Hikikomari Kyuuketsuki no Monmon Vol 7
Table
of Contents
4: The Late Monarch’s Guidance
“Look, Lingzi. The
snowdrops are blooming.”
The garden of the Enchanted Lands’ Jingshi.
Deep within the grand paradise where the Immortals resided, Tianzi Yizhu Ailan
smiled like a child while pointing at the Snowdrop Stone imported from the
Polar Union.
“You don’t find this sort of thing in the
Enchanted Lands. You place it and let it spread its white mana, and it looks
like a blooming snowdrop flower. There’s still even rarer stones out there in
the Dark Core Zone, though.”
The Tianzi was almost two hundred years old,
yet his every movement brimmed with childish naïveté. Unable to stand his
behavior any longer, Lingzi said:
“Your Majesty, your love for nature is very
admirable…but should you not be focusing on the court right now?”
He looked at his daughter with surprise.
“What do you mean?”
“The council will begin soon, and we would be
very grateful for your presence.”
“No need.”
Snowflakes pranced down the sky. He played
with them on the palm of his hand, wearing an innocent smile.
“Let the grand chancellor
take care of things. That would be best for the Enchanted Lands.”
Trying to talk him into it would be useless.
Apparently, the Tianzi used to be full of energy. Lingzi knew not what could
have possibly made him fall to this level. Either way, his decadence was about
to bring down the curtain on the six-hundred-year history of the Ailan dynasty.
It was her job as Gongzhu to avert this.
“If I may, I would suggest that the grand
chancellor is the one behind the decay of the Ailan Dynasty.”
“Don’t say that. Shikai’s been doing a great
job.”
“You are too ignorant of the state of the
world. You have no idea how many misdeeds the grand chancellor has—”
“—Oh! Have I performed any misdeeds?!”
A man in uniform crept up behind her. Shikai
Gudo, Grand Chancellor of the Immortals.
His round eyes glimmered like the full moon.
Lingzi was paralyzed by his otherworldly glare, which was like that of a jester
wandering through a wasteland.
“Ohh, Shikai!” the Tianzi exclaimed dimly.
“Would you like to take a look around my garden?”
“Ahh! This place is like a painting come
alive! It’s a beautiful cosmos of nature! No wonder they call you the Refined
Tianzi! Très bien, très bien!”
“Right? Come, take a seat. I’ll bring you
tea.”
“I refuse!”
Lingzi was taken aback. That was no way to
talk to the Tianzi. Yet it was this very behavior that exemplified Grand
Chancellor Shikai Gudo’s power.
“I thank you for the invitation, but I am here
only for the Gongzhu,” the grand chancellor said. “Now then, Lady Lingzi!
Please come converse with me about our rose-colored future!”
“Huh…?”
“The council! We’re going
to the court council! The meeting where we shall determine the future of our
nation!”
The grand chancellor grabbed Lingzi by the arm
and pulled her out of the garden.
They went into the hallway, not hearing a
single objection from the Tianzi.
A passing officer was shocked to see the pair
and prostrated himself before them. Everyone was afraid of the grand
chancellor. Lingzi knew well why—she, too, dreaded the man.
“Lingzi! I’m stunned! How dare you speak ill
of me behind my back. It’s like my heart has been pierced by the thorn of a
rose. Do you hate me? Is that it?” he shouted as he came to a halt.
His manner of speaking had roughened outside
the presence of the Tianzi.
“I’m baffled. Is that innocent princess act
you put on in front of me just a facade?”
“…I’m sorry.”
“Ahh! The most superficial of apologies! Lady
Nerzanpi would lose her mind if she heard that. She’d lecture you on how
essential trust is for interpersonal relationships.”
“No, it’s just…”
“Don’t talk back to me.”
His stern voice demolished her train of
thought. The next thing she knew, he was right in her face.
“I see it in your eyes. You think I’m doing as
I please with the court. But listen carefully. You hear the leaves rustling?
The voices of the people praising my name?”
Shikai opened his arms wide with egomania.
“Which means! Ahh! That the Ailan dynasty
would crumble without me!”
“Yes…”
“The Tianzi is a refined man, but he does not
see reality. You are a beautiful woman, but you do not see
reality. And it is because your family is such a mess that I have to work like
a dog! You can stick to appreciating the flowers just like your father. After
all, the season of the cherry blossoms is right around the corner, isn’t it?”
“But I am a Draconic Meteor.”
“Heh.” He chortled. “Oh, excuse me! What a
good joker you are! The civil official is supreme in the Enchanted
Lands—soldiers like you have no say in anything. You can go and enjoy your
pretend war while waiting for the wedding. I’ll make you happy soon.”
Lingzi clenched her trembling fists.
This man was really plotting to take over the
Enchanted Lands. He was taking advantage of the Tianzi’s disinterest in
politics. Bending the law. Bending morals. Embezzling the country’s finances.
What was the next thing someone who obtained
all the prosperity in the world would look for?
Likely a longer life and better health.
There was no evidence yet, but rumor had it
that Shikai Gudo experimented on people for the sake of his ambitions. People
had been disappearing out of nowhere one after the other in Jingshi, and
according to the investigations of Lingzi’s retainer, Meihua, the grand
chancellor was under suspicion of being involved.
“Now then, Lingzi! Let us put the Tianzi at
ease and begin that council!”
Before she knew it, they had reached the court
auditorium.
The council was normally supposed to take
place in the morning, yet the sun had already dipped behind the southern sky.
It was proof of the court’s discipline decaying after Shikai became grand
chancellor. Lingzi could hear vulgar laughter beyond the door. The tardy
ministers clamored.
The darkness showed no hope.
She could do nothing by herself.
She needed a savior—the girl who had been
turning the world on its head as of late.
It had been one month since she visited the
Mulnite Empire.
Would she be the one to pull up Lingzi Ailan
from the depths of darkness?
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It was the middle of
March.
The world was heading straight into spring. I
could feel the vampires of the Seventh Unit growing more energetic and hostile
by the day. You know what they say—the warmth makes freaks freakier.
However, the weather mattered not for an
intellectual scholar like me.
No matter the season, I cooped myself up in my
room and put words to paper.
Today, as always, I sat at my desk and picked
up my pen.
“…”
Yet no words would flow.
I was not in a slump, no. Our hot springs trip
had solved that problem. So what was the issue, then? You see, a monster had
taken residence in my mind.
I though back to my meeting last month with
Lingzi Ailan, one of the Three Draconic Meteors of the Enchanted Lands. Her
country was apparently on the brink of collapse at the hands of evil. She’d
asked for my help with that.
“It doesn’t need to be right now. Just help me
when the time comes,” she’d said before leaving.
It was my philosophy to lend my aid whenever
someone depended on me. I couldn’t just say “good luck” after how earnestly and
urgently she’d looked at me. And so, I decided to give her my support… But…
For some reason, her face wouldn’t leave my
mind.
That enchanting expression. Her quiet
demeanor. Her peacock-like green clothing.
Since our encounter, my dreams had been filled
with thousands of Lingzi faces, like I was gazing into a
kaleidoscope. Maybe I was going senile.
“What is happening to me? Is this…love? No,
get ahold of yourself, Komari… It’s gotta be some sort of mistake. My heart
must race every time I think of her because it’s sending me an SOS signal. I have heard that Lingzi has the power to make your heart
explode… Yes, I know how you feel, my dear little heart…”
Anyway. Novel. Write. Surely immersing myself
in my world of fiction would rid me of any carnal distress. I dropped my gaze
to the manuscript.
Then I realized that I had already written a
lot.
Huh? What happened? Was I moving my hand
unconsciously?
What did I even…
Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi
Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi
Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi
Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi
Lingzi Lingzi Lingzi
“WAAAAH?!”
I fell off my chair.
My brain was mush. Somehow, my right hand had
acquired the skill to write on autopilot. Ah-ha-ha. Now
that’s handy.
“No… NO! I was just practicing my handwriting,
that’s it! I was only writing everyone’s name! Vill’s next. Vill Vill Vill Vill
Vill Vill Vill—”
“Did you call for me, Lady Komari?”
“WAAAAH?!”
I fell off my chair (again).
The sicko maid had popped into existence right
behind me.
“Wh-what do you want from me?! If you’re
looking for snacks, they’re over there in the cupboard!”
“I am not here for snacks. I came after hearing
you lovingly call my name without rest.”
“You misunderstand! I was
just practicing for the tongue-twister world championships, you see…”
“Don’t try to play dumb. I could feel your
love for me in every movement of your lips. Now allow me to return that same
affection to you: Lady Komari Lady Komari Lady Komari Lady Komari Lady Komari
Lady Komari…”
“STOPPP! LET ME GOOO!!”
I didn’t want to deal with having to explain
what really happened. I could never tell her.
Vill finally chilled out after a bit of
struggle. I put on my serious face the moment I saw her sicko attack wind down.
“…Hey, Vill. Could you give me some advice?”
“What is the matter? I can give you all the
pointers you need to win over your favorite maid.”
“Okay, so I’m just talking hypotheticals here.
Hypothetically speaking…what would you do if you were in love with someone?”
“…Excuse me?” she exclaimed most seriously.
“Oh, no, it’s nothing. I’m just asking for
reference for my novel. I wanna hear your opinion.”
“Well, the answer is simple: I would throw
myself on her and hug her to show my deep affection, just like this.”
She threw herself on me like one of those
crying old man spirits from folklore. This didn’t feel like what you would
normally do…
I
mean, what would happen if I just hugged Lingzi out of nowhere? She’d probably
hate me. Oh man…I’m feeling hurt just imagining her
rejection… Wait, why am I picturing that?! Why do I have to use Lingzi for
these fantasies?!
“Dammit… I just don’t get it…”
“It is fiction, so you should just write down
your fantasi—Hmmm??”
Vill stared at my manuscript. At Lingzi’s name
covering the whole page.
Shoot, she found out! It’s over!
“…Lady Komari? What is the meaning of this?”
“It’s nothing! I was
simply practicing for the national handwriting tournament!”
“I’m pretty sure you’re making up that and the
tongue-twister championship. And this Lingzi…”
“It’s…you know… Yeah! I was just thinking
about Lingzi Ailan because she asked me such a huge favor!”
Vill glared daggers of suspicion at me.
Her sicko-ness somehow gave her this
supernaturally sharp intuition. Just the other day, when I’d simply asked her, “Is there anything you’ve been wanting to get lately?” she
immediately figured out I was trying to get her a birthday present, and her
answer was, “You.” Her birthday was on March 12, by
the way. We threw a party last week with everyone.
“…That can’t be. You wouldn’t do that,” Vill
said.
“What? What do you mean?”
“Nothing. In any case, Lady Lingzi Ailan
certainly looked like she had her back to the wall. She would have to be
desperate to ask us complete strangers for help.”
“Yeah. I hope we can help her…”
“She said the evil grand chancellor was taking
over the Enchanted Lands. That Shikai Gudo is scheming to overthrow the
dynasty… This is like a rehash of the Aruka Kingdom.”
“So Lingzi’s essentially in Nelia’s place
now?”
“We can’t know for sure, but from what I hear,
it seems like Shikai Gudo is even more vicious than Madhart. Just look at
this.”
Vill handed me a newspaper.
“…Six Nations News, really?”
“Yes. The Gandesblood family has a
subscription.”
“Cancel it right now!!”
“That can wait for later. Just read it.”
“No, it can’t! Look… They’ve got a picture of
me yawning on their ‘Today’s Commander Komarin’ section! Get them to recall
every copy this instan—Hmm?”
My eye caught the
section Vill was pointing at. The headline read:
ENCHANTED LANDS
PRINCESS LINGZI AILAN’S UNEXPECTED MARRIAGE?! MEET HER FUTURE HUSBAND: GRAND
CHANCELLOR SHIKAI GUDO.
“…What in the world?”
“It appears Lady Lingzi will be marrying Grand
Chancellor Shikai Gudo.”
“Why?!”
“I don’t know. Perhaps it’s part of his plot.
It appears he’s planning to destroy the Enchanted Lands’ government little by
little from the inside.”
My hands trembled as I skimmed the article.
Marriage. Reception. The start of a beautiful
relationship. Shocking keywords pierced my gaze.
The article was accompanied by a picture of
Lingzi and a person who appeared to be Shikai Gudo.
She had a bright smile on her face.
She was holding his hand. So happy. He was
beaming at her. So joyful.
“It might be too late now. Not to make
excuses…but we haven’t done anything because we haven’t heard from her since
that meeting a month ago.”
“Ah… Ahh…”
“But she seems happy in the picture. Although
we can’t yet rule out the possibility of coercion.”
Then I remembered. Lingzi had mentioned a
wedding the first time I met her. Was it all in the works even back then?
“Besides, the truth is, Shikai Gudo’s approval
ratings are quite high. They see him as a genius who will restore the Enchanted
Lands to its former glory. He’s cut through the fat of the government and
lowered taxes. This contradicts Lady Lingzi’s view of him.”
If only I had gotten closer to Lingzi sooner… No,
but she looks so happy. Is that smile real? Or is it
coerced, like Vill said? I don’t know… I was so lost that I wanted to break into dance out
of desperation.
“Aww… Bwuhh… Awww…”
“Should we get in contact with her? We better
find out what truly is going on before we—Lady Komari?”
“WAAAAAAAAH!!”
I crumpled up the paper and screamed my lungs
out.
What the heck? What’s wrong with me? I feel like
my heart is about to explode.
I couldn’t stand seeing Lingzi fall into the
mitts of this (alleged) evil grand chancellor.
But…at the same time, the mere news of Lingzi getting
married shook my brain.
She’s never smiled like this at me…
“Vill! We gotta go meet Lingzi right now!”
“Excuse me? Why so suddenly?”
“I can’t sit on my thumbs after seeing this!
Lingzi might… She might get married to the grand chancellor!”
“I mean, yes, that’s true, but this is out of
character for you.”
“She probably hasn’t reached out because
they’re preventing her from communicating with anyone! We need to go to her
ASAP!”
I pulled Vill by the arm and ran to the door,
but the maid kept me in place with her elephant-like strength.
“Please hold your horses, Lady Komari! We
mustn’t rush things.”
“We’re already late! Moooove!”
“I’m not budging! Just calm down! Here, grope
my breasts and relax!”
“I’m not groping anything! I don’t care about
your boobs!”
“That can’t be! You massage them so
lasciviously in your sleep!”
“Don’t make up crap just because I can’t know
what I’m doing in my sleep! Just move already, Vill!”
“What’s come over you?! You never want to go
outside, and I always have to make you suffer by abducting you from your room!
This isn’t how it’s supposed to be!”
“So you agree you’ve
been making me suffer all the time?! Whatever, I’m going to the Enchanted
Lands!”
Just as we began struggling wildly, the
sunlight coming through the window darkened out of nowhere.
I peeked outside, and then, CRACK!!
The window shattered as something came flying inside.
“Lady Komari, watch out!”
“Whaaa?! Blergh!” I exclaimed as Vill tackled
me.
I should be watching out for
your attacks! No, she saved me. I shouldn’t be
getting mad at her.
I looked around from beneath Vill.
Is the Seventh Unit playing baseball outside or
something?
“Ugh… I failed. I failed…”
My eyes landed on a familiar-looking girl.
She didn’t leave that strong an impression,
but I recognized her as the Immortal retainer who’d accompanied Lingzi.
She was lying on the floor, glass wounds all
over her body.
“A-are you okay?! What’re you doing here?!”
I tried holding her up, then noticed that she
wasn’t just bleeding from shards of glass. The girl had bruises all over.
The next moment, I felt a presence outside the
window and shifted my gaze.
Some people were floating in the air, the blue
sky on their backs. They quickly flew away the moment they noticed me staring.
“Judging by their outfits, they must’ve been
from the Enchanted Lands’ army,” Vill said while looking through a pair of
binoculars. “Why would they come here? It seems they were scared off the moment
they saw you, Lady Komari…”
“…They’re after me.”
Lingzi’s retainer, Meihua Liang, staggered to
her feet.
Blood was dripping down her body. I let out an
“Eep!” at the sight of her.
“Terakomari… I must ask you a favor. Please,
save Lingzi…”
“You should worry about
yourself first! Vill! Get some bandages!”
“I’ll bring everything for first aid.”
Vill dashed out of the room. I turned back to
Meihua to care for her…but I had no idea what to do. It wasn’t as though there
were doctors like Kuya all over the place.
“Lingzi…is going to become the grand
chancellor’s plaything. That will be the end of the Ailan dynasty… I fought to
prevent this… But I didn’t stand a chance…”
“Don’t force yourself to speak! Should I give
you CPR?!”
“No. It’s not that serious…”
Meihua’s eyes were filled with a sense of
duty. A pure desire to rescue Lingzi.
She looked straight at me, her gaze pleading.
“Terakomari Gandesblood, I understand I’m
overstepping my bounds, but please, save Ling—”
Her voice cut off as she slipped on a pair of
Vill’s underwear (?!) on the floor.
What’re her panties doing
here?! The shock didn’t come out my throat.
Fortunately, the Draconic Meteor’s retainer
gracefully regained her balance and only fell to her knee.
Thank goodness.
Just as I sighed in relief, the inertia of
Meihua’s tumble sent a splash of blood flying at me. It flew right into my
gaping mouth.
The moment I tasted the viscous red liquid, my
heart thumped faster.
The world turned crimson.
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“Lady Komari, I just
realized we could just teleport to the Dark Core Zone. I brought a Magic Stone…
Umm, Lady Komari? Is something wrong?”
Vill had returned.
I shook my head as I stood up.
Meihua stared up at me
with confusion.
Maybe her blood didn’t actually get into my
mouth. I’d felt a strange surge of mana for a moment there, but I was already
back to my cool, collected, and scholarly self.
I reached out to Meihua while looking at Vill.
“Thanks, Vill! Let’s go somewhere her Dark
Core is in effect ASAP.”
“Yes. Is that all right, Lady Meihua Liang?”
“? …Yeah. Thanks…”
Vill approached us and activated a
teleportation Magic Stone.
Bright light filled my room. A floating
sensation I would never get used to hit my whole body.
I had no idea what was going on in the
Enchanted Lands, but I wanted to help Lingzi and Meihua.
First, we had to get to the Dark Core Zone so
I could ask Meihua some questions.
I also gotta give Vill a scolding for leaving her
underwear on my floor… Just as that thought struck me, I was whisked away somewhere else.
Dark Core Zone—Frezier
Hot Springs.
We were sitting together in a lounge at the
Crimson Snow Hut—the place where we’d had my birthday party, and where I’d
gotten caught up in that serial murder incident. We couldn’t think of anywhere
else to cool down.
“…Thank you. You saved me.”
Meihua had composed herself with the help of a
cup of hot cocoa.
The Dark Core was healing her wounds, too.
“Lady Meihua, what happened? Were those
Enchanted Lands soldiers that showed up at the Gandesblood residence?” Vill
asked while munching on a choco bun.
Could you not smack your lips in gluttony while
talking about serious matters? You’re gonna make me crave some.
“…Those were Enchanted Lands soldiers, yes.
They’re trying to get rid of me for opposing Shikai Gudo. Or, more to the
point, they’re suppressing anyone who allies with Lingzi.”
“Why would they need to do that?”
“Isn’t it obvious? They want to strip her of
her power. She is set to become the next Tianzi… If they neutralize her, he can
take over her position, or so they think.”
“But I hear Shikai Gudo is very popular with
the people, isn’t he? He cut taxes and strengthened
welfare and such. Six Nations News said the citizens are building statues and
monuments in celebration of his achievements.”
“His popularity was built on innocent blood.
Do you think there’s any value in approval rates obtained through force and
sacrifice?”
“What do you mean?”
“He is willing to do whatever it takes to
obtain power. Because of that, Lingzi’s supporters… Lingzi herself…! We can’t
let him get away with it!”
Meihua tried standing up, but I rushed to stop
her.
“Hold on! You’ll only get hurt again if you
charge in without a plan!”
“I don’t care! If you won’t help me, I’ll go
by myself! Whoa! W-wait, don’t cling to me!”
Meihua peeled me off her, red in the face.
Hmm? Something’s strange about her reaction. Oh
well.
“Komari’s right,” a serene voice said.
“There’s no point rushing it. First, we need to gather intel.”
A Warblade with peach-colored hair was sitting
beside me. Nelia Cunningham. My friend and the president of the Aruka Republic.
Meihua sat back down in dismay.
“Apologies… By the way, why is Aruka’s
President Cunningham here?”
“I came here to meet Komari, and then I heard
about the emergency and decided to…not postpone my meeting. I was already
planning on talking about the Enchanted Lands.”
That was right. Just as we arrived at Frezier,
Nelia had called me and said, “Can we meet today?! I know we can! Thanks, I’m
on my way!”
The Moonpeach Princess appeared at the Crimson
Snow Hut before I knew it.
Nelia had been patting my head the whole time,
and she’d even given me half of her choco bun. Did she think I was her little
sister or something? How vexing! But the pastry was sooo yummy.
Nelia wiped away the chocolate around my mouth
and continued.
“Tell me, Meihua. The
grand chancellor is popular with the people of the Enchanted Lands, yet in the
shadows, he commits unspeakable evils… That is your view on the matter, right?”
“Yes.”
“I don’t think you’re wrong.”
“What are you saying?” Vill sighed. “We
shouldn’t act on conjecture. Also, please let go of Lady Komari.”
“It’s not conjecture. I’ve been going through
the confidential files from Madhart’s administration and discovered he was
making illegal deals with Shikai Gudo.”
Nelia took out some documents.
“More specifically, he provided technology
produced in the Daydream Paradise prison. They also engaged in Divine
Instrument smuggling and drug trafficking. Madhart and Shikai Gudo were in
cahoots.”
“Seriously?!” Meihua leaned forward in shock.
“If that’s true, then that’s even more reason to stop him! I have heard rumors
of him kidnapping people for experimentation. He might be continuing the
research that started in the Daydream Paradise…”
“Yeah, which is why I personally can’t
overlook what’s going on in the Enchanted Lands,” she said with a serious
expression while giving me a shoulder massage.
Stop it. It feels so nice.
“This is a mistake from Aruka’s previous
administration, so I cannot say it’s none of my responsibility. I need to look
into the grand chancellor more closely.”
“I appreciate your support, President
Cunningham!”
An alliance was forming without a word from
me.
Anyway, to recap. The grand chancellor of the
Enchanted Lands was super popular with the people. But he was actually doing
bad stuff in the shadows. The country might collapse if he kept going. And…a
poor girl was in the middle of this chaos.
“What…what about Lingzi?”
“She’s confined to the
palace. They’re trying to assault her.”
“Assault?!”
“It’s sickening… If Shikai allies with the
Ailan family, there will be no stopping him. He’s trying to force an abdication
to change the dynasty. And if that happens, Lingzi will lose her freedom
forever.”
My heart raced.
I couldn’t allow that to happen.
Just thinking of her marrying him made my
chest hurt. It made me want to be the person marrying her instead. Wait. No,
that couldn’t be. I was just worried about her. I had to stop the grand
chancellor. Yes, it was only my sense of justice that moved me. Or was it?
Am I…in love? No, no, that’s ridiculous.
“…I’m sorry, Terakomari.”
“Huh?”
Meihua frowned; it seemed like she’d noticed
something.
I had no idea what it was. Then Nelia cut in.
“So, it’s settled! Aruka, Mulnite, and the
Enchanted Lands will ally against Shikai Gudo. First, we have to decide on our
course of action. We need to be careful this time.”
“I don’t understand. Couldn’t Lady Komari use
her Core Implosion to solve things in a second?”
“No, that’s no good. Shikai Gudo has the
support of the people. We’ll be the object of criticism if we try to solve it
by force. We need to obtain proof of his misdeeds and expose him.”
So the approach we used against Madhart won’t
work this time around.
“You agree, don’t you, Komari? You got that
message asking to help the people of the Enchanted Lands, remember?”
“Yeah… You’re right.”
My feelings of resentment over Lingzi being
taken from me supplemented my tiny sense of justice telling me to stop the fall
of the Enchanted Lands. And the message from my mom that Kilty had relayed to
me at the inn gave me the final push to solidify my will. I couldn’t
throw a tantrum and yell about wanting to stay in my room this time.
“All right! Let’s do this, for Lingzi! First,
we go to the Enchanted La—”
“I heard it all!!”
I couldn’t believe my ears.
Meihua and Vill turned around in shock.
A pair of paparazzi from Six Nations News was
right there.
“The Commander’s going to throw herself into a
big battle?! Wonderful!! Inspiring!! Would you allow us to follow you for close
coverage?!”
“I don’t wanna do close coverage please
they’re not gonna pay us extra for the overtime let’s just go home.”
“Shut up, Thio! We’re not doing this for the
money! We’re doing this for the good of journalism and the world! Please excuse
her, Commander Gandesblood! First, allow us to take your picture!”
Melka began shooting before I could even say
anything.
I rushed behind Nelia’s back, but she pushed
me forward.
“Nelia! Those two shouldn’t be here! Why
aren’t you chasing them away?!”
“I called them. They’ll be useful.”
“How in the world?! I mean, the Six Nations
News periodical comes in handy when eating watermelon, but…”
“That’s right! We are useful!”
The Sapphire girl slithered right up to me.
Like, she got right in my face. She had no concept of social distancing.
“It’s shocking to hear that Grand Chancellor
Shikai Gudo has a hidden face! President Cunningham just mentioned confidential
files; would you mind us publishing them?! Also, what do you think will become
of Her Highness Lingzi Ailan?! What will be the direction of this newly formed
alliance between Aruka, Mulnite, and the Enchanted Lands?! Do I take it
Commander Gandesblood will be charging no holds barred against the Enchanted
Lands?!”
“Yes.”
“Shut up, Vill!! No! Were you even
listening?!”
“We weren’t! Please go
over it again, in detail!”
“Just give me some space to breathe…”
“Hold your horses, paparazzi. That overbearing
act will only make Komari hate you.” Nelia gave me a helping hand.
Yet I was all too aware this sham of a
journalist wouldn’t be stopped by such a trifling statement. Knowing this, I
grabbed my half-eaten choco bun to use as a tasty bribe to get her off my case,
when…
“My oh my! My deepest apologies! I did not
know you had such a distaste for pushy coverage!”
…Melka took a step back with a smile.
Wha…? Was she always that quick to give up? Maybe
it’s the power of the President of Aruka? God, I wish I was president.
“Heh. No need to be in a rush in the first
place. We’ll give you the exclusive. In exchange, we’ll have you work for us
later down the line,” Nelia said.
“Ohh! That sounds very exciting! It’s a deal,
then,” said Melka.
“Ms. Melka, it’s best we don’t agree to this
deal. It’s obvious we’ll get sucked dry, then get slapped like mosquitoes in
the end. Ugh, but I know nothing will stop you, so I’ll just get off this ride
right now. I’ll just go relax at the hot springs, so you take care of the
res—MEOW?!”
“Silence, you coward! We’ve got the scoop of
the century right here, and you’re letting it go?! Do you have the brains of a
cat or what?!”
“Yes, I do!!”
Melka put Thio in a headlock, and the poor
girl meowed her lungs out.
I had no idea what was going on, except that
Nelia and Melka were clearly hiding something.
“…Hey, Vill. What do they have in mind?”
“I surmise they’re forming an alliance to get
embarrassing pictures of you in secret, Lady Komari.”
“Seriously?! Sick bastards…!”
I shivered with trepidation. Once again, I was
reminded of how every single person in this world was a sicko.
“In any case,” said Nelia, changing the
subject. “I have but one goal: expose the grand
chancellor’s misdeeds to the world and impeach him. That way, Lingzi won’t have
to marry him, and everyone will live happily ever after.”
“And we journalists will be the loudspeakers
to broadcast his aforementioned misdeeds across the globe.”
“Exactly. Which is also why I want you to
refrain from publishing fake news until we’re done with this… Melka Tiano, was
it? Do you accept these terms?”
“Of course!” Melka grinned.
“I don’t,” said Thio before getting slapped in
the head.
“We’ve no choice but to hold back! Wouldn’t
want to waste this great opportunity. Very well, Miss President. We’ll do as
you say. For the sake of a better world. For the sake of business.”
“Huh, you’re more reasonable than I expected.”
Nelia, no! You can’t trust her! They’ll publish
an article about you and your maid fetish! But if it happens, please join hands
with me to denounce their libel.
“Now then, how should we unmask Shikai Gudo?”
“There is no doubt that he’s evil,” Meihua
said. “He’s even got His Majesty the Tianzi in the palm of his hand. The court
is in shambles under his leadership… I hope Lingzi is unharmed…”
Something pricked at my chest. Lingzi was
locked up. Was she crying all alone?
“Can you meet with Lingzi?” I asked.
“I haven’t seen her in half a month. I was
exiled from the Enchanted Lands.”
“Shoot. I’m worried about her…”
“Of course you are. Let’s ask about her,
then,” Nelia said.
“…? Ask whom?”
“The Grand Chancellor,” she replied, before
producing a luxurious green Magic Stone from her pocket.
“No way.” Vill jaw’s dropped. “Is that…a
hotline? The one they say all countries’ leaders have?”
“Yup. I’ll just ask him
about her.”
Nelia poured mana into the Correspondence
Crystal.
Wait, what? You’ll ask him? Is he really gonna pick up? Everyone
seemed to be thinking the same thing as me while we watched Nelia in silence.
Soon, a cheerful voice came from the other side of the crystal.
“Yes? This is Grand Chancellor and Starquake
Minister of the Enchanted Lands, Shika Gudo speaking!”
…
…He actually picked up. Now what?
“Is something the matter, President Cunningham?!
I am honored to receive your call! It must be the work of the Tiannu celestial
maidens guiding fate to us!”
“Whatever. There’s something I want to ask.”
“Na-ha-ha-ha! I see, so it’s Meihua Liang!” Shikai cackled. “I heard she fled to Mulnite! Good to hear she’s doing fine! I wouldn’t
want a precious life to be lost! I take it she went to Aruka for help in the
end?!”
“Grand Chancellor… You despicable…!”
“Ahh! I can hear a beast roaring. I wonder to
whom it’s baring its fangs? In any case, what do you want to ask me, Miss
President? I can tell you all the perfect sightseeing spots in the Enchanted
Lands!”
“I’ve been informed you are covering up some
misdeeds.”
Subtlety was not Nelia’s strong suit. She cut
right to the chase.
“Is it true that you want to usurp the Ailan
dynasty? That you’re kidnapping citizens and continuing the work of the
Daydream Paradise? That you’re making them build monuments in worship of you?”
“Oh dear, this is harsh. All unfounded slander! I
work myself to the bone trying to make the Enchanted Lands a better place!”
“Uh-huh… Here, I’ll give the phone to Komari.
She’s got some words for you.”
Nelia handed me the Correspondence Crystal.
Huh? Why? I couldn’t react before I heard his voice:
“Komari? You mean Commander Gandesblood?”
“Th-that’s me!” I
couldn’t waste time panicking. I clenched my fist and yelled: “Is Lingzi okay?!
I heard you’re treating her badly!”
“I just told you that those charges are baseless.
There’s no evidence that I’ve harmed Her Highness Lingzi! You’re saying that
I’m locking her up? Ahh! How could I ever think to do something so dreadful?!”
“And yet Lingzi hasn’t been seen outside!”
“Yes, it’s truly terrible! You see, she’s in bad
shape… But you must understand that she is first and foremost my fiancée! No
upstanding man would ever try to make his bride suffer!”
Meihua ground her teeth. Nelia glared coldly
at the crystal.
Shikai was acting provocatively. I could feel
no concern for Lingzi’s well-being in his voice.
“When did she say she wanted to marry you?!
Aren’t you forcing her?!”
“I would never! She chose her future of her own
volition! Have you not seen the papers? Oh, you haven’t? Then take a look!
You’ll see that her smile is full of bliss! Ahh! Such a beautiful grin! Très bien!”
I felt like he was crushing my heart on his
hand. What the heck is with this très bien, you blowhard?
But…come to think of it, Lingzi really was
smiling in that picture with Shikai.
“I am intent on marrying Her Highness Lingzi. I
believe that is best for the country. And more than anything, she fancies me!
The truth is undeniable!”
“M-maybe it’s all in your head!”
“It is not! She said to me, and I quote: ‘I love you.’”
“What?! That’s a lie! You’re delusional!!”
“I have a recording. Listen to this—to her voice
as beautiful as the chirping of birds!”
“I love you.”
I heard Lingzi’s voice come from the
Correspondence Crystal. I wanted to admonish him and shout, What’re
you recording her saying that for, you sicko?! but I couldn’t get the
words out of my throat.
I love
you. I love you. I love you—I felt my brain turning
to mush. I would lose my goddamn mind if she said that to me. My heart would
instantly explode. No, Komari, that’s not it!
Lingzi… Lingzi really wanted to marry him…?
“By the way, she cooked for me just yesterday!”
“WHAT?!”
“And she caressed my head to ease my exhaustion
from all my work.”
“WHAAAAAT?!”
“I’m supposed to be delusional? Hah! Perhaps, in
a way. But know that the things I just said were a joke. Do you really think we
would engage in such improper conduct before marriage? I just said that because
I knew it’d get a reaction out of you.”
“You little…!! Stop giving me vexations!!”
“Um… Lady Komari?”
“You’re acting a bit strange. Why are you
getting that annoyed by his comments?”
My sense of justice and my personal feelings
mixed to light a fire in my chest.
I couldn’t let this man take Lingzi from me.
Much less in marriage! Then, Shikai Gudo threw me the biggest white glove:
“That reminds me! We’ll have our reception next
week! And you’re all invited.”
“Wha…?”
“It’s a tremendous occasion. We’re going to have
a huge celebration with VIPs from every country. Now that’s what I call très bien!”
“Nothing bien about
this, let alone très!! Divorce her!!”
“Heh. How could I when we’re not even married
yet? Her union with me will bring her a stable future—I’m only doing it for
her! Ahh! What a wonderful husband I am!”
A stable future? You’ll only ruin her! And the
Enchanted Lands, too! You’ll make a mess of the country, just like what Madhart
did to Aruka! Heck, you’re continuing the Daydream Paradise and everything!
“I won’t allow it… I will not allow it…!”
“You don’t have the
authority to call things off. Only the heavens can decide.”
That shattered my patience. I rose so
violently from my seat that my chair fell. Then I shouted what came to mind
without stopping to think:
“Lingzi will not be marrying you! She came to
me for help! She asked me to help her before you could do terrible things to
her! Her eyes weren’t lying! The picture of her in the papers is fake! Lingzi
is MINE! Just you wait! I’ll crash that reception and—”
“My, I need to go to the bathroom! Later,
Commander Gandesblood! Adieu!”
“What?! I’m not done talk—”
He hung up without hesitation.
I felt a twinge on the back of my hand. The
glass wound hadn’t healed yet. I’d gotten it back when Lingzi came to the
Mulnite Palace, I think, and it had been quite a while… But this wasn’t the
time to worry about that. I shoved the crystal to Nelia and yelled:
“I will take Lingzi back!”
“I mean, I don’t like the grand chancellor’s
attitude, either, but you’re more fired up than I thought,” said Nelia.
“She’s not only fired up—she’s charred. Did
she just say, ‘Lingzi is mine’? I cannot believe my
ears. Surely it was just me hearing things, right, Lady Komari?” asked Vill.
“Y-yeah, you’re hallucinating!” I responded.
“Yes, of course.” Vill sighed.
“Anyways! I can’t stand by and let those
things go down in the Enchanted Lands!”
“Right!” Nelia stood up with a smile. “It
looks like the Grand Chancellor knows about our plans now, but in any case,
let’s go there right away!”
“Thank you,” Meihua whispered with tears in
her eyes. “Lingzi was right to trust you, Commander Gandesblood.”
“Don’t worry, Meihua. With Vill and Nelia on
our side, we won’t lose to any army.”
“Yes. And if push comes
to shove, you’ll surely blow the enemy away.”
“…”
Oh no. I’d rather solve things peacefully.
Hopefully with a chat or perhaps a bribe…
Then I heard a camera shutter snap. Melka was
taking pictures like crazy.
“How brave! The gallant spirit to stand
against the treacherous subject of another nation! Now this is the Terakomari
Gandesblood I know! The woman who will turn the world into omelet rice!”
“You’ve got that right. Except that part about
me turning the world into omelet rice. I never said that.”
“So, the Aruka-Mulnite-Enchanted Lands
alliance declares war against Shikai Gudo! Now this is a scoop! Our sales will
be through the roof!”
“Aruka will inspect the article before it’s
published, okay? Don’t write anything weird.”
“Roger that!” said Melka, her face looking
like a crook’s.
And so began a new war revolving around the
Enchanted Lands.
“We’re the most upstanding, trustworthy paper
out there! We report nothing but the truth!”
![]()
Six Nations News, March
18th Morning Edition
COMMANDER KOMARIN SAYS:
“LINGZI IS MINE!”
IMPERIAL CAPITAL — BY
MELKA TIANO
Crimson Lord of the Mulnite Empire Terakomari
Gandesblood recently conversed with Grand Chancellor and Starquake Minister of
the Enchanted Lands Shikai Gudo. During the talk, Grand Chancellor Gudo
announced his marriage to Her Highness Draconic Meteor Lingzi Ailan, and
Commander Gandesblood voiced her objection, clearly
stating: “Lingzi is mine. I will not let you take her.” She also asserted she
would crash the reception planned for the 21st next week and steal Gudo’s
bride. Experts continue to fervently discuss Commander Komarin’s ships, and now
it seems a new candidate has been thrown into the fray. Rather, it appears that
the decision has been made: Could Her Highness Lingzi Ailan be the Commander’s
true sweetheart? We all look forward to new and dramatic developments in this
international romcom story.
![]()
“Wha… Wha… WHAT THE
HELL IS THIS?!?!?!” Vill screamed as she tore the paper apart.
Jingshi—the Floral Capital of the Enchanted
Lands.
I sighed as I looked out the window.
A magnificent eastern city sprawled outside.
Buildings lacquered in vermillion lined up in
a panorama so fantastical I felt as though I’d been thrown to another world.
I’d imagined that Jingshi would be like the Eastern Capital, but it was
actually quite different.
The Heavenly Paradise’s City of Flowers was an
elegant place full of eastern, low-rise buildings.
Meanwhile, the Enchanted Lands’ Floral Capital
was a grand place full of gorgeous high-rises and skyscrapers. Not to mention
they were all connected with arched bridges. It was a tridimensional city.
We had successfully infiltrated Jingshi and
were awaiting our chance to strike.
Actually, “infiltrate” wasn’t the right word.
Shikai really had sent us invitations to the reception. He’d even reserved the
hotel for us. We were quite welcome here. As if he didn’t even consider us a
threat… But anyways.
“Outrageous! Preposterous! Let’s go protest at
the Six Nations News HQ! Blow up the entire building right this instant! In its
place, we’ll build a statue of you and me kissing to show
the world our love and power!”
“Chill out, Vill! Why are you getting so
violent?!”
“Because they’re publishing falsehoods!”
“That’s what they always do.”
After saying that, it hit me. Even though Vill
was rampaging, I was oddly calm, despite knowing I should be indignant at Six
Nations News’s fabrications.
Or…was I?
My heart had raced reading the article. I
wasn’t so much annoyed at them making things up as I was embarrassed. The
feeling was a bit different from usual.
“We need to find those journalists and boil
them to death as soon as possible. Only atop their corpses can the world regain
its proper order. And we also need to retaliate
against Lady Cunningham for setting up this report.”
“You’re taking it too far. We don’t have the
time to do that to begin with.”
“You still say that even after seeing her?”
Vill pointed at Sakuna, who was sitting on the floor and hugging her knees.
She was hammering nails on the newspaper
clipping. An ominous gray aura oozed out of her every pore. With every new
nail, she muttered nonsensically, “This isn’t right. This isn’t right. The
world has gone mad.” What was up with her?
“Did you have a nightmare or something,
Sakuna?”
“Not quite, but very close. My nightmare is
reality.”
I had no idea what she was talking about.
Then I heard a shy voice. “Excuse me!” It was
from a girl with reddish brown hair, Esther Claire.
“I don’t think you should be that worried
about this, Vill, Commander Memoir.”
“What do you mean? And you call yourself a
Komari fan? How can you not worry?” Vill asked.
“Ms. Vill is right… Ms.
Komari will only slide further away if we don’t do something… I should kill her
right now and alter her memories…,” Sakuna said.
“I-it’ll be fine! President Cunningham must’ve
had something in mind when allowing this article to be published. Perhaps she
wanted to make clear the Commander’s opposition to the grand chancellor,” said
Esther.
Sakuna raised her head.
“I didn’t consider that,” Vill said, her eyes
wide.
“We can’t solve the issue with magic or Core
Implosion this time. The grand chancellor has tremendous support from the
public. We would be the bad guys if we tried taking him out by force. The voice
of the people is important. I’m sure the president let this article come out as
a stepping stone to changing public opinion… Ah! But this is only my half-baked
assumption!”
“Esther is right.” Vill regained her
composure. “Lady Komari has no plans to get married in the first place. It’s
none of our problem if society gets swayed by whatever the paper says. Lady
Memoir, you can halt your hexing ritual. Stand up.”
“Yes…I wasn’t thinking straight.” Sakuna froze
the paper with a bashful smile.
Esther really was amazing. I wanted one of her
in my house.
“Speaking of which, where is Ms. Nelia?”
“She’s sneaking around Jingshi with her maid.
I believe she’s gathering evidence of the grand chancellor’s misdeeds… We must
be on standby until she calls us.”
“That shouldn’t be a president’s job. What are
we supposed to do?”
“Commander! We are the execution team.”
According to Esther, the lineup was as
follows: Nelia, Gertrude, Meihua, and the Seventh Unit (who had not been
invited, so they were the real spies here) were to snoop around Jingshi. Vill,
Esther, Sakuna, and I were to stay at the hotel. Once Nelia’s team exposed the
grand chancellor’s misdeeds, we would take Lingzi by force.
Just hearing about it made me sigh. In the
end, we had to resort to violence. I would have preferred
sorting out everything without anyone getting hurt. I didn’t want to unleash
that meteoric superpower all the time.
Just then, I heard a song. A band was playing
in celebration of Lingzi’s wedding.
“It’s a festival out there. Everyone is
talking about the Gongzhu’s wedding.”
“The wedding’s the day after tomorrow, right?
Will we really make it in time?”
“Umm… What if we blow up the venue?”
“Wha…? What’re you saying, Sakuna?”
“It’s a wonderful plan, but it won’t work.
VIPs from every nation have been invited to the reception. The Mulnite Empire
will be in trouble if any of them get hurt. Coincidentally, Commander Leona
Flatt and Lady Butchersky are here, too.”
“She’s always everywhere… Wait, Karla wasn’t
invited?”
“I don’t know. I heard she was busy, though…”
Either way, the whole world had its eyes on
Jingshi. She would be unable to ask for a divorce afterward if they really got
married under the circumstances.
My stomach growled. I blushed, and Vill
shrugged.
“It appears your stomach demands meat. Let us
go eat some.”
“My tummy is doing no such thing! And wait,
should we be going outside?”
“It’ll be fine.” Sakuna smiled. “We are the
grand chancellor’s guests, after all. There’s no need for us to hide like that
time we sneaked into the Holy City. We aren’t going to be attacked out of
nowhere…”
“Please don’t say that. It might actually
happen if you do.”
“No worries! I’ll protect all of you! But
wait…the Commander is a billion times stronger than me! I’m sorry!” Esther
exclaimed.
“Now then, I hear Jingshi has all sorts of
exotic foods. Let’s go.”
“Hmm. I see. Okay, then. No harm in going for
some food, right?”
That was how we decided to take a walk around
Jingshi.
![]()
The
Zijingong—the towering residence of the Tianzi.
Inside a detached tower on its grounds was a
prison for those who opposed the dynasty, built by a past Tianzi. But now, it
was being used to confine one of the dynasty’s own: Lingzi.
“Why…?” Lingzi ground her teeth as she gripped
the bars of the window.
The busy landscape of Jingshi spread out
below. The people were in a celebratory mood. Many praised Grand Chancellor
Shikai Gudo’s government. Qilu poems in his honor were framed on the front
gates of the Zijingong.
Yet Shikai Gudo was a wolf in sheep’s
clothing.
Lingzi’s supporters had been imprisoned. The
mere thought that people had been harmed because of her tugged at her
heartstrings.
“Shikai Gudo, I will not lose.”
“Ahh! What an honor to hear my name coming
from your lips!”
The grand chancellor had popped up behind her,
taking her by surprise. Then she recalled the one-way gate in the tower. He
could have teleported here.
“How’s life in the tower? Cozier than you’d
think, right?”
“…Cozy how? This is a prison.”
“Oh, that’s not true. I am only trying to
protect you from a disgraceful fate. I give you three square meals a day and
even tea time. What don’t you like about this?”
What didn’t she
dislike about this?
She worried for Meihua and for the dynasty,
and she feared the upcoming marriage. But saying anything would only get Shikai
to dodge the issue with a “très bien!” This man didn’t
care about her. He was only interested in the “value” inside her body.
“Hmm.” Shikai crossed his arms. “It seems
Meihua Liang went out for help.”
“?! Is Meihua all right?!”
“She is. You think I
would harm an Immortal? Perish the thought. You should start trusting me a
little. Have you ever seen me hurt anyone in the first place?”
“…”
“In any case, Meihua Liang asked the Mulnite
Empire and the Aruka Republic for help. Six Nations News said so. More
importantly, those two nations directly declared war against me.”
“They did…?”
“Terakomari Gandesblood said she would take
you from me.”
Shock shook Lingzi’s chest. Hope, joy, and
guilt welled up inside her.
She realized that Komari was only acting under
Meihua’s Core Implosion, which had made the girl infatuated with her.
“Na-ha-ha-ha! You are so blessed. Any normal
person would be trembling in their boots if the world’s hero, the savior
Terakomari Gandesblood, threatened to take their bride.”
“And…you’re not?”
“Naturally! I’ve achieved so much as grand
chancellor! I have total support from our citizens!”
“But…that’s because no one knows what you’re
doing in the shadows…”
“No one cares about the shadows, so long as
they’re happy under the light. This is what separates me from Gerra. He was too
violent. ‘Most precious are the people; next come the spirits
of land and grain.’ ‘The water carries the boat; the water overturns the boat.’
I taught him so many maxims, yet he didn’t put them into practice.”
Shikai was talking about the former president
of Aruka, Gerra Madhart. This man really was linked to Gerra-Aruka in his misdeeds.
“…What are you getting at?”
“That I have no reason to fear Terakomari
Gandesblood’s threats. She’ll steal you from me? By force? Just try it! Not
even the great hero would escape outcry from the Immortals!”
He was thoroughly prepared. Shikai had zero
combat ability, but he was a master of controlling people’s psyches.
“Lingzi, just give up already. Your status as
Gongzhu and Draconic Meteor mean nothing. They are but
chains holding you down. What has the Ailan dynasty done for you? Nothing! In
fact, it’s only cursed your body. It’s all the dynasty’s fault.”
“That’s…no reason to hurt anyone.”
“Na-ha-ha-ha! Your innocence is so beautiful.”
She clenched her teeth in frustration.
Would she spend the rest of her days in this
prison?
“Hmm? Lady Nerzanpi?”
Shikai took out his Correspondence Crystal—he
had a call from the minister.
All of a sudden, there was an uproar in
Jingshi.
Lingzi glanced out the window, and saw that
explosions were going off one after the other. Not celebratory gun salutes.
People were fighting. Was there a riot?
Just as she wondered that, all her hairs stood
on end. She felt a massive burst of mana. A vivid murderous aura enveloping
everything. Something was approaching.
“What?! Terakomari…?” Shikai exclaimed in an
unusual show of distress.
