Chapter 36
âWe fought quite a bit back then.â
But they werenât bad memories. It was less than a month, but we lived together almost like a family.
âI donât know what Kin thought, though.â
Kinâno, âHinââwas a boy like a wary wild animal. Only in front of young me and my baby sibling did he relax a little. In front of adults, he acted like a fierce wildcat.
My parents felt sorry for Hin.
âIt seems he was treated cruelly by adults. Ash, wonât you help that child a little?â
âTch⊠since youâre asking, Mom and Dad, Iâll try.â
And so, I ended up taking on the role of guardian to that rude boy.
âBack then, I was the leader.â
It was a memory from seventeen years ago, so it was vague, but also comforting.
Wasnât he almost the only person I could remember my parents with?
âSeeing that he gave me back my handkerchief and asked about souls and such, he must think Iâm dead.â
Well, of course. Seventeen years ago, our whole family was massacred by robbers.
âSo he would naturally think I died too.â
I quietly unfolded the handkerchief and held it up to the light. It was cleanly washed, but worn from use.
I opened the box where I kept my important belongings and took out a small pouch.
Inside was half of a purple handkerchief, exactly like the one Kin had given me.
When I put the two together, they matched perfectly. Even after almost twenty years, it didnât feel awkward at all.
âAfter all this time, it finally returns to my hands and completes Motherâs handkerchief.â
Looking down at it, my feelings were strange.
âDo objects have fate too?â
Thinking about what had happened over the past few days, it didnât seem completely wrong.
The portrait inside the necklace returned to Bernard, and the doll returned to Anna.
They all went back to the people they belonged to and told their own stories.
Maybe, like that, this handkerchief met me again to tell me something.
âŠAt that thought, I let out a small laugh.
âWhat is this? Iâm getting too sentimental.â
This kind of overthinking wasnât like me. Now wasnât the time to drown in feelings.
It was much better to think about what to do next.
I crossed my legs and muttered out loud.
âHm. Kin has treasured the handkerchief I gave him all this time, and he even showed the absurd wish of wanting to talk to the dead me.â
âŠThen, wouldnât it be okay to reveal to Kin that I am that âAshâ?
If I revealed our past relationship, maybe I wouldnât be treated like this anymore. Maybe Iâd receive much better treatment.
Surely, if my parents were his benefactors, he wouldnât treat their daughter coldly?
âThatâs likely, right?â
Kin may be cold and calculating, but itâs well known in this castle that he cherishes his own people absolutely.
Even if heâs the king of criminals, a king is still a king.
Maybe this chance could give me a powerful backer.
As my thoughts reached that point, what I needed to do next became clear.
âShould I test the waters a bit and then bring it up?â
Tomorrow might become a turning point in my life.
âYou look tired.â
At Kinâs question, I replied with a worn expression.
âHandling things like this one after another isnât easy.â
Noâthat wasnât it. I had stayed up all night worrying about what to ask, what to answer, and how to reveal the truth to Kin today.
I drew the curtains to create a dark atmosphere and placed the handkerchief on top of the crystal ball.
âThis⊠belonged to a young girl.â
âThatâs right.â
âThe girl is calling the lord. âŠI-in, âŠHin. Sheâs calling Hin.â
ââŠ!â
For a moment, Kin stopped breathing. At that instant, I was certain.
âKinâno, he really is Hin.â
If not, he wouldnât look so shocked.
Kin stepped toward me.
âIs it really you, Ash? Ash, is it you?â
âShh, calm down. This isnât over yet. To fully summon the soul, I need a proper reason. You must tell me.â
Why would he want to meet Ashâs soul even to the point of necromancy? I needed to be sure.
Most people miss the dead, but they donât want to summon them and talk to them.
âAnd we only spent about a month together.â
I decided to hear his answer before choosing whether to reveal who I really was.
âMy lord, quickly. Time is passing.â
ââŠâŠâ
Urged on, he let out a low groan and finally spoke.
âThat girl⊠I killed her family.â
ââŠWhat?â
âI want to apologize to her first.â
Killed my family? What was he talking about? Shocked, I jumped to my feet.
But because the room was dark, my stiff expression wasnât visible, and Kin continued speaking calmly.
âThey were killed because of me. In truth, itâs no different from me killing them myself.â
âSo⊠that kind of killing.â
Even if it wasnât a direct murder, the shock was still overwhelming.
âKinâno, Hinâwas involved in that incident?â
At the time, he had only been a little over ten years old. How could a child that young be involved in something as dangerous as murder?
I knew that Kin, the master of the Ashen Citadel, was a dangerous man, but what I just heard gave me a completely different kind of unease.
Anger and fear rose at the thought that my family had been dragged into something like that, and I erased my plan to reveal my identity from my mind.
For my future, I couldnât form deep ties with Kin.
He belonged to a dangerous world, a world different from mine.
I barely regained my composure and continued questioning him. I couldnât miss the secret tied to my familyâs death.
ââŠDoes that mean the girlâs family wasnât killed by robbers?â
At my question, Kinâs blue eyes flashed in the darkness.
ââŠHow do you know they were killed while disguised as a robbery?â
âI learned your old name from the soul. Shouldnât I naturally know the cause of their deaths too?â
A sharp reply slipped out.
âI can tell you even more. The girlâs name was Ash. She was about three or four years old then. Her parents were Grace and Hardy, and she had a younger sibling named Polly.â
I knew I shouldnât go this far, but my mouth kept moving.
âNow youâre certain that Ash is here, arenât you?â
ââŠI believe you. Thatâs information no one but Ash could know.â
Dizziness washed over me, and I grabbed the table to steady myself.
âAsh is askingâif it wasnât robbers who killed her and her family, then who did? And if you were involved, my lord, why did her family have to die? She wants to clear the doubts surrounding their unjust deaths.â
ââŠThat.â
With a low groan, Kin turned his head away.
âIâm sorry, but I canât say that in front of this astrologer.â
âYou canât say it in front of me? Why? Iâm the one helping here.â
âBecause itâs confidential.â
âConfidentialâŠâ
I quietly whispered my parentsâ names and my siblingâs name to myself.
Seventeen years ago. I thought it was something I had completely forgotten.
But the moment I heard Kinâs words, that time came vividly back to life in my memory.
Neighbors were throwing water on a house engulfed in flames. It was our house.
âM-Mother? Why is it hot? Hic⊠where are Mom and my sibling? And Dad?â
âI donât know! A lot of people died! Your parents might be among them. Go throw water too!â
My parents and sibling were found as cold corpses inside the burned house. The neighbors concluded it was a robbery and arson committed by vagrants.
That day, I lost everythingâmy family, my home, and my money.


