Chapter 19
Why Didnât You Take My Hand?
2022.09.04
Until now, only two people had ever entered the annex.
It was extremely uncomfortable for someone to suddenly invade my space like this.
I pulled my hand free from Yansiâs grip and looked back at Karl.
âWhat is it?â
âMother called for you.â
It seemed to be about the antidote again. Probably because things had been delayed far longer than expected.
But there was something I couldnât understand.
I looked up at Karl.
âThen why are you the one telling me?â
ââŠI happened to run into Mother.â
âYou donât need to go through the trouble of coming all the way here. Next time, just send a servant.â
Karl probably didnât particularly want to see my face either, so that would be better for both of us.
âBrother, you should head back as well.â
After gently telling Yansi to leave too, I left them behind and headed straight to the Duchessâs greenhouse.
âYou called for me, I heard.â
âThatâs right. Come in, Elodie.â
As if she had expected me, a teacup was already prepared for me at the table.
Those two⊠what are they doing?
Feeling oddly thirsty, I drank the tea without hesitation, and the Duchess sitting across narrowed her eyes.
Ah.
At tea with a noblewoman, one was supposed to act carefully and never drink first.
It was too late to pretend to be cautious now.
âYou called me about the antidote, right?â
âPartly. Thereâs no rush, so take your time.â
If it wasnât about the antidote, there would be no reason for her to call meâŠ
Then I suddenly recalled something strange I had heard recently.
âDuchess. The antidotes you entrusted to meâthere were 11 types, correct?â
âThere were 12.â
Blink.
I tilted my head and frowned. At my reaction, she asked,
âIs something wrong?â
âOne of them is missing.â
âMaybe a maid accidentally moved it while cleaning.â
ââŠI suppose?â
But I disliked having servants enter my room, so only my exclusive maid, Martha, handled it. And Martha was not the kind of person who would make such a mistake.
âWho in the Perdian house would steal poison?â
The Duchessâs words made sense. If someone wanted, they could just pluck poisonous plants growing everywhere like flowers. Poison wasnât rare in Perdian.
âIf someone ignorant stole it thinking it was valuable, theyâll pay the price. Whether they die from it or get caught selling it on the black market and have it returned as stolen goodsâit doesnât matter either way.â
The Duchess listed such terrifying possibilities in a calm tone.
âHahaâŠâ
I could only laugh awkwardly.
âTell the servants which poison is missing. Iâll send it again.â
âYes, Duchess.â
âThe payment for the sale should come in soon. You can send it through that girl, Martha.â
âYes. Iâll send the antidotes as soon as theyâre ready.â
By the time our business was finished, the teacup was empty.
Just as I was about to leaveâ
The Duchess spoke first.
âI hear Karl and Yansi have been bothering you lately.â
Her piercing gaze made me tense. I immediately understood what she meant.
A warning not to get close to them.
From her perspective, it was undesirable for someone like meâan outsiderâto get close to her legitimate sons.
Duchessâs concern received.
I smiled reassuringly.
âPlease donât worry. I wonât bother them at all.â
ââŠHm?â
âIâll just avoid them. I only meet Karl when he goes outside anyway, so itâll be fine!â
ââŠHm.â
âThen Iâll take my leave!â
I quickly left the greenhouse, worried I might be blamed for something later.
âPoison.â
At the imperial pharmacistâs words, Adenmirâs expression darkened.
âPoison,â he repeated in a low voice.
Poison.
It was nothing unfamiliar to Adenmir.
A position where one could be assassinated at any moment.
Because he was constantly exposed to danger, he had trained from childhood to build poison resistance.
He had undergone training by ingesting poison in gradually increasing amounts, from extremely small doses.
That was why he understood the pain of poisoning better than anyone.
But what puzzled him was why this particular poison had been left open on Elodieâs desk.
Something about it felt wrong.
âWhat kind of poison is it? Symptoms upon ingestion?â
âIt appears to be a poison made by Duchess Temis Perdian. Even a single drop damages the respiratory system, and if this entire amount is consumed, death occurs within seconds.â
As expected of Temis Perdian, the empireâs greatest poison masterâit was terrifyingly effective.
âYou may leave.â
After dismissing the pharmacist, Adenmir placed the vial on his desk and fell into thought.
Why had the lid of a poison that could paralyze the respiratory system even been left open?
He didnât think Elodie had done it knowingly.
Did the Duchess attempt to eliminate her?
But the method was too careless for that.
It left evidence behind.
The Duchess he knew would never use such a sloppy method.
âThen whyââ
As he murmured, a scene suddenly flashed through his mind.
Elodieâs wrist wrapped in bandages, and the distinct cut beneath it.
ââŠNo way.â
No. Impossible.
That selfish woman, who only cared about herself, would never drink poison.
But once a thought began to flow in a direction, it gained momentum like a rushing current.
Adenmir did not realizeâ
That he had begun thinking about his fiancée, someone he had long stopped paying attention to.
Clatter.
Inside the unevenly swaying carriage, Karl and I sat alone.
Karl, assigned as my escort for this outing, looked quite displeased.
He kept shifting his legs nervously, glancing out the window, then suddenly pulled the curtain shut and turned to me.