Lingzi felt her heart race. It was the same
grand power she’d felt during the Six Nations War. Only one thing was capable
of producing that—Terakomari Gandesblood’s Core Implosion.
“Oh! So she is as radical as the rumors say!
She must’ve known power would not solve anything! Lingzi! Seems like they’re
here for you!”
A golden gust of wind blasted the prison.
(Going back in
time a little)
Jingshi was pretty busy
compared to the Imperial Capital. The high-rise buildings seemed to reach all
the way to the sky. Immortals were going every which way on the ground and in
the air. Nice smells were wafting from a single direction, maybe because it was
lunchtime.
“Ms. Komari, is there anywhere you would like
to go?”
“Hmm? I don’t knowww. I
want omelet rice, but I feel like I should be trying something new…”
“Lady Komari, they’re selling live turtle
blood there.”
“No, thank you.”
“It says it will boost your height.”
“You’re not tricking me this time!”
I’d decided not to fall for anything of that
sort. I could only believe in milk now.
“By the way, should we be sightseeing without
Nelia? She’s working so hard without us.”
“Lady Cunningham just called and said she was
having lunch at a luxury yum cha place in the nicest
zone of Jingshi. She bragged about the exquisiteness of the dumplings.”
“No fair! I want dumplings, too!”
“We should go against her with something more
exotic… My! Look, there’s bear paw and chicken legs over there. Let’s go
inside.”
“Ms. Villhaze… Her face clearly says she
doesn’t want any of that…”
“If I may interject!” Esther shyly raised her
hand; she was as stiff and formal as always. “The guidebook recommends the
Tianzhu Hall, saying every item on the menu is great. Would you like to try it
out?”
“What’s with that book? It’s got sticky notes
all over,” I said.
“It’s a trip guide! I did some research after
hearing we would be infiltrating Jingshi!”
Good on Esther. The most (only) sensible and
thoughtful member of the Seventh Unit. Even Vill nodded at her suggestion with
wonder. My maid often followed whatever Esther said. If only she obeyed me,
too.
I had no objections, so we went to this
Tianzhu Hall.
An employee showed us to our seats, and I
immediately opened up the menu.
Dumplings. Steamed buns. Vegetable sides
galore. Soups and a lot of noodles. It all looked so good that I was getting
decision paralysis.
“Look, Lady Komari. ‘Authentic giga-spicy mapo
tofu that tastes like magma.’ It says your mouth explodes
upon eating it, leaving your gums a wasteland.”
“Order it for yourself if you want it, then.”
“Um… The guidebook says there’s a staple
course meal. If you can’t decide, how about we go with that?”
“Yeah. I trust you to
make good choices, Esther.”
“You make it sound like I make bad choices,”
Vill grumbled.
I ignored Vill’s objection and ordered as
Esther suggested.
A great variety of dishes arrived after a bit
of waiting.
I grabbed a steaming bao with my chopsticks
and took a nibble. Meat juice flowed into my mouth, as did happiness. This. Now
this was the true thrill of the trip, even though we were here for “business.”
“It’s amazing… The Immortals sure know how to
make food…”
“Lady Komari, juice is dripping from your
mouth. Here, allow me to lick it off.”
“Get away!!”
“Ms. Komari, would you like to try a
dumpling?”
“Hmm? Yes, please.”
Sakura held her half-eaten dumpling up to me.
I chomped it. Chewed it. Relished it. How could something be so good? I had to
boast about it to Nelia later…
“Lady Komari.” Vill glared at me with puffed
cheeks. “This has been bothering me for a while now, but why do you have no
qualms about eating the food Lady Memoir offers you? The last time I tried
feeding you bell peppers, you wailed and threw a tantrum.”
“You just don’t understand. There are two
kinds of people in this world.”
“Commander! You should try the chili shrimp,
too! It’s spicy but tasty!”
“Really?! Let me see…”
“Hold on, Lady Komari. What are these two
kinds of people?”
“Ah, basically: perverts and non-perverts.
From my experience, about ninety percent of humankind is in the pervert group.
People like Sakuna and Esther are very rare members of
the remaining ten percent. This is why I can safely eat what they offer me.”
“Esther aside, are you sure you have an
accurate read on Lady Memoir? This former terrorist takes peeping photos of you
any chance she…”
“That’s not true! This is slander!” Sakuna
denied it, red in the face with anger.
It was true that there had been photos of me
plastered all over her room once, but I thought she’d taken them down now.
Esther was wincing after she went to hang out in Sakuna’s room the other day,
but surely it wasn’t anything like that.
“It’s not fair!” Vill fumed.
If you really believe that, then show it in your
actions. Stop creeping into my bed, for starters, I grumbled internally while enjoying the
Immortal dishes.
Sakuna, Esther, and Vill also seemed to be
enjoying it. At the very least, this moment was a pleasant one—but then,
somebody appeared.
“Excuse me, may I take a seat with you?”
A woman in black clothing stood before us.
I looked around anxiously. No other seats were
open.
“Sorry. I suppose taking up a table for six
with only four people was too much of an imposition… Please, go ahead,” I said.
“Thank you. Your altruism bleaches my soul.”
The woman said something odd as she sat down beside me.
I was taken aback by how close she was. And
was she a smoker? She smelled of tobacco. Not to mention her all-black outfit.
She didn’t feel like an Immortal, but she didn’t strike me as being from any
country in particular.
“Excuse me. May I have a giga-spicy mapo tofu
that tastes like magma set?”
Is she for real? I respect anyone who can handle
that heat.
I continued eating my meal while in shock. I
glimpsed to the side and saw the staff bring out some mapo tofu that literally
looked like magma. Even Sakuna and Esther’s eyes grew wide at the sight of
that.
The woman grabbed her
spoon, put her hands together and gave thanks for the food, then scooped up
some of the bright-red, seething stuff. Slowly, she carried it to her mouth
and…chomped down. The next moment:
“BWOOOH?!”
She spat fire out of her mouth. She shrieked
in a coughing fit, like, “COUGHAAEUGHHHH!” and reached out for a cup of water
but knocked it over, spilling all of it over the table. I stood up in a panic.
“Are you okay?!”
“I-I’m not… It’s spicy. Too spicy. Like real
magma… Bwoeeegh!”
“Waaah! I’ll bring some water!”
I gave her a cup and she gulped it down like a
traveler dying in the middle of a desert.
“Thank you, thank you, thank you,” she said
repeatedly as she handed me back the cup. “The water courses through my body
again… Sorry. I can’t handle spicy food.”
“Then why did you order it?!”
“As they say, ‘Those whose
strength is lacking fall halfway.’ I don’t want to give up halfway. I
try to overcome the giga-spicy mapo tofu that tastes like magma time and time
again, and yet…”
“Lady Komari, perhaps you were right about
ninety percent of humankind being comprised of perverts.”
“Don’t be rude! Anyways, I’m glad you’re fine
now.”
“You saved my life. Excuse me! Please bring
her some grape juice.”
“Wha—?! Please, that’s okay. I only gave you a
cup of water…”
“I must respond to kindness with kindness. I
owe you my life…Crimson Lord Terakomari Gandesblood.”
I staggered.
An employee brought me the grape juice right
away. They also wiped the damp table.
“Ah!” Esther exclaimed out of the blue.
“She’s… This woman is the Enchanted Lands’ Minister of Military Secrets!”
“Pleased to meet you. I’m Nerzanpi Rocha. I
have the honor of being the Ailan dynasty’s Minister of
Military Secrets, overseer of the Three Draconic Meteors. Though basically, I’m
just Grand Chancellor Shikai Gudo’s stooge.”
The mood turned tense. So she was on the side
of those tormenting Lingzi.
“Hey, don’t look at me all frightened like
that,” she said with a smile. “It’s not as though everyone at the top of the
government participates in Lingzi’s torment. In fact, I sympathize with her.”
“Suspicious. I’ll stuff mapo tofu into your
mouth.”
“Stop it, Vill… What do you mean by that?” I
asked Nerzanpi.
“I mean I feel bad for her. No one listens to
her. Her father, the Tianzi, is a coward lazing around the rock garden, and the
grand chancellor is plotting to take over the dynasty.”
I had no idea what Nerzanpi’s true intentions
were. Her words and gestures were completely devoid of emotion. She seemed like
she was already dead.
“In fact, it was I who let Meihua Liang
escape,” she said nonchalantly. “The other Draconic Meteors were in charge of
pursuing Lingzi’s followers, but I ordered them to keep it in moderation.
Otherwise, she wouldn’t have made it to the Mulnite Empire.”
“Really…? So you’re on Lingzi’s side?”
“Of course. I may be a villain, but I’m
discerning about the paths of evil I walk. I don’t like Shikai Gudo’s petty
style.”
“Hmmm…”
“Ms. Komari, should I kill her to check her
memory?” Sakuna whispered into my ear.
Kill her? You wanna be the perpetrator of a
homicide just like that? I mean, I don’t have faith in her, either, but…
“Oh, it seems like we’re lacking trust here.
Allow me to give you this, then.”
Nerzanpi searched her pocket and produced a
picture. A picture of…
“Lingzi?!”
“Yes, Lingzi Ailan. This
is a photo of her being held captive in the palace’s tower,” said Nerzanpi.
Vill peeked at it from my back. I stared at it
so hard I could have bored a hole in the picture. Lingzi was sitting down on
the other side of a barred window. She didn’t look hurt…but her expression was
dyed in despair.
“The government explained away the Gongzhu’s
disappearance from the public as convalescence, but that’s clearly a lie.
Shikai Gudo doesn’t want Her Highness undermining his plot.”
The girl in the picture clearly wanted help.
My heart thumped out of my chest. I wanted to
see her no matter what.
“You shouldn’t feel at ease just because she
has no visible wounds. Remember that the Enchanted Lands’ Dark Core is at work.
Although I imagine Shikai Gudo wouldn’t use unnecessary violence—he’s more the
scheming type.”
“Still…,” I said.
“Rumors say he’s forcing her to whisper him
words of love.”
“Love?!”
“I also heard he’s had his way with her whole
body.”
“WHAAAT?!”
“Calm down. Just take a sip of grape juice.”
“Gnnn… Yeah…”
“Lady Nerzanpi, as Minister of Military
Secrets, could you not stop Shikai Gudo?” Vill asked with brimming suspicion.
“That would be difficult.” She sighed. “Shikai
Gudo holds massive power over the Enchanted Lands. He also has a short temper
and kills and imprisons anyone who disagrees with him. He is truly the
chancellor of ruin. Which is why I have no choice but to butter him up. I’m
quite fond of my life, you see.”
There were posters praising the grand
chancellor all over Jingshi. That sicko really was popular with the people. He
knew how to keep his light side and dark side separated.
I dejectedly grabbed the
grape juice and took a sip.
“So, what should we do? We would like to hear
your opinion,” Vill said.
“I can only think of two ways forward,”
responded Nerzanpi. “One: to expose and overthrow him. Two…”
My heart leaped and raced.
A few drops of something else were mixed in
the grape juice. I knew this flavor. A crude taste I couldn’t bring myself to
like.
“…to use force. Subjugate him and be ready to
face criticism from the people.”
“No. We cannot expose Lady Komari to public
censure. She’s too kind and will break under the pressure… Umm, Lady Komari? Is
something the matter?”
I wasn’t listening to Vill anymore.
The next moment, a storm of mana brewed.
Screams erupted all over the restaurant.
Plates shattered. The chair and table I was touching turned into shining gold.
Right. This was my Core Implosion, the Blood
Curse. I was the source of all this mana.
“I… I…”
I was still conscious, but golden swords were
whirling around me before I knew it.
“Commander?! Is there anything that troubled
you?! Did you not like my choice of restaurant?! I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m
sorry!!”
“No, Ms. Esther! There was blood in the food!”
“Calm down, Lady Komari! You can’t just awaken
your powers in the middle of a comedy scene! C’mon, kiss me, I’ll bring you
back!”
I’m fine. I’m already sixteen—I’m a grown-up. Holding
back my meteoric power should be easy.
“Shiny. This one’s the best of the Blood
Curses.”
Nerzanpi lit up a cigarette, ignoring the sign
that said NO
SMOKING.
She puffed a cloud of smoke and let out a
stifled, dead chuckle.
“Shikai Gudo said he would be seeing Lingzi
this noon. Who knows what they’re doing in that tower?
Probably something so terrible I dare not speak it.”
“!”
“She’s on the twenty-second floor of the
palace.”
“…”
“You don’t know where it is? The building has
a sign like this on the wall.”
Nerzanpi grabbed a piece of paper and a pen
and drew some characters that looked like stick figures doing gymnastics. It
said “Gekong Tower.”
My emotions exploded. I could not take it any
longer.
My consciousness began to fade, until the gold
mana shrouded the world.
![]()
“Security’s going to be
tough to crack. There’s also a magical barrier.”
“How about I break through it with Diverse
Divide?”
“Wouldn’t be impossible for you, Lady Nelia…
But that would create a rift with the Enchanted Lands government if we’re
wrong. I also don’t think it would be physically possible to take on all the
Immortal guards.”
The outskirts of Jingshi.
Nelia, Gertrude, and Meihua were hiding in the
bushes, observing a building. Meihua had said this place was suspicious and
that it held the key to revealing the grand chancellor’s misdeeds.
“Hey, Meihua, what exactly is the grand
chancellor planning?”
“He’s investigating willpower. Studying the
workings of the soul. He’s probably trying to do the same sort of things they
did in the Daydream Paradise to artificially activate Core Implosion.”
“Hmmm. He’s learned nothing from Madhart’s
failure.”
“According to my peers’ investigation, the
grand chancellor has been kidnapping citizens of Jingshi for experimentation.
If that’s true, he’s no different from Madhart. But we haven’t gotten any
decisive evidence…”
The building they were
observing was supposed to be a laboratory.
It looked like any other building in the
Enchanted Lands, but it was oddly large. Big enough to compete with the palace.
It was also tightly secured. There was a perception barrier around the
structure, preventing it from being viewed from outside. Moreover, the illusory
magic was Effulgent-level. If Nelia hadn’t cut through it with her Diverse
Divide, they wouldn’t have even realized it was there.
“Lingzi and I found this place by looking into
some secret files, but we don’t know what exactly they’re doing inside… That
part of the documents was destroyed.”
“So we have no choice but to break in and find
out.”
Nelia’s goal was to wipe away the holdovers of
Madhart’s reign, along with exposing the grand chancellor and rescuing Lingzi
Ailan. She would have to do something about this lab to accomplish that.
“Should we have Komari take care of it? She
could blow it up with her Core Implosion,” Nelia said.
“But then the evidence would be gone with it.”
“And it would put Immortal society against us.
We can’t cause a scene after being invited to the wed—” Meihua cut herself
short.
Nelia felt a massive burst of mana and turned
around.
“Huh?”
She couldn’t believe her eyes.
In the skies far away, just by the main street
of Jingshi, a golden pillar shot up to the heavens. Emergency sirens roared all
around.
“What is that?!” Gertrude yelled, staggering.
Isn’t it obvious? It could only be one thing.
Nelia gazed at the absurd sight—a shimmering
golden Vampire Princess flying off to the west.
Just then, she got a call from one of her
subordinates, who she’d left behind to do reconnaissance.
“Abercrombie here. There’s trouble, Miss
President. Commander Gandesblood is heading off to take back Lingzi Ailan, and
she’s fighting the Enchanted Lands’ army along the way. The Empire’s Seventh Unit has also come out of hiding and is starting to riot.
Oh, and they’re screaming about ‘Komarin,’ of course.”
The report was unnecessary. It was clear that
everything was going off the rails.
“Komari?! What the hell are you thinkiiing?!”
The commander had used the Blood Curse’s Saber
Hills and Blade Groves, a golden power that was brought about by drinking
Warblade blood.
Nelia immediately turned around to Jingshi’s
center, pale in the face.
![]()
The bars were cut apart
in an instant—the entire tower wall was smashed to pieces, actually.
Lingzi looked away to cover her face from the
incoming golden gust, but she turned back around upon feeling someone’s
presence. It was a vampire, clad in gold mana and emanating hostility. She’s like a prince charming coming to rescue a captive princess,
thought Lingzi inappropriately, swept away by emotion.
“Give Lingzi back.” Komari glared daggers at
Shikai.
The grand chancellor responded with a cackle.
“Na-ha-ha-ha-ha! What a dynamic entrance,
Commander Gandesblood!”
His laughter was warranted—his position hadn’t
changed.
“But what will happen after you’ve gone on
your rampage? I’ll immediately become a victim! Oh no, an
invader came here to steal Gudo’s bride by force! What will the people
say about you once I call you out on that? Your rampages have only been
justified up to now because you had the support of the people. Using force when
everyone hates you will only make you another despot! No different from Gerra
Madhart!”
Terakomari Gandesblood had solved myriad
issues through sheer willpower. And her achievements had stuck because the
people wished for them. But by the same token, this meant she couldn’t do
something that went against the will of the people. She
couldn’t overthrow Grand Chancellor Shikai Gudo without just cause.
“Do you get it now? Put away that beautiful
yet horrific golden spear!”
Komari could do nothing but obey.
Her golden mana weakened bit by bit. The
swords swirling around her turned to glowing specks, leaving only a stumped
vampire behind.
“Huh? Uh…”
Komari looked around.
The window was wrecked, as was the wall. Then
she turned her eyes to Lingzi and Shikai.
“How did this happen?!” She clutched her head
and screamed.
“Na-ha-ha-ha!” Shikai laughed. “You don’t have
control over it?! Still, your Core Implosion really is powerful! So much so I
want you as my subordinate. What do you say? Care for a workplace transfer?”
“I’m not working for you! Lingzi, are you all
right?!” Komari rushed to her.
Lingzi raised her head with a hopeful
expression.
What beautiful eyes. Lingzi’s were radiant,
unlike those of the other Ailan dynasty Immortals. Komari felt herself getting
sucked in. As she kept staring, Komari’s face turned red like a tomato.
“Um… Would you mind saying something…?”
“Ah! Sorry…”
“Don’t apologize! Are you hurt?”
“No. Thank you.”
Lingzi curved her lips into a smile. Was she
doing it right? Meihua always told her she was too inexpressive. She wasn’t
sure she could make one.
Komari immediately looked away.
“…Sorry I have such an ugly smile.”
“That’s not true! It’s…beautiful…”
Lingzi’s heart raced. It was the first time
someone had said something like that to her.
“Really…? Thank you… But
why don’t you look my way?”
“Huh?! Well… Oh, you see…it’s just
self-preservation! I feel like my heart could explode if I look at your face…”
“…What in the world have you been talking
about?” Shikai glared at them.
Sure enough, this wasn’t a conversation to be
having in front of your enemy.
“Nothing!” Komari shook her head before
turning to look at him. “Shikai Gudo! Stop making Lingzi suffer!”
“Who’s really making people suffer here? The
reports said your Seventh Unit are rampaging across Jingshi.”
“WHAT THE HECK, GUYS?!” Komari ran up to the
smashed window, then yelled, “Heeey! Stop iiit! Stop shouting my naaame!”
Shikai shrugged.
“Good grief! You’re a fun girl, I’ll give you
that. But it’s over now. You’ve made an enemy of the Immortals. It seems
they’re beginning to protest against the Imperial Army.”
“Ugh… Sorry…”
“You haven’t gotten involved with the
Enchanted Lands until now. Perhaps people upheld you as a hero elsewhere…but
the Immortals think nothing of you. Their hero is not some foreign vampire, but
their grand chancellor. The state benefits I’ve distributed have done me well.”
“What am I supposed to… For starters, it’s
your fault for locking Lingzi away! Convalescence?! She looks perfectly healthy
to me! If anything, she’s only in bad shape after being imprisoned here!”
“I can think of countless ways to excuse
tha—hmm? Wait, could it be that you like Lingzi?”
The mood shattered. Komari faltered for a
second before shouting:
“It’s not that I like her! I feel sorry for
her! That’s why I came here!”
“But your reaction just now was obvious. I
could feel your pure, pure love blooming for her! Ahh! Sweet innocence!”
“N-n-n-n-n-n-no-no-no-no way! You’re seeing
things!”
“Of course you’d deny
it! After all, the papers say you’re in a relationship with your maid.”
“That’s all baloney!!”
“So you do like
Lingzi, don’t you? I see, that’s why you had to resort to your Core Implosion
to get here. Oh, beautiful! Marvelous! One could base a whole romance novel off
this!”
Shikai opened his arms like a stage play actor
and walked toward Komari.
He was right: Komari was in love with
Lingzi—but her feelings weren’t natural. It was a forced, artificial affection.
The grand chancellor got right in front of
Komari, then grabbed her by the collar and whispered:
“I will not give you Lingzi. She will be the
foundation of my ambitions.”
The man hid his atrocious fangs behind a
facetious demeanor. Whenever he threatened Lingzi like that, she could only
shiver in fear. She hated how it brought forth the weakness of her heart.
But Komari wasn’t that way. She was entirely
unlike Lingzi.
“Just try and do it,” she provoked Shikai in
return. “I won’t let you have her! Lingzi will be hurt if she stays with you!
She’ll be sad! You don’t care at all about her!”
The grand chancellor’s brows twitched.
Komari declared war oh so easily.
“So I’m going to save her!”
Ba-thump! Lingzi felt as though her chest would burst.
Komari’s earnest words had landed a critical
hit on her heart. Just looking at the girl bravely stand against the corrupt
chancellor was enough to make Lingzi’s heartbeat audibly quicken. She felt her
consciousness flying away. Ahh. This was Terakomari Gandesblood.
“Ahh! I see! You are a vampire brimming with
pathos!”
“Guh?!”
Shikai lifted Komari by the collar, then
slowly approached the destroyed wall of the cell.
“Grand Chancellor! Wait!
What’re you doing?!”
“I’ve been moved to my core! I’m shocked that
you care that much for Lingzi! In honor of your passion, I will give you a
chance.”
Shikai ignored Lingzi’s yells of protest.
Komari flailed her arms and legs; there wasn’t anything underfoot. Nothing but
the ground far below.
“One must respect people’s feelings!
Particularly when it comes to love! Perhaps it was unjust to force marriage
upon her! So I’ll give you an opportunity to fight, fair and square! Let’s
duel!”
“Stop… Let me go…!”
“Let the bout begin. Adieu.”
Shikai released her with a cackle.
Komari fell without even having the time to
scream.
Lingzi launched herself off the floor in
shock. Surprisingly, Shikai did not stop her.
She braced herself and jumped off the tower.
As she plummeted toward the earth, she reached out to Komari. The ground was
getting closer. Komari’s dreadful expression took hold of Lingzi’s heart.
And then…she was unable to reach her.
![]()
◆March 19 – Grand
Chancellor’s Statement
Crimson Lord
Terakomari Gandesblood deceived Gongzhu Lingzi Ailan while the latter was
returning to health and snatched her away. We believe the brawl in Jingshi’s
main street was a consequence of Commander Gandesblood’s orders. Still, we
would like you to refrain from attacking her. She only did so out of
displeasure with Gongzhu Lingzi Ailan’s marriage. Not for political reasons, of
course. This was because she did not want anyone to take the Gongzhu from
her—the commander’s crimes were a lapse of judgment stemming from feelings of
romance. The administration will be lenient in its handling of the matter. The
wedding ceremony between grand chancellor Shikai Gudo and Gongzhu Lingzi Ailan
planned for the 21st will be postponed. Instead, we will hold a Matrimonial War
between grand chancellor Shikai Gudo and Crimson Lord
Terakomari Gandesblood. Whoever wins will marry the Gongzhu. The method to
decide on the victor is under consideration, but it has been suggested that we
hold a national referendum, as we did a hundred years ago. Allow us to clarify
that the Tianzi has approved all of the above. Whoever objects will be treated
as a traitor to the Ailan dynasty—beware.
![]()
“Matrimonial War…? What
is this ridiculous event?”
Prohellya read the grand chancellor’s
statement while eating skewered chicken from a stall in a back alley of
Jingshi.
The statement was on an Ailan dynasty bulletin
board. Usually, the board was full of solemn political notices, but it was
oddly sensationalist this time around.
“Terakomari likes Lingzi? Now that’s a
surprise!” cat-ear girl Leona Flatt said blithely.
The two had run into each other at their
lodging, and Leona invited Prohellya to go sightseeing as they had back in the
Heavenly Paradise.
“You’re way off the mark, Leona. Terakomari couldn’t
be in love with Lingzi Ailan. That’s impossible.”
“What do you mean? Also, you got sauce around
your mouth.”
“What I mean is that this statement is all
false. Or, at least the part about Terakomari being in love with Lingzi Ailan.
I imagine the so-called Matrimonial War will actually take place.”
Prohellya wiped her mouth with a handkerchief
while putting the bulletin inside her uniform.
The General Secretary had instructed her to
show up for Lingzi’s wedding, but she wasn’t sure what was going on behind the
scenes. It seemed like Terakomari was plotting something.
“That aside, Jingshi sure is a peaceful
place,” Leona said.
“Hmm?”
“I feel totally at ease here, even in this
back alley. If this was the Polar Union’s Federal District, we’d have thugs
coming here to mug us.”
“Is that a declaration
of war? Fine, then. I’ll fight to protect the future of my motherland’s
children. I’ll begin by listing a hundred good points about the Federal
District.”
“I’m just kidding. Let’s not fight and just
have fun going around sampling the local cuisine, okay?”
“I was also joking… It’s true that the
Enchanted Lands feel very welcoming. It’s somewhat similar to the Heavenly
Paradise, but different at its core. This country doesn’t have its feet on the
ground.”
“Yeaaah. The Immortals fly all over the
place.”
Prohellya chomped down her last bite of meat
and stared at the wall of the back alley.
There were a few pictures plastered there,
apparently from non-governmental organizations.
They
read: LOOKING FOR MISSING PERSONS.
Residents of Jingshi had been disappearing out
of nowhere for a while now.
Though the city seemed peaceful on the
surface, it had a dark underside. Perhaps Terakomari’s group had noticed
something—so thought Prohellya as she threw her skewer into a trash can.
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I woke up in my hotel
room.
Sunlight was streaming through the west
window. Seemed like I’d been out for a while. I examined myself in a hurry.
“Huh? Did I die?”
I was unharmed. There was no pain. Even though
Shikai had thrown me off the tower.
I shouldn’t have been able to heal even a
scratch in the Enchanted Lands, far away from the Mulnite Dark Core.
“Ahh, Lady Komari! You’re awake! Thank
goodness!”
“Vill? What in the world… Bwugh?!”
She tackled me like a bull. Not only that, but
she also pulled up my shirt and stuck her head in while
trembling with joy. “Ahh, Lady Komari, thank goodness, ahh, Lady Komari, thank
goodness,” she shouted like a sicko.
“There’s nothing good about this! What’re you
doing?!”
“I’m checking to see there’s nothing wrong
with your body. Let me inspect you more closely. Take off your clothes. No
wait, let me do that for you. Freeze like a sea cucumber and stare up at the
ceiling.”
“AAAAAHHHHH!!”
“Stop it, Villhaze. You’re scaring her.”
Someone grabbed Vill’s shoulder.
The peach-colored Warblade—Nelia—sighed.
“Nelia! What happened to me?! I’m not dead, am
I…?”
“Let me go, Lady Cunningham! I’ll sue you for
sexual harassment!” shouted Vill.
“You’re the only sex offender here… Of course
you’re not dead, Komari. You were thrown off the tower, but fortunately, there
was a mat down there that saved you.”
“What? A mat?”
“A mat vendor who was visiting the palace just
so happened to drop one of his wares there. And you fell on it. You also
happened to do a ‘parachute landing fall’ and absorbed the shock of the hit.”
“No way, that’s too many coincidences.”
I felt like I had used up my entire life’s
worth of luck. This was too good to be true. Was God doing everything in his
power to keep me alive? Please don’t go dropping a meteorite
on me tomorrow to balance the karma.
“…Where’s everyone else? Sakuna, Esther?”
“They’re out shopping. Gertrude is outside
keeping watch.”
“Forget them, Lady Komari. Would you like some
snacks? I’ll feed you.”
“What about the city? I hope I didn’t cause a
hubbub.”
“Lady Komari, are you thirsty? Here, I’ll let
you drink water directly from my mouth.”
“Yeah, there’s a huge
hubbub. Jingshi is in shambles because of you.”
“Lady Komari, I am your closest aide, so may I
hug you for no reason? I can, yes? Thank you. Excuse me.”
“In shambles? What in the world… Vill, quit it
already!!”
The maid buried her face in my chest out of
nowhere.
Vill rubbed her cheeks against me. It was
ticklish. An irredeemable pervert to her very core! I
thought, but her behavior felt a bit different than usual this time.
“What’s up with you?”
Vill puffed her cheeks.
“You will be marrying me.”
“She’s sullen.” Nelia chuckled. “Regardless of
your true romantic feelings, you ended up getting involved in a fight for a
bride. I think Vill’s mad that the bride in question is Lingzi, not her.”
“Lingzi…?! That’s right, Lingzi! Is she
okay?!”
“She is. Let me explain in order.”
Nelia took a mooncake from the table and threw
it in her mouth.
That reminded me, my lunch had been ripped
away from me. I was starving. But just as I was about to ask for food, my whole
brain exploded when I heard the next words out of Nelia’s mouth:
“You’ve gotten yourself into a battle with the
grand chancellor over who gets to marry Lingzi.”
That didn’t make any sense. I understood the
individual words in her statement, but nothing else.
“First, you met Minister of Military Secrets
Nerzanpi Rocha at the Tianzhu Hall. She is not on Lingzi’s side. She’s a true
villain on the grand chancellor’s side.”
“Really?!”
“Nerzanpi slipped some blood in your drink.
Then she gave you Lingzi’s location to get you to go save her. That way, you’d
look like a villain trying to steal the grand chancellor’s bride. And sure
enough, a ton of people in the Enchanted Lands are criticizing you and the
Seventh Unit.”
“Ugh… But why the
Seventh Unit, too?”
“They followed their commander’s rampage. They
got too riled up.”
What are you guys—dogs barking at an alarm?
“Do not worry. Esther, Lieutenant Cerbero, and
I put a stop to them before they could go overboard. They only blew up about a
couple shops in the surrounding area.”
“That’s a couple too many!”
“They’re billing us damages of a hundred
million liang.”
“How much is that?”
“About a million plates of omelet rice.”
“What now, Vill?! I can’t make that many!”
Was this Shikai’s plan all along? Sneaky bastard.
“I must say…” Nelia looked up at the ceiling
with worry. “I wasn’t expecting him to do this. I figured he’d just treat you
like a criminal… Why would he set up this Matrimonial War? Maybe he’s looking
to boost his fame even further by defeating the strongest of the Six
Valkyries?”
“I don’t wanna battle to the death.”
“It won’t be a battle to the death,” Vill
said, fondling my belly. “Shikai Gudo said it would be a fight to decide who’s
more suitable for Lingzi. That doesn’t sound like a simple contest of
strength.”
“That man is no military officer—he’s a civil
official. He should be aware that he would end up dead if he duked it out with
you.”
“So it’s gonna be a test of intellect. And I,
being the intellectual scholar of the century, cannot lose.”
“It’d definitely be faster to save Lingzi from
him by doing it his way,” Nelia said.
That was when it hit me. The Matrimonial War
would decide who was going to marry her. So…
“Wait… So if I win, I get to marry Lingzi?”
“You win the right to
marry her. But I know you would never marry anyone other than me, Lady Komari,
so just think of it as a fight to defeat the grand chancellor.”
“That means you can marry me whether you win
or lose.”
“What’s Lingzi doing now? I imagine she’s
safe, or else the battle would be pointless.”
“She’s upstairs.” Nelia pointed at the
ceiling. “Grand Chancellor’s letting her be, for some reason. He also seems to
have stopped pursuing Meihua. She’ll be with us for the time being.”
“Isn’t that suspicious? After how he had her
basically bound hand and foot?”
“Well, yes. I imagine he thinks he can trounce
you in the Matrimonial War. That aside…” Nelia sighed. “Lingzi’s on the roof
right now, and she seems pretty bummed out. How about you go see her?”
![]()
The hotel rooftop was
dyed sunset red.
In fact, the whole of Jingshi looked like it
was stained with blood. Immortals flew between the endless sea of skyscrapers.
The fantastical view caught my eye as I walked forward.
Lingzi Ailan stood before the safety fence.
She turned around as soon as she heard me
arrive, her peafowl-like attire gliding in the air.
“Ms. Terakomari… You’re awake.”
She
was so pretty it made me dizzy. Oh no. I’m really
not doing okay. Usually Cold Komari transforms into Hot Komari at the sight of
her.
“Y-yeah. Are you okay?”
“I am, thanks to you.”
“Yeah, great job, Commander. Thanks to you,
we’ll have to rethink the whole plan.”
I heard an exasperated voice. Suddenly, Meihua
was standing right next to Lingzi.
“Huh? When did you get here?”
“I’ve been here the whole time! Do you only
notice Lingzi, or what?!”
“Sorry.”
Yes, my eyes had been
locked on Lingzi. It was her fault for being so dazzling, though. Just glancing
at her made my chest prickle. And yet, for some reason, I couldn’t look away.
“Oh well,” Meihua muttered. “Judging by the
back of your hand, it seems like Lovebird Infection is in effect.”
“What’re you talking about?”
“Nothing, forget it… Anyways, your rescue
operation made a real mess of things. We don’t have any evidence to expose the
grand chancellor with yet. We’ll need you to win the Matrimonial War now.”
“Meihua, don’t be so forceful.”
“Right… Sorry.” Meihua bowed.
Perhaps these two were part of the rare 10
percent.
“I know it’s brazen of me to ask, but I would
like you to save Lingzi. I can’t do it… Only you are up to the task, Commander
Terakomari Gandesblood.”
Help people. Unite the world.
That was the mission my mom left me.
I couldn’t sit back and watch as the Enchanted
Lands fell into peril.
“I know. I’ll help her.”
“Thank you. You’re so kind.” Lingzi smiled
shyly, then looked down at the crimson-dyed Jingshi. “My whole life, I’ve only
had bad people around me. This is my first time meeting someone like you.”
“You’re a commander, aren’t you? Can’t you use
your power to stand against Shikai?” I asked Lingzi.
“The Three Draconic Meteors aren’t like the
Seven Crimson Lords.” Meihua’s face darkened in powerlessness. “Civil officials
are considered superior to the military in the Enchanted Lands. Commanders have
little authority. And the Minister of Military Secrets oversees the Three
Draconic Meteors. Even Lingzi’s unit is under Nerzanpi’s control. They’re all
basically her enemy.”
“Yes… The Ailan dynasty has many enemies. My
father, the Tianzi, is powerless. He’s letting the Enchanted Lands be taken
over—the worst consequence of this being the reestablishment of the Daydream Paradise. The grand chancellor has been kidnapping residents
of Jingshi and using them as guinea pigs in Core Implosion experiments. That’s
why I need to act against him…but he’s trying to strip me of all power.”
A giant balloon floated above the crimson
city. Propaganda for the grand chancellor’s rule, clearly. A huge picture of
his face was plastered over it. What a narcissistic dude.
“The grand chancellor captured everyone who
agreed with me, and now he’s trying to strip me of my status as Gongzhu and
Draconic Meteor. He wants to marry me to justify his actions—to show everyone
within and without that he deserves to succeed the Tianzi…and to steal
everything from me. If a new dynasty begins, I will spend my life confined to
the palace…”
Lingzi’s words were faltering; I could feel
she wasn’t good at talking.
Still, I felt the strong emotion behind them.
Her sadness, her anger, her impotence, and a faint hope…
“So…” She turned around, wearing a sorry
expression. “I need your help, Terakomari.”
Lingzi’s green hair fluttered in the spring
breeze. Paralyzed by the sight, I forgot to answer.
“I want you to marry me.”
What a beautiful girl. It wasn’t because of
her looks that I was charmed by her, but she really was as pretty as a flower.
Like a fairy straight out of a book.
“Um… Would you give me a reply…?”
“Huh?”
“Like I said, I’d like you to marry me…,”
Lingzi repeated, straining her voice and fidgeting.
Her face was bright red. Not because of the
sunset. What did she just say? My brain was shaken by
waves so hard it was about to evanesce. Lingzi repeated herself one more time:
“Please…marry me!”
“WHAAAT?!”
What? Marry? Did she just
say ‘marry me’?
I mean, sure, every day would be beautiful and
exciting if I were to marry her, so I welcome it with open arms… No, hold on.
Something’s not right with my head. Someone call a medic.
“You always leave out the important part,
Lingzi,” said Meihua.
“S-sorry! I only meant that figuratively…!
What I meant to say was, please win the Matrimonial War for me! As in, take me
away from the grand chancellor!”
“O-ohh, right! You had me going there for a
moment!”
“Yes, I’m sorry. So please…” Lingzi took a
deep breath to calm down and looked me straight in the eye. “Please marry me.”
C’mon girl, stop saying that
already—you’re gonna give me a heart attack. Those
thoughts aside, there was only one thing to do: Give it my all for Lingzi.
“Okay. I will.” I smiled as soothingly as I
could. “I’ll do my best to get to marry you!”
“Lady Komari!”
I thought myself dead for a moment. The voice
of a ghoul from hell echoed in my ear.
“Lady Komari. Lady Komari. What’s this about
marriage I hear? Why are you accepting Lady Lingzi’s proposal? You have me. Are
you going to cheat?”
“Whoa! Vill?!”
The sicko maid appeared behind me like a
ghost. Alarm bells rang in my head, and I immediately tried running away, but I
stumbled when she grabbed me by the belly.
“We drank each other’s blood! I make you
omelet rice every day! We sleep together every night! We promised we would
marry each other! I’ve made an album of us flirting to show at our reception!
And yet you fell for some random woman who only showed up in the middle of the
series?”
“You’re just making stuff up! Let me go!”
“Ms. Komari.”
I was going to die
again. Demise sprouted from my feet. I fearfully looked down.
“WAAAH?!”
Sakuna was on all fours, grabbing my ankles
and looking up at me.
Did she just pop up out of the floor?!
“You can’t do that, Ms. Komari. You’re still
too young to marry. And you don’t really want to, do you? Lingzi’s tricking
you, isn’t she?”
“Huh? Sakuna? Is that really you?”
“I see. I understand. I just need to get rid
of her, then. You wait here, Ms. Komari. I’ll bring you back to reality.”
“No, stop! Where did that fly swatter come
from?!”
“Let me go! I can’t k*ll her if you don’t let
me go!”
“Calm down, Sakunaaa! You’re supposed to be a
decent persooon!!”
Sakuna tried to carry out a suicide attack on
Lingzi. I clung to Sakuna’s waist. Vill clung to my waist. Nelia headed out
onto the rooftop and exclaimed, “What is going on?!” while cackling and
clapping. Esther jumped to Vill’s waist in a flurry, yelling, “Compose
yourself!”
Lingzi and Meihua were flabbergasted. So was
I, to be honest.
The attack continued until Lingzi explained
what she really meant by me marrying her.
The look of disgust in Meihua’s face was
burned into my retinas.
So began our preparations for the war.
![]()
Grand Chancellor Shikai
Gudo had another title: “Starquake Minister.”
His job was to oversee the Starquake Agency, a
department that had existed since the inception of the Ailan dynasty. This
government office was in charge of recording the movements of the stars. But
the task of logging this information was just a front.
“Hmm! Things aren’t looking good, I see.”
The outskirts of the Enchanted Lands.
Shikai Gudo stood in an atrium of the secret
facilities that Nelia Cunningham had scouted out at noon.
“The recipe says we’re
close. It will all be for nothing if we don’t hurry. There’s not much time
left… Ahh! Are the heavens trying to end us?!”
“We’re not dead yet. No need to get so
pessimistic.”
A woman in black appeared beside him. It was
Minister of Military Secrets Nerzanpi Rocha, the grand chancellor’s mysterious
right hand.
She gazed upward, her eyes dead, and lit a
cigarette.
“There were the experiments on Monique Claire.
Dr. Kuya did great work at the Crimson Snow Hut. Now I’m closer to
understanding the mechanics of willpower. It’s essentially similar to the Dark
Core.”
“You mean in that it creates infinite energy?”
“Yes. Willpower recovers on a whim. No matter
how much you batter the spirit through etiolation, you cannot kill it
completely. Little wonder they call it the source of creation of the world.”
“Wouldn’t a Baolu be enough, then? Why do we
keep failing?”
“The model must be wrong. Any random person’s
Baolu won’t get us the Waidan. Which means we need to make a Baolu out of
someone with a stronger will. Maybe one of the Six Valkyries? They all have
powerful Core Implosions.”
Screams rang out behind them—from people being
tortured to create a Baolu. Shikai knew that his reputation would be in tatters
if anyone found out about this place.
“I think we should go for Commander
Gandesblood. You’re already set to hold the Matrimonial War anyway. But why
bother going through with it in the first place?”
“I want Lingzi to resign of her own volition.
She would fight back if I took her by force. But she’ll give up if it’s a
consequence of the Matrimonial War. She’ll abandon the irksome titles of
‘Gongzhu’ and ‘Commander’ and resign herself to being a bird in a cage.
Beautiful maidens shine best when decorating a closed room.”
“I see. So you did have something in mind…
Still, be wary of Mulnite’s Seventh Unit. They might launch an attack in
retaliation.”
“Na-ha-ha-ha! That’s no
issue! Terakomari will be the one to meet her ruin if that happens. Military
might has no value in this country.”
“I hope you’re right.”
The screaming stopped. The victim dropped to
the floor, their soul sucked out.
“We’ve got one. Will this do?”
A tall woman in military uniform holding a
faintly glowing sphere approached Shikai and Nerzanpi.
“Wonderful, wonderful,” Nerzanpi said flatly
after glancing at the orb. “It’s pretty. The source’s heart must’ve been so
pure… Poor thing. By the way, have you been making good use of the Cogito Staff
II?”
“Yes… How long must I keep working here?”
“Until you’ve achieved your goal. Heh-heh.”
Shikai tilted his head as he watched the two
talk.
“That woman isn’t an Immortal, right? Who is
she?”
“Her name is Mary Fragment. She’s a Warblade
and former Illustrious General of the Gerra-Aruka Republic. Madhart’s loyal
subject.”
“I heard they imprisoned most of the Eight
Illustrious Generals, though.”
“She escaped on her own. She had nowhere else
to go, so I took her in.”
Mary the Warblade clicked her tongue as she
threw the Baolu.
Nerzanpi just barely caught it.
“I only care about getting revenge on Nelia
Cunningham and Terakomari Gandesblood. You said you’d give me the opportunity,
and that’s the only reason I’m in this drab place putting on the sequel to the Daydream
Paradise. When do I get to meet the Moonpeach Princess?”
“The time will come eventually. Everything has
its moment. We’re not there yet, so don’t hurry yourself. Just keep focusing on
making Baolu.”
“I just heard you say these things are
pointless.”
“Oh, you were listening? I only said they
wouldn’t become Waidan, not that they have no use at all. Move on to your next
assignment. Be patient, and you will have your revenge.”
Mary clicked her tongue
again and returned to the test area.
It seemed like Aruka had their own plot in
mind—but that would be of little issue with Nerzanpi in charge. Shikai smiled
and left the Starquake Agency. The facility was concealed by the power of a
Magic Stone imbued with Effulgent illusory magic that he’d taken from the
palace treasury. No mage could ever find it.
Perhaps he could send some of the guards here
over to the Matrimonial War.
![]()
The next day. The
morning before the Matrimonial War.
We were having breakfast when Meihua said
something unbelievable:
“Commander, go on a date with Lingzi.”
““““What?””””
My hand froze as I was scooping up a bite of
omelet rice. Sakuna sent a glare of confusion at Meihua. Vill wiped the tea she
dropped on the floor with a cloth. Lingzi curled into herself, red in the face.
Only Nelia and Gertrude kept enjoying their meal: “This meat bun is delicious!”
“It really is.”
“Meihua…there’s no need. I can’t burden Ms.
Terakomari like that.”
“No, there is. We must show the people of
Jingshi that you and Terakomari are close. The grand chancellor is probably
trying to win by getting public opinion on his side.”
“That makes sense,” Nelia said while eating
her meat bun. “The source of his power isn’t physical strength, but his
popularity with the people. Showing Immortal society that Komari and Lingzi
love each other would be pretty effective. After all, it looks like the winner
of the Matrimonial War will be decided via popular vote.”
““No, never!!”” Vill and Sakuna yelled at the
same time.
“As her actual girlfriend, I cannot allow her
to go on a date with anyone else! If you keep up these shenanigans I will have
no choice but to steal Lady Komari’s panties to simmer down.”
“Vill is right! Why is that okay with you, Ms.
Nelia?! Are you just going to let Ms. Komari get married?
What if the world ends as a consequence?”
“There’s no way they’re getting hitched for
real. The date and the wedding are only for show.” Nelia calmly poured milk
into her glass. “Right, Komari? You only accepted Lingzi’s proposal to show her
you’ll defeat the grand chancellor in the Matrimonial War, right? There’s no
way you actually like Lingzi, right?”
“………………………………No, I don’t. You’re right.”
Indeed. I don’t feel anything romantic for
Lingzi. This is only part of the plan to save the Enchanted Lands.
Then my eyes met hers. Lingzi’s cheeks turned
redder and redder.
Somehow that made me blush, too. My heart was
about to explode just remembering her proposal from yesterday. Unable to stand
it, I looked away.
“…Hmm? Hold on, Komari. You can’t be for
real,” said Nelia.
“In any case, we must go outside to also check
how Jingshi is doing. The grand chancellor shouldn’t try anything until
tomorrow. Lingzi is in your hands, Commander,” said Meihua.
“Komari?! What was that reaction?! Your face
wasn’t even that cute when we drank each other’s blood!” exclaimed Nelia.
“Huh? No, nothing, I…,” I mumbled.
“Lady Nelia, calm down! Terakomari always
looks like that!” said Gertrude.
“Hey, that’s rude! I’ve always acted like a
gallant commander!” I said.
“No, Ms. Gertrude… Ms. Komari never makes that
face… This isn’t right. Something’s wrong. This can’t be. She must be possessed
or something… This can’t be. This can’t be.”
“I think you’re the one who’s possessed here,
Sakuna.”
“Lady Memoir is right. The devil must have
taken over your body, Lady Komari. We must secure an exorcist ASAP. To start
things off, I’ll be tying you up to the bed.”
“Let me go, sicko!! I’m perfectly sane!!
You’re not taking me to bed!!”
“Hang on, everyone,”
Lingzi said as she stood up. They all looked at her. “Terakomari doesn’t really
like me at all… Don’t worry. We’ll just be pretending during the Matrimonial
War… I won’t take her from you. Rest assured.”
My heart ached to hear that, for whatever
reason.
Meanwhile, everyone seemed to come back to
their senses, as though what Lingzi said was only obvious.
“Very well.” Vill nodded while massaging me.
“I will approve of this date…no, this outing, because it is necessary for the
Matrimonial War. But you must be home by three. You only get three hundred
mells. Don’t you dare hold hands or do anything else indecent.”
“Who are you, my mom?”
“Lady Lingzi, if you try anything with Lady
Komari, I will put poisonous mushrooms in your dinner that will have you
laughing non-stop for three days. Beware.”
“Understood.”
“Good. We will be watching from a few feet
away.”
Vill’s eyes were bloodshot.
So began my date (?) with Lingzi.
![]()
The people of Jingshi
watched us from afar. No one spoke to us, but their stares full of curiosity
and confusion tickled.
“Um… So, shall we get going?”
“Yes, let’s…”
“Where do you wanna go? I… Um… It pains me to
say this, but…I don’t know what people do on dates…”
Lingzi’s face boiled red. She looked down and
muttered, “Date…”
No, no. No, no, no. You can’t make a big deal out
of it, c’mon, you’ll make me more embarrassed. I’ll apologize for saying that,
just stop. Why do you look like this is your first date?
