Chapter 10
I felt a twinge of self-loathing toward my past self for ever finding this interesting.
Thump.
Without hesitation, I closed the book and stood up.
Splitting firewood would be far more productive than reading some pointless dragon story.
âUghâhaa.â
Stretching, I stepped out through the front door, and warmer air brushed against my skin.
It wasnât particularly cold today.
Was spring already trying to arrive?
According to Ninaâthe one in charge of âNaâ among the Ganada Maid SquadâCelesteâs winters were notoriously fickle.
One day it would be brutally cold, and the next, clear as if nothing had happened.
Then fog would roll in again, followed by days of frost, and no one would find it strange. That was Celeste.
Weather, she said, was little more than divine caprice.
I wholeheartedly agreed.
Still, on a day like this, tending a small vegetable garden didnât sound like a bad idea.
âHas the ground thawed a bit?â
Ever since Iâd fallen flat on my face while chopping firewood, Betty had hidden the hand axe somewhere.
But what she didnât knowâ
âI know thereâs a pickaxe behind the woodpile!â
Ha!
This would do nicely for turning the soil.
The backyard of the cabin was just the right size, and the soil quality seemed perfect for a small garden.
Iâd plant lettuce. Tomatoes. Herbs.
And if this world had chili peppersâŠ
Iâd grow those too. Then cabbage or radishesâand make kimchi.
My life was far more satisfying than my previous one, but there was just one thing missing:
Rice and kimchi.
Iâm Korean to the bone.
You needed rice to have the strength to work!
Though, admittedly, that excuse didnât hold much water when the Ganada Maid Squadâbuilt sturdy on bread and grains aloneâstood living proof before me.
Still, I fully intended to ask around and see if rice farming or kimchi-making was possible here.
I crouched in the center of the yard and pressed my hands into the ground.
The soil was cold, but the snow had already melted.
Maybe it wouldnât be so bad if I broke it up with the pickaxe?
âHrrngh!â
Thoughts short, actions swift.
I raised the pickaxe and slammed it straight down.
âAck!â
I immediately let go.
Or ratherâit felt closer to my body being flung away.
The soil was soft enough that the pickaxe went in easily.
The problem was what lay beneath it.
Something hard. Like solid rock.
A jolt shot up the pickaxe, sending a shockwave through my arms. Every hair on my body stood on end.
âMy hand!â
Right.
This body was even weaker than I thought!
Thinking of Bettyâthe smallest maid but the strongest among themâI wept silent tears of envy.
If sheâd seen me like this, she wouldâve fainted.
I absolutely cannot let them find out.
One overprotective Betty was already more than enough. I now had six guardians hovering over me.
If they discovered Iâd been digging on my ownâ
No, swinging a pickaxe on my ownâ
Theyâd probably take turns standing guard so I couldnât even step outside my blanket.
âThat is NOT happening!â
Letâs pretend this never happened.
Just as I pulled the pickaxe out of the soil and tried to roughly fill the hole with my footâ
âHuh?â
Something was dangling from the tip of the pickaxe.
âWhat theâ?â
Could you⊠fish something out of the ground?
That made no sense.
Stunned, I examined whatever had been caught.
It was an antique-looking silver goblet with handles on both sides.
Intricate patterns covered itâclearly something valuable.
If it were a bit bigger, it couldâve passed for a championship trophy.
And despite having been buried underground, it gleamed suspiciously brightly.
ââŠThis feels ominous.â
The bad vibes were off the charts.
I really didnât want to bring it inside.
Using the pickaxe, I scraped out a shallow hollow, put the goblet back in, and covered it with dirt.
âNothing happened. Yep. Nothing at all.â
âŠThatâs what I thought.
***
âMadam, are you feeling unwell?â
Riaâthe one in charge of âRaââlooked at me with concern.
Despite her impressive muscles, she was the softest-hearted of the group.
I forced a smile and shook my head.
But inside, I was rotting away.
âI-Iâm fineâŠâ
âYou donât look fine at all. Thereâs a shadow on your face.â
She hurried over with a hand mirror and held it up.
The face reflected back at me looked gauntâeven to my own eyesâwith dark circles hanging heavily beneath them.
No wonder. I hadnât slept properly for days.
In just a few short nights, my life genre had shifted from âcalm, healing countryside slice-of-lifeâ to âpsychological horror, sanity erosionâ.
âMadam~ Time to eat!â
At that moment, Garnet, Nina, and Dora entered the cabin one by one, each carrying a tray and smiling brightly.
They even enter in alphabetical orderâŠ
Ever since declaring themselves my footstoolsâno, my devoted attendantsâthe Ganada Maid Squad had drastically upgraded the meals.
Too drastically.
The food was rich and oilyâfar from what Iâd grown used to.
After sharing the first lavish meal together, Iâd gently steered things back toward healthier fare.
Theyâd been devastated, begging at least to be allowed to prepare portions that satisfied their hearts.
I couldnât refuse.
Hence the three traysâŠ
âMadam! Today, we prepared wine as a palate cleanser! Dora and I stole it from the supplies meant for Lady Katarina!â
âIt was terribly thrilling!â
Hahaha! Hohoho! Giggle giggle!
On any other day, I wouldâve laughed along.
But todayâ
âEek!â
âOh my! Madam, are you all right?â
âWhatâs wrong?!â
âWho did this?!â
Even Betty and Mariâwhoâd been cleaning windows and sweeping the yardâcame rushing in, instantly assuming battle stances.
I buried my face into Garnetâs broad chest, trembling.
Honestly.
I was terrified.
And the reason was obvious.
âThat goblet! Where did it come from?!â
âThe goblet? It was on your table this morning. It was so pretty, we used itâŠâ
âAaagh! You cursed thing! Cursed silver goblet!â
âMadam!â
Yes.
That goblet.
The suspicious silver goblet Iâd dug up while foolishly trying to make a garden.
I was sure Iâd buried it properly and that no one would ever know.
But strange things started happening that very night.
That nightâafter pretending nothing had happenedâI washed up and flopped onto the bed.
â?!â
My back felt strange.
I lifted the blanketâ
And there it was.
âThatâs disgusting!â
Shuddering, I threw the goblet out the window.
That was the beginning.
âAaagh!â
I threw it outside.
Buried it again.
Dumped it in the main house.
I even hung it on a tree in the back mountainâ
Yet every time I came to my senses, the goblet was back beside me.
Like a beggar that just wouldnât die!
This wasnât some Exâorcism movie or anything!
After days of this, I was on the brink of a nervous breakdown.
Just yesterday, Iâd buried it beneath a tree in the Grand Fortress Garden, convinced that would finally be the end!
An evil spirit. This has to be an evil spirit.
Was this what they meant when they said I was cursed?
Was it actually real?
Had I not just been medievally gaslit for having red eyesâbut genuinely cursed?
Thenâ
âMadam, look at this!â
Mari, who had relaxed from battle stance, stared wide-eyed at the goblet.
âThereâs something reflected inside it!â
âWhat?â
Suddenly, an uncontrollable curiosity surged up.
And truthfullyâspite.
Iâd been desperately searching for a way to end this miserable game of tag.
If it was really an evil spirit, I was ready to exorcise it physically.
I looked back at my reliable alliesâthe Ganada Maid Squad.
Their magnificent muscles were still there, gloriously intact.
With their grip strength, an evil spirit would be nothing.
Right. I may be weak, but my side is absurdly strongâŠ
Maybe we can punch a ghost.
Armed with the courage of a petty schemer, I cautiously peered into the silver goblet.
And inside itâ






