I told him that he didnât have to go to the tower, but Kou said that he wanted to go.
The magicians seemed upset at knowing that Kou might not choose to be a magician, but they became happy at finding out that Kou was going to be a magician.
While learning magic in the tower, heâs away from me.
I want him to stay by my side all the time, but I canât just get out of work.
So I reluctantly return to the barracks.
Kou seemed to be learning magic at a tremendous speed.
If this goes on, heâs likely to start working as a magician sooner.
âŠbut Kou hasnât humanized yet.
Giving work to a person who hasnât humanized, no matter how powerful they are, wouldnât be possible.
ââeven Kou didnât know if he could humanize or not.
I decided that weâd eat together as much as possible.
Every day, Iâd pick him up, eat at the barrackâs cafeteria, then send him to the tower.
I want to be with Kou even a little, so it didnât bother me at all.
Kou was initially reluctant, but when I told him itâs what I want, he stopped saying anything.
âRyodo, togwether.â
Kou, who happily said that, was incredibly cute.
Thatâs why Iâd go back and forth between the barracks and the tower while holding Kou every day.
At first, many eyes would gather, but since it happened every day, everyone probably got used to it after a few days.
The attention was somewhat diminished, to the extent that theyâd just smile.
It seems like it wouldnât completely disappear since Iâm an Akinist, and Kou is my mate. Moreover, Kou looked like a human being from an unknown race.
Kou talked about things at the tower after the meal.
What kind of magic heâs currently learning, what kind of magic heâd doneâŠ
To be honest, Iâm not familiar with magic, so I donât really understand the difficulty of magic that Kou is learning.
Kou, who speaks while gesturing, was lovely and I just want to look at him forever.
Even if Iâm attacked by magic, many things can be nullified by the racial characteristic of an Akinist.
Thatâs why I didnât learn any magic.
Whatâs required from an Akinist is their power rather than magic.
Thatâs why I never thought about using my power for magic or other things.
I donât even remember the magic thatâs normally used because âI donât need itâ.
Thatâs why cleaning is left to other people.
Usually, many people clean with purification magic.
âToday, Kou, ki, kuryukuryu, came out.â
Ki?
Kurukuru? (something spinning round and round)
âŠ
âDo you mean a vine?â (tsuru)
(T/N: Okay, Kou mean to say âtsuruâ, which is vine, but mispronounced it very badly, so it became âkuryuâ.)
âVuwine.â
A vine emerged from his palm.
Mainly, itâs magic thatâs often used to restrain someone.
âBwig came out.â (A big one came out.)
However, Kou seemed to have made a big one.
âI see. Amazing.â
When I smiled at him, a smile came back to me.
Kou doesnât seem to like or hate being patted on the head, but heâd sometimes shake off my hand.
Because he often says that heâs an âadultâ, it seems like Kou didnât want to be treated as a child.
But from his appearance, anyone would treat Kou as a child.
Would he bear a grudge?
However, he doesnât hate being praised.
âKou, Ryodo, a lot, togwether.â (Kou and Rodo will be together a lot.)
ââŠ?â
Iâm a soldier and Kou will be a magician in the future.
Itâs not that we wonât work together, but theyâre usually separate.
Even when working together, soldiers are usually on the front line while magicians are logistical support.
Thereâs not much recognition that weâd work together.
If we get injured, weâd see a healer instead of a magician. Moreover, all magicians would do physical strengthening for everyone.
Not one-on-one.
âTogether?â
âTogwether.â
I asked but he affirmed it.
âKou, magician. Rodo, soldier. Together, impossible.â (Kou is a magician. Iâm a soldier. Together is impossible.)
I donât know why he made that mistake but I decided to tell him how it works.
Kou is not yet working as a magician since heâs still learning magic.
So itâs not strange that he didnât know how it works.
The magicians probably hadnât told Kou, who canât work yet, that kind of thing.
Butââ
âKou, Ryodo, togwether. Kou, majichan. Ryodo, your majichan.â (Kou and Rodo will be together. Kou will become a magician, Rodoâs magician.)
