia added. “I think you would do well to respect your body just a little
more.”
That concluded our greetings, and so I crossed
my arms in front of my chest.
“You may now speak to those who were worrying
about you,” Sylvester said. But as I turned to Karstedt and Elvira with a nod,
he stopped me with a whisper. “Bonifatius is next. As the son of a former
archduke, he’s higher in status than the knight commander. Don’t mess this up.”
Oops... That was close.
I changed direction mid-step. If Sylvester
hadn’t stopped me, I wouldn’t have noticed until it was too late. The thought
alone made me break out in a cold sweat.
“Um, Grandfather... I wanted to express my
gratitude for you saving me the other—ahem—for saving
me two years ago. Ferdinand informed me that, had you not found me, I might
have died.”
Bonifatius gravely nodded. “I am glad to see
you well again,” he said with a stern expression.
“This is a letter of my gratitude,” I
continued, nervously holding it out to him. “Will you accept it?”
“Yes, of course... Hm? This is an unusual
shape.”
“Aha, it’s a heart. Don’t you think it’s
cute?”
“A heart...? I do not believe hearts look like
this,” Bonifatius said, examining the origami with a clear look of confusion.
I gave a big nod, then used my thumbs and
pointer fingers to recreate the shape. “It’s a symbolic heart that represents
love,” I explained.
Bonifatius froze in place, his eyes wide open.
It took him several seconds to slowly return to life, then he glared at my
letter with a conflicted expression.
“I-I see...”
The silence in the hall as Bonifatius stared
at the letter weighed down on me like a boulder. Did he not like the heart? He
was a military guy through and through, having continued working with the
Knight’s Order even after his retirement, not to mention having served as a
representative of the archduke. Maybe I should have made a tough-looking shape
instead of a cute one.
I’m so dumb! Of course a man would prefer to
have, like, a helmet or a dragon or something! If only I’d stopped to actually
think about this!
But as I cradled my head in agony, I suddenly
realized something—origami could simply be unfolded and then refolded into
something else. There would of course be a few weird creases, but that was
better than cursing him with this foul mistake.
“Um, Grandfather... I can always fold it into
another shape. Please, let me make it into something else for you.”
“Oh, no, no. This is fine. In fact, I have
taken a liking to this shape. There is no need to unfold it.”
Bonifatius raised the origami heart higher
into the air, repeating that he was fine with the shape as it was. I sadly
slumped my shoulders; this was definitely a frantic attempt to avoid hurting my
feelings.
I made Gil worry at the temple, and now I’ve even
made Grandfather worry...
It truly was failure after failure. I decided
to surrender to his consideration and pointed at the letter in his hand. There
was no culture of origami here, so he was unlikely to discover the writing
without an explanation.
“If you open the letter, Grandfather, you can
read its contents.”
“Hrm? Open?”
“You cannot read the letter as it is now, can
you? Please hand it to me for a moment.” I took the paper heart from
Bonifatius, who watched with tightly knitted brows as I unfolded it and then
held it out to him. “And now it can be read, see?”
...Bwuh?!
He was staring down at my letter as though the
world were coming to an end: his eyes were wide open in disbelief, and the
blood was quite clearly draining from his face. It certainly wasn’t the
expression of someone happy to be receiving a letter of gratitude. Had I made
some terrible blunder without realizing it, like the previous mayor of Hasse?
My own face started to pale as I glanced between Bonifatius and the letter.
“Grandfather... C-Could it be that I’ve used
some sort of rude phrasing?”
“Not at all! I am just surprised by how well
written this is. You have got excellent handwriting too, Rozemyne.”
So he says, but that wasn’t the look of someone
who’s about to give praise. It was more like he was losing his mind over what
I’d just done.
I was only trying to thank him, but in the
end, I’d managed to offend him so badly that he hadn’t even been able to
maintain his composure. He was currently collecting himself and trying to
smooth things over with praise, sure, but he couldn’t convince everyone that
easily. The worst part was that I didn’t even know what I had done wrong—I
evidently needed to apologize, but I wasn’t actually sure why. Trembling in
fear, I scanned the room with tearful eyes in search of help, only to notice
that Sylvester’s cheeks were twitching as he just barely managed to hold back
laughter.
Well, I can count him out... The harder I fall,
the harder he’ll laugh.
I promptly decided to ignore him, since he was
clearly just glad to have new material to make fun of me with, and instead
looked to my two parents. They had a deep bond with Bonifatius, so I was sure
there was something they could do.
Elvira noticed my gaze and approached us.
“M-Mother, have I done something incredibly
rude by chance?”
Bonifatius immediately began floundering. “No,
Rozemyne, of course not. You have done nothing wrong. There’s no need to start
crying. Everything is fine, isn’t it, Elvira? Rozemyne is a fine young woman,
isn’t she?” he asked, his eyes anxiously flitting between the two of us.
“Might I suggest you both calm down?” Elvira
said coolly. “Rozemyne, I shall check the letter to see if there are any
mistakes.”
“Thank you, Mother.”
I showed her the letter. She read through it
in silence, then looked up. “It is quite fine. There are no mistakes.”
A relieved sigh escaped me. It had her full
approval.
“I imagine Bonifatius was merely surprised to
see the shape unfold,” Elvira explained. “You can return it to the way it was
before, correct?”
“Yes, it will take just a moment,” I said with
a nod, which in turn made Bonifatius sigh in relief. He seemed to quite like
cute things, despite his appearance, and so I placed the letter on the table
and folded it back into a heart.
Wilfried and Charlotte watched me with great
interest.
“You can make sheets of paper look like that,
huh?”
“Sister, please write such a letter for me in
the future as well. It is absolutely adorable.”
“Certainly,” I replied. At the very least, it
seemed I had managed to catch Charlotte’s interest and scrape up a little
respect from her. Holding back the broad smile that was starting to play on my
lips, I handed the finished heart back to Bonifatius. “Here you are,
Grandfather.”
Bonifatius took the letter and once again
stared at it with a conflicted expression. Then, after a pause, he nodded
gravely. “Excellent.” It seemed that was just the face he pulled when he was
carefully examining something.
Relieved, I glanced around the room again.
Ferdinand quickly caught my eye, and upon seeing his expression, I remembered
something—he had told me to ask Bonifatius to teach me physical enhancement
magic.
“I have a request, Grandfather. Might I ask
you to teach me the basics of physical enhancement magic?”
Bonifatius stared at me in surprise, then a
huge grin spread across his face. He thumped his chest and snorted. “Leave it
to me! I will make you the strongest person in Ehrenfest!”
I didn’t want to be the strongest person in
Ehrenfest, of course, nor did I think that would actually be possible for
someone like me. I quickly realized that I’d need to better explain my
intentions, since the risk of Bonifatius’s intense training sending me to an
early grave was becoming all the more real.
“May I clarify, Grandfather? It’s not that I
wish to become stronger, but rather that I wish to be capable of moving without
relying on assistive magic tools.”
“Y-You wish to be... capable of moving?”
Bonifatius repeated, blinking in utter confusion.
I nodded. I had long been spared any physical
training due to my complete lack of stamina, but now that I was healthy, I
needed to boost my strength.
“My muscles have atrophied so much from my
time in the jureve that I can’t move properly without body-enhancing magic
tools attached to my body,” I explained. “My first goal is to no longer have to
depend on them.”
Bonifatius’s eyes widened in pure shock, then
he looked me over from head to toe as if making sure I really was alive.
“That... certainly won’t be easy,” he said. “I’ve never taught enhancement
magic to a person who can’t even move. How does one make someone who cannot
move, move?”
“Um, th-that is quite the philosophical
question.”
“Is it really safe for you to train at all?”
“I ask only that you do not work me to death.”
Bonifatius and I put our heads together as we
tried to come up with a solution, at which point Ferdinand let out an extremely
heavy sigh, rubbing his temples with exasperation. At his recommendation, we
decided to start by removing the magic tool on my right arm, focusing on using
enhancement magic exclusively for that one limb.
Dinner soon began, and the events of the past
two years were explained to me from the perspectives of those who lived in the
castle. Most of what they told me I had already heard from Ferdinand: my three
brothers all served as guard knights for the archducal family, and they had
been worked to the bone by Bonifatius.
“You certainly are strong, Grandfather. It is
a shame that, with the bag obscuring my view and the poison keeping me from
opening my eyes, I could not see your heroic efforts for myself.”
“Yes, I am strong. Karstedt hasn’t beaten me
just yet!”
Bonifatius, who was sitting next to me, went
on to explain that the knights had shown much more improvement over the past
two years than they had previously. Those who had learned my compression method
had all grown at an extraordinary pace and continued to grow even now. The
technique seemed to have the biggest impact on apprentices still going through
puberty, and it had proven so effective that more and more nobles were asking
to be taught.
“What say we hold a conference teaching the
mana compression method soon?” Bonifatius suggested, carefully observing my
reaction. “Erm, your health comes first, of course, but there are many who
cannot wait to learn it.”
My mana compression method had primarily been
taught to the guard knights serving the archducal family, with the rest being
mainly archknights and medknights. Damuel was an exception as the only laynoble
to have learned it. His mana capacity continued to grow slowly but surely, so
those who were previously of a similar level to him were now getting fairly
impatient.
Well, that makes sense. Grandfather’s training
them all equally hard, but Damuel’s growing mana capacity puts him at the very
top. Anyone in their position would want to learn the method too.
“Have you finished deciding who is going to be
taught?” I asked, looking at the archducal couple.
Sylvester gave a slow nod. “All we need now is
your approval.”
“Very well. We can hold seminars after winter
socializing.”
“After?! That is a
very long time from now!” Bonifatius exclaimed.
I gave him a nod. “Normal mana compression is
taught to first-years in the Royal Academy, correct? In that case, I wish to
see how much Wilfried has grown. I will use this to determine whether he is
ready to learn my method. If so, his guard knights can be taught as well.”
Wilfried’s guard knights let out a quiet
collective “Ooh!” from where they stood along the wall. I had previously
forbidden them from learning the method alongside the rest of the archducal
family’s guard knights, since the Ivory Tower incident had put their
trustworthiness into question. They had experienced fairly poor mana growth as
a result—that is, with the exception of Lamprecht, who I had taught as a member
of my family.
My decision had been somewhat rash in
retrospect, but the Ivory Tower incident was fresh in everyone’s minds at the
time, and I hadn’t anticipated entering a two-year coma so soon after.
Regardless, the inexorable march of time had put a considerable gap between the
strength of Wilfried’s and Charlotte’s guard knights, and it didn’t take a
genius to realize that this wasn’t exactly an ideal situation.
Ferdinand nodded at my suggestion. “That would
be wise if you wish to give Wilfried a chance as soon as possible. You may make
your decision after confirming his behavior and growth. Wilfried, as a ruler of
men, you must continue to think before you act.”
“Understood, Uncle.”
Looks like Wilfried and Ferdinand have gotten a
little closer over the past two years.
It wasn’t just on a surface level either—they
really did seem to have a deeper bond than before. As that thought stuck in my
mind, the others took turns updating me on the past two years: my brothers told
me about their special training with Bonifatius; Elvira told me about the
growing printing industry in Haldenzel; then Wilfried and Charlotte told me
about the winter playroom, and how far they had progressed with their studies.
In no time at all, our dinner together had
come to an end.
Cramming and Preparations
My cramming lessons with Ferdinand started the
very next day. I spent my time after breakfast reading and reviewing what I had
learned the day before. Then, when Norbert came to get me, I moved to
Ferdinand’s office where I continued studying hard until noon. There were two
desks lined up, on which were stacks upon stacks of documents all placed in a
neat row. I was having geography and history beaten into my head, both of which
were difficult to understand without hard data to look at.
Just you wait, O library of the Royal Academy...
I’ll be there as soon as I can!
After lunch, I practiced the harspiel with
Wilfried and Charlotte. It seemed the practice schedule Ferdinand had gotten me
to follow before I went into the jureve was incredibly intense, because despite
my two-year-long absence, it seemed I was already good enough to go to the
Royal Academy, even when compared to how far Wilfried had come. I would need my
fingers to adjust to playing again first, of course, and my time studying music
on Earth had probably helped a lot, but still.
Thank you, Ferdinand! For the first time in my
life, I’m genuinely grateful for your brutal teaching methods!
After harspiel practice, I would alternate
between practicing dedication whirls and training with the Knight’s Order
depending on the day.
Dedication whirls were apparently a religious
act one performed at their coming of age ceremony, which was held on graduation
day. One would express their gratitude to the gods through song and dance,
celebrating winter turning to spring and new life being born.
Out of all the apprentice knights, twenty
especially talented individuals would be selected to perform sword dances,
while seven archduke candidates would be selected to perform whirls. Everyone
else would sing and provide music. Being chosen to perform was a great honor
for both the individuals and their duchies, so everyone worked their hardest in
hope of somehow becoming one of the lucky few. I interpreted this all through
the lens of graduation ceremonies being theatrical, thinking back to all the festivities
on Earth that were exaggerated as well.
“I don’t even need to practice if there’s a
selection process, right? I can just leave it to everyone else.”
“No, you fool,” Ferdinand scolded me.
“Archduke candidates are forced to participate, and you can expect practical
examinations at the Royal Academy. There are times when archnobles are selected
to perform for grades that do not have enough archduke candidates, and if you
do not at least match their talent, you will bring shame to the entire duchy.”
Dedication whirls were apparently far more
important than I had expected. I clearly had no choice but to put my all into
practicing so that I was ready for those practical examinations. Maybe my Urano
experience would pay off a little here too.
“Can you whirl as well, Ferdinand?” I asked
out of curiosity.
He responded with a dry, “Of course.”
I could imagine Ferdinand had performed a
dedication whirl so perfect that it made all the female students faint, just
like his harspiel playing had.
And so I practiced performing the dedication
whirl alongside Wilfried and Charlotte. They had already been learning for
about a year now, so they had the form down, and their dancing was pretty
decent.
“The dedication whirl has two styles, one for
men and one for women, but spinning is at the heart of them both, as I’m sure
you can imagine,” our whirl instructor explained. It wasn’t about jumping or
hopping around like in traditional dancing—it was all about spinning while
gliding as gracefully and as beautifully as possible. “Establishing and
maintaining tension is absolutely necessary. In that sense, it is fairly
similar to watching a kreisel.”
Kreisels were exactly the same thing as
spinning tops: toys that you spun and then watched as they kept their balance.
“When a kreisel spins, it almost looks as
though it is frozen in place, no? And in that moment, there is a captivating
feeling of tension. A proper whirl requires you to reach this point where you
too look as though you are standing still, for this is when the atmosphere
reaches its peak. You must remain perfectly balanced, else your whirl will
cease to be beautiful, and the tension you exude will disappear in an instant.”
Now that I thought about it, I seemed to
recall my traditional Japanese dance teacher having said the same thing back in
my Urano days. My mom had made me go to these dance and ballet classes for
three years on the off chance that I developed an interest in them. She had
said that she would buy books for me if the teacher reported I was making good
progress, and so I had tried my hardest in hope of getting as many as possible.
Not being able to read books during lessons was exceedingly painful, but I was
able to survive all three years nonetheless.
Not that any of that experience is helping me
now, since I can’t move my body at all.
“What matters above all else, however, is
having true gratitude for the gods in your heart.”
I see, I see... In other words, praying seriously
might end up like my harspiel performance during my winter debut. I’ll need to
be careful.
“I understand everything now,” I intoned.
Once we had covered the basics of the
dedication whirl, we started with a few preparatory exercises.
Ow ow ow ow! My body’s even stiffer than I
thought!
On training days, I went to the Knight’s
Order, where I worked on mastering enhancement magic alongside Bonifatius and
Eckhart. I would remove the supporting magic tool from one of my arms and
practice strengthening that limb, aiming to eventually move it with just my own
mana. That said, I apparently couldn’t say I had truly grasped enhancement
magic until I could swing weapons and form my highbeast while using it.
After days of practice, I was finally capable
of creating my highbeast while using enhancement magic on my unsupported right
arm. The sight caused Angelica to stagger back and fall to the ground, her
shoulders sinking in despair.
“Why can you use enhancement magic so easily,
Lady Rozemyne? It took me a year and a half of training to form my highbeast
while using it. I think I’ve lost all my confidence as a guard knight...”
“Bwahaha!” Bonifatius roared. “Rozemyne is a
member of the archducal family! She has more than enough mana for other things
even while using enhancement magic, and there’s no point envying the mana
capacity of someone mana-rich enough to get adopted by the archduke. You’ve
been working hard to boost your capacity while training to minimize how much
mana you use when casting enhancement magic. Just continue as you have been—in
fact, why not look to Damuel as an example? The man’s a master at preserving mana!”
Damuel was fully dedicated to using his mana
as efficiently as possible, and so he would always try to expend as little as
possible during combat. His fighting style was bland and rather straightforward
as a result, but it was far less wasteful, even when compared to those of other
layknights.
“Your teacher is correct, master,” Stenluke
chimed in. “The master of my master has not yet grown used to enhancement
magic, and so she wastes much mana while using it. You are certainly the more
adept magic wielder here; there is nothing for you to feel down about.”
Angelica raised her head. Bonifatius had
recognized her as his apprentice, and she had since become a knight capable of
using enhancement magic that was rare to see even among archnobles. Stenluke
seemed to be growing steadily as well; his blade was much longer than the last
time I had seen him.
“You certainly have grown, Stenluke. Have you
learned a lot about the world yet?”
“I had no choice, considering my master’s poor
memory. My struggles know no end,” Stenluke replied. He was of course speaking
about Angelica, but just hearing those words in Ferdinand’s voice made me feel
as though I were the one being scolded here.
Just as a sad frown crossed my face,
Bonifatius cleared his throat and held out a short sword. Judging by the
sizable feystone in its hilt, I could guess it was also a manablade.
“Rozemyne, I am growing a manablade as well,”
he said. “Could you pour some of your mana into it?”
“Um, Grandfather... The truth is, I’ve been
forbidden from pouring my mana into the manablades of others.”
“Th-That can’t be!”
I hated to disappoint him when he was so
clearly excited about it, but it just wasn’t something I could do without
permission. I explained that Ferdinand had forbidden me from doing it again
after the Stenluke incident, which caused Bonifatius to knit his brow.
“Permission from Ferdinand, hrm...?” he
murmured, his voice almost a growl. I could sense that he was about to charge
forward and smash his way through whatever barriers were stopping him from
getting what he wanted, so I hurriedly tried to stop that from happening.
“But even with Ferdinand’s permission, I don’t
think I could manage it until after I master controlling my mana again. I still
struggle to use it properly, due to my time in the jureve.”
To use an analogy, it was like going from
pouring water into a glass from a pitcher to pouring water into a glass with a
bucket—it was a lot harder to control the flow. Enhancement magic required so
much mana that it didn’t make too much of a difference, since a bucket worked
just fine when you were pouring water into a washbasin, but manablades were a
whole nother story. I essentially needed to pour my mana in by the spoonful, so
a bucket wouldn’t do at all. It would take some time before I was used to working
with my new increased capacity.
“Plus, Angelica’s manablade ended up sounding
like Ferdinand because I thought she would need someone to give her strict
guidance. I can’t think of anything that you need, Grandfather; you are more
than strong enough already.”
“I see... More than strong enough, huh?”
Once training and practice were over, I took a
bath to refresh myself and then had dinner. My last task for the day was to
read in preparation for tomorrow, though Rihyarda always ended up having to
snatch the book away to get me to sleep.
I was constantly learning new things, with
more study materials piling up by the day. I naturally enjoyed reading them,
but memorizing everything was quite the task.
Still, I’m not going to give up. I’ll earn
Charlotte’s respect, become the best big sister in the world, and spend every
day in the paradise that is the Royal Academy’s library!
The first-year lessons about magic didn’t seem
that difficult; they were centered around the basics of mana and feystones.
There were also elements associated with them, which were connected to the
divine colors of the gods. All I needed to do was memorize which element was
associated with which color, and as someone who already needed to have
memorized the bible, I understood everything after just a quick review.
History, on the other hand, was considerably
harder—there were so many kings with long, similar-looking names that my brain
just turned to mush every time I tried to learn them. The only silver lining
was that I already knew religious stories from the bible that led into the
founding of the country, so that saved me a bit of time.
“You need only memorize the general flow of
events for ancient history; more precise information is only relevant for the
most recent decades,” Ferdinand explained. “In particular, you will need to
learn about the civil war that occurred in the Sovereignty, what changes it
caused, and who prevailed. This will be enormously important when interacting
with others at the Royal Academy.”
I looked at the huge royal family tree that
Ferdinand spread out in front of me. The royal family and their children had
fought among themselves, with the strongest among them doing everything they
could to become king. The civil war had started due to the first and third
princes coming into open conflict, and the resulting battle was intense enough
to split the country in two.
The first prince had ultimately lost the war,
but the third prince was killed by an assassin the first prince had sent out
before his death, resulting in them both dying. This reignited the flames of
conflict, with the fourth and fifth princes picking up the fight with their
respective allies behind them. The fifth prince won in the end, but perhaps due
to having been exposed to life-threatening dangers throughout the fierce
battles, he held no mercy for the fourth prince, subsequently enacting a large-scale
purge against him, his immediate family, and the web of nobles who had provided
him with support.
“Which resulted in the whole country losing a
lot of power... Are the royal family a bunch of idiots?”
“Yes, but you are without a doubt the biggest
idiot of all. Keep such thoughts to yourself. The Royal Academy is presently
dominated by nobles who support the fifth prince—that is, the current king.”
“Sure, but he executed more than just his
enemies, didn’t he? Did he really have to kill these princesses and all their
children too?” I asked, pointing at a section of the family tree. Those who had
died normally had a single horizontal line through their names, but each person
who had been purged following the civil war was crossed out with a big “X.”
It made sense that the fifth prince would
purge the men who could rightfully lay claim to the throne, but he had executed
a princess from the previous generation and other women in the family as well,
none of whom seemed to have much to do with the war of succession.
“It may appear excessive to you, but there was
no need to allow seeds of war to grow,” Ferdinand explained. “Does it not make
sense when you consider it insurance?”
“I can understand that, but we’re still
recovering from the fact he purged so many nobles who played important roles
supporting the country. I don’t see how that’s not
going too far. At the very least, shouldn’t he have let this one princess live
so that she could keep giving birth to strong children? He could marry her to a
noble in his faction, perhaps use her to usurp the weakened rival faction... I
really don’t think he needed to kill her.”
“Those are strong arguments, but this princess
in particular sealed her own fate. She infamously had many affairs with
multiple men in hope of obtaining children with as much mana as possible. By
leaving her to her own devices, the fifth prince would run the risk of someone
claiming one of her children to be the son of one of the dead princes, which
could possibly lead to an entirely new war.”
Hearing about the royal family doing whatever
they wanted without consequence made me sick to my stomach. So what if the
princess had a bad reputation? So what if nobody knew whether she had given
birth to one of the princes’ sons? It wasn’t much different from the blue
priests, if you asked me.
“Now that both the royal family and the
nobility have diminished greatly in size, both wish for nothing more than to
increase the size of their houses. Due to the magic tools attached to your
body, I believe your enormous mana capacity will not be immediately apparent to
others at the Royal Academy, but regardless, take care to not be abruptly
kidnapped while you are there.”
“What the heck?! That’s terrifying!”
“It is the reality of your situation. Under no
circumstances are you to leave the sight of your guard knights or Rihyarda,”
Ferdinand said. I nodded over and over again, my eyes brimming with anxious
tears.
In between reading my study materials,
practicing the dedication whirl, and training with Bonifatius to learn
efficient enhancement magic, I needed to prepare to leave for the Royal
Academy. First came deciding what outfits I would wear. Plenty of cloth had
been prepared so that clothes could be made at a moment’s notice, but since
nobody knew when I would wake up, nothing had started yet.
There wasn’t much time left before I needed to
leave for the Royal Academy, so Elvira’s personal seamstress, Florencia’s
personal seamstress, and Corinna (who was basically being treated as my
personal seamstress) were all working together to make clothes for me. To that
end, both Elvira and Florencia visited my room.
“To think you had students gather information
on fashion trends in the Royal Academy, Rozemyne. You are so full of
surprises,” Florencia said.
Among the information Damuel had organized
from the Royal Academy students were detailed notes on what fashions were
popular with archduke candidates from other duchies. An archnoble by the name
of Brunhilde had recorded this information explicitly for Charlotte and me to
reference when preparing our outfits, it seemed.
It wasn’t as though I had intended for this to
happen, but Florencia nonetheless praised me for the foresight I certainly
didn’t have. It felt as though all the information was benefiting someone in
one way or another, so it seemed best to just have the students keep doing what
they were doing.
Incidentally, not a single person had recorded
any stories from other duchies for me. I had to admit though, the fault was all
mine for not having provided clear instructions, instead writing nothing more
than, “Please gather information in the Royal Academy.”
When I had realized this and sadly hung my head, Cornelius had pointed out with
a smile that nobody could have extrapolated that I wanted to gather stories
from a request like that.
“Milady, the first thing we need to decide on
is an outfit for you to wear during this year’s winter socializing.”
“Can I not just wear what I wore two years
ago? For better or worse, I haven’t grown in the slightest.”
Rihyarda and I discussed which of my outfits
needed to be made first. She wanted to make them in the order that I would be
wearing them, but I wanted to prioritize those I would need at the Academy. I
sadly hadn’t grown at all while asleep, but this meant I could just continue
wearing my clothes from two years ago without issue.
Elvira, having heard both sides of our
conversation, let out a sigh. “I now understand what Ferdinand meant when he
said your perspective is frozen in the past, Rozemyne. Do listen. Going to the
Royal Academy is a proclamation that you have become ten years old. Your skirts
will need to be extended, and so even with your lack of growth, you cannot
continue to wear your old clothes.”
Oh, good point... The skirts do need to be longer
now.
Upon turning ten, girls’ skirts changed from
being knee-high to shin-high. This was supposed to be a moment when one reveled
in their growth, but I was the same on both the outside and the inside. On top
of that, I’d missed my birthday celebration, so I didn’t feel even the
slightest bit overjoyed about being ten. It just felt wrong.
“What else can we do but prepare a new outfit
for you to wear while participating at the feast marking the start of winter
socializing?”
“...I say we simply alter the skirt on one of
my existing outfits. Mere alterations shouldn’t take that long to complete,
right?” I asked, then called Corinna over from the group of seamstresses lined
up against the wall. “Corinna, I would like for you to alter the skirt part
here. Add new cloth to the inside so that it reaches my shins, then pleat the
existing skirt like so and decorate it with flowers.”
I was suggesting we make something similar to
a bubble skirt, like I had done with Tuuli’s baptism ceremony outfit back in
the lower city. My socializing outfit wasn’t very important to me, so I wanted
to get through it with only the simplest alterations possible.
Corinna had long since learned my simple
alteration methods from Mom, and so she understood what I wanted at once. She
took out a needle and thread, held the material together, then secured it with
basting stitches to make a simple bubble skirt. From there, she had another
seamstress bring her more cloth while she explained to Elvira and Florencia how
she was intending to alter the outfit.
“If we stitch new cloth to the inside of the
skirt and pleat it as Lady Rozemyne has explained, it will appear like so. Is
this acceptable?”
“Oh my, how lovely. The shape is delightful,
but you must use cloth of a color in fashion this year for the extended skirt,”
Elvira said.
Florencia nodded. “Plus, if you are going to
decorate the pleated skirt with flowers, would it not be ideal to decorate the
chest area in a similar fashion?”
Corinna noted down Elvira and Florencia’s
orders on a board, then took out the flower decorations she had brought with
her and placed them on the suggested parts of the outfit.
“If we were to implement your suggestion,
honorable archduchess, I believe it would look most attractive to line up small
flowers next to each other like so,” Corinna said. “Do you have any
preferences?”
My two mothers excitedly chatted amongst
themselves while deciding on the size and colors of the decorative flowers,
then selected which cloth to use from all those Corinna had brought based on
color and quality. My measurements were taken in the meantime. There were no
changes, as expected.
With my winter socializing outfit selected, I
next needed to decide what to wear at the Royal Academy. There were no school
uniforms, but it was a rule that students needed to be dressed primarily in
black. This was apparently a show of respect to the all-absorbing God of
Darkness, with the color also symbolizing one’s desire to greedily take in the
knowledge being taught.
Black being the primary color was the only
rule, however; students were allowed a fairly surprising amount of freedom with
everything else. According to the information Brunhilde had gathered at the
Royal Academy, there were some who wore frilly clothes with colorful
embroidery, and others who wore tight-fitting clothes beneath bolero-esque
jackets with wide fluffy sleeves, allowing them to adjust their sleeve size
according to the classes they were attending.
“I would prefer an outfit with adjustable
sleeves over one with impressive embroidery,” I noted. Long sleeves were
nothing but an annoyance to me, but there were some classes like those on court
manners that required them. The most practical and convenient solution I could
think of was a long-sleeved bolero, which could simply be removed when the long
sleeves weren’t necessary.
But unfortunately, Florencia, Elvira and
Rihyarda all shook their heads at my suggestion, crushing my dreams at once.
“An archduke candidate cannot wear such an
outfit.”
“Really...? But archduke candidates have to
attend practical classes as well, no? Won’t the sleeves get in the way?”
“Conquering that challenge with grace is only
natural for an archduke candidate, my dear,” Florencia said with a smile,
refusing my suggestion without any further room for debate. I supposed it
wasn’t too much of a problem; I would just need to bring a long cord of my own
so that I could manually adjust my sleeves as necessary.
Aside from my proposed alterations, my
opinions on the clothes were largely ignored; the three women decided what
outfits I would be wearing almost entirely on their own. This was probably for
the best though, since I didn’t want to end up wearing abnormal clothes that
made me stand out completely from everyone else.
And so, thanks to the many seamstresses all
mobilizing at once, my outfits were safely completed before winter socializing
began.
“Rozemyne, what do you think about your
personal chef and musician being sent to the Royal Academy with you?” Sylvester
asked one day at dinner.
At the Royal Academy, students lived in
dormitories that were separated according to duchy. The musicians who worked in
each dormitory were selected from the personnel of five high-status nobles,
while five chefs and their servants were chosen from the castle’s kitchens.
As Wilfried and I were the highest-status
nobles in our dormitory, being archduke candidates and all, our personal
musicians were naturally to be included. Ella and Hugo, however, weren’t castle
chefs—they were my personnel who followed me wherever I went, so it seemed
Sylvester wanted to get my permission before sending them off.
“You were planning to send them back to the
temple while you’re at the Royal Academy, correct? That’d be a waste. We should
use their skills as much as possible.”
“I don’t mind taking them along with me—after
all, I’d prefer being able to eat food I’m familiar with. To be clear though,
we won’t be teaching the chefs that come with them any new recipes.” I didn’t
mind Hugo and Ella sharing the original recipes they had made while I was
asleep, but my personal ones were business secrets that I couldn’t share
without first receiving payment.
Sylvester nodded sadly, having clearly been at
least a little hopeful about obtaining new recipes. “No helping that. Still, if
possible, I want you to debut the recipes I bought from you at tea parties and
archduke candidate gatherings.”
“Did you not want to keep those a secret?” I
asked, remembering his strict orders to keep my study materials, picture books,
and recipes hidden from other duchies. Perhaps this was him lifting the ban.
Sylvester deliberately crossed his arms.
“Everything you make carries with it enormous influence, so I thought it best
to keep them a secret until you entered the Royal Academy. You are to spend the
next six years there as an archduke candidate, and I want to use this
opportunity to boost Ehrenfest’s influence as much as possible,” he said,
wearing the serious expression of an archduke. I couldn’t tell exactly what
future he was envisioning here, but given our current relationship with
Ahrensbach, I could imagine we would want as much power as we could get.
“From what Ferdinand has said, you want me to
raise everyone’s grades in the Royal Academy, I believe?”
“That’s right.”
“What’s my budget for accomplishing this?” I
asked. “If you genuinely want to raise the entire duchy’s grades, there are
several plans I could execute, though they are much too expensive for me and
the other students to finance ourselves. My options will change depending on
how much the duchy is willing to dedicate toward this.”
Money was necessary for doing pretty much
anything, and then we had to consider time as well. Had I woken up just a year
earlier, there was a lot more I could have done to prepare for this.
“I am leaving for the Royal Academy so soon
that there is not much I can do right now. Concrete preparations will need to
start in spring. I will spend this year focusing on confirming the results of
my study materials, comparing the gathered information to reality, and so on—in
other words, getting up to date on the current situation. I will solidify my
plans to increase the duchy’s overall grades once that is done, and I trust you
to provide me the funds necessary to enact them.”
“...Alright. I’ll leave the Royal Academy to
you and Wilfried. Do your jobs as archduke candidates and lead Ehrenfest to
prosperity,” Sylvester said, once again speaking as an archduke.
Wilfried nodded with a stern expression.
“Understood.”
My packing for the Royal Academy progressed
smoothly under Rihyarda’s guidance, and autumn came to an end as Ferdinand
continued cramming knowledge into my head through dense lectures. The falling
snow signaled that winter had begun.
The Gifting Ceremony
The winter feast was being held today. There
was the winter debut and the baptism ceremony for children born in the winter,
followed by the Gifting Ceremony for new students of the Academy. Since I
myself was a new student, Ferdinand was going to be performing this year’s
ceremonies. I had my hair done at a leisurely pace and changed into my outfit,
all in all taking my time with my preparations.
“Sister, shall we go to the grand hall
together?” Charlotte asked, visiting my room as though she had been waiting for
the very moment I was ready.
I naturally agreed at once, and together we
left my room.
“I have been so lonely, Sister. You are
finally living in the castle again, but due to your special lessons, I only
ever get to see you during whirl practice and dinner.”
Charlotte is as cute as ever, I see.
Seeing that my little sister had grown taller
than me was such a shock that it had come close to breaking my heart, but the
instant she had thanked me for rescuing her and apologized for putting me in
danger by distracting my guard knights, my love for her smashed through the
roof with such overwhelming force that all my surprise was blown away in an
instant.
My little sister is so cute, so healthy, and so
adorable.
I took out my highbeast and got inside,
continuing to chat with Charlotte as I drove down the stairs. Wilfried was
waiting for us at the bottom, having finished his preparations already.
“You’re still using your highbeast?” he asked,
blinking in surprise. “I thought the potion was supposed to make you healthy.”
“I technically am healthy now, but I can’t
walk without magic tools yet.”
“What?! Didn’t you say you were training with
Bonifatius in the Knight’s Order?! Are you trying to
die?!” Wilfried exclaimed. He had undergone some training himself while his
guard knights were being worked on, and in his eyes, training with Bonifatius
was equivalent to an act of suicide. I had certainly felt like I was on the
verge of death at times, so perhaps that was a perspective everyone who trained
with him ended up having.
“Grandfather is simply teaching me about
enhancement magic; we haven’t been doing anything too arduous.”
“You have been making such swift progress
during our dedication whirl practice, Sister, that I thought you had already
recovered entirely,” Charlotte said. It seemed that she’d also assumed I had
recovered over the past few weeks, but that couldn’t have been further from the
truth.
“...At the moment, the plan is for me to
remove the magic tools after returning from the Royal Academy,” I explained.
“From there, I will work on slowly building my muscles back up. Keep this a
secret, if you can; I won’t need to wear them for too much longer.”
With that, I started driving down the hall in
Lessy. Wilfried and Charlotte were walking beside me, while our guard knights
circled around us in a tight formation. The three of us hadn’t walked together
since the attack two years ago, and I could sense that everyone was tensing up
a little.
“I am a bit nervous about all this, but they
did catch the culprit. We should be perfectly fine,” Charlotte said with a
small, reassuring smile. Everyone else smiled a little as well, putting me
slightly more at ease.
Once we turned the last corner to the grand
hall, I got out of my Pandabus. I couldn’t keep riding my highbeast beyond this
point, which meant I would be standing for just about the rest of the day.
Will... Will I really survive this?
My worry must have shown on my face, because
Wilfried soon furrowed his brow and held out a hand to me. “Rozemyne, want to
lean on my arm?”
“No, I am such a slow walker that doing so
would only tire you out. You may go on ahead with Charlotte. I will walk at my
own pace.”
“That’s not an option. We’ve been told to
stick together today.”
Wilfried and Charlotte stood firm, so in the
end, everyone ended up walking with me. We took our places at the very front of
those lined up in the grand hall, dragging all our guard knights along as well.
I couldn’t see much along the way due to all the knights around us, but the
nobles who came to greet us all widened their eyes upon seeing me.
“I see that you have awoken, Lady Rozemyne.”
“What a joyous day. Now we can attend the
Royal Academy together, Lady Rozemyne. I cannot wait.”
“Indeed, Count Groschel, Brunhilde. My sister
is at full health once again,” Charlotte said, stepping forward and handling
the nobles with a smile.
Brunhilde was two years older than me; I
remembered seeing her in the winter playroom three years ago. Her eyes were
light brown and she had straight hair that was pure crimson. From what I
remembered, she was a fashionable girl who loved to talk, and she was the one
who had gathered all the information about fashion trends at the Royal Academy
for me.
I stood next to Charlotte and gave Brunhilde a
smile. It would be best to thank her here.
“Brunhilde, the fashion information you
gathered at the Royal Academy proved highly useful.”
“Oh my, I am glad to have been of use to you,”
she replied in a bright voice, at which point others began gathering to greet
us as well. I was something of a curiosity to everyone, given that I had been
asleep for two full years, so noble after noble continued to approach.
“Please do allow me to greet Lady Rozemyne as
well,” came a voice.
“Ah, Viscountess Dahldolf,” Wilfried said,
stepping in front of me before I could say anything. “I am glad to see you are
in good health as well. Incidentally, I am interested in speaking to Viscount
Dahldolf. Do you know where he is?”
“Oh my. Hello, Lord Wilfried... I shall search
for him. If you will excuse me.”
Shikza’s mother hated me, so I was pleased to
see her attack get deflected. I was grateful for Wilfried, but as the waves of
nobles continued to greet us, I suddenly realized something.
Wait... Wilfried and Charlotte are protecting me.
Whenever a noble came forward to greet me, one
of them would smoothly step between us. Unless I actively stepped forward to
involve myself, the exchange would end without me having to say a word. I was
now watching their backs as they protected me during noble exchanges—a complete
reversal from two years ago.
“You have both learned so much, haven’t you?”
I commented.
Wilfried nodded. “We couldn’t rely on you to protect
us forever.”
The manual about dealing with nobles that
Ferdinand had beaten into my head was pretty sizable, as I recalled. It was
genuinely impressive that they had managed to master it at such a young age.
“There is much to memorize. I imagine it has
been quite the struggle.”
“...It certainly has,” Charlotte replied. “But
it was not much more than you were made to study two years ago, and you had to
prepare for my baptism ceremony and winter debut on top of that, correct? I
thought I would collapse from exhaustion after seeing all the boards of
religious ceremonies that you had to memorize, Sister.”
It seemed that Ferdinand had pushed both the
manual for dealing with nobles and the wooden boards covering the Spring Prayer
onto them at once, so they ended up catching a glimpse of the constant studying
I had needed to endure.
“I have been told that you even helped with my
High Bishop work. I am so sorry to have forced so much onto you both.”
“Sister, we too are children of the archduke.
We learned well over the past two years just how important and taxing it is to
fill the Central District with mana. I intend to participate in Spring Prayer
next year as well; I cannot allow you to shoulder such a heavy burden alone.”
“Right,” Wilfried added. “We can get it over
with a lot quicker if we all help each other.”
Oh no. They’ve both grown so much, they’ve
completely left me behind.
As I chewed over how the two of them had grown
both in body and spirit, the archducal couple arrived. They ascended the stage,
took their seats, then directed gentle smiles our way, which we naturally
returned.
“The High Priest may now enter,” came an
announcement.
Ferdinand walked up onto the stage and gazed
across all those below. “We welcome the new children of Ehrenfest,” he
announced, his voice resounding through the grand hall. No sooner had he spoken
than the door opened, and the noble children baptized this year started to
enter.
Ngh. Some of those kids are taller than me.
“Lady Rozemyne,” Cornelius whispered as I watched
some of the children climb up onto the stage to be baptized. “There’s a boy
named Nikolaus among those about to have their debut, and... he’s the son of
Father’s second wife. Our half-brother.”
I had been baptized with Elvira, the first
wife, as my mother, while Nikolaus had been baptized with Trudeliede, the
second wife, as his mother.
“I imagine he and Trudeliede will come to
greet you later.”
“...Is there anything I need to be careful
about?” I asked, noticing that Cornelius looked a little on guard.
“No, but Father did ask me to tell you not to
show him any blatant favoritism in the winter playroom. You have a tendency to
be especially sweet with younger family members, so...”
Since I was the archduke’s adopted daughter,
Wilfried and Charlotte were my main social priority as my adoptive siblings,
then Eckhart, Lamprecht, and Cornelius as my brothers. Nikolaus was fairly low
on the priority list due to him only being a half-brother, and it was
apparently important that I not dote on him excessively.
But little brothers are cute too, and I want him
to rely on me...
As an archnoble, Nikolaus was the last to play
harspiel at the debut, and his performance made it clear just how much he had
practiced. He was a young boy with light-chestnut hair and bright-blue eyes.
Given how little he resembled Karstedt, he probably took after his mother, but
he was well-built and probably taller than me.
The Gifting Ceremony followed the winter
debut. Ferdinand climbed down from the stage; then eight scholars carrying
ornately carved boxes moved to take his place, standing in a line. Once
everyone was in place, Sylvester strode to the center of the stage.
“The Gifting Ceremony shall now begin. New
students of the Royal Academy, step forward!”
The voice of a scholar rang out, then Wilfried
escorted me up onto the stage. We lined up together alongside six other
children—the same six we had lined up with three years ago at our debut. I
scanned the group and recognized everyone, but they were now all a lot taller
than I remembered. My heart sank at how blatant my own lack of growth was now,
and that was when Philine caught my eye. She gave a happy smile, which I
promptly returned. It was nice to see a genuinely friendly face after all the
weird and curious looks I had gotten so far today.
“Rozemyne,” Sylvester called.
I shot my head up and stepped forward. One of
the scholars set his box in front of Sylvester, who delicately opened it before
taking out the cape and brooch within, which he then held out to me.
“I ask that you live life to the fullest—that
you learn well, grow, and become a noble worthy of Ehrenfest.”
“In honor of the God of Darkness, I will do my
utmost to turn my experiences into personal strengths,” I replied, accepting
the cape and brooch before stepping back to rejoin the line.
Once everyone had received their gifts, the
scholars informed us when we were to move to the Royal Academy. As was
tradition, the oldest students would be leaving first, with the new
students—Wilfried and me included—leaving on the final day.
And so began our daily lives in the winter.
The Winter Playroom and Our Departure
Lunch followed the Gifting Ceremony, after
which winter socializing began. Before I could participate, however, Ferdinand
instructed me to return to my room; I had apparently already moved around more
than my body could manage for one day.
“But I was told that Nikolaus and Father’s
second wife would be coming to greet me...”
“Your health is more important than such
obligatory greetings, do you not think? Do not forget that you are moving
solely due to the power of magic tools. You collapsing will disturb your
upcoming schedule, and there is not much time until you leave for the Royal
Academy as it is. I should not even have to explain this to you,” Ferdinand
said, going on to detail all the potential problems that would arise. I
understood that he was worried about me, but my appreciation dwindled the
longer his speech continued.
If you could stop dragging these things out,
Ferdinand, you’d be a much better person.
I sadly hung my head as I continued to listen,
but really, Ferdinand did understand my current health situation better than
anyone. He was definitely worried about me, and in order to put an end to his
lengthy lecture, I decided to obediently return to my room.
“Very well. As you suggest, I will return to
my room for today. However, since tomorrow is the first day of the winter
playroom, I plan to go there in the morning. I need to greet the children who
have had their baptisms, and I wish to grasp the situation there as well. I
will visit your office in the afternoon, so please summon those who gathered
the information I gave you yesterday.”
That was enough for Ferdinand to understand my
intention. He nodded, put a hand on his cheek, then furrowed his brows just a
tiny bit.
“You will not be paying them at the Royal
Academy?”
“Those on the documents I gave you graduated
in the two years I was asleep. I will pay those still enrolled in the Royal
Academy once we arrive there.”
I also had Ehrenfest’s leaders read the
documents Damuel had organized, since much like Ferdinand and I, they would
most likely each have their own ideas of what constituted valuable information.
This ultimately proved to be the case, with some even asking for follow-ups on
certain reports.
Those who had provided information that was
deemed valuable were paid for their efforts, with the money coming from
whichever area of the government had found it useful. The scholars didn’t know
me very well, so they were initially stunned when I came to charge them money,
but they could hardly refuse after seeing the archducal couple and the knight
commander paying with bemused smiles.
And so I acquired the money just as I had
always planned to.
“Ah, yes. You certainly did sell the
information to various places. Very well. I will arrange for them to be
gathered tomorrow afternoon.”
“That is much appreciated.”
“So will you only be at the playroom
tomorrow?” Charlotte asked, giving me puppy-dog eyes once my plans were
settled. I faltered slightly, remembering how sad she was about only getting to
see me during whirl practice and at dinner.
“...That may end up being the case. I intend
to at least drop by to say hello to everyone, but I truly do not have much time
if I am to compensate for the two years I have missed.”
Seeing how much the kids my age had grown at
the Gifting Ceremony made me painfully aware of not only my own lack of growth,
but also the dangers that I faced. There was no mistaking that I would be
mocked and scorned for still looking so young, so the least I could do was
ensure I didn’t fall behind with my studies as well. After all, in order to
raise the grades of everyone in Ehrenfest, I first needed to achieve excellent
grades myself. Attempting to push my study methods without evidence to prove their
effectiveness would only make people skeptical.
Not to mention, getting good grades is a
requirement for me entering the library...
Once I had a grasp on the state of the
playroom, I wanted to dedicate as much time as I could to my own studies.
“I understand how you feel, Sister. In that
case, may I ask you to prepare rewards to be distributed to the children
tomorrow? There are many who have been eagerly awaiting to experience the taste
of your sweets again.”
“Certainly. I will make sure to have them
ready,” I replied with a reassuring smile. It had completely slipped my mind
that Wilfried’s and her chefs had been preparing the sweets given as rewards
for the past two years, so I had very nearly forgotten to prepare some of my
own.
Whew, that was close... Thank goodness Charlotte
was here to remind me.
Now that I thought about it, though, it took a
lot of money to prepare sweets. Sugar was stupidly expensive, and while honey
could always be used as a cheaper alternative, the costs would surely mount if
sweets were being prepared every day. I could manage since I was making my own
money, but I had to wonder how they had managed to afford it.
It would probably be weird for me to ask and then
offer to repay them, but still... This was something I started. It’s my fault
they had to fund it while I was gone.
I fell into thought, which caused Wilfried to
narrow his dark-green eyes. “Let me guess, Rozemyne—you’re planning to lead the
playroom all by yourself again, aren’t you?”
“Yes. I started its present customs on a whim,
and while not much else could be done while I was asleep, I cannot allow you
both to continue carrying this burden,” I said, causing Charlotte to purse her
lips and glare at me with her indigo eyes. Seeing my cute sister give me such a
reproachful look actually shook me to my core.
“Sister, should you truly be taking on more
work when you are already so busy with your own matters? Not to mention, Father
said it is the duty of all his children to educate those in the playroom and
improve Ehrenfest’s future grades, did he not?”
“I-I suppose he did...”
Charlotte scooted closer, forcing me to slowly
raise my head to look up at her slightly higher, intensely smiling face. My
little sister was overpowering me, and as I wavered, Wilfried gave me a
friendly slap on the back.
“In other words, it’s our job to lead the
playroom too. You don’t get to keep it all to yourself. We’ll be considered
incompetent if we leave it all to you, and you’re smart enough to know what
that means, yeah?”
They were both trying to do their work as
children of the archduke, viewing us all as equals. For that reason, it was
best for me to figure out what they were skilled at, then delegate work
accordingly.
“Very well. I will observe the playroom
tomorrow and delegate the work based on what I see,” I suggested.
Wilfried’s eyes lit up at once. He patted me
on the head while proudly puffing out his chest. “Yep. For now though, you
should go and rest. You’ve got a big day ahead of you tomorrow.”
“Yes, we would not want you to collapse
again,” Charlotte agreed. Her expression seemed a lot lighter as well, no doubt
an indication that she was happy I was trusting her with work.
Well, as long as they both
want to work... I thought, getting up and heading
toward the door to leave the dining hall.
“Rozemyne.”
“Yes, Ferdinand?” I asked, turning around to
look at him.
“Your body needs rest, but your mind is still
fully capable of work. Continue to read the documents I gave you while in bed.”
“Gladly.”
I returned to my room, bathed and changed with
Rihyarda and Ottilie’s assistance, then climbed into bed. There was a box of
study materials that I needed to read on a nearby table.
“Goodness, Ferdinand sure has put you through
the wringer, hm? If he truly wishes for you to rest, he should forbid you from
reading as well,” Rihyarda said, not even trying to hide her anger.
I simply sighed in relief as I took a book out
of the box and spread it open on the bed. As much as I appreciated Rihyarda’s
consideration, I was at my calmest while I was reading. To me, Ferdinand had
come across as an actual god when he instructed me to continue studying.
“Unfortunately, there is simply too much I
must learn before leaving for the Royal Academy,” I said. “I have no choice but
to read these documents. Aha.”
Rihyarda was annoyed about Ferdinand giving me
work despite having told me to rest, but I could guess that everyone knew he
was simply protecting me from the other nobles. My two years in the jureve
meant I hadn’t grown at all, which made the other nobles look at me with
curiosity, scorn, and anything but friendliness. Despite being prepared for it
all, the staring and whispering had been more intense than I had expected,
causing me to lose my patience in no time at all. Wilfried and Charlotte had
protected me, but even so, simply being there had been exhausting.
The next day, I headed to the winter playroom,
with Rihyarda and Ottilie carrying the sweets Ella had prepared. People would
start leaving for the Royal Academy today, and Hugo was among the first wave to
be moving to my dormitory’s kitchen. I had told him to keep Ella safe, to
immediately report to me if anything were to happen, and to have her room
prepared just in case there was an incident of some kind. I didn’t want to send
a young woman like Ella somewhere I couldn’t see her, so she was going to be leaving
for the Royal Academy with me instead.
Of course, the chefs and servants weren’t the
only ones going—the students and such were heading to the Royal Academy as
well. Since Angelica was now in the final grade, she was leaving today as well,
leaving only Damuel and Cornelius to guard me.
“You’re going to the Royal Academy tomorrow,
right, Cornelius?”
“Yes. The experienced older students enter the
dormitory first and prepare for the younger students to arrive.”
I entered the playroom while Damuel and
Cornelius told me about the dormitory and the advancement ceremony.
“Good day, Sister.”
“Good day, Charlotte.”
A stir ran through the playroom the moment I
entered. The students were old enough to recognize me, but those who had been
baptized during the past two years had never seen me before. Some looked as
though they had doubted my existence despite all they had heard, while others
squinted as they tried to figure out who I was, having most likely not attended
the start of winter socializing yesterday.
In the midst of all that, Wilfried took my
hand, led me in front of everyone, then raised his other hand to silence them.
“I imagine some of you do not recognize the young woman before you, given that
she spent the past two years recovering, so allow me to introduce you. This is
Rozemyne, my little sister and Charlotte’s older sister. I imagine all of the
older children among us know that she invented the picture books, karuta, and
playing cards we all use here, as well as the sweets unlike anything we have
ever tasted before.”
Wh... Wha... What kind of an introduction was
that?!
As I gasped in terror, Charlotte stepped over
and put on a bright, extremely cute smile. “Even as she slept, my sister
Rozemyne blessed Ehrenfest with her enormous quantity of mana, as one would
expect from the Saint of Ehrenfest herself. I am sure you have all heard of
her, even if you have not actually seen her, correct? My sister has
accomplished feats so great that she has earned my utmost respect.”
No, stop! Some of the kids actually believe you!
The sheer sense of awe radiating from them is hurting my eyes! I’m no saint!
I wanted to deny it with all my might and run
away, but Wilfried and Charlotte were on either side of me, plus we were
surrounded by guard knights. There was no escape. All I could do was put on a
twitchy noble smile while Rihyarda sat me down onto the chair that had been
prepared for me.
“I permit you all to greet Rozemyne,” Wilfried
said, and a line promptly formed in front of me. It consisted only of the
children I had never met before, and so it was only about thirty people long.
“I am Bertilde, daughter of Giebe Groschel.
May I pray for a blessing in appreciation of this serendipitous meeting,
ordained by the harsh judgment of Ewigeliebe the God of Life?”
“You may.”
I went through the greetings with a smile
while receiving the small lights of their blessings. My half-brother Nikolaus
was standing near the middle of the line, and when he eventually reached me, he
knelt down and crossed his arms in front of his chest with enough enthusiasm
that his light-chestnut hair fluttered slightly.
“I am Nikolaus, son of Karstedt the knight
commander and Trudeliede. May I pray for a blessing in appreciation of this
serendipitous meeting, ordained by the harsh judgment of Ewigeliebe the God of
Life?”
“You may.”
Once he had finished the greeting, Nikolaus
moved to leave. I wondered for a moment whether I should have treated him more
warmly as his older half-sister, but no sooner had that thought crossed my mind
than Cornelius called my name.
“Have you forgotten my warning?” he asked, an
intense smile much like Elvira’s appearing on his face as he glared down at me.
“...I remember.”
“Thank you.”
When the children had all finished greeting
me, stone slates were distributed to those who had joined the playroom this
year, while Professor Moritz gave a simple test to see how well they knew their
letters and math. At the same time, the older kids split into last year’s
groups with Wilfried and Charlotte at their center, then started playing games
of karuta and cards. They were seeing how much better everyone had gotten since
the previous spring.
I looked around from where I was sitting,
impressed. It was clear they had polished the process and mastered leading the
playroom in my absence.
“For the first time in two years, Rozemyne’s
sweets will be given as today’s rewards,” Wilfried announced. The children
immediately reacted in one of two ways: they either blinked in confusion,
having never eaten Ella’s sweets before, or instantly became very serious.
“I will use my full power today,” one boy
said. “This is a battle I cannot afford to lose.”
“Hah! I won’t show you any mercy!” another
exclaimed. And with that, they started a rousing game of karuta.
“Lady Rozemyne, these are documents I’ve put
together describing the playroom studies over the past two years. Please look
them over,” Moritz said.
I took the documents and scanned them. “From
what I can see, everything has been managed quite well. The documents indicate
that the average grade has increased, so we should be safe to increase the
difficulty of the math problems.”
“You wish to increase the difficulty again?” Moritz asked, widening his eyes.
I nodded. “Aub Ehrenfest has instructed me to
raise the average grade level for the entirety of the duchy while I am
attending the Royal Academy as an archduke candidate. I will be requesting your
help to make this a reality, Professor Moritz.”
“As you wish.”
“That said, I certainly placed quite a burden
on you. It hadn’t been my intention to start my sleep in the winter, so I left
nothing but the vaguest of plans for the winter playroom. It must have been
difficult to manage without any precise orders.”
The jotted-down memos I had written for future
playroom plans and such had apparently been given to people in the form of
orders from me. I could imagine they had all struggled with how unclear they
all were.
