âAs you know, Lutz is a minor. If he wants to travel outside the city for work, he absolutely requires permission from his parents. Taking him without getting permission would be considered the same as kidnapping.â
Taking a deep sigh, Benno began explaining the situation. I am grateful for the extra information since the assignment list had simply stated Persuade Lutzâ parents to give permission for him to go on a trip.
âI already sent Mark but he was unable to get their permission. I donât know if it is because merchants and craftsmen have different formalities, or if his father is simply stubborn. Iâd like to hear what you think.â
âIâm not sure how much help I can be⌠Youâre having trouble getting permission for Lutz to travel, right? This is a conversation for you, Lutz, and his parents. Even as his childhood friend, Iâm still pretty much an outsider in this matter.â
Benno wants to take Lutz outside the city for work; Lutz needs to be able to travel; Lutzâ parents need to be convinced to permit it. These are the four people concerned. I feel like I shouldnât meddle in their affairs.
When I say as much to Benno, he stares intensely at me and scratches his head roughly.
âThatâs why Iâm asking for your opinion, MaĂŻne. I need as much information as possible. If Lutz knows you best, then you should know Lutz best, right?â
Benno wants to gather information before the discussion with Lutzâ parents so he can prepare for all eventualities in advance. With as much time as I spend with him, I very likely do know Lutz best, except in regards to his work.
âHe needs to travel for work, so why would they refuse permission?â
âThatâs what I want to know. According to Mark, Lutzâ father stubbornly disapproved. I got an idea of Lutzâ hectic family environment when I lent him the attic, but what exactly is his situation?
Now that he mentions it, we rarely speak of our home life with Benno.
Even to me Lutz doesnât talk about his family much. Not since the atmosphere at his home deteriorated when he declared his intention to be a merchant apprentice. I believe that he is even less willing to talk to Benno and Mark since it would feel like heâs whining to his superiors.
âTo begin with, Lutzâs family objected to him becoming a merchant apprentice.â
âWhat did you say? That means they didnât just object to him becoming a peddler, but even to becoming a merchant in the city?â
I slowly nod to Benno as his eyes widen in surprise.
âSince his father works in construction and his older brothers are craftsmen apprentices in construction and woodworking, I heard they wanted Lutz to become a craftsman as well. They say that the steady work of a craftsman is better and more stable than that of a merchant with its intense ups and downs.â
âItâs not like being a craftsman is stable either, is it?â
Given that there are also workshops that go out of business, you canât say that a craftsmanâs job is definitely stable. But if they are skilled, they will be hired by workshops in the same trade as opposed to managing and being expected to shoulder the debts of a shop.
âI also happened to hear from Lutz that he was told that he definitely wonât be allowed to become a merchant.â
Even filtered through Lutz, there were many cruel remarks such as itâs an occupation where one has to be ruthless or that they donât create anything and only take a cut from craftsmen. Their way of speaking makes me wonder just what kind of corrupt merchant scammed them.
â⌠Lutz did well to become a merchant in such circumstances, didnât he?â
Lutz might be a bit different, if you consider that the children in this city become apprentices by joining their parentâs line of work through their familial connections. But, since heâs lively in his work, I believe that Lutzâs choice wasnât wrong.
âLutz intended to become a live-in apprentice if his parents were adamantly against it. Since Aunt Karla⌠Lutzâ mother only approved after seeing just how serious Lutz was, the family is tolerating it for now.â
âLive-in apprentice? He had problems with his family to the degree of considering something like that?â
Benno blinked. Eccentric children that choose the inferior circumstances of a live-in apprentice usually donât exist. By considering becoming a live-in apprentice, it was as if they declared that they believe such an inferior position to be better than staying with their own family.
âI donât know anything since Lutz hasnât told me whether they currently have a good relationship or not. However, it bothers me that Lutzâ older brothers actually look down on him quite a bit because of this.â
âThey look down on him?â
âIn the eyes of his family, it might look as if Lutz is doing as he pleases while defying his father. They might only be opposing him as they canât see Lutzâ hard work or his accomplishments because heâs not in the same industry. I have never talked with his brothers about Lutz, so I donât know.â
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Iâve never properly discussed Lutz with his brothers, and I havenât even spoken with Lutzâs father.
