Chapter 25
Lilian.
As soon as Seraphina uttered the name, she quickly covered her mouth with her handâbut it was already too late.
ââŚWhat did you just say?â
At the low voice, Seraphina shut her eyes tightly.
Everyone feared Cloys, but working under him was surprisingly easy.
As long as you fulfilled your duties, he didnât pay much attention to formalities or etiquette.
People called that his generosity, but Seraphina knew the truth.
He was simply too exhaustedâeven getting angry was a bother to him.
But even someone like him had a line that could never be crossed.
And that was speaking carelessly about his wife and daughter.
âW-Wait, thatâs not what I meantâŚâ
âYouâd better answer properly, Seraphina Lidham. Just because you were close with my wife doesnât mean Iâll go easy on you.â
His tone made it clearâany hesitation would cost her her head.
She hadnât planned on hiding anything anyway, so she spoke honestly.
âYou⌠You know Lilian was a bit different, right? It wasnât magic, but she had a strange power.â
ââŚShe did.â
âMaybe because her powerâs energy wave was similar to my mana, but whenever she was near me, my magic became more accurate. It felt like my spells became more stable and solid.â
But even as she explained, Cloysâ expression only grew colder.
âWhy am I only hearing about something so important now?â
âBecause Lilian asked me not to tell Your Majesty.â
ââŚWhy?â
âHow could I know her exact thoughts? She was called a witch and treated like an outcast. I guess she didnât want anyone knowing about that unusual ability. Besides, she said she didnât even fully understand how it worked.â
ââŚâŚâ
Worried he might explode, Seraphina anxiously glanced at him.
Sheâd witnessed firsthand during the war how mercilessly he took lives.
She had no intention of triggering that fury, even by mistake.
âS-So⌠we should hurry, donât you think? Iâm worried about the childâŚâ
âMake preparations.â
Fortunately, Cloys didnât press further and let her be.
Letting out a quiet sigh of relief, Seraphina turned to the magic stone in front of her.
It was large and saturated with powerful mana.
âWith this much power, a skilled mage like myself can cast a tracking spell over the entire palace without issue.â
However, the real problem was the residual magic left behind by the old palace mages, who had buried this stone deep underground.
Their enchantments weakened any new spells cast on the grounds.
Seraphina raised her hand. A bright light surrounded her, and a whirlwind spiraled out from where she stood.
Then, suddenly, a thought from earlier crossed her mind.
âIf only Lilian were here, weâd find her in an instant.â
Lilian had always been the one to keep her steady whenever she started to falter.
Thanks to her, how many lives had they managed to save?
âItâs no use missing her now.â
It was strange how something she hadnât thought about for seven years suddenly returned to her today.
Shaking off her thoughts, Seraphina focused again.
As she willed it, the tracking spell expanded throughout the entire palace.
Now, all she had to do was detect responses from people within the buildings and identify the presence of a child.
âThis will take a whileâŚâ
And thenâ
ââŚ!â
Within the wide-spread net of the tracking spell, she felt itâan unmistakable aura.
In one of the buildings, tucked away in a remote corner of the imperial palace.
* * *
Whiiiish.
It sounded like the wind was blowing outside. A faint whooshing came from the high glass windows.
Ibi blinked and pulled the blanket a little tighter.
Sure enough, once it got dark, the chills came.
âI want to sleep in my bedâŚâ
She missed the fluffy bed and blanket in her room.
The blanket that rustled softly when she buried her face in it and smelled like sunshine.
The ones at the orphanage always smelled nice too, thanks to how diligently they were washedâbut still, the ones at the academy were softer and cozier.
Thatâs why, even after waking up in the morning, sheâd lie there squirming, reluctant to leave.
âI want to go home.â
The moment that thought crossed her mind, Ibi startled herself.
How long had she even been here?
Sheâd only slept in that bed for one nightâand already, she was thinking of it as âhome.â
She still had a chair to lie on, a blanket to cover herself, and even candy left in her bagâand yet here she was, thinking life was hard.