“...To speak frankly, we encountered many
setbacks in the first year, and recovering from them was no easy task. We were
forced to repeat a process of trial and error as we discovered all the minor,
considerate ways in which you had been steering things in the proper direction.
The winter playroom does indeed flow smoothly now, but it took us two years to
reach this point,” Moritz replied.
The confidence he had developed through the
past two years of work was now clear on his face. At this point, it seemed safe
to leave managing the playroom entirely to him and Charlotte.
“I must compensate for the two years I was
asleep, and so I will be unable to visit the playroom from tomorrow onward. I
entrust managing things to you.”
Moritz knelt and crossed his arms in response,
and at that moment, the games of karuta concluded. The winners let out
victorious cries and pumped their fists in the air, while Wilfried punched the
floor in frustration.
The winners were called over in group order to
be given their rewards, with everyone else watching on in envy as they bit into
the sweets and trembled with delight.
“Ghh... I demand a rematch!” Wilfried yelled.
“Creating new teams based on the results comes
first,” Charlotte chided.
“Ngh...”
Wilfried had evidently become too caught up in
the game, but that one comment was enough to bring him back to his senses. He
stood up, his mouth bent into a frown, and then joined Charlotte in remaking
the teams. All in all, the process was handled fairly expertly. Not only were
the children generally separated into students and those too young to be
students, but it was clear they were also divided into members of a Wilfried
faction and a Charlotte faction, judging by the way the kids flocked to help them.
“Lady Rozemyne,” came a voice. I turned to see
Philine looking up at me and fidgeting. The moment I saw the boards she was
hugging to her chest, I knew what she had with her.
“Philine, will you show me your stories?”
“Yes, Lady Rozemyne.” Her eyes sparkled as she
showed me the collection of stories she had gathered over the years. The
earlier boards were written with clumsy handwriting and childish parlance, so
they were difficult to read, but two years of practice had only led to her
getting better and better. Her grasp of written versus spoken language had
strengthened considerably, and just a single glance at the latest board showed
just how much she had grown.
“You certainly have written much,” I said,
feeling a smile play on my lips.
“You accepted my mother’s story into your
collection of knight stories, and I cannot describe how happy it made me to
hear that other nobles have enjoyed reading it,” she said. “Everyone else was
overjoyed to see their stories included as well.”
The book in question had included stories
collected from the winter playroom. It seemed the children had borrowed copies
while I was asleep, and it was heartwarming to hear how pleased they had been
to see their own stories within.
I wish I could have seen that...
“They had never anticipated that the stories
they had desperately tried to recall in order to borrow teaching materials
would be turned into a book. After that, Roderick spent much time gathering new
stories.”
“I recall reading Roderick’s stories. They
were quite enjoyable. I plan to rewrite the others into written language and
add them to books as well. Have you written the rest of your mother’s stories,
Philine?” I asked, thinking back to two years ago.
She lowered her eyes sadly, then shook her
head. “No, not all of them. There are some stories that I have forgotten,
and... that makes me very sad.”
“Philine, there are a number of common
patterns that stories follow, so you will find ones oddly similar to those you
know even in distant lands. There are many students from different duchies
gathered in the Royal Academy, yes? Perhaps you could ask them about their
stories in hope of remembering your own,” I suggested.
Philine’s grass-green eyes widened, then she
let out a giggle. “Lady Rozemyne, could it be that you plan to gather stories
in the Royal Academy as well?”
“Why yes, I do. Is this not the perfect
opportunity to gather stories known only outside of Ehrenfest?” I replied,
puffing out my chest.
She knelt down and crossed her arms. “I,
Philine, swear to gather information from every duchy as an apprentice scholar
and offer up their stories to you, Lady Rozemyne.”
“I am quite looking forward to it,” I replied,
and an instant later, a stir ran through the room. Uncomfortable tension filled
the air, and a number of the students rushed over in wide-eyed shock.
“Lady Rozemyne, have you accepted Philine as
your retainer?” they asked.
Taken aback by this sudden development, I
glanced up at Cornelius who was standing guard beside me. He seemed to
understand what was going on, as he smoothly stepped forward.
“No, she has not. As someone who heard the
entire exchange, she said nothing of the sort. Philine simply agreed to grant
Lady Rozemyne’s wishes. She may be taken as a retainer in the future, but that
is not presently the case,” Cornelius said.
Some of those gathered sighed in relief, while
Philine hugged her boards to her chest again and stepped back into the crowd,
looking embarrassed and uncomfortable.
“Lady Rozemyne, have you decided upon your
retainers yet?” one girl asked, having steeled her resolve to speak.
Everything finally clicked into place.
Wilfried and Charlotte already had followers consolidating around them, and
those who hadn’t won a place by their side were no doubt aiming for me now,
since I needed to have my retainers assigned soon. Children lived in the shadow
of their parents, however, so it wasn’t a decision I could make lightly.
“Selecting those who will serve me in the
Royal Academy is a matter I will discuss with Rihyarda, my head attendant.”
“Have candidates already been chosen?”
I didn’t know who the candidates were, but considering
we were prioritizing members of my mother’s faction, I could imagine almost all
of them had been decided upon long ago. I couldn’t give any clear answers
though, so I decided to evade the question as best I could and ask Rihyarda
later.
“The candidates have been chosen, yes, but
they will only be announced after I have departed for the Academy,” I said with
a smile. The tension in the air faded at once, and the students quickly
dispersed.
Well, I guess I need to think about my retainers
now.
Fourth bell rang while I thought things over.
I exited the playroom and started making my way to my own room to have lunch.
“Rihyarda, have my retainer candidates been
chosen? Um, that is, people within our faction and everything...”
“Yes, of course. Much has changed among the
factions over the past two years.”
Rihyarda and I discussed the matter as we
walked, and in the process, I learned that my only retainers were Ottilie, the
three knights, and Rihyarda herself. The apprentice attendants had apparently
been removed from my service while I was gone.
“Generally speaking, women resign upon getting
married or to give birth. Apprentices often seek new employment when the one
they serve is away for an unknown amount of time, since the quality of partner
they find is greatly determined by their place of work,” Rihyarda explained,
then noting that my apprentice attendants had been distributed between
Florencia and Charlotte. “It is not at all unwise to select your retainers at
the Royal Academy dormitory, considering that you are going to be living there.
Those you are staying with cannot keep up appearances forever; sooner or later,
they’ll show their true selves.”
But doesn’t that mean they’ll also see my true self...? That’s no good at all.
I went to Ferdinand’s office after lunch,
where those who had gathered information for me were already waiting with their
guardians. They were all standing in a line, looking sick to their stomachs; I
could guess that receiving a summons from the archduke’s half-brother wasn’t
very good for the heart.
“Ferdinand, everyone seems a little nervous,”
I observed. “Might I ask what your exact phrasing was when you summoned them?”
“To come at once upon finishing lunch. Why?”
Holy gods, Ferdinand! Of course they’ll shove
their lunches down their throats and rush over when you phrase it like that!
My stomach started to ache. I felt so, so bad
for them.
“Hello, everyone. You were not summoned here
today to be reprimanded in the least; rather, you may relax, for I wish to
reward your hard work,” I explained. The information gatherers sighed in
relief, while their guardians looked down at me curiously, unsure what to
expect next. “Thank you all for dedicating yourselves to gathering information
in the Royal Academy while I was asleep. I appreciate that this comes a little
late, but you will now be paid in full.”
The information gatherers blinked in surprise,
looking as though they had entirely forgotten about the remaining payment. I
took this opportunity to begin calling them up one by one.
“The vice commander of the Knight’s Order was
quite happy to see your information,” I mentioned to the first. “Aub Ehrenfest
was quite moved by the insight your perspective provided,” I then said to the
second.
I continued to summon them by name, thanking
them for their efforts, apologizing for paying them so late, giving them a few
words of encouragement, and then finally delivering their payments until
everyone had been seen to.
“You are all skilled enough to have obtained
information desired by the leaders of Ehrenfest. I look forward to your
continued good work,” I said.
“Do not falter in your dedication,” Ferdinand
added.
We saw everyone off as they exited the room
with motivated expressions, and my studying began as soon as they were gone.
There really wasn’t much time before I needed to leave for the Royal Academy.
“Ferdinand, am I really ready for the Royal
Academy as I am now?”
“These studies are all an investment for the
future. You would pass in your current state, but passing alone is not enough.
There is only one reason why I am enforcing these studies on you. Do you know
what that reason is?” he asked, narrowing his light-golden eyes.
I could only think of one reason why Ferdinand
would take the time to teach me directly when he had so much work to do
himself: “So I won’t embarrass myself as a daughter of the archduke, right?”
“...More or less, I suppose. Consider it an
investment for the future.”
My studies continued until the absolute last
minute, and finally it was time for me to leave for the Royal Academy. I put on
my mostly black outfit, as well as my brooch and cape which were both the color
of ocher, then headed for the teleportation hall with Rihyarda. Angelica and
Cornelius had already departed themselves, leaving only Damuel to guard me.
The room was dark and windowless. The only
light came from the teleportation circle glowing upon the floor, atop which
servants were stacking boxes filled with living necessities. Many people were
here to see me off: the archducal couple, Charlotte, Karstedt, Elvira,
Bonifatius, and Ferdinand with his guard knight Eckhart. Wilfried was going to
be teleporting after me, so I could see him and Lamprecht in the crowd as well.
My entire noble family was here.
“You won’t need to worry too much with
Cornelius around, but please take care of your health,” Karstedt said.
“Indeed, dear. Take care of your health,”
Elvira added. “I will eagerly await the day you return, when we can have a tea
party once again.”
“I’ll be careful. And I shall look forward to that
tea party as well, Mother.”
“Do not forget I trained your guard knights,”
Bonifatius interjected. “Angelica and Cornelius will keep you safe. And while
you’re gone, I’ll train Damuel even harder. You have nothing to worry about.”
I saw Damuel recoil with fear at Bonifatius’s
words, but there was no way for me to save him now. The most I could do was
offer him my thoughts and prayers.
Godspeed, Damuel. Godspeed.
“Keep an eye out for Ahrensbach,” Sylvester
said. “If there’s something you want to know, send out your apprentice
scholars. Don’t do something as careless as getting directly involved.”
As I nodded, Florencia asked me to look after
Wilfried as well. Given how much he had grown lately, though, I had a feeling
he would be the one looking after me.
“I can’t wait to hear your stories of the
Royal Academy, Sister.”
“Of course, Charlotte. And I shall be trusting
you with the playroom while I’m gone.”
“You may count on me.”
The last to speak was Ferdinand. “Now,
Rozemyne—I advise you to pass all of your exams and return before the
Dedication Ritual begins.”
“Ferdinand, the Dedication Ritual begins
halfway through the winter. Isn’t that a bit unreasonable?” I retorted. While
it was true that I had crammed pretty hard for the sake of getting access to
the Royal Academy’s library, asking me to pull off a miracle like that after
having missed two whole years of studying was just too much.
Ferdinand smirked. “For what purpose do you
think I assisted you with your cramming despite having so much work of my own?”
“Well... didn’t you say it was an investment
for my future?”
“I believe I said it was an investment for the future,” he replied with a poisonous smile.
I could feel my cheek twitch. “Wait... are you
trying to tell me this was all for your benefit?!”
Ferdinand didn’t answer my question, instead
putting on a bright smile so blatantly fake that it made me sick. He wasn’t
about to give me a clear confirmation I could use against him.
“I have faith in your abilities,” Ferdinand
said. “You are to finish your exams as soon as possible, and return before you
instigate any disasters at the Academy. Is that clear?”
Hmph!
I too avoided giving a clear confirmation, and
after giving him a tight-lipped smile, I stepped onto the teleportation circle.
My Retainers and Entering the Dormitory
The teleportation circle filled with mana
before shining with black and gold light, the feystone embedded in my brooch
shining along with it. I saw the air in front of me begin to shimmer, and for a
brief moment, I was hit with a feeling of dizziness. Rihyarda must have noticed
my head wavering, because she reached out her hands and hugged me against her.
Just as I sighed in relief, I realized that
the shapes of those standing in front of me had started to twist about like
they were caught in a whirlpool. The sight made me blink in surprise and then
rub my eyes as I tried to process what was happening. A few seconds passed, and
by the time my vision was back to normal, everyone who had gathered to see me
off was gone.
“Welcome to the Royal Academy, Lady Rozemyne.
This is the Ehrenfest Dormitory,” came a voice.
In front of me was a wide-open pair of doors
with two knights standing on either side to monitor the magic circle. The
teleportation circle beneath me was the same as before and the room looked
fairly similar, but I could tell this wasn’t the same place by the chairs
positioned near the knights, the assorted magic tools nearby, and the fact that
all the people who had seen me off were no longer there.
“If you aren’t feeling well, milady, let’s
hurry to your room,” Rihyarda said, placing a hand on my back and gently
guiding me out of the teleportation room. “Lord Wilfried cannot teleport until
the servants have brought your things to your room.”
Once through the doors, I found myself
standing in a waiting room similar to the one in the castle. This was where
those wanting to use the teleportation circle would bring their belongings and
wait their turn, though only Angelica and Cornelius were here right now, having
come to greet me.
“It is good to see you have arrived safely,
Lady Rozemyne.”
We left the waiting room together and stepped
into a corridor lined with doors. It looked so much like one of the castle’s
hallways that I genuinely doubted whether I had actually teleported to the
Royal Academy.
“The Royal Academy’s dormitories were made
using the creation magic of archdukes who have long since passed, so the
aesthetic of a given duchy’s dormitory tends to resemble its castle,” Rihyarda
explained. Each duchy’s dormitory apparently had its own style, with some being
fancy, some rustic, some rounded and elegant, some sharp and crude, and so on.
“That said, as you cannot enter the dormitories of other duchies, you will only
see their exteriors when you are flying on your highbeast.”
It seemed that the brooches we were given
during the gifting ceremony were specialized magic tools unique to our
respective duchies, such that even if one was stolen, it couldn’t be used to
enter the dormitory of another duchy.
“This way, Lady Rozemyne. Your tea has been
prepared,” Cornelius said.
“Angelica, Cornelius, where exactly are we
going right now?” I asked.
“The common room has been prepared to welcome
new students.”
Those who teleported from the castle to the
dormitory were unable to enter their rooms until their attendants had finished
preparing them, so they waited in the common room in the meantime. Here, the
senior students, whose rooms had already been prepared, would welcome their
juniors.
“I’m leaving milady in your care,” Rihyarda
said when we reached the stairs; then she went up to put away the luggage the
servants had brought in.
“Lady Rozemyne has arrived,” my guard knights
announced, prompting some upperclassman apprentice attendants to begin
preparing tea and serving me sweets. When I looked around, I saw some of the
other new students in my year nervously sipping their own tea.
“Please feel free to sit over here, Lady
Rozemyne,” Brunhilde said with her amber eyes narrowed in a warm smile, her
crimson hair fluttering slightly as she came over. She had been nine when I
first debuted in the winter playroom, so she was now a twelve-year-old student
in her third year. “My... Your outfit is simply magnificent. It plays on the
Royal Academy’s current fashion trends while incorporating flower ornaments of
your own design.”
“It was made based on the information you
provided, Brunhilde. Your help was much appreciated, as I am not familiar with
the trends of the Royal Academy.”
“It is my wish that your clothing designs and
hair ornaments grow in popularity here in the Sovereignty. I would like for
Ehrenfest fashion to dominate for at least a brief period while I am attending
the Royal Academy,” Brunhilde explained. As a fashionable archnoble who stayed
on top of trends, she apparently found it quite humiliating for her home duchy
to be considered a backwater.
“I am certain that the trends you established
in Ehrenfest have the potential to be just as popular in the Sovereignty,” she
continued. “I previously asked the archducal couple whether I could spread them
myself, but they forbade any such actions until you were attending the Royal
Academy. I have been waiting oh, oh, oh so eagerly for
you to arrive. This year will certainly be the best one yet.”
Brunhilde’s smile remained just as bright as
she spoke about spreading sweets and fashion throughout the Sovereignty, her
eyes burning with the same naked ambition I so often saw from Elvira. In all
honesty, I found it a little overwhelming—I only ever made things when the
thought struck me or when I needed something in particular, so all this
business about trends was pretty much beyond me.
“Lady Brunhilde, you mustn’t just speak of
your own interests. How can you expect Lady Rozemyne to relax?” one girl chided
as she quietly stepped forward. Locks of emerald-green hair framed her face,
with the rest tied into a long braid that rested over her shoulder. She was a
bit shorter than Brunhilde, and the fact that I couldn’t remember speaking to
her meant she had probably already entered the Academy by the time I joined the
playroom.
“Very true, Lieseleta. Do forgive me, Lady
Rozemyne. It seems I was so overjoyed that I forgot myself.”
“Think nothing of it, Brunhilde. I understand
well that you are determined to strengthen Ehrenfest’s influence. That is an
important trait for any archnoble to have,” I said reassuringly.
Brunhilde stepped back with a sigh of relief,
at which point Lieseleta stepped forward to take her place. “My apologies for
the disturbance, Lady Rozemyne. Please enjoy your stay,” she said with a polite
smile before quietly leaving.
Lieseleta’s hair was tightly braided so that
it wouldn’t get in the way when she moved, and her dark-green eyes shone with
an intelligent light. The colors were all different, but she looked a lot like
Angelica. They had to be sisters, or at least cousins.
I turned to look at Angelica, who was standing
behind me. “Lieseleta certainly looks like you, doesn’t she?”
“Yes, she’s my little sister. She’s very
competent, unlike me, so our parents compliment her all the time.”
Lieseleta seemed to be quick-witted and
tactful: she was speeding all around the room, preparing damp cloths for those
who had dirtied their hands with sweets, pouring fresh tea for the newly
arriving students, and so on. She carried herself with restraint, saying only
that which was necessary as she worked with an unfaltering smile. It all went
to show just how well raised she really was. While she looked a lot like
Angelica, the way she spoke and acted couldn’t have been more different.
Was that “skilled attendant bloodline” her
parents mentioned fully concentrated into Lieseleta?
“Well, Angelica, was it not the case that you
simply have a poor affinity for attendant work? You are an excellent knight,
are you not?”
“That’s exactly right, Lady Rozemyne,” came a
sudden voice, speaking up in defense of Angelica. I blinked in surprise, while
Angelica frowned slightly.
“Lady Judithe...” she said, sounding troubled.
Judithe was one of the girls I had seen in the
playroom three years ago, and I seemed to recall her being one year older than
me. She had sparkling violet eyes and fluffy bright-orange hair that was
bundled into a ponytail just like Angelica’s.
“Lady Angelica is an expert at enhancement
magic despite being a medknight, and she’s so skilled that even Lord Bonifatius
recognized her talents and took her on as an apprentice. She’s amazing. On top
of that, she’s received your favor, Lady Rozemyne, and her manablade has a mind
of its own. It can even talk. What other manablade can do that?” Judithe said,
extolling Angelica’s virtues at length. “I want to raise a manablade of my own,
but I don’t have the mana for it, and I can’t do enhancement magic either.”
It certainly was nice to hear my guard knight
receiving so much praise. I listened with a smile before voicing my agreement.
“Yes, it is amazing that Angelica has learned to use enhancement magic so well,
isn’t it? Lord Bonifatius did tell me that she has grown much while I was
asleep.”
“Exactly! I want to be strong enough for Lord
Bonifatius to recognize my efforts too. Lady Angelica is my role model.”
Well, well, well... Looks like Judithe is a
member of an Angelica cult. She pretty much worships her.
“Lady Judithe, please leave it at that...”
Angelica interjected.
“You’re right. Lady Rozemyne can’t relax like
this. To think you even take perfect care of your charge, Lady Angelica! I have
so much to learn from you. If you’ll excuse me.”
It occurred to me that Judithe was actively
interpreting Angelica’s words and actions in the best, most convenient way
possible. I glanced up to see that Angelica was trying not to make eye contact
with Judithe, while Cornelius was barely containing his laughter. It seemed
that she was so unaccustomed to receiving praise that she didn’t quite know how
to react to the avalanche of compliments.
“Judithe certainly is a good girl, isn’t she?”
I said.
“...No. She is a weird
girl, not a good one,” Angelica replied, correcting me with a thoroughly
troubled expression.
I smiled and scanned the room. A thick carpet
was spread across the floor and the walls were covered with tapestries, all of
which incorporated the color of our capes. It was as I was looking over these
decorations that I noticed a bunch of young students sitting at an isolated
table. They were all staring at the floor, and during the brief moments they
glanced up, I could see a profound sadness in their eyes; they evidently wanted
to join in with the others, but something was stopping them. Roderick, who had
worked so hard to get stories for me, was among them.
“Cornelius, why are those students sitting at
such a distant table?” I asked, turning to look at him.
“Those are the children of nobles belonging to
the former Veronica faction. Some of them were among those who tricked Lord
Wilfried into disgracing himself during the hunting tournament two years ago.
They are being kept at a distance so they do not endanger either of you.”
A great many people had been in the former
Veronica faction, which came as no surprise given that it had once been the
largest faction in the duchy. It hadn’t fully collapsed even after two full
years, and a solid quarter of the students in the Royal Academy were now
considered worthy of suspicion. This meant that around fifteen of the
sixty-five students living in the dormitory were being isolated. It was for my
safety, of course, but keeping them excluded would make it a lot harder for me
to boost everyone’s grades at once.
“Is there anything we could do to get them on
our side?” I asked.
“Unfortunately, this is simply how factions
function. Eckhart has told me that Ferdinand was once isolated in a similar
manner despite being one of the previous archduke’s sons, all as a result of
the Veronica faction ostracizing him. Before Eckhart joined the Academy,
Ferdinand’s only retainers had been those directly ordered to serve him by the
previous archduke.”
I tried to imagine Ferdinand sitting alone,
looking on at the Veronica faction in envy, but that mental image didn’t really
fit him. He had almost certainly walked the lonely road of a mad scientist with
glee, pleased to have people avoiding him. As he had mentioned, he had used all
manner of tricks and excuses to stay in the Royal Academy, doing whatever he
could to remain in the one place he could truly be free.
The castle was apparently a terrible place for
Ferdinand, but he was pretty lively at the Royal Academy according to Eckhart.
He surely tricked all sorts of people into “investing in the future” just like
he did with me.
“Lord Wilfried has arrived,” came an
announcement.
“Sorry about the wait,” Wilfried said as he
entered with his attendants. His retainers prepared tea and sweets for him, and
as they busily moved around, he sat down in the chair next to mine. “So this is
the Royal Academy, huh? It sure looks a lot like the castle.”
“It certainly does,” came a sudden voice from
behind him.
I turned around to see a slender,
serious-looking woman wearing a calm smile. She looked to be somewhere between
thirty-five and forty-five, and my first thought upon seeing her was that she reminded
me of a scientist, almost certainly due to the monocle resting over her left
eye.
“I am Hirschur, dorm supervisor of the
Ehrenfest Dormitory,” she said.
It turned out that Hirschur was formerly an
Ehrenfest noble but had moved to work in the Sovereignty after securing high
enough grades. She was now a professor at the Royal Academy, where she held
lectures on magic tools.
“Ferdinand contacted me for the first time in
quite a while recently. It seems you are his prized disciple, Lady Rozemyne. I
am quite interested to see what miracles a genius
prodigy taught by the man who received perfect grades in the archduke course,
knight course, and scholar course all at once will
show me.”
“Prized disciple”? “Genius prodigy”? Um, when
have those terms ever been used to describe me? And how am I possibly supposed
to live up to such high expectations?
Before I could even consider how to respond,
Hirschur shot me a smile and moved to the center of the room, where she began
explaining the dormitory rules to the new students.
The girls’ rooms were on the third floor, the
boys’ rooms were on the second floor, and communal spaces such as the dining
hall and common room were on the first floor. Boys were prohibited from going
up to the third floor, and apprentice knights would take shifts watching the
stairs for this very reason.
The rooms at the farthest end of the second
and third floors were for the archduke and archduchess, respectively. These
were used when they visited for the Archduke Conference, which was held here at
the Royal Academy.
“If you fail your exams and are forced to
spend your spring here at the Royal Academy, the archducal couple will remember
you for all the wrong reasons,” Hirschur warned. “Do take care, everyone.”
Oh no, Angelica... Oh nooo...
The girls’ and boys’ floors each had three
rooms for archduke candidates. It was tradition for archnobles to use the rooms
farther back while laynobles used the rooms closest to the stairs, but
retainers were exempt from this rule, since they always had rooms by their
charge. Laynobles and mednobles normally had to live in shared rooms, but those
who saved up enough money could rent one of their own.
Meals were eaten in the dining hall on the
first floor, with all the students being told when it opened. We were also
expected to prepare our own baths in our own rooms, just like at the castle.
“The advancement ceremony and fellowship
gatherings will be held two days from now, with classes beginning the day
after. You have until then to adjust to dormitory life and ensure you are ready
for your lectures. Remember—preparation is essential for all things. Any
questions?”
“I have a question!” I exclaimed, immediately
shooting my hand up. Hirschur looked my way, as did everybody else. “Does the
dormitory have a book room?” I asked excitedly.
Hirschur forced a smile. “There is no book
room in the dormitory, as the Royal Academy has its own full-fledged library.
Incidentally, the library will open when classes begin. New students will be
taught how to use it in order of duchy, and only then will they be allowed to
freely enter.” She must have been able to tell how hard my heart was pounding
in my chest, as her expression grew even more bemused. “You certainly are
passionate about your studies, Lady Rozemyne. I am sure that an archduke
candidate showing such dedication will encourage the others to work hard as
well. I look forward to seeing what you accomplish.”
So you’re telling me that, as an archduke
candidate, my reading will make other people read too? Oh goodness! I guess
it’s my duty to read all the time then!
Rihyarda came up to me once Hirschur had
finished her explanation. “Your room is ready, milady,” she said as she urged
me along. The corridors were long enough that I was told to use my highbeast,
and so I brought out my Pandabus and climbed into it.
“This is as far as I can go,” Cornelius said
when we arrived at the stairs to the third floor. He couldn’t go beyond the
second floor, given that he was a boy, and so Angelica would be my only guard
knight from this point onward.
When we reached the third floor, I found
myself in a long corridor lined with doors on both sides. My room was right at
the back, which was much farther away than I had anticipated; I probably would
have collapsed midway had I needed to climb up the stairs and walk the entire
way without Lessy.
“This is your room, milady.”
The interior wasn’t much different from my
room back at the castle. I could imagine this had been done deliberately so
that I would feel more comfortable, and so that Rihyarda would have an easier
time moving around.
“Now, milady, let’s decide on your retainers.
Is there anyone in particular who has caught your eye today? Please select them
from this list.”
I took a seat at my work desk—though I suppose
it was technically my study desk here at the Royal Academy—and saw that there
were already several sheets of paper lined up for me to look at. On them was a
list of students that Cornelius had prepared for me, and beside each name was
one of three marks representing how suitable each person was to be one of my
retainers. Those with a circle were completely acceptable, those with a
question mark I could choose but weren’t necessarily ideal due to various quirks
with their family or status, and those with a cross were best avoided due to
being untrustworthy. There were also students with Wilfried or Charlotte’s
initials next to their name, indicating that they were already serving as their
retainers.
“Let’s see here... Brunhilde, circle...
Lieseleta, circle... Judithe, circle... Philine, question mark... Roderick,
cross...” I muttered the names I recognized while looking down the list.
“Roderick was among those who tricked Lord
Wilfried, so he is by no means fit to serve you, milady.”
“Is it not probable he was just doing what his
parents told him to without realizing the implications? I think we should talk
to him about this to see whether he deserves a second chance, like we did for
Wilfried.”
“The point still stands that we presently do
not know him well enough, so he cannot be trusted as your retainer,” Rihyarda
said, instantly shooting down my suggestion with an argument I couldn’t refute.
“I will arrange for any of the others to be your attendants. Perhaps Brunhilde
and Lieseleta as apprentice attendants, and Judithe as an apprentice guard
knight. If you so wish, you can also include Philine as an apprentice
scholar—though as she is a laynoble, you will need an apprentice archscholar to
train and support her. I’d suggest Hartmut, milady, if you have no objections.”
“Who is Hartmut?”
“Ottilie’s youngest son. He’s a friendly young
man who loves talking to people. Much like his father, he’s quite good at
gathering information.”
Hartmut was about Cornelius’s age and had
entered the Royal Academy before I was even baptized, so I didn’t really know
him, but him being Ottilie’s son and having Rihyarda’s recommendation meant I
had no reason to doubt his abilities.
“With that settled... it would be wise to
select an apprentice knight to take Cornelius’s place when he graduates. What
about Traugott? He’s the child of my daughter and Lord Bonifatius’s son.”
“Grandfather’s and your grandson... I can only
imagine how powerful he must be.”
“He is nothing compared to Cornelius, who was
trained by Lord Bonifatius and taught your mana compression method, so I would
say he still has a very long way to go.”
Traugott had previously been considered to
serve Wilfried, but as nobody knew when I would permit Wilfried’s guard knights
to learn my new mana compression method, he hadn’t been very enthusiastic about
it. Wilfried had apparently struggled to secure retainers now that he was no
longer guaranteed to be the next archduke.
“Moving on,” Rihyarda continued. “Having
Judithe take Angelica’s place when she graduates is fine, but Angelica is not
much of a teacher. What are your thoughts on this?”
“Rihyarda is right, Lady Rozemyne. I’m sorry,”
Angelica said, though she didn’t sound at all torn up about it.
Rihyarda sighed. “Cornelius could teach her,
but there are many things that are best left between women. You will want
either a head female knight, or an apprentice female knight who can work with
Cornelius to teach Judithe. Do you have any ideas, Angelica?”
Angelica merely tilted her head. It seemed she
hadn’t considered the matter in the slightest, and she wasn’t about to start
considering it either.
“Are there any female apprentice knights who
could think in your place, Angelica?” I asked with a bemused smile. Her
expression became serious in an instant.
“...Leonore is friends with Cornelius, and I
think she’s smart.”
“You truly have no intention of ever thinking
for yourself, do you?”
“No. None at all.”
Oh no... It looks like Angelica has given up on
using her mind even more than she had two years ago.
“Master, you truly are foolish!” Stenluke
scolded. “It is not always ideal to give such blunt answers. The more you study
under your teacher, the more you rely on feelings and instincts over thought.
This trend must be reversed.”
There wasn’t anything for me to add in that
regard; this kind of strict lecturing was best left to professionals like
Stenluke with his Ferdinand voice.
“Let us ask Leonore and then progress things
further if she is receptive,” I said.
“As you wish, milady.”
Thus concluded the initial selection of my retainers.
The Better Grades Committee
“The candidates have all agreed to become your
retainers, milady. They are already being moved into their rooms. You will be
meeting with the boys during the announcement after dinner, since they can’t
come up here,” Rihyarda said, having returned from speaking to all of the
candidates. Those selected to be my retainers needed to move into rooms
specifically for retainers, and with things suddenly sounding a lot busier
outside my door, I could imagine this was already taking place.
“Lady Rozemyne, may I allow your retainers
in?” Angelica asked, standing by the door.
“You certainly may.”
Once the door was open, my new retainers
stepped inside. The girls had come to greet me and discuss their upcoming work
while their attendants and servants moved their things for them.
Brunhilde came over first and knelt before me.
“Lady Rozemyne, I am ever so delighted that you selected me. You may count on
me to make your trends fashionable.”
“Indeed. I intend to rely on you quite heavily
when it comes to social matters, Brunhilde. As you know, I was asleep for two
years; I do not know the precise details of country-wide politics, nor the
relationships between duchies and their various factions. I will be trusting
you to gather information and provide support when I am to socialize.”
Lieseleta was the next to quietly kneel before
me. “You saved my older sister when she was about to fail her studies, Lady
Rozemyne. My family—no, my entire house—is infinitely grateful. I will do all
that I can to make your life here as comfortable as possible.”
“Angelica has told me that you declined every
other offer you received, deliberately waiting for me to awaken so that you
could serve me,” I replied. “The strength of your feelings fills me with true
joy. I look forward to having you in my service.”
Unlike apprentice scholars, who could begin
work at once by making study guides and assisting with assignments so long as
they knew how to write, attendants needed to spend a full year honing their
skills before exclusively serving anyone. This was to minimize the risk of them
greatly displeasing their charge.
Lieseleta had been a first-year when I was
baptized and had hoped to serve me when she finished polishing her skills, but
unfortunate circumstances had resulted in me getting attacked and put into a
coma right as she finished her year of training. The dreadful timing had caused
her to stagger in disbelief, but seeing Angelica steadily continue to grow
stronger while I was asleep encouraged her to train even harder for my sake.
“Milady, I will teach the two apprentice
attendants what work needs to be done here,” Rihyarda said. I gave her a nod,
and then she began running them through my daily schedule and such. It would
most probably be safe to leave the two girls in Rihyarda’s capable hands, so I
turned my attention to the kneeling guard knights. Judithe was looking up at me
with a giddy expression.
“I can’t believe I get to serve you, Lady
Rozemyne. I’m going to get as strong as I can. That way, I can be of as much
use to you as possible!”
“I look forward to seeing your efforts
firsthand, Judithe.”
Kneeling next to her was Leonore, a girl with
violet hair and indigo eyes that sparkled with intelligence. She seemed quite
mature to me, perhaps due to the calm air she exuded or her well-developed
body. I never would have guessed from looking at her that she was an apprentice
knight; in terms of appearance, she looked a lot more like an apprentice
scholar to me.
“Lady Rozemyne, I am ever so grateful that you
have taken me as your guard knight.”
“Leonore, I am aware that I am asking much of
you. I will provide assistance whenever necessary, so I ask that you work with
Cornelius to guide and support both Angelica and Judithe.”
She glanced over at Angelica and Judithe, then
nodded with a stiff expression. “I will do all that I can.”
I sighed in relief, having thought that she
might refuse. Angelica looked just as relieved; there was a broad smile spread
across her face, no doubt due to her now having someone to think in her place.
“Angelica, tell these two what their duties
will be,” I said.
“Understood.”
No matter how bad her explanations were,
Stenluke would probably pull through for me. That said, we still needed to
formulate some sort of plan to reverse the damage done to her thinking
patterns—or rather, the lack thereof.
As I pursed my lips in thought, Philine
hesitantly stepped forward and knelt. “Um, Lady Rozemyne... I am happy beyond
words to have been taken as your retainer, but are you truly okay with having a
first-year layscholar in your service?” she asked, a nervous look on her face.
I could understand why she was worried,
considering how rare it was for a member of the archducal family to take on a
laynoble as a retainer, but Philine was the only person who had vowed to
collect stories from all over the country for my sake. She was a true comrade.
“My only expectation, Philine, is that you
continue gathering stories. I will also have an archnoble scholar here to
support and guide you. If you ever find that someone is treating you unfairly
for being a laynoble, please consult me at once; I will take care of them.”
“Thank you ever so much, Lady Rozemyne.”
As my retainers were busy discussing work
matters among themselves, I took the opportunity to mention the Better Grades
Committee to Philine.
“What is the Better Grades Committee?” she
asked.
“I have been ordered by Aub Ehrenfest to
increase the duchy’s overall grades, coinciding with the archduke candidates
enrolling in the Academy. It is now my duty to raise everyone’s grades while I
am attending school, and this committee shall serve as a tool to accomplish
that. Wilfried and I will of course be the presidents of the committee, but
every student from Ehrenfest shall be a member; I will not let a single person
escape.”
With that, I spread out a number of documents
about the Royal Academy that Damuel had gathered for me. There were twenty-one
duchies, including the Sovereignty. Ehrenfest had ranked thirteenth last year
and was just barely hovering around the middle, but in the past, it had been
competing with lesser duchies for last place.
Our ranking had gone up a little while
Ferdinand was attending the Academy, but it then plummeted back down as soon as
he graduated. In other words, having a single genius wasn’t enough—we needed to
create a system that would increase Ehrenfest’s grades permanently.
“I’ve heard from the senior students that
Ehrenfest’s grade average has risen considerably thanks to the karuta and
picture books, but what can we do to raise it further?” Philine asked.
“The karuta and picture books have shown
results only among the younger students; the material they cover isn’t
complicated enough to have an impact on older students.”
In addition to this, it seemed the younger
students’ grades had only increased in written lessons. One could perhaps say
they had gotten a little better at their practical music lessons as well, but
that was about it. The growth we had seen so far was mainly just because they
had been so bad before, meaning there was still much room for improvement.
“I am told that my brother Cornelius became an
honor student during my two-year absence. He was able to achieve this because
he studied for his written lessons with Damuel a year in advance so that he
could teach Angelica, learned my efficient mana compression method, and spent
time being trained by Grandfather—that is, by Lord Bonifatius.”
While the efforts of the Raise Angelica’s
Grades Squadron had helped other apprentice knights to boost their grades a
little as well, there was a clear gap between Cornelius and his peers.
Angelica, meanwhile, was still just barely passing her written classes despite
the tremendous efforts of so many people, which truly was a headache-inducing
situation.
“From what I remember, you created the mana
compression method yourself, didn’t you?” Philine asked.
“Yes. I intend to teach it to others once we
return from the Royal Academy. I cannot teach it here and now, as it requires
both a sizable sum of money and the permission of Ehrenfest’s leaders. If you
wish to learn it, I recommend gathering stories and information now so that I
can pay you for it all at a later date. I will readily buy stories from other
duchies.”
Philine’s grass-green eyes sparkled at my
words. “I’ll do my best. It’s nice that I have time to earn money, but...
waiting until we return to Ehrenfest means I won’t get more mana right away,
doesn’t it?”
“Indeed. For now, we will focus on improving
everyone’s written lesson grades instead.”
First- and second-years in the Royal Academy
all attended the same classes, where they were taught the fundamentals of
various subjects, while third-years and beyond narrowed their focus down to
specific courses. Ferdinand had already beaten all the content for the first-
and second-year written lessons into my head, since he had instructed me to
pass their exams on my very first day.
Ferdinand had gotten me to make these
preparations for good reason; I needed to know the information covered during
the first two years at the Royal Academy just to have basic conversations with
archnobles at tea parties, and I was told that Wilfried had been working hard
as well for this very same reason. It was also apparently common practice for
archduke candidates and archnobles with older siblings to pass these exams on
their first day, though as these exams only covered the written portion of our studies,
we couldn’t just relax once they were over—we would still need to focus the
rest of our time on practical lessons and socializing.
I wanted to dedicate as much of my time as
possible to the library, and the only way I could achieve that goal was by
setting things up so that everyone could study while I was away reading. The
current students had all studied with karuta and picture books, so they
wouldn’t encounter any issues with magecraft and theology until their third
year, nor would they struggle with math. Our biggest problems were with history
and geography, since these were areas where some people were significantly
better or worse than others. These were also the subjects I knew the least
about myself.
“Many students with older siblings rely on
study guides and the like that are passed down to them, no? I wish to make
similar guides myself and create an environment in which everyone studies
together to boost their grades.”
We had documents from when Eckhart was an
apprentice knight, and if Cornelius lent them out, everyone could make a great
deal of progress together. If we repeated this process for other courses as
well, studying would instantly become a lot easier.
“We’re going to raise the grades of every
student from Ehrenfest, including the children from the former Veronica
faction,” I explained.
“Back when you led the playroom, Lady
Rozemyne, all of us worked together regardless of age and faction to complete
the work given to us, hoping to be rewarded with your sweets. I truly did love
the energy in the air,” Philine said with a nostalgic smile.
As it turned out, Wilfried had been so shocked
by his friends betraying him at the hunting tournament and subsequently being
attacked in the castle that he had started acting hostile toward the children
of the former Veronica faction while I was asleep. He may have looked calm on
the surface now, but that was only because Charlotte had taught him not to show
his emotions so openly. The former Veronica faction remained ostracized to this
day, and for this reason they were neither taken as retainers nor given any
important duties. That needed to be fixed, and fast; I wanted to recreate the atmosphere
from the playroom that Philine loved so much here in the Royal Academy.
I think making everyone compete for rewards again
is probably the best move. Maybe all this internal strife will fade if we can
establish an outside enemy for everyone to focus on...
“Please remain here after dinner,” I said to
everyone gathered in the dining hall. “I will announce my retainers, pay those
who provided information while I was asleep, then convey a message directly
from Aub Ehrenfest himself.”
With that, I took my seat. The tables were
generally divided into factions. Wilfried and I were sitting with our retainers
at a large table with a dozen seats, while everyone else was split between four
large tables with their friends.
It’s kind of funny that we’re bothering to
announce my retainers when it’s already obvious to everyone who I’ve chosen.
“O mighty King and Queen of the endless skies
who doth grace us with thousands upon thousands of lives to consume, O mighty
Eternal Five who rule the mortal realm, I offer thanks and prayers to thee, and
do take part in the meal so graciously provided,” Wilfried said, leading the
prayer. When that was done, we finally started eating.
Incidentally, Wilfried and I had slightly
different menus from everyone else, with both of us getting unique desserts. I
could see the others glancing at our plates with wide-eyed surprise.
“The food here has been getting better over
the years, but this year’s is something else entirely...” said one of the
students.
“Yeah, the food is what I look forward to most
at the Royal Academy. I was at a loss for words the first time I ate here,”
replied another.
The quality of the food had been steadily
rising over the past three years due to the dormitory having chefs sent from
the castle, and now that Hugo and Ella were here, the quality had shot up even
further. It was funny seeing how much the perspectives of the senior students,
who knew how the food had been before, differed from those of the newer
students, who were only familiar with these high-quality meals.
“These fantastic dishes were made by my
personal chefs, who have been sent here for the first time this year. They have
trained very hard over the past few years,” I announced. “Oh, and I plan to
release a recipe book containing these foods at the end of winter.”
“Oh my... Do you mean to say the book will
contain instructions for how to make these dishes?” Brunhilde asked, elegantly
placing a hand over her mouth to indicate surprise. I needed to learn from her
example.
“It will be more expensive than the picture
books, but I believe the recipes are worth every coin.”
“You are certainly right about that, Lady
Rozemyne; recipes are very expensive. Will you also be selling them in the
Sovereignty?”
“My plan is to sell the recipe book in the
Royal Academy next year, or perhaps the year after that. This year I will only
be debuting a single sweet recipe or two in order to build up anticipation.
Trying to change trends too abruptly will only inspire resistance,” I said.
This earned me a small pout from Brunhilde,
who wanted to spread these trends faster than anyone. She was an elegant and
mature girl, but she really did look her age when she made expressions like
that.
“It is best to introduce trends gradually,” I
explained with a smile. “While I am an archduke candidate, other duchies have
their own archduke candidates as well. If we consider the Sovereign royalty and
the archduke candidates of greater duchies to be archnobles, then we of a
middle duchy like Ehrenfest would be equivalent to mednobles. Now tell me, what
would archnobles think of mednobles abruptly starting new trends without any
warning?”
Brunhilde gasped in realization.
“We must move like mednobles. The inventions
and such that we can introduce as trends are our secret weapons for
establishing connections with the archnobles and increasing our influence.
There is no need for us to reveal all of our cards at once; we are better off
showing our hand little by little.”
“It is as you say.”
After dinner, it was time for me to reveal my
new retainers. Everyone already knew who I had chosen given that they had just
eaten with me, but official announcements like this were apparently important.
“I shall now announce my retainers. My
apprentice attendants shall be Lieseleta and Brunhilde. My apprentice knights
shall be Angelica, Cornelius, Leonore, Traugott, and Judithe. My apprentice
scholars shall be Hartmut and Philine.”
I had already spoken to the girls back at my
room, but this was pretty much my first time seeing the boys. We had exchanged
our first greetings three years ago at the playroom, but in all honesty, I had
greeted so many people back then that I couldn’t remember anyone who hadn’t
been on the blacklist I had memorized.
“It is an honor to serve you, Lady Rozemyne,”
Traugott said while kneeling before me. He was a twelve-year-old apprentice
archknight in his third year, and despite being both Rihyarda’s and
Bonifatius’s grandson, he didn’t really look like either of them. He had
exceptionally blond hair and deep-blue eyes, and the silence he exuded was only
further emphasized by his unmoving expression.
Hartmut stepped forward after Traugott. “I
have been awaiting your return ever since you first instructed us to gather
information in the Royal Academy, Lady Rozemyne. I am overjoyed to serve you,”
he said, his amber eyes crinkled in a bright, peaceful smile. His way of
speaking made him sound exactly like Justus, though his noticeably red hair
meant he probably wasn’t as suited to stealthy reconnaissance. He was Ottilie’s
second son, a fourteen-year-old apprentice archscholar in his fifth year.
Once the greetings were finished, I had
Rihyarda bring me a pouch filled with coins.
“With much gratitude in my heart, I will now
distribute payment to those who gathered valuable information for me while I
slept,” I announced.
I began calling the students over one by one,
giving them each a few words of appreciation. Brunhilde in particular had
earned high praise from Florencia and Elvira for the fashion- and trend-related
information she had gathered, while Ferdinand had been quite satisfied with the
information Hartmut had collected. A proud light shone in their eyes as they
accepted their payment.
“Furthermore, Roderick and Philine have both
gathered many stories at my request. It is thanks to them that I will soon be
able to make yet another new picture book,” I continued. While neither of them
had been Royal Academy students at the time, they had still gathered
information that I found valuable, so I was naturally going to pay them in
full. Doing this would also encourage more people to gather new stories for me
in hope of making some money themselves.
Philine happily walked over and accepted her
payment, but Roderick looked between me and the coins in his hands with worry.
“Is... Is it truly acceptable for me to take this?”
“But of course. You are being paid for your
services, Roderick.” He must never have expected for his efforts to be
recognized or rewarded, as his face momentarily scrunched up like he was about
to cry. “I look forward to your continued efforts. Please find many stories for
me in the Royal Academy.”
“As you wish. I will live up to your
expectations without fail,” he replied, gripping the coins tightly as he
returned to his seat. Wilfried watched him go, then looked at me with narrowed
eyes.
“Rozemyne, do you not know? Roderick was—”
“It is best to reward deeds fairly, dear
brother. Roderick gathered many stories for my sake, and I am merely
compensating him for his efforts—that is all there is to it. One’s faction is
irrelevant to their accomplishments and good deeds.”
This announcement caused a stir at the table
where the children from the former Veronica faction were seated. “Lady
Rozemyne, does that mean any information I gather will be rewarded equally as
well?” one asked.
“Of course. Everyone values things
differently. Brunhilde gathered information about fashion and trends, while
Hartmut prioritized information on interduchy relations. Not everyone found use
in what they obtained, but some did. Thus, if someone appreciates the
information you gather, I will reward it fairly.”
Nobody from the former Veronica faction had
brought me any information. I had initially assumed this was because their
parents had forbidden them from doing so, but as it turned out, it was because
they hadn’t thought their efforts would be rewarded. Given how Wilfried had
reacted to me paying Roderick, I could hardly blame them.
“Now, we shall convey to you all the message
from Aub Ehrenfest,” I began. “Wilfried and I are enrolled in the Royal Academy
as archduke candidates, and next year our sister Charlotte will be joining us.”
Wilfried stood up and faced everyone, then
continued in a loud, clear voice. “Starting with us, Ehrenfest will have
archduke candidates in the Royal Academy for the next ten years. My father
wishes to use this opportunity to increase our duchy’s influence as much as
possible, so we want all of you to band together and provide your support.”
“First, let us consider how to raise
everyone’s grades,” I said.
The apprentice knights spoke up at once.
“Simply being taught your mana compression method will be a significant boon.
Please teach it to us so that we may raise our duchy’s grades.”
It was clear to everyone just how drastically
my mana compression method had increased the mana capacities of Angelica,
Cornelius, and Ernesta, the last of whom was Charlotte’s apprentice guard
knight. But most importantly of all, it was a hot topic in the Knight’s Order
that even Damuel—an adult layknight—was still seeing a steady increase in his
capacity.
“...I plan to gradually teach my mana
compression method to those I deem trustworthy. I will observe your behavior
over this winter and select those who catch my interest, then pass these names
on to Ehrenfest’s leaders for approval. When this semester ends, I plan to hold
seminars to teach those who are accepted.”
“Is that true?”
“Yes, though please keep in mind that those
who are accepted will need to pay a hefty fee before they can be taught,” I
explained, resulting in a number of excited and defeated expressions among the
students. “Lessons on using the compression method to increase one’s mana
capacity will begin next spring. As for this year, my goal is to raise our
written grades, both for Ehrenfest’s and for your sakes. Let us all improve
together, regardless of rank and faction.”
My words caused many to raise their heads.
Some were noticeably tense about what I was going to say next.
“We will first split into groups,” I
explained. “The first- and second-years will be put together, as all their
lessons are shared, while the rest of you will be divided into your respective
specialty courses. In summary, there will be the first-years’ team, the
second-years’ team, the apprentice knight team, the apprentice scholar team,
and the apprentice attendant team.”
The teams differed slightly in terms of size,
but there were around ten people in each. This was the most efficient method of
dividing the students, considering my plans to have them share information and
study guides, but people immediately began to complain.
“Rozemyne, are you insane?!” Wilfried
exclaimed. “If you’re going to put them into groups, you should at least divide
them by faction!”
“That’s right. I could never work with someone
from another faction!” came a voice from among the students.
“Lady Rozemyne, please consider how those of
us being ostracized feel,” added a student from the former Veronica faction.
It seemed that my decision wasn’t much
appreciated by Wilfried, the members of my own faction, or even the members of
the former Veronica faction, but I really didn’t want the dormitory to be awash
with faction politics. As far as I was concerned, there really was no point in
caring about such distinctions here.
In the midst of all the complaints, I put a
hand on my cheek and shook my head, wearing the most exasperated expression I
could manage. “Goodness, everyone... Might I ask why you all seem to love
faction squabbling so much? Are you aware that the country at large considers
Ehrenfest a backwater duchy without any notable merits? Is it truly wise for us
to fight among ourselves in such a dire situation?”
“Th-That’s...”
“Rozemyne, have you forgotten that you were
attacked?!” Wilfried retorted.
I couldn’t help but sigh. I had been wondering
why Wilfried was so invested in faction politics all of a sudden, and now it
made sense—he was trying to protect me. As much as I appreciated his efforts,
he was getting in the way of my plan.
“I have not forgotten what happened, nor am I
happy about it,” I said, looking over the dining hall. “Even so, it is worth
noting that we have no parents to rely on here in the Academy, which in turn
means we have no parents to spy on us and force us to commit misdeeds. The
faction squabbling can wait until we return to Ehrenfest, can it not? Here, the
foes we must face are the honor students of other duchies—that is what you all
must understand. Is it not standard practice for us nobles to consider the future,
hide our emotions, and ally with our enemies to defeat yet greater foes? This
is what I was taught long ago. Goodness. To think you are all so feeble of
spirit.”
Wilfried and all the other children fell
silent.
“That said, I understand that being abruptly
told to study harder is not the most motivating thing in the world,” I
continued. “For this reason, I have prepared rewards to encourage you all. The
first team to have all its members pass their exams and the team with the most
talented students shall each receive my pound cake recipe, meaning you may have
your chefs at home make them for you when we return to Ehrenfest.”
Freida had said that I could publicize the
pound cake recipe, but it was still mostly a secret. I had of course taught it
to a few people who were close to me, but they had paid so much for the recipe
that they were keeping it close to their chests. As a result, those in the
Noble’s Quarter who wanted pound cake either had to buy some at the
guildmaster’s store, or secure an invitation to one of Elvira’s or Florencia’s
tea parties. Introducing the recipe as a reward would allow the students to eat
pound cake at home, serve it to visitors, and do pretty much whatever else they
wanted with it.
Everyone suddenly looked a lot more receptive
to the idea—that is, everyone except Wilfried and Cornelius, who still seemed
unhappy.
“Would you two rather be rewarded with Ella’s
new sweets recipe?” I asked. That was evidently enough to solve the problem, as
they both nodded with motivated smiles.
“Given the easier material, I imagine the
lower years will pass their exams sooner, but it is unlikely they will be
selected as the most talented students for this same reason. Those in the
higher years may be able to exploit this chance for victory,” Hartmut mused
aloud. He then shot up a hand while eyeing Cornelius. “Lady Rozemyne, there are
many guard knights among the apprentices who already know your mana compression
method and have access to Lord Eckhart’s excellent study guides. I think this
gives them an unfair advantage here.”
The others immediately began to voice their
agreement. Faction squabbling had already ceased to matter entirely.
“The other teams can surely acquire study
guides from their own siblings, but I agree that the mana compression method
does provide an unfair advantage. Some adjustments will need to be made to
account for this. In which case... I forbid Angelica from using Stenluke in
class.”
“What?! No way are we going to win now!”
several of the older apprentice knights cried out. Angelica was similarly taken
aback—her face paled as she attempted to choke out my name, but I looked her
straight in the eye and didn’t back down.
“You have relied on Stenluke so much over the
past two years, Angelica, that you think even less than you did before. That
simply will not do. Please use your head going forward and learn on your own
merits. You survived your previous two years; you can surely survive this one
as well.”
“Do you hate me, Lady Rozemyne...?” Angelica
asked tearfully. She was almost radiating despair, but I was unmoved. No matter
how much of an ephemeral and melancholic beauty she was right now, I wouldn’t
be deceived by appearances; she was putting on the same face she always made
when she didn’t want to use her brain.
“Of course not. I would not assign someone I
hate to be my guard knight. This is all to aid your growth as a person, and I
trust that you understand this as well, Stenluke. I will not tolerate any
violations,” I declared, having noticed Angelica touch her manablade’s feystone
in a desperate bid for help.
Naturally, a manablade with Ferdinand’s
personality and speech patterns would never in a million years permit any
fraud. He responded with a clear, “Understood.”
“Knights must abide by the rules,” Stenluke
firmly continued. “And most of all, I too wish for my master’s growth.”
“I am glad to see that we are on the same
page.”
“No, Stenluke!” Angelica cried out. “Why, Lady
Rozemyne?! Why?!”
I cheered Angelica on with a grin, then turned
to look across the entire dining hall. “Now then, get into your groups. Come up
with plans, work together, and do your very best in your classes. With that
established... Wilfried, when will we first-years begin our strategy meeting?”
Wilfried, who had been staring at the table
where Roderick and the other children of the former Veronica faction were,
abruptly stood. “Spend tonight checking over the study guides and other
information you have received from your older siblings. We will hold a strategy
meeting first thing after breakfast tomorrow. Victory shall be ours!”
And so Ehrenfest’s Better Grades Committee was
established, with the intense battle for results beginning at once.
The Advancement Ceremony and Fellowship Gatherings
Thanks to my head attendant Rihyarda being
here, my new life in the Royal Academy wasn’t all that different from my time
spent in the castle. One thing I hadn’t entirely gotten used to, however, was
Lieseleta and Brunhilde already being dressed and waiting in my room when it
was time for me to get up. It really pained me knowing that I was relaxing in
bed while everyone else was awake, but such was the fate of anyone who had
attendants. Waking up earlier would only lead to my attendants having to get up
even earlier than usual to make their morning preparations, so my only option
as a high-status rich girl was to wait in bed and at best pretend to be asleep
until everything was ready.
Breakfast was eaten in the dining hall rather
than in my room, so once I was changed, my female retainers and I all went
there together. Cornelius and the boys had already been informed that I was
ready, so by the time I had climbed into Lessy and reached the second floor,
they were already waiting for me.
“Good morning, Lady Rozemyne,” they said.