I know that the eldest son, Sascha, resembles him the most among Lutzâ siblings and that he has pride in his work as craftsman, but thatâs all. I often see his mother chatting by the well, but I never saw his father much.
â⌠However, I think that Lutz will run away from home if he learns that his dream will be crushed due to opposition from his parents. After all Lutz is stubborn and wonât yield on something once heâs decided on it. But, becoming a live-in apprentice is the last resort, right? With the extra burden of domestic chores, living alone will be hard for Lutz, so no matter what he says, I believe that his family is something he should rely on.â
âThatâs right.â
Saying that, Benno smiles bitterly, glancing up at the upper floor. Itâs obvious that Benno, whose parents died early, holds family very dear when you see how he looks at Corinna. He holds such deep affection that he stayed single after losing his lover. I donât believe for an instant that he wants to cause a rift in Lutzâ family.
âSo thereâs no other choice but to explain it to Lutz and have him endure until adulthood if you wish for this to end harmoniously? Since there wonât be any need for something like parental permission once he becomes an adult, the safest approach would be to choose to wait while avoiding a confrontation with his family, right?â
It would be different if he was barred from leaving the city for his entire life without his parentâs permission, but since he can achieve his dream once he becomes an adult, I think it would be best if he endured it for now. Short of Lutz declaring that he canât stand his family any longer, there is no need to cause such a rift in his family.
Benno shakes his head and looks grim-faced at my suggestion to play it safe.
âBy then it will be too late.â
âToo late for what?â
I wonder, is there anything so urgent? Once I tilt my head in confusion, Benno suddenly frowns and averts his eyes.
âThese are my circumstances. ⌠For now I wonât talk about it, okay?â
If those are circumstances related to his work, itâs not good for me to hear too much, as I am not a part of Gilberta Company. After I lightly passed it off with a âI see,â he groans out a âYeah.â
âLetâs assume then that this matter would cause a rift between Lutz and his family, for argumentâs sake. I believe that Lutz will choose living as merchant over his family, but Mister Benno, how far are you willing to go to support Lutz? Since youâre planning to take him outside the city, you definitely have expectations of him. However, to what extent are you going to support Lutz in his life, seeing as heâs only one of your apprentices?â
Benno doesnât bear any responsibility towards Lutz, who has formed a Dalua Contract with him, in regards to his livelihood. If he does look after Lutzâ livelihood, it will also create dissent among the other Dalua.
If Benno has no interest in taking care of the practical side of life, Lutz will suffer even more if he becomes a live-in apprentice. It would be better to keep the status quo, than do that.
When I pin him with a stare that says that I wonât forgive him for playing with Lutzâ life, he raises his hands in surrender
âAs for me⌠Iâm considering adopting him.â
âEeh!?â
I was taken aback by a reply beyond my expectations.
If Benno is going so far for Lutz, I wonât be worried even if Lutz runs away from home. Even if Lutz chooses to separate from his family and leave the city as a travelling merchant, there wonât be any problems that threaten his choice if heâs backed by Benno.
âI didnât expect for you to go so far for him, Mister Benno. Isnât the best course of action to explain the situation to Lutz and then talk to Lutzâ parents together with him?â
âTalk to Lutz, huhâŚ?â
Benno exhales with a âhmm,â obviously hesitating.
âNo matter what you do, I think Lutzâ will is important. After all, Lutz has always thought things over by himself so far.â
Adopting him means that Lutz will eventually inherit Bennoâs store. Since he said that the Gilberta Company will be inherited by Corinnaâs child, I think that Lutz will probably take over the businesses related to MaĂŻne Workshop, such as the paper crafting and the italian restaurant. Thatâs likely the reason why Benno wants me to link up with Lutz at the time they create a new paper workshop.
Realizing that Lutzâ hard work up till now had been recognized by Benno, I am very happy as if I were the one being praised here.
âI suppose you are happy since Lutz will become my adopted child?â
âItâs not about him becoming your adopted child, Iâm happy that Lutzâ efforts are valued highly.â
Benno laughs with a âpfft,â rings the bell and calls Mark. It looks like this is the end of the secret talk.
