Chapter 65
âGrrrâŚ.â
ââŚâŚâ
âGrrhhâŚâ
ââŚâŚâ
âUghhhâŚâ
âYouâre driving me crazy with all that noise!â
At last, Irene couldnât hold it in anymore and lightly kicked Ruskaâs chair from under the desk.
âAh! Donât kick me!â
âYouâre the one making those weird noises!â
âThen tell me with words!â
âAs if someone who listens to words would act like this!â
âWhat kind of person lashes out with their foot first! Who in their right mind would call a lunatic water buffalo like this the princess of the Southâouch!â
As usual, Irene and Ruska bickered endlessly. Arcel sighed at the sight and said to Ivi,
âIvi. Donât bother watching them. Stupidity is contagious.â
âY-yesâŚâ
At Arcelâs words, Ivi quickly turned her head away from the quarrel she had been watching.
âLetâs just finish what we were working on. Earlier, you were confused in this Tennelton section, right? Here, you substituteââ
Arcel pointed at the formula he had rewritten in his notes, explaining to Ivi, who listened with terrifying concentration.
Meanwhile, Ruska, who had just slipped free of Ireneâs grip on his collar, rushed over to Arcel.
âArcel! Youâre only teaching Ivi! How can you watch me suffer over the midterms and just ignore me?!â
âThat was you suffering? I thought you were imitating some monster that got stabbed.â
Irene added dryly from the side,
âReally? I thought it was a drugged-up bug.â
Crushed by their merciless evaluation, Ruska slumped back down onto the desk.
âNo one understands my pain⌠The term just officially started, and we already have exams?â
At his grumbling, Irene flicked her hair back and said,
âYouâre the one who didnât even check the academic schedule. We knew all along and were preparing. Right, Ivi?â
âYes!â
When Ivi answered, Irene smiled approvingly and patted her on the head.
Ruska muttered at the sight,
âSheâs right, but why does it feel so annoying⌠Ah, I donât mean you, Ivi, I mean Irene.â
But when Ireneâs eyes narrowed, he jumped up and hurriedly backed away.
Just then, a bell rang in the distanceâthe end of class.
Arcel closed the book and notes he had been showing Ivi.
âLetâs go eat lunch first. Iâll explain the parts you donât understand afterward.â
âYes, sir!â
Her lively answer made Arcel chuckle.
This was supposed to be Professor Mallesâs class.
But since heâd caught a nasty cold, todayâs class had been switched to self-study.
Ivi, who had been excited to learn new material today, had been crestfallen.
Arcel then offered to teach her himself, telling her to sit next to him if she liked.
Overjoyed, Ivi had darted to his side in an instant.
Irene had looked pitifully dejected at the sight, but unfortunately, she couldnât explain the math parts Ivi was stuck on.
Meanwhile, Ruska had been making bizarre noises about hating the upcoming test, which only made Irene more irritable.
The four of them tidied up the classroom and left.
As Ivi held Ireneâs hand on the way to the cafeteria, she turned to Arcel.
âOh, right! The book you lent meâIâll bring it back to you next class.â
âNo need to rush.â
âBut I finished it already.â
When Ivi replied with a sheepish grin, Irene shot Arcel a glare.
On their last outing, Arcel had brought back several books.
Then heâd handed some to Ivi, saying he thought sheâd like them.
Iviâs reaction had been explosive.
âReally? For me? I can read all of them?â
âOf course. I brought them for you.â
âThank you! Thank you so much!â
A seven-year-old bowing in awe over science theory booksâwhat a sight.
âStill, Arcel is far too nice to Ivi.â
Given his reputation, he should have had little interest in a child like her. Yet, strangely, he was especially attentive to Ivi.
Just earlier, too.
When Ivi was puzzling over her math book alone, he had naturally sat beside her and explained the parts she found difficult.
âItâs infuriating.â
Irene wasnât bad at math, but she couldnât match Arcel. So all she could do was watch.
When the four entered the cafeteria, studentsâ gazes fell on them. But it was no longer the wide-eyed shock it had been at first.
By now, seeing the four of them together was such a normal, natural sight at the Academy for Gifted Youth that no one thought it strange.
As they settled and brought their meals, someone glared daggers at them from afar.
Izriella.
âHow did it come to this?â
Without realizing, Izriella bit at her thumbnail.
It hadnât been like this when she first clashed with Irene.
So many girls had come to her afterward, saying how refreshing it had been.
They had whispered complaints about Irene, how they were sick of her strutting around like the âPrincess of the South.â
And Irene hadnât been their only target.
âI just wish sheâd leave already. Itâs embarrassing for the Academyâs standards.â
âExactly. Sheâs so clueless⌠If sheâd just quit and go back to some rural upper school, thatâd be her place.â
âThey say even His Majesty the Emperor doesnât care about her. Mustâve picked her in a fit of whim. Rumors spread everywhereâno one in my culture class even talks to her anymore.â
And of course, they praised Izriella.
âAs expected of Lady Izriella. Who else couldâve set things straight so firmly?â
âRight. Youâve always been at the center of the capitalâs debutante circle. Please keep leading us.â
They said she was truly noble, that only she understood them.
And so Izriella grew more confident.
âIâll drive out Irene, and that little brat too.â
It didnât even seem hard.
Even if Irene clung to that childâs hand for now, if they were ignored long enough, theyâd break eventually.
But then Arcel and Ruska showed up, and everything flipped.
âTheyâre hanging out with them? Does this mean Irene really has been chosen as a crown princess candidate?â
âMaybe Ruska, but Arcel? He hates letting people close. Iâve heard there are barely a handful of boys he even greets. But heâs with themâŚâ
âAnd even that commoner bratâhe treats her kindly! I overheard them talking last timeâŚâ
And just like that, the crowd that had gathered around Izriella melted away like receding tide.
Soon, they were greeting Irene first instead, flaunting it.
And nowâŚ
The Academyâs atmosphere was almost back to how it had been.
The girls vied with each other for chances to approach Irene.
Then one day, Izriella overheard the girls who had once cozied up to her.
âIf weâd known this would happen, we shouldâve just stayed close to Irene.â
âRight? Izriella strutted like sheâd do something, but in the end she was useless. She only fought Irene because she hated her, not for anyone elseâs sake.â
âHmph. Still, I almost feel bad for her.â
âWhy? Whatâs there to pity?â
âThink about it. If sheâd stayed on good terms with Irene, sheâd be the one in that spot instead of that commoner brat. But she picked a fight and threw away her chance.â
âYou say sheâs pitiful, but youâre laughing.â
Their mocking giggles rang out, and Izriella clenched her lips and turned away.
But their words kept circling in her head ever since.
If only she hadnât fought with Irene.
If only that commoner brat hadnât butted in.
Then, as a noble of great lineage, she would be standing with those three right now.
That was how things should have been.
They werenât just anyoneâthey were future stars of imperial society, possibly even the next Emperor and Empress.
Izriella thought the Academy was a complete mess now.
And all of it was because of that orphan girl.
After all, it had been because of Ivi that sheâd first clashed with Irene.
âMaybe that little brat deliberately drove a wedge between me and Irene.â
Surely Irene, as a fellow noble, would have preferred to be close with her.
But the fact she clung only to that child⌠Maybe that cunning brat kept feeding her bad words about Izriella to turn her away.
And as more students drifted from her side, Izriella became all the more certain:
If only Evie were gone, the Academy would return to the way it was meant to be.