Once classes began, there wouldn’t be time for
the usual process of my retainers having to wait for me to finish my food, so
we all ate at the same time. We were served by the adult attendants we had
brought with us, which meant Rihyarda served my food for me.
After our meal, I fetched the documents
Ferdinand had prepared when beating the lessons into my head, then moved to the
common room. There we would begin the first-years’ strategy meeting.
“I already have Rihyarda to attend me and
Philine as a fellow first-year, so I will only need one guard knight to stay
with me,” I said. “The others can go and be with the knight group, assuming
they are holding a meeting as well.”
“We may be inside the dormitory, Lady
Rozemyne, but it is not enough to have only one guard knight here to protect
you,” Cornelius said. Both he and Wilfried were wearing clouded expressions.
“I will be perfectly fine here. Ferdinand gave
me many protection charms.”
“Did he?”
“Oh yes. They’re magic tools so deadly that I
genuinely feel bad for anyone who would attempt to attack me.”
Since I didn’t have a schtappe, the only way I
could attack anyone was by praying or getting so mad that I Crushed anyone in
sight. Upon hearing that the attack two years ago had occurred too suddenly for
me to fight back, Ferdinand had given me magic tools that would absorb my mana
on their own and activate the moment I was attacked. For this reason, he had
told me to keep them on me at all times.
“I cannot say where the magic tools are or
when they will activate, since we cannot risk any plans being made to counter
them, but trust me when I say that they are exactly what you would expect from
Ferdinand,” I explained. That alone was enough for Cornelius and Wilfried to
grimace; I could only wonder what had transpired between them and Ferdinand
while I was asleep.
“...Very well. In that case, I will entrust
this duty to Leonore.”
“No, Cornelius,” Angelica said, stepping
forward with a broad smile. “Please allow me to guard Lady Rozemyne.”
Cornelius faced her down with an equally broad
smile. “You are the one and only thing posing a threat to the knight team’s victory.
Neither the strategy meeting nor the study group can begin without you,” he
said before promptly dragging her away. They might have grown on the outside,
but they were still acting the same way as they had two years ago.
I couldn’t help but giggle at Judithe’s dazed
expression as she watched Angelica getting dragged away. In an attempt to
reclaim her focus, I gestured to a nearby table. “Judithe, the second-years
have already begun their meeting.”
“R-Right. I’ll be right there.”
I had to wonder whether her saintly mental
image of Angelica had just been shattered to pieces. I genuinely felt a bit
sorry for her, but learning the truth sooner rather than later would save her a
lot more heartache down the line. Besides, it was only studying that Angelica
was bad at; her strength was the real deal.
“Do you not need to study with them, Leonore?”
I asked.
“Fear not. Cornelius has lent me his study
guides, and I have already looked over all the fourth-year material.”
“My, you really are talented,” I said,
remembering how much the Raise Angelica’s Grades Squadron had struggled.
Leonore gave a conflicted smile. “He informed
me that it was all material you learned two years ago, Lady Rozemyne.”
“I only helped Damuel organize it so that he
could teach Angelica. I certainly haven’t memorized it all, and there is much I
have forgotten.”
“Yet more humility. You truly are a modest
individual, Lady Rozemyne.”
Er, no... It’s just the truth.
It was true that I had learned a lot while
participating in the Raise Angelica’s Grades Squadron, but most of that
knowledge was already long forgotten. That said, it had mostly covered the ways
knights fought and battle strategies involving magic, so I couldn’t imagine
this would be much of an issue; it wasn’t like battle magic would ever come up
during tea parties with other duchies.
“Wilfried, what written subjects did you
struggle with the most?” I asked.
“History and geography. I learned everything
else in the playroom, and Moritz said I’m already good enough to pass. I think
we should have everyone else focus on history and geography too, then get as
much practice in with the practical subjects as we can,” he said, clearly
having thought up his own study plan. The main subjects were math, theology,
magecraft, history, and geography, with history and geography evidently being
the main problem areas.
“What should we expect on the practical side
of things? Ferdinand was quite strict with teaching me the written subjects,
but we had no time for practical exercises.”
“First-year magecraft lessons cover mana
control, mana compression, highbeast creation, and schtappe acquisition—none of
which you’ll need to practice for, of course. There’s also court etiquette,
music, and the dedication whirl, but from what I saw in the castle, you’re fine
with those as well.”
...In a shocking twist, Ferdinand had gotten
me to learn most of these things two whole years ago. He truly had planned
ahead to a fearsome degree.
“Am I already passing?” I asked. “I certainly
don’t feel like much of a whirler...”
“First-years don’t perform public dedication
whirls, so all we need to do is practice. Either way though, I expect you are
already above a passing grade in all areas. Uncle would not sit still if you
were blatantly lacking at something.”
Wilfried was right. Ferdinand had been working
hard for the sake of “the” future, so he would have
made it painfully clear if there was a subject I wasn’t doing well enough in. I
had been a little worried about whether I would finish things in time for the
Dedication Ritual, but surprisingly enough, I was now feeling a lot more
confident.
“Okay, let’s all study history and geography
together until third bell,” Wilfried said. “Harspiel practice will begin right
after.”
Wilfried and I divided the work, then started
teaching everyone history and geography. Some of the archnobles already knew
the material we were due to cover, but the laynobles barely knew a thing—they
hadn’t been blessed with skilled tutors, and neither subject had been taught in
the playroom. Philine in particular was in an immensely bad spot, since she
didn’t have any older siblings to rely on.
“Let’s start with a basic history,” I said.
“Yeah,” Wilfried agreed. “The picture book
bibles already covered a bit about the founding of the country, so this should
be easy to remember.”
The first-year team was the smallest of all
the groups, being the only one with fewer than ten students, and that was
exactly why we were focusing on winning through having all of our members pass
first.
“Goodness me. I see we have a passionate bunch
of students this year,” Professor Hirschur said with a surprised expression as
she walked into the common room. Despite her being our dorm supervisor, she was
so busy with her work as a professor that we rarely saw her in the dormitory.
“Hello, Professor Hirschur,” I replied.
“I imagine you are all busy with your studies,
but your attention please,” Hirschur said. “Tomorrow’s advancement ceremony
will be held in the auditorium at third bell, with the fellowship gatherings
then being held concurrently with lunch. Always keep in mind that Ehrenfest is
ranked thirteenth this year; it will give you an idea of how you should act
around others. I myself will be focusing on my own research until my class
begins, so I will be in the main school building. I ask that the archduke candidates
manage everyone carefully so that no problems interfere with my work.”
And with that, she briskly left. The fact that
she was prioritizing her research over managing the dormitory surely hinted at
why Ferdinand was still in contact with her—no doubt she was a mad scientist as
well.
“That is one weird professor...” Wilfried
muttered.
The guard knight standing beside him nodded.
“Indeed. Professor Hirschur is somewhat eccentric. In previous years, however,
she only ever showed her face when unlocking the dormitory at the start of the
semester, and then when closing it again at the end. Despite how it may seem,
she is making an effort to show herself out of respect for you and Lady
Rozemyne. From what I know, she previously settled all business matters through
ordonnanzes.”
This had apparently extended to dealing with
the students in her dormitory as well. Hirschur would normally receive an
ordonnanz when the new first-years had gathered, and then she would rely on
ordonnanzes to inform the students of any official matters.
Wilfried furrowed his brow. “Hirschur didn’t
even kneel or greet us when she first came by. What kind of Ehrenfest noble is
she? That just isn’t right.”
“No, Lord Wilfried, you must remember that
Professor Hirschur is not an Ehrenfest noble—she has moved to the Sovereignty,
and so she is now a Sovereign noble. Furthermore, it is well established in the
Royal Academy that professors are of a higher status than students, so I do not
believe you will find any professors kneeling to students on the Academy’s
grounds.”
“...I see.”
We spent our time going over the material in
our groups and identifying our weakest points. From there, we just needed to
work on our shortcomings and strengthen ourselves overall.
“Well, now we know for sure that harspiel
practice in the playroom is having a big impact,” Wilfried said. “Seems like
even laynobles won’t have much trouble passing now, which means we should add
history and geography lessons to the playroom, yeah?”
“Yes, that sounds like a natural next step.
I’ll need to print picture books that can be used when studying those subjects;
Professor Moritz would definitely struggle having to do it all on his own,” I
said, clenching my fists with determination as I thought about making new books
for the children.
“Hold on,” Wilfried said with a grin, raising
a hand to stop me. “If you’re going to be making study materials, at least
start with something we’ll be able to use ourselves as second-years. I can
already tell you’re gonna make everyone study like this again next year.”
I nodded. It was necessary to establish a
system in which everyone supported each other so that things would continue
functioning even when I withdrew into the library. If our current group system
went well, I would naturally be reusing it next year.
“Indeed. I will start with material for the
second-years then.”
“Great.”
Once we’d had dinner, it was time for a bath.
With the advancement ceremony and fellowship gatherings being held tomorrow, I
decided to thoroughly clean my hair with rinsham. Brunhilde’s eyes sparkled
when I asked her to prepare it.
“Rinsham certainly is wonderful, isn’t it? Did
you have this order specially made, Lady Rozemyne?”
“I certainly did. The Gilberta Company made it
at my request.”
Brunhilde turned out to be quite a regular
user of rinsham. She opened the jar of the newly-made product and let out a
dreamy sigh as she inhaled its scent. It seemed that beauty and fashion
transcended factions for women, such that all archnoble girls had started using
rinsham over the past two years.
“In that case, do you think washing the hair
of all the Ehrenfest girls will draw attention to us at the ceremonies and
potentially kick off a trend?” I asked.
Brunhilde fell into thought for a moment, then
nodded. “I do. It is rare to see anyone with hair this glossy, after all. I
imagine unobservant men will not take much notice, but it will catch the
attention of other women without fail.”
“In that case, please distribute rinsham to
the girls who don’t have any. We shall all attend the advancement ceremony with
clean hair.”
As Brunhilde and I talked, Lieseleta came to
call me for the bath she had just finished preparing with Rihyarda.
“I shall distribute the rinsham for you,” she
said. “Please take your bath, my lady.”
The children who were sharing rooms also
shared bathwater, so there wasn’t much rinsham needed in the end. Lieseleta had
volunteered to distribute the rinsham among them while taking the opportunity
to teach them how to use it as well. She was an observant and overall very
considerate girl.
“It might be wise for everyone to wear hair
ornaments next year as well,” Brunhilde suggested, taking the long-term into
account now that we had decided to start spreading trends. “We can have a
universal design, but with a selection of colors to match people’s hair.”
“That is an excellent idea. I must ask though,
will laynobles be able to afford ornaments the same as the ones I wear?”
“...Considering the cost, perhaps a universal
design will not be so easy after all. Using the same color would certainly be a
foolish misstep though, as there is no single color that would look good on
everyone.”
“I suppose we have until next year to think of
a solution.”
By the time Rihyarda had finished bathing me,
Lieseleta had already returned. She gave me a massage, and as I sipped the
fruit juice Brunhilde had prepared for me, I asked how the rinsham distribution
had gone.
“The girls who had never used it before were
quite excited to finally try it out,” Lieseleta replied.
“You and Philine may use it as well. I look
forward to seeing you both with glossy hair.”
“As you wish.”
Following my bath, Philine and I studied
together until it was time to sleep—or rather, I tutored Philine while
organizing study guides for the second-years like Wilfried had said. We would
need them next year for everyone to study together again.
The sun rose on a new day, and at breakfast,
the boys gawked at how all the girls’ hair had turned glossy and shiny
overnight. Wilfried demanded to know what I had planned, and to that I simply
laughed.
“It’s just a casual statement that we’re going
to push a new trend.”
“How the heck is this casual?! You’re going to
be shoving it in their faces!”
“I could be spreading countless more trends,
but instead I’m just going with one. That makes it casual. I am also currently
figuring out how to have everyone wear matching hair sticks and the like next
year.”
On a personal level, I wanted to kick off a
trend of selling and buying books, but considering the need to raise our
grades, we had to keep that a secret for a bit longer. Bookselling needed to
wait until after the Better Grades Committee had left its mark on Ehrenfest
history. For now, we could start by gradually pushing trends in beauty,
fashion, and cuisine. With the rinsham having been embraced by all women
regardless of faction, I could guess these three areas would be accepted by
everyone across the country regardless of politics.
“I understand that you’re thinking things
through as best you can,” Wilfried said, “but don’t do anything that’ll draw
too much attention. You already stand out enough because of your appearance.”
“...Fair point.”
We soon finished breakfast. Since we needed to
head to the auditorium at third bell, I made myself presentable enough to leave
the dormitory, making sure to put on my cape and brooch—I wouldn’t be able to
get back into the dormitory without them.
“Lady Rozemyne, as the fellowship gatherings
involve so many people, they are held separately by rank. Please select three
guard knights, one scholar, and one attendant from your retainers,” Rihyarda
said.
Wilfried and I would be attending the
gathering with the other archduke candidates and members of royalty, so it
would probably be safest to stick with archnobles and older students who
already knew the ways of the Royal Academy.
“In that case, I select Angelica, Cornelius,
and Leonore as my guard knights. Hartmut shall be my scholar, and Brunhilde my
attendant.”
“As you wish.”
I got into my highbeast like normal once our
preparations were done, but Cornelius advised me to climb out again just as we
were about to exit the dormitory. Though the Academy grounds were overall quite
massive and highbeasts could be used freely outside, it was apparently against
the rules to ride them in the halls.
“A new student riding an unfamiliar highbeast
on the first day will make a very poor impression,” Cornelius said.
“You already look unusually young. You should
try not to stand out any more than you already do,” Wilfried added.
“I understand your points, but will I really
be able to walk all the way to the auditorium?” I asked. Surely I would stand
out even more if my attendants had to carry me there.
“The auditorium is close enough that this
won’t be a problem. You shouldn’t have an issue getting to classes either,
given that they are initially held either in the auditorium itself or in large
nearby classrooms. If you find the distance is too much for you to manage,
Hartmut or I will carry you; that will stand out less than your highbeast.”
When we were all gathered together, our
primarily black clothing with identically colored capes and brooches really did
make us look like a team, even with the unique styles of our clothes.
The door leading out of the dormitory opened,
and my retainers surrounded me as I started walking. The exit led not outside,
but into a corridor. When I looked around, I spotted another door open nearby,
out of which streamed a number of children wearing blue capes.
“Ehrenfest Dormitory is the thirteenth door in
the corridor,” one of the older students said. “Please take care not to forget
that. The doors to the other dormitories will of course not open for you, and
your first mistake will naturally be forgiven, but if you attempt to open the
wrong door too many times then you may be imprisoned on suspicion of attempted
assault or intimidation.”
We younger students nodded with bemused looks.
Our dormitory was the thirteenth door to match Ehrenfest’s position in the
rankings, which were determined by a duchy’s influence and grades from the
previous year. By this point, it was clear that the ranking of our duchy would
have significant influence on our lives in the Academy.
“Duchy rankings influence everything from the
order of greetings to the placement of seats,” the student continued.
The farther we went down the corridor, the
smaller the numbers on the plates above the doors became, and the more students
came out of their dormitories. It seemed that we needed to cede the corridor to
students of a higher rank than us, and so we waited by the door for those ahead
of us to finish leaving.
Those capes are dark green...
All of the students in the Academy were
gathered in the auditorium, and there seemed to be about two thousand of us in
total. Ehrenfest was a middle duchy closer to a lesser duchy in terms of
population, so we had less than seventy students. Greater duchies, meanwhile,
had much larger populations, with some even having over one hundred and fifty
in attendance, while some of the smallest duchies didn’t even have fifty.
We stood in our designated place and waited
for the advancement ceremony to begin. I thankfully didn’t stand out since I
was buried among my retainers—so much so that I could only see Ehrenfest capes
around me.
Since we’re all lined up according to our
duchies, I wonder if we look like a rainbow from above...
Someone began a speech that echoed throughout
the auditorium. “Once again, it is that time of year when the children who bear
the future of Yurgenschmidt come together to grow and develop. You would all do
well to dedicate yourselves to increasing your respective duchy’s influence and
to being accepted as Yurgenschmidt nobles,” he began. The older students were
already looking exasperated, so I could imagine someone gave this same speech
every year.
Once the speech celebrating the advancement of
years was over, announcements pertaining to the upcoming classes began. I
couldn’t see who was speaking, but I could hear them just fine thanks to the
voice-amplifying magic tool they were using.
First- and second-years had only shared
lessons, which were all carried out here in the auditorium. This was also where
the first-years were due to take their written lessons in the morning before
moving to practical lessons in different classrooms based on their status.
Since there were so many people in the lower years who passed the classes
during their first exam, the lectures would be moved from the auditorium to
classrooms once few enough people remained.
Thus ended the speeches from the teachers. The
upcoming fellowship gatherings were apparently the really important part; since
this was where one would socialize with students of other duchies, it was
equivalent in significance to socializing back home, meaning no failures would
be permitted.
“You will now be moved to gatherings according
to your status, but take care to stay close to members of your own duchy.
Seniors of all statuses, take care of your juniors. Juniors, you have much to
learn, so take care and obey the wisdom of your seniors.”
The sixth-years subsequently divided everyone
into laynobles, mednobles, archnobles, and finally archduke candidates, who of
course kept their retainers. We would be leaving the auditorium in order of our
duchy’s rank once again, and so we waited as the massive crowd started to move.
Once we had exited the auditorium, the seniors
split up and took us to our respective gathering locations. We archduke
candidates were taken to a small gathering hall rather than a massive meeting
area.
“Lord Wilfried and Lady Rozemyne from
Ehrenfest the Thirteenth have arrived,” announced a scholar standing by the
door, after which we were guided into the hall. There was a table at the very
front that was considerably larger than the others, so I could guess that the
royalty were sitting there.
I couldn’t see their faces, but I knew who
they were. The fifth prince had risen to kingship immediately after winning the
civil war, and his son, the second prince, was currently attending school as a
sixth-year. His name was... Anastasius, from what I remembered. Since we would
only be attending the Academy together for a single year, Ferdinand had said
that I would almost certainly never have a meaningful interaction with him. For
this reason, I only needed to memorize his name.
He sure made that sound easy, but all these
nobles and royals have names that are super hard to memorize! They’re so long
and weird-sounding! Geez!
As I silently complained, I looked around the
hall and saw a line of separated four-person tables. Given that the tables
closer to the front already had people sitting at them while those toward the
back were still empty, I could guess they were also determined by duchy rank.
“What’s with that tiny girl...?” came a voice.
Everyone in the hall suddenly looked at me
with curious eyes, with a few students here and there even making amused
commentaries. I could hear Wilfried grinding his teeth. Those currently here
were all of a higher status than us, so speaking up to defend ourselves wasn’t
an option; we had to stay silent and endure it.
“Looks like a toddler wandered in. Anyone know
where her parents are?”
Trying to ignore the sneers and mockery, I
headed to my table. Brunhilde pulled a chair back for me and I sat down.
Hartmut then sat beside me as my scholar, while my attendants and guard knights
stood behind me. From what I could see, this was also the case at the other
tables.
“Take this, Lady Rozemyne. You’ll want it for
the greetings,” Hartmut whispered, handing me a folded sheet of paper. I
glanced down and saw it was a cheat sheet detailing each duchy’s color, current
position in the rankings, and archduke candidates. I had already memorized the
names of each duchy and their respective colors, but I didn’t have a full grasp
of the rankings or the names of the new archduke candidates, so this was very
valuable information to have.
“You have my thanks, Hartmut.”
“It is my honor. Your next course of action is
to greet the royalty, then those of the higher-ranked duchies. When you are
done, those of the lower-ranked duchies will come to greet you. It should be
clear once you observe what those who come before you do.”
Once all of the archduke candidates were in
the hall, the doors were closed and the greetings began.
The archduke candidates from Klassenberg—a
greater duchy known to have more power and influence than any other—stood up at
once, their red capes fluttering behind them. They approached the royalty with
their retainers, greeted them, then returned to their seats.
Next to stand were two archduke candidates
from the greater duchy Dunkelfelger wearing blue capes. They greeted the
royalty and then Klassenberg’s archduke candidates before returning to their
seats.
“Why is Ahrensbach ranked sixth despite being
a greater duchy...?” I asked, looking over my cheat sheet.
Hartmut frowned. “Their influence has
decreased over the past few years, and from what I understand, they are
struggling with an inner turmoil of sorts. It is not easy for apprentice
scholars to gather information about them, however, so I do not know much more
than that,” he replied, insinuating that it was hard for lower-ranked duchies
to gather information about higher-ranked duchies.
Soon enough, the light-purple capes of
Ahrensbach began to move. Standing at the front was a girl with gorgeous blonde
hair, who I assumed was Georgine’s youngest daughter. I glanced down at my
cheat sheet.
“...Detlinde.”
After greeting the royalty, Detlinde glanced
my way. The similarity wasn’t immediately apparent due to her hair color, but
her face, eyes, and other features all looked very much like Georgine’s.
For the briefest moment, I could have sworn
that our eyes met.
Royalty and Nobles from Other Duchies
When there was more than one archduke
candidate present for a particular duchy, they all went up together during the
greetings, while duchies without any sent an archnoble student of the highest
year. I observed the process and absorbed the unwritten laws until it was
eventually Ehrenfest’s turn. Wilfried stood up at once, but Brunhilde had to
help me down from my chair.
“Look, she can’t even get up on her own.”
Quiet snickering could be heard from among the
other students. Wilfried wore a stiff expression as he tried to endure them,
but the way his fists were clenched told me that the whispers were getting to
him a lot more than they were me.
I guess that makes sense. He’s not at all used to
being insulted.
I had been called tiny ever since my commoner
days, and nobles had used their status to insult me on numerous occasions in
the past. It was one thing to be insulted by people I knew, but strangers? That
didn’t bother me in the least. I was used to it, but the same couldn’t be said
for Wilfried.
“Wilfried, I care not what strangers have to
say about me. I know that I have many friends and allies by my side,” I
whispered, placing a hand on his balled fist. Our retainers gave small nods.
“Right. Let’s go, Rozemyne.”
Still wearing a hard expression, Wilfried
matched my walking speed as we headed straight to the royalty’s table with our
retainers.
I moved as gracefully as I could, making sure
to keep my back straight, a smile on my face, and my eyes forward. These
instructions had been so thoroughly beaten into me that walking gracefully with
a fake smile was now like second nature to me.
We knelt in front of the royalty’s table,
crossed our arms in front of our chests, hung our heads, and then spoke the
traditional greeting used when meeting someone for the first time. The prince
gave a slight nod of recognition in response, regarding us with beautiful gray
eyes that were completely unobscured by his regal blond hair.
Back in Ehrenfest, I had muttered something
about how disappointed I would be if the prince turned out to be ugly, but
Ferdinand had assured me that those of such high status were generally very
attractive, as only the most beautiful of women were taken as wives. The sight
before me pretty much confirmed that he was right—surely one had to have come
from a long line of stunning people to end up looking like this.
“Prince Anastasius, may we pray for a blessing
in appreciation of this serendipitous meeting, ordained by the harsh judgment
of Ewigeliebe the God of Life?”
“You may.”
He replied as expected, and so Wilfried and I
poured mana into our rings to give a blessing. I put in just the tiniest amount
so as to not overdo it.
...Perfect.
I let out a relieved sigh at the fact my
blessing hadn’t been any larger than Wilfried’s before continuing the greeting.
“It is an honor to meet you, Prince
Anastasius. We are Wilfried and Rozemyne of Ehrenfest, here to learn to become
proper nobles fit to serve Yurgenschmidt. May the future be bright,” we said
together.
Once we had finished greeting Anastasius, he
told us to raise our heads. We did so slowly, and when I saw the prince’s face
again, I noticed he was gazing down at me with a somewhat displeased frown. He
looked me over from head to toe, then sniffed.
“Rozemyne, was it? You
are the so-called Saint of Ehrenfest? The rumors claimed you have unparalleled
beauty and wisdom, enough mana to be adopted by an archduke, and a
compassionate heart that moves even the stoniest of men to tears. How
laughable. Must such reports always be so untrustworthy?”
What the heck?! Since when has my reputation been
that unreasonable?! I’m more confused than anyone right now!
“It is often the case that time and distance
distorts the truth,” I replied carefully. “This is my first time hearing of any
such rumors. I can only imagine there were jesters somewhere along the line who
exaggerated things further for their own amusement.” It was little wonder the
other nobles were laughing at me if they had heard all these rumors as
well—that amount of praise was much too excessive for someone who looked young
enough to have just recently been baptized.
My attempt to brush aside the subject didn’t
seem to please Anastasius. “Good grief...” he said, raising an unamused
eyebrow. “Ehrenfest must be in truly dire straits if they have no choice but to
prop up such a middling girl as a saint.”
“That is exactly correct, Prince Anastasius.
Your wisdom truly does befit your status,” I said with a smile, planning to
stroke his ego and get this over with. “As you know, Ehrenfest is a dearly
lacking duchy with nothing of note. Our mana shortage is so great that the
archduke had no choice but to adopt me and build me up as a saint. Our
situation is so dire, in fact, that we hopelessly pray for the flowers we
offered to the gods to perhaps return to us one day.”
Like you don’t know it’s your fault. We were a
backwater duchy struggling to survive to begin with, and then you royals had
your dumb civil war that caused so much damage that you had to steal mana from
all your duchies just to keep functioning. At least give back the priests you
took for the Sovereign temple.
While complaining on the inside, I put a hand
on my cheek and tilted my head in a generic worried pose. The Sovereignty was
probably carrying on just fine; they had compensated for their purge-induced
mana shortage by taking nobles and priests from other duchies, who were now
facing serious difficulties themselves as a result. It was annoying to be
mocked by a member of the family that had caused all the problems in the first
place.
“They say you became a saint to bring order
back to your duchy, but Ehrenfest hardly seems better off with you. In fact,
were you not attacked by nobles of your own duchy, even?”
“Indeed. Whether big or small, there is always
some chaos following a shift in power. I am just glad I was the only victim.”
Anastasius raised an eyebrow again, then waved
a bored hand in our direction. That was a sign for us to leave, so Wilfried and
I stood and excused ourselves.
Whew, that went well. Good, good.
We weren’t done yet though—if anything, that
was only the beginning.
I pumped myself up and started approaching the
other tables. The greater and middle duchies from ranks one through five were
not on bad terms with Ehrenfest, so each greeting ended after the blessings and
the exchange of a few polite words.
Then it came time for Ahrensbach the Sixth.
Detlinde welcomed us with a kind smile, looking exactly like Georgine.
“Lady Detlinde, may we pray for a blessing in
appreciation of this serendipitous meeting, ordained by the harsh judgment of
Ewigeliebe the God of Life?”
“You may.”
Once the blessings were finished, Detlinde
smiled. “I am delighted to finally meet you, Wilfried. You invited my mother to
visit Ehrenfest two years ago, did you not? She was going to bring me with her.
I was ever so excited to meet you for the first time; we children of archdukes
are not afforded many opportunities to visit family in other duchies, are we?”
she asked.
The innocent smile on her face, plus the fact
she was referring to Wilfried without any title, made it hard to tell whether
she was treating him as close family or someone not even worth recognizing as a
rival archduke candidate.
“Of course, the visit was sadly canceled due
to the attack on your family,” she continued. “I was devastated—we are cousins,
after all. I pray that we can at least be friendly together here at the Royal
Academy.”
“I pray for the same,” Wilfried replied, a
polite smile on his face.
Detlinde’s own smile deepened. “No need to be
so formal. We are family. You may rely on me whenever necessary; I am a
fourth-year and know much that can help you.”
“We are honored,” Wilfried and I replied
together.
Detlinde put a hand on her cheek and tilted
her head slightly. “So, Wilfried... I am told that Rozemyne was poisoned and
forced to sleep within a jureve. It is not always the case that the potions of
one’s parents will work for a child, and sleeping for two years straight is
quite rare indeed. How is she doing? Is she well? It must have placed a lot of
strain on her body,” she said. But for all the worry in her voice, she didn’t
so much as glance in my direction.
“Rozemyne is fine,” Wilfried answered. “As you
can see, she has recovered enough to attend the Academy without issue. Your
kindness is much appreciated, Lady Detlinde.”
“Thank you ever so much for worrying about me,
Lady Detlinde. I have always been of poor health, so I am used to being
bedridden,” I added. “Even so, I am fortunate enough to have already
recovered.”
“I see. Does this mean I will be able to visit
Ehrenfest this summer then? I would like to spend even more time with you,
Wilfried.”
It was then that I realized she wasn’t
affording me so much as a smile. Her attention was focused entirely on
Wilfried.
Okay, this is just too blatant. What’s her goal
here? Maybe she just doesn’t like me, which is understandable enough, but it’s
possible that she’s planning something. The only problem is, I have no idea how
much she actually knows.
“Permission from Aub Ehrenfest is required
before any noble from another duchy can visit, so I can give no answer on my
own.”
“True. In that case, I hope you will convince
him for me, Wilfried.”
Our greeting with Ahrensbach ended with me
being entirely ignored, and from there, we started moving to the next table. I
thought things over as I stood up.
So, it seems that even the prince knows I was
attacked by nobles from Ehrenfest. Just how much information has leaked,
exactly? Is it common knowledge throughout noble society that I was in a coma
for the past two years? Or was Detlinde warning me that Ahrensbach knows
absolutely everything that happens in our duchy?
I had no answers to those questions, and so to
avoid leaking any information myself, I decided to return any inquiries sent my
way with vague smiles and ambiguous responses.
The middle and lesser duchies holding ranks
seven through twelve were currently engaged in a brutal battle against
Ehrenfest to preserve their positions. As these ranks truly could turn on a
dime, they met us with harsh words and spiteful insults, all commenting that
they hadn’t expected the Saint of Ehrenfest to be so tiny. Behind their sneers,
however, it was clear they had been afraid of us overtaking them. As a result,
seeing that I wasn’t the saint they had feared actually came as a relief to
them.
I blew through the greetings with three set
phrases powerful enough to handle whatever was thrown at me: “As I am still
recovering, there is not much I can do,” “Let us all work to grow together,”
and “I am glad to see that you consider me an equal.”
I wasn’t yet sure how much of an impact a
change in the rankings would really have, but with how insulting the other
duchies were being, I was feeling motivated to do my best and work my way up.
Alright. Time to take the Better Grades Committee
seriously.
Once we had finished greeting those above us,
it was time for us to be greeted by the lower ranks. As expected, they also
viewed us with hostility—including those from Frenbeltag, the duchy to the west
of Ehrenfest.
Frenbeltag was currently fifteenth, the lowest
rank of any middle duchy. They had been on the losing side of the civil war,
and I recalled that they had been in the middle of rebuilding themselves when I
went into my coma. There had been two years when I helped to fill up their
small chalices, and their rank was a clear indication that they were still
struggling to get back on their feet.
That maaay have something to do with me refusing
to fill chalices from other duchies...
Sylvester had been accepting chalices year
after year, and so when winter came three years ago, I informed him that I
would no longer be filling them going forward. On top of that, there was also
my ending up in a coma; even if Sylvester had accepted the chalices again, it
was hard to imagine Ehrenfest having the capacity to help other duchies when
even Wilfried and Charlotte had to rush around the Central District refilling
it with mana. Frenbeltag had no doubt fallen even further down the rankings due
to losing this support.
“Lord Wilfried, Lady Rozemyne. May I pray for
a blessing in appreciation of this serendipitous meeting, ordained by the harsh
judgment of Ewigeliebe the God of Life?”
“You may.”
“I am Rudiger of Frenbeltag, and I am a
fifth-year student here at the Royal Academy. If you will excuse my saying so,
Lord Wilfried and I share much blood owing to our parents being siblings,” he
said after kneeling down and blessing us.
As one would expect given his comment, Rudiger
looked a lot like Wilfried—so much so that they really could have been mistaken
for brothers when standing next to each other. The two most notably shared the
same hair color, though Rudiger also had the same indigo eyes as Charlotte.
“I pray that we can have a good relationship,
just as our parents do,” Rudiger added.
“We feel the same.”
Once everyone had exchanged their greetings,
the food was brought in. I would be eating with Hartmut, Cornelius, and
Leonore. Brunhilde would serve me, while Angelica stood guard.
After taking my first bite, I pursed my lips
in thought. I had been expecting the cooking in the Sovereignty to be more
refined than what I was used to, since Ehrenfest was such a country province,
but it just tasted like normal food. I could guess that the cuisine here was
somewhat standardized, since all the duchies got together each year for the
Royal Academy and the Archduke Conference.
The food wasn’t noticeably good, but it did
use ingredients that weren’t available in Ehrenfest. I was curious to know what
else they had, though I couldn’t imagine this would be easy to find out, since
I wasn’t allowed to go into the food storage area.
“It tastes a bit... unremarkable,” I observed.
“A few years ago, I thought this was the most
delicious food in the world,” Hartmut replied with a wry smile. The food at the
dormitory had changed three years ago and had only continued to improve since
then, which was probably due to the chefs getting used to the new styles.
“Well, I suppose we shouldn’t talk about the
food too much,” I said. We then started discussing the greetings, and Hartmut
complimented me on how smoothly I changed the subject. There was a lot we
needed to think about and discuss when it came to our relations to other
duchies, but we couldn’t talk about it here; it needed to wait until we
returned to the dormitory.
“The fact that you have only recently awoken
from your slumber is the perfect excuse to avoid post-meal socializing. You can
remain seated this year; leave the information gathering to me.”
“Very well, Hartmut. I entrust that all to
you.”
We started making plans as we continued our
meal, until eventually we were served dessert: galettes with rutreb jam, plus
cute little sweets in the shape of birds. The plates practically shone, and the
presentation was perfect. Neither Hugo nor Ella had the artistic knack for
decorating plates like this. The dessert looked so nice that I really wanted to
take it back with me just so they could learn from it.
“Feels like a waste to actually eat it...” I
said before taking a bite of the galette. The flavors exploded in my mouth with
such force that I jerked back in my seat, at a complete loss for words. It
wasn’t that the food tasted good—rather, the sweetness was offensively over the
top, so much so that I couldn’t manage another bite. Since sugar was considered
an expensive luxury, it was clear the chefs had thought it best to use as much
as possible.
Guhhh... My mouth feels all gritty now.
I set down my cutlery and reached for my
drink. There were a few mutters of, “At least the first bite or two tastes
nice,” from those eating with me, but they were all making similar expressions.
It just went to show that restraint was important in all things.
“Will my recipes truly catch on in the
Sovereignty?” I asked, setting my cup down with a sigh. “If they think this is
delicious here, it might be more difficult than I thought.”
“I believe they will, but it will take a considerable
amount of time for the chefs to learn your techniques and master the flavors,”
Cornelius replied. “Even the head chef of our estate had great difficulty.”
I nodded slowly. Cornelius was right that it
would take some time for the chefs to get up to par once I spread the recipes,
but did that mean I would have to battle with this overbearing sweetness at
every tea party I was invited to until then?
Bwuh... Now I’m even more scared of going to
them.
“Spreading your recipes is a good idea, Lady
Rozemyne, but I think you should introduce them gradually rather than all at
once. Am I right to assume you know more than what is available in your recipe
book?” Hartmut asked with a raised eyebrow. It seemed as though he was testing
me.
I wiped my mouth, then answered with a smile.
“Of course. There are some I don’t mind making public, some I am happy to share
with Ehrenfest’s leaders, some I am willing to share with my guardians, and
some I would much rather keep to myself. I keep my public and private plans
strictly separate, even when it comes to recipes.”
Hartmut’s eyes started sparkling with
interest. “Then I am looking forward to learning about them. So, how do you
intend to establish your reputation as a saint here at the Royal Academy?”
“Hm? There is no need for that. I wish to live
a humble life as a normal student.”
If everyone was going to talk about how
underwhelming of a saint I was and how much my reputation preceded me, then I
wanted to go all the way and live out my school days as a normal student. My
plan was to hide out in the library and spend as much time there as possible.
Hartmut, however, seemed to disagree. He
frowned at my response, then quickly forced a smile back onto his face. His
expression looked calm on the surface, but it carried an intensity that made it
clear there was no room for debate.
“Unfortunately, that is not an option,” he
said. “The presence of a saint is absolutely necessary for increasing
Ehrenfest’s influence.”
Um... Did I just flip some weird switch inside
him?
For some reason, Hartmut began espousing at
length about his first encounter with the legend of my sainthood. Ottilie had
apparently brought him with her to see my baptism, then pointed up at me and
explained that she would be serving me from now on. The young Hartmut had been
ashamed to hear that his mother was serving someone who was not only a child,
but an archnoble of the same status as them—even if said archnoble was about to
be adopted by the archduke.
“However, when you returned the blessing at
your ceremony, blue light rained down upon the entire hall, covering all the
attendees at once. It was the biggest blessing I had ever seen in my life, and
the first time that watching one had ever moved me,” Hartmut explained, making
it clear that the memory was deeply engraved in his heart.
“That was an evil plot concocted by my
guardians—all part of a plan to force nobles to accept my adoption,” I
explained. “You were fooled, Hartmut. They played you like a harspiel. I am no
saint.”
“Your baptism is not the only reason I
understand you are a true saint, Lady Rozemyne.”
When autumn came and Hartmut heard from his
mother about my desperate efforts to save Wilfried’s future, his only thought
had been that I should have used the opportunity to kick Wilfried down and
become the archduchess myself. He had maintained that he would have crushed
Wilfried into the dirt had he been my retainer, then advised his mother on what
to tell me, though she refused to pass the information on.
“Lady Rozemyne does not wish for such a thing.
She thinks only of raising others up, not dragging them down,” she had told
him. “You would be better off coming up with ways to strengthen the legend of
her sainthood while improving the lives of those around her.”
“And so I did just that,” Hartmut said. “In
the end, however, nothing I thought up surpassed what Lord Ferdinand himself
was already putting into motion.”
I don’t even want to know what plans he
concocted...
“Furthermore, your acts prove your sainthood
more than anything else could, Lady Rozemyne. I have not heard of anyone else
giving a blessing simply by offering music to the gods at their winter debut.
The light that shone from your fingers as you strummed the harspiel was truly
stunning in its beauty. Your blessing to Leidenschaft drifted slowly to the
ceiling while spreading throughout the hall, remember?”
Um... Did it? I was in such a panic over screwing
up that I don’t really recall what happened.
The only thing I could remember was being
shocked at the sudden development and then Ferdinand forcibly carrying me out.
I had been frantically trying to stop the blessing in its entirety, but I guess
it hadn’t looked that way to everyone else.
“It was from that point onward that I knew for
sure: you are a saint who has far surpassed even what Lord Ferdinand has
planned,” Hartmut concluded. “I wish for everyone else to consider you as much
of a saint as I do, and to that end, I will spare no expense.”
My cheek twitched. Up to this point, I had
thought of Hartmut as a mini Justus with some common sense, but that couldn’t
have been further from the truth. He was genuinely skilled, which meant he had
the power to accelerate the spread of my sainthood faster than I could ever
hope to contain.
Is it just me, or have I taken someone as my
retainer that I reeeally shouldn’t have?
Math, Theology, and Controlling Mana
Classes were due to begin tomorrow, starting
with an orientation for the new students during which the various subjects and
institutions throughout the Academy would be explained. With this in mind,
Cornelius spent dinner telling me what my average day would be like going
forward.
“The number of times the bell rings will
change on days with classes,” he began. Second bell apparently marked the start
of breakfast, with second-and-a-half bell then marking the start of morning
classes. Third bell signaled a change in subject, as did third-and-a-half bell,
then at fourth bell we would return to our dormitories for lunch. Afternoon
classes would begin at fourth-and-a-half bell, continuing until dinner at sixth
bell. Seventh bell was curfew, meaning this was when the doors to the dormitories
would be closed.
“So my free time will be from fourth to
fourth-and-a-half bell,” I said. “I believe I shall spend my lunches in the
library.”
“That is not free time, Lady Rozemyne—you are
expected to spend it preparing for your afternoon classes. Furthermore, you
have not even been registered at the library yet,” Cornelius said, a broad
smile spreading across his face.
I fought back with an even broader smile.
Spending my lunch reading in the library had been an iron rule of mine ever
since my Urano days.
There’s a library here, so no way am I going to
let my opportunity for lunchtime reading slip through my fingers!
“I am of course referring to after I am
registered,” I replied. “I will prepare for the entire day in the morning
before leaving for my classes. That way, there will be plenty of time to—”
“No, there will not.”
Nghhh! I won’t lose here! I’ll
fight Cornelius to the bitter end for my reading time, even if that means
prying it from his cold, dead hands!
“You must allow me to visit the library!” I
exclaimed. “I will return as soon as the bell rings for afternoon classes.”
“This is unnegotiable, Lady Rozemyne. Do you
think we can trust you to hear the bell and actually stop reading?” Cornelius
asked. His words hurt, though there was some truth to them—back in my Urano
days, the librarian had gotten used to forcibly kicking me out whenever the
bell rang.
“But, but... The books need me, and I need the
books. At the very least, allow me to very, very
thoroughly look over them. I will even go without lunch, if such is what it
takes.”
“No. That is incredibly unhealthy. Plus, if
you go without lunch, then your retainers will be forced to do the same.”
“N-No way... My precious library...”
I had come to the Royal Academy with the
understanding that I would get to go to the library once I arrived, and now
here I was being denied entry right outside the gates of paradise. The cruelty
was astounding.
As I glared at Cornelius with tearful eyes, I
heard Wilfried sigh from where he was sitting beside me. “Rozemyne, leave it at
that. You look young enough already, so throwing a tantrum like this will make
people think you’re an actual toddler.”
What...? I look like a toddler throwing a
tantrum?!
Shocked by the accusation, I hurriedly looked
around. Wilfried was right—Cornelius, a fourteen-year-old, was repeatedly
rejecting my pleas while I, a girl with the appearance of a seven-year-old
child at best, stubbornly refused to accept his answer. From an outside
perspective, I was clearly throwing a tantrum.
“You have to be more careful than anyone about
how you act,” Wilfried warned me. “Your appearance can create openings for
those from other duchies to exploit.”
“...You’re right. I’ll give up on going at
lunch and just visit the library after class,” I said with a weak nod, hanging
my head sadly. Wilfried had grown so much while I was asleep that I really had
turned into his little sister. It was incredible how much children could change
over just two years.
“Excellent work stopping milady there, my
boy.” Rihyarda praised Wilfried with a smile, then knelt down beside me. “And
milady, Ferdinand has instructed me to not let you into the library until you
have passed all of your exams. He said it should be your highest priority to
pass them quickly so that you can return in time for the Dedication Ritual.”
“Whaaat?! That’s so unfair! Cruel, even! At
least let me spend my free time how I please!” As far as I was concerned,
forbidding me from entering the library at all was just going way too far.
“You may use your free time here as you wish,
milady, but we cannot allow you to access the library so readily when we know
you will only cause trouble for everyone while you are there. In the temple
book room, you prioritized reading over eating until you eventually collapsed,
terrifying all those around you. At Lord Karstedt’s estate, you rushed to the
book room with such fervor that you collapsed on the way there and traumatized
poor Cornelius. And then, when you first entered the castle book room, you became
so focused on reading that Oswald could not get your attention, and I had to be
called to drag you out. The library ban is there for a reason.”
“Exactly. I still remember how shocked I was
when you collapsed. Lord Ferdinand’s decision here isn’t cruel—it’s a
necessity.”
I couldn’t even argue back; those were indeed
all things that had happened.
Grr! Curse you, Ferdinand! How far will you go to
interfere with my plan to hole up in the library? It seems like you might be my
greatest foe after all.
“In return, he has given you permission to
spend entire days in the library once you pass all of your classes,” Rihyarda
said. “You’ll have all the free time in the world—except for when you have to
return for the Dedication Ritual, of course—so if you pay attention to your
health and remember to eat, he said you can read as much as you want.”
My head shot up at once. “So I just have to
pass my exams then?”
“Indeed, milady. Is that not why you studied
so hard in the castle?”
I nodded. My cramming with Ferdinand had been
intense, but it was predicated on the fact that it would allow me to finish my
exams before the Dedication Ritual. Assuming I really was already at a passing
level, then I would surely still have plenty of time to go to the library.
“Very well. I will dedicate my all to my
classes so that I can visit the library as soon as possible!” I declared, my
fists clenched in determination, but Wilfried merely shook his head.
“Hold it, Rozemyne. Don’t forget you need to
make sure all the first-years pass too.”
“...Is it absolutely necessary that they all
pass?” I asked. I was the only one who had undergone Ferdinand’s brutal study
regimen, and there was no guarantee I could bring everyone else up to the
required level before the Dedication Ritual.
“Yeah. We can’t have you locking yourself away
in the library and abandoning the Better Grades Committee. Remember, you’re an
archduke candidate,” he said, making it clear that I couldn’t escape my duties
of raising everyone’s grades and ensuring the victory of the first-years’ team.
“I see... Very well. I shall put my all into
that as well,” I declared, cackling to myself as I thought over tomorrow’s
plans. I then turned to address all the first-years in the dining hall.
“Tomorrow we have the introductions, math, and theology, correct? I’m told
that, over the past two years, everyone with prior experience from the playroom
has passed math and theology on the first day. In other words, we should all be
able to do the same. I will not allow anyone to shamefully fail the exams.”
“Y-Yes, ma’am!”
I nodded in satisfaction at the first-years’
prompt response. Each one flinched and straightened their back the moment I
made eye contact with them.
“In the afternoon, we have a practical lesson
regarding the control of mana. Once that is over, return to the dormitory at
once and study so that you might pass the history, geography, and magecraft
exams that are going to be held the next day. You will be working on the weak
points you identified yesterday, and I will assist you all with your studies.
Our goal is for everyone to pass all of their classes at once.”
“Everyone, all at once?! Rozemyne, are you
insane?!” Wilfried exclaimed, abruptly rising to his feet. But what else did he
expect? I wasn’t allowed into the library until everyone had passed, so I was
obviously going to make sure it happened as soon as possible.
“I said I would be dedicating my all to this, Wilfried, and I meant it. If I am expected to
sacrifice my library time for the sake of everyone else, then I expect everyone
else to sacrifice their peace of mind for my sake in turn. They will work as
hard as I am working to contain myself.”
It was so quiet that only the nervous swallows
of the first-years could be heard, and in the midst of that, Hartmut smiled to
himself. “And so begins another chapter of the legend of the Saint of
Ehrenfest.”
After dinner, I made the first-years study
history and geography until seventh bell. Some of the kids ended up exhausted
in no time at all, which was honestly pretty pathetic, since classes hadn’t
even started yet.
Come seventh bell, I was bathed and then put
to bed. I made sure to wake up earlier than usual at first bell so that I could
start organizing cheat sheets to help the five children—a mixture of mednobles
and laynobles—who weren’t quite good enough to pass yet.
“Lady Rozemyne, what in the world are you
doing up so early?!” Rihyarda barked upon entering my room. She had come in to
clean before waking me up, only to find that I was sitting at my desk in my
bedclothes.
“We don’t have much time before the exams.”
“You are pushing yourself much too hard,
milady. This isn’t good for your body.”
“I’m not pushing myself at all. Compared to
when I had to prepare for Charlotte’s baptism ceremony, there is practically
nothing for me to do. It would be easy for me to pass on my own, but whipping
the others into shape is really hard,” I replied, all the while wondering how
much I would be able to pack into their heads today.
Once it was time for breakfast, I headed to
the dining hall with the cheat sheets in hand, which I then distributed to the
five children who needed them. “Use these to study. I’ve written down
everything that you haven’t memorized yet.”
They accepted the papers, albeit with sickly
expressions.
Wilfried furrowed his brow. “Rozemyne, do you
really have to push them this hard? All so you can go to the library sooner?”
“Yes. I mean, didn’t you forbid me from going
there specifically so that I would push them and make everyone pass as soon as
possible? Need I repeat that I said I was putting my all into this?”
After breakfast, we immediately started
preparing for our classes, then studied in the common room.
“Philine, you misspelled the king’s name,” I
said. “Roderick, you have mixed up the names of these two duchies.”
“My apologies.”
“I will fix them at once.”
I put the five children through a brutal
training regimen, and soon enough, it was time for class. I crossed my arms and
frowned slightly as I looked over their progress; things weren’t going quite as
I expected.
“...Well, it’s time. You should have no
problems with today’s exams, at least. I trust that you will all pass without
issue,” I said, causing the five who had been struggling to lean back in their
chairs in relief.
“Milady, aren’t your expectations here just a
tad too harsh?” Rihyarda asked, making her concern clear.
“This is absolutely too harsh,” I said with a
nod, “just like it was too harsh to deny me my time in the library until all
the first-years pass their exams. But I will stay strong nonetheless. I will
swallow the pain in my heart, complete my duty as an archduke candidate, and
then speed to the library as soon as humanly possible. I’ll do anything to
peacefully read my books!” I declared, balling my fists with conviction.
I could already hear Wilfried apologizing to
everyone nearby.
I headed to the auditorium, accompanied by my
retainers and with Rihyarda carrying my study tools. Once I was inside, my
guards would be changing places with the Sovereign soldiers on watch by the
doors.
“You must not leave the auditorium before we
come to get you,” Rihyarda warned before leaving with my other attendants. The
first-years and I went into the auditorium, then sat next to each other in
chairs with the number thirteen on them.
“The introduction will now begin. Listen well,
as it will come in very useful for life in the Royal Academy,” began the
professor standing at the podium. He was going to be explaining more about our
upcoming classes, though as there were exams on the first day of any subject,
only those who didn’t pass would actually be attending them. “Many first-year
students pass their written exams on the first day, but practical classes take
much longer,” he explained.
Shared classes were held in the auditorium for
all years, but practical lessons depended on one’s mana capacity, so they were
divided by status. These classes took place in the rooms that yesterday’s
fellowship gatherings had been held in, though they would be moved to
classrooms once the class became small enough.
Next began an explanation about the library.
It was open from today onward, and anyone could use it by going there and
registering themselves. Registering could only be done when the library
manager—that is, the Academy librarian Solange—was there, so we were told to
make sure we schedule the meeting in advance. This, alongside having to wait
for a reply and then the day of the meeting itself, made registering seem like
a much longer process than I had expected.
I need to schedule that meeting as soon as I get
back to the dormitory for lunch.
Registering at the library also required a fee
that many laynobles wouldn’t be able to afford by themselves, so we archduke
candidates and other archnobles were asked to give them work so that they could
save up for it.
Right. I’ll have the laynobles transcribe books
that we haven’t already got in the castle book room.
We were also told that mingling between
duchies was encouraged, and that we should therefore actively involve ourselves
with interduchy socializing. Since students could not enter the dormitories of
other duchies, there were numbered rooms based on rank intended to be used for
tea parties. I didn’t care about that though, since I didn’t care about tea
parties. I would have preferred that the professor go back to talking about the
library.
The explanation continued for quite some time
until third bell eventually rang. It was time for our math exam, and we had a
short break before the new professor arrived.
“Now, one student from each duchy come forward
to fetch the exam papers.”
Roderick the apprentice scholar went up for
Ehrenfest. The exams themselves seemed to be on parchment, which was actually
quite refreshing given how much I had been using plant paper lately.
“Prepare your writing utensils,” the professor
said. “You will be expected to write down the questions as I state them. I will
repeat each question three times, and you may think of your answers after
writing them all down.”
We were all using magic pens as our writing
utensils—that is, those weird pens that required you to pour your mana into
them. I had been told that I didn’t need to use one when writing down notes in
class, but using one was necessary for Academy exams; the professors would
apparently dip the parchment into mana-dissolving liquid afterward, which would
erase the writing and allow the parchment to be reused. That was certainly
something I wanted to learn more about.
“The exam will now begin,” the professor
announced. We all set our papers in front of us and readied our pens.
The exam itself was hilariously simple,
covering addition and subtraction involving two-digit numbers at most. I could
solve every problem before the teacher even finished repeating the questions,
and a quick look around the auditorium revealed that all the students from
Ehrenfest were working through the exam with easy smiles. It seemed that we
were all going to pass.
“What do we do when we’re done?” I asked.
“...Once all students of a duchy have handed
in their papers, you may begin studying for your next exam,” the professor
explained. “However, we request that you do so quietly.”
With that, I signaled for the papers to be
passed down. Once I had all eight from Ehrenfest, I handed them to the professor,
then quietly instructed everyone to begin studying. We would naturally be
preparing for tomorrow’s history and geography tests.
“All passing grades for Ehrenfest,” the
professor announced, his voice echoing throughout the auditorium. It seemed he
had already finished grading the papers.
A few let out quiet cheers while others sighed
in relief, then everyone quickly shifted their attention back to the topics
that were actually worrying them. While everyone was desperately working their
hardest, I started to think about the upcoming exams.
All of the Ehrenfest students had passed this
test with excellent grades, but first-year classes weren’t hard at all, and
there were plenty of students from other duchies who passed relatively quickly.
Our next exam was theology. Once again, we
students from Ehrenfest finished first, with all of us getting passing grades.
It wasn’t particularly rare for every student of a duchy to pass, but the fact
we had finished both exams before anyone else earned us a bit of attention—at
least, that was what Wilfried said when we returned to the dormitory for lunch
at fourth bell.
“Rozemyne, did you not notice everyone looking
at us?” he asked.
“I was so focused on our exams tomorrow that I
didn’t even think to look around. What’s important here is making sure everyone
passes so that I can go to the library. It would be one thing if we were
getting attention because our grades are bad, but this is the complete
opposite, so who cares?”
“Me. Everyone. Our reputation is important.”
“Then I shall leave that to you. You already
seem capable of passing all the exams without issue, so you can pay attention
to what the other duchies think of us.”
With that settled, I spent my lunch break
helping the five struggling students with their studies and writing a letter
requesting a meeting with Solange the librarian, which I then asked Brunhilde
to deliver.
I pray that Solange’s reply arrives soon...
The second-years used the auditorium in the
afternoon, so first-years were divided into groups based on status for their
practical lessons. There weren’t many archduke candidates, so we would be
learning alongside the archnobles.
Today we would be learning to control mana.
Hirschur stood at the front of the wide room and set a box down on her podium
with a dull thump.
“Inside this box are feystones,” she
explained. “I want you each to take one and dye it. Direct your mana at the
feystone, then show it to me once you’ve filled it. You will then need to
completely remove the mana from the feystone. That will conclude today’s
lesson.”
Knowing how to put one’s mana into a feystone
and then remove it again was necessary for all manner of things, so students
were expected to learn to do it quickly and accurately before anything else.
“Remember, you will need to dye your feystone
when we move on to making your highbeasts later,” Hirschur added.
We went up and got our feystones in order of
our duchies. I got one as well, but by the time I was back at my seat, it was
gone; all that remained in my hand was golden dust.
The feystone... disappeared?!
As I blinked at my hand in surprise, Wilfried
gave me a confused look. “Rozemyne, did you not get one?”
“No, I did. I was holding it normally, but...”
Once everyone else had gone up to get theirs,
I got back in line to get another. This time, I rested it on my palm and
watched it carefully on my way back to my seat, only to witness the clear
feystone turn yellow before my eyes. It then shone brightly and dissolved into
golden sand.
I recognized the process—the same thing had
happened when I poured mana into the black feystone Bezewanst had once held out
at me. It hadn’t been the same size as this one, and it being black rather than
clear meant they probably weren’t the same element, but the end was nearly
identical.
But why...?
I hadn’t even thought of pouring mana into the
feystone yet, but it had sucked some up anyway and crumbled to dust on its own.