âWhat might be your order, master?â
âCall Lutz.â
âAs you wish.â
Mark leaves the room at once with beautiful movements that look as if they are flowing and then returns with Lutz in tow. I guess Lutz has been carefully watching and imitating Mark. The similarity in their movements is amusing.
âLutz.â
âYes, master.â
âThereâs something Iâd like to discuss with your parents next time. Can you set up an appointment in the near future?â
Lutz blinks, obviously confused by Bennoâs sudden question and slightly tilts his head in puzzlement.
â⌠With my parents? Okay, I understand.â
Benno nods slightly after receiving Lutzâ acknowledgement for the time being and states the dayâs business details to Lutz. It is something along the lines of him having to go work at MaĂŻneâs Workshop on the mass production of Tronbay paper after escorting me to the temple.
âCertainly. Letâs go MaĂŻne.â
âYeah. Then, Mister Benno, best regards.â
âMaĂŻne, think about your other assignments as well.â
âYeeesâŚâ
I head towards the temple together with Lutz. As just about everything seems to be looking up for Lutz, I end up humming spontaneously.
âYou are in a good mood, arenât you MaĂŻne?â
âI am happy, after all.â
âWell, itâs great that you seem to be relatively lively after receiving masterâs sermon.â
âUh⌠donât make me remember that.â
According to what Lutz had said along the way, it looks like he had been sent to MaĂŻneâs Workshop by Benno to mass produce Tronbay paper while I was down with fever. It also seems like he went to the forest together with the orphans, mass produced black rind, picked up kalfe potatoes just like the two of us often did, and made buttered kalfe.
âIt feels more like Iâm the workshop head than you, doesnât it MaĂŻne?â
I shrug my shoulders a bit at Lutzâ comment. Apparently a blue-robed priestess mustnât do any manual labour, so Iâm not allowed to get involved. Given that everyoneâs doing it joyfully, I want to mingle with them, but I have been banned from doing so.
âWhile Iâm the workshop head as blue-robed priestess, itâs only a title for the sake of raising revenue. Do your best, since I pay you, the one whoâs actually running it, a salary befitting a workshop head assistant.â
âCalling it workshop head assistant; thatâs cool, but itâs basically just being your helper, right? I guess nothingâs changed even now.â
âIt probably wonât change in the future either. After all, I will come up with new merchandise and you will sell it, Lutz.â
Even making Lutz produce paper and teaching the orphans at MaĂŻne Workshop is likely a part of Bennoâs training, and necessary for circulating paper made from plants.
â⌠Huh? Thereâs no one here?â
Although we entered the temple, none of my attendants can be seen at the gate. This is the first time since I came to the temple that no one has been waiting at the gate.
âI guess itâs because I told Fran that I didnât know when we would arrive, as you were going to be scolded by master. I think it would be best to directly head to your room?â
âYeah,â I say.
âIâm going to the workshop, okay? I will pick you up on my way home.â
I bid farewell to Lutz at the base of the stairs heading towards the hall of worship, climb the stairs and make my way to my own room after going around the orphanage.
The door, which has always been opened by my attendants, remains closed, so Iâm slightly perplexed.
I wonder whether itâs fine for me to loudly open the door? Or is it better to knock lightly since it will be dangerous if someoneâs in there? Or maybe it might be the best to call out to the inside and wait until itâs opened?
Even if I want to call my attendants, itâs not like Iâm carrying a bell and they will scold me for being improper if I shout for them. Hmm, what would be the best option here? I tried to consider the proper, noble-like behaviour, but since itâs ridiculous for me to be this conflicted just to enter my own room, I decide to open the door after knocking lightly.
⌠Thereâs no one present who might get angry anyway. Letâs ask Fran about the correct manners later.
I knock and say âIâm coming in.â Turning the knob and opening the door, I see Fran descending the stairs at a quick pace while looking flustered.
âGood morning, Fran. I made you worry, didnât I? My fever has come down, so Iâm alright now.â
Fran throws a quick glance at the second floor with an extremely embarrassed expression and whispers,
âSister MaĂŻne, as a matter of factâŚâ
âWhatâs this about a lady walking by herself without taking any attendants along?â
âEh!? Head Priest!?â
I never expected to see the Head Priest in my room! I stare blankly up at the Head Priest who is looking down on me from the second floor.