âYouâre always stealing my training time.â
âThen next time Iâll just ask Yansi. If itâs one of them, Father will let it slideââ
âNo, no way⊠donât bother my brother!â
Karl jumped up in protest.
Since when had he become so attached to Yansi? Anyone would think they were close brothers.
Shrugging, I leaned back.
âWhere are we going today?â
âWhy do you need to know?â
âSo I can escort you properly. You, of all people, might suddenly run off somewhere again.â
âI wonât run off.â
I will.
Our destination was the Southern Magic Tower outside the capital.
It was far, beyond a mountain, and quite distant from the city center.
The mages of the southern tower preferred isolation, which was why it was located there.
Although it was one of the same Magic Towers I had visited before, each directional tower functioned independently.
This time, I planned to invest the money received from the Duchess into the Southern Magic Tower.
Diversification was the key principle of investment.
When I refused to tell Karl the destination, he grew more persistent.
âWhere is it? Where are we going?â
âYouâll see when we get there.â
âAre you going somewhere weird? Tell me!â
âIf youâre an escort, just stay quiet.â
âIâm going to stop the carriage and ask the driver!â
He glared at me seriously.
Annoyed, I finally answered.
âThe Southern Magic Tower.â
âWhy there?â
âJust to look at magical tools.â
I closed my eyes, signaling I didnât want to talk.
But Karl, who I expected to argue further, went silent.
When I opened my eyes slightly, his face had turned cold.
âWait.â
âWhat?â
âDonât come out. Stay inside.â
âWhat?â
Before I could respond, he flung open the door and jumped out of the moving carriage.
And thenâ
BOOOOM!
A massive explosion shook the ground, and the carriage lurched violently.
The horses reared in panic.
I was not spared from the chaos.
âUgh!â
I slammed into the carriage wall, pain shooting through my shoulder.
Outside, the sounds of metal clashing violently echoed.
An ambush?
Perdian had many enemies. Though I had never been attacked in the annex, the Duke and his sons had faced assassins before.
I assumed Karl would quickly handle it.
But the noise abruptly stopped.
Is it over?
Karl did not return.
A bad feeling crept in.
ââŠKarl.â
I pulled aside the curtainâand saw something impossible.
Karl, sword driven into the ground, was barely standing, covered in blood.
Around him lay many masked attackers, but it wasnât over.
Two assassins still surrounded him with murderous intent.
âNo way.â
This was Karl Perdianâs direct heir.
He shouldnât be struggling against such opponents.
Before I could think, my body moved.
I jumped out of the carriage and threw a vial of the Duchessâs poison at the remaining assassins.
âGah!â
âWhatâwhat is this!â
Some poisons didnât require ingestionâjust inhalation could cause effects.
This was one of them.
It wasnât as strong as ingestion, but it was enough to buy time.
I supported the staggering Karl.
âThose guys⊠theyâve got a magic tool that nullifies abilitiesââ
âShut up and move!â
We had no time.
I dragged Karl toward the driverâs seat. The driver was already dead.
âRun⊠aloneâŠâ
âDonât ruin my sleep schedule!â
I knocked him on the forehead and quickly detached the horse from the carriage.
âGet on!â
Karl climbed up behind me as I grabbed the reins.
âAfter them!â
The two assassins began chasing us again.
What do I do?
My ability wasnât offensive. Karl was incapacitated.
There was only one option.
Run.
But my riding skills were mediocre.
The distance between us was shrinking.
I rode toward the forest to obstruct their vision.
Thenâ
Karl suddenly turned and threw a dagger from his coat.
Whoosh!
âGuhâ!â
One assassin collapsed.
âOne leftâŠâ
Karl muttered, gripping his sword. But another obstacle appeared.
Neigh!
A cliff lay ahead.
There was no escape route left.
Turning the horse, I faced the pursuer.
Thereâs still poison.
But Karl was faster.
He leapt from the horse and engaged the assassin again.
Clang!
Even injured and bloodied, he fought fiercely.
âDamn it!â
His sword pierced the enemyâs vital point.
But thenâ
A sudden attack came toward me.
âDuck!â
I twisted my bodyâbut it was a mistake.
The horse panicked and threw me off.
My body tilted backward.
âHey!â
Karlâs outstretched hand seemed to move in slow motion.
I reached outâ
But then, why?
Donât touch me. Itâs disgusting.
A memory flashed like lightning.
Karl once pushed away my hand and said those words.
He said it was disgusting to touch me.
âŠHe might push me away again.
Without thinking, I withdrew my hand.
That brief hesitation was decisive.
ââŠAh.â
I fell off the cliff.
âKarl!â
Rocks kicked by his feet tumbled downward.
The abyss below was completely dark.
âElodie Perdian!â
He shouted her name until his veins bulged, but it was already too late.
Color drained from Karlâs face.
Shock lingered.
Why.
Why didnât you take my hand?
ââŠWhy?â
Would she rather die than accept his help?
Did she hate him that much?
The image remained in his mindâher reaching out, then giving up and falling into the abyss.
He still didnât realize it.
That, somewhere along the way, he had begun thinking about his fiancée again.