“Lingzi! Don’t think too much about it! We’re
just acting!”
“R-right! Just acting! I’ll show you around
Jingshi!”
“Wah-ha-ha! You’re so
reliable! Who better to show me around the Enchanted Lands!”
“…”
There was a pause, but she soon smiled.
“Leave it to me. I always sneak out to town. I
know some good places.”
“Wow. You’re amazing, huh?”
“I’m not the Gongzhu for nothing. I need to
know about my country…”
That reminded me—I didn’t know anything about
the Imperial Capital. I guess that should have been obvious, since I’d cooped
myself up for so long… But this really emphasized how different someone like
Lingzi was from someone like me. Heirs were just on a different level.
“Ah!” Lingzi exclaimed. “…May I call you
Komari?”
“Hmm? Sure…”
“Thank you. That makes it sound more
like…we’re a couple.”
I felt like I was gonna die then and there. My
heart was racing faster than when I’d gotten death threats from the chimpanzee.
“There’s a good shop over there. Shall we…?
Komari.”
“Yeah! Let’s go, Lingzi!”
We walked side by side. I had to avoid
focusing on the tension here. Otherwise, I’d blow up, and I was already at my
limit.
![]()
“AAAHHH!! LADY KOMARI!!
LADY KOMARI IS WALKING AROUND THE CITY WITH SOMEONE OTHER THAN ME?!?!?!”
“Calm down, Ms. Vill! That much isn’t
strange!”
“I can’t calm down!! I have to wedge myself in
between them and do a courting dance… I need to take her back…”
Vill, Esther, Sakuna, Nelia, and Meihua were
watching Komari and Lingzi from a back alley.
“Something seems off.” Nelia furrowed her brow
as she looked through a pair of binoculars. “They actually look like they’re a
couple. An innocent young couple… I gotta commend
Komari’s acting if it really is just that.”
“That’s unexpected. Terakomari aside, why
would Lingzi…?”
“Did you say something, Meihua?”
“Nothing.” She cleared her throat. “In any
case, it’s important that they act the part. They need to be more explicit to
appeal to the masses. I’d rather they hold hands, at least.”
“Things will get spicy if that happens.”
Esther was taken aback. Snow-white girl Sakuna
Memoir sat on the ground, hugging her knees, as she stared at Komari and Lingzi
with a smile on her face.
“…Commander Memoir, what do you mean by
‘spicy’?”
“Things will get spicy if that happens.”
“I heard you, but how exactly…?”
“Things will get spicy if that happens.”
Sakuna stared at Meihua.
“Eek?!” Meihua shrieked like a bird and
stepped back.
Esther knew that Sakuna Memoir was a huge fan
of Komari’s. She knew that Sakuna had plastered pictures of Komari all over her
room, forming a giant Komari mosaic. And so she knew that blood could spill as
a consequence of this date.
“Th-they went into a business. What do they
sell there?”
“It’s a famous general store, although only
tourists go there.”
“Hmmm.” Then Nelia noticed something and
narrowed her eyes.
Esther also felt something strange. Hostility.
Hatred. The source wasn’t clear—but perhaps someone else was following Komari.
“Things are going to get messy.” Nelia curled
her lips while looking through the binoculars.
![]()
Lingzi took me to a
souvenir shop brimming with exotic vibes. It was a nice place, full of shiny
goods closely lined up together.
“Is there anything you want to buy?”
“No, but browsing is
fun… Is that bad?”
“No, not at all! Let’s window-shop together!”
Lingzi chuckled and began walking through the shop.
There were pretty gem keyholders. Earthenware
with flower designs. Dragons carved from wood. Fans of all colors. Playing
cards bearing images of Tianzi from across history. The shelves were full of
unique items that you never saw in Mulnite. I liked this shop.
“There’s a lot of cool stuff. Any
recommendations?”
“Recommendations…?!”
Lingzi started acting weird out of the blue.
She fidgeted and looked around, until finally, she set her eyes on the back of
the shop. I followed her gaze and found a display that read, LOCAL SPECIALTY: HERMIT’S STONE.
“What about that? Hermit’s stone is a rock
they mine in the southern Enchanted Lands. My father tells me it’s a popular
souvenir because of its pretty color.”
“Really? Oh, look. You can get your name
engraved on a stone.”
“Oh, you’re right. Then… Um… Should we get a
pair?”
“Huh?”
“You can also get your stone in a custom
shape. We could order a unique pair, just for the two of us…,” Lingzi said,
glowing red.
Right. We’re on a date. Wouldn’t be weird to do
that sort of thing.
“All right! Let’s do it! I like stars, so how
about a star shape?”
“Okay, then.” She called the clerk. “Excuse
me.”
“The hermit’s stone, yes?” a kind-looking old
man answered. He was stunned when we told him our names, but he didn’t worry
about it much and processed our stones with magic.
“Whoa!” I exclaimed as I received the stones
from the old man.
They glowed softly. Mine was green, and
Lingzi’s was crimson. They respectively read TERAKOMARI GANDESBLOOD and LINGZI
AILAN.
“Hee-hee… We did it,” said Lingzi.
“Yeah. I’ll treasure it,” I said.
“I’ll pay for them as thanks for taking your
time.”
“Huh? No, I’ll pay for mine.”
“Don’t worry. I wanted
to try giving a gift… How much is it, mister?”
“Thirty liang for the both of them.”
“Please take this,” Lingzi said before taking
out a gem from her wallet.
It wasn’t the Enchanted Lands’ currency—it
didn’t look like currency, period.
“What? No, no, Your Highness… Isn’t this the
court’s Frithia Crystal? The one they use to store the taxes in the treasury?”
“I can’t pay with this…?”
“I wouldn’t be able to give you change for it.
Please pay with Jingshi money.”
Lingzi hurriedly looked inside her wallet,
then froze. Her face went crimson to the ears.
“Ha-ha-ha-ha. You’re so innocent, Lady
Gongzhu.”
A puff of smoke practically blew out of
Lingzi’s head.
“N-no! I just happen to not have any on me! I
always carry money to use in normal stores! It’s just that I was in a hurry
today and forgot to bring some!”
“I do need you to pay, though.”
“Nn…!”
“Don’t worry, Lingzi. I have money.”
I’d exchanged some currency when I came to
Jingshi.
“No, no!” Lingzi shook her head and grabbed my
sleeve. “I can’t make you pay! I’m the one showing you around…”
“It’s okay, no big deal. Here, mister.”
“Thank you.”
Lingzi shivered as she watched me pay.
It really wasn’t a big deal…at least for me;
it looked like a huge deal to her.
The moment we left the shop, she grabbed my
hand.
“Huh?! Lingzi?! What’s going on?!”
“N-next time I’ll take responsibility! I’ll
pay you for the hermit’s stones later, too!”
“You really don’t need to…”
“It was just
coincidence. I just happened to not have money on me now. I’ll give them a
check next time, don’t worry.”
“I’m not worried at—wait!”
Lingzi got worked up and pulled me away.
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“AAAHHH!! LADY KOMARI!!
LADY KOMARI IS HOLDING HANDS WITH SOMEONE OTHER THAN ME?!?!?!”
“Please calm down, Ms. Vill! She’s only
pulling her around!” said Esther.
“Ah-ha-ha. Things got spicy, huh?” said
Sakuna.
“Um… Commander Memoir? Why are you sharpening
a knife?”
At a sidewalk café opposite the souvenir shop,
a distressed Esther tried to stop her superiors’ rampage.
These two loved Commander Komarin to no end.
Esther understood the feeling, but theirs was in freakish territory. Perhaps
only weirdos could be soldiers.
“Lingzi sure is assertive, huh?” Nelia said
while sipping her coffee through a straw. “Look at how the bystanders are
staring at them in shock. They don’t seem to realize.”
“That is our aim here. Rumors of Terakomari
and Lingzi going on a date are already making the rounds across Jingshi. People
are theorizing that her true love is not the grand chancellor, but Terakomari.
We’re turning the tables on him good,” Meihua replied.
“We do have Six Nations News on our side. I
think I’ll get them to report on me and Komari later on. Have them say we’re
actually sisters separated at birth… Deliciously dramatic, don’t you think?
Besides, we really are, in a way.”
Sakuna finished sharpening her knife and rose
from her seat in fury, taking aim at Lingzi.
“Think this through!” Esther clung to Sakuna
to stop her.
“They’re going to a restaurant district. Let’s
move,” said Meihua.
“Lingzi sure is going fast. Was she that
embarrassed about the flub at the shop? And why did she
take that huge gem to pay in the first place? Is she stupid?” said Nelia.
“I will admit she’s not the sharpest tool in
the shed. But that’s not it.” Meihua frowned.
“Her Highness and the Commander are out on a
date!” people all around them remarked. More and more rubberneckers were
gathering to watch them. Everything was going according to plan.
Then Nelia’s brows twitched. Esther noticed a
moment later, too.
A few men were following the couple.
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“It’s already noon.
Should we get something to eat?”
Lingzi showed me to none other than the
Tianzhu Hall.
The delicious smell of good food seeped
through a door adorned with twisting dragons. My tummy started growling.
I felt weird about this, though. It was the
same place I went to yesterday with the girls.
“The Tianzhu Hall is a famous restaurant that
gets a three-star rating every year in a prestigious guidebook. It offers
authentic, traditional Enchanted Lands cuisine. A lot of people travel here
just for this restaurant, apparently… A LOT of people,” Lingzi recited quickly,
as though reading from a cue card.
I couldn’t tell her I was just here yesterday.
I guess it’s fine. The food IS good.
“So, how about we go in?”
“Yeah. Thanks,” I said with relief, for some
reason.
The moment we entered, everyone turned their
eyes to us like, “Commander?!” “Your Highness?!” The
price of fame… There was no point in reacting, so we ignored them and walked to
our table.
“This restaurant has a staple course meal. I
think that would be the best choice for you since it’s your first time here. Is
that okay?”
“Huh? Yeah…”
“Don’t worry, I always come here. I guarantee
you it’s good.”
Lingzi put in the order before I could say anything. That’s the same thing I ate yesterday… But I can’t go back now. I gotta
react like I’ve never had it before, too. I can’t disappoint her. Time for my
acting skills to shine!
“…Commander? The Commander is here!”
Then I heard a familiar voice. I screamed
internally at the unexpected encounter.
Caostel, Bellius, and Yohann. The guys were
eating at the table right next to ours.
“What a coincidence! Didn’t expect to see you
here!”
“Yeah. What a pleasant coincidence.”
“I can’t wait for us to take over the
Enchanted Lands.”
Hey, hey. You can’t just say that. Look at
Lingzi’s face. Lingzi, it’s not true. He’s cuckoo.
“Komari… Who are these people?”
“Ah-ha-ha. I wonder. I don’t know them.”
“Ohh, Your Highness, Lingzi Ailan! It is a
pleasure to meet you! I am Lieutenant Caostel Conto, leader of the PR Team of
the Mulnite Imperial Army’s Seventh Unit! The dog here is Bellius Hund Cerbero.
The other idiot is Yohann.”
“Ah… Yes. Pleased to meet you?”
Lingzi
and Caostel shook hands. Watch out, Lingzi. This
guy’s a criminal. Suspected of little girl abduction. Considering how petite
you are, he might try to kidnap you, too. Good thing I’m safe.
“Y-yeah, what a coincidence! So, how have
things been going on your end? Everything good?”
I had no idea what they were supposed to be
doing in the first place. Gathering intel to expose the grand chancellor with
Nelia? I pondered this while drinking my cup of water.
“Definitely!” Yohann answered while munching
meat. “Idiot honcho Mellaconcey just planted a bomb in the palace. We’re ready
to blow it up the moment you give the green light!”
“Bwugh?!” I spit out the water.
What the heck are you
doing, you bunch of terrorists?!
“Guys… What did Vill ask you to do?”
“Hmm? I heard this was a direct order from
you, Commander.”
“O-of course! Now then, repeat my exact
words.”
“Yes,
m’lady. The Seventh Unit’s role in this operation
will be intimidation. Set bombs and other traps to gain an advantage over Grand
Chancellor Shikai Gudo.”
“Why would we need to do that?”
“Isn’t this wonderful plan your brainchild…?”
“Yes, yes! I’m testing you to see if you
really understand it!”
“Excuse me! A-hem. Jingshi is the grand
chancellor’s home turf. We don’t know what sort of traps he might have set for
us. Thus, it would be in our benefit to have as many cards in hand to use
against him. In essence, we are the ultimate weapon in the Matrimonial War.”
“Let’s cut the boring shit and blow the place
up already, Terakomari,” Yohann said.
“We cannot just go around flaunting violence!
Have you forgotten how our Komari Unit has won every battle up to now? With
brains! Strategy! Are you too stupid to understand?”
“What’d you just say to me?! I’mma burn you
well-done like this steak!”
“Whatever. So, Commander, was my answer the
correct one?”
“Yes! Ten out of ten!”
“You flatter me!” Caostel saluted.
There were way too many holes in his response
to point out, but I figured I better let Vill take care of all the mess.
Then my eyes met Bellius’s. He’d kept quiet
the whole time, wearing a tired look on his face.
No wonder the dog man got along with Esther.
He was relatively decent among the sicko unit. Although he, too, was a
murderer.
“Komari, the food is here.”
“Ohh…!”
I wasted my time
listening to them until the staff came back.
It was the same meat buns and dumplings I’d
eaten yesterday.
“This is really good. I’m getting hungry just
looking at them,” I said.
“Huh? Komari…”
“No, wait! I meant it looks
really good! I’m glad I came to the Enchanted Lands!”
“Yes. We use spices that are rare in other
countries. I hope you enjoy it…”
It did not feel good lying, but she looked so
happy that I couldn’t tell her the truth.
Besides, the food really was good. Genuinely.
Everything was fine.
“Commander! We’ll be returning to work now.”
The Seventh Unit guys stood up. They’d
finished eating by the time we arrived.
“Okay. I expect great things from you,
soldiers.”
“We will do our best to meet your
expectations. By the way…” Caostel’s face twisted like a criminal’s who was sure
he’d pulled off the perfect crime. “I heard you came to this restaurant
yesterday.”
“Wha—?”
“I also heard you ordered this same course
meal. Yet you’re reacting as though it is your first time.”
Whoa, whoa, whoa. Hold on, man.
“Lieutenant Villhaze told me you loved the
dumplings… Oh well, I suppose there are special circumstances behind all this.
Now then, if you’ll excuse us.”
“………”
Y-you piece of…! Special circumstances?! If you
were aware of that, then show a bit more tact! Why did you spill the beans, you
bastard?!
“Enjoy your meal, Commander,” said Bellius.
“Call us once you feel like blowing up the
palace! I wanna ignite the thing!” said Yohann.
“Wait, you…!”
My men ignored their boss’s pain and left.
Only silence remained. I
couldn’t bear to look Lingzi in the face.
“Komari…,” she whispered. “I forced you to put
on an act…”
“You’re not forcing anything! Really!”
Lingzi looked like she was about to cry. I was
about to die from guilt.
“I do love this place! The food is really
good!”
“I’m sorry. We should go somewhere else…”
“Don’t worry! It’s my fault for lying! Sorry!
I want to eat here! Please, sit dow—Ah.”
I grabbed her arm as she was standing up, and
then something fell from out of her clothes.
I looked down on reflex and saw a yellow book.
Hmm…? I think I’ve seen that before.
Wait, that’s the Jingshi guidebook Esther
brought. Why does Lingzi have it? Did she borrow it? No, this one doesn’t have
any sticky notes, so it’s a different copy…
As my mind churned with questions, I noticed a
look of despair on Lingzi’s face.
“I’m sorry… The truth is…I don’t know anything
about Jingshi…”
“Huh…?”
“I rarely go outside the palace. I have no
right to show you around. I’m sorry. I’m sorry…”
So she’s basically a newcomer here, just like me?
And she was showing me around with this guidebook so I wouldn’t notice?
As I tried to catch up with the facts, every
window in the restaurant shattered.
Men I’d never seen before yelled as they
charged at us.
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“Lingzi really doesn’t
know much about our country,” Meihua said with a sigh.
They were at the plaza opposite the Tianzhu
Hall. Esther pushed back Sakuna and Villhaze with all her might as she listened
to Meihua.
“She was brought up entirely within the
palace. Her father, the Tianzi, insisted that a Gongzhu
wasn’t to go out to Jingshi without a proper reason.”
Oh, Esther thought. So
Lingzi Ailan is a sheltered girl.
“She didn’t want Komari to know that. I guess
she’s more concerned about her image than one would expect,” Nelia said.
“Lingzi’s more fragile than you’d think. You
can tell once you get close to her.”
“You sure don’t mince your words for a
retainer, huh.”
“We’ve just known each other forever… Still,
it’s true that she’s worried about the Enchanted Lands. She really wants to
stop Shikai Gudo, no matter what.”
“Hmmm. That feels a bit odd…”
“I want to have lunch with Lady Komari! I want
to go on a date with her! It should’ve been me, not her! It’s not fair!” moaned
Vill.
“Ms. Komari might really end up marrying Ms.
Lingzi if she wins the Matrimonial War… Oh, I know. I just have to supplant Ms.
Lingzi,” said Sakuna.
“Calm down, you two! This is just part of the
pla—” Just then, Esther realized that the men who’d been tailing Komari and
Lingzi had sprung into action.
Nelia and Meihua also noticed. They glanced at
the Tianzhu Hall with stern looks on their faces. The men were outside the
restaurant. They raised their hands, channeling mana.
“President Cunningham.”
“They’re Warblades. I don’t recognize them,
but I imagine they have some connection to me.”
The next moment, the windows of the Tianzhu
Hall shattered loudly into pieces.
The men raised war cries as they charged into
the restaurant.
Esther could only watch with her jaw open. Who
would launch an attack out of the blue in the middle of the city? Right. This isn’t sports-war.
“Everyone! We must help the Comman…”
By the time Esther came
to her senses, there wasn’t anyone around.
Nelia, Meihua, Sakuna, and Villhaze were
already dashing toward the restaurant.
![]()
“DIE, TERAKOMARI
GANDESBLOOD!!”
The mysterious men poured into the restaurant,
throwing the staff and clients into a fleeing frenzy.
Meanwhile, I was paralyzed.
The man at the front raised his longsword. His
target was clearly me.
Wha? I’m just gonna die now? There’s no Dark Core
here. The
second after my mind was plunged into despair…
“Komari!”
…Lingzi blocked the man’s sword. She was
equipped with a fan. Her peacock feather fan stopped the blade with ease. The
assailant clicked his tongue and tried to jump back, but before he could,
Lingzi shot a mana bullet at him that pierced his midsection.
“Gwagh?!”
His large frame was hurled backward.
However, there were at least three more men to
deal with. They attacked from every direction with loud war cries. I did away
with any shame and curled myself up like a turtle.
“Die already!! Ogweh!”
A gust of green mana blew one man away.
Then another slipped through Lingzi’s defenses
and ran toward me.
“This is for the president!”
“Komari, run!” Lingzi shouted.
The remaining assailant immediately stalled
her.
I was paralyzed as the assassin rushed to me.
His eyes, tainted with hatred, had frozen me in place. Then, just as his long
sword was about to reach my throat…
I slipped like I had stepped on a banana peel.
I glanced down and saw that there was indeed a banana peel at my feet. Talk
about good luck. The man yelled in surprise before he, too, tripped, hitting
the back of his head during the fall to top it all off.
He went still. The blow seemed to have been
critical.
My luck ran out there, though. Men in similar
outfits rushed into the restaurant in droves. I noticed that they were fighting
Nelia and Vill outside, too.
“Let’s withdraw!”
“Huh? Wh-whoa!”
Lingzi grabbed my arm, then used some of her
power, lifting me into the air.
“Wait! Where are we going?!”
“Somewhere safe! We can’t stay here.”
“But we haven’t paid! Are we dining and
dashing?!”
Lingzi ignored my fear of the law and floated
farther up, pulling me higher and higher with her. I clung tightly to her out
of fear.
“Eep!” she shrieked.
“Wait! Wait, please! I can’t handle heights!
I’ve got trauma from the time I tried grabbing a ball from the rooftop and my
sister rocked the stairs to make me fall!”
“Okay. Let’s just go to that bridge.”
“Fine—Uhh?”
My hands filled with a strange sensation. I
was grabbing Lingzi’s chest. I was a sex offender now. But rather than feeling
shame or guilt, I found it…strange.
“Lingzi…isn’t your chest too hard?”
“?!?!?!?!?!”
Lingzi’s face turned redder and redder right
up next to mine. It was then that I realized the absolute depths of my sexual
harassment. I was worse than the sicko maid now.
“Sorry! I didn’t mean
it! I just—sorry! It’s very soft, actually! Nice breasts! Uhh, no wait, what am
I saying, stupid?! I’m sorry, really!”
“I-it’s fine! Don’t worry.”
Lingzi ascended fast enough to cool her
blushing.
I tried not to pee myself while regretting my
words and deeds.
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“They’re from
Gerra-Aruka. I didn’t expect them to escape all the way to the Enchanted
Lands.”
The Warblades were out on the main street,
unconscious. They weren’t dead; they’d just been tied up together. There were
nine of them in total. They had been trailing Komari, looking for the perfect
time to strike.
“Could they have done this on Madhart’s
orders?” Villhaze asked while putting her poison away.
Sakuna had recovered her cool, too. She looked
around in alert, staff in hand.
“That can’t be. Madhart’s gone. Even if that
was the case, he wouldn’t do something this reckless. I imagine the remnants of
his regime just acted on their own,” Nelia responded.
One of the man’s hands caught her eye. He had
a star-shaped scar on his palm.
After the Crimson Snow Hut ordeal, Komari had
told her that a monster called Yusei was ravaging the Netherworld. Apparently,
Yusei was slowly working their way into this world, and anyone under their
influence bore a stigmata like the one that had been on Monique Claire.
The stigmata decreased one’s “willpower.” In
short, it caused mental illness.
“These guys are like dolls. They don’t react
no matter how much I poke them,” said Villhaze, poking at the Warblades’ cheeks
with a stick.
The men only muttered
“Ahh” or “Uhh” in response, despite having been so energetic a moment ago.
Weren’t these the same symptoms as Monique Claire’s etiolation?
“Anyways, my subordinates will look into the
details. Let’s just report the assailants to the Enchanted Lands authorities,”
Nelia said.
“Yes. There is something else that needs our
attention.” Villhaze looked in the direction Komari flew off before turning to
Meihua and continuing, “It appears I’ve been of unsound mind up to now, but
I’ve come back to my senses after seeing this occur. It is impossible to keep
duping a born Komari sommelier, Lady Meihua. Are you not hiding something?”
Everyone looked at Meihua, and she flinched.
“Hiding…what?”
“Lady Komari clearly holds special feelings
for Lady Lingzi, but that is impossible. It is unnatural. It should be obvious
to anyone that I’m her number one.”
“You sure you’re not
of unsound mind?” Nelia said.
“Yes, Ms. Villhaze. Ms. Komari belongs to all
of us,” Sakuna added.
“Anyhow, what I mean is that too many things
don’t make sense. Now that I think about it, everything began when you visited
Mulnite in February. You…used Core Implosion, didn’t you?”
Meihua shivered. That was admission enough.
“I knew it.” Villhaze sighed. “What did you do
to Lady Komari?”
A short silence.
“…I’m sorry,” she muttered with an apologetic
expression. “I had to do it to save Lingzi. We needed Terakomari’s power, but
there’s no one in this entire world odd enough to help a stranger without
compensation.”
“Explain what exactly you did. I won’t get
mad.”
“The truth is…I put a curse on her that made
her fall in love with Lingzi.”
“All right, I’m taking
out the poison.”
“Didn’t you say you wouldn’t get mad?!” Esther
put Vill in a nelson hold.
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Lingzi and I stopped on
a bridge connecting high-rise buildings.
It was like ten giraffes tall. The oriental
landscape spread everywhere I could see beneath me, while another mazelike land
extended in front of me.
“Who were those people? It looked like they
were going after you…,” Lingzi said while sitting down on the bridge’s
handrail.
How can you sit there? You’ll fall headfirst the
moment you lose your balance. Aren’t you afraid? Wait, I guess you aren’t. You
can fly.
“It could be…that the grand chancellor or the
Minister of Military Secrets is behind this. They must be planning on getting
rid of you before the Matrimonial War. They’re not above playing dirty…”
That was beyond just cheating, if what Lingzi
said was true.
I looked down over the bridge and saw that
Nelia and the girls had subdued the attackers.
“Do you…hate me now?”
“Hate you? Why?”
“Because I don’t know the first thing about
Jingshi. Not even that there were people like them…”
Apparently, Lingzi barely left the palace.
With her sheltered upbringing, there was no way she could have been
knowledgeable about the outside world…yet she continued blaming herself.
“I’m not worthy of being Gongzhu. I’ve
criticized my father’s indifference time and time again…but I’m no different
from him. Maybe I’m even worse than him. How can I say I want to change the
Enchanted Lands when I don’t know the first thing about it?”
“Why do you want to change the Enchanted
Lands?”
“Because I’m the Gongzhu. It’s my duty.”
That felt constricting. It didn’t sound like
it was what she wanted.
“But that’s not all,”
she added. “The grand chancellor is doing bad things. He’s hurting so many
people. Even those who were kind enough to help me…even Meihua…”
“…I see. We gotta win this Matrimonial War,
then.”
“Yes…”
Suddenly, Lingzi’s pocket began glowing. She
was getting a call on her Correspondence Crystal.
“Yes, Meihua?”
The exchange only lasted a couple words.
Lingzi’s expression darkened, as though tormented by guilt.
“…Komari, I’ve been hiding something from
you.”
“You have?”
“Yes. You see…I…”
Before she could say anything else, she was
seized by a coughing fit. I didn’t think anything of it at first, but soon she
fell from the handrails and got on all fours on the bridge, covering her mouth
in pain.
“Lingzi?! Are you okay?!”
I
stroked her back in a panic. She wheezed, her face growing whiter and whiter. Is she sick? But we’re within range of the Enchanted Lands’ Dark Core,
aren’t we? So why?
Lingzi looked up at me and said, “I’m okay…I just
forgot to take my medication.”
She took a pill out from her pocket and gulped
it down. After a few moments, the color returned to her cheeks.
“See? I’m fine.” Lingzi smiled like a kid
who’d just showed a magic trick. “I’ve been unwell lately, but I’m fine when I
take my pills.”
“Are you really okay? Should I call Meihua?”
“She’s coming already. Don’t tell her I forgot
to take my medication, okay? She’ll get mad at me.”
Lingzi stood up like nothing had happened.
Then Vill landed on the bridge, Meihua
clinging to her. She sighed in relief the moment she saw us.
“Yes… Thank you for your concern.”
“Ahh, Lady Komari! Lady Komari, Lady Komari,
it’s so good to see you well! You might have internal injuries, so please allow
me to fondle your entire body to make sure nothing’s wrong.”
“Whoaaa?! That’s too much worry, woman!”
“Not enough, I would say. How could I not be,
after these pesky Immortals put a curse on you?”
“What’re you talking about?”
I dodged Vill’s lecherous hands and looked at
Lingzi and Meihua.
They both looked awkward, but Lingzi took a
step forward with determination.
Her expression quiet as though she was about
to confess her love to me, she asked:
“Komari…do you love me?”
My brain short-circuited.
It was no confession. The question could even
be taken as presumptuous. Either way, it shattered the ounce of calm I had left
in me.
“W-well, if you ask me whether I love or hate
you, I’d say yes, I love you, if those are the only two options!”
“I know. I knew that you loved me. You think
about Lingzi Ailan at every turn. And the mere thought makes you feel like your
heart is about to explode…”
I felt like an egg in a boiling pot. My body
temperature rose to levels that disrupted logical thought.
Behind me, Vill was emanating a pitch-black,
murderous aura. Now this was a slaughter champion.
Lingzi stared at me. I couldn’t squirm my way
out of a response.
“…Maybe. I don’t know why…but my chest hurts
when I think of you. I mean, I get an idea, considering I am an intellectual
scholar with multiple romance novels under her belt. I think…I…I think I might
be in love with you…”
I heard a freakish noise behind me.
The sicko maid was screaming and puking.
“What happened, Vill?! Did the enemy snipe you?!”
“I-I’m fine, Lady Komari… It’s just a little
spasm… Please, don’t mind me and continue…”
She clearly was not fine. But come to think of
it, she never was. I decided to ignore her fit for now and turned to Lingzi
once again.
“I don’t know what to do. It’s the first time
I’ve felt like this…”
“Your feelings are fake. You do not love me.”
I was shocked by Lingzi’s cold response. She
furrowed her brow as though holding in pain.
“You are under the effects of Lovebird
Infection, Meihua’s Core Implosion. She has the power to implant people with
feelings of affection for me.”
“Hm? Hmm?? I don’t get it.”
“Look at the crow mark on the back of your
hand. It’s proof that you are under the effect of my spell.”
Indeed, there was a scar-like thing on my
hand.
So…I was just being manipulated?
“Wait, what?! But I really feel my heart race
when I look at her!”
“Usually, it only provokes sympathy. You’re
probably too sensitive. I was not expecting you to fall so explicitly in love.”
“But I do love Lingzi!”
“BLWEEEEERGGGHHH!!”
“Waaah?! Calm down, Vill!”
“I’m sorry, really. I didn’t want to push your
feelings aside like this.”
I didn’t understand. I tended to Vill, who had
collapsed like a corpse, and asked:
“Even if my feelings are artificial… Why would
you do that?”
“Because I thought you wouldn’t help me unless
you liked me…”
“Huh?”
What’s she mean by that? I
seriously can’t wrap my head around this.
“These two were using you, Lady Komari. If I
hadn’t questioned them, they would have kept quiet about this until the end of
the Matrimonial War. They plotted to make it a done deal so you would marry
her. In other words, I saved you. Please praise me.”
Vill presented the top of her head to me,
lining up for a pat. I ignored her.
“No use hiding it anymore.” Meihua sighed.
“There’s only going to be conflict if we keep up this charade. Commander, stay
still, I’ll undo the spell.”
“You will? I don’t really get it… But is that
okay?”
“You’ll hold a grudge if I don’t. Although I
guess you already do.”
Meihua looked me straight in the eye. Her lips
parted—Core Implosion: Lovebird Infection.
The next moment, I felt my heart grow more and
more serene. Not as in it was going to stop beating. Just that my previously
elevated heartbeat slowed down to normal levels.
I stared at Lingzi. She looked like an
ordinary girl to me.
She was pretty, sure. A once-in-a-lifetime
knockout beauty (like me), perhaps.
But I felt no particular exaltation. My heart
wasn’t about to explode.
Which meant…I really had been following a
feeling artificially implanted in me.
“I’m sorry…I’m just a manipulative weakling. I
had no other choice. Now you have no reason to help me. You can withdraw from
the Matrimonial War and go back to your life.”
“What are you talking about?”
I took a step toward her.
This was it. This was what didn’t make sense
to me.
“You asked me for help. That’s why I came to
the Enchanted Lands. I can’t just go back now, even if you grant me permission
to leave. Though it might be another story if I’m simply of no help at all…”
“But…you don’t like me,
do you?”
“I do like you.”
I covered Vill’s mouth before she could scream
and puke again.
Lingzi’s eyes grew wide. I grabbed her hand
and said:
“You’re acting out of concern for the
Enchanted Lands. You’re trying to stop Shikai from doing bad things. You do
what you do for other people, not for yourself… You have a beautiful heart. And
I like that.”
“Why? Why are you saying that?”
“Because I want to help you!”
Lingzi blinked in shock.
Her cheeks turned pink. Her eyes darted around
before she hung her head.
“But, but I…”
“You didn’t need to make me fall in love with
you. I’m repeating myself, but…you came to me for help. That’s enough to
convince me to give you my support.”
“…?!”
Red in the face, Lingzi froze and went silent.
Meihua was baffled and equally paralyzed.
“There you have it,” Vill concluded, a brazen
look on her face. “Sincerity is more effective with Lady Komari than any trick.
She is the kind of vampire who can’t say no to someone asking for help.”
“That’s not true. I’m a strong-willed,
unyielding vampire.”
“In any case, we will keep on giving you two
our aid. But do not think about doing anything improper again. As punishment,
use Lovebird Infection on Komari again, but make her fall in love with me this
time.”
“You’re the improper one!! Gosh.”
I brushed aside Vill’s nonsense and looked at
Lingzi.
“Awawa!” she exclaimed before looking away.
I walked around and stared at her again. She
shrieked and stepped backward. I thought she hated me
now, but there was something off about her reaction. It was like she was too
embarrassed to say anything.
“Lingzi, no,” Meihua muttered with a shiver.
“Don’t tell me the arrow was pointing in the other direction… You’ve been
acting strange since that proposal…”
“No! It’s really not! I… Komari!”
Her green hair floated in the air as she
turned around.
I got a whiff of apricot. Lingzi stared
straight at me with innocent eyes.
“I’m sorry for using you. I know I don’t have
the right to ask this…but I would still like you to help me.”
“I’ll do anything I can!”
“Thank you… I want you to win the Matrimonial
War. To defeat the grand chancellor. To marry me… Ah! I didn’t really mean
that… I know you already have a lot of girlfriends.”
“No, I don’t have a single one.” I chuckled
and put out my hand. “But I gotcha. Let’s do this.”
“Yes. Thank you.” She grabbed my hand.
Lingzi’s way of doing this had been strange,
perhaps, but she’d only done so out of concern for the Enchanted Lands. There
was no harm anyways, so I had no intention of blaming her for anything.
Now we just had to fight and expose the grand
chancellor’s misdeeds.
The flames of battle began burning within me.
“Your Highness, it is time.”
A group of Immortals appeared in Lingzi’s
shadow. They were wearing frilly clothes.
“Ailan retainers,” Vill whispered into my ear.
“Who are you?! Are you here to take Lingzi?!”
I stepped in front of Lingzi to guard her.
She grabbed the hem of my coat. I could feel
her trembling.
Weird. She should be
much stronger than me in battle.
“Oh,” Meihua said, realizing something. “No…
Wait. These aren’t the grand chancellor’s lackeys.”
“We are the Tianzi’s personal guard.” The man
in the middle stepped forward. “He ordered us to fetch Her Highness in
preparation for the Matrimonial War. His request has nothing to do with the
grand chancellor’s will. This imperial notice should be proof.”
“This really is the Tianzi’s handwriting. And
his mana.”
“Yes. He wishes to speak with Her Highness.”
“I understand.”
Lingzi walked up to Komari and the others.
She turned around and bowed. Once again, I
caught a whiff of apricot on the wind.
“Well then, Komari. See you tomorrow.”
“Sure.”
“Let’s go, Your Highness.”
They used teleportation magic, enveloping the
area with dazzling light. By the time I could see again, Lingzi and Meihua were
gone.
I stood frozen on the bridge and clenched my
fist.
I understood Lingzi’s feelings. I had to do my
best to meet her expectations. First, we had to draw up a plan for tomorrow. I
turned to Vill.
“Lady Komari, we’re in a pinch.”
The sicko maid grabbed the handrail and looked
at the cityscape below.
Then she said something that shook me to my
core:
“How are we supposed to get off this bridge?”
There was no entrance to the buildings it was
connected to.
It was only a decorative bridge for
sightseeing.
“You can’t fly, Vill?”
“Normal people don’t fly.”
“…Can’t you call someone?”
“I dropped all my
Correspondence Crystals when Lady Meihua was clinging to me.”
“…”
Vill and I spent the time playing word games.
By the time the sun was setting, an Immortal
patrolling Jingshi finally passed us. We yelled for help, and our feet were
back on the ground at last.
Six Nations News was
operating as usual.
A silly article titled “Special Feature on Her
Highness & the Commander” was set to be published in the next morning’s
issue.
The report claimed that Lingzi and I were
lovers brought together by destiny who had pinky-promised to get married when
we were little. It also said that our relationship restarted when we met again
at the party before the Heavenly Ball, and that we’d actually been going on
dates once a week in secret until now.
Moreover, the paper criticized her
relationship with Shikai through haphazard arguments.
It said that Lingzi actually hated Shikai, but
she had to marry him to fulfill her duties as Gongzhu. That Shikai, despite
being a capable chancellor, was a terrible partner. That he did not respect
Lingzi’s feelings. That he’d sent assassins to tear me apart from Lingzi (a
dramatization of the events at the Tianzhu Hall).
Shikai Gudo was popular, yes, but as the paper
made its rounds, people began to go, “Hey, maybe we can ship Lingzi with
Komari?” I had no idea how in the world this sham article convinced them of
that, but in any case, the polls ran by Melka and Thio revealed that “about 30
percent of Jingshi’s citizens are Lingzi x Komari shippers.” Nelia’s opinion on
the matter was simply that we were getting close to victory.
And so the Immortals
were divided into two camps.
The person who would wed the Gongzhu would be
decided by today’s Matrimonial War.
![]()
The Matrimonial War was
to take place in the plaza inside the Zijingong, the Enchanted Lands palace.
I entered the venue alongside Vill and Sakuna.
That instant, everyone trained their sights on me.
Aww, I’m getting nervous. I wanna go to the
bathroom… I shouldn’t have drunk that much water.
“Hey, Vill, we’re not gonna kill each other,
right?”
“Please look at the people in the audience.
All big fish. It would be chaos if a battle to the death were to take place
here.”
“Don’t worry, Ms. Komari. I’ll protect you.”
Sakuna rubbed my back.
What a good girl. I had vague memories of her
going berserk yesterday, but surely I must have imagined it. Sakuna was a pure,
pretty girl.
“Where’s Nelia?”
“Lady Cunningham and the Seventh Unit are
elsewhere. Your only role here is to leave the grand chancellor in the dust, so
don’t worry about anything else.”
“Hey, if it isn’t Terakomari! Can’t wait for
the Matrimonial War!”
I turned around at the sound of that voice.
There, I found a girl with silver hair— Prohellya Butchersky. Beside her was
Leona Flatt, from the Lapelico Kingdom. The latter swayed her tail with eyes
wide open.
“Terakomari! What a fabulous outfit! You’ve
got this, girl!”
“Outfit? Ah…”
For whatever reason, I was wearing a tuxedo.
Meihua had insisted I wear it to complement Lingzi being the bride. These
clothes were easier to move around in than a dress, though, so no big deal.
“Marriage at sixteen, eh? I don’t even have
anyone to consider…,” Prohellya said.
“Yeah, I can’t see you getting married!” Leona retorted.
“Shut up. I have more important things to do
than tie the knot. And what about you, huh? Do you really have any right to
mock me like that?”
“Fweh…? I—I have a boyfriend! Maybe two!”
“Your kitty kingdom is beyond amoral, I see.
Couldn’t put some more effort into lying?”
These two got along surprisingly well. I
almost felt jealous.
“By the way, Terakomari.” Prohellya turned to
me. “Watch out for what the grand chancellor’s crew might do. I imagine you’re
already being careful, but still.”
“I know. I’m doing what I can to stop him from
harming Lingzi.”
“The grand chancellor is one thing, but my gut
tells me there’s someone even more dangerous in the shadows.”
“A bigger sicko than Shikai? Maybe, yeah.”
“I just came to the Enchanted Lands, so I’m
not well-versed in the situation. I have no idea why you’re running to marry
Lingzi Ailan, either. I’ll observe from afar for the time being.”
Prohellya walked away commandingly.
“I’m not lying! I mean it!” Leona argued while
following behind her.
Prohellya was smart enough to rival my
scholarly intellect. Perhaps she could see something the others didn’t…
“Ahh! Commander Terakomari Gandesblood! Good
to have you here!”
“Shikai…!”
A man extended his arms dramatically as he
walked up to me.
Cheers followed. “Chancellor! Chancellor!
Chancellor!” the Immortals yelled in unison, like how people would chant
“Komarin” for me. I guess celebrities have it the same no
matter where you are.
“I imagined you’d run away in fear! But I
should’ve known better from the Omelet Queen of Darkness! Do you really want
Lingzi that bad?” he asked me.
“O-of course! Even if the heavens above
approved your marriage, I would never sanction it!”
“Why? I love her so very
much.”
“You lie! And she doesn’t like you, for
starters! Aren’t her feelings most important?!”
“Then who does she love?”
I shut my mouth. Everyone stared at me.
The grand chancellor sneered, lording my
hesitation over me. Oh, whatever! The plan’s already set!
I pointed my finger at him and declared:
“Lingzi loves me! Terakomari Gandesblood! I’m
gonna make her mine! I won’t let you have her!”
A moment of silence. Then, furor.
“UOOOOOOH!! KOMARIN!! KOMARIN!! KOMARIN!!”
Cheering and hollering. Leona’s capybaras ran
all around the venue. Vill and Sakuna stared at me like vengeful spirits from a
paranormal photo.
“Na-ha-ha-ha! I see, I see! You are a very
passionate girl! But I wonder what the woman in question will have to say about
it. Lingzi?”
The grand chancellor looked at the entrance to
the venue, and I followed his gaze.
There was the bride. The jade girl wore a
pure-white wedding dress, a departure from what you’d normally expect for the
Enchanted Lands. Lingzi Ailan’s cheeks turned red. She kept silent, her
bashfulness only boosting her sweetness. I would have died then and there had
Meihua not undone her Core Implosion. Even now, it felt like my heart was about
a second away from exploding.
“…Huh? Why’s she dressed like that?”
“That’s a weird thing to say. Isn’t it obvious
the wedding will take place once the war ends?”
Ohh. That explains it, sure.
Anyhow, she really was super cute. I couldn’t
take my eyes off her…and then they met hers. She gazed arrestingly at me with
crimson eyes, and in the smallest of voices, she said, “Good luck.” Perhaps
she’d been too embarrassed to raise her voice, but even so, I’d heard it.
The grand chancellor put on the smile of a
villain.
“Let us begin the fight, then.”
![]()
“Advanced barrier
spell: Clear Wall.”
One of the Tianzi’s personal guards used magic
to lock the grand chancellor and me inside an invisible force field. I tried
touching it. I could still hear the noise outside, but it didn’t look like I
would be able to leave freely.
“It’s just to prevent cheating. Don’t think
badly of it,” Shikai said as he gallantly sipped black tea.
He and I were the only people in this isolated
space. Vill, Sakuna, and the other spectators could merely watch from outside.
I was on the south side of the venue, and he
was on the north. To the east, outside the barrier, stood Lingzi in her wedding
dress. To the west stood Minister of Military Secrets Nerzanpi Rocha, also
outside the barrier. Further out was the audience.
“Now then, let’s explain the rules! If you
please, Lady Nerzanpi.”
“Yeah.”
Apparently, she was the umpire. Vill raised an
objection from behind her:
“Hold on. She’s on the grand chancellor’s
side. This isn’t fair.”
“My, my. You’re being paranoid, Villhaze. The
umpire will not be deciding the results of the Matrimonial War. Lingzi Ailan
herself will.”
“But…”
“Besides, it wasn’t us, but His Majesty the
Tianzi and his guard who chose the rules of the duel in the first place. The
grand chancellor’s faction cannot interfere, so set your worries aside.”
Nerzanpi dealt with Vill’s objection. “Okay. The rules are simple: The first
person whose LP falls to zero will lose.”
“LP? What’s that?”
“It’s short for Lingzi
Points.”
What the…?
“The Matrimonial War will consist of three
rounds, all of which are themed around Lingzi Ailan. First, a duel to see who
understands her better. Second, a duel about her feelings. Third, a popular
vote. You will lose LP depending on the results of each phase. Points can only
be lost, not gained. You could also say they are Life Points.”
Yeah. I don’t get it.
“Whoever retains the most LP by the end of the
three rounds gets the right to marry Her Highness. Whoever gets to zero LP
loses then and there.”
So it’d be possible to just skip the second/third
round?
“…It’s not a physical battle, is it?”
“Funny you ask, Commander Gandesblood. You’d
have too much of an advantage in that sort of competition. The grand chancellor
has no way to stop your Blood Curse.”
“Wa-ha-ha-ha! Of course! I could turn Shikai
into ketchup if I really wanted to!”
Nerzanpi smiled like a ghost. Merely looking
at her face seemed to chip away at my soul. This woman was just…like, the polar
opposite of people like Nelia, Karla, and Prohellya. Even so, she didn’t feel
evil, exactly, like Spica.
“Thank goodness! I would have a hard time
sleeping if I ended up killing him in the blink of an eye!”
“Still, we would be lacking stakes if the
possibility of dying was completely out of the picture. So, I made some
adjustments.” Nerzanpi’s dead eyes pierced mine. “The moment either party’s LP
reaches zero, the bomb set above your head will explode.”
“Wha—?” I looked up on reflex. A black sphere
was floating above my head. “…Huh? What’d you just say? A bomb?”
“Yes. A mana bomb that has the power to raze
everything within a half-mile radius. But don’t worry. It cannot break this
barrier, so aside from your body being blown to pieces, there will be no harm
done.”
What…what the hell are they thinking?! You can’t
kill me outside the Dark Core’s AoE! I’m gonna die! Not that I’d be fine
blowing up even
within the Dark Core’s AoE!
“Nerzanpi! Take that thing away right now!”
“My, Commander, are you afraid? To think the
slaughter champion was capable of feeling fear…”
“I-I’m not! I’d just feel bad if Shikai
exploded after I win!”
“I don’t mind! A battle to the death is
sweeter, more beautiful! Let’s begin, Commander Gandesblood! May the more
gallant fighter win Lingzi’s love!”
“You little… You have the Dark Core on your
side!”
“Be humble even in wealth.
I understand, but there is no need for modesty. You have great power. Surely
you can stop the bomb with your Core Implosion? We don’t want to kill you,
either. It’s just that it would be more interesting if things went out with a
bang—or a boom, rather.”
Ha-ha, so funny. Bastard. Meanwhile, I’m almost
peeing myself just standing here.
I couldn’t let myself lose before this thing
even started, though. Besides, surely Vill would save me if anything happened.
I looked at the maid, and she gave me an expressionless thumbs-up. I’ll trust you. It’s gonna be your fault if I die!
“Alright, Nerzanpi. I’m good at battles of
wits, too. I won’t be blowing up today.”
“Oh, it seems there’s a little
misunderstanding here. This is not a battle of wits, but of passion. You’ll
understand as soon as we begin. A picture is worth a thousand words, as they
say,” Nerzanpi replied while lighting a cigarette. “Each party will receive two
thousand LP to begin. First round: Lingzi’s personal information.”
Things got weird from the get-go.
The guards set a long table before Lingzi and
placed six cards on it. They read as follows:
1: What she does in her
free time – 200
2: The name of the cat she had as a kid – 200
3: Her favorite food – 400
4: The gift her father gave her for her fifth
birthday – 400
5: The person she loves – 600
6: Her height and weight – 600
“We had Her Highness answer the questions in
advance. You will take turns guessing the right answer. The questions are on
the front of the card, and the answers are on the back. We will check if the
answer you give matches the one on the card. Each of you have three
opportunities to answer. If you are correct, the question you responded to will
be discarded. If you answer incorrectly, we move on. You can keep on answering
so long as you have enough tries.”
“What do the numbers mean?”
“They represent the amount of LP you’ll take
from your opponent if you answer correctly. You will not be gaining the points,
though. And Her Highness cannot speak. No giving hints.”
“Huh?! Uh… Mmm!” Someone gagged Lingzi in her
seat.
You scoundrels! I was hoping to get her to tell
me the answers!
“Hey, Vill! What now?! I don’t know anything
about her!”
“Wasn’t that the point of your date
yesterday?”
“I mean, yeah, but! How am I supposed to know the
answer to such specific questions?!”