âClose your mouth. How indecent. ⌠Apart from that, I donât know about outside, but make sure to never do something so disgraceful such as walking inside the temple by yourself.â
Urged on by Fran, I head to the second floor and obediently listen to his tediously long scolding while sitting in front of the Head Priest and elegantly drinking tea.
According to the Head Priest, the correct way of opening a door, one befitting a noble, is to âAlways give a previous announcement and have your attendants wait at the gateâ or âInform the gatekeeper of your arrival and wait for your attendants to arrive in the waiting room.â
⌠Thatâs a bit too fussy for me.
Donât scold me so much just because I opened a single door. Seeing as he could go on indefinitely, I change the topic by asking about the Head Priestâs visit.
âHead Priest, I understand the way of opening a door.â
âItâs not about how to open a door! Just what did you hear!? I was talking about the way you should conduct yourself as ladyâŚâ
Oh my, looks like the scolding wasnât about how to open a door.
Interrupting the Head Priest at a point before he can get fired up and restart the scolding, I ask him,
âMight I inquire as to the reason for your visit? For you to specially come visit my room, there must be quite a reason, right? Is it something urgent?â
Normally I would have already started on sorting documents a while ago. He mentioned that he has some leeway due to my help, but him allotting that extra time to scolding me will be unbearable.
Does the Head Priest recall the main issue at hand? He clears his throat lightly and looks at me.
âDid the fever go down completely?â
âEh? Yes, I have completely recovered. Iâm very sorry for having caused you worry.â
âThatâs great.â
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While calling it great, the Head Priest reveals a smile that chills me to the bone. I straighten up my back in shock as he switched to the sermon mode of the secret room.
âIâm sure I told you to not cause an uproar. Didnât I?â
âEh? Huh?â
As I had just returned from days in bed with a fever, followed by an intense discussion with Benno, I stare blankly at the Head Priest for a moment before I realized what he was talking about.
âI checked the Orphanage grounds to see if everything had been properly cleaned up. I found much of the soil churned up and the paving stones in disarray.â
I had counted on the blue-robed priests avoiding the place, but it looks like the Head Priest made the effort to check it out himself. It seems that heâs neurotic and must check everything himself, despite being so busy.
He narrows his golden eyes and pins me to the chair with the intensity of his stare.
âJust how did you cause such a situation?â
âHow, you ask⌠umm⌠as I told you beforeâŚâ
I glance nervously towards Fran. I wonder just what Fran told him. I have no excuses that could keep me out of trouble.
âI asked Fran and some of the orphans, but they only said that you cut a tree that will become a raw material for paper, threw Tau fruit, and that you collapsed after being afflicted by fever, butâŚ?â
â⌠we really havenât done anything besides that.â
Jumping on the explanation heâs given, I nod quickly.
I guess they havenât revealed that the Tau fruit absorbed my mana and that the cut tree is Tronbay? Not knowing how much information they passed on to the Head Priest, I hold my tongue so that I wonât say anything unnecessary. I will ask Fran later what kind of questioning he has gone through.
âThe fact that everyoneâs answers are similar probably means that itâs not wrong. But, canât you tell me what kind of uproar you caused that managed to turn the paving stones upside down?â
Just as I put up my guard and brace myself for an interrogation, the Head Priest scowls at me and orders,
âMaĂŻne, today you will stay in the reflection room for the whole day.â
âEh?â
⌠Without any questioning? If it was Mister Benno, he would relentlessly interrogate me though?
I wonder whether itâs because he went to ask the orphans about the circumstances while I was staying in bed? The Head Priest imposed my punishment without asking anything further.
âReflection room, is it?â
âCorrect. You should properly contemplate your own deeds while offering prayers to the gods.â
â⌠Very well.â
In sharp contrast to me, who would rather stay silent and go to reflection room to avoid being questioned, Fran became ghastly pale the instant he heard about me going to the reflection room. Delia even shouted âUnbelievable!â
âI have never heard something like a blue-robed priestess apprentice being sent to the reflection room! Thatâs disgraceful!â
âHead Priest, please reconsider sending her to the reflection room!â
It looks like I will become the first blue-robed priestess apprentice in history to be sent to the reflection room.
