Chapter One Hundred and Thirty-Two: Guild Staff’s Rules (Natalia’s POV)
“Mr. Gab! Karen accepted the Alchemists’ Guild’s proposal!”
“Oh, really! Her accepting our proposal means my meddling will be forgiven in return, right?”
“Rather than forgiveness, Karen wasn’t angry to begin with. The things that make her angry are different from those of other people.”
At that moment, she heard quiet whispers.
“She played it well, didn’t she? Who’d have thought that eternal F-rank would suddenly jump up to C-rank?”
“Still, she must have known that’s why she was watching over her. But how could she tell?”
“Must be family connections. Probably some special magic tool or something. Unlike us—studying hard, training, still stuck at D-rank but joining the guild to do what we could for alchemy—the ones with connections have it easy.”
Natalia glanced in their direction. The guild staff in the back of the counter looked startled when they noticed Natalia’s gaze after a while. Natalia gave the two of them a bright smile. The man responded with a sheepish grin, while the woman looked as if she were about to click her tongue.
Natalia sighed inwardly. If this were Karen, she could disarm people of all ages and genders with her smile. But when Natalia smiled, it didn’t work the same way. Women directed hostility toward her, and while she could mollify men, they became strangely familiar and even tried to touch her.
It never went as smoothly as it did for Karen.
In the past, she would have confronted them directly about what they were saying and given her honest opinion, enraging them. She wanted to think she had changed a little since then. But even if Natalia tried to change, they fundamentally didn’t welcome her presence—someone who had entered the Alchemists’ Guild through connections from the Adventurers’ Guild.
Like Gabriel, Natalia was also an outsider to the Alchemists’ Guild people.
“But Natalia, you have good foresight. Or maybe an eye for people? How did you know that girl would amount to so much?”
Gabriel spoke without seeming to notice the whispers. The Alchemists’ Guild was not a lenient place where one could be allowed to give support just for the sake of wanting to. So Natalia smiled brightly and said as she always did:
“I believed Karen would surely accomplish it.”
“I heard that she was once said to be a potential genius alchemist.”
Indeed, Karen had once been lauded as a possible genius. However, while she could make minor healing potions, she naturally couldn’t produce many due to her magical power limitations, which meant she was destined to remain F-rank for a while. Natalia, who had been by Karen’s side, knew this well.
Yet, in truth, it was simply what Natalia had wanted to believe. However, she didn’t say this and deflected the question with a meaningful smile.
People usually inherited the family business. Among them, those with special talents joined guilds to hone their skills and pursue specialized professions. Among the various guilds, the Adventurers’ Guild was particularly revered, followed by the Alchemists’ Guild. Those without family businesses, unable to find work, and lacking talent were destined to become low-rank adventurers.
In such a world, Natalia was destined from birth to become an Adventurers’ Guild staff member, as both her parents were Adventurers’ Guild staff.
Guild staff had the job of being in charge of and assisting those who belonged to their respective guilds. For example, even if Adventurers’ Guild staff couldn’t fight like adventurers, they were considered to have performed equivalent work as their partners. It was such an elite profession that only exceptional people could be employed, which was why most hiring was done through connections. Connection-based hires came in two main forms: former adventurers recruited for their experience, or family members of current guild staff.
Natalia was a special case who had been pushed into the Alchemists’ Guild through Adventurers’ Guild connections. Gabriel was also a special case as an alchemist who had formerly been active as an adventurer, both arrangements made by the current guildmaster of the Alchemists’ Guild.
Even with connections, it wasn’t easy to get employed as guild staff. In Natalia’s case, while she had originally been slated to work at the Adventurers’ Guild, she had been assigned numerous tutors from childhood and given strict elite education on par with nobility, with almost no time for play. Naturally, she had no friends of similar age. Her parents, who had been overwhelmed with their duties as guild staff, apparently noticed their daughter’s situation when Natalia turned fourteen and was about to come of age, and thought it was problematic.
Despite thinking it unnecessary, Natalia was persuaded to view it as a social observation and ended up attending a school for commoners.
Honestly, Natalia found it ridiculous. She was set to be employed at the Adventurers’ Guild in one more year and had already learned everything necessary for that purpose. She had been cherished from childhood by guild staff in the capital and high-rank adventurers. Why should she have to attend a commoners’ school now?
While boasting to her parents that it would be a complete waste of time, Natalia reluctantly enrolled in the school.
She was disgusted shortly after enrollment. Though her classmates varied in age, they clustered with acquaintances from before enrollment, and their future jobs were either undetermined, not particularly impressive family businesses, or they were headed for low-rank adventurer status at best. To such people, Natalia’s confirmed position as Adventurers’ Guild staff was apparently too dazzling, and she ended up being subjected to annoying gossip from early after enrollment.
Having been persuaded by her parents that it was social observation, Natalia attempted dialogue with them, though she felt they weren’t worth engaging with. Her approach seemed poor, and Natalia began experiencing harassment, like having her belongings hidden or water thrown on her.
It was then that Natalia began to dimly understand the true meaning of the task her parents had given her. As guild staff, she would have to interact with many people. Not just high-rank adventurers, but low-rank adventurers as well. She couldn’t dismiss them just because they were low-rank. Among them might be adventurers who could become high-rank in the future.
And those who harbored resentment toward Natalia and harassed her were people who might become adventurers she would be in charge of in the future. Yet Natalia didn’t know how to handle them. While she had boasted to her parents and thought she should solve this problem herself since she would become guild staff in one year, she couldn’t come up with a solution. Looking back now, Natalia could see that she had been far too arrogant then, but without that self-awareness, she was beyond help.
One of those who approached such a Natalia was Karen.