“Geez. I would be able to answer those
questions within a second were they about you. Forget about weight, I have your
bust-waist-hip measurements memorized.”
Who cares! Before I could say that out loud, Nerzanpi pulled out a coin and
flipped it. It spun in the air, drawing a curve until it fell on the floor.
The side facing up had “Gu” written on it.
“Gu. That means Gudo begins. Your turn, Grand
Chancellor.”
“Na-ha-ha-ha! I’ll show
you how it’s done, elegantly!”
The duel began before I could even wrap my
head around it.
The grand chancellor looked at the table and
hummed pensively with his fingers on his chin.
Wait… Isn’t this rigged against me? Shikai’s
known Lingzi for way longer. And I don’t know the first thing about her…
“Lady Komari, is there any question you can
answer?”
“Not one… Well, maybe one…”
“You need to avoid the six hundred LP damage.
You only have two thousand; that much would be lethal.”
Surely I don’t need to worry about that. The
“person she loves” question is clearly a trap the grand chancellor wouldn’t
take, and there’s no way he knows her height and weight. He’d be a certified
perv if he did.
“All right! I’ll go for number six: her height
and weight! She’s 146 centimeters tall and 40.7 kilograms!”
“You sick perv!”
“You got it right, to the decimal. Correct,
Grand Chancellor.”
“Certified sicko!!”
The audience went wild. I guess they were all
sickos, too.
Lingzi was petrified and beet-red. I glared
daggers at Shikai.
“Y-you inconsiderate prick! How can you expose
her personal info like that?!”
“Na-ha-ha-ha! Because she’s mine! Does an
owner not have the right to publicize the data of his possessions?”
“Fuck off! The world’s as terrible as it is
because of freaks like you!”
“Easy, Commander Gandesblood. Also, you just
lost six hundred LP.”
“Wha—?!”
Suddenly, a giant screen went up inside the
venue.
SHIKAI:
2000 TERAKOMARI: 1400
It’s over… But the moment I clutched my head in despair, I felt something move
above me. It was the bomb, descending according to the LP I’d lost. Like death
approaching from the heavens. I wanted to run away with my tail between my
legs.
“What now, Vill?! I’m
gonna actually die for real if that thing explodes!”
“I have a teleportation Magic Stone.”
“Nice! Hurl it over!”
“I can’t. Barrier and all.”
“AAAAAAAAAHHHHHH!!”
I’d forgotten this maid was a master of giving
me false hope. Darn her!
“It’s your turn, Commander Gandesblood.”
“Ugh…”
I turned to look at the remaining five cards
as Nerzanpi urged.
I had no idea what most of the answers could
be. What was her hobby? You can’t judge a book by its
cover, so who knows. I mean, Vill’s hobby was beetle breeding, as baffling as
it sounded.
There was only one option I could rely on.
“Number five: the person she loves.”
“Oh! Cutting right to the chase! I cannot wait
to see what Lingzi wrote down! Hopefully it’s my name!”
“There’s no way it is! The answer is…”
I glanced at Lingzi. She was redder than an
apple.
I know. I know how you feel, girl. If I were in
your place, I’d be dead right from peeling off all my own skin. It’s admirable
you can take so much still.
But you want to win, don’t you? You want to marry
me, right?
Then the answer is obvious. I clenched my fist and yelled:
“The answer is me! Lingzi loves Terakomari
Gandesblood!”
“Wrong. The answer is Mom.”
“…”
Huh? Mom? You mean her mother?
Ohh. I see. She’s a mommy’s girl.
“Na-ha-ha-ha! You’re too full of yourself,
Commander Gandesblood!”
“I-I’M NOT!!” I screamed in tears.
I felt my blood evaporate, not leaving even
one ounce behind. Lingzi begged me for forgiveness with her eyes. If I’d
thought about it, the answer wouldn’t have been obvious. Who would honestly
write the person they’re in love with after being asked
that question? I would also go for a safe answer if it were me. But wait. I was Lingzi’s prospective fiancée, officially. Why would she
get embarrassed about it? Why hadn’t she written my name? Wouldn’t that be more
obvious? If she wanted to win, why wouldn’t she endure the embarrassment and
just write Terakomari Gandesblood?!
“What a shame, Lady Komari. She dumped you,”
Vill said.
“Wipe that grin off your face!! I’m losing,
you realize?!”
“Now then, it’s the grand chancellor’s turn,”
Nerzanpi announced without mercy.
It’s over. I have no idea what Lingzi’s thinking,
and my whole body is burning like I dived into a volcano. I can’t make full use
of my brilliant mind like this.
“Let’s see… Three: her favorite food! Napa
cabbage!”
“Correct.”
“Wha?!”
Shikai
kept getting correct answers as I plucked my hair out. Also,
that’s her favorite?! How was I supposed to guess
that?! You should’ve taken me to a place that served cabbage, girl! Meanwhile, the numbers on
the screen:
SHIKAI:
2000 TERAKOMARI: 1000
The bomb descended in reaction. I didn’t have
much time left.
“Are you okay, Lady Komari?”
“It’s over… I gotta figure out her hobby, at
least…”
“I am reading a book on physiognomy right now.
I’ll try to guess what she’s thinking through her expressions.”
“Right now?!”
“A shapely nose. Faint eyebrows. Big eyes with
a fold… I’ve completed my analysis. Her hobby is flipping skirts.”
“NO FREAKING WAY!!!!!!”
“Don’t worry, Ms. Komari. I obtained her real
personal information.” Sakuna pushed Vill aside.
I tilted my head.
“I don’t want you to marry her, but I would
hate for you to explode, so I will fight alongside you.”
“Sakunaaa! I knew you were a pure, kind,
pretty girl!”
I was moved to tears. She was no sicko maid
trying to learn this “physiognomy” crap on the spot. But what truly separated
the two of them was Sakuna’s kindness. I saw her eyes turn red for a moment.
“Four…the gift her father gave her for her
fifth birthday. My investigation revealed that it’s a pocket watch.”
“How do you know?”
“Don’t worry. Trust me.”
“No, Lady Komari! Trust me! She likes flipping
skirts!” Vill yelled.
I didn’t get it, but I sure knew which choice
was the good one.
“Well, Commander Gandesblood? It’s your turn.”
“Y-yeah… Four! Her father gave her a pocket
watch!”
I glanced at Lingzi. Her crimson eyes grew
wide, which meant…
“That’s correct. Good job, Commander.”
“HAIIILLL!! KOMARIN!
KOMARIN! KOMARIN!” Diplomats from Mulnite and Aruka
began cheering my name. Indeed, the other side of the card said “pocket watch”
in Lingzi’s handwriting.
“Na-ha-ha-ha! Talk about surprising! Although
I also knew about the pocket watch!”
“Sour grapes! I know her better than anyone!”
The screen changed to SHIKAI: 1600 TERAKOMARI: 1000. The bomb above Shikai descended, too.
I sighed in relief. At least I’d gotten to
take some LP from him. But there was something odd about this… How did Sakuna
know about that?
“Hee-hee. I used my Core Implosion,” Sakuna
said, as though she’d read my mind.
She grinned. Chills ran down my spine.
“…Hmm? What’d you just say?”
“I used the Wheels of Asterism. I killed the
Tianzi.”
Sakuna’s Core Implosion allowed her to examine
and alter the memories of whomever she killed.
No. No way… No freaking way…
“There’s an emergency, Grand Chancellor!”
Uniform-clad Immortals rushed into the venue.
I had nothing but a bad feeling about this, but before I could mentally prepare
myself, the man at the front of the group threw a news bomb:
“His Majesty the Tianzi has been murdered!”
Commotion. Of course. That was Lingzi’s dad.
The head of the Enchanted Lands. Of course his assassination would shake the
entire nation.
“Calm down, everyone! Is that true? He’s not
been killed with a Divine Instrument, has he?!”
“We believe someone stabbed through his
abdomen with their bare hands. There was also a threat letter left on his body…
It must be from the killer.”
“Absurd! What does it say?!”
“It
says… A bomb will go off every ten minutes
throughout the palace.”
Chaos. International VIPs muttered to each
other. Some of them were pale with fright. Back by the wall, Prohellya took a
sip of juice and grinned with excitement. Lingzi froze in confusion.
Then I saw a crack form in Shikai’s composed
expression.
“Do you know who the culprit is?”
“No idea, but circumstantial evidence says…”
The Immortals looked at me, for some reason.
Whoa. Whoa, whoa. Hold on. You don’t know we did
this. You don’t have actual evidence, do you?
“Vill, I don’t get what’s happening.”
“You see, Lady Memoir killed the Tianzi.”
“Why?”
“Because I asked her to. We left no evidence
whatsoever. At the very least, nothing that could give
us away during the Matrimonial War. Besides, the Seventh Unit’s operation has
only just begun.”
Then I heard thunder.
An earthquake followed. What
in the world? Just as I asked myself that, more Immortals came in,
kicking open the door.
“T-terrible news, Grand Chancellor! An
explosion went off at a detached building in the west!”
Oh. It’s so over.
Ha-ha. It’s so painful I can only laugh now.
“…Hey, Vill. Is this act of terrorism related
to the Matrimonial War somehow?”
“We have two goals. The first is to help Lady
Cunningham. She needs time to get what’s needed to expose the grand chancellor,
which means distracting the top brass of the Enchanted Lands.”
“What’s our second goal?”
“To rattle the grand chancellor and prevent
him from being able to exercise good judgment. Now, Lady Komari.” She looked me
in the eye. “Transform into Cockymari as always and say the following…”
She muttered something into my ear (through
the invisible wall).
Shikai glared daggers at us.
“…Commander Gandesblood, don’t tell me you’re
messing around with the Enchanted Lands? Do you understand? It will not be good
for you if we find out you’re behind this. Losing the right to marry Lingzi
will be the least of your problems.”
“We’ll see. I can do whatever darn I see fit.”
I couldn’t grumble any longer.
I put on my Crimson Lord smirk and said:
“By the way, Shikai. Shouldn’t you be going to
check on the palace? You’re Grand Chancellor, right? Don’t you think it’s
important that you observe the scene of the crime yourself?”
“Wha—?! Don’t tell me…! Lady Nerzanpi!”
“Hold your horses, Grand Chancellor. You’ll
lose if you exit the cage.”
“Them’s the rules. We established that at the
start of the competition.”
“Gnnn…!”
Shikai glared at me, sweat on his forehead.
I’m gonna piss myself. No, Komari. It’ll really
be over if you give in to fear.
“I see, of course! You want me to take my eyes
off the Matrimonial War and turn them to whatever is happening in the palace?
It won’t be that easy.”
Shikai took out a Correspondence Crystal and
gave all sorts of instructions.
After a while, he returned to his usual calm
expression and sat back down.
“I’ve called back the army. They will take
care of looking into things. Let’s continue the Matrimonial War, Commander…
Though I imagine we’ll be arresting you before the game ends!”
After a boastful smirk, he yelled: “Number
one: her hobby! Bonsai!”
Correct answer. I lost even more LP. But
meanwhile, unbeknownst to him, the Seventh Unit was plotting
something—something surely fit for a sicko.
![]()
“The Enchanted Lands
has three commanders. Leader of the First Unit, Lingzi Ailan, is in the middle
of the Matrimonial War. Rainsworth is stalling the leader of the second in the
Dark Core Zone.”
“My brother challenged them to sports-war,
correct?”
“Yes. He’s taking his sweet time to keep
Jingshi’s defenses low… The leader of the third is guarding the Starquake
Agency, but it looks like they just left for the palace.”
Immortals were leaving the agency. Out of all
six nations, the Enchanted Lands placed the least emphasis on military might.
Shikai Gudo had won his popularity by cutting military spending and moving the
funds to social benefits. That meant the country’s defenses were
weak. And that meant the secret lab would be left
unguarded if its military went off to protect the palace.
Nelia looked through her binoculars and
grinned.
“We’ve got an opening. Let’s go take a look.”
“Yes, ma’am! I will protect you, Lady Nelia,”
said Gertrude.
“Umm! Should we really…go in?” asked Esther.
“What’re you saying? No guards means we can go
in, of course.”
“But it says ‘No Entry’ right here. This is
breaking and entering!”
“Are you for real right now?! Stop feeling bad
for the enemyyy!”
“Whoa?! Ah-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha! Stop
tickling meee!”
“Lady Nelia, you shouldn’t waste time playing
with that vampire.”
Puffing her cheeks, Gertrude took out a Magic
Stone with the power to create a teleportation portal.
“We’re setting it here, right?”
“Yeah. Somewhere easy to find the moment we
come back.”
Nelia let Esther go and grinned. The
attendants of the Matrimonial War were all gathered in one place. The perfect
place for all of them to bear witness to the grand chancellor’s misdeeds.
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Sakuna really had
killed the Tianzi, and her advice saved my life.
“Number two: the name of the cat she had as a
kid! Youxie!”
“Correct.”
Cheers, followed by more Komarin ovation.
The back of the card said “Youxie.” One could
always rely on the Wheels of Asterism to look into people’s memories… But I was
still anxious to no end.
I could hear a ton of people running around
outside the venue.
The Enchanted Lands government was in
disarray, and it was all thanks to the Seventh Unit’s rampage.
“Captain Mellaconcey called. They’re going to
blow up the southern building of the palace next,” Vill told me.
“Stop it with the terrorist threats,” I said.
“Don’t worry, they
won’t catch them. Your troops are professionals.”
“Professional terrorists?! For starters,
what’s the point if they can get evidence later?!”
“There is very much a point. We only need to
temporarily keep the grand chancellor here.”
I didn’t understand one word of what the maid
was saying.
It was obvious this would all lead to us getting
yelled at and killed later. Although, the bomb could kill me before that. I was
there either way… I could do nothing but chuckle.
“That’s the end of the first round. The grand
chancellor is in the lead.”
The numbers on the screen were hopeless.
SHIKAI:
1600 TERAKOMARI: 800
He had double my points. I was definitely
gonna lose. I could hear the audience talking about me. “The Commander’s in
trouble.” “I guess the grand chancellor is worthier of Her Highness.” “I bet
50,000 mells on the Commander…” Hey, that’s not my fault. And
if you think losing your money’s bad, just think about how I feel.
None of them seemed to care about the palace
exploding. I guess those who lived in the cruel, cold word of fighting were
simply built different.
“Komari! Are you okay?!” Lingzi
exclaimed—they’d taken off her gag. “I’ve made you go through so much…for my
sake… You could’ve run away.”
Oh no, she knows I’m afraid of the bomb? She
knows I’m actually the weakest ever? But even if she did, that didn’t matter.
“I’m okay. I won’t run away.”
“Komari…”
“Even if I don’t know your hobby or your
favorite food… I know very well how much you want to change the Enchanted
Lands. I will defeat this sicko.”
Lingzi fidgeted, red in the face. The audience
began whistling and clapping. They really just saw this as entertainment.
“You’re a formidable
enemy, Commander Gandesblood! Even I did not know the name of her cat!” Shikai
clapped, a creepy smile on his face.
I knew he detested me deep in his soul, but I
had to keep up my slaughter champion bluff.
“Hah! This is nothing! I’ll destroy your sick
plans!”
“Yet I have more LP than you…”
“Aw…”
“Which means, for the moment, I am worthier of
her than you! It is only natural, of course, as it was the Tianzi himself who
offered me his daughter’s hand. You are nothing but a thief trying to take her
away.”
“Stop treating Lingzi like she’s an object!
Can’t you at least pretend to care for her?!”
“Na-ha-ha-ha! I’ll care for her once she’s
mine!”
“You little…!”
“Calm down, Lady Komari. We just need to beat
him.”
Vill’s warning brought me back to my senses.
Right. The fist of justice will smash this sick
villain in time.
“Now then, the first round to see who
understands Lingzi better is over. Now it’s time for the round regarding her
feelings.” Nerzanpi snapped her fingers.
Immortals appeared and approached Lingzi. They
carried a belt with extreme care and wrapped it around the confused girl.
“W-wait, what are you doing?! Nothing
perverted, I hope!”
“Who do you take me for? This is a magic item
that measures mana, vibration, willpower, heartbeat, body temperature, and
such. We call it the heartthrobmeter.”
What’s with that ridiculous name?!
“The second round is a love confession
contest. Each of you will profess your feelings for Her Highness. You will lose
LP according to her reaction shown through the heartthrobmeter.”
“What the heck?!”
WTF, seriously. And yet the audience kept
hollering, “You’ve got this, Commander!” “Boil her like
an octopus!” Lingzi, restrained by the heartthrobmeter, was already as red as
boiled octopus.
“Interesting!” Shikai yelled. “It seems His
Majesty cares about Lingzi’s feelings, after all! The heartthrobmeter will
prove whether she reacts to my words!”
“Piss off! No way I can believe that shady
thi—”
Nerzanpi threw a knife. The sharp blade flew
toward Lingzi and barely grazed her cheek as it stabbed the wall behind her.
“Wha…?”
I froze, letting my mouth hang open like a
fish.
The next moment, the screen showed the number
16.
“A heartthrob rate of 16. It’s working fine,
as you see.” Nerzanpi pressed her cigarette on the ashtray with a smile.
Lingzi was unharmed, but her eyes welled up
from the shock.
I had no idea how the 16 was calculated, but
everyone in the audience nodded in trusting acknowledgment.
“Wh-what’re you doing?! You could’ve harmed
her!”
“No. I did it so I wouldn’t.”
“But what if you did?! That stunt of yours
isn’t enough to get me to trust that machine! I don’t know how you got that
number, for starters! Change how we’re approaching this duel!”
“Hey, hey, no point telling me that. His
Majesty the Tianzi himself chose it. Take it up with him—is what I would say if
he wasn’t dead now.”
“I’m sorry!” Sakuna apologized in a panic
behind me. I clenched my fist and pursed my lips. The audience was going wild.
I’d only incur their wrath if I kept complaining, and that would put me at a
disadvantage for the vote during the third round. Darn it!
Keep it together, Komari!
“I like those eyes! You’re as strong-willed as
ever, Commander. But I must tell you that I have the upper hand for this round.
I am something of a poet, you see. My master wordsmithing can shake the heart
of any girl.”
Overconfident
much? Meanwhile, I had no self-assurance at all in
that department.
Why? You see…I’d never told someone my
feelings like that.
I simply had zero experience to pull from.
“Commander Gandesblood will begin. You have
fifteen seconds to whisper Lingzi sweet nothings.”
Aaand I’m first… I can’t think of anything…
Embarrassment and despair filled my brain. The
audience gazed at me expectantly. Vill and Sakuna stared at my back like
expressionless dolls. And Lingzi watched me with anxiety.
Cast aside your shame! Whisper all those sweet
nothings! To save her!
“I…” I tensed every muscle of my body. “I… I
don’t…know how to put it…but I…want to be…with you…Lingzi… So…could you
please…marry me…?”
““““…………………………………………………………………””””
Everyone present froze, like a bug trapped in
amber.
My face was burning. I felt like my heart was
getting ground in a mortar and pestle.
Still, I endured the sensation and looked at
Lingzi.
Hooo. Smoke puffed from her head.
The next moment, I felt like my heart had
exploded, but no, the explosion came from a faraway building. Mellaconcey had
fulfilled his threat. Darn terrorists were a great job. Then the heartthrob
value showed up on the screen.
195. Apparently, that shook her more than
almost getting killed with a knife.
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“HAAAAAIIIIILLLLL!!!!!
KOMARIN!! KOMARIN!! KOMARIN!!”
Terakomari’s high score was received with
cheering, clapping, and Komarin-ing. The audience clearly cared more about the
Matrimonial War than the terrorist attacks in the background.
Prohellya Butchersky watched while crossing
her arms.
Nothing was off. Or so
it seemed… But she had a bad feeling about this.
“Kyaaa! You heard that, Prohellya?! That’s
love! Romance!!”
“Keep it down, Leona. I don’t think Terakomari
really means it.”
“She’s gotta! Look at how red she is!”
Leona clapped her hands like she was enjoying
a play. As did everyone else in the audience. The only one frowning with
displeasure was Grand Chancellor Shikai Gudo.
“You’re crafty. Are you trying to get my LP to
zero on top of blowing up the whole palace?”
“Wh-what’re you talking about?! I’m not
blowing up anything!”
“Na-ha-ha-ha! Let’s see how long you keep up
the act! The Enchanted Lands’ army is arriving here as we speak. They’ll find
evidence of your terrorist plans right away.”
“You don’t know that! I’ll give you the chance
to surrender now! How about you leave this duel and go catch the real
terrorists instead?!”
“No need! Our Third Unit will take care of it!
I must focus on beating the vampire trying to take away what’s mine all while
committing crimes. I’ll be the one winning the
Matrimonial War and taking Lingzi.”
Prohellya thought things over as she observed
the grand chancellor. It was he who’d proposed the Matrimonial War. He could
have easily ignored Terakomari if he wanted to have Lingzi for himself.
“Lady Prohellya, it seems the Mulnite Imperial
Army really is behind the terrorist attacks.” Pitolina’s voice came from the other end of
the Correspondence Crystal line; she was undercover in the palace. “The Enchanted Lands’ forces haven’t caught them yet, but it’s only a
matter of time. The Seventh Unit is too reckless, and there’s a rapper guy
dancing provokingly.”
“I see. Thanks. Keep your eyes peeled.”
“Roger.”
She hung up. If Pitolina was right, the
Seventh Unit wasn’t being serious.
The woman in black, Minister of Military
Secrets Nerzanpi Rocha, smiled like a corpse and said, “Next is the grand
chancellor’s turn.”
“All right! In short…”
![]()
“Lingzi, be mine.”
That was all he said.
I was baffled. There was no way Lingzi would
be moved by such a simple sentence. For starters, she didn’t even like the
grand chancellor. This round was in the bag… Or so I thought.
The screen showed the number 202.
…Huh? How? What the—?
“Na-ha-ha-ha! Looks like Lingzi wants to be
mine!”
“WHAAAT?!”
“HAAAAAIIIIILLLLL!!!!! Long live the
chancellor! Long live the chancellor! Long live the chancellor!” The Immortals
lost their minds.
I didn’t get it. My hands were shaking.
SHIKAI:
1405 TERAKOMARI: 598
I was losing LP. The bomb approached.
I felt betrayed. I turned to look at Lingzi
and she kept quiet, eyes wide.
“Lingzi?! Why are his words having an effect
on you?!”
“Th-they’re not! The numbers just…”
“Why, Lingzi?! Did you really want to marry
him?! Were you lying when you proposed to me?!”
“Your proposal just now certainly was a lie,
Lady Komari,” Vill quipped.
“No! The heartthrobmeter must be…it must be
broken…”
“It is not! The magical device digs deep into
the wearer’s psyche to unearth feelings that not even they knew they had. That
means it just exposed how you really feel, Lingzi,” said Shikai.
“That’s ridiculous!!”
“Yell as much as you
want, Commander Gandesblood. It won’t change the fact that your life is running
out.”
I looked at the screen again. 598 LP left. It
could end with the second round. I could die—and not just any regular death.
Real death. No Dark Core. No coming back.
I clenched my teeth.
This can’t be. He’s gotta be cheating. But how?!
I don’t wanna die. I wanna run away… Then I noticed Lingzi’s gaze on me.
She looked on the verge of tears. She must’ve
been in situations like this before. Setups.
I couldn’t allow this to keep going. A switch
flipped within me. My fists trembled as the fire of courage burned in my chest.
I have no choice. I gotta make her fall in love
with me.
“My turn next, yeah?”
I gotta. I should be able to do it. I’m not a
scholarly intellectual for nothing.
The
Strawberry Milk Formula. Orange Season Love. Twilight Triangle. And that’s not all. I’ve written over half a million words’ worth of
love stories. Deep within me lies the power to make Lingzi’s heart melt with
desire.
“You get ten turns each to profess love. Go ahead,
Commander. Do your best.” Nerzanpi exhaled white smoke with a smile.
Cast aside your embarrassment. Cast aside
everything. Simply voice aloud the words that spring to mind. Become one of
your novel’s characters. Yes, like, Count Marionette from Orange Season Love. You’ve got this. You’re a scholarly intellectual!
“Lingzi, I’ve been thinking about this for a
while now.” I turned to her. “My body warms up whenever I look at you, as
though bathing in the sunlight. My heart is at peace in here, in your soft
presence.”
“Huh? Komari…?”
“My world was crimson before I met you. An
endless onslaught of bloody battle. Perhaps it was fun for what it was, but it
left my heart parched. And it was you who gave me the
hydration it needed. Now when I’m with you, the world is a more vibrant color.”
“Really…?”
“The birds chirp, the flowers shine, the skies
are clear. It was your simple smile that made me take notice of the world
around me. My heart truly burst before the power of your grin. I want to share
the joy of this beautiful world with you. Now, come with me.”
“Bwuh?! Uhh, but…!”
“I won’t let you say no. You’re going to let
my blasted heart go on without you? Listen: I, and I alone, have the right to
feel the gentle touch of your peacock hair.”
The screen changed.
Heartthrob rate: 334
“HAAAAAIIIIILLLLL!!!!! KOMARIN! KOMARIN!
KOMARIN!”
The venue exploded (figuratively, in case you
were worried).
“See that score?!” “She’s undefeatable!” “Look
at Her Highness’s eyes spin!” “Who knew the Commander was such a Casanova!”
“Who wouldn’t melt upon hearing that?!” “Not to mention Her Highness has a hard
time saying no to begin with!” They sure were having a blast (figuratively,
again).
I emptied my mind. I had to get my head empty
to do this.
I
mean… I just actually asked her out?! And with
lines more embarrassing than anything I’d ever written?! I’m gonna have to
scream into my pillow for a good few minutes tonight before falling asleep!
“Lady Komari… I’m crying tears of blood… Are you going to let me go on like this…?”
Vill and Sakuna looked like zombies.
Sorry, but I really don’t understand you.
“Ahh! How vexing! This brazen vampire has
cajoled Lingzi!”
Looking at her, it seemed like my pickup lines
had a strong effect. I mean, yeah, after hearing that, whose heart wouldn’t be racing from embarrassment?
“Good, very good! I
thought the slaughter commander was only good at killing, but I see you also
excel at battles of passions.”
“Of course! I am a scholarly intellectual,
after all!”
“Riveting! Now then, it’s my turn!” Shikai
looked at Lingzi and yelled, “I’m sorry, Lingzi!”
“Huh?”
“It seems I’d been neglecting you! I apologize
for treating you like an object! But that was only a show of my affection! I
care for you more than anybody else. You are as beautiful as a flower
blossoming on top of a cliff. You’ve concerned yourself with the Enchanted
Lands all while enduring my rude behavior. Ahh, how lovely! Your sweetness has
struck my heart!”
This guy spits drivel as naturally as he
breathes!!
And he makes it sound like he’s sorry for what
he’s done? You’re not fooling me! It’s all nonsense! Lies!
“Now, let us join hands and build the future
of the Enchanted Lands! There is nothing to fear! I know we can overcome any
hurdle with glory!”
Then he reached out his hand.
This man had no idea. There was no way such
shallow words would move her heart. I know that because she’s
marrying me. Or so I thought.
“Oh dear. Looks like that hit ’er hard,”
Nerzanpi said maliciously.
I looked at the screen in a flurry.
Heartthrob rate: 112
A despairingly high number.
“Lingzi?! What’s with you all of a sudden?!”
“I don’t know…I really don’t! The
heartthrobmeter is just doing that on its—”
“Ahh! So she says, but her body is more
honest!”
Our LP was: Shikai: 1081, Terakomari: 486. Oh no. I’m gonna die. I haven’t been to every one of the Top 100
Omelet Rice Places of the World! Rather, what I really couldn’t stand
was the fact that Lingzi was falling for this bastard. I wanted to scream.
“Lingzi, open your
eyes! Don’t let this sicko trick you! I’m the only one who can make you happy!
Marry me, and I’ll whip up tasty omelet rice for you every day!”
“Bwuh?!”
SHIKAI:
909 TERAKOMARI: 486
“Stop, Lingzi! Don’t let that vampire deceive
you! I apologize for everything up to now! Please let it only be me who’s
reflected in your shining eyes!”
“HAAAAAIIIIILLLLL!!!!! Long live the Chancellor!
Long live the Chancellor!”
SHIKAI:
909 TERAKOMARI: 390
“Lingzi, I’m the one for you! I can point out
everything good about you as proof of it! You tried your best to show me around
Jingshi! Your bashful smile is super cute! And I like that you’re the same
height as me!”
“Na-ha-ha-ha-ha! I can list her virtues, too!
You are diligent, no matter what you do! You know the holy texts by heart
despite not taking the imperial examination! Your poetic talent leaves even me
in the dust! One day, I want you to write me a Tang poem!”
“You
want her to write you a poem?! Why not write her
one yourself?! Look, Lingzi, here’s mine: From the
day I met you, / Storms have brewed in my heart. / Every time I see the color
green, / I remember your shy smile.”
“Too wordy! Lingzi is introverted! She
responds better when you keep it short and sweet! Listen to me, Lingzi! Let us
build a future together! You are beautiful!”
“Wha?! Lingzi, don’t let him trick you! I know
you best! You’re cute! Earnest! A hard worker!”
“You are noble, the most concerned with the
Enchanted Lands! Come with me!”
“Come with me, Lingzi! Marry me!”
Passionate words were hurled one after the
other. The audience hollered like crazy every time either of us said anything.
Screams, yells, and explosions (literal) could be heard
in the distance. The entirety of the Zijingong was rowdy.
I couldn’t think straight anymore. I was
focused entirely on getting Lingzi’s attention. I’d gotten swept up in Shikai’s
frenzy, and my vocabulary had dropped from that of a scholarly intellectual to
a simpleton. The next thing I knew, I’d become a sweating machine that could
only yell, “I love you!” and “Marry me!”
“Lingzi! I’ll count to ten! Give me your
answer before…”
“Stop, Ms. Komari! Ms. Lingzi will lose her
mind if you keep going!”
“She’s right!! Hurl your affections at me
instead!!”
Sakuna and Vill both yelled at me. That was
when I noticed that the bride was covering her face with both hands. Of course.
She was the target of a barrage of saccharine silliness.
“I’m sorry, Lingzi! I went too far.”
“I—I don’t mind… It’s just a bit
embarrassing.”
“Sorry! I’ll be more careful with my words
next time!”
“No need for that, Commander Gandesblood!”
Shikai grinned like the devil.
Everyone in the venue gulped. I turned to look
at Vill, a sinking feeling in my gut. She was staring ahead, pale in the face.
I followed her gaze—to the screen.
SHIKAI:
141 TERAKOMARI: 0
“Wha…?”
“That was close! You were so loose with your
courtship that I thought I would lose for a moment there! But it seems Lingzi
chose me!”
“Hold on! There’s gotta be something wrong
with those numb—wergh?” I bumped my forehead on the invisible wall as I tried
to walk up to Nerzanpi. I glared at her with tears in my eyes. “Wh-why’s mine
zero?! It makes no sense!”
“It does make sense. The grand chancellor
shaved off our LP.”
“No way…”
Something was fishy. There was no point in a
duel so arbitrary. What the hell was up with this LP…?
It was just there to make the competition seem fair by introducing an element
of gamification.
I looked at Lingzi. She was trembling and
pale. The pink in her cheeks from a moment ago was gone. That expression made
it obvious—the grand chancellor had not charmed Lingzi. He was cheating.
“C-c’mon! There’s no way you can accept these
results!”
“Indeed, Lady Nerzanpi. Please allow us to
check the heartthrobmeter,” Vill said.
“You think you have the right to do that? Not
even the grand chancellor can check it. This is a fair bout. One that
Terakomari Gandesblood lost. Everyone in the audience agrees.”
Even as I was struck by waves of despair, I
listened closely.
“The Commander lost?” “Oh, well, that was
expected.” “Yeah, not like it was a physical battle.” “THE slaughter champion
couldn’t beat him in a romantic duel.” “It was a fun show.” Everyone was fine
with the results. I even heard someone yell, “Blow her up already!”
“Na-ha-ha-ha! It’s over!” I shivered in
reaction to the grand chancellor’s jester-like cackling. “Lingzi is mine. And
you will be arrested under suspicion of terrorism. Too bad, slaughter champion,
hero of the Six Nations. None of those titles mean anything in the Enchanted
Lands. You cannot steal Lingzi’s heart. You cannot stop my endeavors.”
Vill and Sakuna were lodging complaints at
Nerzanpi, but I could only hear the grand chancellor’s words. That, and sense
the bomb slowly descend upon me.
“I doubt this explosive will be able to kill
you, but it will make for an exciting show before our wedding. Lingzi will love
the fireworks of your demise.”
“What…are you planning to do to her…?”
“Lock her up for eternity. She’s but a tool
for me to become the Tianzi.”
I knew it. His apologies were nothing but lies.
Vill and Sakuna punched the invisible barrier.
The audience cheered in anticipation of my gallant escape. Then Shikai solemnly
declared:
“Now then, Commander.
Time for you to go out with a bang.”
“Halt!” someone exclaimed.
![]()
Only a skeleton crew
remained at the Starquake Agency.
Nelia trashed the soldiers coming after them.
The place really was a rehash of the Daydream
Paradise. Paralyzed people languished in prison cells all over the place. They
showed no reaction to Nelia and company’s arrival. They seemed dead at first
glance but were actually conscious.
“Wh-what is this place?” Esther stiffened and
scowled.
Perhaps it was too harsh a sight for a novice, Nelia thought.
“Thio, c’mon! Get the electrovideo box ready!
Get that scoop!”
“Okay, okay, just please stop clutching my
tail, or I’ll sue you for workplace harassment!”
The Six Nations News journalists were running
around in high spirits.
Just then, Nelia noticed some glimmering
spheres on the squeaky-clean floor. The crystals were about the size of a
baseball. Were they used in their experiments?
“Is this…willpower?”
“Lady Nelia? What do you mean?”
“I’m not sure, but…the people here look like
they underwent psychological shock. Maybe the research here is going beyond
Core Implosion…”
“Seriously?! They can’t get away with this,
the scoundrels! Thio, get filming already, you dunce!”
“I’m setting up the camera, so please let go
of my neck! …There we go!”
An alarm Magic Stone blasted its noisy sirens
upon detecting the intruders. But it was too little, too late. Nelia and the
others were already in a position to smash the grand chancellor’s plans.
The soldiers left in the facility came at them
with desperate looks on their faces.
Nelia gripped her twin swords with a bold
smile.
All she needed to do
was bifurcate these fools who were trying to take over the world.
“The gate is ready. We can go any time.”
“Good job, Gertrude! C’mon then, scoundrels!”
The Immortals let out cries of war and
charged.
In a pink flash of light, she struck them down
before they even had time to scream.
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A silver girl stood up
from the center of the audience, her anger plain to see.
Prohellya Butchersky. For some reason, her
gaze was trained on Nerzanpi.
“What is this farce? It’s obvious you were
cheating.”
“Ahh! Ms. Arctic Master! And what exactly did
I do?”
“If you won’t admit to it, then I’ll show you.
Leona.”
“I know, I know!” Leona jumped from the stands
with a meow and landed near the brick wall on the opposite side.
She unleashed a wild punch on the wall, easily
smashing down the bricks.
“What?!” the international VIPs exclaimed in
worry. However, they pursed their lips the moment they saw beyond the bricks.
“Meihua?!” Lingzi stood up with a scream.
“Tsk.” Shikai clicked his tongue.
There was a chamber on the other side of the
wall. Meihua Liang lay inside on the floor, gagged and covered in blood. Beside
her stood an Immortal holding a knife—Shikai’s subordinate.
“Surprised, are we? Gudo Shikai is a sham.
Every time he spoke those ridiculous pick-up lines, they assaulted the girl
behind the wall to get a reading of her level of agitation, then used it to
lower Terakomari’s LP. They must have planted one of those heartthrobmeters on
Meihua Liang.”
The crowd was shocked, as was I. Lingzi ran up
to Meihua in tears. It was all I could do not to let my
jaw drop. Shikai Gudo was a true villain who did not hesitate to harm other
people in pursuit of his goals.
I held back my anger as I glared at him.
A bold look crossed his face as he said:
“Do you have any proof I did this?”
“You wretched…!” I grunted.
“On the other hand, I do have evidence of your
misdeeds.”
“What? What do you mean?”
“Grand Chancellor! We’ve captured the
terrorist!”
Immortals opened the door and rushed into the
venue, dragging along someone they’d tied up with rope. My face fell. How I
wished I didn’t know that blond hair.
“This is Lieutenant Yohann Helders from the
Mulnite Imperial Army’s Seventh Unit! We caught him as he was about to set the
palace’s treasury on fire!”
“Why’d you let them catch you?!”
Yohann
was bruised and battered. I can’t deny he deserves
it… But Mulnite’s Dark Core isn’t active here! Have you no mercy?!
“Sorry, Terakomari… I couldn’t hold back, and
they caught me dancing in excitement… Damn it all…”
Oh, you really deserve it.
“Na-ha-ha-ha! This proves that Terakomari
Gandesblood is a terrorist! What should we do now? I suppose arresting you and
throwing you into prison would be the proper thing to do.”
“No, wait! Let me explain!”
“Can you worm your way out of this one when we
have undeniable proof? Your lackey here is proof that you’re a scoundrel trying
to take my bride by force! Oh! But don’t think about using your Core Implosion
now. The Immortals won’t turn a blind eye to that.”
A spell deactivated with a bwoon.
The invisible wall vanished. It was no longer needed now that the Matrimonial
War was over.
“Stop…Grand Chancellor…,” Lingzi begged in
tears, right beside Meihua on the ground. “Komari did nothing wrong. Let her
go…”
“I would love to, but
criminals cannot be allowed to escape the law.”
Immortals surrounded me.
The audience watched it all happen with bated
breath. Leona and Prohellya didn’t seem intent on helping me. Of course, they
had every reason to avoid being considered accomplices.
It’s over. It’s all over…
I was paralyzed, feeling as though I’d lost
everything.
“…? What is this?” Shikai frowned.
The VIPs in the stands also looked confused.
Faint lights shone all over the venue. I just
stood there frozen, baffled. Meanwhile, Nerzanpi pouted in amusement.
“It’s the sign of the teleportation spell. Are
you trying to escape?”
“What?! Commander Gandesblood…!” Shikai
exclaimed.
“We’re not running away,” Vill said with
composure. “We’re simply teleporting everyone en masse to end this charade.
We’re taking you somewhere fun.”
“What…? Soldiers! Seize that maid!”
Vill held up the Magic Stone she’d showed me
before.
That’s when it hit me. She must’ve been
preparing this spell ever since then.
The soldiers charged at Shikai’s command, but
Sakuna easily shook them off. The spell activated before they could do
anything.
“Stop this! You’re slighting the will of the
people!”
“We’ll see who’s really doing that. Now then,
Mr. Shikai Gudo. It’s time for karma,” Vill declared victoriously.
Vast light enveloped the area in the blink of
an eye.
Then everyone in the venue was sent elsewhere.
![]()
“Hello, everyone! Melka
Tiano from Six Nations News reporting! We have a giant scoop here for you! The
popular and talented Grand Chancellor Shikai Gudo has been conducting an
illegal operation in secret! Take a look!”
Journalist Melka Tiano
reported loudly from the Starquake Agency.
There was unrest in Jingshi—no, all across the
Six Nations, including the Dark Core Zone.
“Lady Nelia! The gate upstairs has opened!
Terakomari, Shikai Gudo, and the VIPs are being teleported!”
“Great! Tell Villhaze to take care of things
while we look deeper into the building,” Nelia commanded before heading into
the bowels of the Starquake Agency.
The prison was only the first floor. Further
evidence of Shikai’s crimes lay hidden deeper underground. He had been heading
an operation to develop narcotics, and not just one kind—the facility was
filled with all sorts of strange flora.
“What is this? They didn’t do this in the
Daydream Paradise, did they?” said Gertrude.
“Look, President Cunningham! They have all
sorts of pharmacy equipment. Were they making drugs?” said Esther.
“I don’t know, but burn everything you see
here into your memory.” Nelia looked around as she defeated soldiers tackling
them.
After some walking, they found a door reading,
AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY. Gertrude turned the knob, but it was locked.
“It’s not just locked. It’s protected by a
magical barrier,” she said.
“Well, isn’t it locked because only authorized
personnel can enter?!” Esther asked.
“Are you really Terakomari’s subordinate…?
Take a note from your boss and get more violent.”
“Move aside, Esther! I’ll kick this door
open!” Nelia exclaimed.
“Huh? Uhyaaah?!” Esther fell on her butt,
overwhelmed by Nelia’s peach-colored swordplay.
Diverse Divide sliced the steel door like it
was tofu. The AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY sign split in half and drifted down to the floor. On the other side of
the door was an armory of Divine Instruments.
“Ohh?! An illegal weapon stash?! Now that’s a
scoop!”
“You’re pulling my tail
off, please!! Let me go, or I’ll hand in my resignation!!”
“I won’t accept it!! You’ll work here until
the day you breathe your last!!”
The journalists intruded further without
reserve or consideration.
Nelia, Gertrude, and Esther peered into the
room—the armory. It was mundane for something so tightly guarded. Was there
something more terrifying hidden deeper within? Either way, they had to uncover
the secrets of the Starquake Agency while Komari was occupying the grand
chancellor above.
“Hmm? What is this…?” Esther picked up a piece
of paper lying on the ground.
Was it somebody’s notes? Just as she started
reading, the entire world shook.
“…?!”
A surge of hostility rushed from the shadows.
She felt someone’s gaze coming from behind a
pillar.
“That’s… It can’t be…” Nelia shivered.
The next moment, the enemy struck at
imperceptible speed.
![]()
The lights of mass
teleportation converged.
The air around me felt different. I fearfully
raised my head and found myself standing in the middle of a drab, prison-like
location.
It was even bigger than the venue for the
Matrimonial War. There were rooms lined with iron bars all over, with people
piling on top of each other inside. I gasped. What happened
to those people? They’re not mannequins, are they? But they’re not moving.
“Grand Chancellor, what is the meaning of
this?!” someone shouted.
It was a haughty-looking elderly male
Sapphire. Apparently, everyone in the venue had been transported here. The
place was full of confused people.
“Vill…where are we? Who are these people?”
“This is the Starquake
Agency,” Vill said loudly. “The place where Grand Chancellor Shikai Gudo had
been conducting experiments on people.”
“Wha…?!” Everyone gasped.
The spectators muttered to each other. They looked
at the prison cells and Shikai’s face sequentially, suspicion crossing their
faces.
“P-preposterous! Don’t listen to her!” Shikai
yelled, shaking. “Is there any proof that this is the Starquake Agency?! Who
are these people?! Prisoners?! This is clearly the scene of a crime! We must
get the army and the police to investigate this place!”
“Indeed, which is why President Nelia
Cunningham and Commander Gertrude Rainsworth are surveying its depths as we
speak.”
“What?! What…what are you plotting?!”
“We should be asking that of you.” Vill took a
step forward, a sadistic smirk on her face.
Shikai clearly wasn’t acting naturally. From
the look on his face, it was clear she was poking at something he was hiding.
“I see.” Prohellya extended her arms to speak
for the audience. “Villhaze, how exactly did you get wind of these flagrant
crimes? Mind explaining in simple terms so everyone understands?”
“We are standing in the Starquake Agency,
which is under the direct command of the Ailan dynasty government. The place
had been hidden for a long time, but thanks to the efforts of Lady Meihua Liang
and Lady Nelia Cunningham, they uncovered its location and infiltrated its
depths. They planted a gate for mass teleportation here to reveal everything to
you. All at the behest of Lady Komari, of course.”
“Commander Gandesblood… You rotten little…!!”
Shikai glared at me like I had killed his parents.
Whoa, don’t look at me. I
didn’t do this. I didn’t have the mental capacity
to answer, though; I couldn’t take my eyes off the prison cells.
“Shikai…who are these people? What were you
doing here?”
“Indeed, Lady Komari. The Starquake Agency
was, in fact, a prison. And its head is its Minister and
Grand Chancellor Shikai Gudo. He brought about everything you see here,” Vill
said.
“Enough of the bullshit!!”
“Oh? I’ve seen the person over there before.”
Prohellya glanced sternly at a cell. “There was a poster in a back alley of
Jingshi saying they had disappeared. Their face matches the photo, if I recall
correctly… What could this mean?”
“Yes. Grand Chancellor Shikai Gudo was
kidnapping the Immortals of Jingshi to carry out his experiments. It is the
Starquake Agency that is behind the serial disappearances in this city…all
under the direction of Shikai Gudo!”
The VIPs gasped. All eyes were on Shikai.
“Th-this has to be a mistake!”
“It is not. And look. Everyone is angry.”
“I can’t believe this.” “His reputation was
just a sham?” “This is inhumane.” “How could he do this to his own people?” “We
can’t let him go on like this.” “Seize him!” The people criticized Shikai’s
faction one after the other. Vill snorted.
“It seems the Matrimonial War is not of
importance anymore. Lady Lingzi couldn’t possibly marry someone behind this
evil. And such a criminal couldn’t possibly be allowed to be grand chancellor,
either.”
“Listen to the voice of my citizens! They all
trust me!”
“It’s useless. Six Nations News is already
reporting to the entire world on everything happening inside this place.”
Shikai’s face lost all color.
Now I understood what was going on.
The Matrimonial War was only a distraction.
Vill and Nelia’s goal was to get Shikai’s eyes off the Starquake Agency and
loosen its security. Then they surprised him with the teleportation to reveal
his misdeeds to everyone. The people watching the competition made for perfect
witnesses.
Vill took a step forward. Prohellya and Leona
got ready to throw down.
“Hee-hee-hee,” Nerzanpi giggled as she stomped
her cigarette. “How about you admit it already, Grand
Chancellor? This was their aim all along.”
“What?! Lady Nerzanpi?!”
“What’s so shocking? You should’ve seen this
coming after seeing President Nelia Cunningham was absent. I thought you
noticed… Did you not?”
“What are you…?”
“Oh, so you didn’t. Well, this just means your
luck’s run out. What did you say about criminals not being allowed to escape
the law?”
“Cease your yapping! As if you weren’t working
with me all this—!”
“With you? With you how, grand chancellor?”
Shikai turned around like a child who was
afraid of the dark.
“No… This is a misunderstanding! Both Lady
Nerzanpi and I are innocent! This is all a setup! And we already have proof
that Terakomari Gandesblood is a terrorist! Shouldn’t we go over that first?!”
“Explosions at the palace or kidnapped
citizens… I wonder which case the people will care most about. You got your
power as grand chancellor from the will of the populace, didn’t you?” Vill
said.
“Guh… But…!”
“I don’t know what exactly you were doing
here, but it is an undeniable fact that you were up to no good. Turn yourself
in already.”
“No… That’s ridiculous… I won’t allow it!”
Shikai turned heel and fled.
A gunshot echoed. Shikai tripped on the floor,
startled.
Prohellya lowered her weapon with a bold
smile.
“Running away, coward? I take it that’s a
confession?”
All calm disappeared from Shikai’s face. He
looked around with eyes wide for a few moments but found no allies. No one
trusted him.
“I—I…! I only did it for the sake of the
Enchanted Lands! That is still true even now! The Tianzi’s clan is rotten to
the core, and it shall be up to me to rule with an iron fist! Isn’t it natural
for a ruler to sacrifice the few for the sake of the many?! Everyone here
should realize this! And yet…”
“Shikai. I’m extremely
disappointed.” Someone sighed.
It was a soft, elegant voice. Everyone turned
to its source. The Immortals opened the path in prostration. A man I’d never
seen before approached with a light step.
“Your Majesty?!”
Huh? Your Majesty? You mean
Lingzi’s dad? The guy Sakuna killed? Then I noticed
his extravagant clothes were drenched in blood. They must’ve resurrected him
quickly with healing magic. I wasn’t expecting him to be teleported here,
either.
