Chapter 65

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nChapter 65: Practical Experience (3)

nHowever, Epherene gets a penalty point.

n“…”

nEpherene stared blankly at the sentence, forgetting the extremely dire situation around her for a brief moment. Her number of penalty points appeared in the air.

n-14 points.

nOne more point, and she’d be assigned to cleaning duty every day for the dirtiest comfort room.

nIf she accumulated more than 25 points, her dormitory scholarship benefit would be canceled. The expected amount she’d lose would be 50,000 Elnes… per semester.

nShe quickly picked up the chalk.

nEpherene wasn’t the one who wrote ‘Deculein, you fool.’

nA reply arrived quickly.

nWho did it?

n“…”

nAfter hesitating and contemplating, she wrote, Sylv

n“What’s going on?”

nSylvia approached her before she could finish it, causing her to rattle like a wagon caught in a stony path.

n“Uh? Uh, um, this! this!”

nShe said, erasing the letters with her robe sleeve.

n“I think this blackboard is connected to Professor Deculein!”

n“…?”

nFortunately, Sylvia looked at the blackboard, seemingly unaware of her plot.

n“What’s going on? Why the blackboard again?”

n“Ifi, what’s going on?”

nLucia and Julia soon approached her as well. The other wizards couldn’t afford to pay attention to it.

n────!

nAnother powerful shock made the classroom tremble. Epherene wrote another message quickly.

nNow’s not the time for this. The classroom is on the verge of being destroyed, and we don’t know the barrier’s code.

nTak— Tak— Tak Tak—

nA formula consisting of circles and lines began to be written on the blackboard.

nCRRRKKK─!

nThe wall rumbled once more against yet another devastating blow. With the damage it had accumulated, they knew it wouldn’t last much longer.

nSome wizards had already fainted, and many were terrified, but Epherene, Sylvia, and Lucia looked only at what was being written.

nCRRRRRKKK─!

nTheir opponents had already delivered lethal attacks against their only line of defense dozens of times.

nHowever, right before the wall collapsed…

nInitiate the spell.

nThe formula was completed.

nSylvia moved first, releasing mana and drawing a magic formula on the floor.

nGrrrrrr…

nTheir classroom’s floor and ceiling were made entirely of mana stones. Inscribing them with a code, she activated the crystal ball, the source of their mana, unlocking and activating the barrier.

nBoom…

nThe sounds of ruination subsided, and the space around them changed in an instant.

nA peaceful meadow swallowed the ashes’ darkness.

nSuch was the greatness of their classroom that cost 10 million Elnes to build.

n“Phew…”

nEpherene plopped down and placed her hand against her pounding chest.

n“…”

nSylvia also breathed out and looked at the blackboard. Letters were still appearing in it.

nDon’t panic. Calm down and focus on the situation. You’re no longer in class. Welcome to reality.

n“Ask him when the rescue will come,” Lucia said.

nDeculein had already answered it before they could even ask, however.

nHundreds of debutantes are being held hostage, so it is impossible for us to enter right now.

nThe best course of action here is for you to solve it yourself.

n“No. Isn’t that too irresponsible of them?”

nSylvia fiercely glared at her, causing Lucia to shrug in surprise.

nAccording to an external analysis of the different mana concentrations, the source of this disaster is hypothesized to be on the 23rd floor.

n“Who’s on the 23rd floor?” Epherene asked, looking at them.

nLucia answered with her arms crossed.

n“Well. There is one external professor’s office on that floor, but I don’t know who occupies it.”

n•••••••.

nThe 23rd floor, engulfed in ashes, had been turned into a huge nest. A large cocoon pulsated at its center, and a spider web that stretched out in all directions fed it.

n─Listen…

nLouina heard a dry, crumbling voice within the cocoon.

n─Complete erosion is required…

nComplete erosion meant to devour the brains of the debutantes dominated by the ashes. They would absorb all mana and nutrients, eliminating any chances of them being revived.

n─Complete erosion is required…

n“No.”

nLouina refused. Even though she allowed the Ashes’ parasitism, her most primal personality was still strong. Her beliefs and convictions held her instincts together.

n─Complete erosion is required…

nLouina opened her eyes, her black pupil dawning upon the cocoon’s skin. The world was dark, but her mana felt infinite.

