Cohen Socaccio looked at Feli, rushing to Fayâs side as soon as the battle ended.
âDid you fall in love, sir âHeroâ? Too bad, Iâll never let you take the head maid! Not that sheâs mine or anything.â
A cracking noise.
Ratifah and the others were spectating relatively far from the battlefield, but the ground under their feet was still partially frozen. The extent of the two duelistsâ clash of pride was evident.
The âHeroâ named âHeart Scanâ looked at Ratifah with suspicion in his eyes.
ââŚwho or what are you, anyway?â
âWhat a strange question. Canât you just read me too? You donât need to ask me, just use that precious ability of yours.â
ââŚâŚâŚâŚ..â
For some reason, Cohen did not reply.
âOh? Could it be that you wanted to hear me say it in my own words? Let me oblige, then. Brace yourself, sir, for I am the one known as Diestburgâs ultimate weaponâ â
â â not that.â
Cohenâs tone contained a hint of irritation.
âWhy did you stubbornly refuse to help Fay Hanse Diestburg? Despite how strong you are?â
âŚaah, so thatâs what he meant. Ratifahâs expression tensed slightly.
âWhatâs the point in helpingâŚ? Even without *us* around, Shizuki can walk on his own, one step at a time. Are you telling me to help him so that he can start depending on *us* again? Youâre telling me to force my presence on him again?â
Ratifah protested, as if Cohen said something obviously absurd. The latter grimaced.
Thenâ
â â donât screw with me.â
Ratifah had barely managed to keep a calm tone, but it finally broke down, turning harsher than before.
âHe suffered until he died because of thatâŚbut in that world it just wasnât possible to have a normal happiness, a normal life, a normalâŚway to die.â
You survived another day. Congratulations.
In that world, hearing words like that was the epitome of happiness.
It wasnât normal to make such a compromise, but there was no other wayâŚthatâs the kind of age it was.
But now things were different.
That was whyâ
âThe more important someone is for me, the farther I have to stay from them. So I decided to just watch over him, as long as possible.â
AndâŚ
âTo borrow the words of His Highness Princeâs Stenn â this is probably âloveâ.â
Ratifah smiled a little, probably because she wasnât used to saying such words.
ââŚI just donât get you.â
âOf course you donât. Even if you can read someoneâs heart, understanding their feelings is a whole nother matter. For someone who just wishes to know, it seems perfect, though.â
Ratifah referred to Cohen Socaccioâs self-identification as âarchaeologistâ.
âIndeed.â
Cohen smiled.
Then â it happened. In a split second.
The sound of something being squeezed.
â â did you really think Iâd let you off with that?â
Ratifahâs expression said it all: think again, dumbass.
âI have no intention of trusting anyone other than those close to me, you see? Besides, youâre on the empireâs side and all. I have no choice but to tie you up, right?â
Shizuki is all wounded like that, so we canât have any nasty surprises, can we.
As she talked, Ratifah proceeded to tie Cohenâs hands and feet with rope she pulled out from who knows where.
âOne more thing, you can read peopleâs hearts as much as you likeâŚbut if you try spying on my or Shizukiâs memories, Iâm carving out your eyeballs.â
Ratifahâs smile was bright to the point of becoming unsettling.
âBecause it makes me sick to think that someone like you shares memories that *only* Shizuki and I have.â
âGh!?â
Ratifah gave one last sharp pull and Cohen winced in pain.
Maybe because he had seen Ratifahâs one-sided victory against âBacklashâ, one of the other imperial âHeroesâ assigned to the mission, and he knew he had no way to escape.
Or maybe because he felt guilty.
Cohen made no serious attempt to resist her âarrestâ.
âDonât peek inside me or Shizuki so readily anymore. Am I clear?â
Cohen, his hands and feet firmly tied, couldnât help but fall down on the ground.
Ratifah didnât spare him another glance, however, and turned instead towards the bloody boy.
They met, found they had much in common, laughed together, bickered, and quarrelled.
They dreamed about a happiness they would find one day â then, suddenly and banally, died.
The lives of so many important people vanished before their eyes in that shithole of a world.
The man who shed so many tears, who couldnât laugh from the bottom of his heart anymore â or so he was supposed to be.
âI take my eyes off you for a bit, and now you can smile like thatâŚâ
The silhouette of the smiling boy appeared in Ratifahâs eyes.
His body had already far exceeded its limits, but he stood up straight, as if it meant nothing, and laughed loudly.
â that smile was unlike himâŚin a good way.
It wasnât a fake one, but a pure, natural one, born from the heart.
