FERTILIZER CONSULTATION AND BEST FRIENDâS CAREER PATH (PART 1)
After sorting the herbs I foraged this morning and carrying them to the compounding room, we had a slightly early lunch. The lunch consisted of sloppily made Corn Soup and Pan Fried Butter Pumpkin, both of which used homegrown ingredients from my experimental garden that I harvested this fall. I wouldnât exactly say they reach my standards⌠emphasis on wouldnât, and I.
âWhy is the corn so sweet?! The grains are so tender and full! And the pumpkin, itâs so sweet! Even the skin is melting in my mouth!â
The moment she took a sip, Ms. Christyâs eyes opened wide in bewilderment before she showered me in strides of compliments. Being praised so openly like this made the process of making the fertilizer from scratch worth all the hard work.
âHmph.â
On the other hand, Regina only snorted. Not a hint of a smile was seen on her as she picked the tender parts of the pumpkins on the pan, piled them on her small plate, and popped one of them into her mouth. No comment coming from her either.
âAah, Mentor! Youâre hogging them. You took seven, seven! While Iâve only had four!â
âDid I? You didnât look like youâre eating them much, so I thought to help you with them.â
Regina, with her trademarked cruel smirk, covered her small plate with both hands to prevent her pumpkins from being taken. From all the things she said, not one of them was a complaint⌠It led me to believe that perhaps she took a liking to this vegetable dish.
âIâm the type to save delicious treats for last so I can savor them later!â
âKa ka ka. Thatâs why all of your precious things slipped you by. You know, like your marriageable age.â
âM-, my marriage is not part of the conversation! If anything, it was all because you went missing in the first place, Mentor.â
âAah, how wretched, old maids and their prejudices. Donât follow her example, Jill!â
ââŚhaah.â
I donât understand, why are they making a fuss over a slice or two of pumpkin? I went to the kitchen to fetch more.
In the end, the two witches showed how gluttonous they could be and were finally sated after a large pot of soup, two whole pumpkins, and four cobs of boiled corn in their stomachs, and this was supposed to be a light lunch.
As for me, I only had a bowl of soup and a slice of pumpkin. Iâd rather not relapse after the diet, mind you.
â˘âŚâ˘âŚâ˘
âWelcome to the western pioneer village, Madam Governor. I am Aroldo Baresi, the village chief. This is my wife, Karina Baresi.â
Erenâs parents rushed out to the door and greeted Ms. Christy with a bow.
âPleased to meet you, Chief Aroldo. Iâm Cristiane Rita BrandmĂźller, currently a teacher at the Imperial Academy of Magic. Although I have been conferred a baronetcy by His Majesty the Emperor, I am still unworthy of the title, as Iâm yet to become the governor. For this reason, Iâve come here today as a private civilian, detached from my official duties, to confirm the area with my own eyes. I would be grateful for your cooperation.â
âI⌠I see. Uh⌠I understand, Lady BrandmĂźller.â
Being barraged by eloquent words, Chief Aroldo could only nod his head, shrinking in embarrassment. Well, an Independent and Literary Woman like Ms. Christy mustâve been a little bit too much for a simple, backwater village chief. He looked quite overwhelmed.
(Sheâs actually quite the immature grown-up who got into a squabble with her mentor over pumpkin slices under all that elegance though.)
Watching that exchange from a step away, I chuckled under my hood and rubbed the backs of Maya and Vier with my hands each.
Obviously, I canât have Ms. Christy walk on her own two feet from the forest to the pioneer village âShe was riding Fubuki the Wyvern with Mr. Eilmer the Dragon Knight when she first came hereâ so the solution was to have Ms. Christy ride Maya while I would ride Vier as we traveled. Meanwhile, the one to guard the hermitage was Bartholomew, who took the role gladly (Regina hated it though, screaming âYouâre annoying!â).
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âFirst, I want to confirm the variation and the condition of the crops in this village. Can you tell me about them?â
âAh, yes. We grow mainly grains⌠rice, wheat, corn, as well as pumpkins, beans, tubers, and various other vegetables that are relatively easy to grow. As for harvest, we had a poor harvest 5 years ago due to cold weather, but since then things have been going well.â
âHm. What do you do if thereâs crop failure?â
âThen we let the fields rest and wait for them to recover naturally, thatâs basically all we can do. Well, cultivating new fields is difficult, and the village canât survive if we keep increasing the amount of idled plot, so weâre using every trick in the book to stay afloat.â
âI see. Securing idled plots in case of emergency seems to be imperative from now on. We need some kind of leverage, perhaps we can consider tax exemptions for a certain period of time, or import and distribute provisions according to the situation in each town or village.â
âIs that true?! I canât tell you how much that would help us⌠Thank you!â
Despite her matter-of-fact, intelligent tone, what Ms. Christy said was positive, putting herself on the side of the villagers. Chief Aroldoâs once taut shoulders even relaxed as relief spread through his face.
âOh, forgive me. This is hardly the place to talk. Please, come inside.â
Led by the chief, Ms. Christy and I were about to follow him inside when someone called my name, âJill!â Hearing the familiar voice, I looked over and saw Eren coming at us with her two brothers, theyâre all bringing baskets full of grains and vegetables.
âKids. Why are you bringing these things to Lady Baroness?â
Chief Aroldo looked bewildered, reprimanding his children, when his wife gently tugged at his sleeve.
âIâm the one who told them to, dear. Iâm sure the lady will understand it better if she sees our crops herself.â
âI see. Thank you for your consideration, Mrs. Baresi.â
The Chief looked unconvinced, but Ms. Christy interrupted and thanked his wife before he could complain, leaving him chewing his words back.
âLet me see them.â
Ms. Christy stepped forward. She was tall and had a good body carriage, and her every movement was precise and sharp like a knife even in her rest posture âA captivating woman even if you ask me. Because of that, the two boys were a little bit intimidated by her. Eren, though, after glancing a disappointed look at her brothers, stepped forward and lowered the basket she was carrying.
âHere you go, Lady Baroness.â
âThank you. And you are?â
âEren.â
When I answered that for her, Ms. Christy glanced back at me and asked âAre you friends?â To which Eren and I nodded at the same time.
âWe are.â
âBest of friends!â
Erenâs enthusiastic answer invited Ms. Christyâs gaze back at her, and a happy squint from the witch.
âNow, letâs see.â
After which, Ms. Christy bent down and began to inspect the produce in the basket with her hand.
The witch was examining the crops with some interest at first before her expression started to darken âlike she was colored by bafflement and doubtâ which consequently raised the tension within the group, as the rest of us waited with bated breath.