To be honest, I would choose being confined in the reflection room over being repeatedly and persistently picked at about the day of the festival while being scolded by the Head Priest with such a frosty atmosphere.
âBoth of you, it canât be helped as I broke the promise I made with the Head Priest. Itâs only natural for me to take responsibility. Itâs fine as long as no blame reaches the orphanageâs children.â
Allâs well as long as the orphans, who made a fuss together with me, donât end up being punished alongside me. It would be pitiful if their precious, happy memories were painted over by the Head Priestâs sermon and the reflection room, especially considering they enjoyed it so much.
âUmm, Head Priest. Where can I find the reflection room and what will I be doing in there? Ah, no, donât misunderstand. I know that Iâm going to reflect on my actions. But, is there anything I have to accomplish during my reflection?â
Various things pop into my mind from the time when I was scolded in my time as Urano, such as cleaning as punishment, writing apology letters or sitting in seiza.
The Head Priest raises a brow and mutters âYou⌠what are you saying?â It looks like I ended up asking something thatâs common knowledge for those working at the temple.
âItâs obvious that you are going offering prayers to the gods, isnât it?â
Eh? Is it a sentence of one day in the Glâco pose?
As Iâm not saying anything against that unexpected penalty, Gil comforted me by saying âSister MaĂŻne, since Iâm used to it, I will go inside together with you.â Of course he wasnât allowed to accompany me into the reflection room and it was decided that I will enter by myself.
âMake sure to properly contemplate in here.â
The Head Priest led me to the reflection room, which is really close to the hall of worship and urged me inside.
It appears to be a small room made out of white stone, just like the hall of worship, and thereâs a small gap for ventilation high up on the wall. Itâs a dormer window, so the small room is brighter than I expected.
This room, that uses white stone for the floor and all the surrounding walls as well, is cold despite it being summer. It looks like it would be terrible during winter, but it doesnât seem to be such a harsh environment in summer.
âSister MaĂŻne, are you alright?â
âYes, Iâm doing fine.â
I couldnât see the worried looks of Fran and Gil through the hastily closed wooden door.
Since thereâs no one watching me, thereâs no way that I will seriously offer my prayers. I sit down in a corner with a thump. Itâs nice and cold, and has a very calming atmosphere.
I decide to take out the assignment list that I secretly put in the pocket of my skirt and ponder how to solve the problems.
âYeah, wonât this be somehow possible, if he skillfully adopts a system of turning down first-time customers? What should I do about this one? Itâs not a good time to shamelessly ask the Head Priest to Please invite me to dinner and lunch since I want to learn about a nobleâs meals.â
I wonder whether Iâm maybe still not up to my normal condition? Iâm getting too sleepy. Since my stomachâs empty, I think that the time for lunch has passed. I fold the assignment list, put it into my pocket, and then lie down on the floor. In order to restore my stamina by having a little nap, I close my eyes and let myself doze.
âMaĂŻne, youâre supposed to be reflecting, not taking a napâŚ!? Fran!â
âWhaa! Sister MaĂŻne!?â
It seems that my body ended up growing cold while I was taking a nap on the chilly stone floor. When the Head Priest came back to let me out of the reflection room, my fever had come back at full strength and I was unable to move.
âTo cause her fever to act up again the day she showed up at the temple after recovering, just how am I going to apologize to her mother?â I could hear Franâs voice close to my ear. He was at his witsâ end.
âDidnât she recover!?â
âWith all due respect, Head Priest, you are taking Sister MaĂŻneâs feebleness far too lightly. Didnât I implore you to reconsider sending her to the reflection room?â
âSo those were words considering her physical condition and not her honorâŚ?â
He had ignored Franâs warning, and it resulted in my having to stay in bed with a fever again, right after recovering. It seems the Head Priest, who had sent me to the reflection room, deeply regretted my fever as being his responsibility.
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âââââ
On my third day stuck in bed, Tuuli rushes into my bedroom.
âItâs a disaster, MaĂŻne! Ralph said that Lutz ran away from home and didnât come back!â
âEeh!?â
I reflexively try to get up, but instead collapse back into bed.