“Father! Why…?”
“Oh, Lingzi. Great weather today, isn’t it?”
“Your Majesty!” Shikai ran up to the Tianzi in
desperation. “I must report in detail! About what’s been going on in the
Starquake Agency unbeknownst to me! About Terakomari’s terrorist plots! About
what an evil vampire she is! We must capture and interrogate her right away!”
“No need,” the Tianzi said. “I can tell by
looking at this place how much the people have been suffering. It’s a shame… A
real shame. I thought you were taking good care of the government as grand
chancellor.”
“I have. I’ve worked myself to the bone for
the Enchanted Lands. You must know better than anyone else how hard Grand
Chancellor Shikai Gudo has worked. And still, you don’t believe me?”
“I don’t. No one here does.”
Shikai was paralyzed. The Tianzi immediately
ordered the grand chancellor’s arrest. His personal guard swept him silently to
apprehend the villain.
“Your Majesty…are you sure? You think we ought
to stay like this…?”
“We have peace—what else do we need?”
“What do you think I’ve been managing the
Starquake Agency for?! It’s because you do nothing! I must take matters into my
own hands because you idle about all day!”
“I’m asking if you give a damn about your
daughter’s life!!”
“Ha-ha-ha-ha. Why would Lingzi die?”
Shikai looked as though he had been kicked
down to hell.
Prohellya furrowed her brow. Vill placed her
hand pensively on her chin.
“Now take him away.”
The guards followed the Tianzi’s order and
arrested Shikai. He showed no resistance. He looked dejected, accepting of his
fate. Her wore the face of a man without any will—an expression I’d seen
somewhere before.
“Lady Komari,” Vill whispered to me once he
was out of our sight. “You’ve won. Congratulations.”
“Yeah. That’s one thing taken care of…”
Then I heard something move overhead. I looked
up nonchalantly.
A bomb was being pulled downward by gravity.
“Huh?”
“I’ll see you in hell, Terakomari
Gandesblood!” Shikai yelled from afar.
Oh. The bomb teleported,
too. Shikai activated it out of desperation. I felt
like I was dreaming. I could hear the footsteps of the reaper approaching, and
all I could do was stay there frozen like an idiot, waiting for my demise.
The bomb fell, instantly turning the whole
world white.
“………!”
I thought I was dead for sure. It was obvious
my puny body would be pulverized like a cookie before a point-blank explosion.
But I felt no pain. Was I really dead?
My senses are too clear for that…
The smoke dissipated. I saw the shocked faces
of the audience.
“Lady Komari!” Someone was weeping behind me.
“Lady Komari… Are you okay…?!”
“Vill? Huh? I…”
I looked down at
myself. Unharmed. No pain to speak of. My heart was pounding like crazy…but I
was still the same Terakomari Gandesblood. A moment later, I realized I’d
survived the explosion somehow.
“Hee-hee-hee. You never cease to amaze me,
Terakomari Gandesblood,” Nerzanpi muttered, her rotten gaze fixed on me alone.
“That bomb was fabricated in Jingshi’s Magic Stone factory. They have a failure
rate of one in two thousand. You sure pulled a rare one… What unearthly luck.”
A
chill ran down my spine. So I just survived out of
sheer luck?
The audience roared. “That’s our Commander!”
“You saved us!” “You saved us from the chancellor’s stink bomb!”
I had to take advantage of the opportunity. I
put strength into my legs and rose to my feet.
“You’re too shocked! You think this toy was
ever going to kill me?! Bring out the big guns if you wanna take me down!”
“HAAAAAIIIIILLLLL!!!!! KOMARIN! KOMARIN!
KOMARIN!”
The crowd’s feverish cheering and the mere
fact that I was still alive felt unreal, like I was dreaming.
Shikai screamed as the Immortals took him
away. He hadn’t just tried to kill me, but everyone else in here, too. What a
villain.
“Amazing. Wonderful, Commander Gandesblood.”
The Tianzi approached with a smile. “Not only did you win the Matrimonial War,
but you also saved our lives. You really are worthy of Lingzi’s companionship…
Now then, everyone! A hurrah for her efforts!”
“UWOOOOOOHHHH!!” The Immortals went crazy. I’d lost count of how many times they’d
cheered my name today.
My brain wasn’t keeping up. The grand
chancellor, the bomb, the Matrimonial War, the people imprisoned here… I didn’t
know what to tackle first. Then Lingzi walked up to me.
“Komari, umm…,” she said shyly. “Sorry for
causing you trouble… I put you through so much, didn’t I?”
“Huh? Oh…nah. I’m just glad you’re okay.”
Lingzi cast her eyes down, red in the face.
“A-anyways! We should
investigate the Starquake Agency. We must set these people free…”
“Right! Hey, Vill! Open the cells alread—”
“That can wait, Commander Terakomari
Gandesblood,” the Tianzi said.
He had a soft look on his face, his eyes were
gentle, and he was wearing the most elegant of clothes (albeit stained with
blood). He resembled Lingzi, too.
“I am Tianzi Yizhu Ailan, Lingzi’s father.
Pleased to meet you.”
“P-pleasure’s mine! Umm… But shouldn’t we help
those people right away?”
“Who cares?”
Lingzi froze over. I was also speechless.
“…Excuse me, that wasn’t quite the expression
I was looking for. The court will take care of everything later. We cannot have
our hero deal with these chores.”
“But…I would gladly help…”
“Ha-ha-ha. No need to be so formal. We’ll be
family, after all.”
“““WHAT?!?!””” Vill, Sakuna, and I exclaimed
in unison.
“What are you saying, Father?!” Lingzi turned
red.
“You are amazing. I’ll show you my rock garden
later—it’s my pride and joy. I’d also like you to see the masterpieces on
display at the court. Also…would you like to attend a Tang poetry
presentation?”
Something was off. Wasn’t the Tianzi too calm
after everything that had transpired? Too unfazed before so many people in an
emergency situation? Was this just the majesty of a sovereign? But the Empress
and the General Secretary looked different. And more importantly…
“Excuse me! What do you mean by, ‘We’ll be
family’…?”
“Oh, sorry. I meant that you will be marrying
Lingzi.”
What’s he saying?
Nah, nah, I only earned the right to marry Lingzi…
“Let’s go back to the wedding venue, then. The
guests are waiting.”
“Uh… Wait…?!”
The Immortals had
already prepared their mass teleportation Magic Stones.
Light diffused everywhere. We were transported
back to where we came.
![]()
Yusei had said the Dark
Core should not be stuck in its current role.
Nerzanpi Rocha deeply agreed with her opinion.
Theirs was not a loose partnership like that of the members of Inverse Moon,
who did not properly understand their boss’s ideology. Spica La Gemini had
failed to adequately explain her ideals to her followers, and that disparity
had allowed Mulnite to defeat her organization.
But us? Unlike them, we have conviction.
Absolute trust in Yusei. Empathy. A sense of
purpose.
They were as stars gathering around the
brightest one in the sky, coming together to strengthen their evil.
“Heh. What a pitiful man, that Grand
Chancellor.” Nerzanpi lit a cigarette as she walked down the hallways of the
palace.
It was her seventh today. She recalled Yusei
telling her to abstain from it, but she was not here now.
The idiots who’d been teleported to the
Starquake Agency were now at the venue holding a wedding.
Good. They wouldn’t notice one woman in black
disappearing. This country truly was full of oblivious, peace-addled morons.
“Congratulations, Your Highness. Too bad the
path you’ve chosen is painted in red… Hmm?” Nerzanpi’s Correspondence Crystal
glowed; she picked it up without stopping. “Hello? Minister of Military Secrets
speaking.”
“It’s Mary! My work here is done!”
The Warblade sounded more excited than usual.
The former retainer of Gerra-Aruka, Mary
Fragment, was guarding the Starquake Agency.
“I feel amazing! All that bullshit I put up with
under you was worth it.”
“Well done. Did you
have a hard time?”
“It was nothing. I escaped the Metropolis for
this moment.”
Mary chuckled like a wild beast.
“I’ve captured Nelia Cunningham. I get to do
anything I want with her, right?”
![]()
They pushed me and
Lingzi up to the stage as soon as we were back at the venue.
Stares of excitement and felicitation fell
upon us from every direction. Even Leona and Prohellya were grinning. However,
Vill and Sakuna’s expressions were totally flat. Meihua—healed thanks to the
Dark Core—only shrugged.
The personal guard and Nelia’s team had stayed
behind to take care of things at the Starquake Agency.
Meanwhile, it seemed like the wedding was
about to happen for some reason. Why do I have to get
married? Why am I up here looking at Lingzi?
The green bride wore a pure-white wedding
dress. She looked into my eyes super-duper shyly.
“What should we do…?”
“You’re asking me…?”
“Lady Komariii! Should we resume the terrorist
attacks?! Of course we should, I’ll get right on it!!” Vill yelled.
“Ms. Komari!! Should I kill the Tianzi again?!
Of course I should, I’ll get right on it!!” Sakuna shouted.
“Calm down, you two!”
As I appeased both criminals, I did some
thinking. What would happen if I refused to marry Lingzi? The crowd would boo
me to hell, clearly. But I didn’t have the courage to go through with it to
begin with. Also, we were both girls—was same-sex marriage legal in the
Enchanted Lands?
The Tianzi smiled like the kindly old man he
was and said:
“Well, for starters,
how about you kiss the bride?”
“Huh? Whoa, whoa, whoa—kiss her?! You mean,
like, putting our lips together?!”
The crowd went wild. Some of them started
chanting, “Kiss! Kiss! Kiss!”
No way. Don’t you get that a kiss isn’t something
you do lightly?
“Wh-what do we do? That’d be awkward, right?”
I asked.
“R-right… I’m sorry, Komari…for making you go
through this…” Lingzi looked down in embarrassment.
She was so unbelievably gorgeous that I
couldn’t take my eyes off her.
No, wait, what are you thinking?
I had to clear up this misunderstanding—but
then I started to feel unsettled.
The pretty glow in Lingzi’s crimson eyes took
hold of my heart.
A strange, deep emotion welled within me. That
crimson shade gave me a sense of déjà vu.
Vill. Sakuna. Nelia. Karla. My friends’ eyes
had all glowed that same hue in battle.
Wait, is she…?
The moment I realized the shocking truth,
Lingzi collapsed on me. Is she really gonna kiss me?!
I was practically losing my mind at the thought, but no matter how much I
waited, her lips didn’t come.
“Cough!”
Instead, someone screamed. Unrest spread
through the venue.
Lingzi coughed, splashing blood on my tuxedo.
I was paralyzed with shock.
Blood was pouring from Lingzi’s mouth like a
waterfall, but I couldn’t even process what was going on.
Meihua shrieked, pale in the face. The Tianzi
kept quiet, oddly spaced-out. Everyone else just stood there, unsure what to
do.
Lingzi spat blood everywhere as she crouched
down.
“Wha…? Wait, but I… I took my medication…”
Cough. Her pure-white wedding dressed was dyed crimson.
At first, Lingzi reacted to things like it was
no big deal, but soon, she went quiet, unable to say anything anymore.
I just stood there, at a loss for words, in
the middle of the red wedding.
I thought everything would be over once I
defeated Shikai. But that wasn’t the case. Lingzi was still suffering. Peace
had not come to her.
The curse on the Enchanted Lands had not been
lifted.
![]()
Esther Claire ran down
the streets of Jingshi—or rather, she crawled. Her uniform was tattered, and
she was covered in wounds. She was far from Mulnite’s Dark Core, and the pain
would not cease.
“Commander… Commander…!”
The passersby were startled at the sight of
her, but she couldn’t have cared less. She continued toward the palace through
the tears.
She thought back to what had just transpired.
Esther had gone to the Starquake Agency with
Nelia. It was an important mission to expose the grand chancellor’s misdeeds,
and everything was going smoothly: Nelia, Gertrude, and the journalists mowed
down the soldiers defending the place and successfully revealed Shikai’s
transgressions.
But then a single woman turned the tables.
A Warblade with a nihilistic smile used her
mysterious Core Implosion to defeat Nelia in an instant. But it wasn’t because
she’d simply been stronger than Nelia—the woman had done something to her.
It all went downhill then.
Gertrude could not possibly defeat someone who
took out Nelia. The journalists were hopeless as well. Esther, too, was crushed
immediately. She was powerless against the woman’s attacks. But at the last
moment, Nelia yelled, “Go to Komari!” and Esther switched gears to escaping,
obeying her superior’s command on reflex.
“Why…? How did it come to this…?”
The Correspondence Crystal showed no response.
Perhaps there was magic
jamming at play.
And maybe…maybe they had been led by the nose
from the very beginning…?
Esther opened the guidebook on Jingshi. She
had to get into a back alley first. This should be the
shortest route…, she thought, going away from the street, when…
“Well, well, if it isn’t Second Lieutenant
Esther Claire.”
A woman clad in a coal-black outfit was
standing beyond the alleyway.
Esther was too dazed to say anything. She had
crossed paths with the Ruist, Minister of Military Secrets of the Enchanted
Lands: Nerzanpi Rocha. The evildoer who’d collaborated with the grand
chancellor to continue the experiments of the Daydream Paradise.
“Looks like Mary let a critter escape. I’ll
make sure to scold her next time I see her.”
“You… What do you want…?!”
“Why would I tell you? By the way, did you go
into the Starquake Agency?”
“…Yes! We got proof of your wrongdoings! Six
Nations News reported on it! There’s no use escaping no—”
Esther felt a jolt in her chest.
She looked down in disbelief.
Blood was spurting from a hole in her chest.
All strength left her body, and she dropped on the ground. Her Chain Metal
rattled as it fell down with her.
“Wha…?”
“You saw something you shouldn’t have. Learn the truth in the morn and you shall not object upon dying by
dusk. Although, since it’s been reported on now, I suppose that means I
should kill everyone in the world? Ah, well. All according to plan.”
Nerzanpi’s lips curled in a faint smile around
her cigarette as she aimed her revolver.
It was only after the shot that the pain set
in.
“Does it hurt? I would think so. But you
brought it upon yourself. I’ll make you my Baolu… Actually, I changed my mind.
I don’t think you’d be as compatible.”
What is she talking about? It hurts. I can’t get
up.
A vampire killed in Jingshi would not return
to life. The sheer dread left Esther’s mind blank. She could only shiver in
cold and despair at the thought that she would die here.
“Commander Komarin…”
“It’s useless. She’s in the middle of her
wedding. Your wounds will not heal, and they’re fatal. Too bad, Esther Claire…
I’ll give you a proper burial, so forgive me, okay?”
“…!”
Then Esther heard the sound of her life being
extinguished.
She’d graduated at the top of the Mulnite
Military Academy. She’d managed to get into her dream position, the Komari
Unit. She’d gotten to make friends with Commander Komarin and the members of
the Seventh Unit. And finally, she’d been put on her first big mission in the
Enchanted Lands.
But now her life was over.
Nerzanpi took Esther in her arms. All
sensation in Esther’s body was already fading.
Nerzanpi was going to toss her corpse
somewhere.
“I’m…so…rry…”
No one heard Esther’s last whisper.
She repented in her heart as her tears
overflowed.
I’m sorry, Monique. I couldn’t be a good soldier.
Lingzi Ailan is an
ordinary girl,
Shikai Gudo thought.
She was not fit to be a ruler. As her retainer
Meihua Liang said, she was “fragile.”
Yet that was no bad thing. The world was made
up of such small, weak people. Not being worthy of standing above the rest was
no reason for criticism.
She simply had to bear the weight of far too
much suffering.
“Because I’m the Gongzhu,” “because I’m the
next Tianzi,” “because I’m a Draconic Meteor”—this unjust reality inflated her
ideals. The standards she imposed on herself were a curse.
That was why Shikai Gudo wanted to save her.
It wasn’t for the sake of the Enchanted Lands, but rather, for her.
Shikai came from humble origins. He had no
choice but to take the imperial examination, the public servant test, in order
to raise his family’s reputation. From a young age, he studied like hell,
sitting at his desk fourteen hours a day. His father would thrash him if he
made the smallest mistake reciting the holy texts. To avoid this, he took to
cheating, writing the text out in tiny letters and hiding it in his clothes.
When he was found out, he was locked in a shed for a whole day in the middle of
winter, nearly dying in the process.
He cried every night.
He hated this life. He didn’t want to be a servile civil officer, but a
commander who traveled around the world. He wanted to be like the dazzling
Seven Crimson Lords or the Eight Illustrious Generals in the Dark Core Zone.
Yet he could not go against his family’s
plans.
He ground away at his studies until he at last
passed the final section of the exam and joined the center of the Ailan
dynasty. He had no talent in battle, only in words.
“Bring a bright future to the Gudo name.”
Shikai hated his father’s flattering smile.
It was an honor for the whole family to have a
member pass the imperial examination, yet Shikai despised his lot. His father
had stolen his youth from him. He did no real work himself, yet forced his son
to study. He would yell at him if his grades were not good. The beating was not
an exceptional case, either.
I don’t care about my family. I only work for my
own sake.
Shikai’s heart turned ice cold. He decided to
live for himself.
And he didn’t care about who he had to kick
down in the process. He didn’t care about developing a reputation. He toiled
away for his own ambitions. He fawned and bribed to climb the ladder. He put on
a soft facade as he waited for his chance to rise.
Then one day, he met Lingzi Ailan.
“You’re like the jester of Aruka.”
She was under ten at the time. She had the
same innocent smile as any other kid you could find running about the streets
of Jingshi. He found it strange to think that she was the daughter of the
Tianzi, the most powerful man in the world.
“Your Highness, I am no jester. I am not a
Warblade, either.”
“No, I can tell. You’re lying.”
His brain froze for a moment.
The girl, unaware of his mental turmoil, gave
him a bouquet.
“Studying all the time must be tiring. I
picked these flowers with Meihua. You can have them.”
The human soul was a
strange thing. Sometimes, one felt like crying by just looking up at the sky.
Not even he understood what tugged at his
heartstrings, but Lingzi’s normal kindness was like a balm on his tired soul.
![]()
Nelia Cunningham awoke
in a dark room. Her body felt leaden. Dull pain assaulted her joints. Her
muscles tensed as she tried to get up on reflex, only to find that she could
not.
Then she realized she was tied to a bed. Her
body was covered in wounds, too, and the bed was stained with her blood.
A terrible memory replayed in her head.
She’d fallen into a trap while investigating
the Starquake Agency.
“President Nelia Cunningham, you’re finally
awake.”
A tall woman emerged from the darkness.
Nelia remembered everything. Her vision turned
red with anger.
“You’re…from Gerra-Aruka…!”
“Heh. So you remember me.”
The woman approached silently, her eyes
gleaming like a beast’s.
Former Illustrious General Mary Fragment. A Warblade
who’d worked under Madhart to oppress the citizenry. Nelia remembered clashing
with her almost as many times as with Rainsworth.
Mary was imprisoned in the Metropolis after
the Six Nations War, but Nelia heard she had killed herself with a Divine
Instrument not too long ago. They’d held a funeral, too, so she thought her
completely dead—who knew she would be in the Enchanted Lands working for the
grand chancellor?
“Where’s everyone else?! Gertrude?!”
“Who cares. I’ve been training to get my
revenge on you, Nelia Cunningham. I’m overjoyed to finally get to take your
life, you sorry excuse for a president.”
“We’ve already alerted the entire world to the
grand chancellor’s evildoings. You’ll go down with him.”
“We’re talking about
you and me here. He has nothing to do with this.”
Nelia clicked her tongue. She’d been defeated
with ease at the Starquake Agency. Not through an honest swordfight, but
because of Mary’s special Core Implosion; it had felt as though the woman had
burrowed into Nelia’s mind.
“Where are we? The Starquake Agency?”
“A hideout. One whose location I’ve taken
great pains to conceal.”
“Where’s Komari?”
“She left you and went back to the palace,
conveniently.”
Mary unsheathed the sword at her waist—the
same one she’d slashed Nelia with before. Even a child would understand what
she was about to do. Nelia suppressed her fear and looked for a way to escape.
“…Do you resent me? Stubbornness doesn’t make
you friends, you know.”
“This is for President Madhart. He lost
everything because of you.”
“What are you talking about? He admitted
defeat and withdrew.”
“No. I won’t believe it.” Mary bored into her
with an irate glare. “Do you have any idea how many people despise you, Nelia
Cunningham? You might be delighted that you’ve imparted justice, but at the end
of the day, what you did was nothing but arbitrary violence.”
“That’s rich coming from a tyrant like you. I
do not regret my actions. I did what I did for Aruka.”
“Haah… Foolish.
You’re ignorant of how many innocent people you’ve made suffer.”
“Huh? What are you talking about?”
“Many of Gerra-Aruka’s officers were framed,
and their families ostracized. Many of whom were not involved in any violence
whatsoever.”
Even in Madhart’s administration, many people
in office had been innocent. Sacrifices were inevitable in a revolution—but
Nelia had known that before becoming president.
Nelia’s approval ratings were high.
Unprecedentedly so, even when you factored in Aruka’s days as a monarchy.
Still, she also endured
constant criticism. People put up posters and graffiti that disparaged her
every day—She’s full of herself; Give
us back our life, resign; Not my president.
Gertrude told Nelia not to mind them.
Rainsworth suggested killing anyone who opposed her. But that would make her no
different from Madhart. Nelia thought it was the president’s job to listen
seriously to any and all opinions, and this ideal had cost her dearly many
times.
Nelia Cunningham was but an immature little
girl. Too kind for her own good.
“I’ll kill you here and now.”
Mary raised her sword.
Nelia gritted her teeth and struggled, but her
bonds refused to break. The magical stones she’d hidden in her pockets were
gone, too. If Mary chopped off Nelia’s head here, there would be no coming
back. She was genuinely trying to kill her… But just as Nelia’s eye caught the
dreadful gleam of Mary’s blade:
“Wait.”
Something even worse arrived. A woman in black
marched up to them.
“I can’t make a Baolu if you kill her. Use
that little brain of yours, okay?
Minister of Military Secrets Nerzanpi Rocha.
Nelia had no idea who she truly was, but the sight of her sent shivers down her
spine. There was something terrifying about her presence.
“What are you doing here? You promised to let
me do as I pleased with her.”
“You can. But enjoying hurting people is
tasteless. If you really hate Nelia Cunningham, you should destroy her
dignity.”
“You sure you don’t just want to make that
Baolu?”
“I do. Mind stepping aside for a bit, then?”
Mary relented, sheathing her sword and opening
a path for her with crossed arms. Nerzanpi approached with the smile of a dead
woman. Nelia clenched her fists and yelled.
“What’re you plotting?!
Do you want to get your hands on Lingzi to take over the Ailan dynasty?!”
“That we will do, but it is only a means, not
our end.”
This woman really was evil. She was trying to
use Lingzi by collaborating with the grand chancellor.
“Don’t misunderstand me. I’m not really on the
grand chancellor’s side. I was only using him… You thought he was Lingzi’s
enemy and ensnared him, the poor thing. But oh well, it’s his fault for acting
in a way that would turn people against him.”
“What?”
“Anyways, Baolu. Do you know what they are,
President?”
Nerzanpi produced some sort of staff.
It was designed for combat and resembled the
one Dr. Kuya had used at the Crimson Snow Hut.
“This is the Cogito Staff II, a Divine
Instrument that lends us the power of our leader. With a single swing of this
cane, we can steal a person’s willpower.”
“You mean…like Monique’s etiolation?”
“That was the power of the original Cogito
Staff. That only scraped off part of the willpower—but this upgraded Cogito
Staff II can steal all willpower to transform its objective into a Baolu.
Forget about etiolation—this will make them entirely hollow.”
Nelia couldn’t understand a word of what
Nerzanpi had said.
Like the wind in the graveyard, her voice
stoked Nelia’s fear.
“By the way, your buddies have already been
hollowed out.”
Nerzanpi snapped her fingers, activating the
Void spell of invocation. Something dropped from thin air. Nelia was shocked,
as though she’d just been slapped.
“Gertrude?! And the journalists…!”
Nelia’s allies fell on top of one another like
junk on the floor.
Gertrude Rainsworth. Melka Tiano. Thio Flatt.
Their expressions were vacant, and they were
completely still, their limbs splayed out like puppets whose strings had been
cut. Nerzanpi’s choice of words—“hollow”—was completely
accurate; the three girls were silent and drooling.
“I haven’t killed them. Out of the hollow
people I turn into Baolu, I like freezing and keeping the pretty ones. They
certainly are beautiful, especially the orange Warblade.”
“G-go to hell! I’ll kill you first!”
“Oooh, how scary. Hee-hee-hee. All the Six
Valkyries have such massive willpower. The Baolu I make out of you will be
gorgeous.”
Nerzanpi brought the Cogito Staff II close.
Nelia could only stare at the faint light
glowing on its tip.
“Now, Nelia Cunningham. Forget about your
duties as the president—you will be my doll.”
“I won’t let you take me out without a fight!
I am Aruka’s president!”
“Sure. And yet so many people have a grudge
against you.”
Nelia’s mind went blank. She couldn’t do away
with her kindness entirely, and it corroded her heart like poison.
Nerzanpi began to speak as though reading from
a picture book.
“Once upon a time, there was a Warblade boy
who lived in the Metropolis. His father was a public servant. The family was
not wealthy by any stretch of the imagination, but the boy lived peacefully
with his father, his mother, and his sister three years younger. But one day,
everything changed when the sky was painted gold.”
Komari—the girl Nelia asked for help—had
enveloped the Metropolis in a golden Core Implosion.
“President Madhart disappeared. Many of his
workers were arrested, robbed of their jobs. The boy’s father was no exception.
Unbeknownst to him, the true purpose of his position was supplying the Daydream
Paradise with funds, and because of this, he was imprisoned. The boy’s family
lost their house. He was bullied at school for being ‘Madhart’s lackey.’ The
townsfolk looked down on his family, ridiculed them, and tried to drive them
out of town. Soon, they had nothing to eat and nothing to wear, so they escaped
the Metropolis and headed to another country, where they eventually killed
themselves. Happily ever after.”
There was no guarantee
anything she’d said was true.
Yet the mere possibility of something like
that happening was crushing.
Madhart did not care about who he hurt, but
perhaps he needed to be that way to rule. Nelia felt her heart being torn to
shreds just thinking about the people she could’ve made suffer.
Ah… What should I do?
What would she do? How would that vampire
princess answer?
“The heavens entrust their child, who we call
the Tianzi, to rule over the earthly realm. If the Tianzi is judged unfit for
the role, a revolution will arise, and a new Tianzi will be appointed. I
thought you had what it takes to be a ruler… But perhaps the burden was too
great.”
Something left her body. Nelia felt something
important being robbed from her.
“Oh dear. This is what one of the Six
Valkyries are made of. Double the beauty of a regular person’s Baolu.”
Her vision darkened. Her soul closed, and
sensation left her body.
“Wonderful, wonderful,” Nerzanpi said
emotionlessly.
The last thing Nelia saw was the shining glow
of the sphere in Nerzanpi’s hand.
The glow of her lost will.
![]()
Nerzanpi looked down at
the Nelia Cunningham doll and smiled.
The Moonpeach Princess, beloved by her fellow
Warblades, stared at the ceiling with vacant eyes, a scar in the shape of a
star on her chest. For whatever reason, that mark appeared whenever Nerzanpi
used Yusei’s power.
The young president’s body was now an empty
shell.
Nerzanpi stared excitedly at the Baolu glowing
on the palm of her hand. She loved shiny things. Just looking at them gave her
peace of mind. Not to mention the Valkyrie’s was more beautiful than any other.
Mary Fragment broke the
silence and grimaced.
“Uhh, I know I should’ve asked earlier, but
what’re you going to use that for? Why did the grand chancellor want it?”
“The Baolu? He thought this would become a
Waidan.”
“A Waidan…?”
“But it can’t. He was duped by villains. We
needed the help of a whole country to mass-produce Baolu—covering up even one
kidnapping would be hard enough. So, I went to the Enchanted Lands, since it
seemed the easiest prey. This country’s really in decline, rotten to the very
core.”
“That didn’t answer my question. I know you
betrayed him, but…”
“Isn’t it shiny and pretty? And it can also be
used as tool for murder.”
Mary frowned in confusion.
This meathead was far from competent at
explaining things.
“Nerzanpi… You aren’t going to use Nelia
Cunningham’s for anything else, are you? I’ll take her now.”
“Oh dear. You’re interested in her
hollowed-out body? You have some nasty predilections… But I advise you to hold
it. You can throw your victory party once your revenge is truly over.”
“Truly…?”
“You hate Terakomari Gandesblood, don’t you?”
Mary’s expression immediately clouded with
anger.
“The Moonpeach Princess will be the weapon
that destroys Terakomari. I can’t have you breaking it already.”
“What’re you really after?”
Nerzanpi lit a cigarette. She held the Baolu
aloft and smiled.
“Our wish—Star Citadel’s wish—is to end
humanity. Terakomari Gandesblood represents an obstacle to this goal, and I’ve
been tasked with eliminating her.”
“Star Citadel? End humanity…?”
“The preparations are complete. First, we
shall intimidate the Tianzi to tell us the Dark Core’s location.”
Nerzanpi quietly unleashed the willpower
within her body.
Her dead eyes glowed
crimson. Mary shrieked in shock. Nerzanpi raised her hand, and the “dolls”
around the room instantly shambled to life. Like the dead rising from their
graves.
“Core Implosion: Twisted Pedagogy,” she said.
“These soulless husks have fallen to despair, and it is I who will teach them
the way. For you see, Ruists are also teachers.”
The dolls stood up. They stared at Nerzanpi
with lightless eyes.
Among them was Nelia Cunningham, naturally.
The president who’d saved the world was no threat now that she was mindless.
She was but a puppet without human dignity.
The Cogito Staff II imbued with Yusei’s power
could transform people’s willpower into Baolu, which Nerzanpi could wield as a
weapon. And the bodies of people drained of willpower became her puppets. She
didn’t just preserve them because she liked them—she could also control them
with her Core Implosion.
“Now then, my children. Jingshi is about to be
torn apart after the Matrimonial War and the grand chancellor’s scandal. It’s
the perfect time to make some noise, don’t you think?”
The dolls said nothing. Instead, they
scattered in every direction.
So began the final stage of the Death Master’s
plan.
![]()
Jingshi had fallen into
turmoil, like it had been hit by a hurricane.
Grand Chancellor and Starquake Minister Shikai
Gudo’s evildoings had been exposed.
The people who respected him had changed their
tune. The posters praising him all over the high-rise buildings were torn to
shreds. Activists popped up at the Zijingong to demand he quit. The monuments
erected in his honor across the Enchanted Lands were smashed one after the
other.
That had nothing to do with me, though. The
guard had taken Shikai. They would look into the Starquake Agency’s secrets.
Meanwhile, the issues surrounding Lingzi were not solved in the slightest.
The truth behind the
hijinks of the Matrimonial War revealed itself to me.
Lingzi was suffering from an incurable
illness.
“No treatment works. The Dark Core has no
effect on it. Her body just gets weaker and weaker…until she ends up spitting
blood. It’s a terrible disease.”
Vill, Sakuna, Meihua, and I were in Lingzi’s
room in the Zijingong’s villa, watching Lingzi sleep.
The wedding had been canceled, obviously.
Lingzi’s attack calmed down…but it wasn’t clear if she would wake up again, and
the thought of it tore my chest apart.
“There is a drug that delays the progression
of her condition. She should be able to lead a normal life so long as she takes
it every day…but it seems the disease has advanced to a stage that even her
medication can’t adequately curtail.”
“There’s really no way to cure her? I’m
guessing the Enchanted Lands government has been trying to find it?” Vill
asked.
“No, His Majesty the Tianzi pretends the
sickness doesn’t exist. He’s escaping reality. The grand chancellor, too, of
course… She had to find a way to manage things herself.”
“Hold on. But Lingzi is his daughter! How can
ignore her illness?” I objected.
“That’s the kind of person he is,” Meihua
said, full of hatred.
I was reminded of the Tianzi and his
kind-looking eyes. I could have never imagined what he was thinking behind that
smile.
“We visited the Mulnite Empire in February.
Remember how I told you we had two objectives?”
“Sorry, I don’t, really. One was defeating the
grand chancellor, though, right?”
“The other was to find the Waidan. There is a
medicine called the elixir of life in the Enchanted Lands’ legends. This wonder
drug has the power of immortality, and you can get the recipe from any
bookstore.”
“And you tried to heal Lady Lingzi with that?”
Vill said.
“Yes, but it’s not easy
to make… There is one unknown ingredient in the recipe: the Waidan. We just
couldn’t find it—not in the Enchanted Lands, and not anywhere in the Six
Nations.”
“Then why did you visit Mulnite?”
“We heard the gate to the Netherworld opened
during the vampire riots. We thought there might be a clue to the Waidan in
that mysterious alternate world…though we weren’t getting our hopes up. Simply
grasping at straws.”
“Um… What form does this Waidan take?” Sakuna
asked timidly.
Yeah, I was wondering that, too.
“The ancient recipe says it’s a sphere that
shines like a star.”
Everyone lapsed into thought. Neither Vill nor
Sakuna had a clue about it, much less an ignorant recluse like me.
“Hmm…? Where am I…?” A voice came from the
bed.
Lingzi had regained consciousness. Meihua
jumped and rushed to her aid.
“Lingzi! Are you all right?!”
“Meihua…? Yes, I’m fine.”
We hurried to the bed, too.
Lingzi was out of her wedding dress and in her
pajamas. She seemed calmer now—her once deathly pale face had regained some
color.
“Komari… Did I faint?”
“Yeah. I was startled by all the blood… Are
you really okay now?”
“It’s just a cold. I’ll be fine once I take my
medicine.”
Her pained smile stabbed my heart.
This girl was trying not to worry us. There
was no need for her consideration at this point… Or, well, I guessed maybe she
didn’t want people to know about her disease.
“…Sorry, Meihua told us about your illness.”
Her crimson eyes grew wide. She looked at her
retainer asking for confirmation, and understood it from her expression.
“I’m sorry,” Lingzi said with a faint smile,
bowing. “I have an incurable disease. My body has a breakdown if I forget to
take my meds. I was certain I took them today… I didn’t
mean to dirty your clothes with my blood. I’m sorry.”
“What?” I was baffled.
“That’s the kind of girl she is.” Meihua
sighed.
“No…I don’t care about that. I’m worried about
you. I… What should I do? How can I help you?”
“Don’t worry. You’ve already helped me enough.
You exposed the grand chancellor. Now that I don’t have to worry about him
locking me up, I can go look for the Waidan.”
Lingzi stood up. Meihua immediately tried to
stop her, but she smiled and said she was just going to the bathroom.
Still, I had a vexing haze in my head.
Don’t worry? She doesn’t need me now that I did
what she planned?
No, that’s not it. She’s a kind girl. She just
doesn’t want to bother me anymore. She doesn’t want to get me into more trouble
with the Enchanted Lands.
But…I can’t stand it.
“Lingzi! I will not go home like this!”
“Kya?!”
I grabbed her shoulders without thinking. I
moved so quickly the inertia pushed me and her on the bed.
She looked up at me with confused, damp eyes.
I heard Vill and Sakuna throwing a fit behind me.
Huh? This position is a bit strange… But I can’t
stop now!
“You asked me to help you! And now you’re
telling me you’re done with me just because I defeated Shikai?!”
“Um… Uh… You’re too close…”
“Besides, I have the right to marry you! Just
the right… But I’ll take responsibility until the end and stay with you! I want
to help you!”
“Don’t say that… I can’t stand it…”
“You can’t stand it?! Am I bothering you? Do
you hate me…?”
“No! I like you!”
“Oh? Really? Thank goodness…”
Then I felt a cold
touch. I turned around and found Sakuna grabbing my ankle with a smile on her
face.
“Sakuna? What’s up?”
“Nothing. I just couldn’t bear not touching
you any longer.”
I don’t know what that means, so I’ll just ignore
it. I turned
back to Lingzi and continued:
“Anyways! I also like you, Lingzi. Which is
why I want to he—WHOA?!”
Then I felt a hot touch. I didn’t need to turn
around this time. The maid was hugging me tight.
“Hey, Vill! What’s wrong with you?!”
“I just couldn’t bear not having you on top of
me like you’re doing with Lady Lingzi. I think I’ll have to grab you and jump
out the window.”
“Don’t!!”
I
wrestled with the maid. Meanwhile, Sakuna clung to my thigh. Lingzi felt
herself in danger and began squirming away. Whoa!
Who put their hand inside my clothes just now?! Huh? Sakuna? Dammit, Vill!
She’s imitating your sicko behavior now!
“Let me go, Vill! You’re a bad influence on
Sakuna!”
“I don’t get it. It’s unfair that you only
leap to Lady Memoir’s defense.”
“AAAH!! DON’T TICKLE ME!!”
“…I’m sorry, Commander. Would you mind hearing
Lingzi out?” Meihua asked in a truly apologetic tone.
Vill and Sakuna stopped as well.
Right. Lingzi. No time to waste on perverts.
“Sorry! Heard her?! Back off!”
“Exactly, Ms. Villhaze. This isn’t the time to
horse around.”
“Sakuna’s right. I’ll play with you later on,
just compose yourself for a minute.”
“Wha…? Just me…? What about Lady Memoir…?”
Vill was frozen in confusion.
I regained my composure
and turned to Lingzi. She was hanging her head, red in the face.
“…Thank you for worrying about me, Komari.”
“Of course. There’s no need to be cold like
that anymore, okay?”
“Yes. I will…tell you everything.”
Lingzi looked me straight in the eye. The
moment her small lips parted, I heard someone rush in from outside.
“Commander! There’s trouble!” Bellius Hund
Cerbero kicked the door open.
No manners. He paid no heed to his conduct as
he delivered a report.
“Second Lieutenant Claire…I mean, Esther is
missing!”
“Wha…?”
“There’s also a riot in Jingshi. According to
Mellaconcey, government buildings are being attacked one after the other…”
Just then, a huge explosion went off outside.
We hurried to the window, but we couldn’t
understand what was happening.
“Let’s go to the rooftop!” Meihua yelled as
she ran away.
“Let’s go, Lady Komari!”
“Huh? Wait! Sakuna! Watch over Lingzi for a
minute!”
Vill pulled me away following behind Meihua.
The teleportation Magic Stone took us to the
rooftop right away. What we saw there was unbelievable.
Jingshi was on fire. People were running every
which way. The high-rise building right in front of where we were looking began
splitting in half; the upper part slid down and crushed the street with an
apocalyptic cacophony.
“Wh-what’s going on?! Don’t tell me the
Seventh Unit is behind this chaos again!”
“That can’t be. They are discriminate in their
chaos.”
“How can you even have discriminate chaos…?”
“In any case, Lieutenant Cerberus is right—I
can’t get ahold of Esther. I don’t think that a vampire
as diligent as her would neglect communication like this, so there must be
trouble.”
“You don’t think…she got hit by the riots?”
“I don’t know. For starters, I can’t get ahold
of Lady Cunningham, either. They were both surveying the Starquake Agency, but
they haven’t reported since the sham wedding began. I’m sure the president is
fine, considering, but…”
Nothing made any sense. And I couldn’t stop
thinking about Lingzi’s disease.
“The grand chancellor might be behind this…,”
Meihua said, looking at the disaster in the city. “Maybe these riots were a
contingency plan in case he lost everything. Cunning bastard…”
“Should we go ask him, then?” Vill said.
“Yeah. He must be in the underground prison.”
![]()
As soon as we told her
we would be going to see Shikai, Lingzi insisted on coming with us, too.
She’d just fainted from coughing blood. We
told her she should rest, but she wasn’t having it. She wanted to go meet him
to check something.
“Commander, we will be going to look for
Esther.”
“Yeah. I’m worried about her, too. Take care
of it, and make sure not to get injured.”
“Roger.” Bellius bowed before leaving.
We let them look for Esther and Nelia.
Vill, Sakuna, Meihua, Lingzi, and I went to
the prison.
The giant building was west of the Zijingong.
Anyone who rebelled against the Enchanted Lands was detained here. The warden
showed us to the underground prison.
Shikai Gudo sat on the other side of a cell
that was more tightly secured than the others.
“Ahh,” he said upon seeing us. He sounded
tired. “What a large group. Are you here to laugh at me?”
“Yes. Serves you right.
Let’s take a picture in commemoration,” Vill said.
“Put that camera away! Shikai! We’re here to
ask you a question.” I approached the cell.
Suddenly, the grand chancellor looked beyond
me.
I heard Lingzi gasp. Then I saw something
strange.
Shikai seemed relieved for a moment.
“Na-ha-ha-ha! Looks like Lingzi is doing well!
Thank goodness.”
“…? Are you really glad to see that?”
“What? You doubt me? Why wouldn’t I be glad to
see my ex-fiancée in good health?”
I was convinced. He looked sincerely worried
about her. That honestly shocked me.
“I heard she coughed up a ton of blood, so I
thought she’d kicked the bucket… Anyways, why are you here? Is it about the
riots going on in Jingshi?”
“Y-yeah! Shikai! Don’t tell me you planned
this!”
“Outrageous! Isn’t it obvious that I love the
Enchanted Lands? Why would I destroy its capital by my own hand? Unbelievable.”
“Then…who caused it?”
“Nerzanpi.”
I was startled by the coldness in his voice.
His face was composed, as though he was wearing a mask, yet a mix of hatred and
regret overflowed from his eyes.
“…Nerzanpi? The Minister of Military Secrets?”
Vill asked.
“I was duped. She aided me in running the
Starquake Agency and convinced me she was on my side. Yes, I’ll own up to it—I
was kidnapping people for human experimentation.”
“You bastard!” Meihua scowled. “And you say
you love the Enchanted Lands?! You were only making Immortals suffer!”
“I won’t deny it. However, everything I did
was for the sake of the Enchanted Lands in the long term.”
“Don’t justify your evildoings! Because of
you, so many people—”
“Calm down, Ms. Meihua.
Let’s hear Shikai out first.” Sakuna put a hand on her shoulder.
That cooled her head. “Sorry.” She pursed her
lips.
“I don’t mean to justify my actions, but I
needed to dirty my hands to bring order to the world. And by that, I mean I was
making Baolu at the Starquake Agency.”
“Baolu?”
“We abducted compatible people and used a
special spell on them, sapping them of their willpower and transforming it into
matter. We call that product Baolu. Its appearance is that of a sphere, shining
bright like a star.”
Lingzi and Meihua raised their heads in shock.
I noticed, too. I had just heard that
description.
“The first time I saw a Baolu was when Lady
Nerzanpi offered me one. I felt it was destiny. It was exactly the thing I’d
been looking for since forever. But her offering was not enough. I needed a
purer one. Then she offered to cooperate with me to make more of them! Ahh! She
had a tool to produce Baolu artificially! I accepted the offer. I followed her
instructions and abducted people, locking them up in the Starquake Agency. Then
we turned them into Baolu one after the other.”
“Wait, Grand Chancellor… Why were you making
these Baolu things?”
“The truth is, I’ve been lying this whole
time.” Shikai smiled, so innocently. “I didn’t pursue making Baolu for the
Enchanted Lands. Everything I did was for Lingzi Ailan.”
“What…are you saying?” Lingzi’s voice trembled
as she furrowed her brow.
Indeed. Shikai was a villain trying to take
over the Enchanted Lands. He’d stolen away Lingzi. He’d hurt Meihua in the
Matrimonial War.
“Your Highness, I wanted you to lead a
peaceful life. I mean… It’s not fair that you have to suffer just because you
are the Gongzhu, right? It’s unfathomably cruel.”
“Sh-shut up! Don’t try
to get on her good side with your nonsense!”
“Interpret it that way if you prefer, Meihua
Liang. But I know I am only telling the truth.”
“What was your goal…?” Lingzi asked.
“Simple. To ease your pain even the tiniest
bit I could…I was trying to cure your illness.”
“My illness?” Lingzi staggered. Enduring the
trembling of her body, she grabbed my clothes. “You…you knew about my illness?
And that it couldn’t be cured by the Dark Core?”
“Of course. I have control over the Ailan
dynasty.”
Lingzi blinked in shock.
“Na-ha-ha-ha!” Shikai laughed loudly and
changed the subject. “In essence, I was trying to make the Waidan—the last
ingredient of the elixir of life—for you. I believed the Baolu to be it, and
ran the Starquake Agency to obtain it.”
“Then…why did you hurt my friends? Capture all
my supporters?”
“You are too ignorant of the world. Countless
traitors try to get cozy with the Gongzhu… You don’t know who your subordinates
were? That’s why it all ended like that.”
“What do you mean…?”
“I can name every last person who offered to
become your ally…because I captured them all and turned them into Baolu. They
spilled the beans at the slightest beating. From the safety of their positions,
they engaged bribery, blackmail, and violence on a daily basis. It was a pain
stopping their backdoor deals, I’ll tell you. The Enchanted Lands really was a
corrupt, declining nation. Everyone who approached you with a smile on their
face only saw you as a tool to manipulate for their own ends—a stepping stone
for increasing their renown.”
“But…! You ruined the court! You let things
get undisciplined… You began meetings after noon…”
“It was more convenient for me to hold them
then. I was busy with my duties in the morning.”
“You…you made them build monuments in your
honor…”
“I’ll admit that was a
problem, yes. Those things only embarrass me. But the Immortals genuinely
thought highly of me, from the bottom of their hearts.”
Lingzi’s eyes were wide. My jaw was on the
floor. I would have been unable to believe my eyes if it turned out everything
he said with such a sincere gaze turned out to be lies.
“You don’t know what the citizens want. You
don’t know anything about Jingshi to begin with. Yet you were trapped by your
status and forced to work tirelessly. So, I thought to take your duties as
Gongzhu and Draconic Meteor off your hands—by marrying you.”
“I—I do know what my people want. I’m the next
Tianzi, so of course I…”
“Can you tell me the names of everyone in the
court? Explain each of their policies? The most pressing social issues to
prioritize in the Enchanted Lands? And politics isn’t the only issue. Do you
know the total area and population of the Enchanted Lands? Its birth rate? The
murder rate? There’s no way you know all that.”
“…”
“But that is no crime. You’re the Gongzhu, not
a politician. You can keep admiring flowers and stones like your father. You
won’t suffer that way—that’s what I’ve been saying this entire time.”
Shikai’s words must have hit home for Lingzi,
for tears began to form in her crimson eyes. It must have been so painful for
her to realize that everything she’d done until now was pointless.
I stroked her back while thinking.
Shikai’s intention to save Lingzi was
admirable. And yet. I couldn’t look over many of the things he’d done.
“Lord Shikai Gudo, can this Baolu cure Lady
Lingzi’s illness?” Vill asked.
“Ahh! How tragic reality is. As it happens, a
Baolu is only a clump of willpower. It isn’t the Waidan needed for the elixir.
No matter how many times I tried making the elixir with the Baolu we made, it
never worked out.”
“Then…it was all for
nothing. All those people you sacrificed.”
“‘Nothing’ doesn’t even begin to cover it. In
truth, it made things worse.”
Then the underground prison shook.
Something had exploded on the surface. The
riots were still going on. Were the Seventh Unit guys okay? I had a really bad
feeling about this.
“Lady Nerzanpi claimed Baolu was the Waidan to
convince me to gather the resources for making them. I abducted people for her.
I followed her instructions… But that was foolish of me. She only made the
Baolu for herself and used the hollowed-out people left over like puppets. Her
Core Implosion lets her manipulate people like that. I imagine that’s the
source of the turmoil up there.”
“You haven’t found a way to save Lingzi’s
life, and Nerzanpi plotted to use your misdeeds to carry out even greater
crimes… I see.”
