Chapter Three Hundred and Fourteen: Dream of the Magicless
“Huh? As if I’d go. I don’t want to become some alchemist’s servant.”
“Teresa! Stop being so rude.”
“What? I’m just saying I don’t want to go.”
Karen was at the orphanage in Ehlertt’s territorial capital. She was speaking with one of the children there—a girl named Teresa—about taking her in, if she was willing.
Unlike the children who had been driven out by lords of other territories, Karen had respected their individual wishes. As a result, Teresa—the girl who had played a prank on Karen and Julius when they had once stopped by the orphanage to make a donation—was the only one who had refused Karen’s offer.
All the other children had wanted to go with Karen. Harald, who had come from the royal capital and taken charge of managing the unexpectedly large number of children gathering under Karen, had told them his own story firsthand, and that had made the difference.
But Teresa hadn’t budged an inch. Scolded by the orphanage director, August, and still sprawled on the sofa with an air of complete indifference—that was Teresa.
Karen studied her carefully.
“Even though every other child has said they’ll come with me?”
“So what!”
Teresa glared at Karen and snorted.
“Believing that idiotic story about how someone became an alchemist even though he was born with F-rank magical power or even lower. That’s impossible! Everyone’s been fooled—what a bunch of idiots!”
August grabbed Teresa by the shoulders, turned her to face him, and shook her.
“Teresa! I told you to stop! This lady earned distinction at the hunting festival and became a titled noble! Mind your tongue!”
“…The hunting festival? Even though she’s an alchemist?”
August’s scolding went in one ear and out the other—but for the first time that day, Teresa looked directly up at Karen’s face. It was the manner of a child from the adventurers’ quarter, twisted and guarded, dismissing the weak and only lending an ear to the strong.
“Can you fight?”
“I can’t fight. But I made potions from materials I gathered on-site and contributed to the party that way.”
“What kind of monster did you hunt?”
“A black dragon.”
Teresa’s eyes lit up for just a moment—then her expression curdled.
“You think I’m stupid? That’s a legendary monster, the one the Ehlertt ancestors defeated! Don’t go feeding me pointless lies. I get enough tall tales like that at the tavern.”
The news of the black dragon’s re-subjugation should have already been spreading through Ehlertt as quite a significant rumor—but apparently, Teresa had written it off as nonsense.
Teresa let out a world-weary sigh and rose from the sofa.
“Teresa, where are you going?”
“Back to my room. I told you I’m not going, so we’re done here, aren’t we?”
It did weigh on Karen to leave Teresa behind when every other child had chosen to come with her. But she had no intention of forcing her. It wasn’t as though Karen especially needed Teresa to come.
—Though August was looking at Karen with something close to pleading in his eyes.
“Oh? Or are you telling me to leave the orphanage, Director? That’s fine too. I’m a trainee adventurer, after all. It’s not like I need to come back here.”
“Teresa, you’re too young to be an adventurer.”
August said it with sad eyes. Teresa paid him no mind.
“It’s not exactly rare to have someone my age going into dungeons.”
“That’s true. My little brother was already going into dungeons by the time he was ten.”
“See, exactly!”
“But that was only because he had someone looking after him.”
“…You’re saying that to an orphan?”
Teresa looked up at Karen with dark eyes, and Karen answered without flinching:
“I didn’t say a parent. A guardian. My brother wasn’t taken into the dungeon by a parent either. Our parents had already gone missing by the time he was ten.”
“…So?”
“That’s why the local adventurers in the area looked out for him in the dungeon. Do you have adventurers like that—ones who’d look after you?”
“…”
“If not, you should stop going into dungeons.”
“That’s none of your business… could you stay out of things that don’t concern you?”
Teresa glared at her, and Karen glanced at August. He gave a feeble shake of his head—he had tried to stop her many times before, no doubt.
Because if no one stopped her, this girl would die before long. Not in the distant future, but soon.
Karen had no particular obligation to do anything more for her. But—
“I’m done—”
“No, wait just a moment. I’m thinking about something.”