My brow furrowed as I looked at the golden sand on my palm.
“Now, pour mana into your feystones,” Hirschur
said with a clap.
Everyone began focusing on their stones.
Wilfried, who was sitting next to me, must have really gotten used to handling
his mana over the past two years, because his stone ended up completely dyed in
the blink of an eye.
“Alright... Done,” he said. “Rozemyne, where’s
your feystone?”
“I messed up...” I murmured, sadly looking at
the sand.
“Wow, that’s rare for you. Maybe go get
another one?”
“I suppose I’ll have to...” I replied, but it
was hard to imagine the same thing wouldn’t just happen again. There was no
point in me getting another one until I figured out why they were sucking up my
mana on their own.
While I was busy stewing over what to do,
Wilfried eagerly went to show his feystone to Hirschur.
“You’ve finished quickly and done well,” she
said. “Splendid work.”
Wilfried returned with a broad smile, then
immediately withdrew his mana to empty the feystone. “Never thought I’d get
through a practical class before you, Rozemyne,” he said proudly before
skipping out of the room. He had finished before anyone else.
I tried turning the golden sand back into a
feystone by pouring mana into it and chanting “Stick! Stick! Turn into a
sphere!” over and over again, but nothing happened. The other archnobles and
archduke candidates, meanwhile, were all dyeing their stones and withdrawing
the mana with ease. Thanks to their excess of mana, they were able to finish
their practical lessons in no time at all.
When there were only a handful of students
left, people started sneering about how long I was taking despite being an
archduke candidate. The next thing I knew, I was the only one remaining.
“Lady Rozemyne, surely it is not that hard to
fill a feystone with mana. If you cannot even...” Hirschur began, sounding
exasperated, only to trail off upon seeing the sand on my desk. “Aah, I see.”
“What’s going on? They filled up and broke
apart on their own; I didn’t even try to pour my mana into them. I don’t know
what to do.”
“Ferdinand did inform me you would have
enhancement tools on you at all times. They are responsible for this. You are
constantly enveloped in a shell of powerful mana, which instantly fills up
small feystones such as these just by touch. Remove the tool on your left arm,”
Hirschur said, setting another feystone down in front of me while gathering up
the golden sand with a bright smile.
“Um... Sorry, Professor Hirschur. I didn’t
mean to break your feystones...”
“There is no need to apologize. This
mana-saturated gold dust is quite a valuable resource.”
Valuable, hm...? I wonder what happened to the
sand from Bezewanst’s feystone then. Did Ferdinand, being the mad scientist he
is, gather it all up in secret?
As I pondered such deep mysteries, I removed
the magic tool as instructed. My left arm dropped down to my side in an
instant, now too heavy for me to move on my own. I had to move it with my
tool-assisted right arm.
“First, do nothing more than touch the
feystone. Confirm that you are now capable of doing that before you start
pouring any mana in, though make sure not to accidentally touch it with your
still enhanced right hand.”
I moved my barely mobile left hand to touch
the feystone’s surface, resting my fingers on it without pouring in any mana.
Seconds passed, though its color didn’t change.
“Everything seems to be fine,” Hirschur said.
“Now try pouring mana into it.”
I tried pouring mana into the feystone of my
own volition, only for it to burst a moment later, scattering pieces in all
directions.
“Eep!”
“You’re adding too much mana, and you’re doing
it much too quickly. Add less, and do it more delicately,” Hirschur advised
while placing another feystone in front of me. With my heart still pounding
over the unexpected explosion, I touched the feystone again with trembling
fingers.
Just a little. Pour just a little mana...
I once again tried pouring in some mana. It
was just a teensy amount as far as I was concerned, but the feystone still
exploded with a loud pop.
“Eek!”
“Try again.”
Another explosion.
“Again.”
In the end, ten noble feystones gave up their
lives before I was able to fill and then drain one.
“You have an excessively large mana capacity,
so your homework for now will be to learn how to precisely control your mana
usage. Now turn these into dust, if you will.” Hirschur set down the fragments
of all the exploded feystones in front of me. I put the enhancement bracelet
back on my left arm and started touching the shards, causing them to turn into
golden dust one after another.
“Professor Hirschur, how can I learn to
control my mana?”
“That is a question for Ferdinand. He too had
an excessive amount of mana when he first arrived at the Academy, though he
studied mana compression to increase his capacity even further. He never so
much as batted an eye no matter how compressed his mana became, but it was
quite heart-stopping to watch, I assure you.”
I recalled how Ferdinand had consumed
rejuvenation potions while trying out my new mana compression method, and it
was then that I realized he really hadn’t changed at all since his days in the
Academy.
“Ferdinand is still just as much of a research
maniac now as he was then,” I informed Hirschur. “He’s still doing the same
thing to this very day.”
“I see. He said in the past that he preferred
life in the Academy to life in the castle, so it is nice to know he has now
found a place in Ehrenfest as well,” she said with a nostalgic smile.
History, Geography, and Music
After talking a bit about the past with
Hirschur, she asked me to repair the magic tools Ferdinand had made as a
student. I naturally refused in an instant; I didn’t want her viewing me as the
same as Ferdinand.
“More importantly, what did Ferdinand write in
his letter to you, anyway?” I asked. “It seems like you know things that are
being kept secret, so...”
“Everyone here knows that you were attacked in
your own duchy and put to sleep in a jureve. The doctor observing your recovery
noted that you might not wake up before winter, which would delay your entry to
the Academy. During last spring’s Archduke Conference, Ehrenfest provided
documents from the doctor and requested that a special environment be prepared
for you in such a case.”
Noble children needed to enter the Academy
once they turned ten, where they would then study until they came of age. This
process was necessary for them to be officially accepted as nobles, and for
this reason, there were special accommodations that could be made for those
with extenuating circumstances. These would allow the student to attend for an
entire year rather than just the winter, and they would need to accomplish
various things before coming of age. To that end, a professor had to be
stationed in the Academy, and the archduke needed to petition for it ahead of
time.
These special accommodations had seen the most
use right after the civil war, when the apprentice blue priests and shrine
maidens returning to noble society were allowed entry into the Royal Academy to
replace the immense number of nobles who had been lost.
“What I personally know is that Ferdinand is
your guardian; that you have magic tools attached to your body that allow you
to move; that said tools may interfere in your practical magecraft lessons,
which I have been asked to account for; and that you have an innovative mind
that will likely come up with quite interesting ideas,” Hirschur explained.
“Interesting ideas”? Really? I appreciate that
Ferdinand is trying to be considerate, but for some reason, I just can’t find
it in me to thank him.
“I have heard from many Ehrenfest students
that their saint is to thank for everyone’s written grades having risen so much
over the past few years, and even Ferdinand himself gives you his approval.
Consider me excited to see what you come up with in your second year when we
begin covering how to make magic tools.”
It took me a long time to get used to finely
controlling my mana. When I eventually exited the auditorium, I found Rihyarda
and Cornelius in the nearby waiting room with exceedingly concerned
expressions. It was late enough for Cornelius to have already finished his work
for the day.
“That took you quite some time,” he said. “I
know you are perfectly capable of controlling your mana, so I was worried
something had happened.” It seemed that, much like Wilfried, he had been
convinced I would pass the lesson without issue.
I slowly shook my head. “Due to my enhancement
bracelets, I am unable to properly control my mana.” It was probably more
accurate to say that I simply wasn’t used to my capacity after the jureve had
melted my mana blockages, but the bracelets had almost certainly been a factor
too.
“Ah, I didn’t realize they would interfere
like that... I suppose I didn’t really consider it, since you’re moving
normally now. Have you spoken to Professor Hirschur about any solutions?”
“She said that I just have to get used to it,”
I replied, slumping my shoulders sadly. Cornelius’s expression turned from that
of a guard knight to that of a caring brother, and he gave me a friendly pat on
the back.
“Alright. Let’s get back to the dormitory.”
And so we returned to the Ehrenfest Dormitory
through the thirteenth door. As soon as we were inside, Angelica came rushing
over, her blue eyes brimming with tears.
“Lady Rozemyne, please assign me to guard you
again. I have so many more chances to protect you now that you’re here at the
Academy, but I’ve done no work at all.”
To the untrained eye, she was a young beauty
so passionate about fulfilling her duties that she had been brought to tears,
but I wasn’t going to be fooled that easily. What she actually meant was that
she had been looking forward to skipping out on her studies by guarding me, and
now she was agonizing over the fact I wasn’t accepting that as an excuse.
Everyone was working hard to study as much as they could, but all Angelica was
thinking about was escaping.
I looked up at Cornelius, who looked back down
at me with his dark-brown eyes and nodded. The message written across his face
was clear: “Finish her.”
“In that case, Angelica, I order you to pass
your written exams as fast as is humanly possible. That is your most important
duty. I too look forward to the day when you can guard me again.”
“Lady Rozemyne...”
“You heard her, Angelica. That was an order,
and knights need to prioritize orders above all else, remember?” Cornelius
said, shutting her down in an instant. “Come on, let’s go study. Sorry,
Leonore, but could you swap places with me?”
He dragged Angelica away, and in the blink of
an eye, Leonore was standing guard beside me. I took out my highbeast, climbed
inside, then started heading to my room to get changed. Angelica’s wails could
be heard as I went up the stairs, and when I glanced back, I noticed Leonore
was already looking toward the source of the noise.
“You and Cornelius certainly are close with
Angelica, aren’t you?” she asked. “It seemed at first that you were simply
being harsh with her, but the truth of the matter is that you are desperate to
ensure she does not fail her classes or get expelled.”
“Angelica is my guard knight, after all. I
could never allow her to fail while I am here with her in the Academy,” I said,
proudly puffing out my chest.
Leonore continued looking down the stairs with
an exceedingly envious look, then lowered her eyes. “Are the rumors that
Angelica will be marrying one of Lord Karstedt’s sons true? She is Lord
Bonifatius’s treasured disciple, after all, and everyone cares so much for
her...”
“This is my first time hearing about this...”
Angelica, marrying one of my brothers? That’s
crazy. I can’t even imagine it.
“No matter how much mana she has, Angelica is
still a mednoble. Even if Grandfather did wish for her to marry one of his
descendants, surely she would end up with one of his grandsons born to a second
or third wife, like Traugott. She would also be more suited to being a second
or third wife.”
Of course, nobody would be able to oppose the
union if Bonifatius put his weight behind it, but status-wise, marrying the son
of the knight commander himself would put a huge amount of strain on a
mednoble. Angelica was also a notoriously bad thinker, and she tended to act
purely on instinct—two very undesirable traits for a first wife.
“A second or third wife, Lady Rozemyne? What
sort of person do you think would make a suitable first wife, then?”
“My three brothers are all guard knights of
the archducal family, remember. An ideal first wife is someone who can support
her husband through his deep involvement with the archducal family, manage the
estate during his regular absences, and socialize for the benefit of the house.
My mother is incredible, you know; I truly hope to become as capable as her one
day.”
Elvira had not only been willing to hear out
her husband when he had arrived with some random girl who he claimed was his
daughter, but also baptized said girl as her own child, taught her to be a
proper archnoble, and treated her as the archduke’s adopted daughter when
necessary. Not everybody could accomplish such feats.
“She secures that which benefits her, pays
back into society as an archnoble should, receives praise from all around her,
and is unrelenting when it comes to hobbies,” I continued. “She is my ideal
role model, and I say that from the bottom of my heart.”
“In that case, I too will consider Lady Elvira
a role model,” Leonore said with a smile. I couldn’t think of anything better;
as two fellow noblewomen, we could work together in hope of one day reaching
Elvira’s level.
I got changed and headed to the common room,
where I found everyone throwing themselves into their studies. The first-years
were the only ones who looked like they were fighting a desperate battle to the
death, but their enthusiasm seemed to have infected the other years as well. It
really was the ideal situation.
Wilfried, who had been watching everyone
study, looked up. “Sure took you a long time to finish your practical lesson
today, Rozemyne.”
“Indeed. The magic tools were interfering with
my mana control and proved to be quite troublesome. But in any case, how is
everyone progressing?” I asked, walking around the room to check up on the
students. Philine responded that she was doing her best, while all the other
first-years were facing down the cheat sheets I had made to help cover for
their weaknesses.
Hm... If they keep this up, it looks like they’ll
all just barely manage to pass.
“Speaking of which... Wilfried, do I need to
have everyone pass their practical exams now as well, or will just the written
ones suffice?” I asked.
Everyone looked at Wilfried, who recoiled in
fear before hurriedly shaking his head. “J-Just the written ones! That’s all
you said we would be focusing on this year, remember? And with the gap between
our mana capacities, there’s no way we can teach them practical lessons
ourselves. Passing the written lessons is more than enough,” he repeated as
clearly as possible.
The first-years let out a joint sigh of
relief, and in all honesty, I understood the feeling. Not having to focus on
the practical exams right now meant I was closer than expected to accessing the
library.
“If everyone is on track to pass their written
exams, then I should be able to go to the library in just a matter of days. Let
us all work together and do our best to ensure everything continues smoothly.”
Wilfried and I split up to start tutoring the
students, at which point Brunhilde returned. In her hand was a wooden board,
which she promptly held out to me.
“Lady Rozemyne, Professor Solange of the
library has given her reply.”
“Oh my!”
I swiftly took the board and started to read
it, overjoyed at having received a response so soon. On it, Solange informed me
that she preferred to register all the students of a duchy at once, and for
this reason, she wanted me to bring all of our new students to the library
during lunch four days from now. She also told me what the registration fee
would be, and mentioned that there was an additional deposit for those taking
out books. With so many expenses, I doubted many students would actually be able
to use the library.
“It seems the registration fee is one small
gold per person,” I said. “That’s fairly expensive...”
“I certainly can’t afford that...” Philine
murmured, looking overcome with despair.
“I am more than happy to lend you the
registration fee, and you can repay me by collecting stories and transcribing
books. You are going to have much free time once your written classes are done,
no?”
“Lady Rozemyne,” Roderick timidly interjected,
“would you be willing to buy the books I transcribe too?” I noticed that the
students of other years were looking my way as well, and so I turned to look at
them all and gave a big nod.
“Of course. Their value transcends faction
squabbling. My goal is to gather as many books and stories as I can while in
the Royal Academy, so I am willing to buy anything transcribed from the library
that does not already exist in the castle book room. That said, the amount you
receive will depend on the quality of your handwriting and the number of
mistakes in your work.”
My intention had always been to put the money
I earned toward bringing more reading material into the world, so when there
were people willing to transcribe entire books for me, I would spare no
expense.
“I will provide ink and paper for the purpose
of transcription, but as both are expensive, I intend to record exactly how
much is provided to each individual and how much is used in the transcribed
books they return to me. By doing this, I can ensure that the materials are not
being stolen or sold.”
The eyes of the laynobles shone once they
heard I would also be providing them the materials for transcribing books. It
seemed that the money I had paid them on the first day for stories and
information had ended up having a huge psychological impact.
“Rozemyne, how will you tell whether the books
transcribed are already in the castle’s book room?” Wilfried asked.
“I made a catalog of every book already
available to us, so we need only consult that.”
“Wait, what? When did you do that?”
“Is it not normal to record a book after
reading it? I have catalogs of all the books in both the temple and castle book
rooms, in addition to the ones in my father’s estate. It was necessary for the
creation of the Rozemyne Decimal System, after all.”
As I proudly puffed out my chest, Wilfried
shook his head in disbelief. “Have you really been asleep for two years? You
weren’t sneaking out to read, were you?” he muttered.
Oh, how blissful it would have been if those two
years had actually been spent reading in secret. If only reality weren’t so
harsh...
“In any case, let us work to ensure all the
first-years pass before we must register at the library four days from now,” I
said.
“...Right.”
Cornelius later told me that the older
students had all watched the desperately studying first-years with pity in
their eyes, while Angelica had even begun praying to the gods, thanking them
that she wasn’t in the same year as me.
That night, we studied until seventh bell,
then did some last checks over breakfast before heading to our exams. The
dead-eyed, somewhat sleep-deprived first-years were muttering the names of
various kings and duchies as we walked. The older students said they looked
less like they were preparing for their first class in a subject, and more like
they were psyching themselves up for the final exam that would determine
whether they passed or failed. This was only made even more apparent when we
started seeing the students from other duchies, most of whom were simply
excited about starting their first year of school.
“Today begins the true final battle,” I
declared. “Everyone, you have put your all into your studies. I am sure we can
succeed.”
If they passed their history and geography
exams, all that remained was an easy magecraft exam covering feystone elements
and their respective colors. I couldn’t see that being a problem in the
slightest.
“Right. We’ll do our best.”
The history exams were set in front of us, and
with our magic pens in hand, the battle for our fates began. I was going to be
handing the papers in once we were all done, but Philine and Roderick were
taking quite a bit longer to finish. It seemed there was a particular question
they were struggling with.
“I-I’ll go with this one!” Philine stammered
nervously. The exam was almost over by the time she finally settled on an
answer, but there were still plenty more laynobles from other duchies agonizing
over their tests, so she wasn’t much of an outlier.
“Philine of the Thirteenth, please come
forward,” the professor called through his voice-amplifying magic tool.
Philine did as she was instructed, completely
pale in the face about having been singled out. I couldn’t hear her
conversation with the professor, though I did see her shake her head a few
times.
“What happened?” I asked, looking at Wilfried.
“Dunno...”
The both of us watched on with worry until
Philine eventually returned. She was resting a hand on her chest and looked
notably relieved.
“Philine, what did the professor say?”
“It is embarrassing to admit, but I was a
single point away from failing the exam,” she explained. “The professor
suggested that I retake it after attending lessons. I told him that I
appreciated his concern, but that I wished to be passed anyway, since I needed
to have passed in time for the library registrations three days from now.”
It seemed that the professor had noticed how
desperate Philine looked and determined that there were some extenuating
circumstances at work. He had allowed her to pass, but told her that she was
free to attend classes anyway.
“I truly am glad to have passed,” Philine
said, and that was when the professor’s voice echoed through the auditorium
again.
“All passing grades for Ehrenfest.”
A stir ran through the other students. Our
results in the math and theology exams hadn’t been surprising since everyone in
Ehrenfest had been passing those for years, plus the other duchies had pretty
high passing rates as well. History and geography, however, were subjects that
mednobles and laynobles infamously struggled with, such that many failed each
year. It wouldn’t have been an exaggeration to say that the classes existed
almost entirely for the sake of teaching these students, but even all the Ehrenfest
laynobles had passed their history exams on day one. It was no wonder that we
were the center of attention.
“We sure are standing out...” Wilfried
muttered.
“That was not my intention, but the library
demands sacrifice,” I replied. “We must accept these stares with pride. Next is
geography. Everything has gone well so far, and we need only keep up the good
work.”
Roderick anxiously chewed on his lip as he
read over his notes, having particularly struggled at geography.
“I can’t believe how obsessed you are with
this library...” Wilfried said.
“Hm? I mean, what else could be more important
right now?”
I had never gone to the Royal Academy’s
library before, and it was said to have more reading material than any other
library in the country bar one. There was nothing more important to me at the
moment than going through every single book it had to offer.
“So this is what Uncle meant when he said the
library would serve as both medicine and a deadly poison...”
“What nonsense has Ferdinand filled your head
with this time?”
“He said that using the library to control you
would be as difficult as administering the right amount of a potion. ‘An
incompetent fool handling it carelessly will only end in disaster’—those were
his exact words, and only now do I understand just how right he was,” Wilfried
said, his respect for Ferdinand clear in his voice.
I pursed my lips. “And what do you mean by
that, dear brother? We have all passed every exam so far. How is this a
disaster? In fact, is it not the best outcome? It sounds to me like you’re just
being rude.”
“How is it not a disaster...? You should
reflect on all this, just as I am. Your weird priorities always lead to you
having dumb misunderstandings.”
Dumb misunderstandings or not, everyone’s
dedication to working themselves to the bone soon paid off again. Ehrenfest
received passing marks across the board in the geography exam as well, though
Roderick had just barely scraped by and ended up having the same exchange with
the professor as Philine.
Our last exam was for magecraft, and it wasn’t
long before we heard what was now a familiar announcement from the professor.
“All passing grades for Ehrenfest.”
With that, we Ehrenfest first-years had passed
all of our written lessons on the first day. Everyone from the other duchies
stared at us with shock as we rejoiced and collectively fist-pumped.
“I can already feel my appetite returning!”
Roderick said, his fists happily clenched over having managed to conquer his
weakest subject. I shuddered to think how painful his life here in the Royal
Academy would have been had he been the only one to fail, especially
considering that he was from the former Veronica faction.
“In celebration of your efforts, I will
instruct my chefs to make desserts for all of the Ehrenfest first-years
tonight,” I announced.
“Truly, Lady Rozemyne?!” came excited cries
from among the students.
“Indeed. After all, it is thanks to you that
the library is now finally within reach.”
It was true that I had put my all into this
and pushed the first-years to work as hard as possible, but I hadn’t actually
expected everyone to pass on the first go. My assumption had been that the
laynobles would need at least one more try to make it, but they had surpassed
my expectations. If a dessert was enough to make their hard work feel
worthwhile, then I would spare no expense.
“We passed! We all passed!” the first-years
proudly told the older students when we returned to the dormitory for lunch.
The fact we had all passed our written lessons meant the first-years were now
locked in place as the fastest team, but none of the other teams seemed
particularly envious; instead, they all just praised our efforts.
“Congratulations,” said one of the seniors.
“All of you really did work hard.”
“I’m so glad to hear it all went well,”
another added. “I feel moved just to have witnessed it happen.”
“I suppose we’ll need to work twice as hard so
as to not be shown up,” a third chimed in.
Hearing so much praise from the senior teams
despite them being our opponents honestly made me feel a little moved myself.
After lunch was our first practical music
lesson. Nobody was particularly worried—in part because harspiel lessons were a
standard part of the winter playroom, but mostly because everyone was still so
happy about having passed their written lessons. The first-years all wore
beaming smiles as they ate their lunch.
“You mustn’t let your guard down too much,
Philine; there are still practical lessons for us to conquer.”
“Yes, Lady Rozemyne.”
“Music, hm?” Hartmut mused. “Lady Rozemyne,
you’ve already shocked all the other duchies by having every first-year pass
their written lessons. You should land the final blow by giving a blessing
alongside your harspiel performance in music class. Everyone will instantly
recognize you as a saint,” he said, his orange eyes sparkling with excitement.
“I refuse. There is an enormous difference
between us improving Ehrenfest’s reputation and me causing disturbances
entirely on my own. I will not pray to the gods during my performance.”
“It truly is unfortunate that we don’t see eye
to eye here. This is such an excellent opportunity too...”
I didn’t yet understand how much mana I had,
nor was I able to properly control it, so who knew what could result from me
giving a blessing? Just thinking about it was way too scary, so I rejected
Hartmut’s repeated badgering until it was finally time to go to the music hall.
Much like practical magecraft lessons,
practical music lessons were held according to status. It would be difficult to
have too many students in one class, and there was a blatant difference in both
instrument and teacher quality between those of each status rank.
“I would like to judge your individual
abilities, so I want to begin by having each of you play the song you are best
at,” the professor said.
The students played their songs one by one in
order of their duchy ranking. Those of similar skill levels tended to choose
the same songs, so it was hard not to compare people. As I watched the
performances, I decided it would probably be best to pick a song that not many
people knew, so as to give the professor something more refreshing to listen
to.
Geez, Ferdinand. Your training is brutal. Just
how far ahead did you push me?!
Ferdinand and Sylvester were both great at the
harspiel, and even gray shrine maidens like Rosina and Wilma had played with
ease, saying it was only natural to appreciate the arts. I had assumed they
were about average for nobles and set my standards accordingly, training my
hardest to reach their level, but now I knew they weren’t average at all.
Ferdinand was naturally on a level of his own,
able to play and sing so well that he actually caused women to pass out, and
the fact that Sylvester sounded only marginally worse showed that he was
insanely good too. Christine’s obsession with art was abnormal enough that some
still referred to her as “the artistic shrine maiden,” and this obsession had
led to her favored shrine maidens Rosina and Wilma becoming unusually skilled
as well.
I should have noticed that Sylvester and Rosina
were abnormally good the second they showed they could play on equal terms with
Ferdinand, of all people! How did I not realize this sooner?! How?!
My unexpected two-year coma meant that my
going above and beyond had ultimately paid off, and I truly did appreciate
that. However, the realization that I could have had
more reading time instead was more painful than I could bear.
Ngh! I could have slacked off so much!
As I despaired over how much more skilled my
musical role models had been than anyone else, it came time for Ehrenfest to
play, starting with our archnobles.
“I’ll go first. You go last,” Wilfried said
tersely as he stood. I nodded, having no reason to argue, and watched as he
went up to play. Once he started, I took my harspiel and sat in the nearby seat
for the next performer.
“Hey, isn’t that the girl who can’t control
her mana?” came a whisper from the Ahrensbach corner. “Do you think she even
knows how to play properly?”
“You shouldn’t say that,” another voice
replied. “She spent two years sleeping in a jureve, so we need to be
supportive. We can’t expect her to play any better than her appearance would
suggest.”
It might have seemed like the second voice was
trying to defend me, but they might as well have said, “She’s
as immature on the inside as she is on the outside, so don’t expect anything
from her.”
I don’t really care what people have to say about
me, but I do wonder how they know about that... Has Detlinde told all the
first-years about what happened?
As I fruitlessly pondered Detlinde’s goals, it
came time for me to perform. I had decided to play the song I was most familiar
with and that not many other people knew—the anime song that Ferdinand had
arranged for me. I had initially taught it to him so that I could laugh at his
expense, but I had played it so many times by this point that it was like a
brother-in-arms to me.
It’s fine. Nobody’s going to laugh. It’s not like
they know where the song is from, plus the arrangement almost makes it sound
completely original.
I was thankfully able to finish my performance
without issue, having taken care not to accidentally give a blessing midway
through.
“I am told you were asleep for the past two
years, but your performance far exceeded my expectations,” the professor said.
“If you continue to practice, you will surely become a master harspiel player.”
“Thank you,” I replied with a smile, though I
had no intention of ever becoming a master harspiel player, and I only showed
so much promise because my standards had been skewed by the unreasonably
talented pros who had surrounded me back in Ehrenfest.
I tried going back to my seat, but the
professor stopped me before I could. “Lady Rozemyne, I have served as a music
professor in the Royal Academy for almost twenty years now, but I have never
before heard that song. What in the world is it called?”
“It’s a summer song dedicated to Leidenschaft,
and... it has no name,” I began. My intention was to claim it had been composed
by an unnamed musician, but Wilfried interrupted me with a sly grin.
“The Saint of Ehrenfest composed this song to
express her gratitude to Leidenschaft. She has made many original songs
dedicated to the gods, several of which I know myself.”
Nooo! A surprise ambush, and from the person I
least expected!
As I blinked in shock at the unexpected
attack, the professor looked at me with gleaming anticipation. “I certainly
would like to hear these other songs.”
“P-Perhaps one day, if Dregarnuhr the Goddess
of Time ever weaves our threads together...”
Wilfried! You’re such a big, stupid dummy!
Mana Compression and Creating a Highbeast
Written lessons ended midway through the
morning. I wanted to spend my free time in the library, but my meeting with
Solange was still days away. It was at times like this that I truly hated how
everything in the Academy was done based on grades and influence; I yearned for
the library more than anyone else, but my love was being denied.
Two whole days to go... I’m going to die!
Someone, give me booooooks!
As I wailed in silent agony, I called over the
first-years and had them start working on study guides for next year. Everyone
leapt at the chance to help, especially when I mentioned that putting the work
in now would make studying a lot less of a struggle for them in the future.
“Make sure to properly organize your notes,
everyone. I will buy all those of a sufficiently high quality.”
“Understood!” the mednobles and laynobles
enthusiastically replied. The archnoble, however, didn’t seem too invested.
“I am willing to help since you made the
request, Lady Rozemyne, but I would like you to know that I am not fond of
working for money like a laynoble.”
Oho, what’s this? Is working for money considered
a laynoble thing? Are archnobles too proud to do it themselves?
“Are you unaware that I, the archduke’s
adopted daughter, earn my own money?”
“...Ah.”
“Without the funds I made through my own hard
work, I would not have been able to provide sweets as rewards or print so many
educational books to be sold in the winter playroom. Am I right to assume you
are used to spending your parents’ money and know not how to earn your own? I
would advise you to learn a bit more about how income really works.”
“My apologies,” the archnoble replied, though
I could tell from the look in his eyes that he still wasn’t convinced. There
were no doubt many others who shared this view as well.
I glanced over at Wilfried. “Dear brother, do
all archnobles think like this?”
“Yeah, pretty much. They live off the income
from their land and annual salaries from the archduke, so the whole concept of
working for money is completely alien to them. I get income too, and Oswald
tells me where it all goes as my head attendant, but I don’t think I would’ve
noticed you were earning money on your own had I not managed the winter
playroom in your place.”
The money Wilfried received hadn’t been enough
to continuously prepare sweets for the winter playroom, so he had apparently
gone to Ferdinand, the manager of my funds, for financial assistance. While
there, he was surprised to learn that my income was steadily increasing even as
I slept. He had never even considered making money himself.
“It is unsightly for an archnoble to scramble
to earn their own money,” the archnoble student said.
“So you say, but Giebe Haldenzel is an
archnoble, and he is currently spreading my printing and paper-making
industries through the duchy to earn a profit. Were you unaware of this also?”
“Giebe Haldenzel?!”
Elvira came from a family of archnobles, and
it was only natural that this student would know about them. I nodded as he
gawked with widened eyes.
“To rule land is to have commoners earn money
for your benefit, so you will never be an astute and wise ruler if you deny the
very concept of earning money. You must simply learn ways to generate income
that are befitting of an archnoble.”
“You mean having other people work, instead of
doing it myself...?”
“Yes. As you know, I am not personally
responsible for the production of the products I sell. The ink, picture books,
karuta, playing cards, and pumps are all made by workshops, but when they are
sold, I am the one who profits. This allowed me to earn money even while I was
asleep, and it is the very reason I am able to afford sweets for everyone, buy
information, and have you all transcribe books for me.”
I was using the promise of payment to have the
students feed me information and transcribe books, but considering how
reluctant the archnobles were, it would be hard to gather anything from them. I
didn’t want them refusing to transcribe books or gather information—after all,
the more people helping me, the better—so I needed to change their minds and
get them invested in making as much money as possible.
I need to make the archnobles understand the
importance of earning money...
This realization played on my mind as I poured
my energy into making the study guides. Fourth bell rang as I was busy putting
everything together, at which point the senior students started returning to
the dormitory.
Hm... I want the seniors transcribing books too,
not just the first-years.
The other seven first-years and I were the
only ones transcribing books at the moment, but it would be much more efficient
to have all sixty-plus students involved. I wanted the archnobles to work
alongside the laynobles, if possible, but to achieve this I would need to prove
that there was value in earning money for oneself. I needed a product that the
archnobles would want to buy—something so enticing that they would even be
willing to work to afford it.
“What seems to be worrying you, milady?”
Rihyarda asked.
“Can you think of anything I own that an
archnoble would desperately want for themselves?”
“I would say your mana compression method. The
results are already more than apparent: Damuel developed enough mana to propose
to Brigitte, a mednoble; Angelica was able to master physical enhancements and
is now Lord Bonifatius’s favorite disciple; and while Cornelius is not yet as
good of a fighter as Lord Karstedt, he has already matched his mana capacity. I
would say that any student of the Royal Academy is desperate to gain such
knowledge.”
I was already well aware that my method
increased one’s mana capacity, but I hadn’t realized just how effective it was
proving to be. It seemed it would serve as excellent bait after all.
Once everyone had sat down for lunch, I
revealed that I had an important announcement to make, drawing all eyes to me.
“I have decided that those who wish to learn my mana compression method must
pay the fee using money they have earned themselves, even archnobles and
archduke candidates.”
Upon hearing this news, first Wilfried, then
the archnobles of the same faction who had expected to learn my method with
ease all froze in shock.
“There are many ways to earn money here in the
Royal Academy,” I continued, “whether that be gathering information,
transcribing books, or selling feystones and other materials. My plan is to
charge archnobles two large golds, mednobles eight small golds, and laynobles
two small golds to learn my compression method. This price will be halved for
family members of those who have already bought it, and I will allow parents to
contribute toward that halved price for their children.”
“Is that not being too harsh on archnobles?!”
came a cry from among the students. I could see the archnobles looking around
with panicked expressions.
“Archnobles already have an advantage in both
practical and written lessons due to their plentiful mana and skilled tutors,”
I replied. “Does the former not also make it easier for them to defeat
feybeasts and acquire their feystones? Considering that laynobles have to work
just to be able to afford the library registration fee, I think this pricing is
more than fair.”
As the students paled at my sudden
declaration, Cornelius—having already learned the compression method
himself—looked at me in confusion. “Where is this coming from, Lady Rozemyne?”
he asked quietly. “Did something happen this morning?”
“It seems the archnobles do not understand
just how difficult it is to earn money, so I wish for them to learn. This is
certainly not because I became irritated with an ignorant archnoble who
described earning money as unsightly behavior.”
As Cornelius began scanning the crowd, hunting
for the culprit, I suggested that the fretting students transcribe books to
make the money they needed. “Is it not wise and very archnoble-like to earn
money through writing books?” I asked.
Sensing that I had no intention of changing my
mind, Hartmut shrugged. “Even the archnobles will be spurred into action with
you dangling the mana compression method in front of them. This allows you to
spite the fool who misspoke, alter how archnobles perceive money, and secure new books all at the same time. Truly an
outstanding move, Lady Rozemyne—you can obtain all you want without so much as
lifting a finger.”
My plot here would provide me with many more
books and for much cheaper than usual, since I could cut costs by using plant
paper and its corresponding ink instead of parchment, all while using my mana
compression method as bait to get students to transcribe material en masse.
Hartmut gave an amused grin. “I suppose I
shall show my loyalty here by gathering up information and transcribed books
for you as well, Lady Rozemyne.”
“Are you not morally opposed to working for
money?”
“I view this less as working for money, and
more as receiving the proper compensation for what I normally do anyway. I have
already been running around gathering information on what concerns me as an
archnoble, so I will simply be hiring others to transcribe the books for me. I
won’t be desperately working for money myself—after all, archnobles need only
earn money in archnoble-like ways.”
Nobody could protest my decision after hearing
that.
During the afternoon, we had practical lessons
on creating highbeasts. Women needed to wear special riding clothes before they
could straddle their highbeasts, so Rihyarda and Lieseleta helped me get
changed. This was my first time wearing them, and the long, frilly-hemmed
culottes looked a lot like a skirt when I stood normally.
“You don’t usually need to wear riding clothes
because of the nature of your highbeast, milady, but since you need them for
your lessons here, we had some made anyway.”
“I suppose I can’t be the only one wearing a
skirt while everyone else is changed...”
Once I was dressed and the metal cage
containing my highbeast feystone was secured on the belt around my culottes, I
started making my way to the practical lessons. Philine and I were going to be
attending classes in different rooms, but as a fellow first-year, she was
wearing riding clothes as well. There was a pouch containing a feystone
dangling from her hip, which she stroked from above with delicate care.
“It must have been hard work for you to dye
your feystone,” I mused aloud, thinking back to how much mana the feystone had
sucked out of me at once when I made my own highbeast. I could only imagine how
arduous this process must have been for a laynoble like her who had never
compressed their mana before.
Much to my surprise, however, Philine tilted
her head in confusion. “Why would it have been hard work?” she asked. “I had
been storing mana for it since birth using magic tools.”
Nobles were apparently given magic tools when
they were born that would suck out their mana, and feystones for storing mana
that would then automatically be filled. The magic tool would only extract from
the person registered to it so that the mana would remain pure, meaning it
would not extract from siblings, parents, and attendants. This allowed children
to slowly save up more and more mana whenever it started to overflow, then use
the feystones during Royal Academy lessons.
They need a magic tool for each child, and enough
feystones to store ten whole years’ worth of mana... That must cost a lot of
money.
I was aware that noble children weren’t taught
to compress their mana until they were old enough to attend the Royal Academy,
and they weren’t given rings until their baptism ceremony, but only now was I
finding out what they did with all the mana that built up over the years. It
explained why nobles who couldn’t afford magic tools sent their children to the
temple.
“Did you not do the same, Lady Rozemyne?”
“Erm, well... I was raised in the temple, so I
generally just offered my mana to the gods.”
“Oh? Then how did you prepare your highbeast
feystone?” Philine asked, her eyes widening as she recalled that I had indeed
been raised in the temple up until my baptism.
“I dyed a feystone that Ferdinand gave to me
all at once by directly pouring my mana into it.”
“Ah. You were capable of such a feat because
of your mana capacity, so tremendous that it earned you a place in the
archducal family. I could not do the same.”
Right, right... There are so many basic things
about noble life that I’m still clueless about, huh? I should probably keep my
mouth shut as much as possible.
I parted ways with Philine and the other
lower-status nobles, then arrived at the hall where my lesson was going to be
held. Rihyarda warned me to wait until someone came to get us, as per usual,
then allowed Wilfried, me, and the single Ehrenfest archnoble in our class to
enter. Inside the hall, everyone took out their dyed feystones and proudly
showed them off—Wilfried included.
“Your feystone’s light yellow, Rozemyne, but
mine’s light green.”
“Wow. So it is.”
The color of one’s mana largely depended on
its elemental affinity. Mine was somewhere between yellow and gold, which meant
my strongest element was probably either Wind or Light. Wilfried, meanwhile,
had a mana color that suggested his strongest element was Water.
The more elements one had, the fainter their
color became. I had seven elements, so my yellow was rather light, while
Wilfried only had six, so his green was slightly darker. The only element
Damuel had was Wind, and I remembered his feystone being dark yellow as a
result.
“Yes, yes. Quiet down, everyone!”
We were being taught by Professor Fraularm, a
woman who looked to be in her mid-forties. She had a distinctive high-pitched
voice and wore a prideful expression that matched the sharp, prickly aura she
exuded. I had heard that she was the dormitory supervisor for Ahrensbach, and
this was very quickly proven—she directed curt, forced smiles to the Ahrensbach
students, but everyone else she more or less ignored.
“Today you will practice pouring mana into and
changing the shape of your feystones. Please begin by increasing their size,”
she instructed.
It seemed our class was starting in the same
way as my lessons with Ferdinand. This much was easy, since I already used my
highbeast feystone all the time, but I wanted to use this opportunity to
practice controlling my mana. I stealthily removed the magic tool from my left
arm, then started pouring mana into the feystone while trying to change its
shape. The hardest part was trying to properly restrict the flow.
I just need to imagine the process as similar to
using faucets, rather than pouring water from a bucket.
And so I visualized my fingertips as faucets
as I practiced adjusting the amount of mana I poured into the feystone at once.
I was used to offering up my mana, but I wasn’t used to withdrawing it again,
so I also used this opportunity to practice that. In the end, while everyone
else was busy changing the size of their feystones, I put my all into
controlling my mana as a whole.
“Those who are confident in their ability to
control the size of their feystone should now move on to shaping it into a
highbeast,” Fraularm said. “Many choose the animal used in their family crest,
while many others go with horses as they are comfortable to ride.”
Several students immediately began working to
shape their feystones. Wilfried had gotten quite used to controlling his mana
over the past two years, so he always blasted through the mana-related
practical lessons.
“I’m going to make my highbeast a lion, since
I’m the archduke’s son. Though I do kind of want a soft highbeast like yours,
Rozemyne...” Wilfried furrowed his brow in thought for a moment, then started
pouring mana into his feystone. It took him an extraordinarily long time, but
it eventually ended up in the shape of a lion.
“That looks a lot like Ferdinand’s highbeast,”
I observed.
“It’d need to have three heads for me to copy
Father’s. It was easiest for me to just base it on the one Uncle has.”
“Now that you mention it, I did see
Sylvester’s three-headed lion once. It certainly is quite a strange highbeast,
is it not?”
“Were Father here, I’m sure he’d yell that
you’re the last person he’d want to hear that from.”
Wilfried was right that my Pandabus was
perhaps a teensy bit strange when compared to regular highbeasts, but Lessy was
cute, convenient, and better than any other style in my opinion.
“Thirteens! Be silent and focus on forming
your highbeasts!” Professor Fraularm shrieked in her sharp, high-pitched voice.
I obeyed and went back to looking at my
feystone, now deep in thought. Would it really be acceptable for me to pop out
my highbeast here considering how weird everyone thought it was? Fraularm must
have interpreted my internal debate as laziness, because she briskly strode
over and sharply jutted out her chin.
“Highbeast. Now!”
I gave a shrug and summoned my one-person
Pandabus, just as I always did. The students from other duchies immediately
balked at the sight, then began to laugh.
“The heck is that?” one person sneered.
“That thing’s way too tall for her to climb on
top of,” added another. “How does she expect to ride it?”
“What a strange highbeast...”
“Oh, but it is quite cute. A shame it seems so
impractical.”
They were laughing at Lessy for being weird,
but while they were all commenting on his shape, none of them compared him to a
grun as Ferdinand and the knights had. Nobody was asking why I had shaped my
highbeast after a feybeast.
“Weird...” I murmured. “Everyone kept calling
him a feybeast before.”
“I’m guessing first-years just don’t know what
gruns are called, since they likely won’t have hunted any before,” Wilfried
said. “I don’t know all that many feybeast names myself.”
As I mulled over his observation, Fraularm
alone paled and uttered, “A grun...” under her breath. She was a professor, so
it didn’t come as much of a surprise that she recognized the feybeast.
“Lady Rozemyne!” she shrieked. “Highbeasts are
not meant to be played around with. Take this
seriously!”
I couldn’t help but grimace. What had I done
to deserve this scolding? I wasn’t playing around in the slightest.
“But I am taking this seriously.”
“How is this
serious?” Fraularm snapped, angrily gesturing at Lessy. “The moment you made a grun as your highbeast, you forfeited all right to use that
excuse. I will not accept a highbeast like this.
Change it at once.”
Her insistence on getting rid of my Pandabus
annoyed me. Sure, it wasn’t a traditional shape, but I had made a highbeast as
instructed. Lessy was amazing as is, so I had absolutely no intention of
changing him.
“Professor Fraularm, please excuse my
curtness, but I will not change my highbeast. I can say with the utmost
confidence that it is far superior to any other.”
“How is a highbeast modeled after a feybeast
superior to anything?!”
“I can ride it without changing into riding
clothes, and multiple people can fit inside at once,” I explained as I enlarged
the one-person Pandabus enough to accommodate more passengers.
Everyone gawked at how Lessy had so suddenly
grown in size, including Wilfried and the Ehrenfest archnoble. Now that I
thought about it, those in the castle and dormitory had often seen me riding my
one-person Pandabus, but I couldn’t remember ever showing them its larger form.
“I can freely change the size of my
highbeast,” I said, using my excess mana to make Lessy shrink and then grow
again. Fraularm stared at me in silent shock all the while, then snarled
slightly when I puffed out my chest with pride.
“But this highbeast cannot even fly! It has no
wings!”
“My dear Lessy can fly with ease,” I said,
shrinking him back to one-person size before getting inside. I then flew up
above the hall and spun circles around the onlookers as they gasped in
disbelief.
“Th-That is simply not right!” Fraularm
screamed, spit flying from her mouth. She collapsed in shock not even a moment
later, which brought our highbeast class to an abrupt end.
Fraularm was carried out by two knights while
Hirschur was called to replace her. She narrowed her eyes in displeasure when
she arrived, then announced that today’s lesson would be continued at a later
date.
As the students shuffled out of the hall,
Hirschur called me over. She reassured the worried-looking Wilfried that she
would just be asking me for the details of what had happened, and once he was
gone, she turned to look at me.
“Now then... I wish to see this unnatural
highbeast for myself—the one that shocked Fraularm unconscious. The potion I
was in the middle of brewing was ruined due to my being summoned midway through
my stirring it, so you owe me this at the very least.”
“S-Sure. I don’t mind,” I stammered as
Hirschur gave me a sickly sweet smile. Her expression made her look like
Ferdinand to a T, and it was in that moment I realized that she truly was his
teacher.
We had mana compression lessons the next
evening. Many professors were mobilized in preparation, so we first-years were
divided into two groups, with half of us learning court etiquette while the
other half were taught mana compression. I was in the latter group, while
Philine was in the former.
Around ten professors were lined up in the
mana compression classroom. Among them were Fraularm, who had now recovered
from yesterday, and Hirschur.
“Your mana capacity grows along with the
growth of your body, as your mana-containing vessel naturally changes in size
as well. You can stimulate the growth of said vessel by storing as much mana in
it as possible, and since you are all still in your growth period, it is
important that you start doing this now,” Hirschur explained. Once she was
done, Fraularm stepped forward.
“Mana capacity is more important than anything
to a noble, so you must increase it as much as possible before you stop
growing. There is only a particular window during which mana compression has a
significant impact, so you must take this seriously!”
she declared shrilly.
A third professor raised a magic tool up high
for all of us to see. “We will first use these magic tools to measure the
density of your mana. Once we have put it on your wrist and gotten a
measurement, you will attempt to compress your mana. We will then measure your
mana again, and if you have compressed it even the slightest amount, you will
have completed the lesson. You will need to find methods that work for you on
an individual basis and dedicate yourself to them. All we can teach you are the
starting steps.”
So in other words, I have to compress my mana
even more? Nooo...
As I cradled my head in despair, the
professors each began explaining the particular way in which they compressed
their mana. “I visualize it as removing the unnecessary components from your
mana, like removing the water from fruit juice,” one said.
“I picture the misty mana within me gathering
at my core,” noted another.
“Mana compression is much like boiling down a
potion.”
“Just push, push, and keep pushing.”
The professors listed their methods one after
another, but they were providing so many contrasting suggestions that they
would surely only breed confusion. A quick look at the students around me
confirmed that this was indeed the case.
“The most important thing to remember is to
not push yourself too hard, under any circumstances,” one of the professors
warned. “It could put your life in danger.”
“That said, you do need to push yourself to
some degree if you wish to compress your mana. You have to overpower the mana
within you,” added another.
Wilfried furrowed his brow in bemusement.
“Aren’t these explanations kind of a mess? What exactly am I supposed to be
doing here?”
“It sounds like a mess, but nothing they’ve
said so far has been incorrect. The most efficient way to compress your mana is
by finding a method that works for you, and your mana won’t compress unless you
pump yourself up and really forcibly squeeze it,” I explained. “As the
professors said, however, if you push yourself harder than your body can
handle, compression can actually kill you. Ferdinand said there are several teachers
per student here to reduce the risk even just a little.”
Wilfried paused, tightly clenched his fists,
then gave me a serious look. “How do you do it?”
“Well, I suppose I can tell you the first step
of the process. You have a vessel for containing mana within your body.
Envision that vessel as a box, pack so much mana inside that you really
struggle to close it, then force it shut anyway and lock it so the mana doesn’t
come out. Anything beyond that is part of the secret Rozemyne method,” I said
with a smirk.
Wilfried balked. “Just how many steps are
there?”
“Three. Ferdinand took on the third step and
ended up sick enough that even he couldn’t hide it.”
“The Ferdinand?”
Wilfried asked, his expression suddenly turning stiff. “He
got sick?”
It was at that moment we were called to the
front.
The Fourth Step of Mana Compression
“Lord Wilfried and Lady Rozemyne of the
Thirteenth, please step forward.”
Wilfried and I stood, then walked over to
where the professors were all lined up. We archduke candidates were being
called up in order of duchy rank, with the ten professors split into groups of
two. The candidates of greater duchies seemed to be a bit used to controlling
their mana, and so they learned to compress it quickly.
The two ahead of us returned to their seats,
frowning in concentration as they worked to compress their mana as much as
possible. When I looked around, there were three other archduke candidates
furrowing their brows, surrounded by professors as they tried compressing their
mana. One of the professors was holding a magic tool while carefully watching
the students, while another was instead closely observing a magic bracelet on
his wrist.
I continued scanning the room to see that
Fraularm was observing a very similar-looking bracelet. In all honesty, I still
felt a little embarrassed about having made her pass out the day before, so I
quietly thanked the gods that she wasn’t the one observing me today.
Okay... What should I do about this compression?
If my aim was to compress my mana even more
than I already was, I would need to think up a fourth step of some kind to my
compression method. I really wasn’t sure what I could do to further compress my
mana though.
Maybe I could visualize a machine crushing it...?
Machine compression immediately brought to
mind images of aluminum cans being crushed flat. This technique would almost
certainly compress my mana, but I couldn’t say whether I would be able to
decompress it again when I needed it. To make matters worse, I knew from
experience that the second I lost confidence was the second it became
impossible. Hardening my mana so much that I couldn’t even use it myself ran
the risk of creating another situation where I would need to use a jureve to
dissolve the blockages.
Please, no! I don’t want to time travel again!
I wondered what else I could use for
inspiration, thinking back to the various examples the professors had given
just moments ago. I was already using the “misty mana gathering at my core” and
“push, push” approaches, which left me with removing water from fruit juice and
boiling down a potion.
Hm... Maybe I can imagine boiling down soup in
the same way Professor Hirschur boils down her potions?
Boiling down soup caused the water inside to
evaporate, leaving behind a thick and concentrated broth. I wondered what would
happen if I added that boiling technique to the first step of my mana
compression method.
Okay, let’s try it. I’m going to pass this lesson
without killing myself.
I pumped myself up, then stood in front of the
professors. Hirschur was there with a muscular-looking man who probably taught
the apprentice knights. I heard him mutter that I was somehow even tinier than
the rumors had led him to believe.
“Rauffen and I will assist you with your mana
compression, Lady Rozemyne.”
Rauffen nodded. “You’ve got nothing to worry
about with me around. Compression’s easy if you just push, push, and push your
mana down hard. Let’s get this done,” he said with a charming smile, but I
already had him pinned as one of those hot-blooded gym teacher types I really
didn’t care for. They had tormented me countless times in my Urano days by
dragging me outside during lunch breaks, tearing me away from my books to
exercise, and I would probably never forgive them for that.
“Now, Lady Rozemyne, hold out your left wrist.
I will be attaching the magic tool,” Hirschur said.
I pulled my sleeve back until my wrist was
visible, then held it out for Hirschur to attach the magic tool. It looked like
a big bumpy wristwatch at first, but it soon shrunk to the size of a wristband
and wrapped tightly around my wrist.
It’s so heavy!
Hirschur held up my arm to stop it from
drooping beneath the weight, then eyed the tool carefully. “Everything is
ready. Lady Rozemyne, please compress your mana.”
“Here we go! Pump yourself up and start
compressing! Beat that mana and squeeze it aaall the way down!” Rauffen cheered
in an annoyingly loud voice. I nodded with a polite smile before closing my
eyes, focusing on the source of the heat within me and the way it moved.
My plan was to compress my mana by boiling it,
but I would first need to release it all. This was only possible thanks to all
the magic tools Ferdinand had given me.
“Good! Good!” Rauffen shouted. “Can you feel
the flow of your mana?!”
Please shut up. I’m trying
to focus... I thought while opening the box my mana
was packed into and letting it all out at once. I then started steadily pouring
it into the charms I was borrowing and the enhancement tools on my limbs. Once
I had finished packing as much mana into them as possible, my body felt
incredibly light—so much so that I thought a single jump might send me floating
up into the air.
In this moment and this moment alone, I am
stronger than even Grandfather.
I slowly opened my eyes. My vision was
augmented to such a degree that I could clearly see the faces of students
standing far away from me, and my hearing was enhanced enough that the chatter
and bustle in the room was unbearably loud.
“That’s the spirit! Your mana sure is moving
around a lot!” Rauffen exclaimed. “Just keep pushing! You can do this!”
Since I had poured a ton of mana into the
charms Ferdinand had given me on top of pouring mana into the enhancers, the
mana that remained in my body was much lighter than usual. I would be trying
out my new compression ideas on this mana, so I visualized a pot, poured mana
into it, then lit the fire underneath.
Okay... Time to boil down the mana until it takes
up about half as much space.
In the back of my mind, music was playing from
a cooking show my mom back on Earth always used to watch. I was certain I could
even hear a peppy announcer say, “And here we have freshly
boiled mana!”
Once I had finished boiling my mana into a
more concentrated form, I simply needed to begin my usual compression process.
I folded my mana carefully and then stuffed it into the box without leaving any
space whatsoever. When that was done, I used my body weight to crush it down
even further, flattening it completely.
With my mana back in the box, I started
withdrawing the mana from the enhancers back into my body. I was used to
pouring out my mana, but sucking it back in was still new to me. It took some
time, but I successfully regained some of my mana from the magic tools, then
compressed it the same way.
As I was focusing on compression with my eyes
closed, I heard Wilfried—who was doing the same with two professors nearby—get
a passing grade.
“You have talent, Lord Wilfried. Be sure to
frequently compress your mana from now on.”
“Understood,” Wilfried said proudly.
I need to blast through this too.
I tensed my muscles and started compressing my
mana as tightly as I could. The boiling stage was the only part I was
unfamiliar with, so the overall process wasn’t taking me too much longer than
usual. Speeding up the boiling would need to be my homework for a while.
Once all of my mana was compressed, I let out
a long sigh and opened my eyes. Hirschur was glaring at the magic tool on my
wrist with narrowed eyes and a difficult frown.
“Was that enough? I think I was able to make
my mana more compressed than it was before,” I said excitedly, carefully
watching to gauge her reaction.
Hirschur eventually tore her eyes from the
magic tool and exhaled slowly. Rauffen, meanwhile, was rubbing his chin, most
likely surprised that she hadn’t yet said I had passed.
“Do we need to start over?” he asked.
“No, everything is fine. Quite fine. You pass,
Lady Rozemyne,” Hirschur announced, her voice trembling slightly as she removed
the magic tool from my wrist. She then quietly murmured, “I can tell you worked
exceptionally hard,” though it was almost entirely drowned out by Rauffen’s
congratulatory cheers.
“Alriiight!” he exclaimed enthusiastically.
“You’ve just gotta keep building up your mana capacity like that. You’re a tiny
girl, so it’s probably gonna grow more than anyone else’s. Just gotta put in
the work. Compress your mana a little each day. Don’t do it all at once,
otherwise you’ll get sick.”
“I will do my best. And thank you for your
help, Professor Hirschur.” By the time I turned back to thank her, however, she
was already facing away from me, stroking the magic tool. She was most likely
preparing for the next student, since there were still plenty of people coming
up after me. I went back to my seat so as to not get in their way.
“They said I had talent,” Wilfried said smugly
as I sat back down. When I looked at him a little closer, I noticed his body
was tensed up in a bunch of weird places. He was probably stealthily
compressing his mana even as we spoke.
“Don’t overdo it,” I warned him. “If you
compress your mana too much, you’ll end up with a mana hangover and start
feeling sick like Ferdinand.”
“But I finally learned how to do it. How could
I not want to compress the heck out of my mana?”
“I understand how you feel, but there are
students each year who adopt that mindset and then end up with terrible mana
hangovers. This is why there are professors watching over those who’ve passed.
It would be supremely embarrassing if you ignored their warnings, continued to
compress your mana in secret, then got sick and collapsed in front of
everyone,” I noted, gesturing with my eyes toward the professors watching us.
Wilfried jerked in fear, as did some of the archduke candidates from other
duchies who were sitting in earshot, causing the observing teachers to chuckle.
Once the archduke candidates had all been
reviewed, the archnobles began trying their hand at mana compression. It was
then that students started collapsing all over the place.
