The instant I see Lutzâs face, the sheer sense of relief over having returned to a world where my own common sense prevails makes me feel like all the strength is leaving my body. I race down the stairs towards him, grab his arm tightly, and burrow my head into him.
âIâm so exhausted, Lutz!â
âYeah, you look kinda pale. Rough day, huh?â
He gives me a sympathetic look as he pats me on the head. What I did today was basically just read a book, but it seems like being with me is my attendantsâ entire job, so the basically the entire time someone was standing near me, constantly watching me.
Of course, when Iâm absorbed in a book, itâs typical for me to be completely and utterly unconcerned by my surroundings, but every time I came to my senses I could feel someoneâs gaze fixed on me, which made me really uncomfortable. You could call those stares painful, or heavy, but either way being constantly watched is a huge burden. Itâs left me exhausted.
Man, nobles are amazing. How long does it even take to get used to that?
Iâm just happy because I get to go home in order to sleep. If I had to deal with all that from âgood morningâ to âgood nightâ, I would go insane.
âHey, Lutz. I want to meet with Mister Benno today, is he at the shop?â
âHe actually just got back right when I was leaving, so he should probably be in right now, I think? Why, did something happen?â
He looks worried, so I shake my head.
âNo, I just need to go to the merchantâs guild to withdraw money for my donation and bring it to the head priest. I figured I should tell him about it in advanceâŚâ
âHmm! Alright, letâs go.â
When he says that, for some reason, the trio of attendants behind me starts heading with us at well. I donât even want them following me around in the temple, so I really donât want them following me around outside, too! I really donât want to be stared at.
ââŚYou donât need to come with me, you know?â
âIâm afraid I cannot leave you,â replies Fran. âI am your attendant, after all.â
âThatâs right!â adds Delia. âItâs impossible for you to meet with anyone without your attendants around.â
Since itâs not just Fran telling me itâs impossible, but even Delia too, I guess it must be common knowledge that a blue-robed priest never meets with anyone without their attendants. Iâll have to add this to the list Iâm keeping in my head.
âHmm?â says Gil. âWell, if I donât have to go, then yeah, Iâm out of here. Iâm starving.â
As I thought, Gil, whoâs disinterested in even an attendantâs common sense, shoots me a resentful glare as he turns his back on us and starts heading back inside. The other two, however, arenât following suit. If I had to compromise and bring someone along, Franâs the only one Iâd be able to have follow me around. Even still, Iâd be able to relax a lot more if I didnât have any of my attendants following me around. Plus, Iâm just going to the Gilberta Company, where I go all the time, and since I have Lutz with me I donât have any particular use for an attendant.
âŚCan I just drive them off?
âOh, Delia,â I say. âCould you go tell Father Ferdinand that Iâm going to come back with my donation once Iâm done talking with Mister Benno? I really need him to know about this. Iâm relying on you!â
âHmm? You really need it? Alright then. Iâll make absolutely sure to go tell him right away.â
The wide smile she gives me is unbelievably easy to read. I wonder, is she just going to do literally nothing, or is she just going to go straight to the temple master instead? She turns around, looking the happiest Iâve seen her all day, and goes back into the temple.
I breathe a sigh of relief over having managed to drive her off. Fran, however, grimaces in displeasure, looking back and forth between me and the departing Delia.
âMiss MaĂŻne, if you would like a message delivered to Father Ferdinand, I would be happy to do so. Please allow me to accompany Delia.â
âFran, Iâve already sent Delia. If youâre telling me that I have to have an attendant with me, then would it really be okay for you to go with her?â
Fran shakes his head, his displeasure still clear on his face.
âBut, I canât say if sheâll even go see Father FerdinandâŚâ
ââŚI have Lutz here with me, so Iâll be fine if you go tell Father Ferdinand, you know? I really do need someone to go tell him about this.â
As I say this, I grab Lutzâs hand and start walking. Fran stands in the templeâs entranceway for a while, turning indecisively back and forth, but he ultimately seems to decide that heâd prefer to report to the head priest, and heads back into the temple.
âMaĂŻne, are you sure thatâs alright? Isnât he supposed to be learning how to keep an eye on your condition?â
Lutz looks over his shoulder, tilting his head as he looks back at the empty temple entrance. Come to think of it, I was told to let my attendants monitor my health, wasnât I? As I think that, I let out an enormous sigh.
ââŚHmmm. He is one of the attendants picked for me by the temple, but I still think itâll be difficult. First off, he really doesnât have any enthusiasm for it.â
âHuh?â he replies, disbelievingly.