n─Complete erosion…

nPow!

nLouina hit the cocoon with her fist. The loud voice stopped, but the anger she felt grew stronger.

nIn the shattered consciousness, only one person’s face came to mind.

nShe recited his name.

n“Deculein…”

n* * *

nEpherene laid out their food supply on the table.

nThree chocolates. Two big cans of drinks. Two squids. One gummy candy. Five bags of chips. Two cream pies. A pack of gum. Five tangerines.

nIf there were only five of them, it could be considered ample enough, but…

n“How many of us are here?”

nNo one answered. More than half of them had fallen asleep.

n“…”

nThat was understandable. They had just been through terrible suffering, after all.

nSylvia replied, “51 people.”

nThe biggest hindrance to their survival was the amount of food they had.

nThe basal metabolic rate of a wizard with magical powers in his body was comparable to that of a strong farmer.

n“…Sigh.”

nReluctantly, Epherene sent a message to Deculein.

nI don’t think we’ll last long in this place. We’re running out of food. I’m thinking of going to the basement canteen…

nA reply arrived quickly.

nLook at the toolbox at the back of the classroom.

nEpherene did as instructed. The space changed due to the barrier, but the toolbox and other equipment were still where they were before.

nShe ran and opened the door.

n“Whoa!”

nStocks of frozen meat, water, canned goods, and many other sources of nutrients were revealed. If they ate sparingly, they could last for about two days.

nEpherene muttered in admiration.

n“How did the professor know when to do this…”

n“He must have prepared it in advance, you idiot. The tower’s a common target for terrorism. Anyway, go make food already.” Lucia laughed in disdain and ruffled Epherene’s hair, causing her to bite her lip as she glared at her.

n“What are you looking at? Do you want me to do it? I don’t know how to cook!”

n“… You’re useless even in this kind of situation, huh?”

nFeeling pissed off, Epherene rolled up her sleeves but soon saw more messages coming in.

nRest for now. I’m trying to figure out a way to fix this externally.

nIf any of you fight while you’re in there, I’ll be giving penalty points later based on the witnesses’ stories.

n“…”

n‘How did he know?’

nEpherene reluctantly prepared a meal. Grumbling, she used magic to create fire, which she then used to roast meat and cook soup. She then put both dishes on the table.

nOne by one, the wizards who caught a whiff of her cooking’s delicious scent began to wake up.

n* * *

nI went directly to the Yukline mansion’s warehouse as soon as I left the imperial palace.

nWe just ate. We’re resting now.

nThese monsters took possession of our colleagues, so we can’t use violence against them. Moreover, on the 23rd floor, there is an office of an external professor.

n“… Louina.” Standing up, I stared at the blackboard.

nOf course, the Baron of Ashes parasitizing her was a huge problem, but it was also quite questionable.

nLouina had to be a Named character with a mana rating of ‘3’.

n“Is it because of our contract?”

nDid it affect her mana rating?

nOr was it because the way I tormented her made her mental fortitude weaker?

nRegardless, it wasn’t just a bad situation. The ‘Baron of Ashes,’ whose mana rating was lower than hers, shouldn’t be able to completely encroach on Louina.

nKnock, knock—

nJust then, Roy came in.

n“Master. Everyone has arrived.”

n“Tell them to come in.”

n“Yes.”

nRoy returned with the professors I had called.

nI was about to greet them, but I frowned.

n“… Head Professor. We’re here.”

nThose who were talking up front were the tenured professors such as Relin and Ciare. The younger professors, including Kelodan, whom I had been looking for, squatted behind them.

n“Here are the Ashes gathered by the knights.”

nRelin held out a reagent bottle filled with the parasites.

nAfter analyzing and understanding them, I planned to create a ‘custom magic’ since for as long as the Baron of Ashes was still parasitizing Louina, it wouldn’t be easy to fix the situation through normal means.

nSubsequently, several pieces of equipment flooded into the warehouse. Microscopes, tables, mana stones, related magic books, magic tools… They just kept coming. All items were directly airlifted from the Isle of Wizard’s Wealth.

nI neatly arranged everything with Psychokinesis.