“Rauffen, carry this one back to his seat,”
Hirschur said, indicating a student who had fallen to their knees. The
energetic professor promptly did as instructed.
“This one’s mana is on a rampage!” Fraularm
yelled from elsewhere in the room. “Bring a magic tool over! Hurry!”
Another professor rushed over at once with a
magic tool. They pressed it against the neck of the student in question, who
then collapsed to the floor.
“Is this normal...?” I asked. It hadn’t
occurred to me that mana compression could be so serious, since all the
archduke candidates had learned it so quickly, but the archnobles were
evidently struggling a great deal. It seemed more unusual for them to succeed
with their mana compression than not.
As I worriedly glanced around the room,
Wilfried crossed his arms in thought. “Eh... I’m guessing what makes this
process so much more manageable for us archduke candidates is that we’ve
performed Mana Replenishment on the foundational magic and are used to moving
our mana.”
Now that he mentioned it, I had also ended up
collapsing and losing the ability to move the first time I offered up my mana.
Skipping lunch obviously hadn’t helped, but Wilfried had fallen to his knees
and been rendered immobile for a short period as well.
“They should recover after some rest,”
Wilfried said. “Charlotte and I got better in no time.”
“But with the state the archnobles are in, I’m
starting to worry about the laynobles.”
“Oswald said mana compression is easier for
laynobles. The more mana you have, the heavier the load is before you get used
to it.”
“I see... I’m surprised you know that,
Wilfried.”
Wilfried looked at me with a bemused frown.
“I’m surprised you’re unaware of such basic facts when you seem to know
everything. Two years is a surprisingly long time, huh?”
“I only know the information I can get from
books; the stuff you’re supposed to learn naturally through living is pretty
much a mystery to me. It doesn’t help that I was raised in the temple until my
baptism, unlike most nobles.”
The fact that I hadn’t even lived two full
years as a noble meant I had yet to encounter a lot of the things other nobles
considered to be common sense.
“Yeah, I worked pretty hard over the past two
years. I wanted to be capable enough to help you, even if just a little bit.”
“I appreciate your efforts.”
Our class eventually came to an end with over
half of the archnobles having failed to pass; they would probably need to take
their time getting used to moving the mana around inside them. The professors
dismissed the class, and with that, we returned to our respective dormitories.
Since I had completed everything else I needed
to do today, I immediately got to work making study guides, all while the
mednoble and laynoble first-years told me about their practical court etiquette
lessons. In return, I described the first step of the mana compression method
to them, then mentioned that the archnobles who weren’t used to moving their
mana had dropped like flies.
“That sounds like quite an exciting time,” one
student said.
I nodded. “Though Wilfried did mention that
those with less mana find their first mana compression easier than those with
more.”
“That just means we’ll have a harder time
increasing our capacities though, right?”
“Correct. Only by dancing on the verge of
death is one able to noticeably expand their mana capacity.”
Following that remark, a few people started
whispering about how scary the prospect of risking their lives for more mana
sounded. Everyone ultimately agreed not to push themselves too hard, and that
was when Hirschur burst into the common room. She threw the doors open, scanned
the room with an unmistakable glint in her purple eyes, then locked her sights
on me.
“What? Professor Hirschur?!”
“Did something happen?!”
A stir immediately ran through the common
room. Under normal circumstances, there was nothing unusual about seeing one’s
dormitory supervisor actually inside the dormitory, but here in the Ehrenfest
Dormitory, that could not have been further from the case.
Hirschur looked straight at me before striding
over at once, her steps graceful and silent yet also incredibly quick. She
ignored every single student who attempted to question her along the way, such
that I started to wonder whether she even acknowledged they were there.
Due to either the speed at which Hirschur
approached or the sharp gleam in her eyes, Leonore instinctively whipped out
her schtappe, while Cornelius quickly stood in front of me. Angelica wore an
excited expression as she placed a hand on Stenluke’s hilt and skipped over to
protect me, while Judithe and Traugott—young students not quite used to serving
as guard knights yet—raced over only upon snapping back to their senses.
“Lady Rozemyne. You have quite a skilled set
of retainers,” Hirschur said with a chuckle as she looked over my guard
knights. “I have urgent business with you. May we speak in your quarters?” She
wore a pleasant smile, but the sharp look in her eyes hadn’t softened in the
slightest.
“Of course,” I said with a nod, having no way
to refuse. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw both Rihyarda and Lieseleta
instantly spin around to go prepare my room for a visitor. Brunhilde, my
remaining apprentice attendant, pulled my chair back so that I could stand up.
In an attempt to buy Rihyarda and Lieseleta
some time, I stood up slowly and took a moment to look over the common room,
which was now unusually tense.
“Hartmut, Philine—continue making study
guides,” I instructed. “As for my guard knights, I will need only girls to
accompany me, since boys cannot go to the third floor.” My mind was racing
despite the graceful smile on my face.
It feels like she’s going to yell at me. Why?
What have I done? Is this about me knocking Fraularm unconscious yesterday? No,
that can’t be it... I thought I avoided a lecture on that when Hirschur went
nuts over Lessy and started gushing about how great he is. Maybe Fraularm
complained to her after getting better, or something... This is terrifying
beyond words. We’re talking about Ferdinand’s teacher here... Just what are her
lectures going to be like?
I took my female guard knights and went to my
quarters, with Brunhilde at the lead. The stress of the situation was causing
my stomach to churn, but Rihyarda and Lieseleta having returned before us meant
my room was at least ready for a visitor.
Rihyarda poured tea for us both. I sipped from
my cup and took a small bite of a sweet, then encouraged Hirschur to do the
same. She took a bite herself, then widened her eyes.
“...What manner of sweet is this?”
“It’s called a pound cake. They’ve recently
become quite popular in Ehrenfest.”
“Oh my... New sweets, I see.”
Relieved to see that Hirschur’s sharp eyes
were starting to soften, I asked the question on everyone’s minds. “What urgent
business were you referring to...?”
“I wish to discuss what occurred during
today’s mana compression lesson. Please clear the room.”
When it came to mana compression, there were
many things I needed to keep secret. I nodded and waved a hand, at which my
retainers swiftly exited the room. Once Hirschur had confirmed that they were
all gone, she set a sound-blocking magic tool in front of me.
“This is a magic tool for blocking sound,” she
explained.
“I am aware. Ferdinand uses them often.”
“Oh my. So you are close enough to the Ferdinand to warrant engaging in such private talks?”
she asked teasingly before letting out a sigh and shrugging her shoulders. “I
imagine he uses them for the same reason I am using them now, but in any
case... Please explain to me what you did in class today.”
“I mean... I simply compressed my mana. What
would you like me to explain?”
She was leaning forward expectantly, but I
really didn’t know what to tell her. I hadn’t done anything aside from
compressing my mana, so as far as I was concerned, there was nothing to
explain.
Hirschur shut her eyes tightly. “Does she
simply lack self-awareness...?” she muttered to herself.
“Um... I did pass the lesson, right? Was I
lacking in some area?”
“Oh, no. Quite the opposite. I am here because
of just how much you exceeded my expectations. I have
never encountered such an abnormality in all my years of teaching, and I merely
wish to understand what happened.”
“An abnormality...?” I repeated. I knew that
she wanted me to explain something to her, but I couldn’t remember anything
happening that seemed out of the ordinary. “What do you mean exactly? I imagine
you’re saying that I did something unusual, but I’m not entirely sure what that
might be.”
Hirschur’s eyes widened in surprise; then she
detached something hanging from her belt and set it down in front of me. It was
the magic tool she had put on my wrist during the lesson, and at the moment,
the needle on the meter-esque protrusion was resting right in the middle.
“This is a magic tool for measuring the
density of one’s mana,” she explained. “By placing it on a person’s wrist, we
can measure their current density. We consider this a baseline, which allows us
to measure how their mana is compressed from that point onward. The needle
moves to the right when the compression is successful and the mana becomes more
dense. A student is expected to show a gradual amount of growth over time once
they’ve learned the basic principle behind compression, so in most cases, the
needle moves only slightly to the right before we pass them.”
It seemed they didn’t measure the density or
amount of one’s mana with numbers, but rather checked to see whether the needle
moved at all. Once a student successfully managed to compress their mana, it
was up to them to work out what the most efficient method was and then use that
to compress larger and larger amounts. Professors did not involve themselves in
this part of the process.
“This is a special magic tool unlike the
others—one I made to measure Ferdinand’s mana density in particular,” she
continued. I could guess that Ferdinand had compressed his mana to such an
extent during his school days that the needle had immediately slammed all the
way to the right, necessitating the creation of a measuring tool able to
measure a broader range of mana compression. “I elected to use the tool I made
for Ferdinand on you, Lady Rozemyne, just to be safe. You had caused Fraularm
to pass out with your highbeast the day before, so I had no way of knowing what
might happen today.”
S-Sorry.
“And then, just as expected—or perhaps not as
expected, seeing as you surpassed my expectations—something happened. When I
instructed you to begin compressing your mana, the needle immediately went all
the way to the left. It was the first time I have even seen someone lower their
mana density enough to reach the limits of the magic tool I made for Ferdinand.
No matter how I approach the situation, there is no way a child should be
capable of compressing their mana to such a degree.”
Oh, right... My mana density must have dropped so
much because I undid the compression at the start.
“The needle then returned to the center,
entirely as if you are used to compressing your mana, before shooting to the
rightmost side,” Hirschur concluded.
“So what you’re saying is... my mana ended up
more dense than it was originally? There’s no mistaking that I successfully
compressed my mana?”
“Correct.”
Whew... It was my first time trying out the new technique, but it seemed the
new four-step Rozemyne Compression Method had ended up a success. But as I
cheered on the inside, Hirschur shook her head and muttered in exasperation.
“I should have expected nothing less from
Ferdinand’s disciple...” She sighed quietly, then looked straight at me. “Now,
Lady Rozemyne. Please explain to me exactly what you did.”
“Okay. At the start of the lesson, you said
that the density of our mana was going to be measured and that we needed to
compress it more to pass. I assumed that meant I needed to compress my mana
even more than I was already, so I decompressed it all at the start of my turn,
then recompressed it using a new technique to make it denser than before. Oh,
and your advice really helped with that, Professor Hirschur.”
Hirschur quizzically tilted her head to one
side. “While I am glad to hear that, it was not necessary. You could have
simply decompressed your mana before the tool was attached and then
recompressed it as usual. No normal person would think to compress their mana
even further.”
Eep. I didn’t think of that...
“Sorry. That thought hadn’t occurred to me...”
Hirschur looked at me with an exhausted
expression. “Well, I now understand that you truly are Ferdinand’s prized
disciple. I do not know whether I should say you surpassed my expectations or
surpassed normality itself, but either way, it seems the time for Ehrenfest to
rise has come again. That said, you will certainly be even more of a handful
than Ferdinand was, since you clearly have no self-awareness whatsoever...”
She trailed off, realizing she had gone on
somewhat of a tangent, then raised her head to look at me. Her eyes were
sparkling with interest.
“Now then, Lady Rozemyne. You said that you
learned from my compression method, yes? In that case, I would like to learn
from your method in turn.”
“...Do forgive me, but my compression method
is a confidential Ehrenfest secret. I cannot tell anyone without permission
from its six leaders.”
“Oh my, that is unfortunate... And who might
those six leaders be?” Hirschur asked. She was completely undeterred, no doubt
already plotting out how to get her hands on my technique. “I assume the
archducal couple, plus the knight commander and his wife? Ferdinand is also
likely included, since he is your guardian, but who is the last person, I
wonder...? Rihyarda, since she was previously Sylvester’s head attendant? Or
Lord Bonifatius, member of the archducal family?”
Hirschur was familiar with Ehrenfest’s
internal affairs, given that she had been born there. I broke out into a cold
sweat as she continued.
“I won’t have any trouble wrenching permission
from the archducal couple, and with how many favors Karstedt and Elvira owe me,
conquering them should be just as trivial. Who is this last person though...?”
she asked again, her lips curving into a grin as she stared me down.
Gaaah! Professor Hirschur has Ehrenfest’s leaders
under her thumb! She knows all their secrets and weaknesses! HELP ME,
FERDINAAAND!
I shrunk in fear, feeling like a mouse backed
into a corner by a hungry snake, at which point Hirschur stood up with a
chuckle. “A new highbeast, a new mana compression method, and these new
sweets... I am quite looking forward to seeing what new changes you bring to
the Academy, Lady Rozemyne.”
Registering at the Library
“Tralala! Lalalala!”
I was so overjoyed in the morning that all my
retainers looked at me like I was crazy, but what did they expect? I would be
going to the Royal Academy’s library for the first time this afternoon to get
registered. The truth was, I had been shaking with excitement even since
getting into bed last night.
Lieseleta had been there as I restlessly
tossed and turned. As we sat at the breakfast table, she looked at my other
retainers with a bemused smile before turning back to me. “Lady Rozemyne, you
must truly be excited for the library to have lost sleep over it,” she said,
indirectly updating my male retainers on my nighttime antics. “My older sister
has never once set foot in the library, and I must say that your interests
could not differ more from hers.”
Angelica puffed out her chest with pride.
“Right. As the commander said, a servant should make up for the weaknesses of
those they serve, and vice versa. This means Lady Rozemyne and I are perfect
for each other—she’s good at studying and bad at physical stuff, while I’m bad
at studying and good at physical stuff.”
“Are you sure you should be saying that,
Sister? When Lady Rozemyne masters the art of physical enhancement and can move
again, you will need to learn to study in order to match her once again,”
Lieseleta said with a refined giggle.
Angelica widened her eyes with shock at the
realization that she once again could not escape her studies, and breakfast
came to a pleasant end with everyone laughing at her despair.
All of a sudden, Brunhilde’s head shot up.
“Lady Rozemyne, I forgot to mention this due to Professor Hirschur’s sudden
arrival yesterday, but the music professors have invited you to a tea party,”
she said, causing the senior students to whistle with surprise. They seemed
excited about it for some reason, but we first- and second-years didn’t quite
get the significance.
“The third-years had practical music lessons
yesterday afternoon...” Brunhilde began.
Lessons were held separately by status, and as
it turned out, the professors in the archnoble, mednoble, and laynoble classes
had all mentioned the new song I had played during the practical lesson for
first-years and asked the students to play my other songs as well. They had
apparently become fairly popular throughout Ehrenfest over the past two years
due to the infamous Ferdinand concert and the sheet music having been sold so
freely. The students who had purchased the sheet music two years ago had practiced
the songs plenty, such that they could now play them at will.
The third-years had played songs for the
professors according to their preference and abilities, thereby making it known
throughout the Royal Academy that I had composed many original songs. It was
known that Brunhilde was serving as my apprentice attendant, so she had been
called over after class and asked whether I had time for a tea party one
morning, given that the Ehrenfest first-years had now finished their written
lessons.
“Culture from all duchies comes together in
the Royal Academy, and yet the songs were overflowing with individuality unlike
anything they had ever heard before. All of the music professors were quite
drawn to them,” Brunhilde explained.
“Has not a single student played one of my
songs here in the two years since we first started selling the sheet music?” I
asked.
“It was the will of Aub Ehrenfest that all of
your inventions be spread slowly through the Academy only after you awoke and
began attending yourself, Lady Rozemyne.”
Pretty much all of my inventions were made in
the temple and the lower city, and scholars in the castle had zero involvement
in the day-to-day affairs of either. Even Ferdinand only received reports on
finished products and total sales. As such, nobody knew the fine details of my
business, and Sylvester had likely put out his gag order to avoid Ehrenfest
being shamed in the event of someone at the Archduke Conference asking
questions nobody could answer.
“Can you accompany me to that tea party,
Brunhilde?” I asked, too scared to go alone. Her amber eyes began to sparkle at
once, and she gave a firm nod.
“Of course. I shall accompany you as an
apprentice attendant. An invitation from the professors can be interpreted as
the Sovereignty expressing interest in Ehrenfest culture, so I must say, I am
exceptionally honored to be afforded the chance to attend such a tea party.”
Being invited to a tea party by the professors
was a great honor, and nobody in Ehrenfest had received such an invitation for
as long as Brunhilde remembered. This explained why the senior students had
been so surprised and excited.
“This is my first time attending a tea party
at the Royal Academy, so I shall trust you to prepare everything I need and
deal with the professors,” I said to Brunhilde. “Have they given us a date?”
“Not as of yet. I was not expected to give an
answer before first discussing the matter with you. It will be a few more days
before I finish my own written lessons, so may I suggest your reply be that you
will think the matter over with your attendants once they send an official
letter of invitation?”
Brunhilde seemed set on finishing her written
lessons before the tea party. I couldn’t help but respect people who charged
straight toward their goals, so she had my total support.
“That answer is fine with me. I imagine
preparing for a tea party with the professors immediately after you finish your
written lessons will not be easy, but I am certain you will manage it with
aplomb.”
“You can count on me. I must ensure clothes,
hair ornaments, music, and gifts are prepared to an impeccable standard in time
for the tea party—a worthy test of my skills indeed,” Brunhilde said, counting
everything she needed to do on her fingers. “The date has not yet been decided,
but please have your musician start practicing as soon as possible. If you can,
I believe it would be wise if you include original compositions.”
As my personal musician, we would naturally be
bringing Rosina with us.
“Original compositions... I shall discuss this
with Rosina. I am perfectly able to create music, but reaching a point where I
can perform the song myself requires some time,” I said. The most I could
usually do was hum the tune; it was the job of my personal musician to arrange
the notes and create sheet music that could be played on the harspiel. “I
intend to leave for the library this afternoon, so do try to return from your
morning lessons as soon as possible.”
I saw my older retainers off with a smile,
then started discussing new songs with Rosina while the first-years were
working on study guides. She was overjoyed to have the opportunity to arrange
new songs again, and in no time at all, she had her harspiel, a pen, and some
white paper at the ready.
“Lady Rozemyne, you may begin humming at any
time.”
I hummed a song melody while Rosina played it
back to me on her harspiel and wrote down the notes measure by measure. Since
we were going to be performing this one to teachers, I chose a classical song
that wasn’t too lengthy.
“What god is this song dedicated to?” Rosina
asked.
“To celebrate my first-ever visit to the
library, I shall dedicate it to Mestionora the Goddess of Wisdom.”
The first-years continued with their work, but
I could see them glancing up with great interest as Rosina put together the
melody and began arranging the song.
After Wilfried and I finished lunch, we
gathered all the first-years and our retainers and prepared to leave for the
library. Rihyarda had the money to cover our fees, and Oswald was joining us as
the adult attendant Wilfried had brought to the Academy. I could feel myself
getting more and more excited as our retainers checked to make sure everyone
was present at the entrance hall.
“The library! Ohh, the library! What a
wonderful place! So many books to read at one’s own pace! Tralala! Tralalala!”
I sang enthusiastically, the music we had been composing all morning still
stuck in my head.
“Lady Rozemyne, is that the song you were just
composing?” Hartmut asked, clearly surprised. “Have you already written the
lyrics?”
I nodded with a big smile. “Yes, I thought of
them just now. How does the name ‘A Paradise Gifted Unto Us by the Gods’ sound
to you?”
“Hold it, Rozemyne,” Wilfried interjected with
an exasperated tone. “No way are you going to impress the professors with
lyrics like those. I thought this was a song dedicated to Mestionora the
Goddess of Wisdom, not the library.”
A few sensible chuckles could be heard
throughout the hall.
Rihyarda sighed, seeming to be just as
exasperated, then promptly put a stop to my enthusiasm. “Milady, might I remind
you once again that we are simply registering with the library today. You have
court etiquette lessons this afternoon, so there is no time for any reading.”
I had naturally been told several times this
morning that I wouldn’t be able to enter the library freely until after I
passed the exams for all my practical lessons as well, so I had absolutely no
intention of skipping class. That didn’t mean I wasn’t excited about visiting
my first-ever library in this world though.
“I am aware, but I will be allowed to walk
through the library’s reading room, yes?”
And while I’m there, I’ll surely be allowed to
take just a quick peek at the books... It’s important. Like taste-testing food
as a chef.
Rihyarda narrowed her dark-brown eyes at me.
“Milady, I shall say this as many times as it takes: you will not be allowed to
read.”
“Of course. Of course.”
The other first-years let out dry laughs at
just how many times this exchange had taken place between Rihyarda and me.
“Everyone is ready. Shall we go?”
We exited the dormitory and entered the
hallway outside the auditorium. Once we had passed by the halls used for
practical lessons, we were in an area that was entirely new to me. Next were
the larger halls for mednoble and laynoble practical lessons, then the central
building with its own auditorium and classrooms. We eventually turned south and
reached a T-junction. Halls extended to both the left and right, each with
large doors at the end.
“The left door leads to the branch for
apprentice scholars, while the right leads to the branch for apprentice
attendants,” Cornelius explained.
“Where is the building for apprentice
knights?” I asked, tilting my head.
“At the north side of the central building,
which makes it farther from the library than any of the other specialty
branches. They must not expect apprentice knights to use the library very
much,” he replied, shooting Angelica a glance.
In a shocking twist, despite being a student
of the oldest grade, Angelica still hadn’t registered in the library yet. She
maintained that she had no business there and didn’t want to waste money on a
registration after all this time, but Stenluke had managed to talk her into
it—namely by barking, “Master, what manner of guard knight are you?! Your
charge shall inevitably be going to the library, so what will you do when you
cannot follow her inside?!”
Honestly, I can’t believe she hasn’t stepped into
the library a single time over all these years...
“The library is behind this door,” Cornelius
said. The older students who were already registered could enter, but without
Solange the librarian, we unregistered students had to wait. “Lady Rozemyne,
please put the wooden board that Professor Solange gave you in here.”
He was pointing at an opening in the door that
looked a lot like a mail slot. Putting the wooden board in would apparently
inform Professor Solange of our arrival, so I did just that. A few seconds
later, the door opened on its own. On the other side was a bright hallway
illuminated by the sunlight beaming through the windows, at the end of which
was another door.
Behind the second door was a refined-looking
older lady with blue eyes and light-purple hair, wearing a peaceful smile on
her face. She was a little chubby, and I could guess she was the pleasant
librarian of the Academy.
“Lord Wilfried, Lady Rozemyne—this is
Professor Solange,” Cornelius said.
“Welcome to the library, students of
Ehrenfest. My name is Solange. I have heard much about the exploits of this
year’s new students. I truly am surprised that you all finished your written
lessons before even registering here at the library,” Solange said calmly and
with an unfaltering smile before gesturing deliberately to the door behind her.
“This door leads to the reading room, the heart of our library.”
It seemed that getting to the library was as
simple as leaving the central building and going directly south. This was
good—it meant there was no chance of me getting lost. I instinctively started
walking toward the reading room, only for Cornelius to grab my shoulder and
forcibly turn me to the right instead, just as Solange turned in that
direction.
“Please follow me so that we may begin your
registrations,” she said.
Nooo! The reading room is calling for me!
I reluctantly turned, feeling as though I were
being dragged by the ear, and followed after Solange. A door to a room fairly
close to the reading room was open, and I soon learned that beyond it were
Solange’s reception area and office.
The office itself was fairly large, since it
was built to hold many students at once during registrations. It was a long
room with tall, slender windows spaced out evenly along the walls, letting
light flow in toward the back.
The space for guests was right by the
entrance. There were chairs and other places to sit placed in the sunlight, as
well as a table with a pen holder full of mana-using magic pens resting atop
it. Along the wall were a series of single-person chairs and wooden boxes large
enough to be used as seats, which we were told to sit on as we waited our turn.
Wilfried and I sat on the chairs along with the single archnoble among us,
while the mednobles and laynobles sat on the boxes. To be clear though, the boxes
were ornately carved as well, and they had cloth covering them just like any
fancy seat.
There was a desk at the back end of the room,
positioned near the windows so that one could work in the sunlight. Standing
near it were bookshelves and several boxes of what I assumed were books, but
they were all tightly locked, such that I couldn’t even see a single cover. It
was fun just trying to imagine what works must have been hidden inside them.
Further behind the desk was a folding screen, behind which I assumed was
Solange’s private space, if my own room was anything to go by.
Sitting atop one of the bookshelves were two
stuffed rabbits—one black and one white—both about my height and dressed in
clothes. Despite them looking like plush toys, they weren’t the cartoonish
rabbits I was familiar with from my Urano days; rather, they looked very real.
I smiled at the thought of old Solange tenderly caring for them like they were
living things.
While I was looking around the room, Solange
took several sheets of parchment from her desk and brought them over. She set
them down on the table in the guest area, then stood in front of us all.
“The library is replete with the precious gems
of knowledge given to us by Mestionora the Goddess of Wisdom. Only those who
swear by her name that they will treat its books with care are allowed inside,”
she said.
“I couldn’t agree more, Professor Solange. The
library is a paradise gifted unto us by the gods. Reading books is a joy they
have blessed us with,” I said, causing Solange to break into a genuine smile
and nod repeatedly. Her agreement confirmed that she loved books perhaps just
as much as I did. This was surely the beginning of a long and beautiful
friendship.
“Do you have the fees prepared?” Solange
asked, then accepting the bag of money that Rihyarda held out to her. She
checked its contents before tilting her head in confusion. “I believe there are
only eight Ehrenfest first-years, but here you are providing enough for nine.”
She counted the people seated in the room, then her eyes eventually fell on
Angelica. “I see. So a senior is registering as well. How delightful! It is
exceedingly rare for a student who did not register during their first year to
return at all.”
The registration fee meant that some couldn’t
afford to use the library in their first year, and it was apparently common for
such students to ultimately graduate without ever registering.
Once Solange had finished checking the money,
she started explaining how to use the library. “The first floor largely
contains reference documents for written classes. You may take them wherever
you like in the reading room for all your reading and transcribing needs, but
if you wish to take them outside the reading room, there is paperwork that must
be filled out and a deposit that must be paid.”
Students would need to offer up an amount
equal to the book’s value for insurance purposes. It was also mandatory that
they return any borrowed material before they graduated, though this seemed to
be the only deadline—students were allowed to keep whatever books they wanted
for a reasonably long time.
“On the second floor are valuable chained
books not used in Royal Academy lessons. You are only allowed to read them
where they are chained, meaning you cannot borrow them or even undo their
chains to take them to the reading room,” Solange continued. She then began
listing off a few smaller details—that no eating or drinking was allowed in the
library, that opening time was at second-and-a-half bell, that closing time was
at sixth bell, and so on. “Only those who swear to follow these rules and treat
the books well will be allowed to register.”
“I swear!” I shouted, shooting my hand up at
once.
Solange’s blue eyes wrinkled as she smiled.
“Then let us begin with your registration, Lady Rozemyne,” she said, gesturing
me over to the table by the windows. Just to be safe, I checked with Wilfried
that it was okay for me to get registered first, but he merely shrugged and
waved me away. He really wasn’t bothered.
“Tralala. Tralalalala.”
Once I was standing at the opposite side of
the table from Solange, she pushed a blank sheet of parchment over to me and
gave me a mana pen. “Now then, write your respects to Mestionora the Goddess of
Wisdom, then your vow that you will obey the rules of the library and treat its
books with respect,” she said.
I did as instructed, then Solange told me to
write out my name. She checked to make sure everything was satisfactory, then
added her confirmation signature, which caused the paper to burn up in golden
flames. It had been a magic contract with the library, and with that, my mana
registration was complete.
“Okay. Who is next?” Solange asked.
“Me,” Wilfried said, raising a hand. We
switched places, with me returning to my chair to wait for everyone to finish.
Only once they had all been registered did I stand up with a broad smile.
“Okay! Shall we go to the reading room then?”
“Milady, there will be no reading today. We
are purely here for the registrations. Have I not made myself clear?” Rihyarda
asked, wearing an especially dark expression. At this rate, I wouldn’t get to
see the library at all before being dragged back to the dormitory.
My dream of walking through the reading room
was being torn to shreds right before my eyes. Once again, I was being
presented with paradise, only for it to be taken away...
No! I won’t allow it! Never again!
I had been so eagerly looking forward to today
that Lieseleta had been giving me bemused looks since last night. My heart
ached and ached to see the library, which boasted the second-largest book
collection in the country. Had the registration taken place at a counter in the
library reading room, then I would have been satisfied, but this was simply too
much. Not once had it crossed my mind that I would be forced to leave the
library without even seeing the inside.
“I’m only asking to see the book room,
Rihyarda! Nothing more! I just want to smell all the books on the bookshelves!
Please! Please let me in the library! My precious, precious library!”
“You will not leave once you go in, milady,
and it takes a great deal of physical strength to pull you away from your
books,” Rihyarda said. “I cannot take such a risk when practical lessons are
beginning so soon.”
“M-My library...” I choked out. Tears welled
up in my eyes, then burst forth like a dam had suddenly broken. It had been
beaten into me that noble girls were never to cry in public, but the sheer
despair of my situation had temporarily wiped every single lesson from my mind.
Everyone flew into a panic as I collapsed onto the floor and sobbed, “My
library... My library...” over and over.
“Rihyarda... Rozemyne really did put her all
into making sure the first-years passed, all so she could visit the library,”
Wilfried said. “Don’t you, er... Don’t you think you could let her look around
just a little bit?”
“With this many people, we shouldn’t have any
trouble peeling Lady Rozemyne away from her books and dragging her to her next
lesson if need be,” Cornelius added. The first-years, who had gone through hell
for this explicit purpose, also threw in a few words of support.
When faced with so many pleas, Rihyarda
couldn’t help but give in. “If you all insist...” she said with a bemused
smile, but then she shot me a deathly serious glare. “However, milady, there
will be no reading today. Is that clear?”
“Yes, ma’am! I thank you ever so much,
everyone...” I went to rub my eyes, but Lieseleta caught my hand before I could
and wiped my tears for me with a handkerchief.
Solange gave a refined chuckle, having watched
the whole exchange. “I shall take this opportunity to personally guide you all.
It certainly is rare for a student to be so excited about the library. I must
say, it is quite heartwarming to see.”
“Thank you ever so much, Professor Solange. I
am truly, truly glad—beyond words, even—to have been blessed with entering this
paradise given to us by the gods. Let us pray to Mestionora the Goddess of
Wisdom in thanks for this meeting with the Royal Academy! Praise be to the
gods!”
After all this time, I was finally going to be
inside a library. My spirits had plummeted at Rihyarda’s rejection, but now, I
was so immensely excited that I threw both my arms into the air and raised my
left leg. I was so overjoyed that I gave a genuine prayer of gratitude to the
gods, causing a burst of mana to shoot out of my ring. The light was yellow
because I had prayed to Mestionora, and it soon spread through the room.
Oopsie.
Solange watched the light of the blessing in a
wide-eyed daze; Wilfried muttered, “I figured this would happen,” with a
drawn-out sigh; and Hartmut said, “That’s our Lady Rozemyne. To think she would
create a new legend all on her own...” while smiling in amusement.
I quickly averted my gaze by looking to the
back of the room, and that was when I saw the black and white rabbits hop up by
the partitioning screen. I had assumed they were nothing more than large
stuffed animals, but they actually started walking in our direction.
“Wha...? The (rabbits) are moving.”
“O-Oh my! Schwartz and Weiss!” Solange cried.
Her widened eyes and the emotion in her voice made it clear she was close to
the two rabbits, but the two of them—both tall enough to reach my
shoulders—walked right past her to stand in front of me.
“Milady? What do you need?”
“Work? Work?”
The rabbits stared up at me with round, golden
eyes that matched the golden feystones embedded in their foreheads. I blinked
in confusion, then looked to Solange for help.
“Professor Solange... what’s going on?”
“They are magic tools that regularly assisted
with library work back in the days when multiple archnobles served as
librarians. They are dolls that, while filled with mana, help their master with
whatever they need. As they regained the ability to move when blessed with your
mana, Lady Rozemyne, they currently consider you their master. I truly believed
I would never get to see them move again...” Solange said with tearful eyes. As
a mednoble, it seemed she lacked the mana required to support them.
“Right. Schwartz and Weiss, I instruct you to
assist Professor Solange with her work,” I said. Since they were library
assistants, I decided it would probably be best to have them continue helping
out here.
The two rabbits nodded. “Okay. We’ll help
Solange,” one said.
“What do we do, Solange?” asked the other.
I could see Solange’s eyes brimming with
nostalgic tears as she looked down at Schwartz and Weiss. “First, let us guide
Lady Rozemyne to the library.”
Schwartz and Weiss
“Let’s go, milady. The reading room.”
“We’ll take you.”
The two rabbits spoke again, then they
promptly started walking to the back end of the office. It was clear that they
wanted us to follow them, but those of us from Ehrenfest merely exchanged
glances; as students, we weren’t sure whether we were allowed to go where they
were leading us. Thankfully, Solange intervened.
“Schwartz. Weiss. That is not the door for
visitors,” she said with a small smile. “Your new lady is not a librarian, so
please treat her as you would any other guest.”
I could infer from her words that there was a
door farther inside the office that led directly into the library’s work space.
Schwartz and Weiss turned around and instead
started shuffling to the entrance we had come in through. When they reached the
door, they held it wide open for us.
“This way.”
“Milady is a visitor.”
I noticed that the rabbits were wearing
short-sleeved dresses, likely because they had been made to move around and
work. The black rabbit Schwartz wore a white dress, while the white rabbit
Weiss wore a black one, so both their outfits contrasted with their fur. Over
their dresses they wore vests decorated with a variety of colorful embroidery.
The gleaming stones that served as buttons looked a lot like feystones, so I
could guess that their clothes were very expensive.
Never before had I seen walking magic tools
like these, so I couldn’t help but assume Schwartz and Weiss were pretty rare
and valuable.
“Professor Solange, is there any danger of
Schwartz and Weiss being abruptly kidnapped, or stripped of all their
clothing?” I asked. “I must say, I am quite worried about them...”
“Schwartz and Weiss were built for working in
the library, so they cannot operate outside it, aside from when accompanying
their master. Furthermore, while I am not too well-informed on this myself,
many of their previous masters throughout history held similar concerns, and so
they covered them with various protective charms to prevent any kidnappings.
They are safe as long as they are in the library.”
“That is reassuring to hear.” I admittedly
still felt somewhat uneasy, but I followed Schwartz and Weiss out of Solange’s
office nonetheless.
“Milady. This way.”
The two rabbits guided our party down the
hall. It was exceedingly adorable how their heads and ears bobbed as they
shuffled around. I wasn’t sure who had made them, but our tastes in cute things
seemed to align perfectly.
Just as that thought crossed my mind, I heard
a dreamy sigh come from behind me. “Aah... How lovely they are...” someone
said.
I turned to see Lieseleta gazing at Schwartz
and Weiss, her green eyes sparkling with life. It was a rare sight, considering
that she usually acted extremely calm for her age. She came back to her senses
the moment she realized she had caught my attention, returning to her usual
neutral smile, but I could tell she was completely smitten with the rabbits;
the fact she kept stealthily glancing at them was a clear giveaway.
“I am glad to see you have also taken a liking
to Schwartz and Weiss, Lieseleta.”
“Erm, well... I raise shumils at home, and
this is my first time seeing ones that are this large and capable of speech,
magic tools or otherwise. I can’t quite contain my excitement,” Lieseleta
replied, a relieved smile playing on her lips as she let her eyes wander back
to the rabbits. Her gaze was overflowing with hopeless adoration. It was cute
to see her so enamored, but there was something she had said that caught my
attention.
“...Shumils, you say?”
I carefully eyed Schwartz and Weiss while
digging through my memory, trying to remember where I had heard the term
before. It was on the tip of my tongue, and as I continued racking my brain,
Lieseleta began a happy speech about shumils.
“Actual shumils are feybeasts no taller than
my knees, and they are often raised by nobles as pets. They naturally cannot
speak like these magic dolls can, instead communicating with chirps that sound
a bit like ‘pooey.’ Have you never seen one before, Lady Rozemyne? They love
rutrebs, and they are especially cute when they start vigorously chewing away
at one.”
They chirp? Like “pooey”?
The realization suddenly hit me, and I
grimaced as memories of my not-so-pleasant first meeting with Sylvester flooded
back into my mind.
“I cannot say by whom exactly, but I was once
told that I resemble a shumil...”
“Oh my. Now that you mention it, your golden
eyes are quite similar, and your dark, silky hair is much like the fur of many
shumils I’ve seen. Whoever made this observation was almost certainly praising
your cuteness.”
Yeah, I don’t think so. He poked my cheek and
forced me to say “pooey.” That doesn’t seem very praise-like to me.
I also recalled that Ferdinand had told me to
make my highbeast a shumil the first time he had seen Lessy. I actually might
have followed his advice had I known they were rabbit-like feybeasts, but by
this point my mental image of highbeasts was locked in on the Pandabus. It
wouldn’t be easy to change now, and I didn’t want to anyway.
“Here, milady. The reading room,” Schwartz and
Weiss said as they opened the thick double doors. Beyond them I could see rows
upon rows of wooden bookshelves standing some distance away from the walls,
closer to the center of the room. There were way, way
more than in any of the book rooms I had seen in Ehrenfest.
Aah! So many books! So, so many books! I’ve never
been so happy! I’m actually on the verge of tears!
There were as many bookshelves here as there
were in some small city libraries I had visited back in my Urano days, or
perhaps as many as there were in a side building attached to a huge public
library. This was my first time ever seeing somewhere with enough books to be
called a library in this world, and my heart was fluttering with joy.
“This is simply splendid,” I proclaimed. “I’m
so happy, I could cry. I must praise the gods...”
“You haven’t even gone inside yet!” Wilfried
cried out in surprise.
Cornelius rested a hand on my shoulder and
warned me not to give any blessings, while Rihyarda once again repeated that I
was not allowed to read any of the books. Had she not said that, there was no
doubt in my mind that I would have rushed to the nearest bookcase and
immediately started rifling through its treasures.
Schwartz and Weiss looked up at me with wide
eyes, watching our back-and-forth by the doors. “Milady? Inside?”
“Yes. Right. Here we go.”
My heart pounded as I took my first step
inside and started looking around. The right-hand side of the library had a
section without windows, as well as a counter for official business. There were
a few doors along the wall, one of which I could guess led into Solange’s
office, presumably so the librarians could more conveniently enter and leave
the library.
Ornately carved wooden partitions snaked
around the reading room, tall enough that they seemed to reach up to my
shoulders and everyone else’s waists. The walls, which were made of the same
ivory material as the castle and the Ehrenfest Dormitory, were lined with
thick, massive pillars, evenly spaced out between tall windows. The sunlight
that streamed into the room reflected off the radiant walls, making the library
interior look especially bright. There truly was an abundance of white, but the
pillars and walls were adorned with enough engravings that the decoration
didn’t seem too plain.
It looks a little bit like the temple, in a
sense.
At the center of the library was an atrium
where more light poured in through a ceiling window, and on the left-hand side
was a broad staircase leading up to the second floor. There were bound to be
even more books waiting for me up there.
Aah! A library with two whole floors! Be still,
my beating heart!
I wanted to start reading straight
away—everything from the smallest scrap of parchment to the largest tome. My
head was already swimming with questions. Where would the best reading spot be?
Where was it brightest in this electricity-free library? Which spot was closest
to the bookshelves? In the first place, were there any spots set aside
specifically for reading? I eagerly scanned the reading room in search of
answers.
“Milady. Are you searching?”
“Questions?”
Schwartz and Weiss called out to me as I
glanced around.
“Where should I read, I wonder? Is there a
good place just for reading books?” I asked.
“Yes. Over here.”
The two shumils cut straight through the
library, heading from where we had stood at the door to the very back. I
followed after them, all the while eyeing the books on the bookshelves. They
weren’t the sort with elegant leather covers that I was used to seeing in the
castle, but rather thin boards held together with string. I had assumed there
would be a plethora of thick, fancy-looking books here, what with this being
the Royal Academy library, but that didn’t seem to be the case; in fact, the
books here were a lot more like documents. Tags hung from the documents to
indicate the school years and subjects of their contents.
“These are fairly simple covers. Are these
books the bulk of what you keep on the shelves?” I asked.
“The books available on the first floor are
all study guides written by students,” Solange answered. It seemed that the
library purchased them from those with high grades and neat handwriting to aid
the poorer nobles. Giving the books all fancy leather covers simply wasn’t
feasible, as not only did the library buy so many books, but they also had to
source replacements for those that were damaged or went missing.
I gazed across the shelves and gave an
understanding nod. The books I had made in Ehrenfest would fit right in so long
as I slapped some wooden covers on them.
Covers or no covers, the smell is heavenly.
Nothing serves as a more pleasant reminder that I’m completely surrounded by
books.
I deeply inhaled as we reached the back wall
of the library. There were square pillars so thick I would just be able to
barely touch both sides of one if I stretched out my arms all the way. A number
of equally tall windows lined the walls between them, in front of which were a
few simple wooden desks and chairs, most likely to make use of the sunlight.
Upon closer inspection, the wooden partitions
I had seen from way back at the entrance were actually little doors. They
seemed to be locked, so I could guess the students weren’t allowed to access
them freely.
“These are carrels. We have the keys. We lend
them out.”
Eeee! They even have carrels!
The gaps between the pillars, which each
seemed to be roughly one square meter each, were being used as reading spaces
with partitioned-off desks known as carrels. It seemed they were basically
treated as private rooms, and just seeing them was enough to send my excitement
through the roof. The desk immediately in front of us wasn’t currently being
used, but there were still books, boards, and some ink stacked atop it.
“You can study. You can read. You can sleep
too. Many people sleep.”
I can imagine. Having the warm sunlight shining
down on you would be enough to make anyone sleepy, especially right after
lunch...
I looked around to see if anyone here was
taking a nap, but the reading room was near enough empty. There were a few
people sitting in the carrels, but I couldn’t see anyone walking around. It was
such a waste having so many books and desks going completely unused.
“I see not many people use the library...” I
commented.
“That’s not true, milady.”
“It’s only true now.”
Schwartz and Weiss always spoke with excessive
brevity, so Solange took it upon herself to elaborate.
“Few senior students pass their written
classes straight away, and most of the first-years who passed on their first
day have not yet been registered, so this is when the library is at its
quietest. Once we reach the midpoint of winter, however, there will be so many
students here that we won’t have enough carrels for them all. We’re always at
our busiest right before final exams.”
It turned out that archnobles preferred to pay
the deposit on books they needed to study and then take them to their rooms
rather than use the cramped carrels. Laynobles and mednobles could rarely
afford this option, and so they were the ones to stay in the library. It thus
came to pass that students tried to barricade themselves in carrels between
classes, even treating them like their own rooms.
“As a mednoble, I myself struggled with
studying back in the day, so I understand how they feel...” Solange began with
a smile. “However, I still find it rather troubling when students leave their
books in their carrels. They simply expect to keep their places until they’ve
finished transcribing what they need.”
The carrels at the south end of the library
were the most popular study spots, since they received the most sun from the
windows. Those on the west side and near the hall, meanwhile, were fairly
unpopular, since they didn’t get as much light. This was especially the case
for the west side, where the sun was only seen when it was already starting to
descend.
Status played a key role in the battle for
carrels, and it seemed the laynobles of lesser duchies tended to get stuck with
the least desirable locations on the west side and near the entrance.
I want a carrel too...
There truly was nothing more wonderful than
having a space near the bookshelves where one could sit and read at their own
leisure. I resolved to claim one of the carrels as my own the moment I
conquered all of my practical lessons.
Schwartz and Weiss began heading to the
counter where work was done. Those sitting in the nearby carrels looked up as
they heard us pass, then blinked in surprise upon seeing the shumils. I could
assume that someone would need to be about as old as Ferdinand to recognize
them, considering that the last time the two had been helping with library
business was before the civil war. Interestingly enough though, the surprise of
the students seemed to suggest that walking magic tools weren’t particularly
commonplace or normal to see.
“Professor Solange, I haven’t seen any moving
magic tools like Schwartz and Weiss before, but are they actually common here
at the Royal Academy?”
“No, no. They are quite rare. It is standard
to hide the results of one’s research, and my predecessor said that the method
used to create them has been lost entirely. I am told they were made by a
princess of the past, and so they always address their masters as female.
They’re all ‘milady’ to them.”
It seemed that even men were addressed as
such. I could hear a few of the other Ehrenfest students quietly chuckling to
themselves as they imagined male librarians having to endure the name with
embarrassed grimaces.
“Professor Solange, how are the books
organized on your shelves? If you have a categorization system, I would very
much like to hear about it.”
“Our books are organized according to when we
acquire them. Everyone prefers the newest ones, after all.”
That made sense, what with the books on the
first floor all being study documents. The older students would apparently
scramble to get these new books when the library opened on the first day of
written lessons, and as expected, the archduke candidates and archnobles would
always leave with the very best ones. Many didn’t even return them, deciding to
instead relinquish their deposits, which made things a lot harder for Solange.
“They don’t even bring back the books...?” I
asked, completely taken aback. “Could you not demand their return via an
ordonnanz?”
“This approach worked when we had archnoble
librarians among our staff, but I am just a mednoble, you see... All of my
complaints are simply ignored.”
The archduke candidates and archnobles rich
enough to leave their deposits behind were of a high enough status that they
could completely ignore Solange without any repercussions. It must have been a
massive inconvenience for her.
“Where did all the archnoble librarians go?”
“They were... reassigned to other positions
after the civil war. My predecessors entrusted me with Schwartz and Weiss,
saying that I would manage with their assistance, but my mana alone was not
enough for them. I could not make them move by myself.”
It seemed it was the shumils’ job to handle
the carrels, as well as the lending out and returning of reading material. The
mana from Solange’s predecessors had allowed them to continue moving for about
a year after they were reassigned, but then Schwartz and Weiss had stopped
moving entirely. Solange had mournfully set them on one of the bookshelves in
her office, having no choice but to continue her work alone.
“Here we lend.”
“Here you return.”
Once we arrived at the work space, Schwartz
and Weiss fought to climb up onto two nearby chairs as quickly as possible. It
seemed this was actually a regular desk rather than a counter, but it was
apparently where the library’s paperwork was done. The two shumils slapped
their paws on the tabletop, then began their explanation.
There were several bookshelves around the
desk, lined with documents and tools for work. The sight sent a wave of
nostalgia rushing through me as I remembered my time spent in my school’s
library committee back in my Urano days, and the part-time library jobs I had
worked.
“Speaking of which, I don’t see any other
librarians here...” I noted as I continued looking around.
Solange’s expression clouded over. “We are
suffering such a lack of personnel that I doubt they will ever spare me any
scholars.”
As it turned out, she was running the library
entirely by herself. Her higher-ups assumed that her job was as simple as
handling registrations, but there was much, much more to being a librarian than
they realized.
“Surely you have a lot more work to do than
everyone expects. How are you finding the time to do everything?” I asked.
“The semester is usually over by the time I
have finished managing the books and registering and deregistering the
students, so I do all my other work from spring to autumn, when there are fewer
students here.”
How awful...
The thought alone was enough to make my head
spin.
...Ah! Could this be my time to shine?! Things
definitely won’t be the same here, but I’ve spent more than enough time working
in libraries. This place is absolutely wonderful, and I want to do everything I
can to ensure it runs smoothly. If students can’t become librarians, maybe I
can at least form a library committee? I mean, this is a school, and every
school needs a library committee! Okay. Perfect!
“Professor Solange. I wish to—”
I had intended to say, “establish a library
committee to help you with your work,” but before I could finish, blue and red
lights shone down on the library. I glanced up in surprise, expecting to see
massive stained-glass windows overhead, but there was nothing of the sort; in
fact, there didn’t seem to be any explanation for the multicolor lights
whatsoever.
The lights disappeared after a few seconds, at
which point the few people using the library closed their books and stood up in
unison.
“What were those lights?” I asked.
“An announcement to leave for afternoon
classes,” Solange explained. “Some students become so immersed in their studies
that they do not hear the bells, but even they notice when the light shining on
their books changes colors. That is why we use them here in the library to
signal when the bell is about to ring.”
I nodded gravely, understanding just how easy
it was to become so absorbed in a book that you stopped paying attention to all
the noise around you. From behind me, I could hear Rihyarda mutter, “That is
good to know.”
“Professor Solange,” one student said. “Here
is the key to my carrel.”
“Yes, yes. You have practical lessons this
afternoon, correct? Good luck.”
One by one, the students handed Solange their
keys and hurriedly exited the reading room, still curiously eyeing Schwartz and
Weiss. Rihyarda watched them go with a smile, then pointed at the door.
“Well then, milady. Now seems as good a time
as any for us to leave for your practical lessons as well.”
“All you wanted was to enter the reading room,
yeah? Save the rest for when you’ve passed your classes,” Wilfried added.
“We’re going to be late if we do not leave
soon,” Cornelius agreed.
I looked up at the second floor and sighed,
having not had enough time to see what was up there. It was tragic that I
hadn’t gotten to read a single book either, but my hands were tied here. On the
bright side, I was more motivated than ever before; I had seen more reading
material than I could wish for, inhaled that sweet book scent, and spoken to
Solange about all manner of things. My lust for coming back to the library was
burning hotter than the sun.
I’ll pass all my classes as soon as possible,
then hole up in here twenty-four seven!
My fists were clenched with resolve as I made
my way out of the reading room. Schwartz and Weiss followed closely behind to
see us off, but when we arrived at the door, they reached out and tugged on my
sleeve.
“We did our job.”
“Milady. Praise us.”
Schwartz and Weiss were standing before me
with their eyes closed. I glanced over at Solange, unsure what they were
expecting me to do.
“Lady Rozemyne, stroke the feystones on their
foreheads and pour some mana into them. That will allow Schwartz and Weiss to
continue their work with renewed vigor,” she explained.
I naturally wanted the two shumils to stay
functional while I was busy passing all of my remaining exams, so I poured some
mana into their feystones as instructed.
“Schwartz, Weiss. Thank you for the tour.
Please listen to what Professor Solange says and continue to assist her with
her work,” I said.
“Okay. We’ll help Solange.”
“New clothes then?”
Schwartz agreed at once, but Weiss’s request
was so truncated that I once again had to tilt my head in confusion. Solange
turned her gaze to the ceiling as she dug through ancient memories, then she
suddenly clapped her hands together.
“It is customary for Schwartz and Weiss to
receive new clothes when their master changes. They want you to give them new
clothes as well, Lady Rozemyne.”
“...I imagine those will take around a year to
prepare, since I have no seamstresses here in the Academy, nor any cloth
prepared. Is that acceptable?”
Getting clothes for the both of them would
take some time, and it definitely wasn’t something I could have finished by the
end of winter.
Schwartz and Weiss nodded.
“New clothes take time.”
“We know.”
It seemed they were happy to wait, which meant
I would have plenty of time to make cute clothes for them.
“Speaking of which, Professor Solange... Are
Schwartz and Weiss boys or girls?”
“My my, Lady Rozemyne. Magic tools have no
gender. They care less about the style of the clothes they wear, and more about
the fact they come from their master.”
The magic tools were shaped after living
creatures, and yet it turned out they were completely genderless. There had
apparently been some generations when Schwartz and Weiss were dressed as girls,
some when they were dressed as boys, and some when they were dressed as
neither.
What should I have them wear? Hm... Whatever
clothes I pick, they’ll need a library committee armband, for sure. And if
they’re getting armbands, then I want one as well. I’ll ask Tuuli to make them
when I get back to Ehrenfest.
“Well then, I shall finish my classes as soon
as possible and return to the library. Please contact me at once if Schwartz
and Weiss are ever in need of more mana,” I said to Solange before finally
leaving the library. Schwartz and Weiss stood at the door, waving me goodbye as
I went.
Okay! Time to blast through my practical lessons
too!
Court Etiquette and Hirschur’s Visit
We exited the library and stepped into the
hallway, which connected to the buildings for scholars and attendants. Wilfried
and I instructed the apprentice scholars and attendants serving as our
retainers to go to their respective buildings, while we returned to the central
building with our apprentice knights and the first- and second-years.
When we got back, Judithe and the second-years
headed for the auditorium, Philine and her group went to the laynoble
classrooms, and then Roderick and his group went to the classroom for
mednobles. We archduke candidates went to the same hall as usual, but proper
court etiquette was extremely nuanced and changed in subtle ways depending on
one’s status, so a separate classroom was being used for archnobles.
Once we arrived, our adult retainers said they
would return for us later, then left.
“You sure look motivated, Rozemyne,” Wilfried
noted as we headed inside.
“But of course. My grand return to the library
relies on me passing these classes as soon as possible. I intend to have my
court etiquette studies over and done with by the end of the day.”
Despite all my efforts so far, the closest I
had gotten to my dream was touring the first floor of the library. I hadn’t
even been able to read a single book! I was going to pass these practical
lessons and then hole up among the bookshelves, no matter what it took.
“I’d even give up my life if it meant finally
gaining complete access to the library...” I added.
“Er, well... It’s good that you’re motivated,”
Wilfried said, sitting on one of the seats labeled “thirteen” before muttering
something about how things probably wouldn’t go as well as I was expecting.
“First-years are expected to know court
etiquette for greetings and the proper way to behave at tea parties,” our
professor—a woman called Primevere—began. “As I’m sure you’re all aware, once
your lessons are over, tea parties between duchies will be held for diplomatic and
social purposes. A common and shared understanding of etiquette is necessary so
that you do not displease each other at these gatherings. You have all been
educated in the basics, but there is a tendency for archduke candidates to
become slack over time, and their status as the highest authorities in their
home duchies often makes them inexperienced at maintaining a polite form. To
that end, we will be holding a faux tea party here in class, with the idea
being that a member of the royal family has invited you. We will see how your
court etiquette withstands a meeting with an individual of such superior
status, and I am sure the experience will serve as a useful reference for you
all moving forward.”
In our mock tea party, Professor Primevere
would be posing as the theoretical royal in question, while three assistant
professors would observe our etiquette and mark us based on the contents of our
conversations, our expressions, the manner in which we ate and drank, and so
on. Due to how thorough these checks were going to be, we were divided into two
groups: archduke candidates from the first to tenth duchies, and candidates
from the eleventh to the bottom duchy.
“We shall begin with the higher-ranked
archduke candidates,” Primevere announced, prompting the higher-ranking
archduke candidates to stand. Their first task was to greet the royal who had
invited them to the tea party, starting with the highest-ranked student.
It was clear from the way the highest-ranking
candidates held themselves that they had plenty of prior experience to work
with; they lined up smoothly, then started the greetings without hesitation.
Philine had mentioned that court etiquette teachers tended to be gentle and
overall quite relaxed in nature, and that few students ever failed, so I
initially watched the proceedings without much interest.
“Please try again from the very beginning.”
“...What?”
Much to my surprise, however, one student
after another received a failing mark at the very first stage. Primevere merely
shook her head at them, wearing a calm smile that left no room for debate.
“That is simply not good enough for a tea
party with royalty. Archduke candidates must be better,” she said. “Future
archdukes will invariably have meetings and tea parties with the royal family
at the Archduke Conference, so it will do you well to focus as much as
possible.”
It seemed that passing this class right away
was going to be harder than I thought. I straightened my back and watched as
the higher-ranking archduke candidates all steeled themselves. No matter how
closely I examined them, however, I couldn’t figure out what was wrong with
their greetings—they all seemed very much by the book. Each student was made to
repeat themselves at least once, and thus began a somewhat awkward tea party.
The way Primevere’s staring them down and making
them repeat themselves over and over... it feels like one of those job
interviews where the interviewer is deliberately trying to psych you out. Is
she just seeing how they react to being bossed around unfairly, since archduke
candidates are used to being of a higher status than those around them?
