Chapter 42
The self-control she had desperately trained managed to hold back the words that were about to burst out.
She wanted to rush in and hug the girl, rub cheeks togetherâbut the other person wasnât an animal. She was a human being. Her roommate.
âI canât ruin my image right after weâve met.â
So, Irene calmed herself and took a closer look at Evie.
She immediately noticed her short height, small frame, and wrist so thin it looked breakable.
The youngest age allowed at the Gifted Academy was seven.
But no matter how one looked at her, Evie seemed barely five years old.
The moment Irene realized that, her mind raced.
What the heck? What is this? Where did this child come from? Why is she so emaciated?
She almost scooped Evie up in her arms and ran to the security office, thinking she was witnessing signs of abuse.
Should I just take her back to the South where I lived and feed her until she plumps up?
One thing was clearâthis wasnât normal.
Then she overheard the nearby students say something: that Evie was a commoner and an orphanage child.
Irene knew very well what that meant.
While some orphanages were well-run, many directors embezzled the support funds and abused the children.
After the war, the number of orphans exploded, and things had reportedly gotten worse.
So Irene assumed Evie must have come from one of those terrible orphanages.
âYour hair, skin, your bodyâeverythingâs a mess. Did your orphanage starve the kids?â
Grinding her teeth internally at the thought of such a place, she asked, determined to not let such a place go unpunished.
But Evie immediately jumped in, protesting that it wasnât true.
She exclaimed that the place she had come from didnât do such things, and Irene studied her again.
Indeed, Evie was small and thin, but there were no bruises or scars on her face or body.
Irene quickly realized her mistake.
Just as she was about to apologize for her assumptions, other students started scolding Evie.
She wanted to shout, âShut up and stay quiet! Evie canât even get a word in!â
But then she remembered the promises she made to her older sister before coming here.
She had to live quietly here, at least for a few years. She couldnât act the way she had in the South.
So she took the other girls and left the room, thinking it would be better for Evie.
âIâll apologize properly when weâre alone later.â
But that evening, she couldnât find Evie again, and the next morning, other students had driven Evie out on their own.
She felt like crying.
âThis isnât what I meant to happen! Why did I say something like that? Should I fix the way I talk like my sister said?â
She hadnât meant to speak so harshly. But regretting it now was pointless.
She tried to find a chance to apologize, but when the class went to the museum, their team got separated and she lost Evie again.
And when they couldnât find her until nightfall, it became a full-blown crisis.
She blamed herself for not taking care of her own roommate.
After that, Irene stuck close to Evie every dayâbut she just couldnât bring herself to talk to her.
âDamn that Ruska Largselv!â
Every time she tried to speak to Evie, Ruska would butt in.
So Irene could never get a word in. And on top of that, Evie seemed strangely intimidated by her.
It was the same even when she saw her from a distance.
She once saw Evie eating all alone and wanted to run over right away, but the girls beside her spotted Evie tooâand their expressions soured as if they had seen something disgusting.
So Irene couldnât approach.
If she went now, Evie might just end up being picked on againâbecause of her.
âMaybe after a bit more time passes, sheâll at least say hi in the roomâŚâ
So she decided to wait a little longer, until Evie let down her guardâŚ
Until she heard something that shattered her patience.
âEvieâs playing with Ruska and Arsel?â
Students ran up to her, telling her that Evie had grown close to Arsel and Ruska.
And in that moment, Irene felt her patience crack.
âThose thieves! Sheâs my roommate!â
How could they get close to her first?
So today, Irene couldnât take it anymore and followed Evie early in the morning.
It was just when the sky was beginning to lighten.
She looked back at the dormâno lights were on yet.
Sleep tugged at her, but she continued to follow Evie.
âWhere is she going this early?â
Then Evie headed toward the garden. Why would she go there at this hour?
Evie entered the greenhouse and came out holding flowers the gardeners had given her.
In that moment, Irene recalled the vase in the dormâs shared entrance.
When she first arrived, there hadnât been a vase, but at some point, a small vase had appeared and the flowers in it changed every day.
Sheâd just assumed it was something the academy staff did.