nBang, bang, bang—

nIn no time at all, the warehouse turned into a magic tower laboratory.

nI did all this simply because I couldn’t stand a dirty and inefficient environment.

n“Whoa! This is great! If you need any help, just let us know!”

n“… Help would be nice.”

nI answered Relin’s words. He took a deep breath solemnly and ferociously.

n“Yes. The tower being attacked is an unprecedented situation. We’ve already determined—”

n“However.”

nI pointed to the young professors behind them.

n“Only the three of you will remain here.”

nKelodan the glasses holder, Jennifer, a master of harmony magic, and Grant, a former addict.

nAllen seemed to be trapped inside the tower, but I wasn’t worried at all.

n“The rest may go.”

n“… Huh?”

nHaving too many cooks spoil the broth. It was far more efficient to exclude them altogether since they would undermine the motivation of the new professors with their useless political quarrels and their sense of sympathy.

n“Uh, um, Head Professor, they’re not yet very experienced, so they’re extremely lacking—”

n“Hmm. I must’ve said something wrong.”

nRelin’s expression brightened.

n“Check the condition surrounding the tower, professors. This is an extremely important task, so, please. If the situation escalates over there, I’ll be needing your help to suppress it.”

n“…”

nI pushed the old professors out with Psychokinesis.

nAfter that, I looked at the ones that remained without saying a word.

n“W-What should we do?” Kelodan asked cautiously.

n“That’s obvious.”

nI laid down dozens of magic books on their desk, all of them related to ‘puppetization.’

nBang, bang, bang—!

n“Understand the gist of each of these.”

nBewildered, they looked at the magic books piled up like a mountain before them.

n* * *

nWe’re currently formulating magic that’ll be effective against the ashes.

n“Damn! That doesn’t make any sense. It’ll take them several weeks to create new magic!” Lucia exclaimed nervously. As a result, the atmosphere in the classroom grew darker again.

n“Ask him how long we’ll have to wait—”

n“Be quiet, Dorothy.”

n“…!”

nGreatly surprised by Sylvia’s remarks, Lucia held her breath as if her heart had stopped. She ran toward Sylvia and shoved her face beside her ear.

n“I definitely told you not to call me by that name. Why did you suddenly do it again?”

n“Dorothy? Who’s Dorothy?” Behind her back, Epherene muttered innocently. Lucia put her hands together and begged Sylvia.

n“Please…”

nLucia was actually her pseudonym, and her real name was Dorothy.

nHer true name was so sloppy that she convinced, no, forced her father to change it!

n“Only if you keep quiet.”

n“Sure. Sure.”

nSylvia pushed Lucia away and got up.

n“We’re going to help Professor Deculein from our side.”

n“H-Help? Yes, yes, okay. I will do that~” Dorothy, no Lucia, agreed before Sylvia could even say anything.

nEpherene tilted her head.

nSylvia’s next words terrified them.

n“I’m going to catch a debutante and dissect it.”

n* * *

n… Sophien Ekater von Jaegus Gifrein asked, ‘Do you know how it feels to die year after year? Do you know the misery of being twisted by an incurable disease that not even the entire continent is aware of? Of making your way through the darkness, never knowing what lies ahead of you? Do you know the pain brought by a disease that engulfs your whole body?’

nIndeed, her pain made her feel like her ribs were being broken while an awl was piercing through her entirety.

n‘Do you know the feeling of resurrecting every time you die and enduring the same pain from the beginning? Do you know of such a damn curse?’

nShe died dozens of times at the age of eight. There were times when she waited for a year to die, and there were times when she couldn’t stand it and cut off her own throat.

nHowever, no matter how many times she succumbed to death, whenever she opened her eyes, it would be the 1st of January, and she’d be a kid again lying on a luxurious bed and looking out her window, where the gardens of the imperial palace, forever in spring, awaited her gaze.

nHer brain had already matured, but her body couldn’t escape youth.

nSophien often had that weird feeling like she was garbage floating in the ocean, reaching an impasse where even if she rotted away, she wouldn’t be able to escape.

nIt was said that all human beings desired life.

nHowever, she wished for death. She longed to disappear even after she had died.

nThe only thing that made her happy every time she went back was her brother’s face, but even that feeling eventually faded.

