Ellen and Harriet cautiously proceeded through the maze of complex alleys between buildings.
âIf they see us, the Guards will tell us to leave because itâs dangerous. We have to stay far away from them.â
Unlike before, because of Reinhardtâs disappearance, the back alleys were lined with guards, not criminals. Harriet nodded at Ellenâs words.
âI learned a noise canceling spell this time. Let me cast it on us and move along.â
âYes.â
âIt wouldâve been nice if I actually learned invisibility magic, but weâre not that far ahead yet.â
âItâs okay.â
Harriet had learned some new magic spells since the island mission; she learned them because she had already experienced a situation in which the magic spells she thought of as useless were actually very useful.
The underwater breathing spell and the heating ball summoning spell were two such examples. They were the lowest level of magic spells that one could learn without much effort, and yet they were such a great help to Ellen and Reinhardt in gathering food for the group and in helping everyone maintain their body temperature during the torrential rain.
In fact, many of the attack spells she learned, even if they were powerful, didnât actually see much action. Due to how long it took to cast them, their practicality was greatly reduced as well.
In the end, after the group mission was over, Harriet started to think a bit differently about what was and wasnât useful magic.
Low level magic, such as noise suppression magic, would have been a great help when they were hunting on that island. So Harriet had passed on higher level magic to learn more useful magic which could be used right away, noise canceling was one of them.
After the short casting time was over and the magic activated, the noise Harriet and Ellen emitted was greatly reduced, if not completely gone.
Ellen took the lead.
It was raining, so the smell wasnât that intense, but if it had been hot, that space would have been filled with a nauseating stench.
Piles of unidentifiable garbage, food remains, and traces of urine were scattered everywhereâvisible for anyone to see.
Harriet was not used to something like that; she tried not to look. She was so upset when she actually saw a rat running past her, it was a miracle that she didnât scream.
Fortunately, it was raining and they had noise canceling magic cast on them; the Guards couldnât hear those two girls moving about.
âWhat are all these buildings?â
Even while being uncomfortable, Harriet seemed to be curious about the buildings they found in the back alleys of the market.
âThey are probably homes.â
âHomes? At a place like this?â
How could people live in buildings so close to each other? Arenât these places like ant hills?
Harriet showed the typical reaction of a noble that couldnât understand the way commoners lived.
The back alley streets behind the market, which were as complex as a maze, were completely silent except for the occasional Guard passing by.
Sometimes they would see homeless people crumpled in the alleyways, sleeping.
When Harriet saw one, she froze and wasnât able to even get close to him. Ellen approached him instead.
âMister.â
âHey, be carefulâŚâ
âUh, uhm⌠What? Who are ya? Oh~ what are pretty ladies like you doing in a place like this?â
âWeâre looking for a guy with blonde hair about this tall. His name is ReinâŚâ
âAh, I donât know. How many times do I have to say that I donât know that guy?â
The homeless guy couldnât give them an answer, seeming as if he had been asked several times before.
Following that, Ellen found a few more people that seemed to be homeless people, not criminals, but all of them only told her that they didnât know anyone called Reinhardt, as if they were already tired of it.
After wandering around for a long time, trying to evade the Guards, Ellen and Harriet ended up with no new results.
Sponsored Content
ââŚI think everyone here has already been questioned about Reinhardtâs disappearance.â
âYeah.â
They were beggars, but none of them knew Reinhardt, and the criminals that haunted those places already hid away because of all the Guards.
Did they even have to break into those buildings to ask if they were criminals or if they knew Reinhardt? However, it was already pretty clear that the Guards already did something similar.
They both wanted Reinhardt to return safely, yet hadnât been able to find him. Harriet then spoke her next words rather carefully.
âEveryone has already searched every nook and cranny of this place⌠And if they didnât find any clues after such a long time, I donât think it would make sense for us to wander around here even more.â
In the end, they came to the conclusion that it would be meaningless for them to continue to search through the Wenster Market.
*Â *Â *
Harriet and Ellen left Wenster Market, going out onto the street again. The Market was already covered by others. It wouldnât change a thing if they were to be added to the mix.
âDid Reinhardt actually not come here?â
âI donât knowâŚâ
The fact that the Guards hadnât found Reinhardt yet, even though they combed through the place Reinhardt supposedly disappeared at, might mean that it wasnât the place of his disappearance.
It was possible that Reinhardt didnât actually go to that place. The reason why all the criminals that could have kidnapped disappeared like that all of a sudden could be because they felt threatened by the sudden appearance of so many Guards.
Then where the hell should they start to look for Reinhardt?
âThere are a lot of strange things about this situation.â
Harriet raised another question.
âWhat?â
âThe guards⌠questioned most of the beggars here, didnât they?â
âYeah.â
They did it to the point that the beggars were sick of hearing that question.
âThe criminals ran away, but the beggars stayed in this place.â
âHowever, it seems like none of the beggars that lived under the bridge came here. None of them knew Reinhardt.â
The beggars that lived under the bridge.
According to the Guard, the beggars should have come over to the Wenster Market to take shelter from the rain. If they didnât want to get completely soaked, they would have no other choice but to go there. The Guards werenât really kicking them out of that place. Thatâs why the beggars remained in the back alleys whether the Guards were patrolling or not.
There were beggars, but none of them were the ones that knew about Reinhardt.
âThey never went to the Wenster Market.â
Ellen nodded at Harrietâs reasoning.