“Unfortunately, yes. I don’t know what her end
goal is. Maybe she wants to take over the Enchanted Lands… Or maybe she wants
to destroy it… There are many possibilities, but none of them can be good. And
it is my fault for not being able to keep her in check.”
It sounded like the worst-case scenario was
happening.
I glanced at the green girl standing beside
me. It was hopeless. I’d come all the way here trying to help her…but I could
do nothing.
“…Grand Chancellor, I understand what you were
trying to do,” Lingzi said, clenching her fists. “I truly am an ignorant
failure of an Immortal. I spent my whole life inside the palace and know
nothing of the world. Still, I have a duty to fulfill as the Gongzhu.”
“Your Highness… Weren’t you listening? I
locked you away to keep you from doing just that. Your illness will only worsen
if you overexert yourself.”
“Still, I am the Gongzhu all the same. I must
stop the Minister of Military Secrets’ rampage.”
“Listen already! You’re gravely ill! And you
think you can stop Nerzanpi? There’s no way. She’s a monster. She can kill a
regular person like you in an instant.”
“Still! I can’t let her
destroy Jingshi!”
“You’re just a kid! Let the adults take care
of that!”
“You couldn’t do anything yourself!”
Shikai flinched, his heart gouged by her
words.
“Which is why I have to do something. I’ll
stop Nerzanpi…and become the Tianzi. Then I’ll find a way to cure my illness on
my own…”
Shikai clicked his tongue and glared at us,
gripping the iron bars tight.
“You shouldn’t be the Tianzi! Leading a
country only wears your spirit out day in and day out.”
“I don’t mind.”
“Do you have the determination I or
Gerr—Madhart had?! Just so you know, your father certainly doesn’t! That is why
he stays home all day playing in his stone garden! And he was passionate at
first! He only wound up like that after experiencing setback after setback! He
should’ve ceded his title from the beginning if he was going to turn slothful
like that! And I can tell a fragile girl like you will only end up the same!
Stop dreaming of things beyond you!”
“Stop it.” I stuck up for Lingzi.
She had tears in her eyes. There is nothing
“beyond you” or “within you” when it comes to dreams. I could not stand to see
someone lay out another person’s life for them based on their own preconceived
notions.
“You underestimate Lingzi. She might be weak
and ill, and ignorant about Jingshi, but she wants to do her best for the sake
of the Enchanted Lands. I will not let you disrespect her feelings.”
“Komari…”
“Besides, she won’t have to do it alone. I’m
here for her.”
“What?” Shikai exclaimed. “What are you
talking about, Terakomari Gandesblood? Are you not a slaughter champion here to
conquer the Enchanted Lands?”
“What’re YOU talking about?! There’s no way
I’d do that!”
“The newspaper said you were going to take
over the world! And you actually blew up the palace! The
vampires from your unit we captured said you’re trying to achieve world
domination! Are you telling me you aren’t plotting to
take over the Enchanted Lands by using Lingzi?!”
“Hey, Vill, what should I say to him?! I can’t
let them ruin my reputation like this!”
“This is convenient. Let’s make the
misunderstanding even worse… Lord Shikai Gudo, Lady Komari is intent on turning
the land of your country into a frying pan in order to cook the greatest omelet
rice in history. Its ketchup will be the blood of your people.”
“Stop making shit up!!”
I didn’t have the time or energy to deal with
the sicko maid.
I had to clear up this misunderstanding… Or
did I?
It didn’t matter what other people thought.
I’d already decided I was going to fight for Lingzi.
“You do what you want to do, Lingzi. I’ll help
you out any way I can.”
“Komari… Thank you. You’re so kind.” She wiped
her tears and smiled.
I wasn’t kind. I just couldn’t stand Shikai or
Nerzanpi.
“…Commander Gandesblood, will you really help
Lingzi?”
“To the best of my ability. That’s why I came
to the Enchanted Lands.”
Shikai glared at me with his jester-like eyes.
Lingzi clung to me in anxiety. After Shikai and I stared each other down for a
few seconds, he sighed in resignation and smiled.
“Do your worst! That little girl’s weaker than
you imagine.”
“You don’t know anything about her.”
“I know everything about her. But I have no
right to say anything after how hard I failed. Take care of her now.”
He bowed meekly.
Shikai may have cared about Lingzi, but it
didn’t change the fact that he made so many people suffer by continuing the
work of the Daydream Paradise. And in my opinion, forcing tragedy upon other
people to fulfill one’s wishes was unforgiveable.
“…Right. You are her fiancée, after all.”
I shot him one last glare before turning heel.
“Let’s go, Lingzi. The officers will take care
of interrogating Shikai.”
“Yes…”
We left the cell. Lingzi seemed worried about
Shikai until the very end. It was only natural. He wasn’t simply her enemy. He
was also the only Immortal besides Meihua to care about her.
“Why was he trying to cure my illness?”
“That’s obvious—to let you grow up and take
advantage of you. He could make the court his if Gongzhu was his puppet.”
“But…it doesn’t feel like that’s the case.”
“Should I kill him to check his brain? That
would solve everything.”
Stop it, Sakuna. Wipe that grin off your face.
And so, filled with trepidation, we walked
through the prison.
Just then, I heard an explosion right above
us. A tremendous shock and quake followed. I protected myself from the dust
falling from the ceiling as I looked up.
“Lady Komari, we just got a report from
Captain Mellaconcey. It seems the rioters have begun attacking the prison.”
“…What? Why?”
“It must be because this is a government
building. Minister of Military Secrets Nerzanpi Rocha has also issued an
official statement: If you don’t tell me the location of the
Dark Core, I will be destroying the main bases of the Ailan dynasty one by one.
So she really is behind the riots.”
“She’s… after the Dark Core?” Lingzi asked,
holding her hand up to her chest in worry.
“It seems so,” Vill replied. “She is
threatening the Tianzi for it.”
Every scoundrel was after the Dark Core.
Inverse Moon alone was enough… Or could it be that Nerzanpi was also working
for Spica? Somehow, I doubted it. It felt more like Nerzanpi was a star in the
darkness to Spica’s moon.
Meihua clicked her
tongue and yelled:
“Let’s move! We gotta get to Nerzanpi ASAP!”
“R-right! We’ll die if we stay here anyways!
Let’s make a break for—”
The moment I tried running, the ceiling
exploded. Or rather, collapsed.
I could only scream. Am I
gonna die? I thought, but Vill tackled me, holding me tight as we rolled
across the floor. I tried to keep the salad I’d had for lunch in my stomach as
I looked ahead.
“Die, Terakomari Gandesblooood!”
A bunch of men were charging at us, swords in
hand.
Huh? Why are these guys
here? Does Nerzanpi want me dead? As I wallowed in
despair, Vill threw kunais at them. The blades plunged into their arms,
spraying fresh blood everywhere.
“Lady Memoir!”
“Yes.”
Sakuna waved her staff immediately. Her white
mana turned to ice and shot at the attackers. They froze over without
resistance.
I shivered in the cold. Vill noticed and
clutched me tighter to warm me up… But she wasn’t acting out of pure kindness—Stop groping me, you sicko!
“Let me go! Thanks for saving me, though! But
why are they after me?!”
“It’s an inescapable truth that people will
come after your life… But I don’t know what Nerzanpi is planning.”
“Are these people the puppets the grand
chancellor mentioned? I can’t see vitality in their eyes.” Meihua stared
curiously at the ice statues.
Sure enough, they didn’t look alive. They also
had a star-shaped scar on their foreheads. Maybe that signified they had fallen
under Nerzanpi’s control. So then, Monique…?
“Lady Komari! A second wave’s coming!”
“Wha? Gweh?!” I shrieked as Vill pulled me by
the collar.
Hostile murderers fell from the wrecked
ceiling one after the other. They glared at me like they wanted to kill me. But
why? The next moment, they started throwing grenades at
me. One just barely grazed my cheek and exploded behind me. Why?!
“Ms. Villhaze! I don’t have access to the Dark
Core’s supply of mana! There’s a limit to my freezing magic! We should
withdraw!”
“I understand. Excuse me, Lady Komari.”
“Huh? Whoa, Vill, don’t carry me like that!
You’re embarrassing me!”
“Should I give you a bridal carry, then?”
“That won’t help!”
Vill ignored my screams and ran away.
I heard screams and spells flying from behind.
I was trembling. I could die any second. But I couldn’t whine.
I glanced at my side. Meihua was also
bridal-carrying Lingzi, and my eyes met hers.
We looked away awkwardly. Still, I decided to
do my best for her. I had to speak with Nerzanpi, at the very least.
![]()
“This is an
announcement from Minister of Military Secrets Nerzanpi Rocha. The riots are a
result of His Majesty the Tianzi’s failings. A revolution is coming. This is
fate. Hand over the right to be Tianzi to Lady Nerzanpi—give her the right to
the Dark Core. The riots will continue until this is done.”
The voice of Nerzanpi’s subordinate echoed
from speakers all over Jingshi.
“A band of miscreants is attempting to stop the
revolution—Gongzhu Lingzi Ailan and Crimson Lord Terakomari Gandesblood’s
clique. We have placed a bounty on their heads. Citizens, we ask you to kill
them on sight or report their locations. I repeat…”
“What the hell?! This is beyond outrageous!!”
Prohellya Butchersky yelled.
She was on a bridge connecting some high-rise
buildings, crossing her arms. Beside her was catgirl commander Leona Flatt.
“I don’t know what’s
going on anymore. Why did this Nerzanpi woman do this? For starters, does she
have the power to do all this?”
“First, because she’s after the Dark Core.
Second, she has the power to manipulate other people. Look at the rioters.
They’re not doing this out of their own volition. Something has been planted
inside them where their souls should be.”
“How can you tell?”
“That much is obvious from their hollow
expressions. Their willpower is being manipulated from the outside. It’s
probably a worse version of Monique Claire’s etiolation.”
Prohellya observed Jingshi, gun in hand.
Quelling this much chaos by herself would be impossible. The only way to stop
it would be killing Nerzanpi.
The problem was she only sent instructions to
her subordinates while in hiding.
Pitolina was running around looking for her,
but she hadn’t found even the slightest lead so far.
Prohellya and Leona couldn’t afford to act
recklessly.
The Enchanted Lands’ Tianzi had asked all
other national leaders not to interfere with the riots, as it was an internal
problem. He even went so far as to say he would mobilize the army in
retaliation if anyone tried. Prohellya had no idea what he was thinking;
perhaps Nerzanpi had threatened him to say so.
“Darn General Secretary…so upright in the
worst places. At this rate, the Minister of Military Secrets will be able to do
whatever she wants.”
“Lapelico’s king also told me to stay out of
this. Although I don’t think he has anything in mind—it’s just that he doesn’t
care……………… Hmm??” Leona went rigid, her eyes widening.
“What is it?” Prohellya asked, but received no
answer. She waved in Leona’s face, and nothing; she danced a kozachok
in midair, and nothing. The catgirl just kept staring blankly.
“Did the airwaves hack
your brain? Your hair’s on end, and your tail’s getting thicker.”
“No… That’s not it… Sister?”
“Sister?” Prohellya followed her gaze.
She was looking at a bank managed by the
Enchanted Lands government. Its ceiling was blown apart.
There, Prohellya saw two familiar faces.
“Thio!! The money!! Grab all the money!!”
“Yahoo!! Now I don’t have to work for the rest
of my liiife!!”
“Hold it!! We’re using all of this to fund Six
Nations News!!”
“Look at this, Ms. Melka!! There’s a heap of
treasure behind this frame!! You can’t get anything past me, punks! I can sniff
out a single speck of gold in the middle of a desert in one second flat!! Hand
over all the money, or I’ll gouge your eyes out!!”
“Good job, Thio!! You were born to be a
thief!! I’ll allow you to keep that as a side gig!!”
………
…
“My sister’s turned to a life of crime?!”
“No, relax. She’s being manipulated, too.
Probably. I think.”
“But I can’t let her keep going like that!
Gosh, what a troublemaker my sister is!”
Leona jumped off the bridge, descending toward
the bank with meteoric speed.
Prohellya sighed and followed with levitation
magic.
“Yahoo!! Hand over everything, down to the
very last pennyyy!”
“Stop making trouble!!”
“Gweh?!”
Leona came up to the catgirl—who was armed
with a hatchet—and stopped her rampage by landing a dropkick on the side of her
face. Thio flew away like a billiard ball and smashed into the wall, losing
consciousness immediately. Her eyes swirled as she lay there.
“Thio?! Who’s the scoundrel trying to stop our
robber—IEGH!”
Prohellya subdued the
Sapphire with a karate chop.
Quiet returned before the civilians trembling
by the walls cheered, “Commander Butchersky!” “She’s come to save us!” Applause
enveloped the bank. All right, let’s enjoy this for a bit.
“Wah-ha-ha-ha! You have nothing to fear, for
I, Commander Prohellya Butchersky, am here! You can go back home and rest easy,
regular citizens!”
“No, they can’t!” Leona bopped Prohellya
across the head and stood there in discontent. “Is this really Nerzanpi’s
doing? I could see this just happening.”
“You have zero trust in your sister, huh? But
look, the journalists have star marks on their chests.” Prohellya tore apart
Melka’s clothes to show Leona. “I am guessing this is the mark of etiolation,
as Monique Claire had a similar one, too.”
“Who’s Monique Claire?”
“Don’t worry about it. You only need to know
that this star mark is proof those two were under Nerzanpi’s control. She stole
their willpower and ordered them around.”
Leona tilted her head, a question mark popping
above it.
But soon, she accepted it. Her eyes gleamed
sharp as she exclaimed, “So we just need to take Nerzanpi down!” Indeed, it was
that simple.
That got Prohellya thinking. Where was
Nerzanpi’s next target, Terakomari Gandesblood?
![]()
Something was making
her nose tingle. It smelled like the medicine Lieutenant Villhaze sometimes
made. Then she realized she was in bed. She squirmed and felt a sharp pain in
her chest.
Finally, Esther Claire woke up.
Her uniform and underwear had been taken off.
In their place were bandages around her injuries. What was going on? Why was
she in such a state?
“What…happened…?”
“Hmm. You barely
managed to avoid taking a one-way trip to heaven.”
Esther turned to her side in shock. There was
an Immortal with her hair in buns standing next to her. Esther practically
leaped out of her bed.
“Dr. Kuya?! What’re you doi—Ow!”
“Simmer down. You’re going to open your wounds.”
Dr. Kuya sighed and pushed her down.
She didn’t seem hostile. In fact, she seemed
worried.
“It’s good to see you’re okay,” she said to
the flustered vampire. “You were in a horrible state. You’d be dead if it
weren’t for me.”
“Um… Thank you…?”
“I’m sure there’s a lot you wanna say. Just
calm down first.”
Dr. Kuya made her lie down. Esther stared at
her with conflicted emotions.
This was the woman who’d made her sister
Monique suffer. She had been missing ever since Commander Komarin blew her
away—so she ran off to the Enchanted Lands?
“That gunshot wound is clue enough. Minister
of Military Secrets Nerzanpi Rocha did you in, didn’t she? Not that I need to
ask; I was watching. It was awful.”
Esther’s memories were hazy.
“Want some water?” Dr. Kuya offered. Esther
accepted gratefully. Only after taking a sip did it occur to her that the
beverage could be poisoned. But she dismissed the idea right away. Dr. Kuya
wouldn’t have helped her if she wanted her dead.
“Back on topic. Nerzanpi shot you and threw
you into a garbage dump. I was shocked, really. Didn’t think she’d shoot
someone in the middle of the day. I pulled you out the moment she left and
brought you here.”
“And…where are we?”
Esther looked around. It looked like she was
in a small hospital room, full of a vast number of
books. The walls were lined with texts on medicine and plants and other things
she didn’t understand.
“This is my hideout. We’re under the eastern
section of Jingshi.”
Dr. Kuya pulled out a chair and sat down. She crossed
her legs, her expression serious.
“The bullet pierced your body, but it missed
your vitals. The Baolu she shot you with was pure willpower, not matter. It
won’t leave shrapnel behind, so you don’t need to worry about that.”
“What…?”
“Basically, treating you wasn’t hard. You were
unbelievably lucky.”
“Sorry if I’m just being ignorant,
but…couldn’t you have taken me to the Dark Core Zone?”
“Nerzanpi’s gun is a Divine Instrument. The
Dark Core couldn’t have helped you.”
Esther gasped. She really had been on death’s
door.
Either way, this woman had saved her. There
was no doubt about that, at least.
“Um, Dr. Kuya… Thank you for saving me, but…
Why? After all you did to Monique.”
“I am really sorry about that. I am a doctor;
I’m supposed to help the weak.”
Dr. Kuya chuckled self-derisively, then bowed
earnestly. Esther stared at her hair buns and thought, Did
she have a change of heart? Or is she not a bad person at her core to begin
with?
“Nerzanpi ordered me to conduct experiments on
Monique to reveal the workings of willpower. I followed her instructions and
made Monique suffer…until Commander Gandesblood told me off. I figured I should
change my ways.”
“…”
“I know it’s hard to believe. You can punch me
if it makes you feel better.”
Esther couldn’t chastise her.
It was too much to keep up with. She didn’t
have the energy to punch Dr. Kuya. And most importantly,
the woman had given her a sincere apology. And saved her. Esther thought it was
best to put her feelings aside for now.
“…I must do my job. Could you tell me what
Minister Nerzanpi is scheming? What happened to President Cunningham, and what
is going on in Jingshi?”
“Very well. I can’t let Nerzanpi get away with
this, either.”
Dr. Kuya looked up at the ceiling.
“She’s after the Dark Core. Her underlings are
rioting in Jingshi as we speak.”
The mana lamps on the ceiling swung.
Intermittent explosions went off in the distance.
“Her underlings have been tasked with killing
Terakomari Gandesblood. That vampire is trying to stop Nerzanpi.”
“…!”
It was then that Esther was finally hit with a
wave of anxiety.
She couldn’t stay in bed. She had to go to
Commander Komarin. She reached for her uniform on a hanger.
“Esther! You need to rest!”
“No! I can’t! I have work to do! I need to
find the Commander…and defeat Nerzanpi! I have to help President Cunningham!”
“You’ll waste my efforts if you reopen your
wounds! Besides, Nerzanpi disappeared! No one knows where she is!”
Esther understood Dr. Kuya’s points, but she
couldn’t just obey her.
She was fumbling pulling her uniform on when
Dr. Kuya threatened her: “I’m gonna paralyze you if you keep trying!”
Then a piece of paper fell out of her pocket.
“?”
Esther grabbed it on reflex. On it was some
text that read:
We’ll settle things at Death Dragon Cave.
“What is this?” Dr. Kuya looked at it in
suspicion. “A note of sorts? Death Dragon Cave is the Tianzi family grave on
the outskirts of Jingshi.”
Suddenly, Esther
remembered. She’d picked up that note in the Starquake Agency.
More memories came back to her. She’d seen
this handwriting before. Characters like stick figures doing gymnastics. Right.
She saw that same handwriting when she went to the Tianzhu Hall with Commander
Komarin.
“I think…this is a message…from the Minister
of Military Secrets…”
“What…?”
Dr. Kuya’s face twisted in shock as she
grabbed the note. She read the trace of mana on it and clicked her tongue.
“You’re right—this is Nerzanpi’s! Did she mean
to give it to a colleague?”
“They were meeting there? Or is the Death
Dragon Cave their hideout…?”
“No idea but it might be worth checking out.”
“Let’s go. Now.”
“I just told you to stay—Hey!”
Esther ignored Dr. Kuya and stood up.
It felt like her organs were going to give
out, but that was nothing compared to the rigorous training she’d undergone at
the Mulnite Military Academy.
I’ll be there, Commander Komarin.
Esther gritted her teeth and left Dr. Kuya’s
hideout.
But then she remembered she was half naked and
hurried back inside, her face burning.
(Going back a little)
Nerzanpi Rocha stood
before His Majesty the Tianzi.
He was as ordinary as ordinary came.
He had no interest in politics. He didn’t care
about who his daughter would marry. He spent his days inside the palace,
running away from reality. It was laughable to think he was the head of state.
The Enchanted Lands was in a precarious
position without Shikai Gudo.
The Tianzi was
incompetent. His successor, Lingzi Ailan, was a weak idealist.
The Enchanted Lands was as good as over. And
its demise would come even sooner once deprived of its Dark Core. It seemed
like the Immortals’ country would be the first of the six nations to fall. Once
Nerzanpi got rid of Terakomari Gandesblood, no one would be able to stop her.
“Now, Your Majesty. Tell me where the Dark
Core is.”
The Tianzi trembled on his luxury chair.
No one was coming to rescue him. Nerzanpi had
already done away with everyone.
The man’s eyes wandered like a lost child’s as
he twiddled his thumbs.
“What are you talking about, Minister of
Military Secrets? Why are you confining me here?”
“You’re still playing dumb? Don’t tell me that
you’re too stupid to realize what trouble you’re in.”
“I have no idea what you mean. Are you
incapable of listening to the Tianzi’s command, traitor? I’ll have my personal
guard arrest you right away.”
“Your personal guard is dead. By my hand.”
“Don’t jest. I have a poetry presentation
coming soon…”
“Are you not interested in what is happening
in Jingshi? The hardships the Immortals are going through as we speak?”
“The commanders will stop the riots. There’s
nothing for me to do.”
The Tianzi had no idea where these commanders
were now.
The First Unit’s commander had escaped with
Terakomari Gandesblood. The Second Unit’s commander was stalled in the Dark
Core Zone. The Third Unit’s commander had been arrested under suspicion of
aiding Shikai—who the Tianzi himself had power over.
“Stop this foolishness and release me. I will
turn a blind eye to this if you do.”
Nerzanpi approached the Tianzi.
He looked up at her with idle eyes. She
pressed her lit cigarette on his forehead. He screamed
and fell off his chair, crying “It burns!” as he crawled on the floor. An
overreaction to something the Dark Core would heal.
“I see you’re not used to the pain. Naturally,
considering you’ve spent your life in this walled garden. You are not fit to be
ruler. Your self-indulgence allowed miscreants like me to run rampant.”
“Wh-wh-wha…?”
“A ruler who doesn’t know the pain of his
citizens has no value. Your only worth is your knowledge of the Dark Core’s
location.”
“I… I…” The Tianzi shivered as if in the
middle of a blizzard.
He stood up, holding his forehead. The Dark
Core had healed his burn.
“I…I know the pain of my citizens…”
Nerzanpi found this odd.
He wasn’t begging for his life, much less
telling her where the Dark Core was. What was he yapping about now?
“I don’t live like this because I want to…
Once, I wanted to be a ruler to go down in the history books…but I couldn’t.
They say a gentleman is not a tool of limited uses…but I was limited and a tool. I worked fervently after I succeeded my
father…but I could not bear it. I couldn’t stomach the reality of people
turning miserable with the slightest change of policy. By bringing one person
fortune, I brought another misfortune. And they filed grievances against me…
Some even plotted regicide…”
“I see. But only the people who can bear that
pain are fit to rule a country.”
“Which is why I’m saying I can’t! So I had no
choice but to shut myself in! I don’t want to hurt anyone! I don’t want to get
hurt myself! I can hide away and indulge in my hobbies, and that’s enough for
me! I didn’t want to be Tianzi! I’m not worth it!”
Bang. Nerzanpi pulled the trigger.
Her Baolu bullet pierced the Tianzi’s shoulder
at an imperceptible speed. He was blown back, blood spurting from his body. The
Dark Core wouldn’t be healing this wound. The Tianzi howled and drooled like a
wild beast. The pain was so strong he couldn’t speak coherently.
“No surprise here.
You’re as weak as I figured. I wonder if Nelia Cunningham would turn out like
this if I exacerbated her symptoms.”
“A… Aaa… Aaahh…”
“If you don’t want to die, then tell me where
the Dark Core is. You don’t like getting hurt, do you?”
She pushed the muzzle of her gun to the
Tianzi’s temple. He wriggled like a child throwing a tantrum, all rationality
gone. Did I overdo it? Nerzanpi lamented internally
before kicking the side of his head.
“I’ll give you some time. Ten seconds.”
His eyes trembled like an animal’s. Once she
said “eight,” he began talking in between sobs.
“Th-the Dark…Core…”
“Yes? Speak up, I can’t hear you.”
“There…is…no Dark Core in the Enchanted
Lands…”
She was taken aback.
“What? What do you mean?”
“Just what I said. It doesn’t exist. There is
no Dark Core…in the Enchanted Lands.”
“…”
He was dead serious. He’d have to be a master
actor to be lying about this.
There wasn’t much time left. She had stopped
the other countries from interfering by sending a message in the name of the
Tianzi, but if she didn’t wrap this up quickly, the Aruka Republic or the
Mulnite Empire would send their troops.
There was simply no way the Enchanted Lands
didn’t have a Dark Core. What was he talking about?
Nerzanpi lit a new cigarette and mulled this
over in silence.
![]()
The surface was filled
with dread, too.
The first things to receive us after leaving
the prison were unthinking puppets.
“Die, Terakomari
Gandesbloooood!!”
“Why are they after me?!”
Puff. A wall of smoke went up.
Vill had thrown a smoke bomb as she ran across
Jingshi, carrying me bridal-style. Spells were flying every which way. The
Tianzhu Hall, which was undergoing repairs, was blown up again. I’m sorry for all the trouble I’ve caused you guys.
“Oh no. Now the Seventh Unit is rioting, too.”
“Why?!”
“The idiots on the special team said it wasn’t
fair that the enemy got to rampage but they didn’t. They’re pillaging the
palace while killing the rioters.”
The members of the Seventh Unit just marched
to the beat of a different drum, huh.
But where was Esther? How I wished she’d take
my place as Crimson Lord… The next moment, I saw her reddish-brown hair below a
public bath signboard. She was tottering on her feet. Her clothes were covered
in blood. “Commander!” she yelled out tearily after she noticed me.
“Esther?! You’re all right?!”
“Yes…! Thanks to Dr. Kuya…”
I stared in shock at the woman standing beside
Esther, whose hair was done up in buns. It was the Immortal I’d accidentally
blown away at the Crimson Snow Hut.
“It’s been a while.” She crossed her arms and
frowned awkwardly. “Glad to see you’re well, Commander Komarin. Too well, I
would say, actually.”
“Watch out, Lady Komari! Shove your head into
my clothes and sniff my breast to hide from the enemy!”
“Do you think I’m a breast ostrich or
something?! I’m not sniffing any part of you!”
“DIE, TERAKOMARI GANDESBLOOD!!”
Another Immortal charged at me from behind.
Fortunately, Sakuna
pierced the dude with an ice pillar.
This wasn’t the time to clown around. We had
to move on, or I would actually die for real.
“Esther…what happened? Where were you? And
what’s with those injuries?”
“The Minister of Military Secrets shot me. Dr.
Kuya healed my wounds… And…at the Starquake Agency… President Cunningham…!”
“Calm down, Esther. I’m here now. It’s okay.”
“Commander…!”
Tears welled up in her eyes, which she wiped
away with her sleeve before putting on a serious face. She took a deep breath
and gave a military salute.
“Allow me to deliver my report… We
successfully infiltrated the Starquake Agency and exposed the grand
chancellor’s secrets, just as planned. It played out exactly as you saw on the
Six Nations News’ broadcast. But after that…we were caught by surprise and
defeated.”
“What?! Where’s Nelia?!”
“President Cunningham, Commander Rainsworth,
and the two journalists were captured. It was all a trap laid by the Minister
of Military Secrets. I did as the President ordered and escaped, just barely
clinging to dear life…but I ran into the Minister on my way to the palace. She
shot me and took me out. I’m sorry.” Esther bowed.
There was nothing she needed to apologize for.
I couldn’t believe her report. There should have been no way Nelia would get
caught off guard like that… But sure enough, we couldn’t get in contact with
her.
More importantly, however…
“Are you okay?! What about the gunshot?! Your
clothes are drenched in blood!”
“I healed her already. Don’t worry,” Dr. Kuya
said, her expression tense. “She would have died if no one found her, since her
wounds were from a Divine Instrument, but I was born to treat patients like
her. As long as Esther gets some rest, she’ll make a full recovery.”
“There won’t be any
aftereffects? She’ll be okay?”
“Yes. More importantly… Uh…”
Dr. Kuya trailed off. She seemed to be pretty
scared of me. Or rather…nervous? Anyway.
“Thanks for saving Esther!” I told her.
“Huh? Y-yeah…,” she responded.
“Despite everything that happened with
Monique…I’m glad you saved her big sister. And I’m glad you’re okay, too. I was
worried about you after I blew you away… I overdid it… Sorry.”
“…Huh? Yeah… I am a doctor, after all. Of
course I’d be fine.”
“Thank you, really. You’re an amazing doctor.”
Dr. Kuya looked like she was seeing things.
She turned away for some reason and wiped her eyes before speaking hoarsely:
“No, I’m not amazing. I hurt the people I
should’ve been helping after I was tempted by Nerzanpi… I should be dead, yet
here I am. I don’t know why the heavens still keep me alive.”
“Now’s not the time to be sentimental, Lady
Dr. Kuya,” Vill said, rolling her eyes. “Getting back on topic, Minister of
Military Secrets Nerzanpi Rocha was behind everything, correct? And this
madness will stop if we butcher her?”
“Probably…but I don’t know where she is,” said
Dr. Kuya.
“I just got a message from Captain
Mellaconcey. It seems the Starquake Agency was blown to bits, too. Getting rid
of the evidence…? Now we have no trail to follow,” said Vill.
Was Nelia okay, though? Hadn’t she been
subdued there?
Knowing her, we shouldn’t have to worry… But I
couldn’t help but feel as though my heart was being torn apart. We had to find
Nerzanpi ASAP.
“I think I know…where she is,” Esther said,
frowning in pain. “Death Dragon Cave. I found a note saying We’ll
settle things there.”
“Death Dragon Cave? That’s the name of the
Tianzi family grave,” Meihua said, coming back from repelling the attackers.
Lingzi raised her head
sharply.
“There’s this tradition of revering the
mausoleum of the past dynasty when a new one begins. Nerzanpi is serious about
ending the Ailan dynasty…”
“Let’s go, then. I will accompany you,
Comman—” The moment Esther stepped forward, she crouched down and clutched her
chest.
I ran up to her, worried. She was pale. She
really had to rest.
“I’m sorry, Commander… A little pain won’t
stop me…”
“Stop! Don’t do this! You wait here with Dr.
Kuya!”
“But…”
“Don’t worry. I will take care of everything.”
My assertion was baseless, but as her
superior, I had put on a brave face. That’s what I’d done up to now. Esther
spaced out for a moment before tearing up and saluting me with an “It’s in your
hands, Commander.”
I replied with a smile and ran away again—or
rather, Vill ran away with me in her arms.
Making a fool of myself after bluffing was an
everyday thing at this point, so I didn’t care.
The only thing on my mind was stopping
Nerzanpi.
![]()
“Dr. Kuya! Take care of
Esther!” the crimson commander said before leaving.
That girl really had no sense of
self-preservation. Dr. Kuya was her enemy. The evil woman who’d made Monique
Claire suffer so much.
“Thank you, really. You’re an amazing doctor.”
Her earnest smile had moved Doctor Kuya.
“Terakomari Gandesblood…”
Nerzanpi had killed Dr. Kuya in Frezier. And
yet, here she was, alive and well. Someone had saved her back then. Though her
memory of it was foggy, she recalled a voice amid the blizzard.
“You cannot die here. The
Goddess’s foresight can’t be used now, but you have a skill like no other. Your
medical abilities will be of great help to her.”
She felt like she had heard that voice before.
Perhaps it was a dream. It had felt like the
heavens were telling her to live.
Either way, Dr. Kuya had indeed aided
Terakomari Gandesblood with her skills. Perhaps it was fate. It had been years
since the last time she felt such joy.
“Dr. Kuya, I want to sneak after the
Commander…”
“No. Go back to bed.”
“But…! I can’t be the only one resting! I’d be
a failure of a soldier!”
“A good soldier rests when she has to.”
She pulled Esther back into the room while the
girl demanded to go back to work.
A doctor’s job was to heal her patients.
Saving the world was best left to the heroes—so thought Dr. Kuya while tying
her patient to the bed.
![]()
She was in the middle
of endless fog.
Her surroundings were blurry. There was no
light wherever she went. The golden mana inside her had disappeared, along with
the bright memories of having saved the world.
Everything that made her her
was fading away. Only insults remained.
You’re not worthy of being president. It was
Terakomari who defeated Madhart. You did nothing. You have no talent. Your
policies are useless. Madhart was better. You don’t care about your citizens.
My family is in shambles because of you. Resign. Apologize. Die.
Her heart’s defenses had been lifted.
The delirious insults stabbed her chest like
knives, but she felt no pain. Even her ability to feel that had been taken
away.
She couldn’t think. She had things to do, but
she couldn’t act.
After walking endlessly through the fog, she
finally saw light.
A faint glow, like a star in the darkness.
She reached out for salvation. Then someone
punched her head. She turned midair before falling to the ground. She let the
sharp pain wash over her as an angry voice yelled:
“Don’t act on your own, puppet.”
She was pulled up by her hair.
A malignant whisper in her ear:
“Now go. You will kill Terakomari
Gandesblood.”
She had no sense of right and wrong. She
didn’t know what she should do.
So, in the middle of the fog, in her addled
mind, she thought: Obey the voice.
![]()
The mausoleum was on
the border of Jingshi.
The guards had rushed to the city proper to
quell the riots. A giant, wide-open hole in the ground awaited us. A massive
chasm.
Step by step, I carefully descended the spiral
staircase on the wall. I looked below but couldn’t see anything in the
pitch-darkness. Maybe there was a magical barrier in place that prevented
people from looking in from the outside.
“…Have you been here, Lingzi?”
“No, I don’t think so.”
“This is a grave, after all. Revering the
ancestors is the Tianzi’s job, not the Gongzhu’s,” Meihua added.
Apparently, they buried everyone in the
Tianzi’s family here. Lingzi’s ancestors lay inside this hole. I felt like we’d
get cursed entering here without permission.
An eerie gale blew from within the darkness,
like breath from the underworld.
After walking for a
while, we passed through a sort of thin film. An instant later, my sight was
restored. There really was a barrier in place.
Before us lay an underground ruin.
A circular space with walls decorated brightly
and with vibrant colors. Tons of doors everywhere. It was like we were in Death
Dragon Cave’s terminal.
“Wow. Are the corpses behind the doors?”
Sakuna looked around with curiosity, her voice oddly cheery.
You into this sorta thing?
“I don’t know the structure of this place, but
I would guess so, logically speaking. The Tianzi from six hundred years ago,
seven generations of the Ailan dynasty, must lie there,” Meihua said.
“How exciting! Would it be wrong if I took a
peek inside their coffins?”
Of course it would! What are
you saying?! I retorted internally to Sakuna’s
twisted comments while walking down the center of the hall.
Nerzanpi was nowhere to be found. I looked up
and saw that the sky had turned dusk-red. The riots were still going on in
Jingshi—you could hear the screams and explosions if you paid enough attention.
Then I noticed Lingzi staring at a point on
the wall. Her expression was indecipherable, like a mix of despair and
resignation.
“What are you looking at?”
“…Oh, nothing.”
She was gazing at a door that was plainer than
the rest. I checked the plate above it, which read, HISTORIC DANSHOUZHI MAUSOLEUM. No idea what that meant.
“Komari… I…,” Lingzi said hesitantly. “Can I
really become the Tianzi? Would I be capable enough?”
“I know you can do it.”
“…Of course. Yeah,” she said, half to herself.
I knew she would be fine. Lingzi was gravely
ill, but there was still hope we could cure her. We just had to look for a
treatment together.
Just then, one of the
doors opened with a thud.
Everyone turned around in shock. I was sure
one of the corpses inside had woken up, but no.
I recognized the people who revealed
themselves.
“Nelia?! And Gertrude…!”
Nelia Cunningham and Gertrude Rainsworth.
The pair who’d gone missing at the Starquake
Agency approached us in silence.
“Hmm?” Vill furrowed her brow, but I paid her
no heed and walked toward them. Nelia was fine! How could I not be happy?
“Nelia! Thank goodness! You oka—”
“Lady Komari, get back!!”
I heard something slash through the air. I
tried approaching Nelia, but I couldn’t anymore. Vill had pushed me aside. C’mon, you’re usually more discerning of the time to be a pervert.
Before I could tell her that, however, I felt
something gooey.
Blood was spurting from Vill’s belly above me.
“Huh? Vill…?”
“Ms. Komari!” yelled Sakuna.
Ice shards shot from her staff at Nelia and
Gertrude. The duo silently jumped into the air to dodge the attack.
What was going on? Next thing I knew, Sakuna
was standing on guard in front of me—glaring at Nelia and Gertrude.
I finally realized there was something wrong
with them. The light in their eyes was gone. Usually, they shone like jewels
overflowing with strong will, but now they were murky. Neither girl seemed to
recognize us.
Not to mention Nelia’s twin blades. They were
stained red.
What? No way…
“Ugh… Gegh. Lady Komari…”
“Vill?! You okay?!”
“I-I’m fine. Just… The puppets in the city had
eyes like these… They must be…under Nerzanpi’s control…” Vill panted, pale in
the face.
I looked at Nelia in
shock. Vill was right. Otherwise, they would have no reason to attack us. Vill
shouldn’t have gotten hurt like this. I had to help her somehow. But I didn’t
have the Dark Core to help her. She’d die unless I took her to Dr. Kuya or the
Dark Core Zone.
“The time has finally come, Terakomari
Gandesblood.”
Someone emerged from the shadows. A tall
Warblade in military uniform. I had no memory of her face, but I immediately
knew, from the evil air about her, that she was Nerzanpi’s peer.
“A Warblade?! Are you in cahoots with the
Minister of Military Secrets?!” Meihua yelled.
“She’s in cahoots with me. I was only using
her.”
The woman came up to us slowly, stopping
beside the husk of Nelia.
Then she hit Nelia with the back of her hand
right on the face. Her small body blew back from the force of the woman’s blow.
I shrieked.
“Wh-what are you doing?! Are you okay,
Nelia?!”
She didn’t answer, only staggered up and
returned to her place. Like a puppet. Upon seeing her vacant expression as
blood dripped from her nose, I was sure of it—she and Gertrude were being
manipulated.
“Lady Komari… Be careful. That’s former
Illustrious General Mary Fragment.”
Vill took an ointment case out of her pocket
and opened it.
Her wound was bad. A bit of medicine wouldn’t
do anything.
Mary Fragment grabbed Nelia’s shoulders as she
glared at me.
“The maid is right. I am one of Gerra-Aruka’s
Eight Illustrious Generals. One of the Warblades who lost pathetically to you
and this brat.”
“And what do you want now?!”
“Isn’t it obvious?” Mary exuded hostility from
every pore. “Vengeance. I helped with Nerzanpi’s experiments so I could get my
revenge on you.”
“What’re you talking
about…? Where’s Nerzanpi?”
“Not here. She called you here so I could end
you. And you fell for it.”
“Ms. Komari, that thing Ms. Esther had…,”
Sakuna said.
Yes, the note Esther picked up. Maybe she knew
she’d survive. All to lead us here.
I clenched my fist in chagrin. But…no. It was
good that we’d fallen for the trap. We wouldn’t have been reunited with Nelia
otherwise.
“Mary Fragment… Give those two back. I’ll
forgive you if you do.”
Mary snorted.
“Are you stupid? Forgive me? Who do you think
you are?”
“The slaughter champion! Now let them go, or
I’ll butcher you! You’ll be dead in one second! Got it?!”
I couldn’t stop trembling. She must’ve known
how my Core Implosion worked, and what my weak points were. Otherwise, she
wouldn’t have shown herself here like this.
“You really are stupid. I get sick just
looking at you.”
“Hah? What do you mean?”
“You truly believe that you’re acting in the
name of justice. The nerve! You smashed Madhart’s administration with your
golden sword, but do you have any idea how many people suffered because of it?”
“I fought alongside Nelia because
so many people were suffering!”
“No! More people suffered thanks to you
destroying Gerra-Aruka! The people I was close to all fell apart after losing
their power… They all died!”
“Wha…?”
“Ms. Komari, look out!”
Nelia turned around and attacked me.
Her twin blades and Sakuna’s staff clashed in
a burst of sparks.
I nearly fell on my butt pushed back by the
pressure. There was no warmth in Nelia’s eyes, but no hostility, either—she was
just cold like a machine. The Nelia I knew would have never looked like that.
“Whoa?!”
Gertrude slashed with her longsword, but
Lingzi and Meihua just barely blocked it. I felt so sorry. Meihua aside, how
could I let sick Lingzi defend me?
“Your Blood Curse’s only weak point is your
naïveté. You cannot use your power against your friends… Nelia Cunningham! Kill
her already!”
“You…! That’s unfair… You coward!”
“You were unfair first! There is nothing more
wicked than false justice! So many people suffered because of you! Don’t you
feel any guilt?!”
“I… I…”
“And you’re doing the same thing again! You’re
trying to destroy the order in the Enchanted Lands! Was destroying Gerra-Aruka
not enough for you?! You don’t even think about how many people will die
because of your actions!”
“But…! I can’t let Nerzanpi go free!”
“Nelia Cunningham couldn’t cope with the
guilt! That’s how she ended up like that!”
I looked at Nelia with shock.
She was exchanging blows with Sakuna. The
trails of her shining twin swords clashed with the ice shards, whipping up a
storm. Nelia moved as though dancing, and I couldn’t possibly guess what was on
her mind. Still, I could feel a deep despair beyond her eyes.
“Many people in Aruka hold a grudge against
that brat. Popularity polls don’t matter. This all happened because you and her
started that selfish, violent revolution. She regretted the tragedy brought
about by her rise to power, and that’s how she became my puppet.”
Nelia shot a series of razor spells. Countless
slashes rushed toward Sakuna.
I watched their fight with my mouth agape.
Dr. Kuya had said something similar back at the
Crimson Snow Hut: “Have you ever given a thought to
those who were driven to ruin under your fists of justice?”
Nerzanpi and Mary had wormed their way through
the opening in Nelia’s heart.
“It’s obvious the same thing will happen in
the Enchanted Lands. The riots will stop if Lingzi Ailan becomes Tianzi…but
what will happen to those who followed Shikai Gudo? What about those who
obtained peace under his policies? Nerzanpi says that Lingzi is weak. That
she’ll end up like her father, a shut-in who couldn’t cope with the guilt.”
“Guh…?!” Sakuna failed to block Nelia’s next
attack.
Nelia’s twin blades dug into her shoulders,
drawing blood. I watched on in silent despair as Sakuna fell to the ground.
Nelia ignored her and slowly approached me. I trembled as her hollow eyes
trained on me.
“Terakomari Gandesblood, I hear you’re revered
as the hero who will change the world… But you’re nothing more than a criminal
spreading misfortune!” asserted Mary.
“………”
Sakuna begged me with her eyes to run away.
Vill was already passed out beside me.
Lingzi and Meihua were in an intense battle
against Gertrude. Both sides were injured.
Nelia pointed her blades at me.
Mary Fragment was right. She felt guilt. I
could feel the sadness in her despairing eyes.
It came out of nowhere.
I never could’ve thought someone would come
out to criticize my past actions right now.
Nelia and I had fought to change Aruka, and I
was currently fighting with Lingzi to change the Enchanted Lands. But now the
woman before me was asking me to think about those who
would suffer as a result.
Nelia was far too kind; that was the only
explanation for how she’d let Nerzanpi and this woman confound her.
What would Karla have thought of this? The
Empress? Spica? I tried to imagine other people’s reaction, but then I shook my
head to banish those thoughts.
I could not allow the current situation to go
on.
That was enough.
“All right,” I said, glaring at Mary. “I
apologize if I hurt you. Nelia and I fought thinking that revolution would be
best for Aruka… I didn’t think about who would get hurt as a result. At this
point, I don’t care about your prior wrongdoings. I’m sorry I made you suffer.”
Mary froze, as though time itself had stopped.
She looked at me like I was a rare animal, but
soon, she screamed in vivid panic.
“I-it’s too late now! Are you stupid?!”
“Yes, I am. And I know it’s too late. I can’t
undo what I’ve done. But we can think about what to do next.”
“What…?”
“I want to change the world. I won’t allow
people getting hurt in front of me. I cannot let Nerzanpi keep getting away
with it.”
“Bullshit!! People like me will suffer as a
result!!”
“I’ll take responsibility for that. I’ll make
it a world that those who suffered can accept eventually. I want to change
people’s hearts. That is the mission my mom gave me.”
Nelia raised her blades as she charged against
me.
I had no way to dodge her attack.
So…
“Komari!” “Terakomari?!” Lingzi and Meihua
screamed. They had already knocked out Gertrude. No problem over there anymore.
Nelia’s right blade approached at terrible
speed. But then I stumbled on a rock and dodged her slash by a hair. What
tremendous luck. For some reason, I’d kept surviving in
the weirdest of ways since coming here.
Nelia’s left blade approached without delay.
That one I couldn’t dodge.
My cheeks burned. Bright-red blood spurted
from my slashed skin.
“…!”
But it was no lethal wound. I stomped with all
my might before I could feel any pain.
A crack showed in Nelia’s frozen expression.
I lurched forward and clung to her. She
slashed wildly at my shoulders. I shrieked with pain, but I could not let go.
Nelia was suffering in the darkness. I had to pull her out of it.
“Commander! Be more ca—”
“No! It’s okay, Nelia! I’m here with you!”
I held her as tightly as I could.
Mary gasped in shock.
I bit into Nelia’s neck—into the star-shaped
mark. Nelia screamed and struggled, trying to push me away, but I did not let
myself lose. I tore into her soft skin and slurped the crimson liquid gushing
out.
I could not let Nerzanpi and Mary get away
with their violence.
It was beyond cowardly of them to put
themselves on a pedestal and point out other people’s faults. And Nelia had
fallen for it because she was too kind. She’d done the right thing for
Aruka—and I had to show her.
“Ko…ma…ri…?”
The light of willpower returned to her eyes.
And then the world turned gold.
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She was in the middle
of endless fog.
The feeling of something dear breaking. Blood
gushed every time she swung the blades her teacher gave her. She had no idea
what she was cutting. Just that she had to do it, as she was ordered.
She shouldn’t have been able to feel anything
anymore, but her sense of reason—sleeping dormant in her chest—was telling her
to stop with every slash.
Her body wavered. Something was clinging to
her.
She had to carry out her orders. She had to
bifurcate any hindrance for the sake of the star shining in the dusk. So she
raised her sword, but then someone grabbed her arm.
“Stop it, Nelia.”
She raised her head. She had heard that voice
before.
A voice she’d heard countless times when she
was young—the voice she loved the most.
“Miss Gandesblood…?”
“Those blades are for altruism. Not for
murder.”
She woke up. She had been cutting people down
unconsciously.
Her memories came back. She’d lost to Mary
Fragment, and Nerzanpi had taken away her soul. The guilt was crushing. She
felt she didn’t have the right to stand at the top. But her teacher shook her
head kindly and said:
“You are in the right.”
“But…”
“Don’t let the enemy confuse you. Raise your
head high and keep on living. Komari’s with you. Everything will be okay once
you change the world with her. That is your duty.”
“Really…?”
“Yes. But Komari can be careless. As the
older…or maybe the younger sister, you must take care of her.”
Her teacher hugged her. That smell, that
warmth brought her back. Nelia tried to close her eyes. Suddenly, she realized
that it wasn’t her teacher she was hugging, but someone else.
Shining gold hair. Crimson eyes brimming with
a mix of kindness and hostility.
“Don’t worry,” she said. “I will carry half of
your pain.”
![]()
The Minister of
Military Secrets had said this:
“They use their kindness as a weapon, which is
why they abhor hurting people so much. Deep down, they’re just like the Tianzi.
