âWhat is it with plants, ants, and centipedesâŠâŠâ
Seeing Valletta playing with the things, Reinhardt secretly stepped aside.
âMasterâŠYouâre a maniac.â
Reinhardt finally managed to get the words out. His heart thumped in his chest as the centipede turned over completely and swung its many legs around madly.
Valletta glanced at him and then opened her mouth.
âI didnât know you were afraid of centipedes.
âIâm not afraid of them, Master.â
âThen what is it?â
ââŠâŠ physiological rejection?â
Valletta lowered her gaze again. The centipede that was moving its legs around like crazy to live, was indeed creepy. Sometimes they were used to make potions, so Valletta was familiar with them.
âIâve never used one aliveâŠâŠâ
Usually, she would grind up the dried ones or used the dead ones.
It wasnât a great looking sight anyway.
What was more, Snorta was glaring at the ants trapped in the barrel and rolling the glass bottle around incessantly, as if he had great enemies.
âI think Iâm going to die doing that.â
Valletta drew a circle with a pen on a piece of paper she had bought earlier that was only as big as five palms together. She slowly began to write the formula. Decompose, reestablish, and reconstruct.
The alchemical formula was based on the alchemical formula that she saw in the book and was slightly transformed. The criteria for activating the ancient alchemy formula was difficult. To be precise, it was not activated simply by a command. The ancient one wanted an offering. An offering of a body. If it was life, it was life, if it was blood, it was blood. Or a magical power so great that it could withstand them.
The man named Bertas, the author of âThe Alchemy of the Beginningâ was short-lived.
He lived to make his name known as an alchemist for only ten years before he died. In other words, he couldnât leave any of his books to the world other than the one called âAlchemy of the Beginning.â
She didnât have to think too hard to find out what the author paid for that one book. If this was a taboo, then he had broken dozens or hundreds of taboos. He started out with blood, but he should have paid a much larger price for a larger experiment. One could easily guess what it would have been like.
âWill this be right?â
The basics were brought from Alchemy to begin with. Another addition to it was stability when re-established, an alchemical formula for making the glass bottle disappear, and specifying that it would be the main medium. The centipede would be the main medium for this concoction.
Vallettaâs hunting knife slightly bled the tip of her finger. She put it on both index fingers and slowly raised her hand above the magic circle.
Reinhardt put his hand on Vallettaâs shoulder. If any problems arose, he would react quickly and take care of it. Valletta took a deep breath.
Activation.
An ancient magic circle appeared in her left eye at the same time as the starting words she muttered in an ancient language. Soon, the glass bottle on the soft dust shattered into pieces and everything disintegrated. It was the beginning of a strange phenomenon.
Valletta couldnât say anything about the strange things that were happening in front of her. Purple light covered her eyes, and soon something strange was walking around on a piece of magical paper.
The centipedeâs body was shaped like three equal parts, like ants, and the numbers on its legs were exactly the same as the centipedeâs numbers. On its face, there were plant root-like things hanging down and moving like tentacles, and there were the sharp jaws of an ant. On the back of the strangely shaped centipede, translucent wings sprouted. It looked like a newly hatched butterfly, shaking its wings as it bloomed.
ââŠâŠHuh?â
The centipede began to shake its wings and flew away while Valletta stopped, unable to grasp the situation. Her body shuddered and she took a step back. She swallowed a breath as she stepped back quickly.
âThis is notâŠâŠ.â
Valletta hurried back as the centipede chased her. It was creepy. She hurriedly twisted towards Reinhardt. Then the centipede followed her and flipped its wings in her direction.
âHey, itâs âŠâŠ.â
Valletta hastily grabbed the hem of Reinhardtâs robe. A normal centipede was fine, but not a centipede with wings. A cockroach was good, but not a cockroach with wings. Furthermore, the centipede that wriggles its numerous legsâŠ..
âHey, hey! ThatâsâŠ!â
âHmmm, didnât Master say itâs not scary?â
Reinhardt asked with a sly smile.
âThis punkâŠâŠâŠâ
She deliberately snuggled up to Reinhardtâs back. Then the centipede, which had folded its body, flew in front of Reinhardt this time. Reinhardt frowned.
âCome on!â
âWhat?â
âDo something!â
âShould I burn it?â
âNo! No! Donât kill it!â
âPicky Master.â
Still smiling, Reinhardt lightly flicked his fingers. It was the first time sheâd ever touched him, but it was also the first time heâd ever seen her with such a scared expression on her face.
A thin needle of ice flew out and stung the centipedeâs head and stomach. The centipede, still alive, was constantly moving its limbs like a madman. A gasp came from behind him.