âŠno, Iâm happy, but isnât Kou just thinking for my sake?
Only His Majesty can have an exclusive magician.
âWhat did the other magicians say?â
Since he has potential, the one teaching magic to Kou should be an exceptional magician.
The greatest magician in the Tower of Trik should be Rudikda Rickmoore.
Kou just calls him âRuuâ.
He canât even say my name properly, so he couldnât help but call out nicknames to other people.
At first, some people seemed dissatisfied, but no one complained because he couldnât speak fluently.
âRuu, good, shaid. Kou, Ryodo, togwether, can⊠Kou, gwo, mare, togwether.â (Ruu said itâs okay. I can be together with RodoâŠsince thatâs what I want.)
Ba-dumpâŠhis distorted expression hurt my chest.
He didnât know when heâll leave, but he wanted to stay with me until then.
I havenât told anyone yet that Kou came from another world.
Maybe I just donât want to believe it.
ââthereâs the possibility that Kou will disappear.
Do you even want to be on my side?
ButâŠyour feelings of wanting to go home seemed to be stronger.
I had seen Kou sadly look far away many times before.
How much sadness and loneliness does he carry in that little body?
He never said heâs âlonelyâ until now.
He also didnât say âI want to go homeâ.
How long have you put up with it?
Are you not saying it just for my sake?
Are you enduring and trying not to cry?
I havenât cried for a long time, but Iâm about to cry.
âRyodo, hwome?â (Rodo, letâs go home?)
âYes. Home.â
After becoming Kouâs guardian, I stopped working after dinner.
I never went home before since I just trained.
Now itâs important to spend time teaching Kou.
Kou had to go to the tower to learn magic, so he had less time to learn the language.
That means that he spends less time with me.
So this was the only time I could be with him for a long time.
Iâll be with Kou from now until morning.
At first, Kou wanted to take a bath alone.
He was mature since the first day, but he shook his head the next day.
Even so, I persuaded him many times, until he sighed and agreed, so weâre taking a bath together.
Itâs the same with the sleeping arrangements.
âŠwell, because thereâs only one bed, Kou only made a disgruntled face once but didnât say anything after that.
There are some empty rooms, but theyâre left vacant.
I donât need it because I donât intend to have any guests in this house.
Even my parents never visited me.
If three Akinists get together, even if theyâre humanized, their aura would multiply and the people around them would be intimidated.
Iâm not that strong in my childhood, but when I grew up and humanized, I had an adultâs aura.
Thatâs why I came to live here as soon as I was able to humanize.
By the way, my parents are quite wealthy as Akinists, and this house was also gifted to me for becoming an adult.
Since Akinists have great power, the country gives a high salary.
And because both of them were in charge of the nationâs soldiers, itâs not strange to be wealthy.
Iâm even given a salary that I wouldnât be able to use up.
Those two are in a higher position than me in terms of their contribution to the country so theyâre probably getting more than me.
What I meant to say is that itâs okay to be treated like the Captain of the Third CorpsâŠ
I donât have to know whatâs going on in detail.
Iâm not interested in things Iâm not interested in.
So I picked up Kou and left the cafeteria.
He often wanted to walk, but he didnât look that dissatisfied when I lift him.
He even happily sings what seems to be a song.
I still donât understand Kouâs native language.
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I canât even hear Kouâs name.
Even if I happen to hear it and say it, the pronunciation seems to be different.
To Kou, it might be similar to how Kou lisps his words.
As I was walking towards my house, a strong wind suddenly blew.
âAhâŠ!â
I heard someoneâs voice.
Something might have been blown away by that gust of wind.
âWhind.â
When I was walking without worrying about it, I heard Kouâs voice on my shoulder.
He manipulated the wind and picked it up.
Looking at it, it looks like a cloth.
This light brown cloth is often used to wrap children.
When humanized adults carry children still in their beast forms, the small ones would be wrapped in cloth and moved in a basket.
This cloth should be used at those times.
