~Chapter 79~
âLeave the Eosia matter to me for now. If any new information comes in, report immediately.â
âYes, understood.â
Borvel bowed politely and stepped back.
Leviathan called for Adolf.
âBring me Rubianâs registration papers.â
âHere they are.â
He carefully completed the stack of complicated documents.
Rubian was his daughter. Whatever past she had didnât matter anymore.
When it came to the section about her nationality, his pen hesitated.
âAdolf, the matter I told you to handle?â
âItâs done. A village called Marinvesta in the southern region of Vamilon.â
Leviathan nodded and filled in the line.
âIâll be going to meet the Emperor.â
He quickly ordered the carriage to be prepared.
As he grabbed his coat to leave, something rolled across the floorâ
a small glass vial that had been left on the desk.
Adolf snatched it before it could fall. An old blue ribbon was tied around it.
âWhat is this? Oh⌠the ribbonâs stained with blood.â
Leviathan stared at the vial. So, it was here in his office all this time.
âItâs something that once helped me on the battlefield.â
The vial had traces of black magic. Whenever he retraced its origins, he always found traces of a dark magician.
But who had sent it, he still didnât know.
âYour Excellency, the carriage is ready.â
Leviathan slipped the vial into his pocket and stepped forward.
Rubian is my daughter.
His grip tightened around the papers in his hand.
From now on, Rubian would be the rightful daughter of House Zebret.
She would grow within his protection, cherished and safe.
What mattered to him was not her past, but her presentâand her future.
âIâve come to see His Majesty.â
At the grand palace gates, a servant saw Leviathanâs face and immediately bowed low.
MeanwhileâŚ
âBy the wayâcoughâwhy couldnât I contact you at Ipsun Mountain?â
I was having snacks with Khalid in the greenhouse.
Warm milk soothed my scratchy throat. Hazel had gone out to fetch preserved fruit that was good for colds.
Khalid poured more milk into my cup as he answered.
âMy magic wasnât stable. When that happens, itâs hard to talk with you.â
âWhat? Were you hurt? What about the bracelet?â
âI had it on.â
Khalid lifted his wrists. Three golden rings clinked softly.
This wasnât an ordinary magical tool.
When we wandered the battlefield, I had found it in ancient ruins. I engraved a magic circle on it and gave it to him, since his still-growing body struggled to control his overflowing magic.
The bracelet stored excess magic like a vessel, then released it back into the body when needed. Simple enough.
âThen why was your magic unstable?â
At my question, Khalid frowned, looking troubled.
âProbably⌠psychological reasons.â
âHuh?â
âWhen I get anxious or scared, it happens sometimes.â
I tilted my head.
âWhat were you so anxious about? Sure, the situation was scary, but there were adults with usâŚâ
âThat wasnât it.â
For a while, he didnât answer. Then, in a stiff, low voice, he muttered:
ââŚThey always said the second time is easier.â
âEh?â
âRunning away. Abandoning someone. They said once youâve done it once, the second time is much easier.â
âAbandoning⌠what? Who said that to you?!â
His clear eyes fixed on me.
âMercenaries who left their wives behind. They said it like a habit.â
I was speechless.
Seriouslyâwhat kind of nonsense did they feed this kid?!
âDonât hang around those uncles again!â
âTheyâre not in this world anymore anyway.â
âŚWell, good riddance.
I let out a long sigh and picked up a cookie with strawberry jam.
So basicallyâŚ
âHe was anxious Iâd abandon him again.â
Anxious enough that he couldnât even control his magic.
The realization made him look like a rain-soaked puppy, head slightly bowed.
Ah, I felt awful.
With a solemn look, I crunched into the cookie.
âAlright, Khal. I swear.â
âWhat?â
âNo matter where I go, Iâll always tell you first.â
His sharp eyes narrowed suspiciously.
âI mean it! I swear on this strawberry cookie!â
ââŚYou eat the symbol of your oath like that?â
Gulp.
I swallowed and laughed awkwardly.
âI swallowed the oath! Here, you eat too.â
Reluctantly, he chewed the cookie I pushed at him.
âYou promised. If you break itâŚâ
His words trailed off.
I quickly jumped in.
âIf I break itâthen, uh⌠weâll stop being friends!â
ââŚ.â
âJust thinking about it hurts, doesnât it?â
âI feel sick. I want to throw the cookie up now.â
âWhat?â
âNot hard to do. Just hearing you say âstop being friendsâ made me nauseous.â
âHey!â
I shot up, staring as he covered his mouth and slumped weakly over the table.
âHow can you say that so casuallyâŚ?â
His voice trembled faintly.
âWait⌠are you crying? Throwing up? What are you doing?â
I bent close, trying to see his face, but he turned it away.
âQuit it.â
âAre you mad? Why?â
âIâm not mad. Just sulkingâŚâ
âHuh? So are you crying or not?â
âIâm not crying!â
âYour face looks really pale.â
âThen cancel what you said about breaking off.â
âAlright, fine. Canceled, canceled!â
When I said it, he slowly revealed his handsome face from behind his arms. His cheeks were puffed out, his expression sulkyâbut it was cute.
âOooh, were you scared of the word âbreak upâ?â
I teased as I ruffled his hair.
His cheeks, round like steamed buns, were too temptingâI reached to poke them.
But suddenly Khalid shot up like heâd been struck by an arrow.
âWhy are you touching me so much today? Holding my hand, grabbingââ
âŚWas I?
StillâŚ
âSo what? Why are you acting so bothered?â
Now he seemed overly sensitive.
My empty hand felt strangely awkward. I couldnât see how red his neck had turned.
âKeep some distance.â
âWhat? Why do I have to?â
The words left my mouthâand then I froze.
Wait a secondâŚ
I cautiously sniffed myself.
ââŚNo way.â
Determined, I suddenly leaned in close again. Khalid stumbled backward.
Oh-ho.
I stepped closer. He backed away.
What theâat first I was joking, but nowâŚ
A wave of disappointment washed over me. I bit my lip.
âKhal, you bad boy! Just what do you think of me?!â
âYouâre asking that out of nowhere? Of courseââ
But he suddenly clamped his lips shut. His whole face flushed red.
What was that?!
Before I could ask, a huge shadow loomed behind him.
âKhalid, you brat, here you are!â
A booming voice. Someone grabbed Khalid by the scruff of his neck.
âWhen are you going to stop skipping trainingâhuh?â
That voice. That silhouette!
âGrandpa!â
I turned happily.
But something was wrong. Normally heâd rush over and smother me with beard attacks. Insteadâ
âS-so-so-soâŚâ
He froze, clutching Khalidâs neck.
âCow? Moo? You mean a cow?â
âM-my graaandchildâŚâ
Was his hand hurting?
âGrand⌠childâŚâ
âWhat? I donât understand, Grandpa.â
I reached out toward him, but he stepped back like heâd seen a ghost.
Whoaâretreat combo, two steps in a row!
At this point, I couldnât ignore it anymore.
âSo it really is me⌠Ruby?â
All I did was skip a bath because I was sick.
âDo I really smell that bad?!â
But stillâdid everyone really have to avoid me like this?!
âWaaah! How unfair! Goodbye!â
I ran off crying.
Iâll scrub myself clean this time!