The others and I were watching from a
considerable distance away, so we couldn’t hear the exact contents of their
conversations. I could, however, tell that some of the students had already
wilted under the pressure of being made to repeat themselves again and again.
They began each attempt with nervously wavering eyes, desperately trying to
ensure they weren’t doing anything wrong to avoid being failed again.
“This seems even harder than expected...”
Wilfried muttered to me under his breath. Primevere wasn’t making the students
repeat themselves anymore, but those serving as attendants behind her and the
other professors were now writing on their boards. It would probably be wise to
consider them part of the “interview” as well.
“It seems Dregarnuhr the Goddess of Time has
woven today’s threads with exceptional speed and grace,” Primevere intoned. It
was a euphemism that pretty much meant, “Time flies when
you’re having fun.”
With that, the faux tea party came to a close.
The higher-ranking archduke candidates said their farewells before going back
to their seats, while those playing the roles of attendants cleaned up after
them, then began replacing the tea and sweets for us lower-ranking archduke
candidates. Meanwhile, the professors looked at the boards they had been
writing on and started announcing the results.
“Ninth, you must take care to remain graceful.
Pay more attention to how you move your fingers.”
“My apologies.”
“Third, do not speak only of yourself; also
listen to those around you.”
“Second, you are an archduke candidate of a
greater duchy. Act confidently and carry yourself with more dignity.”
“Seventh...”
Judging by the professors’ feedback, the most
important thing to remember was to keep one’s composure no matter how tense the
situation became. One needed to wear a confident smile at all times and refrain
from ever looking down at the floor—the very same rules that had constantly
been drilled into me since I started my life as a noble.
Remain graceful. Watch your surroundings. I
should be fine as long as I follow Mother’s teachings.
“Lord Wilfried and Lady Rozemyne of the
Thirteenth. Please enter.”
The exam was already well underway by the time
we were called. We had been told ahead of time that it included waiting
elsewhere and arriving at the tea party, so I straightened my back as elegantly
as possible before extending a hand to Wilfried with a pleasant smile. He
blinked in surprise, having not expected my request for him to escort me, then
took my hand at once. It would have been difficult—if not impossible—for me to
gracefully stand up from my seat without his help.
When the two of us arrived before Primevere,
Wilfried greeted her first. He knelt, crossed his arms in front of his chest,
and bowed his head. “May I pray for a blessing in appreciation of this
serendipitous meeting, ordained by the harsh judgment of Ewigeliebe the God of
Life?”
“Try again.”
Wilfried momentarily lowered his eyes, having
expected that response, then repeated the greeting as instructed. Primevere
made him do it twice more, watching him quietly all the while. I could see that
he was gritting his teeth in frustration.
“That is enough, Lord Wilfried,” Primevere
eventually said with a small sigh, waving a hand to dismiss him. He stood up
and silently left.
It was my turn to step forward next. I met
Primevere’s watchful gaze, smiled once, then knelt gracefully before crossing
both arms in front of my chest. “May I pray for a blessing in appreciation of
this serendipitous meeting, ordained by the harsh judgment of Ewigeliebe the
God of Life?”
“Try again.”
“As you wish.” I deepened my business smile,
then gave the greeting again, this time speaking even more politely than
before.
“You may.”
I was able to secure passing marks on my
second try. As I moved to my seat at the tea party table, Wilfried, who had
been waiting to escort me, muttered a frustrated, “You managed it after a
single repeat, huh?”
“The trick is to imagine her not as a
professor, but as true royalty,” I advised, all the while maintaining my polite
smile and continuing to face forward.
“I did,” Wilfried replied, though I could tell
he wasn’t truly aware of what I meant. He had barely ever interacted with
people of a higher status than himself, so even though he thought he understood
how to treat Primevere as royalty, he didn’t get it in the slightest.
“Lord Wilfried. Here is your seat,” said one
of the professors.
Wilfried instinctively moved in the direction
indicated to him, forcing me to pinch his arm and smile harder. That seemed to
get the message across, as he immediately turned and started guiding me to my
seat instead. I made sure to courteously raise a hand to the professor along
the way.
I clearly needed to give Wilfried some advice,
but we naturally couldn’t exchange many words with the professors and those
playing the roles of attendants watching our every move. Brevity was crucial.
Unlike the archduke candidates of the
higher-ranking duchies, who had truly never had anyone they needed to bow their
heads to, Wilfried was no stranger to being reprimanded for his mistakes. This
was partly the reason he had ultimately grown used to bowing his head to
Ferdinand, someone he had once hated. So long as he used these experiences to
his advantage, this lesson would surely be easy for him.
“Wilfried,” I whispered, “Ferdinand is here
watching us.”
Upon hearing those words, Wilfried
straightened his back in an instant. He was still facing forward with a smile,
but his eyes had started to wander nervously. It seemed my message had proven
effective.
“This is my seat. Thank you ever so much,
Wilfried.” I expressed my gratitude with an encouraging smile once he had
escorted me to my chair. Wilfried returned a smile brimming with newfound
confidence, then went to his own seat.
“Lady Rozemyne,” one of the attendants said
while pulling back my chair for me. It was much higher than I had expected,
causing me to blink in surprise.
Climbing up onto the chair was certainly an
option, but doing so would hardly be graceful. I gazed up at the attendant and
placed a hand on my cheek in a textbook gesture of worry. It had worked on Fran
and many others, so it would surely work on someone trained to be an
attendant...
Or so I thought. The attendant merely blinked
back at me in confusion, not even attempting to lift me onto the chair.
Is this part of the exam? I wondered, still
maintaining the worried pose. What’s the best move
I can make here?
The ideal situation would have been for the attendant
to lift me up right away, but it seemed they were testing me to see what I did
with an attendant who was slow on the uptake. It was clearly unacceptable for
me to climb onto the chair myself, and asking for her to pick me up directly
was far too demeaning for the daughter of an archduke. I could never, ever
admit weakness like that.
Is the right answer to find a way to overcome my
weakness, or to complain about the attendant? Hm... I’m theoretically dealing
with royalty here, so...
The attendant and I stared each other down,
and soon enough, I realized that I was the only one who hadn’t yet taken my
seat. I could tell that I was being watched not only by the archduke candidates
attending the mock tea party, but also by the higher-ranking archduke
candidates who had already finished theirs.
“Is something the matter, Lady Rozemyne?”
Primevere asked.
I turned to face her, my hand still on my
cheek. “Professor Primevere, we are to act as though this is a tea party being
hosted by royalty, correct?”
“Yes, that is certainly correct,” Primevere
replied, an interested smile playing on her lips. This was probably the most
important part of the exam for me, in which case it was crucial that I maintain
my noble air and not break my poise. I was a guest invited to a tea party by
royalty; there was no need for me to cover for a mere attendant.
“Professor Primevere, is this attendant a
recent hire? I am rather surprised they would make a mistake such as this, but
please do not scold them too much,” I said.
It was exceedingly rude for a host to not
understand the circumstances of their guests. Each time Elvira had arranged a
tea party, she had made sure to stress to me the importance of catering to
those you invited, whether that be meeting their preferences, adjusting their
seating arrangements, or managing any personal treatment they required. In this
regard, it was important to inform the on-duty attendants what would need to be
prepared and what would need to be done on the day of. The rudeness of an attendant
was, by extension, the rudeness of whomever they served.
In the case of this tea party, the host was
expected to know I was smaller than average and would thus struggle to sit down
on my own. Preparations should have been made to ensure I was not
inconvenienced, so by asking whether the attendant was a recent hire, I was
indirectly pointing out that the host had neglected to gather information
properly, inform their attendant of what to do, or adequately train them in the
first place. In a sense, I was accusing them of minor laziness.
“Oh my. What a disaster,” Primevere exclaimed.
She rang a bell while directing the attendant behind me to step down, and in an
instant, another attendant arrived to help me onto my chair. The fact that
everything had been settled with a single ring of a bell suggested she had
indeed gathered information in advance and informed her attendants about my
issue, so in this case, the problem was nothing more than a single incompetent
attendant.
“I do apologize for the inexperienced
attendant, Lady Rozemyne.”
“Think nothing of it. It has been difficult to
acquire high-quality attendants as of late,” I replied with a graceful smile,
now sitting on my chair. It was then that I noticed the attendant standing
behind Primevere write something down.
With that, the tea party truly began. I
treated it like a group discussion with food and drinks included, throwing
harmless softballs to the kids who were silently nursing their tea to get them
involved, pretending to listen to those raving passionately about one thing or
another, and flattering the host by praising the tea and sweets she served.
All in all, I worked pretty hard. A few
problems arose in the form of clearly manufactured accidents, no doubt to see
how we would react in the moment, and I made my decisions while looking around
to see what the others were doing.
There were a few instances where Wilfried was
goaded slightly, much like he had been when we initially greeted Primevere, but
he handled it much more smoothly and with a courteous smile. My warning that
Ferdinand was watching really had worked.
“Lord Wilfried and Lady Rozemyne of the
Thirteenth have passed,” Primevere soon announced. “They would do fine at any
tea party held in the Royal Academy.”
In the end, Wilfried and I were the only ones
to pass court etiquette on our first day. I contained the joy swelling within
me, doing my best to keep my smile elegant.
“I am honored,” I replied.
The faux tea party was over, but I could still
feel Primevere’s eyes on me. I made a mental note to save my excitement for
when I was back at the dormitory, and so I continued acting with grace even
after leaving the classroom.
“I PASSED COURT ETIQUETTE!” I yelled to
Rihyarda with a beaming smile the very second the dormitory door shut behind
me. The sudden outburst was enough to shock my gathered retainers, while
Wilfried’s retainers looked at their charge with worry.
“And you, Lord Wilfried...?”
“I passed too, but only thanks to Rozemyne.
Her words really did work wonders,” Wilfried noted, making his gratitude more
than apparent.
Rihyarda blinked, her curiosity quite
evidently piqued. “Wilfried, my boy... what did she say to you?”
“I simply told him that Ferdinand was watching
us,” I said.
While I was asleep, Wilfried had not only led
the playroom, but also performed both Spring Prayer and the Harvest Festival in
my place. This had meant spending time with Ferdinand whether he liked it or
not, and since Rihyarda knew this all too well, the revelation of my warning
made her cackle.
“Bwahaha! I said it would all pay off one day,
my boy, and it seems that day came a lot sooner than we expected!”
“Yup.”
I went to the common room after getting
changed into new clothes, where I observed the others making study documents
and purchasing information. I was trying to refrain from making any study
documents myself, since that would mean stealing work from the laynobles.
Instead, I simply pointed out when their handwriting wasn’t good enough, or
when their grammar was poor.
While everyone was using trial and error to
figure out the best way to make money, I planned ahead for my next class. What
could I do to hasten my grand return to the library? I had passed court
etiquette, which meant I now needed to focus on my dedication whirl, music,
highbeast, and schtappe acquisition practical lessons.
We were just practicing the dedication whirl
this year, so I really doubted the professors would expect much from us. I
decided to simply focus on the fundamentals; the most important thing for me
was ensuring I didn’t accidentally pray to the gods and cause any unnecessary
problems.
When it came to music, I had already been
invited to a tea party by the professors, which surely meant I was above
average. I just needed to negotiate a passing grade in exchange for publicizing
a new song or two.
My first highbeast class had been suspended
after Fraularm collapsed, but things would most likely continue from where they
had left off. According to Hirschur, a passing grade would be awarded once a
student could take their highbeast outside and fly one loop around the Academy
grounds, so I had nothing to worry about.
As long as Professor Fraularm doesn’t collapse
again, that is...
I was sure I could avoid any trouble by
getting Hirschur to assist Fraularm next time, but I really doubted she would
ever interrupt her research to take on extra, unnecessary work. The only way I
could secure her help was by making it somehow worth her while.
And tomorrow is schtappe acquisition...
The first-years would all enter a place known
as the Farthest Hall to gather feystones known as the Divine Will, which served
as the main building block for schtappes. I was worried that I would be unable
to properly gather one, but Cornelius assured me that everything would be fine;
I would apparently understand why the moment I got there.
That said, there was more to the lesson than
simply acquiring the feystone—I would also need to build a schtappe and learn
the basics of using it.
“Where is Lady Rozemyne?” came Hirschur’s
voice. She had rushed into the common room right as I was summarizing my
thoughts on how to pass my lessons. I blinked at her in surprise. For someone
the older students had said only came to the dormitory on the first and final
days of each semester, she sure was appearing a lot.
“What do you need today?” I asked, drawing her
attention to me.
“I just heard from a student that the
library’s magic tools were revived,” she said, striding over with a fervent
look of excitement on her face. “How did you manage it? I am certain they were
surrounded by a protective magic circle that prevented anyone but their master
from touching them.”
In the past, those who had touched Schwartz
and Weiss unprompted were apparently thrown back, which told me a bit about
what crazy things protective charms could do. How had she figured out I was the
one responsible though? It could have been any one of the Ehrenfest students in
the reading room.
“Why do you think I am the one who revived
them?” I asked.
Hirschur rolled her eyes. “Because the
Ehrenfest first-years were seen touring the library with two large shumils, one
black and one white. It does not take a genius to deduce who among them was
responsible. You, Lady Rozemyne, are the only person who continually commits
such unprecedented acts, and you failed to inform me of this one.”
“I didn’t think activating Schwartz and Weiss
was something that demanded your attention, especially considering how busy you
are,” I replied.
Judging by the excitement lurking in
Hirschur’s eyes, I could guess she cared less about being kept up to date as
our dorm supervisor, and more about experimenting on Schwartz and Weiss. As
their new master, I had to protect them from her.
“Schwartz and Weiss cannot leave the library.”
“...I believe they can, if you are with them.”
“I will not let you disassemble them,” I said
with a glare.
“Goodness me. I would never do such a thing. I
simply want to remove their clothes.”
“...Do you have a thing for removing the
clothes of magic tools, Professor Hirschur?” I asked, getting on the defensive
in case she was even more of a weirdo than I thought.
“I am a professor specializing in the creation
of magic tools,” she shot back with a wry smile. “It is only natural that I
would want to learn more about two special magic tools, the designs of which
remain a mystery to the world. As far as I know, the parts of their bodies
hidden by their clothing offer clues as to how they were created. I simply wish
to see those parts for myself.” There was no mistaking the scholarly look in
her eyes, but she still wanted to see them without their clothes on; my fears
were more than justified.
“As their new master, it is my duty to protect
Schwartz and Weiss. There is too much work at the library for Professor Solange
to reasonably handle alone,” I said.
Hirschur knitted her slender brows together as
she pondered the situation, then began tapping her temple with a finger, just
as Ferdinand always did when he thought things over.
Oh my gosh. Ferdinand really did get a bunch of
his quirks from Professor Hirschur.
As I cackled on the inside, Hirschur seemed to
have a sudden epiphany. Her head shot up, her lips curved into a grin, and the
eye behind her monocle glimmered with interest. “As I recall, Lady Rozemyne...
it is tradition for Schwartz and Weiss’s master to award them with new clothes,
correct?”
“...Is that so?” I replied, doing my best to
play dumb. Hirschur had been in the Royal Academy for a very long time, but I
had no idea how much she knew about the subject. It seemed that my momentary
hesitation was all she needed to confirm her suspicions, however, as her smile
immediately broadened.
“Do allow me to accompany you while you are
measuring them and changing their clothes,” she said. “Naturally, I will not
touch them, nor remove the clothes myself.”
As
far as I was concerned, that excuse was no better than saying something like, “Just let me follow you into the shower. Don’t worry though, I won’t
strip you myself.”
Before I could protest, however, Hirschur
continued. “If you allow this, I will serve as the presiding professor for your
remaining magecraft lessons. You are not allowed to enter the library until you
have passed all of your classes, correct? I assure you, it will take you a very
long time to secure a passing grade in your highbeast lessons with how much
Fraularm currently resents you.”
She’s... She’s a demon! Hirschur is a demon
seducing her students to the dark side!
After an intense battle of wits, I ultimately
succumbed to the whispers of a demon who would make my life easier all the way
to graduation.
Schtappe Acquisition
I spent the morning working on study documents
and practicing the harspiel. Rosina had instructed me to practice from
breakfast to third bell, just like I would in the temple, and everyone else had
ended up following suit. As a result, we all gathered in the common room and
played together. I was preparing for my tea party with the professors, while
everyone else was practicing at their respective skill levels.
More and more students from the other grades
were finishing their written lessons as well, and it wasn’t long before near
enough everyone was practicing together. Some people tried studying in their
rooms, but the noise must have been too much, as they usually came back a short
while later with their harspiels in hand.
“I’ve been practicing a lot less recently,
since I haven’t been able to secure regular practice time in the dormitory,”
one student said. “With each year I advance, I get less praise from my music
teachers in class.”
“Then perhaps it would be wise to permanently
establish this period as harspiel practice time,” I replied.
While I was practicing the songs I planned to
debut at the tea party, Rosina started mercilessly purging the lyrics I had
come up with myself.
“Lady Rozemyne, as this is a song dedicated to
Mestionora the Goddess of Wisdom, might I suggest praising the Grutrissheit
instead of the library?”
She went on to explain that the Grutrissheit
was the original bible, owned by Mestionora herself. The first king of the
country had been chosen by the gods and permitted to transcribe a copy. I
decided it was best to leave the lyrics to Rosina, and soon enough, my
passionate lines about the library were reworked into verses admiring
Mestionora, peppered with all sorts of theological references.
But, well... I guess this is okay. I’d rather
this than everyone getting even more weirded out about my love of the library,
plus it greatly reduces the risk of me accidentally blessing everyone while I
sing...
“Actually, Rosina, would you mind completely
rewriting the song? I’ve got a feeling that my lyrics about the library are
going to result in me giving a blessing during my performance.”
“Oh my, but what is wrong with giving a
blessing while praying to the gods and singing a song in their honor?” she
replied. It seemed that her understanding of things was somewhat distorted,
which was honestly to be expected when she had been raised in the temple—the
house of the gods—beneath an art-loving shrine maiden. I doubted she realized
that giving such a blessing at the Royal Academy would cause quite the stir.
“I am doing my best to give as few blessings
as possible,” I explained.
“...If you insist, Lady Rozemyne. I will
refrain from using any lyrics related to the library.”
Harspiel practice came to an end at third
bell, at which point I started helping Hartmut with his scholar study guides
while simultaneously learning more about the scholar course itself.
“Lady Rozemyne, are you also intending to take
the scholar course?” he asked.
“Indeed. I intend to become a librarian, so I
shall be taking the scholar course alongside the archduke candidate course. I
have already discussed this matter with Ferdinand,” I replied while reading
about the coursework for third-years.
“Are you not aiming to become Aub Ehrenfest?”
“Not once have I ever even considered it. As I
said, I wish to become a librarian, so that role would do nothing but waste my
time and effort. My current dream is to use my position as the Saint of
Ehrenfest to conquer the temple’s book room, or alternatively conquer the
castle’s book room while assisting the archduke. My ambition burns for nothing
else.”
My ultimate goal was to marry whoever owned
the largest library and then sit among its bookshelves forevermore, but I
naturally couldn’t say that to my retainer.
“With this in mind, if you ever come to
realize that serving me will only be a dead end for your career, please do tell
me,” I continued. “I will allow you to leave without any hard feelings.”
My schtappe acquisition lesson was being held
in the afternoon. Schtappes were the perfect tool for efficiently and
accurately wielding the mana within oneself, and only once I had my own could I
become an official noble. Ferdinand had mentioned that several researchers had
attempted to make tools even more effective than schtappes in the past, but
none had succeeded; the quality of the material that went into making schtappes
was just on an entirely different level.
Schtappe acquisition had initially taken place
when third-years were being split into their specialized courses, but around
ten years ago, the current king had changed things so that they would be
acquired as soon as new students entered the Academy. As far as he was
concerned, the faster one learned to use their schtappe, the better.
From what I had been told, schtappe
acquisition consisted of acquiring the Divine Will that served as the raw
material for one’s schtappe and then returning with it. That was the entire
class, but it was an important event for becoming an adult noble. The
first-years all looked pretty excited on their way to the auditorium, while the
older students on their way to their own lessons cheerfully urged them to calm
down with nostalgic expressions.
“Were there always this many first-years?” I
mused aloud, blinking in surprise. The entire grade was gathered in the
auditorium for the schtappe acquisition.
“It only feels that way because you no longer
have any written classes,” Philine replied with a small smile. The sight didn’t
come as much of a shock to her because she was still attending geography and
history classes, but as someone who hadn’t gone to one since passing my exams,
this was my first time seeing so many first-years gathered in one place in
quite a while.
The busy auditorium fell silent the moment the
professors appeared. Primevere stepped forward, then looked across the gathered
students.
“Everyone is here, I see. I will soon be
guiding everyone to the Farthest Hall, starting with the archduke candidates,
but first, there is one rule you must all obey under any circumstances: do not
touch anyone after you have gathered your Divine Will. It must be dyed with
your mana and your mana alone in order to produce a high-quality schtappe.
Space yourselves out such that you do not bump into anyone on the way back, and
spend Earthday tomorrow filling the Divine Will with mana.”
Once all the archduke candidates were lined
up, Primevere took the lead. There was a door at the back of the auditorium
which led into another room.
Wow! There’s a chapel here?!
It was a pure-white room, with circular
pillars spaced out at equal distances on either side of us. The farthest wall
had a multicolored mosaic built into it from the ceiling to the floor, and in
the middle of the room was a forty-some step staircase going up three stories
high, on which were offerings for and statues of the gods. At the very top were
the King and Queen gods; on a lower step was the Goddess of Earth, who was
holding a chalice; then on an even lower step were the Goddess of Water, God of
Fire, Goddess of Wind, and God of Life, all positioned in a line.
I wonder what my attendants
back at the temple are doing... I thought to
myself, the familiar sight of the shrine having made me feel somewhat
nostalgic. I knew they were most likely doing well, since they had managed just
fine without me for two whole years, but I couldn’t suppress my sudden urge to
see Fran and the others.
It seemed I was the only one who felt homesick
upon seeing the altar; everyone else was too busy gasping in awe.
“This is the Farthest Hall, the place closest
to the gods,” Primevere explained. “Everyone here shall only be given one
opportunity to gather their Divine Will. As mentioned, take an exceptional
amount of care not to bump into anyone else once you have yours. There are two
paths—one for those entering and one for those exiting—so make sure to take the
left path on your way back, no matter what.”
With that, Primevere reached out to a
feystone. An instant later, the shrine’s staircase began rumbling as it moved
slowly to one side, revealing a gaping square hole that led deeper into the
shrine.
“May you have the gods’ protection and
guidance.”
At Primevere’s encouragement, the first
archduke candidates stepped into the hole, their expressions tense. Wilfried
and I followed after them. The shrine was made out of the same ivory stone as
the Royal Academy and the dormitory, and even the hole was perfectly paved on
all sides.
Our footsteps echoed as we pressed onward. The
path wasn’t particularly narrow, and there was enough space for three people to
walk next to each other.
About five meters in, the square hallway
suddenly became less uniform. The floor continued on, providing an ivory path
for us to walk on, but the walls and ceiling were now made of crude rock. The
hole had brought us into a natural cave. The only light source was the ivory
path that glowed underfoot, which would guide us to the exit on our way back.
“Who knew a place like this would be behind a
chapel shrine...?” I mumbled, looking around a little before continuing on. The
ivory path snaked through the wide curves of the cave, and it seemed we were
going ever upward. There were several staircases along the way, with another
one popping up after a short walk. After a while, I could almost feel how much
higher up we were.
I’ve been power walking for so long... I’m going
to lose my breath any moment now...
Even with all the enhancers on me, I was only
as strong as an average person. And when combined with my short stature, I was
getting steadily farther away from the front.
“Go on ahead,” I eventually said to the other
candidates. “As you can see, I am shorter than you all, so it is hard for me to
match your pace.”
I moved to the side to let an archduke
candidate get by me. Wilfried immediately offered to accompany me, but I turned
him down.
“You go on ahead, Wilfried. We won’t be able
to return together anyway. But when you pass me on the way back, please do tell
me how much farther I have to walk.”
“...Alright.”
Wilfried didn’t look very convinced, but he
walked on with the other candidates nonetheless, repeatedly turning back to
check on me.
I sighed, now walking at my own pace. I was
sure I could have kept up with the others for a while longer, but it was
getting harder to maintain an air of grace while constantly power walking down
this seemingly endless road.
A short while after the archduke candidates
had disappeared up ahead, I heard some footsteps coming from behind me. It was
the archnobles. Their eyes wavered as they debated whether they should say
anything to the lone candidate walking all on her own, so I told them what I
had told the others and sent them on their way. Ehrenfest’s archnoble student
looked back at me over and over again with a worried expression as he walked
on, much like Wilfried had done.
I continued along at my own pace, and next
came the mednobles. They gave me bizarre looks, which I simply ignored as I
told them to go on without me.
“Lady Rozemyne?” came a voice.
“Oh. Hello, Roderick. You may go on ahead as
well.”
I was partway through giving him the
explanation I had repeated several times now when a mednoble from another duchy
walking at the front of the group suddenly shouted, “Ah! There it is!”
“Hm? What?”
I turned my gaze to where the boy was focused,
but I wasn’t at all sure what he had found. To me, he seemed to be staring at
the plain rock wall; there was nothing special there that I could see. His
eyes, however, were locked on one spot in particular. He stepped off the ivory
road toward it, then reached out a hand. I could tell from how assured his
movements were that he was definitely seeing something, and when he turned
around again, his fingers were curled as though he were holding an invisible tube
of some kind.
“Sorry, but could you make way?” the boy asked
with a pleased smile. He cut through the group, then sped along the path back
to the entrance, his eyes remaining locked on whatever was in his hands.
“Did he find something?” Roderick asked. “Did
you see it, Lady Rozemyne?”
“No, it looked like he was holding nothing but
air...”
Everyone who had seen the first person to find
their Divine Will was immediately overcome with intrigue, and they slowed down
to watch the cave walls more carefully. They were now moving at a pace I could
comfortably keep up with, at which point Roderick and I started talking about
the Divine Will and what kind of feystone it might be.
It wasn’t long before another person cried
out—this time a girl. “I found it!” she shouted in a lively voice. Meanwhile, I
could see another boy at the front of the group stray from the path and head
over to the wall. Everyone who claimed to find their Divine Will knew exactly
where to go, so there was no denying that they were actually there.
Roderick started looking around as well,
driven by how many others were finding their Divine Will. It was clear from his
expression how much he wanted to spot his.
“Ah!” he cried, his gaze suddenly focusing on
a point farther ahead on the path.
“Did you find yours?” I asked.
“Yes! It’s shining beautifully!”
I couldn’t see what Roderick was looking at,
as expected, but there was evidently something there. He smiled proudly and
raced down the path, then reached toward the wall. I could tell he had touched
something because his eyes widened in surprise, then he hugged the feystone I
couldn’t see to his chest.
“Lady Rozemyne. If you will excuse me.”
“Take care not to drop it or bump into
anyone,” I noted.
Roderick started making his way back, while I
continued walking in the opposite direction. As everyone else was finding their
feystones, some of the archnobles from earlier started walking back past us.
They had evidently found theirs somewhere up ahead, and I could guess that my
feystone was going to be even deeper in the cave.
I’m going to have to go all the way to the back
of this cave, aren’t I...? I’m exhausted already...
I walked on at my own leisurely pace as fewer
and fewer people surrounded me. Those who remained were steadily leaving the
path to grab their feystones, so it was becoming both easier to walk and easier
to see ahead. It was kind of sad seeing everyone leave one after another
though.
Determined to continue, I walked, climbed
stairs, and walked some more. It wasn’t long before there was nobody else with
me, and the only people I saw were those coming back. An odd-looking line had
formed, since the students were all trying to keep a fair distance away from
each other, so as to avoid accidentally bumping into one another. Given that
this was around where the mednobles had found most of their Divine Wills, I
could guess that the archnobles were returning from much farther ahead.
Eventually, some archduke candidates started
getting mixed in with the returning archnobles. I recognized everyone from my
practical lessons, and soon enough, I saw Wilfried coming back among them.
“You’re still all the way back here?” he asked
with widened eyes. “The archduke candidate feystones are way deeper inside.” He
was cradling something in his hands as well, which encouraged me to pour some
more mana into my enhancers. Doing this would make walking considerably easier,
but I had to be careful about how much mana I used—if I used too much, my
muscles would ache so badly tomorrow that I wouldn’t even be able to move.
I slowly increased my pace, aiming for the
farthest point of the cave. Soon enough, there weren’t even any candidates
walking back. I truly was alone, the only noise being the light patter of my
echoing footsteps. I climbed more stairs, found nothing on the walls, and then
climbed yet more stairs. The lack of people and repetitive scenery was boring
to say the least.
“Where are youuu, my precious little feystone?
I’m so tiiired...”
Of course, there was no response; my words
merely echoed through the cave. The ivory path led to yet another staircase,
but this one was unique—while the others had contained reasonably few steps,
this was a spiral staircase that seemed to go up an entire story.
“Guuuh... Another staircase. Seriously, how
far am I gonna have to walk?” I grumbled while starting to climb the white
spiral staircase. My surroundings got brighter the higher I climbed, until
eventually...
“Wooow.”
I exited into a white plaza. It seemed to be a
dead end, since there was no longer a path going forward. The ivory floor was
now circular, and in the middle was a large sculpture of a tree that seemed to
be made of the same ivory substance as everything else. Its white branches
covered in equally white leaves extended outward, stretching up to a large hole
in the middle of the ceiling through which light was streaming down.
At the base of the tree was a feystone glowing
a rainbow of colors. It was sticking straight up out of the ground and looked a
lot like a vertical crystal hexagon. It stretched all the way up to my stomach.
Aah. This is it. This is my stone.
Just as everyone had said, I recognized the
feystone in an instant. The sunlight streaming through the tree branches made
it turn all sorts of different colors. It was like a dream, and with a sense of
reverence in my heart, I started making my way toward the stone. It gleamed as
I came closer.
“I’ll be taking this...”
I knelt in front of the Divine Will and
reached my hands out. The second I touched its surface, it slid up out of the
ground and started floating in front of me, as if asking me to take it. I
hugged the Divine Will to my chest as it shone a variety of colors, then let
out a pleased sigh.
“Okay. Time to go back.”
I would need to take the Divine Will all the
way back to the entrance of the tunnel, and so with it firmly secured in my
arms, I tried pouring more mana into my enhancers.
“Wha...?”
Any mana I tried pouring into the enhancers
was immediately sucked up by my feystone. I wouldn’t be able to physically
enhance myself any more than I was already, so it seemed I would need to get
back in my current state. Just thinking about the long road ahead was enough to
make me slump my shoulders.
Standing in place wouldn’t do me any good, so
I turned my back to the massive ivory tree and started my journey back to the
chapel. This time, I would be alone from start to finish.
I fearfully climbed down the spiral staircase,
cradling the feystone in both arms all the while. Once again, the only noise
was the echo of my footsteps. The way back was certainly easier, since I was
going down rather than up, but my lack of stamina was really starting to show.
“Okay, okay. I need a break,” I said to
myself. “Even with the enhancers, this is exhausting...”
Somewhere along the way back, I sat down on a
set of stairs to rest with the feystone still in my arms. Everything looked so
identical that I had no idea how much farther I needed to go. I leaned against
the wall and let out a heavy sigh, praying that the exit was nearby, and it was
then that the exhaustion hit me like a strong wave. I could feel my eyelids
starting to droop, and soon enough, no matter how hard I tried to fight it, my
consciousness slipped away.
“DON’T GO TO SLEEP! YOU’LL DIE IF YOU DO!”
came a sudden roar. “WAKE UP! STAND! YOUR LIFE HAS ONLY JUST BEGUN!”
“Bwuh?!”
The voice echoed through the cave like
thunder, making my ears ring. I shot up at once, only to see Rauffen waiting
nearby, his fists tightly clenched with determination as he continued calling
out to me.
“Whew! Good to see you’re back on your feet,”
he said, stepping back a little to reveal the other professors standing behind
him. Hirschur came forward to take his place, then explained the circumstances
to me. It seemed that I had taken so very long to return that they had thought
it necessary to send out a search party for me.
Hirschur had initially gone alone. She had
been certain that I hadn’t gotten lost, given that this was a linear pathway,
and she soon found me passed out against the wall. Since I already had my
Divine Will, however, she wasn’t able to touch me. She had no choice but to try
calling out to me, but I didn’t respond no matter how hard she tried.
In a panic, Hirschur had rushed back to the
chapel, then returned with several other professors. Only when Rauffen, the
loudest of them all, shouted at me did I finally wake up again.
“I had heard you were in poor health, and for
a moment there, I was truly worried you had died,” Hirschur said.
“My apologies...”
“Ferdinand had told me you were not fully
healthy again, but you seemed to be doing just fine in the Royal Academy, so I
ended up letting my guard down,” she admitted while gesturing for me to follow
her out.
And that was how the Saint of Ehrenfest nearly
climbed the towering stairway on her journey to acquire her Divine Will. It
hadn’t been my intention, but I was now the focus of yet another new legend in
Royal Academy history.
My First Earthday
When I eventually made it back to my own room,
Rihyarda instructed me to put my Divine Will on the bed. “I don’t really want
to do this, since it might impact the feystone, but...” She trailed off with a
sigh, then started peeling off my clothes while wearing mana-blocking gloves.
One would normally only bathe after filling
their Divine Will with mana, but after falling asleep against exposed rock, I
wasn’t nearly clean enough to get in bed. Rihyarda had said that I wouldn’t be
able to get into a proper bath, but she was at least able to wipe me down with
wet towels. It made me feel a lot better.
“Drink this and rest well, milady.”
After preparing one of Ferdinand’s special,
awful-tasting potions for me, Rihyarda stepped back and silently waited for me
to drink it. I could still move a little thanks to my enhancers, but my head
was spinning and the chills were unbearable. There was no denying that I’d
developed an intense fever, but I couldn’t help looking between Rihyarda and
the oh-so terrible potion.
I might be sick, but I still don’t want to drink
that mercilessly nasty thing...
As I shrunk back in fear, Rihyarda somehow
managed to give me a judgmental look while still maintaining her smile. It was
quite impressive, all things considered.
“To think you were asleep in the Farthest
Hall, in this season... Even a normal child would catch a cold, or if worst
came to worst, climb the towering stairway! Is it not a miracle you are even
alive right now?!”
“I’m sorry for worrying you...”
Rihyarda had always been the one to panic most
over my ill health back in the castle, so it was no surprise that she had
started to worry when I hadn’t come back from the cave. She revealed first to
Hirschur and then to all the other professors just how many incidents my poor
health had caused in the past, which had made the other professors realize that
I wasn’t just an unfit student who had gotten tired while getting my Divine
Will; rather, I was so sickly that I had collapsed and almost died.
“Drink it all. Now, milady.”
“Okay...”
I picked up the vial and chugged the goopy
green liquid that was inside. There was no point in hesitating—trying to drink
it slowly would only prolong the suffering.
“Nghhh!”
It had been such a long time since I last
drank one of these vile potions that I immediately had to clap a hand over my
mouth to avoid throwing up. But as I rolled around on my bed, tears welling up
in my eyes, I started feeling better and better. The potion really did work; it
was just the drinking it part that made me feel as though my soul were being
torn from my body and dragged down into hell.
“Enjoy your rest, milady.”
After confirming that the potion was gone,
Rihyarda finished cleaning up my room, then swiftly exited.
“It sure has gotten smaller...” I mused while
lying on my bed, looking at the Divine Will. It had shrunk enough that I could
now hold it in one hand. I squeezed it tightly, and the more mana I poured into
it, the smaller it got. It seemed I was absorbing it into my body as it fused
with my mana.
When I had woken up after falling asleep in
the Farthest Hall, my Divine Will had shrunk so much that it initially took me
by surprise. Hirschur had thankfully explained that this was simply how it
worked, and she had noted that I should keep pouring my mana into it until it
became one with me.
Absorbing the Divine Will into oneself could
only be done by cradling it, almost like a mother hen warming her egg.
Completing the process would require hugging it for an entire day and night
while pouring mana into it, so it was tradition for schtappe acquisition to
take place on a Fruitday. This way, students could dedicate the subsequent
Earthday to their Divine Will.
“Either way, I’m just glad I got back safely,”
I said with a sigh, thinking back to all the fuss I had caused. Rauffen had
managed to wake me up with an especially loud shout, and everything after that
had been terrible...
The mana levels in my enhancers had gone back
to normal while I slept, and my muscles had already started to ache, so my legs
were wobbling from the moment I stood up. I had also caught a cold; my head
throbbed, and while I had the chills, my body also felt burning hot at the same
time. The professors couldn’t touch me, so they anxiously watched on as I
hobbled down the tunnel.
“Professor Hirschur, can I ride my highbeast
back to the dorm? Please. Just for today,” I begged.
Sylvester, as Aub Ehrenfest, allowed me to
ride my highbeast inside the castle, and since he also owned the Ehrenfest
Dormitory, this permission applied there as well. The Royal Academy itself,
however, was an institution run by the royal family; I would need permission
from those invested with their authority to ride my highbeast inside. It was
for that reason that I glanced between the professors, hoping they would allow
it.
Primevere furrowed her shapely brow and shook
her head. “I can grant you permission, but you will not be capable of creating
your highbeast while holding your Divine Will,” she said.
That reminded me—all the mana I had tried
pouring into my enhancers had gone straight into the Divine Will instead. Even
so, I was sure I could forcibly pour mana into my highbeast feystone; I just
needed to hold it in my hand and focus.
“I’ll at least give it a go,” I said, then I
gripped my highbeast feystone and started pouring in my mana. Half was sucked
into the Divine Will, but I somehow managed to use the rest to make a
one-person Pandabus. I uneasily climbed inside, then set the Divine Will down
by my feet and put my hands on the steering wheel.
I could guess that the Divine Will was sucking
out my mana through Lessy, and the fuzziness in my head was making my mana flow
strangely. My trusty Pandabus drove on nonetheless. He was going much slower
than usual, but still fast enough that we were making decent progress, which
the professors were all relieved to see. They started offering their commentary
while walking around me.
“So this is the rumored highbeast...?” one
said.
“Oho. So this is what knocked Fraularm
unconscious,” Rauffen remarked. “It sure looks tough.”
Lessy’s not tough! He’s cute, and adorable!
I wanted to protest Rauffen’s praise, but I
could barely even manage to open my mouth. In the end, I resorted to a simple
pout and an annoyed glare.
“Isn’t it spectacular that she can ride it
even while wearing a skirt?” Hirschur added. “I have decided to try making such
a highbeast myself, to see what it is like.”
This declaration seemed to interest Primevere
in particular. “Oh my. Now that you mention it, she can indeed ride it with a
skirt on. The design of the highbeast seems to be fairly complex, though.”
As expected, having to change into riding
clothes every time they wanted to ride a highbeast was not something the women
liked very much at all.
“Even after receiving an explanation from Lady
Rozemyne herself, I struggled to conceptualize the ‘steering wheel’ and
‘accelerator’ of which she spoke,” Hirschur said. “My current plan is thus to
copy the overall structure while using reins like any other highbeast on the
inside.”
Fraularm had screeched about how unnatural it
was for a highbeast without wings to fly, but according to Hirschur, it could
almost certainly be reproduced now that it was proven to be possible. It was
the confirmation and mindset that mattered most.
“Fraularm is rather hardheaded, you see. What
could possibly be wrong with caring more about the utility of a highbeast than
its beauty?” Hirschur had said. “Being able to carry luggage in your highbeast
is simply marvelous, if you ask me.”
The way she had insulted Lessy’s appearance
and treated him like an object while simultaneously praising his ability to
carry my luggage reminded me a lot of Ferdinand.
Like teacher, like student, I suppose...
And so, I spent the rest of the journey with
curious professors peering into my highbeast. Being inside Lessy meant I was
moving much faster than I could have on foot, and once we were safely back in
the chapel, everyone let out such blatantly relieved sighs that they kind of
stuck in my mind.
Rihyarda and Wilfried wept at my safe return,
having been worried sick while waiting at the entrance. Hirschur had then
walked me back to the dormitory, making the excuse that she could hardly focus
on her research knowing that I could die in class at any moment.
It was now Earthday morning—my first day off
since coming to the Royal Academy. We first-years didn’t get to enjoy this
sacred day, however; instead, we had to carry around our Divine Wills like
chicken eggs while filling them with our mana. Since the mana of others would
reduce the quality of our schtappes, we had our attendants bring our breakfasts
to our rooms, where we would then eat alone.
“Rihyarda, how do the older students spend
their free days?” I asked when she came in with my food. From what I had seen,
they normally did whatever suited their tastes, whether that be going to the
library to study, having tea parties with their friends from other duchies,
gathering information, or participating in apprentice knight training sessions.
“I was hoping to go to the library.”
“That will need to wait until you are better
again and have passed your classes.”
“I’m fine. I drank the potion, remember? And
my Divine Will is really small now.”
“Yes, yes. Either way, you are still spending
today in bed,” Rihyarda said incontestably, producing one of the
improved-flavor potions. No sooner had I downed it than I was immediately
chased back into bed.
“Rihyarda, could you at least bring me a
book?”
“You must focus on your Divine Will today,
milady.”
Reading evidently wasn’t an option. I sadly
listened to Rihyarda’s retreating footsteps, then picked up my Divine Will,
which was now small enough to fit comfortably on my palm. It was then that I
suddenly realized something.
“Won’t this whole process go a lot quicker
without my enhancers on?” I wondered aloud. I experimentally moved the Divine
Will to my left hand and removed the enhancer on my left arm, and just as I
theorized, the feystone started to shrink before my eyes. Soon, it was gone
entirely.
Gaaah! Why didn’t I think of this sooner?!
I stared at my now-empty hand in a daze, let
out a heavy sigh, then started putting the enhancer back on, all the while
telling myself that the fever was to blame for my not noticing sooner. The
Divine Will had seemingly been absorbed into me, but I didn’t feel any
different.
“Mm... Does this mean I can actually make a
schtappe now?”
I thought back to the shape of the schtappes I
had seen all the adults use, then visualized holding one in my right, dominant
hand. In an instant, a familiar-looking shining wand appeared.
“Wow! I actually made one! Holy cow! I’m like
an actual magician!”
Brimming with excitement, I swung the
wand-shaped schtappe around while lying in bed.
“I wonder... Could I turn it into another
shape? Like a mage’s staff, maybe?”
I decided that a long and bumpy staff was
ideal, like Flutrane’s from the temple, so that was what I visualized as I
started to remake my schtappe.
“Aah! It worked!”
I tried swinging the staff around like a wand,
and that was when it hit me—using such a huge staff was really inconvenient.
The wand-shaped schtappe I saw most often was the perfect length to tap a
feystone, pour mana into it, and create an ordonnanz; doing this with a staff
would no doubt be much harder.
“Mm... I guess schtappes are so short for a
reason.”
I spent some time playing around with my
schtappe, turning it into swords, hammers, and even books and pens, but these
designs were all pretty unwieldy. In the end, I discovered that I needed a
clear image in my head to change the schtappe’s shape or add decoration, which
meant each incarnation was slightly different. It also always disappeared when
I kept it out for too long.
The thought of a book or pen schtappe had set
my heart aflutter, but it wasn’t easy to tap a feystone with them, or morph
them into different objects to, for example, hit Sylvester over the head as
Ferdinand once had. Neither option seemed feasible, so I ultimately settled
with a wand just like the ones adults used.
“I hope there’s at least one way I can use
them for fun...” I murmured. But in any case, I would be learning to use the
schtappe at my next practical lesson: schtappe fundamentals. I was seriously
looking forward to it.
“I brought your lunch, milady.”
After my meal, Rihyarda reminded me not to
leave my room or needlessly walk around. She offered no mercy whatsoever, even
though my fever was gone and I had already absorbed my Divine Will.
“If you behave until dinner, I will allow you
to eat in the dining hall,” she said as she collected my plates and exited the
room.
I watched her leave, then slid out of bed the
moment I could confirm she was gone. A whole day without reading was a surefire
way to die of boredom, so I stealthily plucked a book from my desk drawer and
dove back under the covers.
“It’s reading time. Eheheh...”
Not long after I started to read, Rihyarda
returned, having finished putting away the dishes. Her eyebrows shot up in
anger the moment she saw me holding a book.
“Milady! I told you to rest today!”
“But I am. This is my way of resting.”
“Good gracious! When it comes to books, you
simply never learn! You’re just as stubborn as Lord Sylvester and Lord
Ferdinand!” Rihyarda huffed while snatching the book away. “If you are well
enough to read, then you are well enough to talk. You don’t intend to become
Aub Ehrenfest, do you?”
I tilted my head in confusion; I was sure
someone else had asked me that question just yesterday. “Why do you ask?”
“As the formally adopted daughter of the
archducal couple, your claim to the seat of Aub Ehrenfest is equal to that of
the other candidates,” Rihyarda explained. “Unlike before when Lord Wilfried
was decreed to be Lord Sylvester’s successor, you could now potentially become
the archduke yourself, if you so wish. There is no problem with your bloodline
either, as Karstedt has the blood of the archduke from two generations ago.”
Oh boy. There are some serious political problems
with my bloodline, I assure you.
“The archduke seat is best taken by the most
powerful candidate,” she continued. “Men are generally preferred over women, as
the term suggests, but you have your status as the Saint of Ehrenfest to
overcome that. As such, some of your retainers are working under the assumption
that you may become the archduchess in the future. I would like to confirm your
thoughts on the matter before you are led down this path.”
Aah. Hartmut must have said something...
It seemed that Hartmut had been acting in the
shadows over the past few days, working toward some mysterious goal. I could
imagine he was trying to further accelerate my saint legend.
“I have absolutely no interest in becoming the
next Aub Ehrenfest. I intend to focus my efforts on managing a book room while
supporting whoever takes the position.”
“That is very much like you,” Rihyarda said
with a chuckle, relaxing her shoulders. “As you have no intention of becoming
the next aub, milady, I will stop these troublemakers from getting in your
way.”
Rihyarda exited the room with a notably serene
expression; she would probably block my retainers from trying to push me toward
the archduke seat. Once her footsteps had grown distant, I grabbed a book from
another hiding spot and snuck back into bed.
“Milady!”
My plan had been to hide my book under my
covers before Rihyarda got back, but I had ended up falling asleep partway
through reading it, so she caught me in the act.
Whoops, whoops.
Still, I managed to get plenty of rest and
woke up feeling completely refreshed. Rihyarda changed my clothes, grumbling
that my secret reading time would have been better spent socializing in the
dining hall; then together we exited my room.
My two-year slumber meant I was woefully
lacking in social connections within my own duchy, to say nothing of within
other duchies. I had bonded somewhat with the first-years through the trials
and tribulations we had faced passing all our written exams on the first day,
but the older students were still pretty much strangers to me. In all honesty,
I had barely even spoken with my own retainers.
I climbed into Lessy, my muscles still aching
all over, then started making my way to the common room. Angelica accompanied
me, having been guarding my door from the outside. It was almost time for
dinner, so the students who had been out and about were slowly trickling back
into the dormitory and relaxing as they pleased.
“What did you do today, Angelica?” I asked.
“This morning Cornelius, Leonore, and Traugott
invited me to practice ditter. Judithe wanted to join us, but she had guard
duty, so she wasn’t able to take part this time.”
We soon reached the second floor where
Traugott was waiting for me. We met up, then continued going down the stairs.
“Ditter is a kind of sport, right? How do you
play?” I asked. Eckhart had mentioned it a very long time ago, but he had only
described it as a game that apprentice knights often played at the Royal
Academy.
“You hunt feybeasts,” Angelica replied, giving
me the briefest possible answer.
“Angelica, that really doesn’t explain
things...” Traugott said with a grimace, then turned to me to elaborate. “There
are many different kinds of ditter. Participants compete by comparing things
like the strength and speed of the hunted feybeasts, as well as the total
number caught. The victory conditions depend on the type of ditter.”
The largest-scale form of ditter was
apparently something called treasure-stealing ditter. Each duchy would have its
own group of apprentice knights, and these groups would form bases near their
respective dormitory buildings. The aim was for each duchy to hunt and capture
a feybeast, which then served as a treasure to be guarded from the other
duchies. It was crucial to weaken the feybeast first, but not so much that it
turned into a feystone.
Each group would protect its captured feybeast
from the attacks of other groups, all the while attempting to take feybeasts
from other duchies. Incidentally, it was totally okay to turn opponents’
feybeasts into feystones to make stealing them easier, though direct conflict
between groups was not allowed.
“In the past, treasure-stealing ditter was the
heart of the Interduchy Tournament, but the overall population has dropped so
low that playing is hardly feasible anymore,” Traugott continued. “It’s
currently more popular to play the kind of ditter during which teams race to
hunt training feybeasts created by the professors.”
“I see. In that case, I look forward to the
Interduchy Tournament,” I said.
“I shall train hard to honor your name, Lady
Rozemyne.”
It was hard to imagine exactly what the
Interduchy Tournament was going to be like, but I was excited for it
nonetheless. I still hadn’t seen Angelica and Cornelius fight in their newly
powered-up forms.
“With Angelica and Cornelius on our side this
year, I think we might do well,” Traugott noted, though despite his words, his
voice was dark and he looked notably frustrated.
“You do not seem very happy about the prospect
of us doing well.”
“To speak honestly, I am very jealous. I hope
to learn your compression method next year and increase my own mana capacity
before I participate again.”
When we arrived at the common room, a bunch of
girls—Lieseleta and Brunhilde included—were gathered in a circle. They seemed
to be writing something.
“What are you all doing?” I asked, causing
them to let out startled shrieks and hurriedly hide the sheet of paper between
them all. I tilted my head. “Is it something you do not want me to see?”
Brunhilde shook her head at once, wearing a
troubled smile. “No, Lady Rozemyne. We, erm... We just feel a bit uncomfortable
about having gotten so festive without you. There is not much more to it than
that.”
Lieseleta bobbed her head in agreement, as did
the other girls. “Schwartz and Weiss are simply too adorable... We began
discussing what fashion of clothing you might prepare for them. Do forgive us
for getting ahead of ourselves in your absence.”
“I do not mind in the least. May I see what
ideas you came up with?”
I excitedly reached out a hand, at which point
Lieseleta passed me the sheet of paper. On it was an impressively well-drawn
illustration of Schwartz and Weiss done in black ink. Rather than having the
two shumils wear dresses of contrasting colors as they did now, the girls had
envisioned dressing one in male clothes.
“It would be ideal for them to have flower
hairpins, and if possible, I believe it would look truly excellent if you
dressed them as different genders...” Lieseleta said. “Though this is just my
opinion, of course.”
I looked over the various illustrations and
design ideas. In them, Weiss was dressed in frilly lace, while Schwartz wore a
cool, sharp uniform. When it came to the flower hairpins, there were quite
detailed descriptions explaining how large they should be, and where they
should be placed.
“The skirt of the outfit you wore during this
year’s winter feast was exceptionally cute, Lady Rozemyne, so we thought it
would be wise to take inspiration from it,” Lieseleta said with sparkling eyes.
She was referring to the bubble skirt I had
gotten made to avoid the outfit looking too big for me. At the time, I hadn’t
heard much about what others thought about it, but it turned out they saw it as
cute and well-made. People were impressed that I was creating new styles for my
own clothes, on top of the dress I had designed for Brigitte two years prior.
The more you know.
Angelica smiled, amused to see Lieseleta being
far more talkative than usual. “Lieseleta has always loved cute things to
death,” she said. “She even dresses up our pet shumils at home with clothes
that she makes herself.”
“Sister!” Lieseleta exclaimed, unhappily
puffing out her cheeks at Angelica’s revelation. She was finally starting to
look her age.
“...I will only be able to enter the library
once I have passed my classes,” I said. “Lieseleta, if you have finished your
written classes by then, I would not mind you coming with me to measure
Schwartz and Weiss.”
“Truly, Lady Rozemyne?!”
“It will be much more enjoyable if we all
think of designs together. Would anyone else like to join us?” I asked, looking
around as Lieseleta broke into a happy smile.
The girls who hadn’t come on our group trip to
the library promptly started expressing their interest. “I would like to see
Schwartz and Weiss as well,” one said.
“It will certainly be easier to tell what
outfits will suit them once we’ve actually measured them ourselves,” added
another. “I cannot wait.”
“In that case, I recommend you all finish your
written lessons before my practical lessons conclude,” I said. “It is always
hard to focus on your studying when there are more exciting matters to tempt
you.”
“Indeed! We shall do our best!”
I could feel a smile touch my lips as the
girls pumped themselves up, determined to finish their written lessons as soon
as possible. Bringing a bunch of people with me would be the best way to
protect my cute little Schwartz and Weiss from Hirschur, especially when said
people adored the two shumils as well.
I don’t know how to measure large shumils like
that myself, and the more people I have to stop Professor Hirschur before she
goes on a research-induced rampage, the better. I couldn’t handle her on my
own. I’m just glad I found so many willing helpers!
Dedication Whirl
There were a few first-years who didn’t show
up for breakfast, but by lunch, we were all gathered together. It seemed that
everyone had safely absorbed their Divine Wills into themselves.
“I was starting to worry I wouldn’t be done in
time for lunch,” Wilfried said with a bright grin as we headed with our
retainers to dedication whirl practice.
All archduke candidates had dedication whirl
practice, while apprentice archknights had sword dance practice. Everyone else
would be practicing music. It wasn’t feasible for everyone to play the harspiel
at once, so they would also be practicing other instruments that resembled
flutes and drums, among other things.
“You have sword dance practice as well, right,
Angelica? Even though you’re an apprentice medknight.”
“Right. Professor Rauffen recommended me for
it. I’m glad everything worked out, because I’m really bad at music.”
When I stealthily asked Cornelius for more
details later on, it turned out there had been a good number of reasons for
Rauffen’s recommendation: Angelica’s mana capacity was now great enough to
rival those of some archnobles; she had amazing potential, since sword dancing
involved so much movement; beautiful young women added even more grace to the
dance; and not only did she not care in the least about learning to play an
instrument, she didn’t get any better no matter how much they tried to force
her to play.
“You say that, but have you not had harspiel
lessons?”
“Oh, I’d practiced the harspiel since I was
little. Plus, when I was a second-year, I practiced so hard to get permission
to start raising my manablade that I almost died. I haven’t gotten any better
since then, but I’m getting by.”
It seemed Angelica had argued with her parents
over what course she would take in the Academy, and it was only after a great
deal of work that they accepted her as a manablade-wielding knight. Angelica
always worked her hardest when she had a goal in mind that she actually wanted
to accomplish—something I could very much relate to.
“I see... It’s nice that you had a professor
to vouch for you.”
“Right. Sword dancing is really fun, so I’m
glad it worked out too.”
I was fine with all that, since Angelica’s
motivation was a precious thing indeed, but little did I know that Judithe was
about to drop a complete bombshell on me.
“Angelica really is on a whole nother level,”
she said to me, her violet eyes sparkling as she proudly puffed out her chest.
“Most archnobles don’t even get picked to sword dance, since it’s a
country-wide thing. If you look at Ehrenfest in particular, you won’t find many
archnoble graduates who were chosen for it in all of history. It’s, like,
really crazy and beyond amazing that Angelica got picked despite being a
mednoble.”