âCompared to living at the inn, this is nothing.â
Ibi remembered things she hadnât thought about in a long time.
* * *
Ibiâs earliest memory was of the stable behind an inn.
An older woman working there had taken her in after sheâd been abandoned.
âThe innkeeper picked you up from the forest. So be sure to obey him.â
Once Ibi could walk and talk, the innkeeper immediately put her to work.
At first, she shoveled manure in the stables.
Then, because she was small, she was made to clean chimneysânot just at the inn, but across the village.
Ibi hated that job.
It wasnât just physically demandingâpeople would spit at her when she came back covered in soot, saying she was disgusting.
In summer, at least she could wash up easily, but in winter, it was impossible.
The stream next to the inn froze solid when winter came.
Even when she tried breaking the ice with rocks, it never crackedâjust hurt her hands.
Sometimes sheâd chip off some ice near the edge and use the melting water to wet her throat, but that was all.
The innkeeper and his wife used hot water from the kitchenâbut of course, Ibi was never allowed any.
She once tried washing her face with freshly fallen snow, but it was too cold to stay on her skin for long.
So in winter, Ibi looked even filthier than usual.
Whenever she passed by, the innkeeper and his wife would cover their noses and wave her away.
âUgh, whatâs that smell? Filthy brat. Go wash up, now!â
âB-But thereâs no waterâŚâ
âThereâs that spring deep in the forest that doesnât freeze, isnât there? Go wash up there! If I see you filthy tomorrow morning, youâre out of the stable!â
At the threat of being thrown out, Ibi trembled.
She could survive because she had the stableâbut if she was kicked outâŚ
She remembered a man sheâd seen frozen to death on the street recently. She was young, but she understood death.
Never opening your eyes again. Never speaking again. Buried under the cold earth.
She didnât want that.
So Ibi went into the forest alone.
But the forest was terrifying too.
âThere are wolves hereâŚâ
People said wolves ate anyone who walked alone.
Thatâs why villagers only entered the forest in groupsânever alone, especially at night.
But if she didnât wash up, sheâd be kicked out and starve. Sheâd never be given even dry bread again.
To Ibi, hunger and cold were scarier than wolves.
As she entered the forest, only the sound of the wind greeted her.
On the way to the unfrozen spring deep in the woods, she heard footsteps behind her.
When she turnedâthere it was.
A wolf. Eyes glinting not far away.
GrrrrâŚ
The wolf slowly approached, droolingâit looked starving.
âIs this how I dieâŚ?â
She shouldâve just stayed and gotten scolded.
Freezing to death mightâve hurt less than being torn apart.
But regrets came too late. The wolf was drawing nearer.
Ibi crouched down and curled into a ball. That was when her hand suddenly grew hotâand a blinding light flashed through the dark woods, like lightning.
âHuh?â
Even in her terror, the sudden light startled her. She looked up.
Her hand was glowing with a strange light.
On the back of it was a black, blotchy markâsomething sheâd never seen before.
She stared at it, transfixed, forgetting even the wolf in front of her.
ââŚWhat is this?â
Of course, there was no one around to answer her question.
While she stared in shock, the mark faded away from her hand.
Then she remembered the wolfâand looked up again.
âHuh?â
The wolf was gone.
It had already turned around and was walking away, as if Ibi hadnât even existed.
That night, Ibi safely reached the spring deep in the forest.
She washed her body with the warm water that flowed from it.
And she didnât run into the wolf again on the way back to the inn.
âYou came back alive? Guess youâre lucky.â
The innkeeper tilted his head, surprised to see herâbut quickly lost interest.
To him, Ibi was someone whose life or death meant nothing.
That night, curled up in the straw of the stable, Ibi stared at the back of her hand for a long time.
âIt looked so strangeâŚâ
If anyone else saw it, theyâd probably hate itâcall her diseased and avoid her.
But for some reason, Ibi felt like it had protected her.