âThat fits you better, Shizuki. To smile and laugh like that.â
If he heard her words, he would surely refuse to accept them.
But for Ratifah, that was just âlike himâ to do.
Soâ
âSo itâs time you forgive yourself, Shizuki.â
She continued talking to the boy obsessed in his past.
âYou suffered a lotâŚhid your weaknesses â everything, put up a front, alwaysâŚâ
⌠you kept accusing yourself, reaching for a past that wonât ever come backâŚ
âEnough alreadyâŚâ
No one wished for you to do that in the first place. No one would blame you for anything.
âYouâve done it enoughâŚtoo much.â
She didnât want to tell him to forget his past.
It was because of that past that Shizuki was now Fay Hanse Diestburg.
âYou can look forward, at least a little bit more.â
Ratifah smiled at her âclumsy little brotherâ. The head maid was probably scolding him for running off on his own.
âIf you keep carrying all those burdensâŚyour family is going to worry.â
âââ
My head refused to work.
Maybe there wasnât enough blood circulating in it: I just couldnât focus.
My field of sight was like a window during a rainstorm. I could barely stand up.
I felt like I would fall down if I moved just one step.
ââŚâŚ.aah.â
A sense of accomplishment and fatigue.
Because I had to show off, I was covered in wounds. I couldnât even tell for sure if I was still holding my âSpadaâ or not.
âŚfive more minutes. Or maybe ten. Iâll have recovered a bit then, I thought, standing there motionless. Suddenly, a shadow cast over me.
ââŚhonestly, what are you doing?â
Words half hopeless, half accusatory.
ââŚI want to ask myself that too.â
I dodged the question.
I couldnât see the person before me well.
But the voice, tone and words made it easy to tell who she was.
Feli von Yugstine.
âŚat the same time, I recalled something.
I told her I was only going to check the location, didnât I.
I sure turned out to be a huge liar, I thought, with a wry smile.
âI told you not to do anything rash, didnât I? WhyâŚwonât you listen to me?â
I didnât plan to do anything rash.
I just showed off my pride a little.
In Feliâs eyes, what I did looked like nothing but rash, definitely.
ââŚlook at all this bloodâŚYour Highness, do you have a deathwish?â
ââŚwell, honestly, it wouldnât have been too bad to die like that.â
Feliâs expression contorted in sadness.
I was being honest. Somewhere in my heart, I felt it wouldnât have been bad to go like that.
JustâŚ
âBut I have no intention of dyingâŚI can say that for sure. Maybe you wonât believe me, but I wasnât thinking about dying at all.â
âŚI honestly thought so.
I did think that it wouldnât have been bad to die there.
However â I had no intention to actually go.
âHey â Elena.â
I smiled and looked up at the sky, then called the name of the girl that should have been behind me.
Because of the blood covering my eyes, the normally azure sky looked bright red.
âIn the past, I wanted to die really badly. On a completely different level from you back there.â
That desire to die influenced me to this day.
That was probably the reason why Feli looked like she was about to cry.
What should I do to meet someone who has already died? How should I die? What kind of death would I find satisfying? In the past, I thought about things like that all the time.
In the end, I couldnât endure my solitudeâŚand took my own life. Because of that, the hope that dying would lead me to them again was torn asunder too.
âBut as you can see, Iâm still alive. I wanted to survive.â
Because I willed it.
.
â even in pain and suffering, even in despair, even if trapped by regrets and guilt, even people like that continue to dream. So donât look downâŚlook forward.
.
Words someone told me a long time ago. They suddenly flashed in my mind so suddenly, I couldnât recall who said them.
.
â A future happier than the present will definitely come. The day we will feel content with ourselves will comeâŚno matter what. Because as long as we can dream, our hopes are never gonna die.
.
âThe reason is probablyâŚI guess I finally found it, something to be content with myself.â
I never uttered such words before.
But I probably subconsciously felt it.
That I was happy now.
There was no other way to explain it.
âI understand your pain, so much that it hurts. But let me say this â people can still dream. You might find happiness one day. So donât let yourself sink into despair and throw away that possibility.â
I suffered, wept, eventually fled into the arms of death â but there was no happiness to be found.
âŚif you donât go on living, the possibility of finding happiness will be lost too.
So I continued talking, almost obsessively. The dream-like, faint memories that surfaced in my mind moved my mouth. Donât ever become like me, I said over and over.
âYouâll find your own happiness too one day. DefinitelyâŚone day, no matter whatâ â
â after all, even someone like me could look to the future.
My still clouded gaze turned towards Feli.
If you look at me like that, with genuine concern, I canât look down all the time, I canât say âI want to dieâ anymore, can I?