âTheir decorating sense is lacking, but the nice morning scent makes up for it.â
But now she realizedâit was Evie changing the flowers every day.
Irene kept tailing her. She thought Evie would return to the dorm, but instead, she headed to the cafeteria.
âAt this hour?â
Some students might eat early, but this was way too early.
As expected, when Irene peeked inside, the only student there was Evie.
Irene quickly grabbed her own breakfast and sat down across from her.
Just as she thought, Evie looked completely flustered and didnât know what to do.
They started eating, but only the occasional clink of fork and knife on the plate broke the silence.
ââŚ.â
ââŚ.â
A quiet, awkward meal dragged on.
Evie wanted to cry.
âWhy is she doing this?â
Ever since Ireneâs friends warned her, she had been careful.
She tried not to be noticedâcoming out early, returning late.
Even within the academy, if she spotted Irene from a distance, she made sure to circle far around her.
Then, Irene finally spoke.
âThe flowers in the front hallway⌠are you the one putting them there every day?â
âY-yes!â
Her nerves made her voice come out too loudly.
âShould I not have done it?â
She had taken leftover flowers sheâd brought to decorate Professor Mallesâs classroom and put them in a vase in the hallway.
At first, she meant to do it just once, but the gardeners kept giving her more and prettier flowers.
So she began changing them dailyâŚ
âIf it bothered you, I can stop from tomorrow.â
Seeing Evieâs troubled expression, Irene quickly shook her head.
âNo, itâs not that! I asked because itâs pretty!â
Evie let out a breath of relief. And so did Irene.
âThis canât go on.â
If she kept hesitating, more misunderstandings would pile up.
âFirst, let me apologize.â
âHuh? For whatâŚ?â
âI misunderstood the situation with your orphanage. Iâm sorry. I heard bad things before and jumped to conclusions. I never meant to insult the people who cared for you.â
Irene admitted her mistake honestly and apologized.
Evie looked surprised.
This happened often even back in Ellam.
When people heard she was from an orphanage, they assumed she mustâve lived a miserable life and pitied her.
Even when the director tried hard to give them the best, no one believed it. They just wanted to keep calling them âpoor orphans.â It had always hurt.
But Irene was the first person to admit her assumption was wrong and apologize.
âI just thought you were really small and⌠Oh no, thatâs not what I meant.â
Realizing sheâd messed up again, Irene covered her face with both hands.
Evie couldnât help but laugh quietlyâPfft.
Until now, whenever she saw Irene, she thought she looked like a princess out of a storybook.
Beautiful, poised, perfect in etiquette.
But the Irene sitting in front of her now was acting nothing like she did around others. She seemed very⌠human.
The atmosphere at the table had softened.
After that, they finished breakfast in a comfortable mood.
They hadnât talked about anything grand, but at least the initial awkwardness was gone.
And thenâŚ
âThen⌠is it okay if I say hello in the mornings?â
âOf course. Youâre my roommate. You can even say hi at night.â
Irene nodded like it was the most obvious thing in the world.
Evieâs face brightened at that.
Then Irene added, as if she had just remembered:
âAh⌠but maybe donât talk to me when others are around.â
Her expression wasnât a happy one.
âIt canât be helped.â
If Evie talked to her when those girls were around, they would surely talk endlessly behind her back again.
But Irene couldnât drive them all away either.
Her goal at the academy was to make a successful entrance into the capitalâs social scene.
So even if she didnât like them, she had to keep them close and pretend to be friendly.
That was the role she had to play as the daughter of House Terrins.
âSo while theyâre around, Iâll pretend not to know her. But weâll get along fine when itâs just the two of us in the room.â
âItâs better that wayâfor both of us.â
âOkay⌠Iâll be careful.â
Hearing Evieâs slightly disappointed answer, Irene hesitated.
She really wanted to be close with Evie.
But she also had to build relationships with the other nobles.
If she had to choose one⌠what would she do?
Then, several carriages pulled up in front of the dormitory.
The commotion stirred even the students who would normally still be asleep. They opened their windows to see what was happening.
And then, someone shouted:
âThe guardiansâ gifts have arrived!â