It turned out that sword dancers and
dedication whirlers were selected out of all the fifth-years at the end of the
semester. Ernesta, one of Charlotte’s guard knights, had apparently learned my
compression method before starting her fifth year, but she hadn’t managed to
develop her capacity quickly enough to be chosen. She had more than enough mana
by the time she started her final year, which ended up killing her inside.
“I’m just a mednoble myself, and I’m not
nearly as strong as Angelica, so I’ll never get picked,” Judithe continued.
“Leonore and Traugott have a chance, though!”
Both Leonore and Traugott were archnobles, so
if they learned my mana compression method at the end of winter and developed
their mana capacities in time for the selection, there was certainly a chance
they would be chosen.
“I wish to learn your compression method so
that I might be selected to sword dance, just as Angelica was,” Traugott said,
his exceptionally blue eyes gleaming with hope.
“I certainly appreciate my guard knights being
selected for such an honor,” I said. “Please do your best.”
“Now then, milady, I advise that both Lord
Wilfried and you focus on practice today. Students of all years are going to be
gathered here,” Rihyarda said, earning solemn nods from Wilfried and me.
Every archduke candidate regardless of school
year was practicing in the same hall, from us first-years to the sixth-years. I
was rather nervous, since this was going to be my first time seeing the older
students from the other duchies since the fellowship gatherings.
“First-years, please watch the older students
carefully; you are to spend the first half of class learning by example,” a
professor announced. “You shall whirl yourselves during the second half, which
is your opportunity to show us all just how skilled you are.”
The other first-year candidates and I sat in
the lined-up chairs provided, then I gazed around the hall as those from each
grade whirled together. This was the first practice of the semester, to see how
much better everyone had gotten between spring and autumn.
As far as I could tell, the second-years were
all of a similar skill level, but this certainly wasn’t the case among the
older students. There were several people in particular who caught my eye due
to the undeniable grace with which they spun and flicked their wrists while
artfully moving their fingers. The sixth-years were the smallest group of all,
since their whirlers had already been selected; there were three boys and four
girls in total, all dressed in their respective divine colors as they prepared to
begin practice. They wore thin veils over their faces, as well as silver
sashes. They would apparently wear golden sashes when celebrating their coming
of age ceremonies.
Those designs look a lot like the temple’s
ceremonial robes.
Unlike those ceremonial robes, however, the
clothes these students wore were mostly transparent and made of a light enough
material that they majestically floated through the air with each spin. There
were several incisions running from the waist down to the hem, probably to make
the clothes easier to move around in and to ensure they ballooned out as
intended.
And so, the sixth-years began their practice.
Once the girls had their outfits on, they spread their arms out and spun,
causing their wide sleeves to open up while the hems softly fluttered around
them.
As I watched the sixth-years, I noticed there
were seven boys and girls waiting nearby without any special clothes on. They
were probably the back-up whirlers, judging by the way they were enviously
eyeing the twirling dancers.
“I am one who offers prayer and gratitude to
the gods who have created the world,” began the familiar prayer. The dancers’
seven voices echoed throughout the hall as they celebrated the end of the harsh
winter, hoped for spring to bear new life, thanked the gods for all the
protection they had given up until their coming of age ceremonies, and asked
for protection moving forward as well.
My eyes widened in surprise. Back in
Ehrenfest, my lack of time meant I had only practiced the whirling itself, so
this was my first time hearing the prayer at the start. It was so unusual
watching a prayer from the bible being spoken by nobles rather than by priests,
especially considering that nobles often looked down on the temple. It seemed
that the religious leaders of the past had once been equivalent to royalty, but
the temple’s reputation must have plummeted at some point across its long
history.
“Praise be to the gods!” they declared,
raising their arms and their left legs before beginning the dedication whirl.
My whirl instructor back in Ehrenfest had said
it was hard to maintain one’s balance in such a pose, but I was used to
balancing on one leg from all the praying I had to do, so my focus had simply
been on learning the choreography. It hadn’t occurred to me at the time, but
now that I was seeing how an actual dedication whirl was performed, I was even
more convinced that the temple of the past had been a lot stronger than it was
now.
The sleeves of seven differently colored
outfits fluttered in time with the dancers’ gentle movements. It was only a
practice session, but they were moving with such grace that it reminded me of a
traditional Japanese dance.
Anyway... I see that Prince Anastasius was
selected to pray to the God of Darkness. I assume the duchy rankings play a
considerable part in who’s chosen for that role.
As I watched Anastasius whirl, I noticed his
dancing was clearly inferior to that of the girl praying to the Goddess of
Light. They were supposed to be a pair, praying to the King and Queen gods
respectively, but the skill gap was more than noticeable.
Not that I can blame him; anyone would look bad
whirling next to her. It can’t be good to show up a prince though.
The girl praying to the Goddess of Light was
completely unrivaled in her dancing ability. Even the smallest details like her
finger movements and the direction in which she gazed were refined to
perfection, and she was so beautifully elegant I simply couldn’t look away.
“Oh my. Hello there, Wilfried.”
“Lady Detlinde...”
As soon as the older students took a short
break, Detlinde—an Ahrensbach archduke candidate—strode over to us with a
smile. She brushed back the gorgeous blonde tresses that had settled over her
shoulder, looking at Wilfried with eyes that were just as green as his.
“I have heard much about your efforts,
Wilfried. Few have ever managed to lead an entire duchy to pass their written
classes on the first day. I truly am proud to be your cousin.”
“Thank you for your praise, but it was
Rozemyne who—”
“My my. There is no point trying to give
someone else the credit when everyone already knows the truth. That will only
further emphasize your humility.”
“No, that’s not—” Wilfried began, only to be
interrupted as Detlinde reached out her slender, white fingers and stroked his
forehead with an amused smile.
“You have done well, Wilfried. You are my
pride and joy,” she said with a calming smile; then she tilted her head ever so
slightly as Wilfried widened his eyes in shock. “Is something the matter?”
“Erm... No, it’s nothing...” Wilfried replied,
lowering his gaze and shaking his head. It was clear from his expression that
the touch hadn’t bothered him in the least; in fact, a wistful smile was
creeping onto his face.
“Wilfried, oh Wilfried... We are afforded far
too few opportunities to meet like this. I want nothing more than for us to
settle down and have a nice, thorough talk, as cousins. May I invite you to a
tea party?” she asked, shooting me a single glance.
Given that she had explicitly emphasized their
relationship as cousins, I could guess that I wasn’t invited, but I wasn’t
about to back down here. It was my job to watch over Wilfried, even if doing so
made me look socially incompetent.
You’ll have to forgive me for not wanting to deal
with another disinheritance incident...
“Oh my, a tea party?” I interjected.
“Wilfried, isn’t that exciting?”
“My apologies, but I see I must make this
clear—you and I are not cousins,” Detlinde said,
rejecting me flat-out when I pretended not to notice her intentions. It seemed
she likewise wasn’t willing to back down.
“I am officially recognized as the daughter of
Aub Ehrenfest, am I not?”
“Officially, yes, but this is a personal tea
party. Please be a dear and excuse yourself.”
Detlinde and I glared at one another behind
false smiles, both hunting for the next move to make. Before I could say
anything else, however, an extra-tall Wilfried slid in between us. I say an
extra-tall Wilfried because the resemblance truly was uncanny, but it was
actually Rudiger from Frenbeltag.
“May I come as well then, Lady Detlinde?” he
asked. “I am your cousin too.”
Detlinde fell silent for a few seconds. There
was no knowing what had gone through her mind, but a smile returned to her face
once more. “Very well, Rudiger. You are indeed my cousin,” she said, then
glancing back at me with a victorious grin. “I am afraid things are what they
are, Lady Rozemyne. My apologies, but I must again ask you to excuse yourself.”
With that, Detlinde turned away to begin
planning the meeting with the two Wilfrieds. I had wormed my way into the
conversation for as long as possible, but there was no getting around the fact
I wasn’t a blood relative. She had flatly refused me, so there was nothing I
could do from here but trust in Wilfried.
I moved some distance away from the three and
started looking around the hall. As everyone chatted and enjoyed their break,
only one person continued to practice—the sixth-year girl, clad in the color of
the Goddess of Light. Her expression was so lively and pleasant that I found
myself enraptured, and I wandered over to sit a safe distance away. I watched
for a while, completely absorbed in her dance, until someone called out to me
from behind.
“You there. The tiny one from Ehrenfest.”
A stir immediately ran through the hall. It
was about as rude of a greeting as one could give, but the person who had
spoken had no obligation to be polite. To make matters worse, it was wholly
unacceptable to ignore a direct address from a member of royalty. I tore my
eyes from the girl, then plastered on the same fake smile I had worn in court
etiquette class before turning around.
“I am honored beyond words that you would
grace me with your presence, Prince Anastasius.”
“I hear you’ve been up to some pretty
interesting stuff. Come here. I want to know more about it.”
I did as instructed, walking over to where
Anastasius was, but I hadn’t a clue what he was referring to. I hadn’t done
anything particularly interesting as far as I knew, so I had no idea what he
had heard, who had told him, or what he thought about it.
“May I ask what rumor has reached your ears,
Prince Anastasius?” I asked, kneeling down the moment I reached him. “I must
admit, I have no recollection of doing anything considered worthy of your
attention.”
Anastasius, who had quite a few female
students surrounding him, raised an eyebrow. “Did you not attack Fraularm with
some bizarrely shaped highbeast?”
I couldn’t believe my ears. The rumor made me
sound like some kind of psycho. I needed to clear things up at once, which
meant speaking a little more directly; being vague was as good as confirming it
was true.
“I swear to the gods that I have not attacked
any professors. It is true, however, that my highbeast is somewhat abnormal
compared to most.”
Anastasius narrowed his eyes slightly, quite
clearly doubting my words. He thought things over for a moment while looking
down at me.
“Hm... How am I supposed to know the truth
when some say otherwise? Very well. I will allow you to show me your highbeast.
Then I shall determine whether it is dangerous for myself.”
No, thank you... You’re not even a teacher. I
don’t want your judgment.
I stifled my inner voice and maintained a
courteous smile, crossing my arms with a polite, “As you wish.”
“Follow me,” Anastasius said curtly, standing
up at once. I was completely flabbergasted. Leaving with him was the last thing
I wanted to do. Not only would it make me stand out like nothing else, but I’d
also be the only one who got in trouble if we returned late; there was no way
the professors were going to yell at the friggin’ prince.
“...Prince Anastasius, may I show you after
dedication whirl practice is over? I believe your practice is far more
important than my humble highbeast,” I replied. I wanted to pass this subject
as quickly as possible, so skipping my first class just wasn’t an option.
Anastasius, seeing that the professors were
returning and that break time was almost over, merely shrugged. “Very well,
then. Later. Hm... You are tiny, but quite the tactician. You will need better
bait than a strange highbeast to entice me.”
“‘Bait’...?”
Now, I don’t have the best memory in the world,
but I’m pretty sure he’s the one who ordered me to show my highbeast. Why is he
acting like I made the first move here?
I wasn’t following his logic in the least, but
I decided to firmly reject the idea anyway. I couldn’t risk being vague in case
people started to assume I was a cocky first-year trying to score points with
royalty.
“Worry not, Prince Anastasius; I will never
make any attempt to entice you or invite you anywhere. I will show you my
highbeast, as I have promised, but I swear to never approach you on my own
henceforth.”
“I... see?”
Anastasius looked positively baffled, but that
was better than him having any weird misunderstandings. The older girls
surrounding him were still giving me some pretty murderous looks though. I
could guess these fine ladies were caught up in a cutthroat battle to be the
one to escort the prince during their graduation. It was so intense that they
even viewed me with hostility, despite the fact I was far too young to escort
him.
Talk about scary...
By the time Anastasius had permitted me to
leave his presence, the professors were calling for class to resume. Wilfried
was waiting for me with a worried expression, so I reported to him that I had
promised to show Anastasius my highbeast after practice.
“Don’t mess this up, Rozemyne. Seriously.
Don’t.”
Wilfried was looking far more sick and nervous
than I was. I attempted to reassure him with a nod, at which point the second
half of class began.
“Now then, everyone—it is time to show us how
much you have practiced,” one of the professors said. Their priority was
teaching the sixth-years, so the rest of us were to practice with the others in
our duchies. We first-years simply needed to prove that we were above the
passing line, then we would be done; the teachers just wanted to see how much
work we had put in before we became second-years.
I’m going to pass this class today, no matter what.
Everyone lined up and started to whirl just as
they had learned in their respective duchies. I thought back to the girl who
had been praying to the Goddess of Light and spun more gracefully than I ever
had before, trying to match the delicacy with which she had moved as best I
could.
The library is waiting for me! The library! Oh,
the library!
Pouring my heart and soul into the dedication
whirl paid off, as I ultimately managed to pass; the professor had given me a
smile and praised my efforts as “very, very good.” Now I wouldn’t need to
practice dedication whirling this year, and this seemed to be the case for all
the other first-years as well.
“You are free to come and watch during class
hours to learn more. Just watching the older students whirl can be quite an
enlightening experience,” the professor said, but the library was much higher
up on my priority list. I didn’t plan to waste any of my time here.
All that remain now are my highbeast and schtappe
classes. I’m almost there! Yes, yes, yes!
I had already struck an illicit deal with
Hirschur to secure a passing grade in highbeast creation, and I doubted I would
have any trouble using my schtappe properly, considering how much progress I
had made with it while messing around on Earthday.
Just a tiny bit longer before I can go to the
library...
I was so excited about passing whirling class
that I unconsciously headed for the door to return to the dormitory.
Thankfully, I only got a few steps before a sick-looking Wilfried grabbed the
back of my shirt and angrily whispered into my ear.
“Rozemyne! Are you forgetting your promise to
Prince Anastasius?”
“Oh... So I am.”
“Are you for real...?” Wilfried murmured,
cradling his head. He told me to wait outside the door to the hall with
Rihyarda, then swiftly exited; he hadn’t received an invitation from the
prince, so he wasn’t able to stay with me.
Whew. That was close...
Breaking out in a cold sweat, I waited outside
the door for Anastasius. He finally came out with a bunch of girls surrounding
him, looked my way with a smirk, then scoffed. “What, this is where you were
waiting? Sorry, but something more pressing came up. I don’t have the time to
spare for you.”
“Prince Anastasius will be coming with us.
Apologies,” the girls said with a boastful giggle. I could feel the clear
hostility radiating from them, and since I didn’t really want to get wrapped up
in the battle for the prince’s affection, I moved aside for them at once.
“There is absolutely no need to apologize; it
is well within my knowledge that members of royalty are quite busy. Now,
Rihyarda—shall we return to the dormitory?” I asked, turning to my adult
attendant who looked a little more stone-faced than usual. She was probably mad
about how rude Anastasius was being to me. “I would like to continue reading
the book I started this morning.”
Rihyarda nodded, then briskly started walking
off. I stayed close behind, but as I dared not look back in fear of making eye
contact with the scary girls, I never saw the expression on Anastasius’s face.
Passing Highbeast Creation
I asked to go to the library, since I didn’t
have any more classes to attend that day, but Rihyarda refused. That much was
to be expected, so I dedicated my time to making manuscripts to be printed. I
started fixing up the stories that had been written in childish language, which
would give us plenty to work with once spring came around.
The next day, I had practical music lessons in
the afternoon. The professor had given me a song to learn, which I simply
needed to play in order to pass. It was actually one of the songs that
Ferdinand had given me to learn in the past, so after practicing just a few
times, I played in front of the professor and instantly got a passing grade.
The professor gave an approving nod. “You have
learned songs other than the ones you composed yourself, I see.”
“I simply practice as my personal musician
instructs.”
“Well, I very much hope you are bringing this
musician with you to the tea party. I am ever so looking forward to it.”
“I am as well. Being invited to a tea party by
a professor is such an honor that my musician and I have hardly been able to
sleep.”
“Oh my, what an exaggeration...”
When our conversation was over, the lesson
came to an end. Believe it or not, my statement hadn’t been a complete
exaggeration. Rosina had actually been losing sleep lately, though not due to
stress—she was dedicating her time to arranging the songs and writing up lyrics
to accompany them. She was genuinely excited for the tea party, so much so that
the enthusiastic smile on her face hadn’t so much as faltered in days.
“You learned that pretty fast, Rozemyne,”
Wilfried said. He was faced with a song that he hadn’t played before, and he
seemed to be struggling with it. He stared down the sheet of music while
putting his all into his practice.
I sat down in my seat and merely shrugged in
response, having already seized victory at the very first opportunity.
“You can play any song without much effort,”
Wilfried continued. “You must have a natural talent for the harspiel.”
“Not true. Ferdinand just kept giving me
harder and harder songs to learn. I even practiced this particular song right
after my debut.”
“After your debut?” he asked in surprise.
Naturally, the song he had played back then was one suited for children of
debuting age, not one usually given to a ten-year-old. He frowned, realizing
that this gap between us had existed even that long ago.
“If you wish to become a master harspiel
player as well, might I suggest taking Ferdinand’s lessons with me?” I
suggested. “He gives me five or six songs to learn each season, though since I
never know when he might ask me to play them, I need to work my fingers to the
bone with Rosina to master them as soon as possible.”
I thought back to how Ferdinand would tell me
to bring my harspiel at a seemingly random point toward the end of each season.
My heart had pounded nervously in my chest with each practice session. Not
meeting his expectations would earn me a drawn-out scolding about how I hadn’t
worked hard enough, then he’d go on to list every single way in which I had
messed up. When I passed, he would simply give me far more difficult songs to
learn before kicking me out, thus starting the cycle all over again.
Upon hearing my explanation, Wilfried closed
his eyes in disbelief, then shook his head. “You’re the only one who can easily
keep up with Uncle’s demands and expectations, Rozemyne. Mana and magic tools
are about my limit; I don’t want to learn music under him too. I’m fine with
things the way they are.”
“Just to clarify, I wouldn’t say I’m easily keeping up with them...”
Another day passed, and I was speedily working
my way through making the study guides and such for the second-years. The
process thankfully didn’t take much time, since I was just organizing Eckhart’s
and Ferdinand’s notes, the study documents those who went to the library had
borrowed for me, and the information that had already been gathered for me the
year before.
“Now that I look at them properly, quite a few
classes have changed considerably since Ferdinand and Eckhart were here,” I
observed. It hadn’t really hit me before then, since I had only looked at the
notes for classes in the apprentice knight course when working as part of the
Raise Angelica’s Grades Squadron, but it was a lot more apparent now that I was
looking at the notes for the first- and second-year classes.
Philine gave a small shrug as I compared the
documents everyone had put together. “The majority of the professors were
changed after the civil war, so it is only natural that the course material
would change as well,” she said.
It turned out that most professors had
assistants, and when a professor died or retired, these assistants would take
their places and teach in a similar fashion. This system was completely
upturned, however, by the mass purging that followed the civil war; since most
professors and their assistants belonged to the same faction, they were all
relieved of duty. There were some instances of classes being changed entirely
as a result.
“Why couldn’t the new teachers just check the
study documents in the library to see what was covered in previous years...?” I
pondered.
“The professors have their pride as
researchers to consider. They were probably looking to distinguish themselves
from the professors who had just gotten fired,” Wilfried interjected while
looking over the documents himself. I certainly understood that, but I would
have much preferred them to prioritize the learning of their students.
“Doesn’t that mean the older study guides
won’t be useful in the slightest?” I asked. There was nothing more annoying for
a student like me trying to pass on the first day having to root through old
study guides and resources that were completely outdated. I pursed my lips,
annoyed that my time in the library was getting delayed once again.
Philine giggled. “Will it soothe your
frustrations to think that your study resources covering the new lessons will
soon refill the library, Lady Rozemyne?”
“...You are a wise one, Philine. I must admit,
now I feel ever so slightly grateful for the war.”
“It all depends on perspective,” Wilfried
agreed with a nod.
“In any case, we have almost finished putting
together our study resources. What will you do when we are done, Philine?” I
asked.
“A tea party is planned for all the laynobles
who wish to become apprentice scholars.”
It seemed that, once the study resources were
done, Philine would be putting her time into associating with laynobles from
other duchies. She mentioned that she wanted to make at least some headway with
entering society so that she could find more valuable information for me.
“I am still nervous about joining a tea party
with older students, so we thought we would first practice with each other,”
she continued. “So, erm... is there anything in particular I should or should
not bring up during the tea party?”
“A tea party, hm? I suppose that is something
I should consider doing myself...”
Wilfried nodded. “Yeah, and I’ve got that tea
party with my cousins. We should get the older students together and discuss
what we should and shouldn’t reveal at these kinds of gatherings,” he
suggested.
As we thought it over, Hartmut decided to give
us some advice. He had passed his class that morning and was visiting the
common room to kill some time.
“You should know, Philine, they’re absolutely
going to ask you about Ehrenfest’s rising grades. I’m not even a first-year and
people are asking me all kinds of questions.”
The efforts of the Better Grades Committee had
ultimately paid off, and with students of all years easily passing their
written lessons, plus all our first-years having passed our written lessons on
the first day, Ehrenfest had apparently become a hot topic of conversation
throughout the Academy.
“Lord Wilfried is standing out due to his
excellent grades, but you are garnering a reputation for many more reasons,
Lady Rozemyne,” Hartmut continued.
“Oh yes, I certainly am. I was the last one to
pass my mana control class because I turned so many feystones to dust; I
apparently attacked a professor with a feybeast-shaped highbeast; and I
collapsed in the Farthest Hall. Truly I am making an excellent impression,” I
said, glum about having stood out in all the worst ways. “What do you say when
they ask about Ehrenfest, anyway?”
“I tell them that our grades are rising thanks
to the Saint of Ehrenfest, and that next year will come as even more of a
surprise.”
“Hartmut?!”
“Is that not the truth? The Better Grades
Committee was your idea, Lady Rozemyne, and the first-years passing all their
classes was a result of your passion for the library. Those who have learned
your mana compression method will show excellent results in their practical
lessons next year, and so I have not lied whatsoever. You seem to be unaware,
Lady Rozemyne, but you are not standing out in exclusively unfavorable ways; in
fact, your reputation has made you quite enviable as well, with many being well
aware that you created original compositions, passed your written lessons with
almost perfect marks, and passed court etiquette in a single try.”
Hartmut gave a bright smile, then turned to
Philine and continued. “There is no need to inform those from other duchies of
the details. Keep the information you disclose vague, but under no
circumstances are you to lie. You must first earn the trust of your enemies
before you can deceive and betray them.”
“I understand,” Philine said with a nod,
looking at Hartmut with a gaze that made her respect for him all too clear.
“Oh my goodness...” I said, having had a
sudden epiphany. “It’s your fault, Hartmut. You’re the reason all the rumors
about me are getting exaggerated in weird ways!”
“Lady Rozemyne, that is a misunderstanding...
I am not the only one to blame; everyone from our duchy is working together to
spread the glory of the Saint of Ehrenfest.”
“That’s even worse! At the very least,
dedicate that energy to elevating Wilfried, since he’s likely to become the
next archduke. I’m just a humble, everyday student planning to spend most of my
time in the library,” I protested.
Much to my displeasure, Hartmut, as well as
everyone else in the common room, said it was already much too late for that.
“In the first place, Lady Rozemyne, it will not be good for Lord Wilfried to
grow accustomed to receiving credit for your actions.”
“Right. I want to do what I can on my own,”
Wilfried said.
I had no choice but to agree with them, and it
was beyond me to realize that my doing so would cause the legend of the Saint
of Ehrenfest to accelerate even further.
We had our practical highbeast creation lesson
in the afternoon. Our previous lesson had been cut short when Professor
Fraularm, the dormitory supervisor for Ahrensbach, passed out upon seeing my
highbeast, and she was evidently mad enough about it to claim that I had
attacked her.
I don’t really care about her holding a grudge,
but I don’t want her to keep me from passing out of spite...
I was sure there was nothing to worry about
thanks to my illicit deal with Hirschur, but from what I knew about her, there
was always a chance she might forget about it entirely and not come to the
class. She seemed to be the kind of person to forget promises when absorbed in
her research, and it was hard to trust someone who seemed to be even more of a
mad scientist than Ferdinand.
In the end, however, my fears were unfounded.
Hirschur came to the class, along with many other professors whom I didn’t
recognize.
“Oh my. Professors. What brings you all here
today?” Fraularm asked.
“Do you not remember? Your passing out last
time interrupted my brewing. I would not like for that to happen again, and so
I have decided to observe today’s lesson in its entirety,” Hirschur said with a
chuckle, a noticeable glint in her purple eyes. “Incidentally, I will not bear
a grudge for the materials wasted in that failure. As long as you pay for them,
that is.”
“W-Well... I advise you seek recompense from
the dangerous student who attacked me with her feybeast.”
“I wanted to question that, actually. As far
as I can tell, the highbeast was not one particularly suited to attacking
others. Are you not just exaggerating the incident to avoid accepting blame?”
“Wh-What was that?!” Fraularm stood up
abruptly, only for a sharp-eyed older man to step between them, the smile
plastered across his face being the only peaceful thing about him.
“I cannot speak for all this exaggeration
business, but with rumors of a student attacking a professor with a
feybeast-shaped highbeast going around, it would be better for everyone to have
other professors observe your class. It should prove whether or not what you
have said is the truth,” the older man said, using security and confirmations
to justify his and the other professors’ attendance.
Fraularm had no choice but to accept, since
she was the one spreading rumors about me being unsafe in the first place.
“Very well. You can all see for yourselves how dangerous her highbeast is,” she
said, speaking in a tone befitting a sore loser before moving to stand at the
center of all the students and instructing us to take out our highbeast
feystones.
The other professors wasted no time in
positioning themselves around me, seeming to be preparing for the worst. I
bemoaned their lack of trust in me, which only made Hirschur break into a
smile.
“Lady Rozemyne, everyone here is interested in
your highbeast. They are all passionate researchers with enough interest in new
things to have warranted me calling upon them,” she explained.
In other words, they weren’t actually on
guard—they were looking at me with the intrigued looks one would give a
research subject. I decided it was probably best for me to obediently show them
Lessy and put on a show to prove he wasn’t dangerous.
I can endure it for the sake of a passing
grade...
According to Hirschur, the professors who had
seen my Pandabus after I collapsed in the Farthest Hall had told the others
that it was very unusual, and that its clunky movements were very unlike those
of a grun. This had caught the interest of several other teachers.
“I would also like to get a closer look at you
making your drivable highbeast,” Hirschur continued, holding a feystone for her
own purposes. It seemed she was preparing to make a drivable highbeast herself.
“Those of you who can form highbeasts, do so
now,” Fraularm instructed. The gathered professors urged me on as I
begrudgingly created my one-person Pandabus.
“Oho. I see... It has something of a flat
face, but this certainly is a grun,” one said.
“There’s a seat, but how in the world does one
get inside?” asked another. The professors had closed in on Lessy almost
immediately to touch and examine him, so I hadn’t been able to take a step
forward myself.
“Lady Rozemyne, you mentioned that you can
change the size of your highbeast, correct?” Hirschur asked.
I grew Lessy into the size of a large family
van, and no sooner had I opened a door than Hirschur gleefully climbed inside
and started touching the inner walls. She had done exactly the same thing the
last time she saw my Pandabus, so she acted without an ounce of hesitation.
“Aha, I see. So this is how you ride it,” one
of the professors said. There was no mistaking that they were researchers who
loved discovering new things, and they all went into Lessy one after another to
look around.
“Lady Rozemyne, what is this? How does it
move?” one asked.
“Aah. This is quite comfortable...” a second
professor sighed.
The nearby students watched in a daze as the
professors, who were supposed to be here to determine whether my
feybeast-shaped highbeast posed a threat of any kind, instead examined it with
excitement.
“Look, everyone! Professor Hirschur can ride
it even while wearing a skirt!” one of the girls exclaimed.
“Now that you mention it, I did hear that one
could ride such a highbeast without changing into riding clothes...” another
murmured.
“Such a highbeast would actually be cute if
made as a shumil,” said a third.
The female students were starting to approach
as they talked, their interest having clearly been caught. Everyone said that
the Pandabus looked like a grun, but the first-years who weren’t familiar with
such feybeasts didn’t seem to find it scary in the slightest.
“Watch yourselves! That thing is abnormal and
dangerous!” Fraularm shrieked desperately, but everyone could clearly tell from
the other professors’ complete lack of concern that nothing dangerous was going
to happen.
“I believe I shall use Lady Rozemyne’s
highbeast as a reference and make one of my own,” Hirschur announced. “I have
always thought it would be convenient to have a highbeast for carrying around
tools and materials.”
“Professor Hirschur, is making a new highbeast
really that easy?” I asked. “My guard knights have led me to believe it would
be impossible to handle two.”
“It might be a challenge for knights,
considering that they need to make split-second decisions, but if one has ample
time to think, it is quite easy to change the focus of one’s mind. Furthermore,
making another highbeast is no problem for me, since I am quite fine abandoning
my original one.”
Hirschur took her feystone in hand and started
making her new highbeast, all the while focusing her eyes on my Pandabus.
Perhaps due to how much she was used to controlling her mana, she was able to
complete the process with surprising speed and noticeable ease.
“Wooow!” A cheer arose from the students as
Hirschur finished making her highbeast. Beside Lessy there was now a one-person
highbeast with the head of a shumil. It had reins in the place of a steering
wheel, and there was only one seat, indicating that she didn’t plan on having
other people ride with her. There was, however, a considerable amount of space
in the back for luggage. It truly was a highbeast made just for her.
Hirschur flicked her wrist, and much like with
Lessy, a door opened in the side of the highbeast. She climbed inside, still
wearing her skirt, then sat down in a seat that looked very similar to mine,
gripped the reins, and started pouring mana into the shumil. Soon enough, it
started to move around, then soared above the hall with very little effort.
This meant she was already able to perfectly visualize something flying without
wings.
Wowee... She might be even more open to new ideas
than Ferdinand. Talk about being open-minded.
“It seems that reins can control it just
fine,” Hirschur commented, climbing out of her shumil highbeast with an
exceptionally content smile. “It moves and flies just like my previous
highbeast, and given that I can leisurely relax in the chair, it feels even
more graceful than riding a normal highbeast.”
“Professor Hirschur, could you teach us to
make a highbeast like that too?” one female student asked.
“I would like to know as well,” added a
second.
The girls all wanted to copy Hirschur’s
highbeast, since shumils were considered much more acceptable, and the students
were more familiar with using reins. She was a star among the girls in an
instant, but nobody came to look at my Pandabus.
“Lessy is cute too...!” I protested.
“That’s where you’re mistaken, little one. He
is certainly interesting though,” the older man said, perhaps trying to comfort
me. He then went to leave the class with the others, saying that his time here
had been quite productive indeed.
“All those who have created their highbeast
shall pass upon flying it once in a circle above the Academy,” Hirschur
announced, proactively striding outside. It was getting more and more cramped
in the hall due to all the highbeasts, so the students who were already
confident in their riding ability turned their highbeasts back into feystones
and followed after her.
The moment the cold outside air hit me, my
body tensed up so much that I could practically feel myself shrinking. I
hurriedly brought out and climbed into Lessy, then gripped on to the steering
wheel. My highbeast was a lot warmer inside, since the walls blocked the icy
winds.
On the bright side, the Royal Academy isn’t quite
as cold as Ehrenfest.
It was still cold since it was winter, but
Ehrenfest was even colder, and the snow there was much worse. It was this
slight change in climate that reminded me I wasn’t in Ehrenfest anymore; I was
at the center of the country, far away from home.
“Shall we go?” Hirschur asked. She took the
lead, going up into the air in her shumil while I stayed close behind. Fraularm
had remained indoors to aid those who were still struggling to create their
highbeasts.
We lined up our highbeasts in the air and then
flew over the Royal Academy, which was my first time seeing the entire grounds.
Before this point, I had simply teleported inside and then used the dormitory
entrance to go straight into the hallway by the auditorium; not once had I
gotten a look of the Academy exterior or the dormitory from the outside.
The Royal Academy was located atop a sizable
hill, the slopes of which were covered with thick conifer forests on all sides.
The trees were evergreen, meaning they kept their leaves even in winter, and
the coating of snow that topped them made the entire world appear white. The
grounds themselves were so sprawling that they actually took me by surprise.
Directly beneath us was the massive primary
building of the Academy, surrounded by ivory buildings placed on top of smaller
hills nearby. The ivory structures dotting the forest were probably the
dormitory buildings; I saw several as we circled the grounds, but in all
honesty, I couldn’t tell which belonged to Ehrenfest. Rihyarda had been right
when she said that each dorm was built in a unique architectural style, though,
and it was fascinating to see all the variety.
Let’s see... Are there any buildings here that
look like Ehrenfest’s castle? I guess it’d be that one over there. Or maybe
that one.
Not only was the Royal Academy surrounded by
slopes and thick forests, the area around was covered with a sea of clouds that
hid everything beneath it. Maybe I would have seen more had the weather been
better, but as far as I could tell from my aerial view, the only things here
were the dormitories and the Academy itself. At the very least, I didn’t see
any commoner cities attached to it like the lower city in Ehrenfest, nor did I
see any crop-covered fields. It was entirely as though the Academy was just a
massive temple.
Perhaps this was where the gods had descended
upon the country and given the king the power to rule over the people, as
described in the bible. This thought ran through my mind as I gazed across the
Academy’s grounds. When covered with such a delicate blanket of snow like this,
it was certainly a fantastical enough location for the gods to descend and make
their presence known.
“All of you pass highbeast creation,” Hirschur
announced, signaling my completion of yet another class. Thanks to her,
drivable highbeasts became a popular trend among the female students throughout
the Academy.
Schtappe Fundamentals
There were still a number of days left before
it was time for my schtappe usage lesson, so I spent the time making picture
book manuscripts and studying for my upcoming second year. Once I mastered
using my schtappe, there would be no more barriers between me and the library,
so I was practically counting down the days until class began.
One girl sighed. “It is only at times like
this that I find your talents vexatious, Lady Rozemyne.”
The girls were all studying blisteringly hard
to pass their written lessons, eager to accompany me to the library for
Schwartz and Weiss’s measuring session. Brunhilde was being especially
industrious, as she also wanted to schedule the tea party with the music
professors as soon as possible.
“Lady Rozemyne, you do not need to rush
passing your lessons,” another girl added.
“At this rate, we may not be able to attend
when Schwartz and Weiss are measured,” noted a third.
The girls were working with the same fervent,
desperate expressions the first-years had worn when aiming to pass all their
written classes in one go. It seemed their passion was at least somewhat
contagious, as the boys who still had written lessons left were putting their
all into studying as well. I gazed around the common room with a smile, then
shook my head at all the pleading eyes; I had already waited long enough.
“I will pass my schtappe lesson as soon as
possible and then go straight to the library,” I declared. “Far from slowing
down, I would rather the class begin right away, so that I may be done with it
immediately!”
Hartmut chuckled. “Learning how to use your
schtappe is not so easy, Lady Rozemyne; laynobles have to spend almost the
entire semester learning to use theirs. Even archduke candidates struggle to
pass on their first day. I’m afraid you will simply need to give up on this
one.”
His doubts only made me want to pass even
more. “I will do everything in my power to ensure that I pass,” I replied. “No
effort will be spared in my struggle to reach the library.”
“Indeed, Hartmut,” Brunhilde added coolly as
she continued focusing on her studies. “There is nothing that can stop Lady
Rozemyne’s surge toward the library. If she intends to pass right away, then we
as her retainers must assume it will happen. I am already struggling to plan
the upcoming tea party, considering her desperation to do nothing but hole up
in the library.”
It seemed that Brunhilde had made much
progress herself—she only had one more class to finish before she had passed
them all.
“I see. So are you saying Lady Rozemyne will
hold nothing back for the sake of the library? That she will throw her absolute
all into this endeavor?”
“Exactly.”
“In that case, I look forward to witnessing
you give rise to a new legend, Lady Rozemyne.”
Urk... Do I really have to choose between gaining
access to the library and avoiding a new legend...? This is rough... I really
don’t want to stand out any more than I do already—after all, obscurity is
essential to a quiet, peaceful life. Then again, I won’t truly be at peace
until the library is mine to explore. What should I do? This truly is a
philosophical dilemma for the ages...
Or is it...? Could I ever pick anything other
than the library?
No. No, I could not.
“Lady Rozemyne, if you wish not to stand out,
we suggest you hold off on immediately passing at least one of your classes,”
my retainers noted as I exited the dormitory to go to my schtappe class.
Wilfried and I gathered in the usual hall
along with the archnobles and such. Hirschur and Rauffen entered soon after;
they were evidently our professors for the day.
“Schtappes can only be used by nobles,”
Rauffen began, clenching one hand into a determined fist. “If you don’t have a
schtappe, you’re not a noble.”
To be recognized as a noble, one needed to
possess enough mana to recover their Divine Will. The mana measuring done at
baptisms was for this purpose.
A schtappe was apparently one of the things
that the first-ever king had been given by the gods. He had up to that point
possessed more mana than he could ever use, and the schtappe he was granted
allowed him to freely use it all... or so the bible said, anyway. I wasn’t sure
whether everything in the bible was completely true, but after all my
experiences in this world, I imagined something similar had actually happened.
There was surely some base for the legend to have been formed upon.
“We shall begin by forming the schtappe,”
Hirschur said. “Everyone, please create a schtappe in a form that you find easy
to use. Once you have done so, please come to me. We will ask you to create and
dispel the schtappe three times in quick succession, to confirm that you are
comfortable with the technique.”
“Right. I’m gonna make an amazing schtappe,”
Wilfried said.
Everyone probably had the same idea; they
started forming their schtappes, focusing on the shape and size. The archduke
candidates were used to controlling their mana, so they were putting their
absolute all into producing magnificent creations worthy of their status. The
archnobles, on the other hand, were less used to controlling their mana. Most
were struggling to create a schtappe at all.
“Mine’s going to look so cool. What’re you
gonna make, Rozemyne?” Wilfried asked, his dark-green eyes sparkling with
excitement as he glanced my way. Little did he know, I had already spent an
entire day playing around with my schtappe before eventually coming to the
conclusion that simple is best.
“I intend to make a simple schtappe like the
one most adults use,” I replied.
“Aw, what? That’s so boring though. Why not
put a little more effort into it? Your highbeast is already weird enough, so
nobody’s going to be surprised if your schtappe is weird too.”
Lessy wasn’t weird—his focus on practicality
simply meant he was a little different from other highbeasts. It wasn’t as
though I had deliberately made him unique, either; standing out for the sake of
standing out wasn’t important to me.
“Highbeasts I can understand, but I don’t see
the need to obsess over schtappes too much,” I explained. You
can just keep messing around with yours until you realize I’m right, I
silently added as I walked over to Hirschur.
“Oh my. Lady Rozemyne,” the professor said.
“How can I help?”
“I can make my schtappe. Can I do the test
now?”
“...You practiced on your own, didn’t you?”
she asked, looking at me like I was some kind of problem child before
encouraging me to demonstrate.
I worked my mana and made a schtappe of the
same shape and size three times in quick succession. Hirschur blinked in
surprise, then sighed.
“You have excellent control of your schtappe;
there should be no issue with you moving forward to the next step. You will now
need to use your schtappe to fill a magic tool with mana. Rauffen, are the
feystones ready?”
“Yep. All ready,” Rauffen replied, patting a
bag on his hip. Hirschur watched as he started walking over to the side of the
hall, away from the other students.
“Lady Rozemyne, you will follow Rauffen and
learn to make an ordonnanz. Attempt to have it fly over to me,” she said. I
nodded in response, spurring her to lean forward with a grin. “Ordonnanzes are
used in this introductory class because they can be created from the smallest
drop of mana,” she added in a hushed voice. “Do try to restrain yourself.”
“Okay.”
I had previously learned for my magecraft test
that the feystones used for making ordonnanzes were no normal feystones—they
were specially crafted for a specific and limited purpose. Everyone called them
feystones because they looked very similar, but in reality, they were a kind of
magic tool.
Green feystones were likewise crafted for a
particular purpose, and they were oft used in daily life. Attendants in
particular found them useful, since they allowed for a source of water to be
linked with a pitcher. The feystone embedded in the bottom of the pitcher could
be activated with a tap of one’s schtappe, causing water to endlessly flow from
inside. These feystones were primarily used to fill tubs with water for baths.
When I caught up with Rauffen, he gave me an
all-too-familiar yellow feystone. I looked it over while he explained what to
do.
“You’ll struggle to communicate with people if
you don’t learn how to make ordonnanzes right. This is something everyone in
every course will use, so if you don’t master it, you won’t even be able to
take on apprentice work. Got that?”
“Yes.”
“I can’t hear you!”
“YES!” I replied more forcefully, earning me a
grin and an approving nod. I was getting a little worried about how much longer
I could keep up with Rauffen’s passionate teaching style; having enough mana
for the task wouldn’t matter if I ended up dying from exhaustion before it even
began.
“First, lightly tap the feystone with your
schtappe while pouring mana into it,” he explained, demonstrating the process.
I placed the feystone on the palm of my left hand, then whipped out my schtappe
with my right. Keeping Hirschur’s warning in mind, I made sure to pour in as
little mana as possible.
Ooh... Wow.
As it turned out, schtappes did indeed allow
one to use their mana more efficiently. While using my mana had previously felt
like water pouring from a bucket, it was now like a water faucet I could adjust
at will. I tapped the yellow feystone lightly, then watched in wide-eyed
amazement as it turned into a familiar white bird. It spread its wings, then
dug into my arm and folded them back down. It was practically weightless.
Wowee. Now I’m really like a wizard.
I could summon a tool for better controlling
my mana at will, then tap a yellow stone to turn it into a white bird. At some
point, I had turned into a fully-fledged denizen of fantasy.
“Oh, not bad!” Rauffen exclaimed. “Now, once
the ordonnanz opens its mouth, put your voice into it.”
The ordonnanz promptly opened its mouth, so I
spoke my message. “This is Rozemyne. Professor Hirschur, I’ve finished making
the ordonnanz,” I said. When I fell silent, the bird closed its mouth.
I was about to move my schtappe to send the
ordonnanz off to Hirschur, but Rauffen stopped me. He then swung his own
schtappe like a conductor’s baton.
“If you have anything else to say, tap the
ordonnanz’s beak with your schtappe again and it’ll open,” he noted.
The more you know...
I nodded, intrigued, and tried tapping the
ordonnanz on its beak. Just as Rauffen had said, it opened its mouth again.
“How do you make the ordonnanz close it?”
“All you have to do is speak. See?” he said,
gesturing toward the ordonnanz that had now closed its mouth again.
“Wait, what? H-How do I erase the message?!” I
yelped. I didn’t want my first ordonnanz to carry such a dumb exchange.
Rauffen laughed, then explained that I simply
needed to suck the mana from the ordonnanz with my schtappe and return it to
its feystone form. I did just that, then re-recorded my message.
“Once you’ve said your piece, picture the
ordonnanz flying to Hirschur, then swing your schtappe while pushing out your
mana. And put some real oomph into it!” Rauffen declared. Given how much mana I
had though, I felt that wantonly giving it my all wasn’t a good idea—especially
considering that I was only sending the ordonnanz to Hirschur a short distance
away.
I swung my schtappe, ever so gently sending
out some mana, then watched as the ordonnanz flew over to Hirschur. It repeated
its message three times, just as I was used to, before returning with a message
for me.
“Well done,” the ordonnanz said in Hirschur’s
voice. “You may now move on to the next step.” It repeated this thrice before
returning to the form of a yellow feystone, which I then handed to Rauffen.
“What are we doing next?” I asked.
“Shooting mana out of your schtappe,” Rauffen
explained. “This’ll allow you to use simple mana attacks, but for now, you’ll
be focusing on shooting up a rott—a red light used to call for aid. Once you’ve
learned this, you’ll be able to request help whenever something happens.
Knights will come rushing to your position in an instant.”
With that, Rauffen took out his own schtappe
and started to demonstrate. “Build up the mana in the tip of your schtappe like
this, then push it right outta your body,” he said. A fist-sized ball of light
started to form at the tip of his schtappe, crackling and sparking like
electricity.
“Rott!” he suddenly
yelled. Just as he swung his schtappe high into the air, a beam of red light
shot up and collided with the ceiling before fading away. Despite the impact,
it didn’t appear to leave any marks behind. “Mana can’t damage buildings made
with creation magic, and a rott will never pierce through one. You can go all
out and use as much force as you want.”
“Going all out is fine with me, but before I
do—is this the last part of the lesson?” I asked. I didn’t want to expend all
of my mana and then have nothing left for the rest of the class.
Rauffen did a double take, then blinked at me
in surprise. “There’s still another part. What, are you planning to finish the
whole class in one day?”
“Yes. Is there a problem with that?”
“Er... I was just thinking that you might
wanna save some of your mana.”
“I’ll hold back when casting rott, then. Is
that acceptable?”
“Y-Yeah. I, er... Yeah. Go all out, but don’t
put your all into it.”
I don’t think that makes much sense... Can you
really call it “going all out” if you’re not putting your all into it?
The main thing I was learning in class today
was the importance of ignoring Rauffen and instead preserving my mana. I
started to build up some mana in the tip of my schtappe, and soon enough, a
fist-sized ball was sitting at the end. It was steadily growing in size as more
mana gathered there.
“Right! Perfect! That’s what I’m talking
about! Now make it even bigger! Keep on pouring mana into your schtappe!”
Rauffen yelled. I made sure to put my newfound knowledge to use and ignore him.
This schtappe really is something else, huh?
People hadn’t been exaggerating when they said
it was by far the most efficient tool for controlling one’s mana. Using my mana
precisely hadn’t been easy due to how unstable it was, but now I could
manipulate it as easily as I had been able to before sleeping in the jureve.
“Now, let it out!” Rauffen roared. “Scream
‘rott’ and blast your mana up into the sky as hard as you can!”
I think you mean “into the ceiling”...
I raised my right hand into the air, then
pointed the schtappe up with a calmly stated “Rott.”
It seemed that I had managed my mana rather well, as a beam of red light shot
directly up to the ceiling. I sighed in relief, glad to have finished the task
without issue.
“Alright. You pass. That said... Are you sure
you’re not running out of mana by now?” Rauffen asked, his concern clear on his
face as he glanced around the room.
I followed his gaze and noticed that the
archnobles were already exhausted just from having used their mana to make
schtappes. They weren’t the only ones either; the archduke candidates who had
been focused on making the coolest schtappes had wasted a ton of mana and were
now sitting on the floor in exhaustion. Wilfried must have put an especially
great deal of effort into his—he looked absolutely drained, having not moved
even an inch since I spoke to him last.
It seemed the only students who were now
working on the ordonnanz step were those who hadn’t tried to make excessively
unique schtappes. Even they seemed pretty tired though; some had to stop before
they could finish, while others dropped down to the floor moments after
transforming the feystone.
Okay... My mana capacity really is abnormal, huh?
I closed my eyes to check how much mana I had
left and found that there was still plenty in me.
“So? Think you can handle the next step?”
Rauffen asked.
Two choices flashed through my mind: I could
pretend to be exhausted to avoid standing out, or I could embrace looking
abnormal to all those around me for the sake of the library. I was ashamed to
have even debated my next move.
“Yeah. I can handle it.”
Rauffen looked at me in momentary surprise,
then he gave a firm nod. “Alright! Being able to push your limits is an
important life skill. Let’s do this!” he declared, his eyes blazing with
passion. “This is the last part. You need to change your schtappe into a usable
mana-filled tool.”
I was immediately reminded of the knights
turning their schtappes into weapons during combat, but first-years apparently
only needed to turn theirs into knives, pens, or mixing sticks. I nodded with
interest as I continued to listen, then I noticed that Hirschur was coming our
way. It seemed that all the students who had come to her had since given up.
Hirschur looked around at all the exhausted
students before making an announcement. “It is exceptionally important that you
practice morphing your schtappes. You will learn the fundamentals of magic tool
brewing next year, and if you are unable to create a knife, pen, and mixing
stick by then, your ability to brew will be significantly diminished.”
Crafting magic tools was her specialty as a
professor, and upon hearing her message, all the students tightened their
expressions. It seemed that the process of making magic tools included cutting
the ingredients with a knife, drawing a magic circle with a pen, then mixing
everything together with mana in a cauldron using a mixing stick. I had already
made a jureve under Ferdinand’s direction, however, so I knew it was possible
to brew without a schtappe by using magic tools.
“How do you morph a schtappe?” I asked.
“First, begin by trying to make a knife,”
Hirschur instructed. “Take your schtappe, and clearly visualize what you want
to morph it into.”
I did as she instructed and took out my
schtappe, then visualized the knife Ferdinand had used while brewing. Hirschur
said “messer” aloud, so I promptly followed suit. I watched as the schtappe
morphed into a knife in my hand; then I looked at Hirschur, who was holding a
very similar-looking knife as well.
“Very well done. Now say ‘rucken’ to revert
its shape.”
I did as instructed, and just as expected, the
knife turned back into a regular schtappe. Those around me let out awed noises.
“Now repeat that process, but this time focus
on making a pen and then a stirring stick,” Hirschur said. I ultimately had to
say “stylo” to turn my schtappe into a pen, then “beimen” to turn it into a
mixing stick.
“I never expected you to pass all the tasks on
your first day... Ferdinand was the last person to have actually achieved such
a feat. I suppose I should have expected nothing less from his prized
disciple,” Hirschur said with an exasperated sigh.
The other students exchanged looks of complete
astonishment; then they began to whisper among themselves.
“Lord Ferdinand from Ehrenfest... Does she
mean that Lord Ferdinand...?” one asked.
“Yeah. He was a famous treasure-stealing
ditter player, you know. I hear his tactics were insane. Apparently our duchy
only ever lost during the years he was here. The adults say we’re lucky we
won’t have to deal with him,” another replied.
“Nah, he was good at more than just ditter.
I’m pretty sure he was the genius who invented magic tool after magic tool. I
know this because my uncle bought loads from him,” a third chimed in,
encouraging the others to bring up yet more rumors.
“Hold on, wasn’t Lord Ferdinand the battle
maniac who slaughtered countless feybeasts for their materials? I heard that he
demolished the high-quality stuff in the Royal Academy and then took everything
left with him.”
“You guys must be nuts. My aunt said he was a
harspiel player, and an amazing one at that.”
“Well, which one’s right?!”
All of them, probably... I heard he was an
archduke candidate, an apprentice knight, and an apprentice scholar, with
excellent marks in every course.
I couldn’t help but blink in surprise as
students from other duchies all shared stories about Ferdinand’s impressive
feats at the Academy. It seemed his superhuman reputation wasn’t unfounded
after all.
“Makes sense that Ehrenfest’s grades are
shooting up if they have his disciple here as an archduke candidate,” one
student noted. “I heard that Lord Ferdinand did multiple courses while he was
here, and he got the highest grades in every single one of them.”
Everyone was now sharing all the legends they
knew about Ferdinand, but there were so many covering such a wide range of
achievements that I had to imagine some were being misattributed. Either way,
it wasn’t long before people stopped paying any attention to me at all.
Whew. It looks like Ferdinand was so freakishly
abnormal that I’m standing out less in comparison.
As the topic shifted from Ferdinand to other
legendary students of the past, Hirschur bent over and whispered to me. “You
pass, Lady Rozemyne. However, please practice morphing your schtappe simply by
chanting the word, rather than having to pause and close your eyes to visualize
the form.”
“Understood,” I replied, wearing the dignified
smile of a noblewoman. Inside, however, I was much less composed.
YES! YESSS! I DID IT! I passed all my classes! I
can go to the library! I can start going to the library tomorrow! Bwahahaha! I
can lock myself away in the library and read until it kills me! Praise be to
the gods!
Epilogue
No sooner had Rozemyne departed for the Royal
Academy than Sylvester started getting a series of unsettling and downright
baffling reports. In previous years, Hirschur had only ever mentioned the bare
minimum, usually stating that there was nothing special to report...
This year, however, was very different.
I haven’t had this bad of a headache since my
first Archduke Conference! Curse that little problem child!
The first report from the Academy came on an
Earthday, before the advancement ceremony had even begun. It was from Wilfried,
listing Rozemyne’s newly picked retainers.
Given the growth and diligence Wilfried had
shown over the past two years, in addition to the current power balance between
factions, Sylvester still wanted him to become the next archduke. To that end,
he had entrusted him with leading the Ehrenfest Dormitory, telling him to
secure as powerful a position as possible before Charlotte arrived. That likely
wouldn’t be too much of a challenge, assuming he cooperated with Rozemyne.
Hm. Looks like he’s certainly working hard...
Sylvester glanced over the first report. There
were a few points where Wilfried had expressed his thoughts perhaps too
directly, but nothing he had written was hard to understand. Florencia and
Elvira had been discussing who Rozemyne should take as her retainers ever since
being told she had started to wake up, and excluding Judithe the apprentice
medknight and Philine the apprentice layscholar, it seemed she had followed
their recommendations to a T.
“Charlotte, do you know Judithe or Philine,
Rozemyne’s new retainers?” Sylvester asked at dinner, partly because his
daughter so desperately wanted to hear how her siblings were doing in the Royal
Academy. She had dedicated herself to leading the winter playroom, so it was
likely she knew at least something about them.
“Judithe is an apprentice knight who reveres Angelica.
She declined to be my guard knight so that she could join her in serving
Rozemyne. I am glad her dream came true,” Charlotte said with a smile.
This was not the reaction one would expect
from a member of the archducal family after being turned down by a mednoble,
but after relying on Rozemyne to save her from a kidnapper, Charlotte’s spirit
was completely shattered. She had utterly failed to fill the hole her big
sister left behind without outside help, and now she was borderline obsessed
with Rozemyne, if not also a little delusional. Sylvester was a little worried
that this obsession might lead her to go off the deep end at some point in the future.
“As for Philine, she adored my sister more
than anyone in the winter playroom, and put her all into collecting stories as
an apprentice scholar while awaiting her return. She swore her fealty to
Rozemyne the very moment she could this winter. Few viewed that favorably,
assuming she would not be taken as a retainer, but it seems they were wrong.”
In other words, they’re both plenty loyal to
Rozemyne. Good.
Sylvester was relieved, but that feeling
didn’t last very long at all. A week later, once again on Earthday, Hirschur’s
regular report was filled with brief and baffling messages.
“The girls of Ehrenfest had shockingly glossy
hair at the advancement ceremony, and Lady Rozemyne drew much attention due to
her unique hair stick and youthful appearance.”
“All first-years passed their written classes on
the first day. The professors are discussing what manner of studying might have
caught on in Ehrenfest.”
“Lady Rozemyne’s original compositions caught the
eye of the music professors, and they have invited her to a tea party.”
“The professor leading highbeast creation claimed
she was attacked by Rozemyne’s highbeast, no doubt due to its grun-like
appearance.”
“Please do teach me Lady Rozemyne’s mana
compression method.”
“I do not know how, but Lady Rozemyne is now the
active master of Schwartz and Weiss, the library’s magic tools. It seems to be
the work of the gods.”
“Lady Rozemyne collapsed in the Farthest Hall,
resulting in a squad of professors having to rescue her.”
Sylvester was both impressed to see Hirschur
write a report consisting of more than just a single sentence, and absolutely
horrified by what he was reading.
This is all about Rozemyne! What’s that little
gremlin doing over there?!