Take advantage of this. Make them realize how many people are suffering because
of them.”
Mary found it genius.
Mary Fragment never had a family. She was a
lone wolf who’d risen by her own power. Her sole motive in life was
slaughtering people as Aruka’s Illustrious General. She could get away with any
crime under Madhart’s authority. It wasn’t rare of her to prey on innocent
people for sport.
But that glorious life of hers did not last
for long.
Nelia Cunningham and Terakomari Gandesblood
reformed Aruka.
All of Mary’s misdeeds were exposed. She was
thrown into prison and lost her freedom. Her peer Pascal Rainsworth repented
and now worked for Nelia Cunningham—but she was not as simple as him. Nor did
she have the acting skills to feign a change of heart.
She wanted revenge. To destroy those little
girls, no matter the cost.
She would have been able to escape from prison
through sheer force, but she faked her suicide to shake off any pursuers. She
wandered the Metropolis after escaping and bided her time to exact her revenge.
“Oh dear, looks like the heavens are on your
side.” One day, a woman in black smoking a cigarette appeared before her.
“Would you mind getting played by me? I’ll give you the chance to get your
revenge on Terakomari Gandesblood and Nelia Cunningham.”
The mysterious Ruist of unknown race—Nerzanpi
Rocha.
![]()
Golden
mana blew across Death Dragon Cave.
The surge of bloodlust was coming from the
crimson vampire, Terakomari Gandesblood. She held Nelia Cunningham up as she
glared at Mary.
Mary gritted her teeth and took a step back.
She’d ensnared Nelia Cunningham to prevent
Terakomari from using her Core Implosion.
She’d stirred the guilt in her heart to take
advantage of her kindness.
But none of that worked. Terakomari was
stronger than Mary thought. Bullshit. Bullshit. Bullshit.
“Nelia Cunningham! What are you doing?! Kill
Terakomari already!”
Nelia did not move.
Light had returned to her eyes. A bright light
brimming with will. Nerzanpi had transformed it into the Baolu. People who’d
been robbed of willpower were supposed to become hollow shells. So why had the
Moonpeach Princess recovered hers?
“You will pay.”
A voice trembling with anger pierced her ears.
A crimson glare pierced her eyes.
“You’re not getting away with this! I’ll end
you!”
Propelled by golden mana, the Moonpeach
Princess rushed at Mary with her twin blades.
Mary clicked her tongue and raised her
longsword. She couldn’t rely on tricks anymore. She dodged the pink slash
coming from the side and unleashed her Core Implosion—Mindblade Annihilation.
“…!!”
Nelia staggered.
Mary had obtained this power under Madhart.
Born from her desire to dominate, it allowed her to turn people into
playthings. Simply by locking eyes with someone, she could scramble their brain
and stun them.
She’d beaten Nelia once
with this power. If fortune was on her side, she could even defeat Terakomari
Gandesblood. But the moment her lips curved in assurance of her victory…
“Gwah?!”
…the twin blades sank into her chest.
Mary ground her teeth in agony. All strength
left her arm, and the longsword fell to the ground. The Moonpeach Princess
stood before her, gallant and possessed of her senses. She yelled so hard that
drops of blood flew at Mary:
“I am NOT falling for that twice!!”
That was when Mary realized what had happened.
Before she could activate Mindblade Annihilation, Nelia had used Diverse Divide
to counteract Mary’s powers of delusion. But then Nelia acted
like it worked to get her to drop her guard. Mary cursed her carelessness for
falling for that trick.
“Y-you little shit!!”
She swung her weapon recklessly, only to be
hit by a similar blow.
A golden blade had cut into her shoulder. And
that wasn’t all. Her body began turning into gold particles from that wound.
Spitefully, she looked beyond Nelia at the
golden vortex.
Terakomari Gandesblood. Countless swords spun
around the hostile vampire. The fear left Mary at a loss for words. Simply
staring down Terakomari made Mary realize that no normal person could ever
stand up against her. She knew it was foolish to think she could exploit her
sense of guilt.
That girl’s willpower was too strong. She
could never compare.
The blades all pointed at Mary.
“Repent.”
“Komari, step aside.”
Murder took the form of shining blades.
Nelia slashed Mary clean with her twin swords.
Hatred gushed out her throat, but she could not keep standing. The Gerra-Aruka
survivor collapsed in a pool of her own blood, her vengeance incomplete.
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The pink mana evaporated the moment she
sheathed Diverse Divide.
Nelia then turned to Komari. She was still enveloped
in golden mana. The vampire had saved Nelia from the fog. It was always Komari
saving her. Ashamed, she walked up to her.
Then, it hit her. Villhaze, Sakuna Memoir, and
Gertrude lay wounded on the ground.
“Hey, President Cunningham! We gotta take them
to the Dark Core Zone now!”
“R-right. Sorry…,” Nelia responded glumly to
Meihua’s request.
Her friends were covered in blood. She wanted
to die from the shame of knowing that she caused this. But she could repent
later. They had to take them to where the Dark Core could help them first.
Then Nelia sensed someone standing behind her.
It was Komari, shining gold. Nelia wanted to
cry. There was a slash wound on Komari’s shoulder, again her fault.
“Komari… I’m sorry…”
“You are my little sister.”
“Huh?”
“Don’t worry. You’re in the right.”
Her faltering words struck her heart.
Nelia wiped her tears and looked straight into
her crimson eyes as she yelled:
“Thank you! I’m over it now, thanks to you!”
“…”
“But I’m the elder sister! Miss Gandesblood
asked me to take care of you!”
“………?”
Komari cocked her head. Nelia lost her mind at
the adorable gesture.
One needed the determination to stand at the
top of a country—Nelia thought she had attained it way
back during the Six Nations War, but Nerzanpi’s and Mary’s every word had
thrown her into a vortex of despair. She still had a long way to go.
Was she unfit for the job? Was she so fixated
on leading that she’d overlooked how she hurt people?
Nerzanpi had opened a hole in her heart and
paralyzed her.
But then Komari called out to her. With her at
her side, she would be all right.
Willpower shone radiantly in the fog. There
was no need for doubt anymore.
“Hurry up, President!” Meihua yelled, carrying
Gertrude.
The truth was, she wanted to fight alongside
Komari, but they had to heal everyone first.
Nelia took a Magic Stone out of her pocket and
turned around.
“Komari. I’ll go to the Dark Core Zone with
Meihua. It’s my responsibility for getting them hurt. I’ll be right back… You
go and defeat Nerzanpi. Alongside the Gongzhu.”
The green girl’s shoulders jolted.
Lingzi Ailan looked at Nelia like she had seen
the most terrifying monster in the world.
“…What’s wrong?”
“Ah… Err… N-no… Nothing…”
Was she afraid of Nerzanpi? There was no need
to fear, though. Everything would be fine with Komari by her side. Lingzi
Ailan, too, should puff out her chest like Nelia Cunningham and take the title
of Tianzi.
Komari walked up to Mary, who was collapsed on
the ground.
She grabbed her by the collar and in a faint
and quiet voice asked:
“Where is Nerzanpi?”
“Ugh…”
“Where is Nerzanpi?”
Mary looked up at the sky with hollow eyes.
After a while, she muttered hoarsely:
“With the Tianzi… In
the Zijingong… She’s getting him to spill the beans on the Dark Core’s
location…”
“No tricks?”
“Ha-ha… Bwa-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha… I was only being
used… You’ll pay, Nerzanpi… Suffer at her hand…”
After that, she only laughed like a broken
record. She had sold off her ally in her desperation. An
unsalvageable woman to the very end, Nelia thought.
A moment later, Komari activated the
teleportation spell. Nelia looked back at Komari, enveloped in the light. She
was already in the air, holding Lingzi close.
Her small lips parted. “Take care of them.”
Nelia nodded and shouted, “Sorry, Komari! You
take care of the Enchanted Lands!”
Komari also nodded.
The golden pillar extended to the heavens at
tremendous speed. Nelia stared at the fantastical sight before closing her
eyes. The Magic Stone’s glow increased, until it made them disappear.
Strong light was like
poison to those who lived in the shadows.
The Moonpeach Princess. The Crimson Vampire
Princess.
Being in the presence of someone who shone
brightly only highlighted one’s insignificance.
Facing the disparity between her and them only
made her want to slip a noose around her neck.
The fight between Mary Fragment and Nelia
Cunningham was like deadly poison to Lingzi Ailan. Nelia’s willpower had been
stolen, and she’d been turned into a puppet who couldn’t muster any
resistance—and yet she’d stood once more for the sake of the Aruka Republic.
Lingzi Ailan could never do something like
that.
The moment she saw Terakomari and Nelia shine
within the light, her heart froze at the thought of how indecisive she’d been
throughout her life. It was beaten to a pulp.
Beaten down by the fact she could never reach
their heights.
From a very young age, Lingzi Ailan had been
told she needed to be worthy of the title of Tianzi.
She had no siblings, so there was no question
she was to succeed her father in leading the Enchanted Lands. The fact had been
decided upon her birth.
The people of the court raised her with rigor.
It was then that the Tianzi began to show disinterest in
politics. The top brass of the Ailan dynasty felt at risk and put their efforts
into making his successor a worthy Tianzi. She was locked up in the palace and
taught classic Ruist writings from morn to dusk. The teacher told the young
Gongzhu countless times that the future of the Enchanted Lands rested on her
shoulders.
Lingzi thought it only natural.
Education decided a person’s fate. The
teacher. The writings.
Her
days spent as a bird in a cage guided her willpower in a single direction: “I was born to lead the Immortals.” “As Tianzi, I must act for the sake
of the Immortals.” “Happiness in my life can only be found in the prosperity of
the Immortals.”
A sense of duty was ingrained in her mind.
She was forbidden from fraternizing with
outsiders. The teacher said it was because she would be infected with
unnecessary ideologies.
Lingzi understood. She could not resist upon
being told it was for the sake of the Immortals. And besides, she was content
with staying inside studying in the first place.
The only friend she was allowed to have was
Meihua Liang.
She was employed as her caretaker.
Meihua was a functionary in the inner palace.
Lingzi found her commendable for it, despite being the same age as her. She was
a wise and considerate caretaker. She quickly noticed whenever Lingzi wanted
something. She brought her a brush whenever she thought she needed one and
scratched her back whenever she felt itchy.
“You’re like a doll. Like a puppet. You only
do what you’re told.”
“You think so…?”
“Yeah. Girls your age should be more
capricious.”
Lingzi had never seen other girls, so she
wouldn’t know.
Still, she didn’t mind. The Zijingong was her
entire world. And it would remain that way even after she grew up. She would
stay in the palace and work for the Immortals—though she could only imagine
what her work would be like from reading the history books, because her father
spent all his time idling.
“You’re too ignorant of
the world.” Meihua laughed. “You won’t be able to see reality if you stay
inside the palace all the time. You should go outside. You should know the
people you’ll be ruling over.”
“But they told me not to go outside…”
“I know a few ways out. I lived in a normal
family in Jingshi before working for the palace. I can show you around.”
“But…”
“There’s lots of cool stuff in Jingshi. I know
you want to go outside, don’t you?”
Outside. Out of her cage. Into a world she
could only imagine.
Lingzi gave in to the temptation.
Thinking back on it now, perhaps Meihua had
felt sympathy for her.
Perhaps Lingzi’s circumstances were not
fortunate. She had been locked up since infancy and made to study. In her spare
time, she only watched the birds fly on the other side of the window.
She sat at her desk reading Ruist writings day
in and day out. Her each and every day was dedicated to learning how to be a
proper sovereign.
And yet she’d never even found it abnormal.
Lingzi never felt the need to rebel. They had
groomed her into a diligent child who found no grievance in her role as
Gongzhu. Despite her life being far from normal.
“Let’s escape during your noon break. There’s
a small hole beside the eastern gate. Wide enough for us kids to go through.”
“But what if they find out…?”
“Don’t worry. I’ll be there with you.”
Which was why Meihua’s presence was toxic to
Gongzhu Lingzi Ailan.
Meihua pulled her by the hand, and they left
the Zijingong.
Her heart was racing.
She felt bad about breaking the rules but
simultaneously intrigued about setting foot into an unknown world. She felt
like her heart could explode at any moment.
They went down a narrow
path after going through the hole.
Lingzi trembled in fright while Meihua cheered
her on to keep going.
After a while, her field of view opened. The
world overflowed with light.
The bustling sight of Jingshi revealed itself
before her eyes.
Lingzi saw color for the first time. Vibrant,
glowing, lively.
People of all kinds were going to and fro.
There were carriages and oxcarts. Glaze-coated buildings lined up endlessly,
all plain in comparison to the palace, yet full of life thanks to the scratches
and graffiti on their walls.
The voices of people having fun. The smell of
food and perfume. Shiny products of all sorts filling the shops. A child bumped
into her and bowed, saying, “Sorry,” before they ran off with a giggle to
continue playing tag with a friend.
Lingzi was shocked beyond belief.
The city was filled with all sorts of things
she would have never gotten to see if she’d stayed holed up in the palace.
“Let’s go. We gotta go back before break time
is over.” Meihua smiled and pulled her Lingzi by the hand.
It was a fun world. A far cry from the gloominess
of the palace. What had she been doing all her life? Why couldn’t she live like
everyone else?
Then Meihua went off to buy something.
“They sell these skewers over there. That guy
is a cheapskate, but they’re really good. The lamb is so soft, try it.”
“Okay…”
“How is it? I ate this all the time as a kid
and… Whoa, what happened, Lingzi?! Why’re you crying?! Was it that bad?!”
“No… No, that’s not it…”
Tears spilled from her eyes. She couldn’t hold
back her sobs.
“Then why? Does your tummy hurt?”
“It’s good. It’s so good…that it hurts…”
Meihua was confused as Lingzi kept weeping
loudly. Passersby looked at them with worry. Someone
came up to ask, “Are you okay? Where’s your mommy?” The kindness stabbed
Lingzi’s heart like a drill.
She felt something break inside her.
The recoil was devastating.
From that day on, Lingzi Ailan fell ill.
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Nerzanpi Rocha was in a
grand hall in the Zijingong.
The Tianzi lay at her feet. She had gouged him
with a knife a few times. He resisted like the ruler he was for a while, but
soon, he reached his limits. The Tianzi dropped all pretense of shame and
dignity and spat out the details on the Dark Core.
Nerzanpi was honestly shocked. If what he’d
said was true, then the Enchanted Lands was a wicked nation indeed.
“Let… Let me go…already…,” the Tianzi wailed,
squirming to grab Nerzanpi’s ankle.
She nearly laughed out loud at the sight. A
man like him stood atop the tragedy that was the Enchanted Lands. Rulers who’d
inherited their positions were all despicable.
“I told you what you wanted to know… You have
no business with me anymore…”
“I’ll give you peace, then.”
She pulled the trigger without mercy. The
Tianzi was sent flying at the sound of the gunshot.
Nerzanpi exhaled white smoke and looked up at
the ceiling.
Now she had intel on two of the six Dark
Cores: the Enchanted Lands’ and Aruka’s.
The first she’d gotten from the Tianzi; the
second, from the hollowed-out Nelia Cunningham.
A third of the total. The pieces were falling
into place.
Yusei called her organization Star Citadel.
Unlike Inverse Moon, Star Citadel had always
been a small organization. They didn’t amass followers like Spica to carry out
terrorist attacks. They didn’t have bases in every
country to add more people to their cause. Increasing their member count would
muddle their ideology. Yusei wanted an organization comprised of an elite few.
“Let’s see who gets the world. Only God
knows.”
The names of three people who could take over
the world came to mind.
The Crimson Vampire
Princess: Terakomari.
The Head of Inverse Moon: Spica.
The Boss of Star Citadel: Yusei.
Terakomari was working
to change the hearts of all people.
Spica was working to select the pure of heart
to build a utopia.
Yusei was working to destroy all people and
reset the heart.
Nerzanpi found Yusei’s approach the correct
one. Humans were too filthy of creatures, so they were better off extinct.
Resetting the world would not be hard with the six Dark Cores in hand.
“…Oh dear.”
Nerzanpi heard people calling Komarin’s name
all throughout Jingshi. Then she sensed a staggering mana. One with the power
to destroy everything. Mana so massive it matched Yusei’s. Massive willpower.
Endless kindness.
She heard something crack overhead.
The next moment, the ceiling blew up with ear-piercing
noise.
Nerzanpi dodged the rubble hail as she looked
up.
Golden mana. Countless blades swirling in the
air.
Bloodlust.
“You’ll pay.”
Terakomari Gandesblood.
She’d foreseen this. Mary Fragment had failed
to end her.
Then she noticed Gongzhu Lingzi Ailan clinging
to her. Evidently, the duo’s full-fledged sense of justice had motivated them
to stop the villain who was trying to take over the country. What a waste.
A storm of raging mana.
The swords behind her approached like a
hurricane.
Aruka’s Warblades fell helplessly before
Komari’s Core Implosion.
There was no way Nerzanpi could escape with
her life if Komari hit her.
So all she had to do was avoid getting hit.
“The virtuous are quiet. So shut up.”
Nerzanpi pulled the trigger before the blades
flew at her.
A bullet of pure willpower made from a Baolu
shot from the muzzle at high speed.
Right before the golden sword could strike it
down, with a little prayer, it changed course.
Terakomari gasped softly.
The Baolu bullet hit her side.
“Komari?!”
Blood splattered. Lingzi Ailan screamed.
The golden mana began to fade. The blades lost
their power and fell to the floor. Terakomari staggered, a look of disbelief on
her face. She must have never even considered the possibility of someone
breaking through her Core Implosion head-on.
“Oh dear… I didn’t hit any vitals. I see
you’re as lucky as ever, huh?”
Blood dripped from Komari’s tiny mouth.
The vampire princess descended, pulled down by
gravity.
Nerzanpi shot her five loaded Baolu bullets
consecutively. Lingzi hurried to erect a magical barrier, blocking two of the
bullets, but three remained. They flew directly at Terakomari’s face. Then
something odd happened.
The golden mana disappeared. This time,
rainbow-colored mana stormed.
A rainbow raiment enveloped her body—but only
for an instant. Suddenly, she was back to being a helpless little girl.
It was like how the flame of a candle burned
brightest the moment before it vanished.
Then rubble fell from
the ceiling with miraculous timing.
The debris struck the three remaining Baolu
bullets. Nerzanpi used the void spell Summoning to
obtain a new Baolu and transformed it into a bullet. She loaded it while taking
aim, but by then, Terakomari was already hidden on the other side of the
rubble.
She was too lucky. Unnaturally so.
Nerzanpi put down the gun, a cynical smile on
her face.
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Sharp pain greeted me
as I regained consciousness.
I writhed on the floor and wailed.
“U…Ghh… Agh…!”
It hurt. Blood spurted everywhere. It felt
like my stomach had exploded. There was no Dark Core here. I would die. I was
scared. But I couldn’t lose. I’d decided to fight for Lingzi. I couldn’t let
Nerzanpi go after she’d made my friends suffer so much.
“Komari! Are you okay?! No… You’re clearly
not… Look at all this blood…”
“I’m…fine… I won’t…die…”
Upon closer inspection, the wound on my belly
wasn’t that big. Just a little gouge.
My troops in the Seventh Unit got cut in half
and blown up every day. This was nothing compared to that. Although it was also
true that they were crazy.
“Komari… Don’t push yourself…”
“I’m not.”
I gritted my teeth and sat up.
I was losing my mind at the pain. But I had to
keep it together.
“I’ll take care of Nerzanpi. I won’t let her
wreck the Enchanted Lands. I won’t let her take the Dark Core. Although I don’t
know where it is… But anyway! I’ll help you so you can become the next Tianzi!
My goal hasn’t changed!”
So please rest easy. I looked at her pleadingly.
The green Gongzhu
Lingzi Ailan looked like she was about to cry.
“Huh? What’s wrong, Lingzi?”
“I… I… Why…did I turn out like this…?”
I didn’t get it. Was she worried about my
injury?
Clearly that wasn’t all. I could feel the
regret in her eyes. What was going through her mind?
Just as I thought to ask her, I heard someone
move beyond the debris.
I had to defeat Nerzanpi, and for that, I
needed to do this.
“Lingzi, I’m sorry, but I need you to help me.
I need blood to activate my Core Implosion. Give me just a little bi—”
“Coff!” She coughed.
I froze, forgetting all about my pain.
A huge rush of blood dyed the floor red,
soaking my boots and skirt. Blood was gushing from Lingzi’s mouth like a
fountain, and there was no sign of it stopping. More blood mixed in with saliva
dropped every time she coughed.
I didn’t need that much.
“Lingzi?! Are you okay?! You hurting?!”
“…Ugh… Yes…”
I could only rub her back.
I felt like everything had turned dark.
Right. Defeating Nerzanpi wouldn’t solve
everything. We had to find the Waidan and make the elixir or Lingzi would have
no future. At this rate…she would die soon.
Why wouldn’t the Dark Core help her?
It healed everyone else, even when their limbs
got chopped off or their hearts exploded.
So why would it not cure this ill girl? I
hugged Lingzi, trembling in frustration, when…
“That is the curse of the Enchanted Lands.
Poor girl.”
…I heard the voice of death.
The next thing I knew, the woman in black was
standing right in front of me.
Nerzanpi Rocha. I
glared at her in tears.
“You… What do you know?”
“The Tianzi told me. It seems their Dark Core
broke six hundred years ago.”
Nerzanpi leaned on some debris and lit a
cigarette.
It looked like she wasn’t going to attack
right away. Was her guard down because my Core Implosion wasn’t in effect? I
stayed vigilant as I listened to her speak. I needed to listen to what she had
to say.
“More specifically, it didn’t break so much as
it stopped working. Not even I know why that happened. The Tianzi didn’t,
either. Regardless, the Enchanted Lands’ Dark Core lost the ability to grant
infinite recovery by itself.”
“That’s ridiculous… The Immortals’ wounds are
still recovering. The Tianzi came back after Sakuna killed him. It’s just
Lingzi who’s special…”
“Indeed. Lingzi Ailan is an exception among
exceptions.”
Lingzi’s breathing was heavy.
I rubbed her back powerlessly.
“The Dark Core needed support to function
correctly, but there is no spell that could do that. After all, the Dark Core
itself is a source of mana. Even if there was such a spell, no regular person
would be able to use it perpetually. So they needed the power of something
other than magic.”
“Something besides magic…?”
“The glimmer of will. The whisper of fate.
Core Implosion.” Nerzanpi laughed as she spun the gun in her hand. “Haven’t you
realized that Lingzi Ailan’s Core Implosion is always in effect?”
“…?!”
It wasn’t me who gasped in shock, but Lingzi.
Nerzanpi was right. I had noticed that
Lingzi’s eyes were always shining crimson—the sign of Core Implosion. Evidence
of her eternally burning willpower.
“No…I… They’ve always been red…”
“Don’t speak, Lingzi.
You have to rest.”
“Indeed. Rest, Your Highness. Your illness
comes from your perpetual consumption of your willpower. That’s why there’s no
cure—you’re always using Core Implosion. I was shocked, too, when the Tianzi
told me. To think the entire country was pushing this huge burden on one girl.”
“No, no,” Lingzi muttered in tears.
Nerzanpi continued, disregarding her pleas.
“Your Core Implosion’s name is Late Monarch’s
Guidance—the power to turn matter back to its proper state and fix it in place.
An appropriate ability for this country, born from its ancient Ruist ideology.
Through this power, the Enchanted Lands’ Dark Core maintains its form from
before it broke. This is why it appears as though it’s been functioning
properly.”
“But hasn’t it been six hundred years since it
stopped working? Lingzi isn’t that old…”
“The Late Monarch’s Guidance doesn’t come from
Lingzi Ailan’s will. It is just like the experiments Gerra Madhart carried out
in the Daydream Paradise. The poor Gongzhu was implanted with this power beyond
her capabilities. She is the bearer and guardian of the Dark Core for the Ailan
dynasty.”
Lingzi’s expression was pure despair.
I could tell from her reaction that everything
Nerzanpi had said was true.
“Originally, the Late Monarch’s Guidance was
but a Core Implosion that appeared in a single person six hundred years ago.
The Dark Core would have stopped working correctly after they died, so the
Ailan dynasty passed the ability down generation after generation to keep it
functioning. Core Implosion is a power of the heart, so as long as one has a
similar heart, they can possess a similar Core Implosion. That’s why generation
after generation of the bearers of Late Monarch’s Guidance were manipulated to
make their hearts similar to that of its original bearer.”
“No regular person would understand, much less
a foolish one like me. Either way, the Ailan dynasty was diligent. With every
generation, they selected one of their daughters to become the bearer. They
locked them up from a young age and raised them strictly, repressing the ego
these girls would naturally develop to shape their hearts to conform to the
original bearer’s. Your Highness, you weren’t brought up to be the next
Tianzi—you were raised to be a disposable tool.”
“No…”
“Lingzi Ailan’s personal information was made
public during the Matrimonial War: her hobby is bonsai, her favorite food is
napa cabbage, she treasures her pocket watch, she had a cat as a child—all the
same as the original bearer. None of these traits belong to Lingzi Ailan
herself.”
It was all so convoluted I couldn’t
understand.
An artificial personality. A forced Core
Implosion. A sick body.
Six hundred long years of history rested on
her little shoulders.
Lingzi twisted her face in agony and started
panting. How great a tragedy did she have to carry? How much agony had she been
holding in all by herself?
“Every bearer dies an early death. The burden
of their Core Implosion makes them gravely ill. By the way, the people of the
Enchanted Lands have been called ‘Immortals’ since ancient times based on the
irony of this situation—their long lives are sustained by the premature death
of the bearer. Although it seems the Tianzi of the Ailan dynasty all looked for
ways to extend the lives of the bearers—one of which is the elixir of life.”
“…Right! The elixir! We can save Lingzi if we
find the Waidan, right?!”
“Not so fast. The Waidan is probably the Dark
Core.”
“Wha…?” Lingzi muttered.
“It is believed that each Dark Core has a
unique shape. That is the reason why Inverse Moon had trouble finding them.
However, their original form is that of a sphere shining bright like a star—so
said Yusei. Which means the Waidan is not the Baolu.
It’s more likely that it is the Dark Core. And to make the elixir from it, one
would obviously have to expend it.”
All color drained from Lingzi’s face. She
trembled in fear.
Her illness wouldn’t be cured unless she used
the Dark Core.
Which meant…
“You must make a decision, Your Highness.”
Nerzanpi stomped over to her, a malicious grin on her face. “Your life, or
those of your citizens.”
“………”
It was outrageous.
The Dark Core’s regenerative ability was the
foundation of modern society. Too many people would die if it were lost. But
Lingzi would die if we didn’t make the elixir using the Dark Core.
How could one make a choice?
Nerzanpi took out a knife.
Shivers ran down my spine. I had to stand up
to protect Lingzi, but an imperceptible kick to my midsection blew me away. My
gunshot wound screamed, but I couldn’t waste time paying attention to it—I had
to stop Nerzanpi.
“Stop! Don’t hurt Lingzi anymore!”
Lingzi’s face twisted in fear.
Nerzanpi ignored me and swung her dagger. I
endured the pain and raised my hip. I would not let this woman get away with
everything. But just as I steeled myself to charge against her…
…Lingzi took a slash to the chest.
No blood. It took me a second to realize that
Nerzanpi had only torn her clothes.
Lingzi’s fair skin, so pale it looked sickly,
was exposed. Is she feeding herself correctly? I
thought, trying to turn away from reality by focusing on irrelevant details.
“Look. This is the symbol of the Enchanted
Lands’ foolishness.”
“Wha…?”
Something was stuck in Lingzi’s chest.
A tiny, tiny blade.
Still, it was gouging into her flesh.
The hilt moved up and down with her every
breath, as though it was a parasite growing out of her chest.
“Don’t look,” Lingzi pleaded in the smallest
of voices. But I couldn’t take my eyes off her chest. It was too bizarre. Not
to mention that I had an inkling of what the blade could be.
Nerzanpi confirmed it flatly:
“That’s the Enchanted Lands’ Dark Core, the
Willow Sword.”
“No…! This…this isn’t the Dark Core…”
Lingzi could only deny it; she couldn’t admit
that her enemy was correct.
But even I could tell.
That sword was sucking Lingzi’s life dry.
It was the target of Late Monarch’s Guidance.
“It must hurt. It must be suffocating. Your
destiny was set in stone from the moment of your birth. How cruel. But people
are always cruel. They live like nothing’s wrong while sacrificing innocent
girls such as you. They would be better off extinct, don’t you think?”
“No… No…”
“This is reality. You will die in pain. You’ll
draw your last breath exploited by the evil Immortals. Which reminds me, they
don’t have someone to take over after you, do they? The Ailan family had no
other suitable daughters—that means the Dark Core will cease functioning
completely once I kill you.”
“………”
“This world is sick. Don’t you agree? You mut
have wanted to live like any other normal girl. But the circumstances of your
birth bar you from that. The Tianzi was torn up over that, too, you know. ‘Ahh! Why did she have to be born as the daughter of the Tianzi?!’
he said. But I’ll put an end to that legacy today—by burying you. And don’t you
worry, it’ll be a proper funeral.”
Nerzanpi slowly raised her gun.
I couldn’t move, paralyzed by the facts.
The curse binding
Lingzi was too much. It was way out of my reach. Stopping the riots would
accomplish nothing. Defeating Nerzanpi wouldn’t save Lingzi’s life. She was
carrying too great a burden. If only I could share half of it. But I couldn’t.
It wasn’t fair. What could I even do?
“Now die.”
I raised my head.
Lingzi was about to get killed. She was lying
there paralyzed, wincing. Nerzanpi’s finger was on the trigger.
For an instant, Lingzi directed her exhausted
crimson eyes at me. Like a baby asking for help.
“S-STOP!!”
I shot myself at Nerzanpi and desperately
grabbed hold of her. She didn’t move an inch. She only sighed.
“C’mon, Commander Gandesblood. Don’t you find
it pitiful for her to keep on going like this? Don’t you think it would be more
merciful to put Lingzi out of her misery instead of prolonging her pitiful
life?”
“I won’t let you hurt her! She wants to live!”
“I mean, no one wants to die. But sometimes,
it’s the better option. She’s only suffering because she’s living.”
“Shut up! I’ll save her!”
“Oh dear.”
I shoved Nerzanpi with all my might.
I nearly blacked out from the blood spilling
out of my belly, but I endured it and yelled:
“Lingzi! Let’s go to Dr. Kuya! She might be
able to cure you!”
“Y-yeah… Thanks, Komari…”
I helped her to her feet. We staggered toward
the exit, but Nerzanpi wouldn’t allow it. Another bullet gouged my side. I
couldn’t stay up anymore. I brought Lingzi down to the ground with me.
She gazed at me, pale in the face.
Don’t look that sad. I’ll make everything right.
“Don’t fret, Lingzi… You don’t have to worry
about a thing.”
Coff.
Lingzi threw up blood again. She was at her
limit, too.
I couldn’t let things end like this. The other
day, my mom had told me to help those who needed me. I’d just started to
overcome my shut-in tendencies, and I was going outside of my own volition. Yet
I couldn’t even help a single girl who’d come to me for support?
“It’s okay, Komari,” Lingzi said with a smile.
I felt like I’d been thrown to the pits of
hell.
“Wh-what do you mean? I’ll cure your illness.
There’s gotta be a way. And once you’re better… You’ll lead the Enchanted Lands
as the new Tianzi.”
“I’m sorry, Komari. I lied to you.”
I was taken aback.
There wasn’t a shred of hope left in her.
Lingzi’s face was contorted in regret over her sin. She took a breath before
confessing.
“I don’t want to be the Tianzi. I don’t care
about the Enchanted Lands.”
The light of dusk set in, painting the Gongzhu
red in blood and twilight.
“I don’t have the power to lead. I have no
talent whatsoever.”
“What are you talking about…? You said…that
you wanted to stop the grand chancellor’s misdeeds. That was for the sake of
the Enchanted Lands, wasn’t it?”
“No. That’s just the Gongzhu’s duty. What I
had to do. I was only trying to fulfill my duty… In truth, I’ve never thought
about the future of the Enchanted Lands. I can’t. I am not fit to be Tianzi. I
realized that after seeing you and Nelia. I can’t be like you. I don’t have it
in me to be that kind. I’ve got too much on my plate just worrying about
myself…”
Tears spilled from her eyes, mixing with her
blood on the floor.
“I wanted to live a normal life.”
“Normal…?”
“Ever since that day Meihua took me out of my
cage… I’ve wanted to live like a regular person. One
without a blade in my chest. One without this strange illness. One where I
don’t have to sacrifice myself for my country…”
“…”
“I want to open a shop in Jingshi. A gardening
shop. I’d gather seasonal flowers and take them to my customers… I wouldn’t
have to think about life and death… That’s the kind of peaceful life I’ve
yearned for. A life with a normal person’s joys and sorrows. And I wanted to
marry someone kind like you. I wanted a life suitable for my capabilities…”
“………”
“I’m really sorry.”
Lingzi fidgeted.
“I’m irreparably weak.”
She smiled with resignment.
“You don’t have to get hurt for a cowardly
liar like me. After all, you’re the hero who’ll change the world.”
She might have meant that as a sort of
goodbye.
Just then, something fell from her person. The
hermit’s stone we’d gotten engraved on our date sank into the pool of Lingzi’s
blood. I cursed my folly at the hopeless sight.
“Can I become the Tianzi? Would I be capable
enough?”
Lingzi had asked that in Death Dragon Cave. I
immediately said, “I know you can do it,” without hesitation. But she wasn’t
looking for that sort of empty encouragement. She needed kind denial.
I had been poisoned by the world.
Nelia wished to change the world, from the
bottom of her heart. The Moonpeach Princess had been overflowing with willpower
from the very beginning.
Karla was the same. While she said she didn’t
want to be commander, she hadn’t been able to let Karin and Fuyao get away with
what they were doing. In the end, she’d decided to fight.
But Lingzi was different.
And a bit of
encouragement wouldn’t change that.
She could not fight against adversity on her
own like Nelia or Karla.
She had accepted that her circumstances were
well beyond her power and resigned herself to suffering.
There were tons of people who were crushed
under the duties given to them—but I was only realizing that now. Lingzi Ailan
was a regular girl who’d been made to carry a heavy fate. She didn’t have the
willpower to fight against it. She was just a normal kid, with the most normal
of hearts.
Tears fell from my eyes.
I put the blood-drenched hermit’s stone back
in her pocket.
“Lingzi… I’m sorry. I didn’t understand you in
the slightest…”
“No. I’m sorry.”
Lingzi rose to her feet slowly. Blood flowed
from the wound of the Dark Core. Her body was at its limit. I watched her stand
up in silence.
“It’s my fault you got hurt. I let my
half-hearted sense of duty dictate my actions and got you embroiled in this.
So…I’ll take all the responsibility.”
“What do you…?”
“If it’ll save you, I’ll gladly give up my
life.”
Her smile was strained with fear.
Mistress Death stood before her eyes.
The devil exhaled cigarette smoke and sneered.
“It seems I underestimated you. How brave.
You’ll set aside your fear to face your fate?”
“You’re only after me, right? Leave Komari out
of this.”
“Of course I’m after you… But are you sure?
The Enchanted Lands’ Dark Core will break. A lot of people will be hurt. Can
you take responsibility for that? His Majesty sure couldn’t stand the guilt.”
“…!”
Lingzi flinched. Even Nelia had fallen to the
devil’s whispers.
But she only hesitated for an instant.
“I… I…! I only care about myself!”
Blood flowered from her
mouth, yet she did not stop.
She fixed her eyes—red with the power of Core
Implosion—on Nerzanpi in a glare as she yelled:
“Because I’m just a kid! I don’t care as long
as Komari is safe! Getting rid of the Dark Core won’t kill anyone in the first
place! It just means we won’t be able to participate in sports-war anymore! So!
I! Don’t care about the Immortals! I only care about saving Komari!”
By now, I was baffled.
At the very least, I understood that Lingzi
was worried about me.
Despite being so wounded herself, and despite
being on the brink of death, Lingzi was using what little strength she had for
my sake. She looked Nerzanpi in the eye and shouted:
“Now then, Minister of Military Secrets! Kill
me right this moment!”
“You don’t have to die!”
Before I knew it, I was hugging her. We
tottered a few steps and nearly tripped. I endured the pain to keep her
upright. She gazed at me with confusion at point-blank range.
“I know how you feel. But you’ve done enough.
Just forget about the Gongzhu, about being commander or the bearer and
everything else that burdens you, and keep on living.”
“But…my life…”
“I’ll do something about it! I’m the strongest
commander in the world! The slaughter champion capable of killing five trillion
people with just a pinky finger! I can get rid of your illness, easy-peasy!”
“…”
How irresponsible of me. I was but an ignorant
child yelling nonsense.
Yet I felt the strength leave Lingzi’s body.
She pondered things quietly for a while.
Finally, tears spilled from her crimson eyes.
A shiver ran through her shoulders as an awkward smile painted her face.
“Thank you, Komari… You really are a hero.
That’s why I love you.”
“Yeah? Then don’t waste your life anymore.”
“Sorry to interrupt,
but…,” Nerzanpi said as soon as she found the opportunity. “Are you ready to
die now?”
“No way! I’ll protect her!” I shouted.
“That’s very commendable and all, but I’ve got
a job to do here. Yusei will be sad if I don’t get the Enchanted Lands’ Dark
Core.”
Nerzanpi slowly raised her gun.
Lingzi trembled in my arms. I ground my teeth
in incontrollable anger. Lingzi was trying to survive, and this woman was about
to make her efforts go to waste.
I could not allow it.
I had to stop Nerzanpi here and now.
Countless people had gotten hurt because of
her. Nelia, Sakuna, Gertrude, Vill, Esther, Meihua, Dr. Kuya, the Tianzi,
Shikai, the Immortals…and above all else, Lingzi.
“Lingzi! Excuse me! I’m gonna suck your
blood!”
“Huh…?!”
I turned to her with determination. Ignoring
her bewildered stare, I placed my mouth on her neck—but our enemy didn’t just
let it happen.
“Off with you.”
A thundering gunshot.
She remorselessly pulled the trigger.
Her shining bullet advanced at dreadful speed.
I looked at Nerzanpi in befuddlement. The
world slowed down around me as my mind accelerated in the face of death, but my
body was frozen. At this rate, we would both be dead.
This was not the time for fear.
I could not let Lingzi die.
She had already endured such an unjust fate.
She had the right to live normally like she
wanted. So I glared at the bullet with tragic determination.
“…?!”
Nerzanpi’s false composure broke for the very
first time as her face twisted in shock.
Just then, rubble came
flying at indiscernible speed from the side, hitting the bullet. Nerzanpi came
back to her senses right away and fired the other rounds in revolver—but they
were all struck down by mysterious attacks.
That’s when it hit me: The wall of the palace
had been demolished.
There were two people on the other side.
“Terakomari! Use your Core Implosion already!”
“She’s the source of all trouble? We gotta
kill her, then.”
A Sapphire in winter clothing and the catgirl
commander looked at us.
Prohellya Butchersky and Leona Flatt.
Prohellya’s gun was smoking, and Leona was playing with a rock in her hand, a
killer look on her face. They’d protected us from Nerzanpi’s attack. But just
as I was about to bask in the joy of salvation…
BLAAAM! A hilariously loud explosion went off behind me.
Lingzi and I turned around in shock. A ton of
vampires flooded into the wrecked entrance.
“Commander! Is this who we gotta kill?!” “The
commander’s bleeding! That woman’s gonna pay!!” “Let’s kill this terrorist and
take over the Enchanted Lands!” “Beginning murder. Beginning murder. Target:
woman in black.” “It’s a bloodbath, people!!”
For some reason, the Seventh Unit charged in.
This sight would usually be the stuff of
nightmares, but now, it was cause for celebration.
Never before had I been so moved by this bunch
of barbarians.
“G-guys! What’re you doing?!” I yelled as I
wiped my tears. “There’s no Dark Core here! Don’t be crazy!”
“We are not crazy.”
The next thing I knew, a man who resembled a
stripped tree was standing beside me. Caostel had warped in with Void magic. He
smiled like the criminal he’d always been and said:
“It’s our job to fight under you, Commander.
The presence of a Dark Core here is as inconsequential as Yohann’s constant
deaths. And besides, Commande—! Ahh! What happened to
you?! You’re hurt all over!”
“Huh?! I… Y’know! It’s a handicap! It’d be too
boring if I just massacred Nerzanpi without a fight!”
“Ohh!” “Praise be our Commander!” the vampires
cheered.
Yeah, you guys are not all right in
the head. How’d you believe that?
“Terakomari! Take a rest! I’ll burn that bitch
to ashes!” Yohann said.
“Stay away, kid. It’s obvious you’ll fall like
a swatted fly,” Bellius said.
“What’d you say?! I’ll swat you, poochie!
Look, I can’t hide this anymore at this juncture—Terakomari’s power is all a
bluff! She’s a weakling! We gotta take care of shit or she’ll die!”
“What? Are you stupid?”
“You’re the stupid one, stupid! Lemme kill
’er!”
“Check it! Yohann always dies. Consider this
foresight. He’ll meet a flaming demise. He won’t even get a hit in again. We’ll
have to see him off with an amen.”
“I’m gonna kill every last one of you
fuckers!!”
Yohann began struggling with Mellaconcey.
He sent a flaming fist at Mellaconcey, but
before his punch could land, Mellaconcey kicked him up the chin. “Ubwoeh!”
Yohann cried out before losing consciousness.
Idiots! Read the room, okay? Look how creeped out
Lingzi is.
I’m sorry, girl. That’s just how they roll.
“Stop wasting time, Terakomari! We’ll keep the
Minister busy, you use the Blood Curse!”
“R-right!”
Upon hearing Prohellya say that, I came back
to my senses.
I couldn’t let this chance go. I turned to
Lingzi once again and smiled.
“I need your blood. Would you give me a
little?”
“Umm… I heard vampires only suck the blood of
those they love.”
“And I love you. Let me protect you.”
Without waiting for her reply, I put my teeth
on her neck. She exhaled with a little whimper, then hugged me tightly and
awkwardly. Warm blood flowed from her veins into my mouth.
“Don’t get too cocky.”
A gunshot echoed.
Nerzanpi finished reloading and fired.
“It’s rude to interrupt a vampire’s
bloodsucking session.”
Caostel used Void magic to open a
teleportation gate between me and Nerzanpi, and the bullet disappeared inside
it.
Now there was nothing to worry about.
“Err… Komari…,” Lingzi moaned, petrified.
Core Implosion was the power of the heart. As
Lingzi’s blood melted inside me, her emotions flowed into me. She had not given
up on living. I had to give her all the support I could.
“Komari…”
“Don’t worry. I’ll take care of everything.”
Blood dribbled out of the corner of my mouth.
Her crimson eyes wavered in confusion as she
stared at me.
Then the world was dyed in the colors of the
rainbow once again.
![]()
An explosion of mana.
A rainbow-colored torrent to change the world.
In its center stood a vampire whose eyes were glowing like the
rainbow—Terakomari Gandesblood. The palace walls groaned under the pressure of
the energy and crumbled. Trees rattled in the howling wind. The vampires jumped
like little kids, yelling, “Komarin! Komarin! Komarin!”
A rainbow garment floated around Terakomari.
A raiment like the Tiannu wore, rendered
through mana.
“You’ll pay, Nerzanpi.”
The woman in black chuckled in the face of
Terakomari’s death glare.
Nerzanpi knew she had
to avoid this at all costs. There were still too many unknowns about the Blood
Curse. And the way its power changed depending on the variety of blood Komari
had sucked was particularly hard to work around.
The blood of a vampire gave her extraordinary
mana and physical capabilities. The blood of a Sapphire gave her a durable
body. The blood of a Warblade gave her the power to control golden swords. The
blood of a Peace Spirit gave her the power to accelerate time.
So what abilities would the blood of an
Immortal grant her? Belatedly, Nerzanpi realized she should have given Komari
Immortal blood instead of Warblade blood at the Tianzhu Hall.
“That’s my cue to leave.”
Nerzanpi was not stupid enough to directly
challenge an opponent whose powers she knew nothing about. Not that the details
of Komari’s powers mattered much. Facing the Blood Curse by herself would be
stupid enough.
Not to mention that the situation was far from
favorable. Nerzanpi was surrounded by enemies. Prohellya Butchersky. Leona
Flatt. The Seventh Unit’s relentless vampires. She could also sense that the
puppets who’d been freed from Twisted Pedagogy were approaching the palace.
Terakomari’s immense willpower must have undone their brainwashing.
“Say your prayers, Nerzanpi!”
The rainbow-clad vampire sprinted up to her
adorably, like a child playing tag. The sight was so adorable that Nerzanpi
wanted to turn Komari into Baolu to decorate her room with. But she knew that
she could not underestimate her.
“Heh. I could never put up a fight.”
She took a Magic Stone imbued with a
teleportation spell out of her pocket.
Retreating was the wisest move here. Nerzanpi
was satisfied enough with having uncovered the location of the Enchanted Lands’
Dark Core. She would have plenty of opportunities to take it down the line. So she grinned mischievously as she poured mana into her
Magic Stone.
“…?”
But for some reason, its teleportation spell
didn’t start.
She looked down and noticed that there was a
crack in it. The circuit must’ve fried. It wouldn’t activate in this state, no
matter how much mana she poured into it. Maybe it had gotten damaged when the
ceiling had fallen in.
“This can’t be…”
“Repent!!”
The next thing Nerzanpi knew, Terakomari’s
fist was right in her face.
She couldn’t dodge. The timing was perfect.
A weak jab enveloped in mana crushed her face.
Nerzanpi slipped on the puddle of Lingzi
Ailan’s blood. Her balance lost, Nerzanpi fell like a spinning top.
![]()
“HAAAAAIIIIILLLLL!!!!!
KOMARIN!! KOMARIN!! KOMARIN!!” An eardrum-shattering cheer echoed across the
Zijingong.
Nerzanpi spun in the air as she flew away.
She hadn’t flinched when I jumped at her just
seconds before. Was this the magical assistance of Core Implosion?
It was then that it hit me—I was still fully
conscious. In fact, I felt just like I did when lazing around in my room, even
though my body was clearly overflowing with the rainbow mana of the Blood
Curse. Maybe my clear head had something to do with the Immortal’s power?
“Heh… Heh-heh-heh. You never cease to surprise
me, Commander Gandesblood.”
Nerzanpi struggled to her feet, keeping a hand
to her forehead.
She’d banged her head on some debris. Blood
was dripping down her face.
“You prevented me from retreating without even
meaning to. I only have few Baolu bullets left. I’m surrounded by enemies on
all sides. This reception is so warm that I could tear
up. It’s far too much for a small fry like me.”
“Stop resisting! I’ll catch you here and now!”
“You wish.”
Nerzanpi fired a bullet with a smile on her
face.
I dodged like crazy while pulling Lingzi by
the hand. That would get me killed for sure. My body wasn’t extra durable right
now, like it had been when I sucked Sakuna’s blood.
“Whoa?!”
“Eep!”
We tripped over a step.
Then the shining bullet just barely whizzed
above my head. It hit the stone pillar behind me with a loud explosion,
wrecking it in an instant.
I had no time to celebrate my survival,
though.
Nerzanpi closed the distance with ninja-like
movements.
“You die hard, eh, Commander Gandesblood?”
Then she pulled out a knife, as though she
were doing a magic trick.
She slashed at my throat with godlike speed,
but Lingzi pulled me back by the arm; the blade of Nerzanpi’s dagger missed me
by a hair’s breadth.
“Why are you so fixated on Lingzi Ailan?”
“Because she’s my friend! Because she asked
for my help! I can’t abandon her!”
