Chapter Two Hundred and Thirty-Four: New Menu Item
“I still can’t believe you actually came, Karen.”
“I said I’d come, so I came. I don’t just bail on people!”
When Karen visited the bakery that was Fiene’s family home, it wasn’t Fiene who usually greeted her, but Linus, who came out and said something rather rude.
Since the school reunion, she had replied to letters, apologized for her negligence, and arranged to meet again—and here she was now.
“Where’s Fiene?”
“Morning sickness—she can’t move from her room.”
“She can only eat fried food, right? That’s rough.”
“Still, Karen, that’s quite a load you’re carrying.”
Linus tilted his head, seeing Karen holding a large cloth bundle.
Karen grinned.
“It’s both a souvenir and a request!”
“A request?”
“Little Karen, do you have another bread you want us to make?”
“Auntie! It’s been a while!”
A plump woman came out smiling from behind Linus, and Karen bowed while holding her luggage.
“It’s been a while. The breads you ask for always sell well, so feel free to request anything you’d like. And those fried buns you suggested a while back have been a godsend—Fiene can only eat those right now.”
“Actually, today I made something I thought Fiene might be able to eat.”
“Oh my, that’s even more appreciated.”
Karen entered the house through the back entrance of the bakery, went into the kitchen, placed her souvenir on the table, and removed the cloth she had wrapped around a pot to hide the smell.
“Well, well. This has quite a unique aroma… Do you think Fiene can eat it?”
Fiene’s mother asked Linus, and Linus answered in a flustered manner:
“Um, I’m not sure. It seems like she can either eat strong-smelling foods or not at all—it’s pretty extreme.”
“Yeah, I remember it being like that for me too. Little Karen, may I have a taste?”
“Of course, please do.”
Karen opened the pot lid. Then a strong aroma wafted gently around.
“It’s an appetite-stimulating aroma. Yes, the taste is good too. This is delicious.”
As Fiene’s mother scooped some with a spoon and tasted it, Karen nodded vigorously.
“This is called curry. I want you to put the curry in bread, coat it with crispy batter, and deep-fry it until it’s crisp!”
“Karen, you say it’s a souvenir for Fiene, but you just want to eat it yourself, don’t you?”
“Ah, you caught me?”
At Linus’s observation, Karen stuck out her tongue.
“Sure, I could make it at home—but it’s way better when a real bakery does it!”
At Karen’s sincere and earnest words, Linus looked exasperated.
“You came carrying such a big load, so I thought for sure you’d brought potions and panicked. I carelessly wrote about Fiene’s condition in my letter, and Fiene scolded me, asking what we’d do if you brought a get-well potion.”
To Linus’s relieved face, Karen looked nonchalant. Naturally, this curry was a panacea. But Linus and his family, being commoners, didn’t know that Karen could make panaceas or that it took the form of a dish called curry.
Fiene’s mother immediately rolled out the fermented dough for fried bread, placed curry scooped with a spatula on top, and skillfully wrapped it up.
It was a firm curry filling with the moisture removed and potato starch added so it could be wrapped in bread dough. It contained finely chopped onions and carrots, minced meat from a bovine-type monster, and curry spices. There was no way it couldn’t smell good.
Fiene’s father, who had been at the storefront, also returned to the kitchen, perhaps because the customers had cleared out or he noticed the aroma.
“That’s a stimulating aroma.”
“Make some breadcrumbs. It’s what Little Karen wants.”
“Yes, yes!”
Nodding gently, Fiene’s father made breadcrumbs as told by Fiene’s mother.
Neither of them seemed to dream they were handling a panacea.
“So, Karen, want to wait in Fiene’s room?”
“I’ll stay here and see the curry fried bread through to completion.”
It was a panacea, after all. As an alchemist, she wanted to keep an eye on it just in case, but Linus gave her a dubious look.
“Well, you did try to make something Fiene could eat… so I guess it makes sense you’d want to see how the bread comes out…?”
Under a gaze that seemed to say she had come not to see Fiene and Linus but just to have bread made, Karen watched over the curry bread dough—wrapped, coated in breadcrumbs—as it underwent its second rise.
“Hey… something smells really, really good…”
“Ah, Fiene! Is it okay for you to get up?”
Fiene came down from the second floor and peeked into the kitchen.
Karen stood up from her chair and offered her seat.
“Yeah. The delicious smell rose all the way to the second floor where I was sleeping, and I got a little energized.”
Did panaceas have an effect even from just the aroma?
Karen nodded thoughtfully while scooping the curry remaining in the pot with a spoon for Fiene, who had sat in the chair.
“Want to taste it?”
“What is this?”
“It’s curry. It’s delicious. So I’m asking your mom to put it in bread and fry it! Do you think you could eat it, Fiene?”
“Ah, with this taste and aroma, I think I could eat a lot.”
After Fiene took one bite of the panacea, her complexion gradually improved. Blinking her eyes, she placed her hand on her slightly swelling belly with a puzzled look.
“…Somehow, the nausea seems to have subsided. And I’m getting really hungry.”
Karen grinned. If she had said it was a panacea, Fiene would never have eaten it.
“That’s good. Let’s taste-test the curry fried bread together!”
“…Yeah.”
Fiene kept rubbing her belly, her expression one of puzzlement.