For the most part, he thought the events
detailed in the report were understandable enough—his planned steps to boost
Ehrenfest’s grades and increase its influence in the Royal Academy had no doubt
played some role, and Rozemyne couldn’t be blamed for whichever professor had
been shocked by her highbeast. Hirschur had probably covered for her letting
the mana compression method slip, and given how Rozemyne had just awoken from
the jureve, it was easy to see why she would collapse in the Farthest Hall...
But the gods guiding her to become the master
of some magic tools in the library... That just boggled the mind.
What in the friggin’ world...?!
“Ferdinand, look at these reports from the
Royal Academy,” Sylvester said, holding out the various boards he had received.
“Any thoughts?”
He had summoned Ferdinand in hope that the
reports were a coded message or something that only Hirschur’s former disciple
was able to understand. His half-brother skimmed them, then gave a polite
smile.
“These reports are quite brief. Even the ones
I receive from Wilfried contain more detail.”
“Wilfried sends you reports?!” Sylvester
exclaimed. “Why haven’t I heard about this?!”
“They were questions directed to me
personally, and I did not believe they were worth the aub’s time,” Ferdinand
replied. He was speaking formally, since they were presently before the
scholars, but he made his intentions perfectly clear through indirect means.
Sylvester smacked the table, trapped between
uncertainty and frustration. “Everyone except Ferdinand and Karstedt leave the
room,” he ordered.
The very moment the three of them were alone,
Sylvester glared at Ferdinand, who in return dropped his formal smile and
raised an eyebrow. Sylvester couldn’t say he was particularly fond of the way
his half-brother was so intent on keeping everything a secret.
“Wilfried has been sending me deeply flawed
reports that also serve as questions on how to deal with Rozemyne. I was
annoyed at having to continue my days off correcting his language, but it is
good to know that even still, they are better than those you receive from
Hirschur.”
Ferdinand proceeded to leave Sylvester’s
office and return with transcribed copies of said reports. As Sylvester read
them, his hand found its way to his forehead. The only thing Wilfried said
about the incident was that Rozemyne had become the master of two magic tools
made by royalty, but that didn’t explain things any better. Still, he could
tell that Wilfried had put his all into asking Ferdinand important, relevant
questions. Ferdinand had sent back harsh corrections, but Wilfried was staying
strong and keeping at it nonetheless.
One thing the reports did elaborate on,
however, was how the Ehrenfest first-years had passed all their classes in one
go—Rozemyne had apparently gone on an absolute rampage after being baited with
the library. Sylvester once again glared at Ferdinand for having hidden this
information from him, but even the scowl of an aub earned no more than a scoff.
“Is it not blindingly obvious that this is
what happens when one foolishly puts other people between Rozemyne and the
library? Understand that I proposed forbidding her from entering the library
until she passed all her classes to ensure she would be finished in time for
the Dedication Ritual. Wilfried was a fool for not realizing this and stupidly
adding on the condition that all the other first-years had to pass their
classes as well,” Ferdinand said, wearing a cold expression as he verbally tore
Wilfried apart.
“And to be clear, it is not easy to control
Rozemyne,” he continued. “Recall that, despite entering the temple for the
first time at her baptism, she charged blindly ahead to Bezewanst and offered
an entire large gold for him to take her as a shrine maiden, all so that she
could enter the temple book room. With the Royal Academy’s library now within
reach, there is obviously nothing that could stop her.”
“Now that you mention it, I do remember
hearing about that... Guess it really wasn’t an exaggeration after all.
Karstedt, does that mean you weren’t joking when you said Rozemyne rolled out
of bed while sick and literally crawled down your halls in an attempt to reach
your mansion’s book room?”
“Ah. The day after she was so excited about
the book room that she fell unconscious in the hall. That absolutely happened,”
Karstedt noted, then shot Ferdinand a glance. “A wise man advised me to keep a
book on the table beside her bed to keep her contained.”
Sylvester had originally dismissed the story
as a comical exaggeration, but as it turned out, it had been completely true.
She was now going on a similar rampage in the Royal Academy. He didn’t even
want to consider what nobles from the other duchies were thinking about the
matter.
“The first-years wrapped up in her chaos have
my sympathy, but Wilfried is to blame for involving them in the first place,”
Ferdinand said. “It is too late to back down now. I advised him to offer them
his sincerest apologies.”
G-Good luck, Wilfried... Your father’s on your
side!
After his silent proclamation, Sylvester
pointed to the most confusing board of all. “But yeah, what’s all this about
her becoming the master of magic tools when she was registering at the library?
Neither report tells me anything. Does the library have some kind of special
magic tools or something?”
Unlike Rozemyne, Sylvester did not have an
abnormal obsession with the library. To him, it was nothing more than a place
where documents were stored. He had never gone there himself, since he could
just have scholars bring him whatever he needed, so he wasn’t aware of any
magic tools being kept there. Ferdinand, however, had often gone to the library
when serving as Hirschur’s assistant.
“The tools in question are Schwartz and
Weiss,” Ferdinand said, tapping his temple. “My understanding is that they once
served archnobles assigned there by the Sovereignty, so why Rozemyne became
their master, I do not know. Did she steal them through sheer force of mana? I
cannot imagine so. From what I am aware, they are covered in protective charms
to prevent anyone but their master from even touching them.”
“In other words, we’re completely in the dark
here,” Karstedt mused. He was at as much of a loss as Sylvester.
Ferdinand alone gave an amused grin. “The work
of the gods, hm? Blessings might be involved here. I cannot say for sure, and I
do not know why it would work if such is indeed the case, but her becoming
their master means I may now have the chance to study them. One more reason to
look forward to Rozemyne’s return.”
Like teacher, like student... What a bunch of
research-obsessed weirdos.
“The first-years have passed their written
classes, and now all she needs to do is dedicate herself to finishing her
practical classes,” Ferdinand continued. “I imagine she is going to hide away
in the library once she is done, at which point she will have little
opportunity to cause problems.”
That seemed likely. There were some causes for
concern, but when looking at the reports as a whole, it was safe to say that
Ehrenfest’s grades were rising and new trends were being started. Sylvester
decided not to think too hard about the rest.
Another week passed, and Sylvester received
yet more headache-inducing reports from Hirschur.
“Lady Rozemyne made contact with the second
prince during her dedication whirl class. It seems the prince is on guard
around her, due to her reputation as a saint.”
“In order to dispel the negative rumors forming
around Lady Rozemyne’s highbeast, I am now overseeing her highbeast class.”
Sylvester exchanged a look with Karstedt, then
immediately summoned Ferdinand before once again clearing the room. He had a
feeling that Rozemyne having any contact with royalty was exceedingly
dangerous.
“I’d assumed there was nothing for us to worry
about, since the prince is only there for one more year and there’s only one
class he shares with Rozemyne, but it looks like we weren’t so lucky,”
Sylvester said, sliding the reports over to Ferdinand. “What’s the plan?”
Ferdinand crossed his arms with an exasperated
expression. “There is no plan; the prince was simply interested in Rozemyne’s
highbeast. He ultimately prioritized other engagements over her, and now that
Rozemyne has passed her dedication whirl class, they will no longer have any
point of contact. Our main concern here is that Rozemyne has such a stunning
lack of awareness that she forgot her promise to the prince.”
“SHE DID WHAT?!” Sylvester and Karstedt
balked, their eyes bulging as Ferdinand slid over copies of the reports he had
received from Wilfried. As it turned out, had it not been for Wilfried, she
would have rushed straight back to the dormitory, leaving the prince in the
dust. They couldn’t believe it; her priorities made no sense whatsoever.
“There is no use agonizing over it; Rozemyne’s
obsession with the library cannot be fixed,” Ferdinand continued. “It would be
a more valuable use of your time to consider how to manipulate those around her
in the Royal Academy, but even that is not likely to go well. In any case, we
have another matter to discuss—Wilfried is due to attend an Ahrensbach tea
party.”
“Come again?! I wasn’t informed of that!”
Sylvester exclaimed, lurching forward and snatching the report Ferdinand was
holding out. A tea party like that was incredibly important, yet it hadn’t
received so much as a passing mention in Hirschur’s reports. “A tea party
between cousins... with Frenbeltag’s candidate joining in too?”
“Rozemyne’s attempt to join was rebuffed,
since she is not a blood relative. For now, I advised Wilfried to carefully
consider what topics might be brought up and discuss how to respond to them
with Rozemyne.”
Sylvester’s breath caught in his throat.
Wilfried had somehow managed winter socializing by learning how to specifically
deal with members of the former Veronica faction, but who knew how he would
deal with those of a higher status than him?
“Proper socializing in the Royal Academy
starts once all the archduke candidates and archnobles have finished their
lessons, right? Is it really safe for Wilfried to go to a tea party while
Rozemyne is back in Ehrenfest for the Dedication Ritual...?” Sylvester asked,
earning him a dismissive look from Ferdinand.
“If your son is such a buffoon that he cannot
handle a tea party with his own cousins, he would never survive as an archduke.
He has plenty of time to prepare; do not interfere unless he comes seeking your
counsel himself. Remember that duchies are largely forbidden from interfering
in the Academy’s affairs.”
That was the last thing Sylvester wanted to
hear from the guy who was secretly responding to reports from Wilfried. His
lips curved into a frown, at which point Karstedt gave him a few supportive
pats on the shoulder.
“Your boy’s growing up just fine; in fact,
he’s more reliable than you were at his age. He won’t have any problems so long
as he’s willing to ask for advice and actually listens to it.”
To Sylvester, the Royal Academy had been a fun
playground where adults could no longer disturb him. It had never occurred to
him how much his parents must have been agonizing back home, and now, as a
parent himself, he was experiencing that same worry firsthand. He clenched his
fists and put his heart into one single prayer.
Please don’t cause any more problems than you
already have...
Of course, his prayers went unanswered.
A Productive Earthday
The sound of a bell rang through the darkness.
Without missing a beat, I sat up and pulled
aside my bed curtains. I had been waking up at first bell ever since beginning
my apprentice attendant training at another house, so it came almost naturally
to me now.
My older sister, however, was another story.
She never woke up on her own, under any circumstances, and today was no
exception; she showed absolutely no sign of getting up anytime soon.
After watching her sleeping form for a moment,
I stood up and activated the light-creating magic tool on my bedside table,
illuminating the dark room. I then lit the fire in the hearth so that it
wouldn’t be cold come changing time and climbed back into bed. My attendant
Emerika and my sister’s attendant Friedel would come to wake us up soon enough.
They were both older female relatives who had finished raising their children,
which made them very comfortable to be around.
“Lady Lieseleta, am I correct that you have no
apprentice attendant duties today?” Emerika asked, using a green feystone
pitcher to prepare a small tub of water for me to wash my face with.
I nodded. Attendants normally still worked on
Earthdays even though there were no classes, but Lady Rozemyne was going to be
staying in her room to nurture her Divine Will, so I was getting a day to
myself.
“Friedel, I would like to wear not my work
clothes or my black clothes today, but rather something normal,” I said.
“You wish to wear clothes for rest, while Lady
Angelica will be wearing light armor to motivate her studies, correct? That is
quite standard,” she replied, preparing the outfits. We did not have a room
dedicated to clothing like Lady Rozemyne, so our clothes were all either in a
closet placed in our room or in boxes.
“I was truly worried when you were taken as
her retainer...” Emerika admitted while combing my hair. “It was an immense
relief to learn there was a double bedroom for retainers.”
I agreed with a smile. Archduke candidates
could leave all the menial labor to others, and archnobles did largely the
same—albeit with fewer retainers than they might be used to. Mednoble and
laynoble students, however, could only afford to pay their servants so much. As
a result, we had to sleep in shared bedrooms to minimize the amount of cleaning
and bathwater required, allowing us to survive with fewer attendants between us
doing less work.
My older sister had been Lady Rozemyne’s
retainer since before Lady Rozemyne arrived at the dormitory and announced her
retainers. I was a more recent addition, meaning I had not been prepared to
shoulder the costs of staying in a retainer’s room by myself. After thinking
about how to best save money and lessen the load on my attendant, I decided to
room with my sister.
Judithe and Philine were currently sharing a
two-person room for the same reason. Brunhilde and Leonore had been shocked to
see us not using our right as retainers to secure individual rooms, but
archnobles were given individual rooms whether they were retainers or not, so
we weren’t in similar positions whatsoever. It wasn’t that our family was too
poor to afford single rooms for the both of us, but we would have needed time
to make preparations.
“I suppose I am going to have my own room
regardless after Angelica graduates this year...”
“You will do just fine in your own room, Lady
Lieseleta. You are an excellent retainer who any archduke candidate would wish
to have. Lady Angelica often fails to properly communicate with her attendants,
and I was quite fearful of serving here alone. It truly is a relief that you
are here with her, my lady.”
I could not help but smile. Attendants could
not do their job unless they were kept up to date, and Friedel was informed of
Angelica’s plans only when I conveyed Rihyarda’s and Cornelius’s reports to
her. She surely would have been thought of as incompetent among the attendants
had I not elected to live with my sister.
“I still cannot believe Lady Rozemyne values
Lady Angelica so much as a retainer...” Friedel mused aloud. Emerika nodded
firmly in agreement, then held out a hand to help me stand up. My chair was
repositioned and my socks prepared, and it was as I was putting them on that I
recalled the fuss my parents had made.
“There was quite a stir when my sister was
chosen to serve as Lady Rozemyne’s apprentice knight, wasn’t there?”
“Of course there was,” Friedel replied. “Lady
Angelica is hardly considerate of anyone else, and so she chose to be a knight,
not an attendant. Who ever would have thought she would be capable of serving
the archducal family without causing any problems?”
It was not unusual for female attendants to be
replaced after giving birth, which meant it was inevitable that Lady
Florencia—who had taken only female attendants—would need to take on someone
new. When the time came, she had wished to avoid taking any retainers with
close bonds to Lady Veronica, and so she invited my mother to serve her. It had
been very significant that she kept her distance from Lady Veronica somewhat
while my father served the previous aub.
Lord Karstedt, impressed with the diligence of
my parents, had taken Angelica to serve as Lady Rozemyne’s apprentice guard
knight. My parents surely would have indirectly refused had they been consulted
on the matter in advance, but he had gone straight to Angelica, who had then
agreed on the spot.
“I thought everything was over when Lady
Angelica failed her final exams and was told to take supplementary lessons,”
Friedel continued while shaking her head.
Needing supplementary lessons was in itself
cause for one to become a laughingstock in noble society, and if Angelica had
been relieved of guard duty as well, she surely would have lost all hope of
ever finding a proper partner. What’s more, she had only been selected to serve
as an apprentice guard knight due to the trust my parents had earned
themselves; her being relieved of duty would suggest that the archducal couple
and the knight commander had misplaced their trust in our family. No one of any
notable status would want us as retainers, and we would all most likely
struggle to find employment and get married. It truly was a frightening time
for us.
Angelica, meanwhile, showed no concern over
being required to take supplementary lessons; in fact, at one point, it seemed
as though she might fail to graduate entirely. Those who failed to graduate
from the Royal Academy were not considered nobles in the eyes of society,
meaning her schtappe would have been sealed and she would have been reduced to
serving our family as a lowly servant.
Even so, Lady Rozemyne kept her as a retainer,
and even helped organize a study group to ensure she passed her supplementary
classes. She had saved not only my sister, but our entire family. There truly
was no end to the gratitude I felt for her.
“Even my sister is motivated to study with
Lady Rozemyne here at the Royal Academy. She is not the same woman she was last
year,” I noted.
Emerika nodded. “She must be glad to have been
afforded this opportunity in her final year.”
“If only she and Lady Rozemyne had been in the
same grade from the start...” Friedel said with a wistful sigh. “We all would
have had a much easier time.”
I adjusted my skirt while the two attendants
shared a laugh. Once I was ready, it was time for my sister to wake up. Friedel
was the first to act.
“Do wake up, Lady Angelica. Lady Lieseleta has
finished getting ready.”
“Mnn... But there aren’t any classes to go to,
and we’ve got no work today...” Angelica murmured, hugging her blanket and
turning away, her silky blue hair flowing behind her. She was just as beautiful
and enchanting as ever, but also just as unladylike. Friedel sighed with
exasperation as I stepped forward to try next.
“Sister, you have ditter practice in the
morning even on your days off, do you not? Please remember that Cornelius has
said you cannot participate in practice if you do not finish your studying
first. I understand that you are finding it a struggle, but Lady Rozemyne will
be disappointed if you do not try your best nonetheless.”
“Oh, right... I have to study in the
morning... I have to study even though I don’t have class...” Angelica groaned
in a sleepy voice as she started to move. It took her some time to get moving
at first, but once she was up and moving around, things went a lot quicker. She
would manage just fine without me now.
“Lieseleta,” she said, rubbing the sleep from
her blue eyes. “I’ll get changed and study, so you go ask Rihyarda how Lady
Rozemyne is doing.”
It still came as somewhat of a surprise that
“study” and “Lady Rozemyne” were among Angelica’s first words upon waking up.
Last year, she had studied only when Cornelius cornered her in the common room,
but now she would study alone in her room. That said, this willingness likely
only stemmed from the fact she was forbidden from serving as a guard until she
passed her written classes.
Lady Rozemyne’s presence truly does make an
enormous difference...
“Certainly,” I replied. “May our parting be
brief.”
I exited the room, entrusting Angelica’s
morning preparation to Friedel and Emerika. I cut down the hallway, knocked
lightly on the door where the other retainers were gathered, then opened it as
silently as possible.
“Good morning, Rihyarda. How is Lady
Rozemyne?” I asked.
Rihyarda paused midway through refilling some
tea leaves and looked at the door leading to Rozemyne’s room. “I checked up on
her a moment ago, and it seems the potion she drank last night has made her all
the better. She should be right as rain after a full day spent resting in bed.”
Yesterday, Lady Rozemyne had gone to the
Farthest Hall to gather her Divine Will, only to fall unconscious on her way
back. She had returned in her highbeast, moving much slower than usual, and was
then left exclusively in Rihyarda’s care to minimize the risk of the Divine
Will being contaminated. We were all strictly forbidden from going near Lady
Rozemyne until she had finished absorbing the Divine Will into her.
“I was just so worried, since I had never
heard of anyone losing consciousness in the Farthest Hall before... Cornelius
and Hartmut were particularly concerned at dinner last night, as neither of
them are allowed up to the third floor. Even my sister mentioned Lady Rozemyne
almost immediately after she awoke.”
“Inform them about her recovery at breakfast.
I have work to do here while Lady Rozemyne is absorbing her Divine Will.”
I returned to my room and studied with
Angelica until second bell, then left for breakfast. Angelica had somehow
managed to finish everything she needed to do before practice, so she stepped
into the hallway with a lively expression. Ahead of us we could see Judithe,
her fluffy orange hair bouncing as she walked.
“Good morning, Judithe. How is Philine?” I
asked.
“Good morning to you both. Philine is still
stuck in her room to prevent anyone from touching her. I understand how
important it is, but I still felt lonely this morning without anyone to talk
to. I couldn’t wait for second bell.”
Judithe had been raised alongside several
brothers, so she was used to every morning being busy. We chatted as we entered
the dining hall, where Hartmut greeted us with a soft smile.
“Lieseleta. How is Lady Rozemyne doing?”
“She is feeling much better now. I am told she
will be fine after a day of rest.”
“Good to hear. I really wasn’t sure what to
think; I’ve never heard of anyone collapsing in the Farthest Hall before.
Hopefully it doesn’t mess with her schtappe...”
Both Cornelius and Hartmut sighed with relief
when I relayed Rihyarda’s message. Cornelius was Rozemyne’s blood-related older
brother, so it was only natural that he would be so visibly distraught even in
the dining hall. Hartmut, meanwhile, had only become her retainer after she
entered the Royal Academy, yet his dedication to Lady Rozemyne as an individual
far surpassed almost anyone else’s.
I am grateful for Lady Rozemyne saving my sister
and family, but what drives Hartmut’s abnormal dedication, I wonder? He says
that anyone would feel the same if they understood the glory of the Saint of
Ehrenfest, but I am afraid to say I don’t quite understand at all...
“Rozemyne once collapsed just from walking
through our estate to get to the book room,” Cornelius said. “As retainers, we
should have been more worried about the Farthest Hall, since everyone has to
walk all the way back on their own.”
His wisdom was well and true. I needed to be
more careful with Lady Rozemyne as well.
“My my...” Brunhilde said, entering the dining
hall with Leonore and sitting down with us. “It seems you have all already been
updated on Lady Rozemyne.” I could guess they had just gone to the room for
retainers and spoken to Rihyarda as well.
With all of the retainers now gathered, our
food was served.
“So, seeing as we all have today off, what are
everyone’s plans?” Cornelius asked. We took turns giving our answers.
“I am attending a tea party this morning to
exchange information,” Brunhilde said. “We are all relatively in the dark about
the first-year archduke candidates of other duchies, are we not? Thankfully,
the apprentice archattendants who serve them are also going to be present. I
have been instructed to attend with Isidore, one of Lord Wilfried’s apprentice
attendants.”
“Ah, yeah. I’ve got a gathering of apprentice
archscholars to attend. Do the guard knights have anything like that?” Hartmut
asked. He and Brunhilde were going to be fulfilling their roles as archnobles
by exchanging information with those of other duchies.
Cornelius answered on behalf of the guard
knights. “We have ditter practice this morning. There won’t be many
opportunities for us to practice once Rozemyne starts holing up in the library,
since one of us is going to be stuck in there accompanying her. So,
Angelica—did you finish in time?”
“I did everything you told me to, Cornelius. I
can come,” she replied.
Cornelius looked my way for confirmation. I
nodded, having observed her valiant efforts before breakfast.
“Alright,” Cornelius said. “Looks like
Angelica, Leonore, Traugott, and I will be practicing today.”
“Wait a second, Cornelius! I want to join in
too!” Judithe declared, launching a fist into the air, but Cornelius merely
crossed his arms and frowned.
“You’re not in the knight course yet,
remember? You’re a second-year. Plus, you haven’t finished most of your
classes, since you’re focusing on getting the highest grades you can. You
should use this time to study instead.”
“Ngh... But I can’t practice most days because
of classes. I want to join you guys at least once. I’ll get all stiff
otherwise.”
Judithe had trained with the knights almost
every day in her home province of Kirnberger, but as a second-year, her time
was spent attending common classes. Compared to the third-years and above who
specialized in the knight course, she had overwhelmingly less training and
experience.
“I understand how you feel, but as an archduke
candidate’s retainer, it’s more important for your future to pass with
excellent grades than to pass with the bare minimum,” Leonore explained,
brushing her magenta hair from her shoulders and regarding Judithe with
intelligent blue eyes.
“This isn’t so much the case for archnobles,
but mednobles and laynobles must face the jealousy of all those who would hope
to take their position,” she continued. “Securing high grades is essential to
avoid and lessen that jealousy. The only way to protect your position is to
make those around you understand that you were selected out of all the other
mednobles for a good reason.”
Her explanation complete, Leonore then turned
to me, no doubt signaling that as a mednoble, the same held true for me. She
was correct, but there were a few rare exceptions—in Angelica’s case, she had
secured her position not through good grades, but by surviving Lord
Bonifatius’s training and accomplishing the awe-inspiring feat of earning his
respect.
“Um, if we need high grades to protect
ourselves... what does that mean for Philine? She’s a laynoble and she just
barely passed history and geography,” Judithe asked, her eyes wavering with
concern.
“It is unfortunate, but I imagine she will
struggle greatly whenever she is not in Lady Rozemyne’s sight,” Leonore replied
coldly. “I understand that she had no choice as a laynoble—if she had elected
to fail the exams to achieve better grades, not only would she have earned the
ire of all the other first-years in the dormitory, but she would have also
delayed Lady Rozemyne’s entry to the library. The adults in Ehrenfest will care
not for such details, however.”
Leonore sighed, then glanced over at the table
where Wilfried’s attendants were eating. Wilfried himself was not there, but a
mutter directed at him escaped her nonetheless. “What were you thinking? Do you
even realize what you’ve done?”
“I thank you ever so much for the advice,
Leonore. I will try to earn the best grades I possibly can,” Judithe said,
understanding Leonore’s point and resolving to study even harder.
“And how will you be spending the day?”
Brunhilde asked, glancing my way.
“I believe I will take Judithe’s lead and
study, so that I might pass my classes as soon as possible with the best
possible grades. We will need many retainers on standby to accommodate Lady
Rozemyne’s library needs, no?”
Once breakfast was over, we saw off the
apprentice knights, then headed to the common room to study. Thanks to Lady
Rozemyne having established the Better Grades Committee—an organization which
split everyone according to their courses and enforced the sharing of study
materials—I now had more people to study with, and it was easier to ask others
for help. I saw Judithe leave for another table, likely to study with other
second-years. In my opinion, it was truly admirable that Lady Rozemyne had
created a situation where we could all work together, regardless of our
factions.
“Lieseleta, you certainly are throwing
yourself at your studies today. Is today not your one and only day off, while
Lady Rozemyne is absorbing her stone?” Kathrein asked. She was a third-year
apprentice attendant set to serve Lady Charlotte, and she had been practicing
in the home of an attendant who previously served Lady Florencia until the end
of autumn.
“It is, Kathrein, but I cannot risk getting
grades unbefitting one chosen to be Lady Rozemyne’s retainer. I also hope to
finish my written lessons as soon as reasonably possible so that I can
accompany her to the library.”
“Lady Rozemyne certainly was more forceful
than I anticipated—even Traugott is taken aback. I simply cannot believe how
she treated the first-years. Had the one I served likewise ordered me to pass
my classes on the first day no matter what, I surely would have frozen in shock
and failed to achieve anything at all.”
The fearsome might Lady Rozemyne had unleashed
upon the first-years while driving them to pass came as a massive surprise to
those who had seen her in the winter playroom. There, she had simply read thick
books to herself, read aloud from picture books, and asked everyone to work
together despite their factions. There were more than a few students who took
this sudden change as her abusing her authority as an archduke candidate to act
like a tyrant.
“Well, using the library was one of the main
reasons Lady Rozemyne came to the Royal Academy. I must say, though... I am
quite looking forward to accompanying her there,” I said furtively, lowering my
voice a little.
Kathrein’s eyes widened. “You never seemed
interested in the library before, Lieseleta,” she replied, eyeing me carefully.
“After accompanying Lady Rozemyne there for
the registration process, I know exactly what awaits me,” I said, giggling to
myself as I recalled the shumils. My words caught the attention of not just
Kathrein, but the other nearby apprentice attendants as well. “Do you recall my
mentioning that there are two large shumils—that is to say, two large magic
tools—in the library, and that Lady Rozemyne became their master? They are
named Schwartz and Weiss, and once I have finished my written lessons, I plan to
begin designing outfits for them.”
“Outfits for the shumils...?”
“Indeed. Lady Rozemyne was told that, as their
new master, it was her duty to award them with new clothes. I want nothing more
than to help with that process,” I said.
The shumils we raised at home could neither
walk nor talk, but the two large ones helping Professor Solange in the library
not only spoke, but they also walked on two legs. One was black, the other was
white, and they were both much too cute.
“Goodness... Seeing Schwartz and Weiss give
their tour while wearing matching outfits was just... Ah, so adorable!” I
gushed.
“I would like to see these library shumils,”
Kathrein said. “I raise shumils of my own back home. Just how large are they?”
“They aren’t quite as tall as Lady Rozemyne,
but they do come close if you count their ears. They act according to Lady
Rozemyne’s instructions, and they are capable of speech as well. It is quite
stilted speech, mind you, but that just makes them even cuter in my eyes.”
As I spoke at length about Schwartz and Weiss,
I noticed the other girls who raised shumils at home start exchanging glances.
“I think I might wish to visit the library as
well...” Kathrein murmured, drawing everyone’s attention. “To, erm... To secure
study materials, of course. There are less resources for the attendant course
than for the knight course, you see...” She looked around with worry,
attempting to recover the situation with a polite laugh, but it seemed everyone
else was just as eager.
“You are quite right, Kathrein,” one girl
noted. “Do take me with you when you go to the library; I would like to see
these other resources myself.”
“I wish to accompany you as well,” added
another. “I too must search for new resources.”
“It seems that Lady Rozemyne is already
working with the first-years to make study resources for next year. As her
retainer, I believe it necessary that I follow her example,” I said.
With that, we headed to the library to see the
shumils—or rather, to search for resources for the attendant course. We found
the two shumils organizing the bookshelves, their heads swaying from side to
side as they moved around.
“O-Oh my...” one girl started to stammer.
“How... How...”
I chuckled at her reaction. “Adorable, are
they not? Do you not wish to help make new clothes for them?”
“How shall we dress them? I imagine another
matching set would look lovely.”
“Stay strong, everyone. We came here for study
resources, remember?” Kathrein whispered, stopping us in our tracks. “You said
that the magic tools help with library work, correct? I suggest we ask them
where we might find resources for the attendant course. There is nothing wrong
with us approaching them to that end.”
“Brilliant, Kathrein!”
We approached Schwartz, asked where the
attendant course resources were, then ogled the two shumils as they began
looking for books. From a distance, we could see there were a few professors in
the reading room, seemingly asking Professor Solange about the circumstances
behind Schwartz and Weiss moving again.
“I see the professors are interested in
Schwartz and Weiss as well,” Kathrein said.
“Professor Hirschur raced over as soon as she
heard the news,” I replied. “I believe she said something about magic tools
that can walk and talk on their own being extremely rare.”
We took our time picking out resources, all
the while watching Schwartz and Weiss, and it was only when the light signaling
for us to leave the library snapped us back to our senses that we realized none
of us had actually brought deposits with us to take out any books.
Fourth bell rang a moment later, and we all
returned to the dormitory. It was unfortunate that we had been unable to borrow
any resources, but we used the walk back to discuss just how cute Schwartz and
Weiss were, and what manner of clothes we could dress them in.
“I thought about it over lunch, and... I am
convinced that dressing them in separate colors is for the best,” Kathrein
declared immediately after lunch. She had drawn up an illustration detailing
her ideal outfits for the shumils, which caused our enthusiasm to spread
throughout the common room.
“Should their clothes not be black,
considering that they work within the Royal Academy?” I asked.
“Surely you recall that the black shumil wore
a white dress. Any color must be fine.”
Even girls who hadn’t been in the common room
that morning soon became interested in our discussion. “What are these?” one
asked, gesturing toward the illustration.
Those who had already visited the library told
the unaware girls about the two shumils, explained that they were magic tools,
then expounded on their almost indescribable cuteness.
“...And so, we are in the middle of designing
new outfits for them,” I concluded. “Do you have any ideas?”
Soon enough, we were pondering the issue
alongside even girls of other factions. At some point, a few apprentice
scholars joined the mix as well.
“It is nice to see you all so enthusiastic,
but is it not Lady Rozemyne’s job to prepare clothes for Schwartz and Weiss? Is
it truly acceptable to advance this discussion without her?” Brunhilde asked
out of nowhere. Everyone immediately fell silent, the laughter dying away on
our lips as we looked in her direction.
I attempted to break the uncomfortable air
with a smile. “We know, Brunhilde, but Lady Rozemyne is absent today. Can we
not have a single day to discuss what clothes would suit Schwartz and Weiss,
and what we would like to make for them? Please do keep this a secret from
her.”
Brunhilde fell into thought for a moment,
looking over me and everyone else, then smiled and tapped a finger to
Kathrein’s illustration. “Their new master is an archduke candidate from
Ehrenfest, you know. Shall we adorn them with the flowers used to decorate
hairpins?” she suggested, contributing to the discussion rather than
instructing us to disperse.
We all exchanged smiles of mutual agreement;
introducing to their clothing the Ehrenfest fashion trends Lady Rozemyne had
invented was a truly splendid idea. We soon had an abundance of amazing
suggestions.
“If we are to use flower decorations, perhaps
we should also copy Lady Rozemyne’s skirt?”
“Rather than having them both dressed as
girls, would it not be wonderful to have one wear boys’ clothing? The white
shumil can be adorned with cute lace, while the black one can wear a sharp,
cool-looking uniform.”
“I think we should make their clothes match
Lady Rozemyne’s outfit.”
Brunhilde’s dramatic arrival had only
accelerated the discussion. Ideas were spreading around the group like
wildfire, and each one improved upon the last. In the end, however, we ended up
too absorbed in our conversation. Not one of us noticed when Lady Rozemyne
entered the common room, so when she suddenly asked what we were all doing, it
shocked me so much that I almost jumped out of my skin. I scrambled to flip the
illustration so that Lady Rozemyne would not see it.
“Is it something you do not want me to see?”
she asked.
“No, Lady Rozemyne. We, erm... We just feel a
bit uncomfortable about having gotten so festive without you. There is not much
more to it than that,” Brunhilde said with a troubled smile.
“Schwartz and Weiss are simply too adorable...
We began discussing what fashion of clothing you might prepare for them. Do
forgive us for getting ahead of ourselves in your absence,” I added.
Brunhilde and I stepped forward, taking full
responsibility as retainers so that the others would not be blamed. Lady
Rozemyne then asked to see the designs we had come up with, and the hopeful
glint in her eyes precluded any refusal. I showed her the finalized
illustration Kathrein had drawn while explaining our thought process.
It wasn’t long before Angelica, who had
arrived with Lady Rozemyne, chimed in as well. “Lieseleta has always loved cute
things to death. She even dresses up our pet shumils at home with clothes that
she makes herself.”
“Sister!” I exclaimed. It was true that I had
put more enthusiasm than was perhaps necessary into my explanation, since Lady
Rozemyne seemed to be enjoying it, but I did not believe it was proper to
disclose such personal details about a retainer in front of the one they
served.
As an attendant, I needed to remain
clearheaded at all times, and yet I had been so absorbed in our conversation
that I had not even noticed Lady Rozemyne enter. To make matters worse, I had
also failed to include her in the discussion even though she was the master of
the two shumils in the first place. I could feel the blood drain from my face.
If these transgressions resulted in me being relieved of duty, my family would
surely be wailing in agony once again.
Mother, Father... Please forgive me!
As I silently begged my parents for
forgiveness, Lady Rozemyne curiously tilted her head at me. I remembered her
mentioning that someone had once praised her as looking like an adorable
shumil, and with her golden eyes and flowing dark-blue hair reminding me of the
ones I raised back home, I wholeheartedly agreed.
“...I will only be able to enter the library
once I have passed my classes. Lieseleta, if you have finished your written
classes by then, I would not mind you coming with me to measure Schwartz and
Weiss.”
“Truly, Lady Rozemyne?!”
“It will be much more enjoyable if we all
think of designs together. Would anyone else like to join us?”
Everyone who had been working with us for the
designs agreed to come with us. Those who hadn’t gone to the library in the
morning looked like they were dying with excitement to go.
“In that case, I recommend you all finish your
written lessons before my practical lessons conclude. It is always hard to
focus on your studying when there are more exciting matters to tempt you,” Lady
Rozemyne said.
“Indeed! We shall do our best!”
We had finalized our own ideas for the
designs, and from this point onward, we would be prioritizing Lady Rozemyne’s
views. It was a perfect opportunity to shift our excitement from clothing to
studying.
“Lady Rozemyne is passing lesson after lesson
with tremendous speed. We will not finish our own in time without serious
effort. First-years have only a few classes, but we seniors have many more.”
“Indeed. Let us do all we can. I want nothing
more than for us all to measure the shumils together.”
And so, we Ehrenfest girls all started
studying together, our hearts and souls united with the desire to measure
Schwartz and Weiss. I looked around the common room, which was now much quieter
as everyone threw themselves into their studies, and found myself moved by how
much more focused people were.
Lady Rozemyne truly does excel at driving us to
study.
Myne Awakes
“Whew. That was heavy...” Kamil said, setting
his carrying basket down on the table with a thump. Today was market day, and
we had gone to buy meat for winter preparations. I set the things I had bought
onto the table as well, then looked at my son, who was now resting on the
floor.
“Time for the next step. Kamil, could you
fetch the salt for me?” I asked. We needed to get the base preparations done,
since pig-killing day was coming fast. Kamil frowned and grumbled about being
tired, but he stood right up and went to the storage room. I chuckled to myself
as he went.
At this rate, he’ll be ready to go by spring.
Kamil had been begging me to let him go to the
forest, most likely because there were so many other kids his age going there
for winter preparations, but I feared he didn’t have the stamina to handle the
trip, or the strength to make it back with the older kids before the gate
closed. Right now, I was testing him by sending him to the market and on
errands to the east gate where Gunther worked.
“Okay!” I took out a somewhat large board,
covered it with cloth, and started setting some meat atop it while Kamil came
back in with a bag full of salt. The sight reminded me of the time Myne had
found the salt much too heavy to carry. She had ended up crying to Tuuli,
asking her to help with tearful eyes. Kamil didn’t really look like Myne, but
his similarly colored hair and eyes meant I often thought about her when I
looked at him.
Has Myne woken up yet, I wonder...?
We were currently keeping ourselves going by
believing in the letters Lutz occasionally brought to us, which said she was
still alive. We had gone quite a while without any updates, until we finally
received good news in the middle of autumn. It was around the time Lutz had
gotten back from a trip to some distant city.
“Looks like there are some signs of change
popping up. It’ll still be some time before she wakes up, but it’s progress,”
he had said. That good news had warmed my heart amid all the business bearing
down on me, but then a whole month passed. Before I knew it, the end of autumn
was on the horizon. It had been almost two years since the winter Myne was
poisoned.
I hate the winter... The more blizzards keep me
stuck inside, the more bad thoughts I have. I can’t believe it’s this time
again already...
I played back the memory of when Lutz had read
that terrible letter aloud, and my heart twinged with the same pain that had
washed over me when I was told Myne had been poisoned.
“I just hope she wakes up before winter...” I
muttered to myself with a sigh.
“Huh? Mom? Did you say something?” Kamil
asked, looking up at me. I smiled and held out the water jug.
“It’s nothing. Go wash your hands. We need to
start rubbing salt on the meat.”
“Okay! I’m excited for pig day!”
Pig-killing day was something of a small
festival. All the kids looked forward to it, mostly because we got so much
food. Myne had always gotten sick around this time of year, and she would pull
a face whenever the occasion was mentioned, but Kamil would immediately gaze up
with renewed enthusiasm, even when he had just complained about being tired.
We bundled up the salted meat, took it to the
winter storage closet in our storage room, then started preparing dinner.
Gunther was on afternoon duty today, so he wouldn’t be getting back until after
the gates closed.
“Are we steaming the bird with wine?” Kamil
asked. “Dad said that’s his favorite.”
“No, we’re cooking it with herbs this time.
The salt needs to rest a day before we can steam the bird with wine,” I replied
while preparing the herbs. It was then that someone suddenly started pounding
on the front door. No sooner had Kamil and I exchanged worried glances than we
heard a familiar voice from the other side.
“Mom! Kamil! Open the door! It’s me, Tuuli!”
“What? Tuuli...?” I asked aloud. She usually
only came home on Fruitday afternoons or Earthday mornings. On top of that, she
had completely mastered the etiquette the Gilberta Company was teaching her,
such that she always acted graceful and polite even when at home with us. She
never pounded on the door or yelled.
I opened the door in confusion, and in raced
not just Tuuli, but Lutz as well. Given how much they were gasping for air, I
could guess they had sprinted all the way up the stairs.
“What happened, you two?” I asked. “Don’t you
have work today?”
“We do, but Lutz came to see me, and they said
I could go home for today. Lutz can tell you why. Haah... I can barely
breathe...” Tuuli gasped.
Kamil rushed over and gave her a cup of water
as she rubbed her throat. She gulped it all down before casually wiping her
mouth; her usual elegance was absolutely nowhere to be seen.
“Thanks, Kamil. Give some to Lutz as well.”
“Okay. Here you go, Lutz.”
Lutz accepted the cup with a thank-you, gave
Kamil’s dark-blue hair a quick tousle, then downed the drink in one go. Kamil
responded with a broad smile. He liked Lutz a lot, since Lutz was always the
one who brought him new picture books.
“So, what happened then?” I asked while
watching Kamil celebrate. Lutz looked at me with a wide grin.
“Myne woke up yesterday!” he announced.
My eyes widened; this was the very news I had
been hoping to receive for quite some time now. Tuuli, meanwhile, clapped her
hands together in excitement.
“I knew it was going to happen sooner or
later!” she said, but something about the whole situation just didn’t feel real
to me. I had been hoping that she would wake up before winter, but not once had
I thought it might actually happen.
Hold on... Maybe I’m asleep, and this is just a
dream...
I couldn’t help my skepticism. I mean, I had
already witnessed countless dreams in which Myne woke up—happy dreams where the
whole family jumped for joy at Lutz’s message. The fact that Gunther wasn’t
back and things weren’t as good as they could have been made it feel more
realistic, at least.
As I wavered between thinking this was a dream
and accepting it as reality, Tuuli and Lutz excitedly talked among themselves.
“Lutz, when are you going to go see Myne?”
Tuuli asked, a noticeable glimmer in her blue eyes.
Lutz rubbed his nose with a proud smile. “I
got word from Gil this morning and we had a meeting this afternoon.”
“Huh? You’ve already seen her, Lutz?! No fair!
I thought we all found out together!” Tuuli complained, puffing out her cheeks.
Lutz shrugged at her, but there was still an overjoyed smile spread across his
face.
“Hey, it caught me off guard too. Seems like
she’s moving to the Noble’s Quarter tomorrow or the day after, and they wanted
to have a work meeting before that happened.”
Lutz met her...? Myne?
I was still struggling to process their
conversation, and for some reason, my heart was pounding harder than ever. It
felt like things were gradually snapping into place, and the dream was becoming
reality.
“Was Myne okay?” Tuuli asked. “Remember how we
talked about how crazy it would be if she got super tall while she was asleep
and came out looking like a totally different person? Did that happen?”
Lutz laughed and shook his head. “Not at all.
She’s better now, but she looks and acts exactly the same. I kinda couldn’t
believe how tiny she is, but she certainly seemed to be self-conscious about
it. She cried about how she wanted to get tall.”
Myne cried...?
Myne had never cried in any of my dreams; she
always wore pleasant smiles and waved, apologizing for worrying us but being
happy to be healthy again.
“Oh... Well, Myne’s always been uncomfortable
about how tiny she is, and I hate to say this knowing she cried about it, but
I’m super relieved to hear she’s the same Myne I remember.”
I feel the same way...
I agreed with Tuuli without voicing it. I was
very glad that my daughter was the same as I remembered.
“So, Lutz... Do you think she’ll order a new
hair stick?” Tuuli asked.
“Who knows? But I’ve got plant paper, ink, and
new stationery ready. No matter what she needs, I’m prepared.”
“Act as smug as you want; it doesn’t bother me
at all. I mean, I’ve made so many hair sticks for Myne
over the past year in preparation for when she wakes up,” Tuuli said, puffing
out her chest. Lutz grinned at her, and she smiled back in turn.
This never happened in any of my dreams...
My dreams always ended not long after the news
came; I would always wake up in the dark and sigh to myself. But now, it was
progressing beyond Lutz and Tuuli’s initial celebration, and they started
talking about the future—about more practical things. It was then that I
finally accepted this was real—that Myne really had woken up—and tears began
welling up in my eyes.
“I’m so glad... This isn’t a dream... Myne
really did wake up...” I said aloud.
“Mom...”
It had been a long two years... A very, very
long two years. Sometimes I had worried that she would never wake up; other
times I wondered whether the nobles were just hiding the fact she had died. But
my fears were unfounded. Myne had woken up. The strength drained from my body,
replaced with joy and relief.
Thank goodness, Myne... Thank goodness.
Kamil blinked his golden-brown eyes and looked
around at us, confused to see our tears. He then asked a question that pulled
me back to my senses like being doused with cold water.
“Who’s Myne?”
Tuuli, Lutz, and I all frowned at each other.
We hadn’t been talking about Myne much so that our neighbors wouldn’t press for
details, and we didn’t really talk about her being asleep since it would always
just make us depressed, but the fact that Kamil outright didn’t know who she
was blew me away.
How should we explain this to him...?
Kamil would turn four when spring came. He was
at the age where he would tell people everything he knew, and ask everyone
about everything they knew. We couldn’t risk him talking about Myne to the
neighbors. I wiped my tears away and started to think things over. I would need
to speak to Gunther about what we’d say to him.
“We can talk about this after dinner, once
Gunther gets back. Tuuli, you’re happy to help with dinner, right? Could you
and Kamil get the potatoffels and rannyehs from the storage room? Let’s make
this fancy, since you’re back. And Lutz, thanks for coming all this way for
us.”
I plucked my purse off the shelf as I walked
Lutz to the door. Then, once I had confirmed that Tuuli and Kamil were gone, I
slipped a small silver into Lutz’s hand.
“I’m really sorry about this, but could you go
ask Gunther to stay out drinking until the time Kamil usually falls asleep?” I
asked.
Lutz shot an awkward glance at the storage
room. “Sorry, Mrs. Effa. I just...”
“Don’t apologize. I’m very thankful you came
to tell us this, and it’s our fault for not thinking about Kamil properly. You
can tell Gunther the news.”
Lutz nodded, then turned around and hurried
down the stairs.
“Is Dad not back yet?” Kamil asked. “I hope he
gets back soon.”
“Why don’t we just go ahead and eat now?”
Tuuli asked. “I’m starving here, and Dad’s like, super late.”
“Agreed,” I said. “He’s probably at the bar,
and I can’t wait any longer. Let’s start without him. Tuuli, how has work been
lately?”
We finished preparing for dinner while
blatantly avoiding talking about Myne, then started eating. Kamil sadly looked
over at the door before joining us. He was hungry too, and it wasn’t rare for
Gunther to come home late after drinking.
Once we had finished dinner, Kamil leapt into
bed, excited to sleep next to Tuuli for the first time in a while. They chatted
for a short while beneath the covers, but it wasn’t long before Kamil was fast
asleep. In all honesty, I was relieved that he had fallen asleep before Gunther
got back. It probably helped that he was tired from walking to the market,
carrying things about, and preparing for pig-killing day.
At seventh bell, the front door quietly
opened. Gunther was back.
“Welcome home, dear.”
“I heard it all from Lutz... About Myne and
Kamil.”
Gunther removed his coat and put it aside
while Tuuli poured tea for everyone. We picked up our cups, then collectively
sighed.
“As his father, I want to tell him the
truth... but how would we even do that?” Gunther asked with a sigh after
drinking some tea.
“I can’t believe Kamil still doesn’t know
Myne,” I said. “I want to tell him who she is, since they’re family, but the
story is that nobles took her away and she died. Wouldn’t he just get confused
if we told him the truth and called it a family secret?”
“I’m less worried about him being confused and
more worried about him telling everyone what he heard without really getting
why it’s important,” Tuuli replied, turning her blue eyes to Gunther. “I’m
absolutely against telling Kamil the truth; we don’t know what he’ll do. Our
best option here is to tell him what everyone else knows.”
My eyes fell to my cup. Tuuli had a point, but
the hardness in her voice made it seem like she really didn’t care about Kamil
in this situation.
“You and Lutz kept secrets when you were just
old enough to be baptized, didn’t you?” Gunther asked. “We don’t have to tell
him right away. We can wait until after he’s been baptized. He’ll surely
understand then. He wouldn’t just tell people our family secrets.”
Tuuli pursed her lips, then shook her head,
rejecting Gunther’s compromise. “No, Dad. Words won’t be enough to explain how
dangerous Myne’s situation is, and why we can’t tell people about her no matter
what. He won’t ever get it.”
“Tuuli...?” I asked. She was being strangely
obstinate for some reason. Before I knew it, she lowered her head; tears were
welling up in her eyes and dripping down onto the table.
“She told me not to come to the temple because
it was dangerous, but I didn’t get it... I didn’t understand...” she sobbed. “I
thought I needed to protect her, since she’s my little sister... I thought I
was supposed to protect her from danger, and... It’s my fault she’s stuck where
she is now...”
“No, Tuuli...” Gunther said, trying to comfort
her. “That wasn’t your fault. How many times have I told you this?”
He had said it more times than I could
remember, but Tuuli never seemed to agree with him. There had been times when
it seemed like he had gotten through to her, but in the end, the regret still
weighed on her heart.
Gunther and I glanced at each other, at which
point Tuuli wiped away her tears and looked up at us.
“I just wanted to protect Myne,” she said,
“but all I ended up doing was making things worse for her. It was because we
were there—because our own actions caused this much damage—that Lutz and I know
how important secrets are. Kamil won’t understand. He hasn’t gone through that.
And even if we do explain this all to him, how can we be sure he’ll grasp how
serious it is? He’s family, but that doesn’t fix the problem.”
Tuuli’s words had weight to them, but above
all else, she was right. She and Lutz hadn’t known to keep secrets just because
they were old enough to have been baptized; they knew from experience, keeping
secrets whether they liked it or not because they knew they had to.
“You’re right, Tuuli. Kamil doesn’t have the
context or the life experience he needs to understand the situation, so he
could put us all in danger,” I said. “And Myne would desperately try to save
us, wouldn’t she?”
Gunther nodded. “Yeah. Myne put her all into
protecting Hasse and the gray priests. If anything happened, she’d do
everything in her power to try and save us.”
Myne would try to save us no matter what, even
if doing so put her in a bad situation or meant breaking the contract that
stopped us from calling each other family. Considering that she wanted to stay
connected with us in any way she could, even after becoming a noble to save our
lives, it wasn’t hard to see what lengths she would go to.
“We can’t put Myne in danger when she’d do
anything to protect us. We have to wait until Kamil comes of age... No, until
Kamil figures things out on his own,” Gunther decided, earning him an agreeing
nod from Tuuli.
“That’s fine with me, but how do we explain
Tuuli and Lutz being so overjoyed earlier today?” I asked.
“It’ll depend on how much Kamil remembers, but
we can just frame it as part of the story about Myne getting killed by nobles.
Let’s say... Lutz and Tuuli were happy because they found something of Myne’s
she left at the Gilberta Company,” Gunther suggested, pulling an old but
familiar-looking hair stick out from his pocket. The yellow flowers were rather
dirty from being handled so much, and the red flowers were faded.
“I remember that one... It’s the hair stick I
made right after Myne became a noble. I based it on the design Myne described
in a letter she wrote and slipped into a book she printed...” Tuuli said, her
eyes watering as she poked at the hair stick. It was completely different from
the more complex ones she made now, serving as a reminder that she really had
gotten a lot better.
“Lutz got it from Otto. They were keeping it
in their workshop to use as an example, but they’ve got so many experts now
that they don’t need it anymore. Should be perfect for the whole Kamil
situation.”
“It’s old and dried up now that it’s been used
as an example for years. It’s perfect to say Myne used to own it,” Tuuli said,
glancing over at the bedroom where Kamil was asleep with a tearful smile.
Gunther looked over as well, his eyes just as watery, then I did the same. We
were making a big secret in our family, and I couldn’t help but feel terrible.
“I suppose we can’t talk about Myne anymore,
even at home...” I whispered.
Tuuli spun back around to look at me, her face
scrunched up in pain... but after a moment, she nodded too.
Afterword
Hello again, it’s Miya Kazuki. Thank you very
much for reading Ascendance of a Bookworm: Part 4 Volume 1.
A new chapter of the story has begun. Rozemyne
awoke from her coma to find herself two years in the future. She’s had much to
worry about, but she’s still charging at full speed toward the Royal Academy’s
library.
The Royal Academy is a school for teaching the
children of nobles to become proper nobles themselves. They learn about things
like magecraft and brewing magic tools from a variety of rather colorful
professors and grow alongside the children of other duchies on their way to
becoming Yurgenschmidt nobles, while archduke candidates also learn the magic
necessary to rule their duchies.
It’s probably hard to tell from Rozemyne’s
perspective, since royalty and the other archduke candidates are blown to the
wayside in her quest for the library, but the Academy is supposed to be a place
where you make friends, establish connections to other duchies, and look for a
future significant other, much like Damuel did in the past.
Rozemyne is a former commoner turned archduke
candidate, which means she is more annoyed than anything by the flock of
retainers who follow her by necessity, and she yearns for nothing more than to
be surrounded by books. To be honest, she’s something of a problem child who
would vanish into the library forever if she could.
Some people are troubled by this abnormal
archduke candidate, but her guardians acknowledge that she hasn’t yet recovered
from her long sleep and still lacks the common sense of a noble, so they don’t
mind too much as long as she doesn’t actively cause any problems. Unfortunately
for them, all sorts of problems are going to spring up in the next volume.
(Hahaha.)
Of course, a new part also means a lot of new
characters. Rozemyne has a bunch of retainers going with her to the Royal
Academy. It may be hard to remember them all, since so many were introduced at
once, but just do your best and start with those who interact with Rozemyne the
most. Don’t worry, she’s just as confused as all of you are!
For this volume, we prioritized giving
illustrations to the attendants who are going to be looking after Rozemyne.
Among them we have Lieseleta, Angelica’s little sister and a lover of cute
things, and Brunhilde, the trendy daughter of Count Groschel with a keen sense
for fashion. There’s also Professor Hirschur, Ferdinand’s former teacher and
the ever-absent supervisor of the Ehrenfest Dormitory. Maybe the next volume
will show the guard knights?
This volume’s short stories are from
Lieseleta’s and Effa’s perspectives.
In Lieseleta’s story, I hoped to portray what
Royal Academy life is like from the perspective of another noble. It contains
all sorts of things you don’t see in the main story, like how other nobles have
to ask their parents for attendants to support them, how they share rooms to
save on money and minimize labor, how retainers talk when the person they serve
isn’t around, how they have fun with their friends, and so on...
Effa’s story shows us how the lower city
reacted to Myne waking up. Tuuli and Lutz rushed home as soon as they got the
news, Effa listened with tearful eyes... but Kamil alone had no idea what was
going on. Nobody wants to keep a secret in the family, but how much can he
really be told...? They’re ultimately forced to make a tough decision...
Since Part 4 takes place in the Royal Academy,
I’ve included in this volume a map of Yurgenschmidt, as was often requested in
the web novel. It’s a map I drew myself, so please be gentle. My hope is that
it at least gives you a gist of where all the duchies are. Try to think of it
as a mood setter more than anything else.
We’re also announcing the results of the
second popularity poll that was held online. The results surprised me once
again, and I hope you enjoy seeing them.
Incidentally, TO Books has announced the sale
of the second fanbook. This one will contain the store-exclusive short stories
I’ve written in the year since the first one, in addition to a report on the
recording for the drama CDs, newly written short stories, another Q&A,
original manga from Suzuka-sama, and four-panel comics from Shiina-sama. There
really is so much packed into it!
Also, Ascendance of a
Bookworm won first place in the tankobon category of This
Light Novel is Amazing! 2018. It’s all thanks to your passionate support
as readers. Truly, thank you.
There’s also new merchandise being released.
This includes metal bookmarks; five different acrylic keyholders with art from
Suzuka-sama, the manga artist; a letter set made of parchment; and five kinds
of postcards.
This volume’s cover art has Rozemyne in her
new Royal Academy clothes, as well as Schwartz and Weiss, the library’s magic
tools. Don’t you think it’s the perfect illustration to show her beginning as
the founder of the Royal Academy’s so-called Library Committee? The color
illustration is filled with new characters, and there are still a bunch who
haven’t shown up yet. I can imagine that giving them all proper designs will be
quite the task... Shiina You-sama, thank you very much.
And finally, I offer up my highest thanks to
everyone who read this book. May we meet again in Part 4 Volume 2.
October 2017, Miya Kazuki