âI think that, probably, he really wanted to serve the head priest, but he got told that he was being assigned to me instead. He always looked like he was doing things kind of begrudgingly, no matter what we were doing. If I could maybe make him consider me his master more than the head priest, that might change, but Iâm pretty sure thatâs hopeless, right?â
âYou, a master⌠donât you need, like, dignity and presence for that?â
He laughs teasingly at me, and I canât help but start laughing too. I feel so much better now that Iâm back in such a comfortable environment.
âGood afternoon, Mister Mark,â I say. âIs Mister Benno in?â
As Lutz opens the door to the shop, I see Mark inside and, as I always do, wave as I call out to him. The instant he sees me, though, his face turns pale.
ââŚMaĂŻne, quickly, please come in.â
âHuh?â
Mark, in an atypical hurry, rushes to show the two of us inside. Under ordinary circumstances, when we drop by without having made arrangements beforehand weâre usually asked to wait inside the store for a while, then are brought into the back room when Benno is able to see us. Today, however, Mark immediately opens the door to the back room and pushes us through, his face still drained of blood as he calls out to Benno.
âMaster Benno, MaĂŻne has come to see you. Iâm showing her in.â
âWhatâs this now, Mark?â replies Benno. âWhyâre you being so hasty when itâs just MaĂŻne⌠droppingâŚâ
Mark shuts the door behind us as Benno looks up from his desk. When he sees me, he just stares at me for a moment, then immediately flies into a rage, his eyes wide.
âMaĂŻne! You! Idiot!â
I squeak in fright, covering my ears as I recoil. Lutz flinches too, his breath audibly hitching as he steps back.
âUh? Huh? You too? What now?!â
âYou thoughtless little kid! You came here looking like that?! Donât tell me you walked here all the way from the temple wearing that?!â
I look down at myself, then tilt my head curiously. ââŚYes, I did, is there a problem with that?â
Lutz tilts his head too. Benno looks at the two of us, sees that we arenât able to understand why there could be a problem here at all, and scratches his head vigorously in frustration. Mark closes his eyes, rubbing at his temples.
âMaĂŻne,â says Benno. âYouâre wearing the clothing that a blue-robed priestess wears, arenât you?â
âYes,â I reply.
âOrdinarily, blue-robed priestesses are nobility.â
âThatâs right,â I reply.
âWhen the nobility have to travel, they ride in carriages. Theyâre not able to just wander around the city on foot. Can you tell me why that is?â
I tilt my head further as I consider his question. I think back to the few times Iâve ridden in a carriage. It shook a lot as it was moving and felt pretty terrible to ride. However, riding in one is something that us commoners never really get to do often. All we can do is stare yearningly as they ride past. So, itâs a great way to instantly show off how high your status is.
Back in my Urano days, I had a car, of course, to use for transportation, but I didnât use it all the time. It made sense for when I went shopping and knew that I was going to be buying more than I could carry, or when I was going on long trips. I also drove when the weather was bad enough to make walking difficult.
âUmmm⌠because walking is too hard and not ostentatious enough?â
âWrong! If theyâre staggering around on the streets, then they will be abducted and held for ransom! So if you donât want to be abducted, then donât wear that robe outside of the temple!â
âY-y-y-yes s-sir!!â
I immediately start taking off my robe on the spot. Since I already have my apprentice wear on underneath, itâs as simple as undoing the sash and pulling the robe over my head.
Iâve always been the child of poor people. I hadnât even considered the idea that anyone would want to kidnap me and hold me ransom.
I see now. Iâve been thinking of this blue robe like it was just another kind of uniform, but to other people Iâm basically wearing a sign that with âHELLO, I AM NOBILITY, I HAVE MONEYâ written on it in big, bold letters.
After I finish neatly folding my robe, Benno sighs exhaustedly, looking down at the bundle of cloth in my arms with a complicated expresion.
âWell then⌠why are you here, MaĂŻne? Surely you didnât show up here just to try to scare us to death, right?â
âRight. I have a favor to ask. Would you mind accompanying me to the merchantâs guild, and then after that to the temple?â
âWhat for?â he asks, his head tilted in incomprehension.
âIâd like for your help in withdrawing five small gold coins for my donation and bringing it to the temple. Iâve already asked the head priest, and he said it was okay.â
âWhy me?â
âAll of my large transactions so far have been done through my guild card, but the head priest doesnât have one of those. Iâm kind of scared of walking around with that much money on me. When I told that to the head priest, he told me to have my attendants take care of it, which actually surprised me a little.â
Benno frowns, his eyebrows knitting together. âWhatâs surprising about that? Thatâs an attendantâs job, isnât it?â
ââŚI genuinely, completely, thoroughly distrust my attendants. The thought of trusting them with a large amount of money is utterly terrifying.â
Benno pauses for a moment, eyes wide, then blinks a few times.
