âItâs not as meaningful now as it used to be,â Nabel smiled. The first good person he had ever met in his life was staring out of the window, illuminated by a shaft of warm sunlight.
As the carriage drew a little closer, the sky cleared, casting sunlight over the trees that had been shrouded in shadow and she saw that they were, in fact, all connected to one trunk.
âWowâŠâ
It was just as Nabel had said. This place was completely different from the Eastern Continent. If that kind of immense tree could exist here, the monsters too must be as big as Nabel had said.
That was how dangerous this place was. It was all unfamiliar. Suddenly, the carriage jolted violently, rattling.
A black-clad rider saw her blanch and bury her head. He was the one guarding the area around the carriages.
Perhaps they were not animals, in fact, but monsters. The brown monster that was leading the chase pounced on the monster that was fleeing and bit into its neck.
At that moment, Nabel gently covered her eyes with a warm hand. âI donât think youâll enjoy seeing what comes next.â
She sucked in as much air as she could fit in her lungs and let it out again, laughing. Her heart pounded. Nabel kissed the back of her hand again.
Her hand felt so delicate that he thought it might break if he squeezed it too hard. Nabel closed his eyes. He needed to be patient. He wanted to ask if something had happened. He wanted to ask if there were people who had wronged her and if they were unharmed.
Nabel took a short and quiet gulp of air. He already had many plans made inside his head â among them was a plan to drive the loathsome House of Rieda to ruin.