Laughing lowly, Reinhardt lightly flicked his fingers again, it hit the squirming, swingy centipede like a specimen on a flat board.
âWow, thatâs weird. Itâs creepy. âŠâŠâ
âYou said the centipede wasnât scary.â
âA centipede with wings and tentacles is a no. âŠ.â
Valletta clapped her hands lightly with a slightly bored expression. It seemed that she made the wrong choice. She just grabbed what she saw and decided to experimentâŠâŠ..
âHe didnât mention queen ants.â
âAs expected, Master is very lucky.â
âOhâŠâŠ.â
No matter what she wanted to look for, the one that was moving its legs in a sprawling, lifeless manner was not going to die. Valletta just watched it from a distance for a moment.
âHowâs your body? Is Master okay?â
ââŠâŠ A little tired.â
She felt as if her strength was being drained from her body. It was similar to the exhaustion she felt when she made three top notch potions. If she repeated the same thing three or four times, she would definitely collapse.
âIs this what you call a chimera?â
âAccording to the definitionâŠ..I guess so.â
âCan you turn it back to normal?â
âIâm going to try an experiment now.â
Valletta drew another circle on the blank sheet of paper with tired eyes. Reinhardt leaned against a tree as she began to write the alchemy of decomposition and reconstruction, the exact opposite of what she had just done.
âWhy are you so desperate, Master?â
âItâs for peace.â
âIf peace is so important to you, why donât we go to another country? Just you and me, where no one knows us.â
The low soaring voice slowed down Vallettaâs pen that was drawing the formula. She was silent for a moment, then quickly opened her mouth as she wrote the following equation.
âYou have to stay here. Thereâs the magic tower.â
âIf itâs for Master, Iâm fine with it.â
âIf something goes wrong and we have to leave, I will go alone.â
âI donât think Master will be able to get rid of me.â
Hsi voice mixed with laughter was always the same. He acted like he wasnât hurt, but she knew he must have been hurt.
Valletta slowly closed her eyes and then opened them. In the blink of an eye, the boundary between darkness and light was unclear.
âTime is not the same for you and me.â
ââŠâŠ.â
There was a chill in the air in the presence of someone that had been felt from behind. Valletta didnât turn around and continued writing the complicated formula. The formula, which looked three times more complicated than before, was written in an ancient language that was so tightly packed that it would have taken a large sheet of paper.
âYou must stay at the magic tower, you know that.â
ââŠâŠ What do you mean?â
Valletta eventually had to stop as she could no longer concentrate on writing the formula. She looked down with a frown at the centipede, which was still alive and flapping its legs, then turned around and looked up at Reinhardt as he sat down.
âThe average lifespan of a wizard would be three or four times that of an ordinary person. Of course, alchemists arenât short either, but theyâre probably less than you. So donât get attached to me, youâll get hurt.â
âNo way, not until nowâŠâŠâ
âUntil now, I was really scared of you. Of course, Iâm still scared of you. Still, Iâm being a little realistic right now.â
She just thought it was time for a little reality check. They would figure this out somehow. Whether it takes a few years or a few months, the victory will be Reinhardtâs and he will regain his freedom.
âIf you stay in the tower, Caspellius will be there, Quilt and Ceylon. I read a book the other day and found out that Snorta will also live a long time.â (Valletta)
ââŠWhat does that have to do with me?â (Reinhardt)
The voice that had always been so relaxed froze in place. The pretentious salutation had already disappeared. Unhurriedly, Valletta stared up into Reinhardtâs red eyes.
âIâm going to settle down somewhere after this, or travel far away from here.â (Valletta)
âWhere is that?â (Reinhardt)
âWhere you wonât be.â (Valletta)
Valletta replied calmly. She hadnât given him her heart for a long time, partly because she was afraid of the world he would take away, that she would die like the real Valletta, giving him her heart without knowing anythingâŠ.
Maybe you donât have this idea at all. The fact that wizards had different lifespans had been mentioned many times in the novel, of course, since the main character, Therion, was of wizard blood. She thought she found some way and Therion and the heroine would be able to be together for a long time, butâŠ
âI donât remember.â
Valletta stared at Reinhardtâs face, which had turned cold.
ââŠâŠ you, you know Iâm being cruel now, donât you?â (Valletta)
âI know.â (Reinhardt)
âDo you hate me that much?â (Reinhardt)
ââŠâŠ.â
Valletta didnât answer. She didnât dislike him. She thought he was scary, but she didnât hate him. If she had really disliked him in the first place, she would have taken whatever steps she could to find. However, Reinhardt smiled bitterly with a very hard expression on his face at Vallettaâs silence.