âSo, the girl who never thinks anything through, who constantly just shrugs her way through problems, who is so resistant to learning from her mistakes that she still goes to the guild masterâs house after being so massively deceived, has finally found someone she distrusts? Please, tell me, just who are these individuals?â
Iâm still going to the guild masterâs house because itâs beneficial for me, though. I get to trade recipes for sugar, and even though the guild master had deceived me about the magical tools thereâs no question that he saved my life. Of course, I donât have enough trust in them to let them carry my money for me, but if Iâm dealing with them as partners in a mutual transaction, then Iâll shrug my way through that particular problem.
Thereâs no way that I could ever trust someone who flat-out say so my face that theyâre going to intentionally cause trouble for me.
âOut of the three attendants I was assigned, one of them is a spy for the temple master, one is a spy for the head priest, and one of them is a problem child who seems like he was assigned to me purely as harassment. I donât even want them loitering around near me at the temple, much less carrying any amount of money for me.â
âThatâs⌠Iâd thought this might happen, but you really made some enemies over there, didnât you.â
I groan a little at how accurately he hit the nail on the head.
âBack when I thought that I only had half a year left to live, I was thinking that it didnât matter how well-liked I was as long as I got to read books, but if this is going to go on for a while then this is really going to be a problem.â
âCircumstances really are different now. So, for the spies, all you can do right now is try to improve your surface-level relationships with them. You donât need to trust them, but figure out what exactly you can trust them with. âŚAnd for that problem child, youâre basically going to treat him like youâd treat a wild animal.
The image of Gil as a wild baby monkey atop a tree, clapping his hands and shrieking down at me, floats through my mind.
âPeople arenât animals, though?â
âTheyâre basically the same thing. If they donât do what you say, give them a lashing. If they do, give them a treat. If you want him to know who his master is, youâll need to beat it into him.â
That sounds less like building a healthy relationship of mutual trust and more like just forcing him into subservience.
ââŚThat sounds like it would take a lot of time that I would rather spend reading, though.â
âDonât be lazy! Being in noble society and not knowing how to use your attendants is a serious issue!â
âNgh⌠Okay, Iâll think about the future.â
Benno lets out a long sigh, then lightly shakes his head as if to reset his thoughts.
âWeâve gotten off topic. So, when are you going to be delivering this donation?â
âThatâs what Iâm here to discuss with you, though? I told my attendants that weâd be back with the money as soon as it was convenient for youââ
The color instantly leaves Bennoâs face.
ââWhich means you basically said âimmediatelyâ! Mark, get things ready! Weâre going to the temple!â
âAt once, sir!â
Mark leaps out of the room, ghastly pale.
âUh, um, so, then weâre going to the merchantâs guild?â
âNo time to waste on that. We donât actually need to go. Card?â
After we tap our cards together, Benno tells me to put my robes back on since weâre going to the temple, then disappears through the inner door, bounding up the stairs.
I unfold the robes that I had taken off just moments ago, then slip them back over my head. I tie the sash around my waist, then let my head hang dejectedly. I didnât think it would turn out like this. I just told my attendants that to get them to leave me alone, and it looks like thatâs just made a whole lot of trouble for everyone.
ââŚWhat did I do now, Lutz?â
The subtle implications of phrases and the way that promises are made can change depending on what organization youâre part of. Itâs such a simple, obvious thing. I knew it, but I didnât understand it.
Lutz pats me comfortingly on the head. âWe donât know anything about how the nobility work, do we?â
ââŚYeah.â
âSure, you messed things up this time, but use this opportunity to fix your weak points.â
I tilt my head. âMy weak points?â
Lutz nods emphatically, looking at me with a little bit of strictness in his eyes.
âLook, I know you love books more than anything else, and I know youâve been wanting to read them for so, so long, but, before you can do that, you need to learn the way of life over there, which means you need to be asking everyone around you even the tiniest little questions you have.â
âTheir way of life?â
ââŚLike, right now, thereâs so much stuff I donât know about the world of merchants. Itâs all sorts of stuff that everyone around me thinks is obvious, but Iâve never heard of it before. So, Iâve been asking about everything I donât understand, no matter how small it is. When I do that, then it doesnât matter if itâs just the other apprentices or even Mister Mark, theyâll all teach me what I need to know. If you donât put in the effort to ask, then youâll never learn anything.â
His words strike home. Heâs a son of craftsmen, throwing himself into the world of merchants. I know full well just how hard heâs been having to work to get familiar with how things work in a shop. Despite knowing that, even after finding myself in basically the exact same situation of having thrown myself into the unknown world of the temple, Iâve been putting no effort into learning anything about the common knowledge of the temple, even beyond just wanting to spend my time reading books instead.