“Oh, how commendable. What a humanitarian you
are.”
She slashed at my side.
Fortunately, I dodged it by falling on my
butt. On top of that, Nerzanpi tripped and lurched forward. But now she was
going to crush me from above! So I tried to stand up and book it, but…
“Bwegh!”
Nerzanpi’s face slammed into my head.
She held her nose while staggering backward.
Blood dripped from between her fingers and the vampires yelled,
“HAAAAAIIIIILLLLL!!!!! KOMARIN!! KOMARIN!!” Can’t you see
that was just dumb luck?
“Heh. Heh-heh… I see.
Interesting,” Nerzanpi muttered.
“What’s so interesting, huh?! You’ll see! I’m
gonna beat you to a pulp!” I said.
“Komari! Don’t push yourself!” Lingzi shouted.
“Just stand back and watch, Lingzi! I’m the
strongest Crimson Lord of all! This sneaky coward’s got nothing on me!”
I let out a war cry and threw a punch at
Nerzanpi.
Usually, I would have never done something
like that, but I was filled with a sense of omnipotence right now. No wound
hurt too much when Lingzi was in danger, and no attack would frighten me. I had
to defeat Nerzanpi, no matter what.
“That childish jab won’t— Gwuh?!”
Somehow, I landed a clean hit on her chin.
Cheering followed again.
Then I noticed something. A giant boulder had
fallen behind Nerzanpi. Her escape route had been miraculously sealed off. I
couldn’t let this chance slip.
“You did all those terrible things to
everyone! Who cares about the Dark Core! Who cares about the Baolu! I won’t let
you hurt people for that stupid crap! Repent! Apologize to everyone!”
I hit her again and again with my feeble
fists, every strike followed by shouts of, “HAAAIIILLL!!! KOMARIN!! KOMARIN!!”
I had no idea what was going on anymore. I’d
lost myself to my wrath and hatred. How in the world were my amateurish punches
even landing, though?
“That’s enough.”
“Ugh?!”
Nerzanpi grabbed me by the neck.
It hurt. I couldn’t breathe. But the rainbow
mana remained strong. I could keep going.
“Let me go! I’m gonna save Lingzi!”
“Stop with your nonsense. Your kindness is
nothing but poison. You heard her panting and suffering. You know that dying is
her only release. Giving her false hope will only
heighten the despair she feels when she meets her demise.”
“I won’t let Lingzi die! I’ll cure her
illness!”
“You really never learn. Your selfish sense of
justice only breeds people like Mary Fragment. Can you take responsibility for
your actions? No, you can’t.”
“Yes, I can!!”
“Can you? You’re even sicker than Yusei, huh?”
Nerzanpi threw me away, hard. My back hit the
wall, and I blacked out for an instant. But it seemed like I hadn’t hit
anywhere bad—I wasn’t too banged up.
Lingzi called my name in pain. Someone yelled,
“Commander, watch out!”
Then I noticed that Nerzanpi had trained her
gun on me.
“It’s over. Rest in peace.”
“Wah-ha-ha-ha-ha! Terakomari’s not your only
enemy!”
That same instant, Prohellya broke the silence
and fired.
Nerzanpi clicked her tongue and triggered a
spell. Her right hand glowed faintly. She threw a punch, neutralizing
Prohellya’s bullet with her bare fist.
“Wha…?”
“Regular bullets won’t work against me.”
Prohellya froze in shock. Nerzanpi seized on
the opening and threw a knife. I ran in to try to protect the Sapphire, but
then more debris fell from the ceiling, sending the bullet to the ground.
“This can’t be…”
“You sure you should be looking away,
Minister?!”
Leona unleashed a meteoric kick from above.
But Nerzanpi couldn’t dodge immediately—she was getting caught on the flooring,
which had tilted from the impact of the debris. The catgirl’s dropkick landed
right on her hand.
Nerzanpi was blown away, and unfortunately for
her, she flew right into the Seventh Unit, who were ready to rumble.
Nerzanpi activated a magical barrier in the
nick of time, and the whole palace shook as ax met mana. Still, Bellius’s
strike was enough to pin her there. The other vampires raised their weapons and
charged at her, spouting off lines that would normally foreshadow death.
“GO TO HELL!!”
“HYA-HA-HA-HA!! IT’S TIME FOR YOUR NAP, LITTLE
LADY!!”
Nerzanpi raised her gun to respond.
Bang!! A series of Baolu rounds flew at the vampires—but none hit. In a
series of ungodly coincidences, the mana bullets they were firing back at
Neranpi collided with each and every one of her shots. The fluke brought
further happenstance, and she ran out of ammo. A clicking noise rang out as she
pulled the trigger to fire again. Nerzanpi sucked her teeth and tried to summon
new Baolu, but it was too late.
“Check it! Blow it!” Mellaconcey blew up her
newly formed bullets.
Her zombie-like expression twisted ever so
slightly. The vampires yelled valiantly as they raised their swords and hammers
and whatnot. Nerzanpi tried dodging backward, but it was in vain.
Out of nowhere, a pair of hands grabbed her by
the ankles.
“My goodness, Minister. Running away isn’t
very admirable,” Caostel said.
He’d teleported his arms alone.
It was then that Nerzanpi grumbled in vexation
for the first time.
“C’mon. This is too much. You think it’s fair
ganging up on one lady like this?”
“We don’t care! It’s your fault for picking a
fight with the Komari Unit!”
“Yeah! You moron!!”
“You’ll regret ever raising a hand against the
Commander, bitch!!”
The Seventh Unit attacked without mercy.
Countless slashes hit and blood drops flew.
Nerzanpi went flying
backward, then tumbled on the floor before she hit the back of her head on a
pile of rubble.
That triggered a landslide of debris. Nerzanpi
hurried to her feet, only to slip and fall again on the blood on the floor.
“Wait… This isn’t fair… This…”
Nerzanpi stared up in a daze at the veritable
mountain crashing down on her.
In the end, she couldn’t resist. She could
only stare, like a deer in headlights.
The earth rumbled and the avalanche echoed as
the woman in black was buried in stone.
“Retreat! Retreat!” Prohellya yelled, doing
just that.
I got out of there while pulling Lingzi by the
hand. The collapse didn’t stop at that pile of rubble. A chain reaction had
started, triggering wave after wave of destruction. The Zijingong began
crumbling with a resounding echo.
“Komari…!”
“We gotta get out of here! Move it, everyone!
You wanna be buried alive?!”
The Seventh Unit shouted my name as they flew
out of the palace. I ran as fast as I could, fighting through the agony of my
wounds. Still, I was confident this was the end. There was no way Nerzanpi
could have survived the entire palace collapsing on her.
Just then, Lingzi’s eyes grew wide.
“Wait. That mana…”
“What is it?! I can carry you if you can’t
walk!”
“No, under there… Something’s moving.”
“Wha…?”
Lingzi clung to me.
The next thing I knew, I was being pushed to
the ground.
I looked up and saw Prohellya and Leona
standing there frozen, pale in the face. Caostel and Mellaconcey, too, were
uncharacteristically taken aback. What’s wrong? I
wondered, unable to move.
The next instant, an
incredible shock wave rocked the whole world.
My vision went white.
![]()
It’s an ill bird that
fouls its own nest.
Nerzanpi had thought to erase all trace of her
activities after obtaining the Enchanted Lands’ Dark Core. So she’d set a trap,
burying a mana bomb underneath the Zijingong, one that would erase all record
of her work as Minister of Military Secrets. Then the Ailan dynasty would
collapse, and Yusei would take over.
“Heh… Now’s the time to use it…,” Nerzanpi
muttered under the rubble.
She was covered in wounds. How many years had
it been since she was this banged up? She had to admit she’d left her guard
down—but Nerzanpi Rocha was not one to admit defeat fair and square.
By now, she was starting to make sense of
Terakomari Gandesblood’s power.
To push through, she would need all the bad
luck she could get her hands on.
So she had no choice but to use the mana bomb.
“Someone else will hold your burial. For now,
just die, Commander Gandesblood.”
Nerzanpi took a Correspondence Crystal from
her pocket, the one to send mana to the fuse. Unlike the last Magic Stone, this
one wasn’t broken. In the very end, the heavens sided with her. Nerzanpi
savored her luck as she quietly poured in mana.
Just then, something moved underground.
The Zijingong was enveloped in mana flames the
next moment.
![]()
I lost consciousness
for a moment, only to be woken up by the pain. I panted as I slowly opened my
eyes.
The first thing I saw was the vast twilight
sky. The sun had already dipped behind the horizon.
Glowing stars were showing their faces in the purple sky above.
How beautiful.
The sky seemed clearer here than it did in
Mulnite.
“Komari… Thank… goodness…”
I heard a voice beside me. I sat up and
whipped around.
The green girl lay right at my side.
“Lingzi?! You oka…” I couldn’t finish my
question.
Her clothes were so badly tattered that you
could no longer tell what they had looked like originally, and she was terribly
wounded all over. Yet despite the damage Lingzi had sustained, the Dark Core in
her chest was intact. It had survived, and it continued to eat away at her
life.
Lingzi coughed up blood.
She smiled faintly as she wrung out her voice.
“Thank goodness…you’re all…right.”
I finally realized what happened.
Nerzanpi had set off a bomb she’d planted in
the palace. Our surroundings had been turned into a wasteland. My comrades
crawled out of the earth, groaning. Everything was drenched in blood.
I was about to lose my mind.
I wanted to scream and escape reality.
This had to be a dream. One of those
nightmares I’d had when I was a shut-in.
“It’s okay.” Lingzi grabbed my hand.
“Everyone’s okay. They’ll be fine if you…go to the Dark Core.”
“Lingzi… Lingzi…!”
“Everyone…other than me is okay. I think…your
Core Implosion kept them safe.”
Other than you?! What’s the point of this power
if I can’t use it to help you?!
She had protected me. There was no other
explanation for how I was so lightly injured. I’d wanted to save her—but she’d
ended up saving me.
“Don’t cry. I’m glad I was able to save you.”
“Don’t say that… I’ll save you, too… I’ll cure
your illness…”
“No. It’s okay.”
She forced a smile, one so painful I wanted to
look away.
“It’ll be all right, as long as you’re okay.”
Ahh. I…
“Because I love you.”
How foolish could I be?
Back with Vill. Back with Sakuna. Back with
Nelia. Back with Karla. Back with Monique.
During all those times, the only thing I’d
managed to do was run and fight, frantically and recklessly.
I’d thought that would solve everything.
I’d sincerely believed my efforts would bear
fruit.
I’d thought I could do anything so long as I
had Core Implosion.
“Komari… You helped me. You kept fighting for
me even when you were hurt.”
“Lingzi…please…”
“You called me your friend… A fragile coward
like me… But I didn’t want to be your friend… I wanted to be your bride…”
Her warmth faded.
Tears spilled from her crimson eyes.
“And that’s why I’m content just being able to
save you.”
“D-don’t be… We’ll still have a lot of fun
after this… You’ll live like any other normal girl… Don’t give up…”
“No.”
“Please don’t give up!! Let’s go to Dr. Kuya!!
It’s okay… I can carry you there…”
Terror struck me.
Lingzi’s eyes changed color.
Their vivid crimson hue faded.
They had returned to
their original appearance.
“It’s okay. Don’t worry about me.”
Cracks formed in the sword in her chest.
The Dark Core began falling apart. Lingzi no
longer had the strength required to maintain Core Implosion.
“Don’t say that…”
“Use your power to help other people in need.”
“Don’t… Don’t say that… I’ll protect you… I’ll
find a way you can live a normal life… So please, don’t say that…”
“I appreciate the thought. But…leading a
normal life…would be pretty hard.”
“………”
In the end, I was a shut-in vampire princess
to my core. I hadn’t been ready to face the outside world.
I didn’t have the power to save people.
I couldn’t grant my mom’s wish.
I didn’t have it in me to change the world.
I couldn’t stop Lingzi’s life from slipping
away.
The strongest Crimson Lord? The hero who’d
saved the world?
That wasn’t me. I was just a pathetic weakling
who couldn’t save one girl.
“Thank you, Komari.”
Lingzi smiled.
And with that smile on her face, she bade me
farewell.
“Our time together was short, but I savored
every second of it.”
Pop.
I heard the sound of something bursting.
Blood gushed out of Lingzi’s body.
The red spread, tainting my skirt.
Lingzi went limp.
She was still, like a broken doll.
“And happily ever after. At last, Lingzi has
been freed from her burden as the bearer.”
Mistress Death laughed
behind me.
I could feel my mind breaking.
In its place, a tingling, uncanny emotion
boiled up inside me.
I turned around.
There stood Nerzanpi Rocha, gun in hand.
A lit cigarette was tucked between her smiling
lips.
Even on the verge of losing my mind, I could
understand what happened.
She’d stolen Lingzi’s dream. Stomped on her
tiny, simple wish of leading a normally life without being trapped by the
circumstances of her birth.
Nerzanpi had taken everything from Lingzi
Ailan.
“Please don’t misunderstand, Commander
Gandesblood. You know Her Highness had no hope of surviving. She would’ve died
eventually, even if I hadn’t sped up the process.”
“………”
“I keep telling you, I did this for her. It’s
better to make a quick exit than to draw out your life in agony. She already
wanted out.”
“………”
“Reality is harsh. The heavens are cruel. It’s
easier if you let yourself go with the flow instead of struggling in vain. Just
let the river carry you away.”
“………”
“Now move, Commander Gandesblood. I gotta
collect the Dark Core from her corpse. Looks like I’ll have to break her bones
to pry it out. My work is never done.”
Nerzanpi chuckled.
What was so funny about this?
I had lost my senses, my rationality. This
woman had killed Lingzi—that was all I needed to know.
I really was a useless vampire. I hadn’t been
able to save Lingzi.
But I still needed to stop Nerzanpi.
I couldn’t let even more people suffer at her
hands.
Mana burst. Willpower burned.
The next thing I knew, I was on my feet.
“Nerzanpi.”
“Hmm? We’re gonna keep going? Your luck’s
already over, ki—”
Mana blew like a storm.
A rainbow raiment enveloped my body.
Pillars of light in five different colors rose
to the heavens, slashing apart the evening sky.
I stomped the quaking earth and glared at the
woman in black.
“You’ll pay.”
“…!”
Nerzanpi flinched for a moment.
That was it. I only needed one blow. That was
all it would take. I would not allow the woman who’d stolen Lingzi’s dream get
away with it. I would make her pay. Apologizing wouldn’t be enough. She’d lied.
Nerzanpi needed to repent from the bottom of her soul.
“You… This can’t be…”
“I’m gonna send you flying.”
![]()
According to Enchanted
Lands legend, pillars in five colors would pierce the heavens upon the birth of
a Tianzi.
The grand sight before her couldn’t be
anything but the reenactment of that legend.
The light of night filtered through the
evening sky.
Rain began wetting her hair.
No—this was not rain. This was an omen to
celebrate the Tianzi: the Ganlu.
The sweet and smooth liquid washed the ground
of blood. Purified the world. The people of Jingshi looked up at the rainbowy
sky and cheered.
“…Still got some luck
left in you, huh? You don’t know when to quit.”
Nerzanpi clicked her tongue.
The Immortals were a long-lived people. Thanks
to their particular way of breathing, their lifespans were just about triple
that of other people. Nerzanpi had trouble understanding the workings of that
trait—and she certainly didn’t expect them to achieve pseudo-longevity through
manipulating luck.
A Core Implosion like the Blood Curse came
along only once every thousand years. And by ingesting Immortal blood, the
wielder of this ultimate power could produce miracles through the manipulation
of fate itself.
“It all makes sense now.”
The rainbow Blood Curse was the power to don
the raiment of luck.
The explosions of mana Komari had produced
were just a signal of when its effects started and ended.
Here was how it worked. Upon activating, the
Blood Curse would paint the world in rainbow and create the raiment of luck. At
this point, Komari would regain consciousness, and her good fortune would
persist for a while. (She also appeared to go back to “normal” while she wasn’t
actively using her Core Implosion—this was why she had been able to use the
gold version of the Blood Curse back at the restaurant). Then once she incurred
a certain amount of ill fortune, her raiment was undone, the world was dyed rainbow
again, and her last bit of good luck was triggered.
Komari must have ingested Immortal blood when
she’d arrived at the Enchanted Lands. That explained the unreasonably good luck
she’d had while she was sightseeing in Jingshi and competing in the Matrimonial
War. Then, once Nerzanpi shot her in the Zijingong, Komari’s raiment broke from
being pushed past its misfortune limits and unleashed its last bit of good
fortune. This was what caused Nerzanpi’s shots to be miraculously negated by
debris.
But after that, Komari
triggered the rainbow Blood Curse again by sucking Lingzi Ailan’s blood. Her
luck pushed Nerzanpi to injury, but in the end, her fortune ran out when the
bomb went off.
Now, Komari’s mana had exploded again,
signaling the end of the Blood Curse’s effects.
What sort of tremendous, heavens-twisting last
bit of fortune would she unleash this time?
Terakomari slowly raised her hand.
Nerzanpi had no idea what could happen. The
detonation of her bomb had turned the Zijingong into a wasteland. Their
surroundings were practically featureless.
In a space as empty as this, there was no way
Komari’s burst of luck would be enough to turn the tables.
“Heh-heh. Time to end this.”
Nerzanpi loaded the Baolu she’d created from
Nelia Cunningham’s willpower into her gun.
Nerzanpi, too, had been gravely wounded in the
explosion. She needed to procure the Dark Core and rest as soon as possible.
The moment she raised her gun, she heard
something approach.
Not a person. Not magic. Not even an attack.
“Meteorite,” Terakomari muttered with brimming
rancor.
Nerzanpi looked up at the sky in shock.
Something was quickly approaching, tearing the
rainbow sky asunder.
“—?!”
A star.
A star was falling.
A giant meteorite was plunging down on her from
the glowing rainbow sky.
The sky fractured. Someone screamed.
A tremendous noise was accompanied by
crackling particles of light.
Heaven’s net has large meshes, but nothing
escapes—Divine
punishment arrived to annihilate the evil.
The earth erupted around them.
Debris flew every which way like scraps of
paper.
The vampires regained consciousness and looked
up at the sky. “Ah,” they muttered.
Nerzanpi couldn’t move.
Her limbs were completely paralyzed.
“This…” Her cigarette fell out of her mouth.
“This…is fate…? No… This means you…you have a will strong enough to bend fate…”
“Get crushed.” Terakomari handed down her
sentence.
The meteorite descended, aiming for the
villain in black. The approaching shock wave nearly blew her away. There was no
point in firing back. Nothing could stop that. Nothing could stop her death.
But before the fear could hit—the meteorite crushed her.
“A—aaaaaaagh!”
Her eardrums burst, stripping Nerzanpi of her
hearing. The bones in her body crumbled, rendering her unable to feel any pain.
Still, Nerzanpi resisted—but it was all for naught. Fate had been manipulated
beyond significance. Nerzanpi yelled her bitter enemy’s name mutely as her
consciousness was ripped out of her body.
Intense shock.
Rainbow light filled the Enchanted Lands.
![]()
Some fates were set in
stone, no matter how much you tried to change them.
Perhaps I’d gotten too cocky.
The hero who saved the world. The slaughter
champion. The strongest Crimson Lord.
There was no meaning in those grandiose
monikers. Who would follow a useless commander who couldn’t even help the girl
she wanted to save?
“Lingzi…”
In the ruins of the
palace, I stared at Lingzi lying on the ground and cried.
Her expression was peaceful, but her flesh was
pale. Her body was limp and still. Blood continued to ooze from her chest.
Her life had been snuffed out by Nerzanpi’s
bullet.
I touched her hair.
Our enemy was no more.
No one would make her suffer anymore.
“Please wake up…”
Her eyes did not open again.
Memories from the brief time I’d spent with
Lingzi Ailan played in my mind. I had surprisingly little in common with her,
yet I was still able to experience her kind, regular heart.
Our date in the Jingzhi. The Matrimonial War.
Her wedding dress. Her wish to lead a normal life—all of it was burned into my
brain.
It wasn’t fair.
Lingzi was just a normal girl. What value was
there in a world that allowed fate to torment her until she faded away? I
wailed in despair.
“What a terrible sight. Star Citadel knows no
limits.”
Suddenly, someone was standing behind me.
Fluttering eastern clothing. A gaze as sharp
as a knife.
It was Karla’s older brother—Kakumei Amatsu.
He slowly walked up to me.
“Are you all right? You should go back to
Mulnite or the Dark Core Zone soon.”
“Why…are you here…?”
“Just checking on you, under Her Highness’s
orders.”
Who’s Her Highness?
That’s when it hit me.
Karla could do it.
Karla Amatsu could turn back time and save
Lingzi—but just as that thought came to me, Amatsu shook his head.
“Waving Moment can only
turn back time. It cannot cure Lingzi Ailan’s illness. The Dark Core’s curse
devoured her from the moment of her birth—turning back time would not change
her fate.”
“But…”
“Or do you intend to make Karla turn back time
by six hundred years, to the period before the curse was in place? If you do
that, then Karla would be the one to die. I will not allow it.”
“…”
There was no way out.
Profound despair took hold of my heart.
“Are you frustrated at being unable to save
her?”
“O-of course I am…!” I cried out in tears. “I
should’ve saved her… This isn’t fair…”
“Your first loss, eh…? But going through
defeat is important, too.”
Amatsu looked up at the sky.
The curtain of night was already lowering.
“Things had gone too well for you until now.
Experiencing the fear of loss is what makes you stronger.”
“…!!”
Blood rushed to my head, and I clenched my
fist, only to let go the next instant. I didn’t even have the energy to say
anything back to him.
Amatsu sighed in annoyance.
“Perhaps it was too much. You won’t be able to
contend with Yusei or the Wicked God Slayer like that.”
“…”
“Don’t worry, Miss Gandesblood. Your willpower
is far greater than you think.”
Huh? I raised my head.
Amatsu had a scowl on his face, like always.
“There’s blood in your pendant.”
I looked down at my chest in reaction.
The pendant my mom gave
me was bright red, covered in the blood that Lingzi had coughed up.
“Now go to the Dark Core Zone. Lingzi Ailan is
not one to go down in the history books—she’s a normal girl, and saving her
will be of no real value. But it is what your heart needs to heal.”
“What do you mean…?”
“You’ll know once you go there. There’s still
hope for the girl yet.”
I felt like he’d stirred my brain.
I stood there frozen as Amatsu gave me a Magic
Stone. Its spell was already at the brink of triggering—teleportation, most
likely. A bright light enveloped me and Lingzi.
I’ll know once I’m there. Wait… That means…
“Amatsu…!”
I felt my heart race as I raised my head, but
by then, he was already gone.
My vision went white. I decided to do as he
said. I hugged Lingzi’s cooling body close and wiped away my tears while
praying, “It’s okay. It’s okay.”
She and I were instantly transported to the
Dark Core Zone.
![]()
Lingzi Ailan was a
normal person without any determination.
She wasn’t grand enough to be a Tianzi. She
wasn’t even cut out to be Gongzhu or commander.
She wanted to live a normal life, like any
other person in Jingshi.
Yet she’d been bound by the curse of the Ailan
Dynasty. Though she played at looking for the elixir of life, deep down, she
had resigned herself to die for the sake of her country.
She lacked willpower. Her heart was too weak
to lead the people.
Yet Terakomari Gandesblood had faced this
spineless girl with sincerity.
Lingzi’s time with the vampire had been
delightful. Her life may have been worthless—but she was
happy to have been able to save someone in the very end.
She had no regrets.
She surrendered herself to watch over Komari
from the shadows.
But… After all that…
She still wanted to live a little longer.
“Meihua… Komari… Father… I’m sorry…”
Her eyes warmed up. Lingzi shed tears. She
couldn’t help it. Everyone was afraid of death. But then, she noticed something
strange.
Why was she able to cry?
After death, people were supposed to become
spirits tied to the transient world.
Could one shed tears even without a body?
“—!”
Lingzi thought she heard someone calling her
name.
She could see a faint light.
A glow like a star in the middle of the
darkness.
“—! —!”
It wasn’t just one voice. Several people were
calling Lingzi Ailan’s name.
Lingzi slowly raised her petrified body.
She reached out to the light, and in that
moment…
“Lingzi!! You’re awake!!”
“Huh…?”
Someone grabbed her hand.
Lingzi opened her eyes wide in shock.
Terakomari Gandesblood’s teary face jumped
into view. The vampire sobbed and wailed while holding Lingzi’s hand tight.
“Thank goodness… Thank goodness…! I thought
you were dead…!”
“Lingzi, are you okay?! Does anything hurt?!”
“Komari? Meihua…? And everyone else…”
She was in the morgue.
The ward was full of
familiar faces. Terakomari Gandesblood. Meihua Liang. Villhaze. Esther Claire.
Sakuna Memoir. Nelia Cunningham. Gertrude Rainsworth. Even Prohellya Butchersky
and Leona Flatt.
They were all sighing in relief.
Lingzi couldn’t keep up. Wasn’t she supposed
to be dead?
Meihua wiped away her tears.
“I’m sorry, Lingzi. I couldn’t go help
you…even though I’m your retainer… I put you through so much…”
“What’s the meaning of this…? Ow!”
Sharp pain ran down her side the moment she
tried to sit up.
Lingzi fell back to bed. “Call Dr. Kuya,
quick!!” Komari exclaimed, looking around in a panic. “Please don’t die,
Lingzi!!” Meihua yelled, like it was the end of the world.
“Don’t push yourself, Lady Lingzi,” Villhaze
scolded.
“Umm… I’m not. It just hurt a little.”
“Naturally. Nerzanpi shot you in the stomach
with a Divine Instrument. Fortunately, the wound isn’t lethal.”
“Yeah! Remember the hermit’s stone we bought?
It stopped the bullet and saved you!” Komari showed her the shattered pieces of
the stone.
There was still so much that Lingzi didn’t
understand. How had she been saved? What happened to Nerzanpi? And most of
all…why was the sluggishness caused by her illness completely absent?
“Komari… I…”
“Don’t sweat the details!”
Komari hugged her out of nowhere. Lingzi felt
her heart race as she savored Komari’s warmth. She smelled nice. It made her
feel lighter somehow.
“Thank goodness… Thank goodness…” Komari
repeated like a broken record. “I’m so, so glad. Your illness was cured. You’ll
recover little by little.”
“Cured…? Wait, what about the Dark Core…?”
“It’s over there. They
say it will break in about a week.” Villhaze glanced at the bedside table.
The Enchanted Lands’ Dark Core, the Willow
Sword, was just sitting there inconspicuously, like it was a wallet or
something.
Taken aback, Lingzi looked at her chest. The
portion that was stuck in her ribcage would normally grate on her bones in this
position, but she felt nothing now—nothing except Komari’s softness. So that
was why she felt lighter. The Dark Core had been removed.
Komari clung to her in tears.
“It’s okay now. You don’t have to worry about
anything now.”
“Yes…” Lingzi froze in place and blushed.
Tears fell from her eyes like waterfalls,
soaking Komari’s clothes.
Her kindness resounded in the depth of
Lingzi’s heart.
And not only Komari’s. Everyone here worried
about her. Her heart felt full—but at the same time, guilt welled up inside
her.
“I’m sorry. You did all this for someone like
me… A girl as weak as I am isn’t worth saving.”
“Don’t you apologize. And you’re not a
weakling. You’re amazing! You saved my life with yours.”
“…!”
“So stop belittling yourself. You’re amazing.
You’re way better than I ever could be. And I think you have a right to make
your dream come true.”
Komari quietly let go of her.
She smiled with bliss.
“Your life might’ve been hard until this
point, but now it’s yours to do what you please with. No worrying about being a
commander, or Gongzhu, or Tianzi. You can do whatever you want.”
“Um…?”
“I took care of it,” Meihua said
apologetically. “I couldn’t honor your feelings before. I’m really sorry about
that. So, I beat the Tianzi into an understanding. I convinced him to not force
anything on you and let you do as you please.”
“Uh, no, I… It was mostly talking. Anyway, he
got the point. You don’t have to worry about the curse of the Ailan dynasty
anymore. And he was sorry about forcing that on you, too. He should be here to
say that to your face, but…”
“…”
A fresh breeze blew across her lighter,
blade-free chest.
The next instant, she was crying twice as hard
as before.
“You okay?!” Komari and everyone else
exclaimed.
Lingzi dropped her head, unable to contain her
emotions.
She composed herself after a moment of deep
breathing.
At the same time, her chest filled with
warmth.
“…Thank you, everyone,” she said, grinning
awkwardly.
They all responded with pure smiles.
“Let’s throw a recovery party!” Nelia clapped.
“I’ll go get the food,” Prohellya said,
raising her gun for some reason.
“Wait, Lady Lingzi isn’t fully recovered yet.”
“Celebrations gotta be done in the moment! Right, Gertrude?” “Huh? Yes! Lady
Nelia is right!” “This maid just says whatever she says.” “I’ll bring you
traditional Polar Union dishes! Cat hot pot, fellas.” “Meow?! What?! I’ll gouge
your eyes out if you keep joking like that!” “Wah-ha-ha-ha! I’d like to see you
try!” “Hey, don’t start fighting right here!! You’re gonna kill me!!” “You should join the fight, Lady Komari. You’ll be
cooked in the hot pot if you lose.” “No freaking way!!” “Don’t worry,
Commander! I’ll protect you!” “I’ll protect you, too, Ms. Komari!” “Stay away,
sycophants. I’ll take all the glory by hunting the cat.” “Stay back, you!!”
“Are you forgetting we’re in an infirmary?! What if you open Lingzi’s wounds?!”
“Meihua’s right, stop it, you crazies!!”
Lingzi was confounded.
She didn’t get it, but the sight of her
friends making a fuss filled her with emotion.
Ahh, I’m so blessed.
Up to now, she had only
lamented her unfortunate circumstances. But she wasn’t unfortunate—she had all
these people to support her.
“For goodness’ sake.” Komari sighed before
looking back at her. “…I’m sorry, Lingzi. I don’t think they’ll start fighting
for real. They’re just playing around.”
“It’s okay. It’s fun.”
“Y-you think? If you say so…” Komari looked at
her with worry.
Her eyes brimmed with endless kindness. I have to repay her, Lingzi thought while wearing a smile
from the bottom of her heart.
(THE END)
Six Nations News, March
23rd Morning Edition
COMMANDER GANDESBLOOD
TAKES THE TITLE OF TIANZI
His Majesty the Tianzi of the Enchanted Lands
announced on the 22nd that he would be abdicating his title to Terakomari
Gandesblood, Crimson Lord of the Mulnite Empire. Commander Gandesblood emerged
victorious in the Matrimonial War held on the 21st and swiftly suppressed the
riots instigated by Minister of Military Secrets Nerzanpi Rocha. In a press
conference, His Majesty the Tianzi declared, “The Immortals of the Enchanted
Lands overwhelmingly support Terakomari—she deserves the title. I could not have
found a worthier partner for my daughter and successor.” Ms. Gandesblood
declined the position three times before she finally accepted. The dynastic
cycle has ended, and the Enchanted Lands switches from the Ailan dynasty to the
Gandesblood dynasty. Ms. Gandesblood has been welcomed as the spouse of the
former dynasty’s Gongzhu, Her Highness Lingzi, becoming the founder of a new
generation. Rainbow pillars of five colors appeared throughout the Enchanted
Lands to herald and welcome the succession. We can all look forward to
Commander Komarin’s bright future.
![]()
“Hmmm.
Things sure are getting interesting!”
Spica La Gemini laughed as she tossed the
newspaper aside.
She elegantly sipped a cup of blood-infused
coffee on a terrace 165 feet above ground, on a giant skyscraper in Jingshi.
Cannon salutes went off in the distance.
Everyone in the Floral Capital was celebrating.
Tianzi Yizhu Ailan was retiring, and his
successor was vampire girl Terakomari Gandesblood. And the celebration wasn’t
confined to Jingshi. The announcement had taken everyone in the Six Nations by
surprise.
“Terakomari has made an ally of another
country. Do you think we can afford to stay behind much longer?”
“It’s not a race. Inverse Moon only needs to
fulfill its goals.”
“That makes sense! And I will win, so there’s
no need to worry!”
“…” The man in eastern clothing sat across the
table from Spica with an awkward look on his face.
Kakumei Amatsu. A Peace Spirit who held the
title of Luna, top brass of Inverse Moon.
“Either way, the Enchanted Lands is a nice
place! This takes me back! This was a raging battlefield back in the day. And
by that, I mean thirty generations before yours.”
“Hah. Sure is different to be a
six-hundred-year-old child.”
“Yup! I’m your elder by a ton! So if you ever
need someone to pamper you, come to your big sister here. I’ll pat your head.”
“Big sister? More like great-great-grea—
Blegh!”
Amatsu spat out his coffee and fell into a
coughing fit. The drink soaked into the tablecloth.
“You fell for it!” yelled Spica with a wide
grin. “I mixed my blood in it. You really can’t stand the stuff, huh?”
“No Peace Spirit can.” Amatsu wiped his mouth
and sighed. “Now, why did you come all the way here, Your Highness?”
“To check on the
Starquake Agency.”
“Couldn’t turn a blind eye to Shikai Gudo’s
misdeeds? You have a surprisingly strong sense of justice, you know?”
“Nice joke. I’ll give you some candy for it
later.”
Spica smiled as she summoned something. A
strange object fell on the table. A giant bracelet… No, a necklace?
It looked like a simple metal ring. Six giant
spheres were incrusted around it, glowing blue.
“What is this? A giant rosary?”
“Are you going to find someone to hold this
thing with you and pray? That’d be funny! Introduce me if you do—but no. This
is a Divine Instrument I stole from the Starquake Agency. Every ball is an
armillary sphere. It’s an antique used to read the movement of the stars.”
Spica stroked a sphere merrily as she
continued.
“Did you know that the Starquake Agency’s
official purpose was to research star movement? Of course, this was just a
front to continue the research of the Daydream Paradise. Its real purpose was
to produce Baolu. But originally, it was supposed to be a place for studying
the cosmos.”
“Right back to the starting point.”
“Everything is a circle—but well, Shikai Gudo
twisted it. Still, Starquake Ministers throughout history have devoted
themselves to researching the stars, along with protecting this Divine
Instrument, the Nightsky Ring. They’ve been doing this for six hundred years.
That means this rosary is an ultra-rare treasure, and not just on an Enchanted
Lands scale—but all six nations.”
“What do you use it for?”
“You don’t know what armillary spheres are
for? You use them to learn the names of the stars. That way, you can rattle
them off while looking at the night sky with your sweetheart.”
Spica cackled. She sure had a knack for saying
pointless drivel.
Each of the six armillary spheres looked had a
different constellation engraved on it. And Amatsu only recognized two. The sky
of this world, and the sky of the Netherworld. He had
never seen the other four.
“To be more specific, this is our map to a
great journey. Our guide to fulfill Inverse Moon’s goal. I got to steal it
easy-peasy thanks to Meihua Liang and Nelia Cunningham exposing the Starquake
Agency. Shikai Gudo, Nerzanpi Rocha, Terakomari Gandesblood—they were all
dancing on the palm of my hand. And they’re all happy, ignorant of the fact
they were being used. How adorable! They’re so cute I could suck their blood.”
“We should be wary of Nerzanpi’s organization.
They could end up using us instead if we’re not careful.”
“Yup. The other reason I came to the Enchanted
Lands is to meet with her.” Spica threw a sugar cube in her coffee. “But that
didn’t happen. The Minister of Military Secrets was captured by the Mulnite
Empire. And it would be such a pain to infiltrate the Imperial Capital again,
so I gave up.”
“Did you find evidence of anyone besides her?”
“No. I walked in the direction of the Dusky
Venus, but I found no one. I guess only Nerzanpi was here.”
“Speaking of Star Citadel, what do you think
of them, your highness?”
“We gotta kill ’em!” Spica exclaimed
gleefully. “Those villains destroyed our utopia. They’re trying to extinguish
all humanity. Even the ones with pure hearts—the shut-ins! I will not renounce
murder. Sometimes, you need to sacrifice people to achieve things—which is
precisely why we must be choosy about who we kill! Yet Star Citadel doesn’t
understand that basic notion! My wishes won’t come true with those berserkers
around.”
“I see. Indeed.”
“Yusei herself is devastating my boxed garden.
We need to kill her as soon as possible. That’s why we need to break the Dark
Cores and open the door to the Netherworld… By the way, Amatsu.” Spica shot him a testing glare. “Did you find out what the Enchanted
Lands’ Dark Core is?”
“No. The Ailan dynasty hid it cleverly.”
“You lie.”
More cannon salutes went off, celebrating the coronation
of Terakomari Gandesblood.
“Your role was infiltrating the Enchanted
Lands to uncover their Dark Core’s secret. There’s no way THE Kakumei Amatsu
would come back without anything to show for it.”
“You overestimate me.”
“I’m not kidding! But you keep being sneaky!
That’s why Tryphon doesn’t like you! Though I must admit that I like your
spy-like character.”
“…”
“I trailed you, Amatsu. I know that the
Enchanted Lands’ Dark Core is the nearly-broken Willow Sword. Guess they
managed to pull it out of Lingzi Ailan’s chest.”
“Don’t say…”
“I’m not gonna do anything. There’s no need
to, in any case.”
Amatsu’s expression darkened. In contrast,
Spica’s eyes shone like stars. She took a blood candy out of her pocket and put
it in her mouth with a childlike grin. “Can’t wait to see what happens!”
As if reacting to her emotions, the stars of
the Nightsky Ring glowed.
![]()
How was Lingzi saved?
The only thing I could say was that Lingzi
Ailan was registered to the Mulnite Empire’s Dark Core. Her illness was cured
in the Dark Core Zone thanks to Mulnite’s Dark Core’s mana. Come to think of
it, the Dark Cores weren’t discriminatory in who they healed. Bellius was a
dog, after all, and he’d come back to life again and again with the rest of the Seventh Unit. But anyways, I didn’t know
much about how the system worked. What mattered was that a miracle happened.
Lingzi’s wounds healing also meant that she could stop using Core Implosion for
the first time in ten years.
Without the protection of the Late Monarch’s
Guidance, the Enchanted Land’s Dark Core quickly crumbled.
According to the Zijingong’s Immortals, it
would shatter completely in one week. Apparently, this was the period of
functionality it had saved after ten years of Lingzi’s Core Implosion.
That backup was a blessing, too.
During that week, Lingzi healed entirely—and
decided to become the bearer again and resume using the Late Monarch’s
Guidance.
“It’s something only I can do. Something I
must do.”
There were many downsides to losing the Dark
Core. Still, the Tianzi and the rest of the Enchanted Lands’ top brass weren’t
sure what to think of the decision. Lingzi would fall ill eventually by
becoming the bearer again, and everyone felt bad about binding her to her duty
once more.
That said, Lingzi was assertive. She stated
she would not do anything related to the Ailan dynasty besides maintaining the
Dark Core. She would prioritize doing what she pleased.
She also assured there was no need to be
pessimistic about her illness. She would use the Late Monarch’s Guidance for a
set time to save up the Dark Core’s backup. Then she would stop her Core
Implosion and heal in Mulnite. She said she could keep the Willow Sword intact
by repeating that cycle.
That didn’t change the fact there wasn’t
anyone to become the bearer after her, though. Tianzi Yizhu Ailan said he had
no intention of raising a next generation. That meant the Enchanted Lands would
eventually lose its Dark Core. The Immortals needed to think of a way around it
when the time came—but that day was still far off.
Lingzi got her freedom. She didn’t have to be
burdened anymore. She could live however she wanted. And
she’d won that future herself, with her own willpower.
As it turned out, that thing about Lingzi
lacking strength of will wasn’t true. It just so happened she felt strongly
about having a normal life instead of being the Tianzi. Her wish was just as
powerful as Nelia’s or Karla’s.
It was wonderful.
It also gave me hope. Maybe if I kept a mind
of steel and was steadfast in my determination, then maybe I, too, would one
day be able to quit my job.
That aside, for now, I just had to focus on
supporting Lingzi.
………
……
…No, hold on a sec.
I think there’s a few things I’m still missing?
“Congratulations, Lady Komari, on becoming the
Tianzi.”
“WHY?!?!?!”
“This here is the symbol of the Tianzi, passed
down through generations of the Ailan Dynasty: the Imperial Seal.”
“What am I supposed to do with this?!”
The Tianzi’s abode, the Zijingong. I grabbed
my hair in a room of a building that managed to stay standing.
I was about to be in this mysterious event
they called my “coronation ceremony.” The Tianzi said it was only natural, as I
would be his successor, but I had no idea what was natural about this whole
thing.
“This isn’t right! I’m a vampire! How can I be
the head of the Enchanted Lands?!”
“You never know until you try. And besides,
take a look at the results of this survey Six Nations News conducted in the
capital: ten thousand people out of ten thousand agree with your coronation.
You have an approval rating of one hundred percent, Lady Komari.”
“This is clearly a hoax!!”
Outside, the Seventh
Unit guys chanted, “Komarin! Komarin!”
They were celebrating my coronation. I
couldn’t get Caostel’s wicked sneer out of my head. “At last, the preparations
to take over the Enchanted Lands are in place,” he said.
“Komari… I’m sorry about all of this…,” Lingzi
Ailan said, casting her eyes down. She went red in the face and fidgeted, then
looked at me. “Umm… My father said that your coronation is the natural legal
conclusion.”
“Well, your law sounds whack.”
“It’s not whack.” Meihua sighed. “It’s nothing
strange for you to succeed the Tianzi. I mean, you are officially married to
Lingzi.”
“Hold on, Lady Meihua. May I see the papers
confirming this? I have a bonfire to ignite.”
“Put that match away! Control yourself!”
“But it’s not fair! Even if it is in name
only, I will not allow you to marry anyone other than me, Lady Komari, not even
if hell freezes over! I’ve already used Pandora’s Poison to see our future
together! We have a nice, happy family! So come! You may kiss the bride!”
“Get off of me!! Shoo!!”
I shoved Vill away and backed off.
The maid was as nutty as ever, but I felt her
confusion.
I mean, I didn’t even know when when me and
Lingzi had gotten hitched.
Meihua said it happened the moment I won the
Matrimonial War. Apparently, that’s how their laws worked. I’d gone past the
point of return without even knowing it.
“I-it’s okay, Komari. You’re only married
according to Enchanted Lands law. As far as the Mulnite Empire goes, you are
still single.”
“I don’t get the logic… But that aside, what
am I gonna do about the coronation?”
“Well…if you manage to convince my father, and
the people, and the law…”
Too many people (and concepts?!) to convince!
“Lady Lingzi, allow me
to have a serious discussion here with you.” Vill cleared her throat and gave
her a cool-headed glance. “I will ignore the marriage entirely. It is fate that
Lady Komari and I marry sooner or later. In fact, we have strict plans to
whisper sweet nothings to each other as we indulge in gazing at the starry
sky.”
“Are you being serious?” I interjected.
“So, I will ask only about the coronation.
Will Lady Komari truly become the Enchanted Lands’ Tianzi? Even though she
hasn’t even become the Mulnite empress yet?”
“What do you mean yet?
I am NOT becoming empress.”
“Don’t worry, Komari. We’re going to hold the
coronation…but you haven’t earned the title yet. Perhaps if you throw a
tantrum…”
My only choice is to act like a baby?
I couldn’t say that throwing tantrums had
gotten me anywhere before… Well, I could give a try at yelling “I don’t wanna
be the Tianzi!” with all my might. That strategy had worked pretty well for
Lingzi. I couldn’t let myself go with the flow!
Anyway, I was a tiny bit relieved.
I felt like I had taken one step forward in my
mission: helping those in need—and uniting the world.
And yeah, I had to do that because my mom had
asked me to, but I genuinely wanted the world to come together. I wanted to
help people in pain like Lingzi. I wanted to cheer up people who were suffering
like I had during my days as a shut-in. That way, I could meet my mom again
with my head held high.
The Mulnite Empire, the Aruka Republic, the
Heavenly Paradise, and the Enchanted Lands had been taken care of.
The missing pieces were the Polar Union and
the Lapelico Kingdom. Mulnite’s relationships with those two countries weren’t
bad per se, but… I just had this feeling things would be tricky with them, and
my hunches were usually right.
I sighed before looking at Lingzi and Vill
again.
“All right, all right. I’ll go meet the
Tianzi.”
“Yeah. I’ll go with
you,” said Lingzi.
“I’ll be by your side, Lady Komari. I’ll
expose the extent of your sloth to His Majesty and crush all his expectations.
I’ll explain how you still cannot eat your bell peppers at this age. I’ll tell
him all about the list of diseases you keep on hand to get sick days off. I’ll
recount to him that time you went to the bathroom late at night and thought a
tree branch outside the window was a ghost, and you cried your eyes out.”
“You keep your mouth shut!!” I yelled as I
walked away.
Everything was settled for now. I just had to
stop this coronation and go back to my safe indoor life—or so I thought,
unaware of what awaited us.
“Hmm…? Lady Lingzi?” Vill said in surprise.
Meihua gasped.
The workings of heaven were inexplicable.
We had a week of backup? Who’d decided that?
Lingzi’s chest was shining.
She quickly put her hands in her clothes to
take it out. The Willow Sword was already in shambles. It glowed in signal of
its last moments.
Lingzi was on the verge of tears.
“Ah… The Dark Core…”
Everyone was bewildered at the fact.
The sound of glass breaking echoed.
And the Willow Sword burst into pieces.
The shards turned into light dust and spilled
out of Lingzi’s hands. Vill and I could only watch in shock. A strong flash
exploded from the center of the broken Dark Core.
One of the six was lost at last… And the
despairing silence only lasted for one second.
It must have been just like this during the
vampire riots.
The door to the Netherworld opened.
I felt my body being pulled.
“Whoa…”
“Lady Komari! Hold on to me! No, I’ll hold on
to you!”
“Stop taking advantage
of the situation to grope me! Don’t you see this is not the— WAAAH?!”
I felt ashamed of myself for thinking I only
had the Polar Union and the Lapelico Kingdom left. My hunches never worked
during tests back when I was in school.
Resistance was futile. Before I knew it, the
light was already sucking me in.
And so, I was transported somewhere else.
Nice to see you again. Kotei Kobayashi here.
As you might have
noticed, the countries in this story each have real-world inspirations.
That said, I only take the slightest, vaguest
ideas from real life. I don’t put a lot of detail into reproducing cultures.
They really are just a point of reference.
I think the easiest to tell would be the
Heavenly Paradise. And the Polar Union.
Of course, the Enchanted Lands isn’t hard to
figure out, either; it’s based on pre-modern China. I would say a mix of about
the Ming to the Qing dynasties. You can expect a very Eastern-ish adventure for
Komarin and the gang.
Now, some special
thanks.
To riichu, for carefully illustrating the
feats of Komarin and friends. To Ryo Hiiragi, for bringing color to this story
with the book designs. To Yoten Sugiura, my editor, for pointing out the
smallest details of my writing. To everyone involved in the production and
selling of this book. To all of you my readers for holding it in your hands. I
give you my deepest gratitude—Thank you so much!!
We are at the halfway
point of the series with this seventh volume, and I wasn’t expecting it to turn
out like this with such serious fighting. The following
volume will be something unusual for Vexations—a cozy
road-trip style story in the Netherworld… Or I guess we’ll see!
I also have an
announcement to make.
The manga adaptation of The
Vexations of a Shut-In Vampire Princess is being serialized in Monthly Big GanGan, with art courtesy of riichu. You can see
Komari’s feats in the same style as the novels, so I’m also very excited as I
follow it. It also contains some characters and scenes not depicted in the
novels, so I hope you enjoy it. Please give it a read!
Kotei Kobayashi






















