Chapter Three Hundred and Sixteen: Dream of the Magicless 3
“—The people I have been in contact with are, in all likelihood, not the ones you are describing, Lady Karen—they are not the ones attempting to create the Philosopher’s Stone.”
“Eeh!?”
Karen couldn’t help but cry out.
“B-But! This medal with magical power in the negative range—surely that was made by the Children of Dark Night!?”
“It may well have been. They seem reluctant to say anything plainly, but it appears they do conduct some degree of trade with them. Even so, the people I have been in contact with are not the Children of Dark Night.”
“They’re not?”
Karen blinked.
“They are the people of a hidden village—those without magical power who have drawn together and live quiet, modest lives. They are simple, ordinary people. The idea of attempting something as grand as creating the Philosopher’s Stone would never enter their minds.”
“Perhaps they just haven’t told you, Director—”
“Lady Karen, there are actually far more people without magical power in this world than most realize. Ordinary people merely choose to look away. They have their own beliefs, form various settlements, and even come into conflict with one another.”
August sat upright and answered Karen firmly as she tried to press the issue.
Karen suddenly realized something.
“…You mean, just like those of us who have magical power?”
“Yes. What I know of is only the hidden village. And they are, if anything, at odds with the Children of Dark Night. Because the Children of Dark Night treat children as tools…”
August said it with an expression like he was biting into something bitter.
“Come to think of it, you mentioned before that you were trying to stop the Children of Dark Night from abducting children.”
“I know nothing about the Children of the Dark Night, nor about the Philosopher’s Stone you mentioned, Lady Karen.”
“I see…”
“They use this medal as a mark to seek me out in times of need, or to take in the children without magical power that I have sheltered—those with nowhere else to go—and find them a place to belong. Whether that is truly a happy thing for the children, I cannot say, as I have no right to visit their hidden village myself. But the reality is that there are no other options.”
People without magical power formed several distinct groups, each with their own independent aims. When put plainly like that, it was obvious enough. August had simply established contact with one group of magicless people for the sake of children with no place to go—he had no connection to the Children of Dark Night.
Karen felt the strength drain out of her as the lead toward the Philosopher’s Stone she had thought she was grasping slipped away. If she had been able to meet with someone high up in the Children of Dark Night, there was something she had wanted to ask.
What was the wish they hoped to fulfill with the Philosopher’s Stone?
“If you have no connection to the Children of Dark Night, you could have been upfront about things.”
“Still, I was introduced to the hidden village through Lord Horst, so there is a shadow over it… And besides, to most people, the Children of the Dark Night and the people of the hidden villages are all the same simply because they are magicless.”
Karen, too, had assumed that the Children of Dark Night were simply where people without magical power ended up after being cast out by society. But that was not the case; the world those people inhabited was far broader than she had imagined.
“Lady Karen, are you not going to take me into custody?”
“Of course not! I only came to talk. Well—I’m not sure what would happen if the people of Ehlertt found out, which is why I came alone… but someone like you is needed. Without someone like you, there would be children who truly have nowhere to turn.”
Karen held out her hand, and August took it and rose to his feet. He gave Karen a priest’s bow.
“I am deeply grateful for your generosity, Lady Karen.”
“In my case, it’s less generosity than simply putting my goals first.”
“Regardless of the reason, there are very few who will accept others as you do. The goddess’s teachings hold that a person’s worth is not determined by the degree of their magical power—and yet the reality is that even the temples harbor the contradiction of requiring at least C-rank magical power to become a priest at all.”
August said it with a weary smile. No doubt this was one of the contradictions August himself had struggled with after pursuing the priesthood with his sincere ideals.
“From the bottom of my heart, I pray that your efforts succeed, Lady Karen, and that the day comes when children no longer need to live in hiding to survive.”
“Well, I certainly want it to succeed so I can put all those kids to work and make a fortune skimming off the top!”
Karen blurted it out in an embarrassed attempt at deflection—and in that moment, a faint sound came from the doorway. Both Karen and August turned to look.
“I wasn’t paid yet, so…”
It was Teresa.
Karen had gotten fairly good at concealing her own presence lately, but sensing others was still entirely beyond her. Karen drew a sharp breath—and August had gone even paler than she had.
“Teresa, how much did you hear?”
“—The Children of Dark Night are trying to make the Philosopher’s Stone? The Philosopher’s Stone is the magic stone that can grant any wish, right?”
“They will stop at nothing to achieve their goals. They are people you must never go near, Teresa.”
August tried to hold her back in a firm tone—as if he was certain that Teresa, having overheard their conversation, was about to go straight to the Children of Dark Night.
Certainly, for those dissatisfied with society and dreaming of overturning it, there might be no destination other than the Children of the Dark Night—yet as Karen thought that, something about her own reasoning caught her attention.
Overturn. An upside-down tree—
Teresa poked Karen and snapped her out of her thoughts before she could sink into them.
“Hey. You were willing to let Teacher off the hook—even though he might have ties to criminals—because you wanted information about the Philosopher’s Stone, right?”
“Hm? Well—I suppose so.”
Karen nodded, caught off guard by the unexpected question. Teresa let out a long breath.
“So you really are someone who’ll do anything for alchemy. You’re not pitying me at all—you genuinely want to know the truth of things. And you’ll do whatever it takes to get there.”
Teresa said it with something almost like amusement, a lilt in her voice, then looked up at Karen and smiled. It was the first childlike smile Karen had ever seen from Teresa.
“Whatever it takes… That’s awesome! You’re cool—and totally nuts!”
Teresa looked up into Karen’s eyes with a dreamy expression and said:
“…Fine. I’ll be your lab rat, Karen.”
“Don’t make it sound so awful! Just become an adventurer and accept my support!”
“Kyahahahaha!”
It was the laugh of a little troublemaker getting scolded for a prank—and beneath it, there was still an innocent, childlike charm lingering in her smile.