âIâm planning on working as hard as I possibly can so that I can live as a merchant. If you want to go to temple and read books, then first off, you need to learn how they do things at the temple. Itâs gonna be okay, though. I know you can do it. Youâre really smart!â
âIâm not, though! Iâm always so thoughtless. Youâre way smarter than I am.â
Thereâs no way that Iâm actually smart. Just like Benno always says: Iâm thoughtless. Iâve got a bunch of prior knowledge, sure, but I wouldnât say any of that makes me smart.
âYeah, sure, but even if youâre thoughtless, youâre still the kind of person who can always blast your way forward towards your goal, right? So, if your goal is to be able to read books without anything bothering you, then youâll be able to do whatever you need to make that happen, right? You just need to work hard to make sure you can read your books in peace.â
âNgh⌠you know me too well.â
As soon as I start thinking a little more about the future, I hear the clatter of footsteps coming down the stairway. The door creaks open and Mark steps through. Heâs wearing a long-sleeved garment that seems like itâs been made from a material light enough to still keep him cool.
âI am sorry to keep you waiting,â he says.
Unlike his usual work clothes, the sleeves on his white coat are long and fluttering, with enough extra cloth hanging from them that it almost reminds me of a long-sleeved kimono1. The hems of the coat are embroidered, primarily with blue thread, and hang low, reaching down to his knees. Beneath that, he wears a comparatively crisp set of slender trousers. The overall outfit gives me the impression of a much more extravagant version of the nice clothes kids wear to their baptismal ceremonies. The quality of the material is much nicer too, so itâs clear to me that this is clothing worn when dealing with the nobility.
âThanks for waiting,â says Benno, coming down the stairs shortly afterward.
The sleeves on Bennoâs large, white coat are even longer than Markâs, and the hem of his coat falls all the way down at his ankles. The quality of the embroidery on his coat is leagues above that of Markâs. On top of his coat, he wears a thin cloak, clasped shut at his shoulder by a golden brooch, set with a blue gemstone. In his hand, he carries something that looks like a flower. Heâs also put some sort of pomade in his usually quirky, milk tea-colored hair, fixing it in place. He looks like an entirely different person.
The sudden reminder that interacting with the nobility requires so much attention to be paid to even such things as clothing causes my throat to run dry. Iâm gripped by the terrifying realization that I have just blundered my way into a world I know nothing about. I shouldnât have said anything to drag anyone else into this mess with me.
âIâm really sorry, Mister Benno,â I say, as I rush over to him. âI didnât know that Iâd get you caught up in all thisâŚâ
âDonât worry about it,â he says, grinning his usual fearless grin. He holds up the flower ornament. âThis is a new model,â he says, then sticks it in my hair next to my usual chopstick.
âMy motto is that you find your best opportunities in your biggest predicaments. If we can safely deliver your donation while comporting ourselves as we should around the nobility, then thatâs an opportunity for us to demonstrate just how quick and thorough the Gilberta Companyâs services are. Letâs go.â
Bennoâs confidence is no lie. I have no idea what sort of chain of command there is in the store, but in the time Benno and Mark were out getting changed, the employees assembled a small wooden jewelry box with my donation inside, a roll of cloth, a small jar, and three cloth-wrapped packages. Then, when we go outside, there is already a horse-drawn carriage waiting for us, big enough to fit four adults, with sharply dressed coachmen waiting for us to embark.
When did this happen?!
As I stare, dumbfounded, Benno lifts me up, much more courteously than usual, and helps me into the carriage. As I look around the obviously expensive carriage, my stress level only starts to rise. When I worriedly look up at Benno, though, he flicks me in the forehead.
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âRight now, youâre a noble. I know what Iâm doing, so Iâll make it all work out, but what I need you to do, no matter what happens, is to not get flustered. Just smile. Be dignified. And never hang your head. Can you do that?â
ââŚI will do that,â I respond.
Through the window in the carriage, I see Lutz yelling something to me. I canât hear it, but his lips are easy to read. âYou can do it,â he says. I nod back, as exaggeratedly as I can so that he can see.
Mark climbs on board and shuts the door behind him then, after a moment, the carriage starts slowly moving forward. The clattering of the wheels matches the unsteady rhythm of my heart as we head off towards my first encounter with noble society.
Translatorâs notes for this chapter:
1. The coat more specifically reminds her of furisode, a style of kimono with long, voluminous sleeves.