“What is your problem!? I’m not just sitting around doing nothing, you know! I’ll charge you for my time!”
“I’ll give you some pocket money afterward, so stay there.”
“Well, that changes things.”
Teresa’s mood shifted at once, and she perched back down on the sofa with a cheerful little grin. Karen looked down at her with a thoughtful "hmm.”
Even if Karen left here and forgot all about Teresa, and Teresa died afterward—Karen bore no responsibility for it. She would feel sorry, but that would be all. She was accustomed enough to how this world worked that it wouldn’t leave much of a bitter taste.
But Teresa had something unusual about her—an abnormality that didn’t buckle even under Julius’s pressure. People with that kind of quality, it was said, tended to grow into formidable adventurers. But without magical power, Teresa would likely die before ever getting there.
“…What a waste.”
“Of the money? There’s no taking back the pocket money at this point. Director’s my witness—and he’s a priest, so it’s practically a promise made before the goddess herself, you know?”
“What’s a waste is your life, Teresa.”
“Oh, sure, sure. Are you satisfied now? Want me to say ‘thank you so much for your kindness toward someone like me, abandoned even by her own parents’?”
Karen ignored the sarcasm and said:
“Would you let me be your sponsor?”
“…What?”
Suspicion and bewilderment. Teresa was looking at her like she was an idiot.
“Believe it or not, I’m currently the sponsor of the Crimson Thunder—the party that just conquered the thirtieth floor of the territorial capital’s dungeon.”
“…Huh? Excuse me?”
The idiot stare wavered slightly. She probably knew that adventurers had no tolerance for outright lies.
“Though how much I actually contributed to the conquest as a sponsor is honestly debatable.”
Teresa swallowed and said:
“…Saying something like that as a lie would get you killed by adventurers. …You’re serious?”
“Completely serious.”
“What do you want from me?”
Deep suspicion before any hint of joy. Teresa stared at Karen with eyes full of distrust. Talking to a child abandoned even by her own parents about love, ethics, or morality would only backfire.
So Karen decided to say exactly what she meant, without any pretense.
“I have a hypothesis—that the less magical power a person is born with, the stronger they can become if they manage to grow.”
Teresa reacted with a sharp, barely suppressed flinch. Karen, already half-submerged in her own thoughts, pressed on without paying it any mind.
“Technically, you’re supposed to need at least C-rank magical power to become an alchemist—B-rank is considered ideal. But I made potions with D-rank. That was already considered exceptional—prodigious, even—and yet my apprentice made potions with F-rank magical power, and with E-rank joined the Alchemists’ Guild and even advanced the steps. The less base magical power a person has, the less they may need to wield it. That’s my current hypothesis.”
“W-Wait. What are you talking about?”
Karen surfaced from her own thoughts and looked up to find Teresa wearing an expression of sheer fright. To Teresa, Karen’s words were in some sense hope—and if they were wrong, despair.
Karen looked at her without the slightest softening.
“I’m talking about the fundamental truths of this world.”
“—You mean… alchemy?”
“I want to become your sponsor, keep you from dying too easily, and use that time to test whether my hypothesis is right or wrong.”
She wasn’t going to show her only possibilities, offer her only hope, and soothe Teresa’s heart with comfort. Teresa was surely sick of that kind of thing by now.
“As an alchemist, I want to use your life to verify the principles of this world.”
Without asking or expecting Teresa to believe in her—knowing she probably couldn’t believe in anything—Karen simply thrust her own desire forward.
“That’s why I want you to accept my proposal.”
“You’d be my sponsor and… the price would be… being used for your… experiment?”
“It’s an experiment, but all you have to do is use my potions and survive and grow stronger.”
“This is way too convenient…”
Teresa bit her lower lip and looked down for a moment. Then she murmured:
“…Let me think about it.”
There was nothing more Karen could do for Teresa today. Karen gave a small nod.
“Let me know when you’ve made up your mind.”
And for the real purpose of the visit, Karen left Teresa behind and stepped out of the room with August.