nShe had a limit on how much she could hold on, after all.

nThere was always the smell of iron from a knight, the sweet scent of a eunuch, the aroma of money from a merchant, the smell of disinfectant from a doctor, and the smell of grass from a herbalist.

nSophien had no regrets about life, which to her was just a hellish cycle.

nShe had no passion. No emotion.

nHow could she?

nHowever, she hoped that her whole life, marred by her pain, would become dull.

nShe prayed that it would collapse without agony.

nIt was said that this continent was truly harmless, which was unfortunate for her, who lived in a cramped imperial palace and a body that did not grow.

nShe had become so crippled that she became unaware of her own misfortunes.

n‘… The me who died over and over, the me who killed all that I had within, Deculein. Do you know of her? No, How could you know?’

nWith nobody else that could understand her, she prayed and complained to the only one who understood her every night.

nShe prayed to him, the one who gave her her fate and cage, the one who growled while watching her boredom from the highest points of the sky, a place no one could reach or in the deepest depths below the earth where not even the tiniest ray of sunlight could shine.

nShe sent her promise.

nShe would kill God.

n“I must have met Deculein when I was a child, but he wasn’t a noteworthy person then. Aside from his face, nothing about him really stood out.

nOf course, Sophien overcame the incurable disease of the past and survived to the end. Since then, she had made countless assassinations and poisoning attempts and had died several times, but she defeated death each time.

nThanks to that, she found out that this damn regression was a ‘1-year cycle’.

nIf she died at the age of nine, she regressed to January 1 of the year she turned nine. If she died at the age of ten, she’d regress to the edge of 10.

n‘Your Majesty speaks as if there is no death awaiting you,’ were Deculein’s words.

n“As if there is no death…”

nWas it just a sentence to express her recklessness?

n“No.”

nThe nuance his words gave off was quite different. Moreover, he also stated, ‘I see the world differently.’

nWas she included in his definition of ‘differently?’

n“Keiron.”

n“Yes.”

nSophien called her knight.

n“Yukline should have been one of the families who attended ‘That Day.'”

nThe incurable disease that killed her dozens of times was actually poison. She felt disappointed when she heard the story.

n“Yes. All the counts of the continent were there.”

nThe suspect was probably one of the families who attended the day she ascended to the throne.

nSophien intended to find the criminal and kill him, tearing his limbs apart and annihilating his family and relatives.

nHowever, after being engrossed in it for about three years, she grew bored with it, causing her to cut it off.

nAfter all, they only died once.

nIt didn’t matter how many times she regressed after death. They only had one life.

nShe didn’t get anything worthwhile for what she suffered and compared to the effort she put in. Soon enough, she grew bored of it as well.

nEven revenge began to feel cumbersome.

n“If you have any questions for Deculein, you must learn magic first.”

nKeiron’s voice sounded joyful, causing Sophien to clench her teeth.

n“You’re not any better than me, though. Not too long ago, you decided there was something wrong with Deculein after just hearing some rumors.”

nHe lowered his gaze.

n“… Admittedly, I made a mistake then. Deculein’s honest today. You, who can see through people, should already know that.”

nSophien looked over the desk, where Yukline: Understanding Elemental Magic, a book left behind by Deculein, was placed. Its hardcover, adorned with gold leaf and jewels, had a note attached to it.

nPlease prepare up to Chapter 1.

n“Please, study.”

n“… Keiron.”

nSophien stared at him as he responded emotionlessly.

n“Yes?”

n“Fuck you.”

nShe raised her middle finger at him.

nKeiron smiled silently, closing his eyes to pretend he saw nothing.

n“I’m going to bed. Do not bring anything into my room today.”

n“Take the book with you.”

n“Piss off.”

nSophien went straight up to her boudoir. The court wizard and servants said something about an incident happening over the Imperial University Tower, but she ignored it.

nShe lay on the bed and looked up at the ceiling, sorting out the thoughts that popped into her mind.

nAll those thoughts resulted in a single emotion.

n… Curiosity.

n“Did they say Imperial University Tower incident…”

nSuddenly, the words of her servants came to mind again.

nLaughing in disdain, Sophien got up from her bed again.

n