âHwere.â
It seems like heâs giving it to the person who lost itâŠbut they wouldnât approach to get it.
Kou, whoâs tilting his head, didnât seem to understand.
The reason they canât get close was that Iâm here.
âRyodo, drop.â
Kou asked me to bring him down, perhaps because heâs impatient that they wouldnât get it.
I lowered him to the ground and he ran towards that person.
A woman with a basket entered my view as he chased her back.
There might be a child in the basket.
âHwere.â
Kou presented the cloth again.
âAh, thank you very much.â
The woman was quite scared, probably because Iâm there.
She received the cloth with a deep blue face.
âChuwild?â
Kou looked into the basket.
Did he become interested because he never saw a child nearby?
Children donât get close to me, so Kou would never see one nearby.
âY-yes. Heâs five years old.â
When the woman removed the cloth, the beast-like creature woke up.
Apparently, it seems to be a race called âTorjiuâ thatâs common among the people.
It doesnât seem to be a race that Kou would be afraid of.
ââŠcuwute. Ishnât it cuwute? Get used, doing, good?â (âŠcute. Isnât it cute? Can it pet it?)
You can see him getting excited.
âŠseems like he favors this race.
Contrary to me, whoâs dominated by a gloomy black, Kou is happily stroking her child.
âCuwute, hey. ****, ***. ******.â
Perhaps because he was so excited, he spoke in his language.
Kou seems to be trying to use the language used in Marihect as much as possible but when heâs excited, scared, or overly emotional, heâd use his original language.
Even when heâs stroking me in my beast form, he often speaks in that language.
Thatâs why when I saw Kou speaking in that language and at something that had nothing to do with me, that gloomy feeling accumulated.
âŠI never thought I had such a strong desire for monopoly.
Unlike the eyes she used to look at me, the womanâs eyes are smiling when looking at Kou.
She wouldnât repel a person who stroked her child with such a gentle hand and called it âcuteâ.
The petted child was also squinting comfortably.
I realized that my expression was gradually disappearing.
In my current state of mind, I canât smile.
âGwoodbye.â
Perhaps finally satisfied, he waved at the woman and approached me.
I picked him up as soon as he arrived.
My desire for monopoly seemed to be getting worse and worse.
âRyodo.â
âWhatâs up?â
He called out to me.
Will he point out my stiff expression?
âAkinicht chuwild. Bwig? Shmall?â (How big is an Akinist child?)
ââŠI donât know.â
It seems like he wanted to know the size of a young Akinist, but I have never seen an Akinistâs child, so I donât know how big it is.
I didnât care and I wasnât interested.
If someone should know, itâd probably be my parents.
Since they gave birth to me, they probably remember how big I was.
âŠbut those two arenât conscious of things that didnât interest them, just like me.
Would they even remember?
âRodo, parents, meet, go?â (Would you like to meet my parents?)
âRyodo, parents?â
When I turned, his face was asking âwhy?â and I remembered that I hadnât told him that Akinists are from a rare race.
âŠbut how should I tell him?
âAkinist. Parent, parent, Rodo. Three people. Akinist, Marihect, different country, none.â (There are only three Akinists, me and my parents. There are only Akinists in Marihect, none in other countries.)
Kou stayed in that position for a good long while.
But he probably understood it right away.
When he looked up, his big eyes became even bigger.
âAkinicht, Ryodo, parent, parent? Sho shmall!?â (Rodo and your parents are the only Akinists? Why so little?)
He was surprised at knowing that in this world, there are only three Akinists.
ââŠKou, Ryodo, chuwild, woveâŠAkinicht?â (âŠif Kou and Rodo have a childâŠwill they be Akinist?)
ââŠhalf?â (âŠonly half though.)
Normally, different races give birth to children who inherit half of their characteristics.
However, Kou is from an unknown race.
Even so, Kou isnât an Akinist, so it should be a halfling.
âHiyafâŠâ (So, itâs a half.)
He pondered over something.
What on earth are you thinking about?
After that, Kou, who was thinking without saying anything, didnât say a word until we got home.