âI think we have to find those people first.â
âYes.â
Wenster Market, the most clear trail, was already crowded with people. If that place held any type of clue, it would be found someday, even if they werenât there.
The two decided to look for the beggars of the Bronzegate Bridge, a group no one really cared about. Everyone else had only focused on the Wenster Market.
Their theory was correct.
Neither the forces of Temple nor the Guards focused on that lead under the assumption that Reinhardt disappeared in Wenster Market. They were trying to find some criminal gang that was connected to Reinhardtâs disappearance.
Reinhardt hadnât even found the group of beggars he was looking for at that point.
That was the problem with people who only did what they were told to do. That was the reason why Templeâs forces and the Guards were only concentrating on the fact that Reinhardt definitely went to Wenster Market.
So Ellen and Harriet came to the decision that they should go somewhere else because other people were already covering that place.
Those beggars that lived under the bridge were a bunch that stood out quite a bit, even the Guards knew them well.
Although they didnât seem to impose any sanctions on them, they didnât really like them, either. Ellen and Harriet hadnât seen them in person, but they imagined them drinking booze and chattering under the bridge. That definitely wouldnât have been a pretty view.
Ellen and Harriet reached the entrance to the riverside park where they first gathered information to look for that guard again.
However, there was a different person standing guard, probably because that other guyâs shift was over.
âOh, those beggars? At times like these, theyâd probably go to Wenster mââ
âThey arenât there.â
When they were about to get the same answer as before, Ellen cut him off. It was highly likely that Reinhardt went there, but the beggars were definitely not there.
âHmm⌠Really? Then where would they have gone on rainy days like this? They donât even have houses or anything, you know?â
It rained a lot those past few days and they couldnât stay under the bridge in that situation, so the only choice they seemed to have was to head towards Wenster Market.
One of the guards chimed in after hearing the other talk.
âWell, donât they make a lot of money these days? Maybe they donât have to go to the market anymore. Who knows? Maybe they even found some inn to stay in.â
âMoney? What money would beggars have? And an inn? Thatâs funny.â
When the other guards were laughing at his statement, treating him as if he was talking complete nonsense, he started to chuckle.
âThose bastards arenât selling cheap candy any more, you know? They are now selling knick knacks on the mana train. Didnât you notice? Thatâs why we donât get any complaints from people visiting the riverside park any more. But Iâm sick and tired of seeing those guys every time I go to work.â
ââŚYouâre telling us that those vendors were those beggars?â
âYeah, they are pretty active, arenât they?â
Ellen and Harrietâs eyes met as they were listening to the Guardsâ conversation.
âAah, greetings, dear citizens of the Empire.â
âCould you please lend us your precious time for a bit, I would like to introduce to you one of our new items.â
The two had already found their target without even knowing.
* * *
The only people interested in the job change of the beggars from under the bridge were people of the same âtradeâ and the underworld. So there were only a few people among the guards who knew that the beggars became train vendors.
Beggars were still beggars, people often didnât care about who they actually were, and the vendors were just a mild annoyance, so no one wondered about their background.
Anyway, unlike the solicitors in the river side park, the mana train vendors could continue their business regardless whether it rained or not. They were still going from train to train to sell their wares even during the rainy season.
Ellen and Harriet immediately boarded a mana train, not caring where it went.
âI hope they know where Reinhardt is.â
âYes.â
Both hoped that nothing bad had actually happened to him and that he was absent from Temple for such a long time because of something else. The two moved from compartment to compartment of the mana train, looking for those junk sellers.
They didnât have to look for long. After moving through four compartments they found a vendor who was twirling a spinning top on the floor and talking excitedly about the âmagic spinning topâ.
It was no wonder that people wouldnât connect the vendors with the beggars living under the bridge.
According to Reinhardtâs instructions, the merchants riding on the train were properly dressed and cleaned up.
âAah, everyone, let me tell you about this spinning topâŚâ
âExcuse me, mister.â
As was to be expected, Harriet was still pretty shy, so Ellen stepped up to the guy. When Ellen called out to him, the merchant smiled.
âHello there, itâs only one silver coin.â
He seemed to think that she talked him up because she was interested in the spinning tops lying on the floor. Of course, Ellen had no interest in those things whatsoever.
âDo you know Reinhardt?â
ââŚReinhardt?â
The vendor tilted his head when she said that name out of nowhere.
*Â *Â *
Fortunately, he knew Reinhardt.
âThat guyâs missing?â
âYes.â
As soon as he heard that he immediately picked up his spinning tops and got off at the next station. Harriet and Ellen followed him, and when they reached a quiet place, they started to talk.
âYou didnât know?â
âThis is the first time Iâve heard of this⌠This is a big problem. I should let big sis know about it.â
What did that mean?
However, the peddler seemed to feel compelled to immediately report the matter to someone.
âThank you, you two. But you guysâŚâ
âWeâre Reinhardtâs classmates.â
It seemed like he wanted to send them away, but Ellen and Harriet were burning with determination; they would follow him no matter what.
The vendor couldnât win against those two, whoâd inevitably follow him whether he liked it or not, so he had no other choice but head towards the Rotary Gangâs current base with them.
Ellen and Harriet were forced to realize that it was only natural that they werenât able to find the Bronzegate beggars in the Wenster Districtâs market street.
The vendor was heading towards the southernmost area of the Imperial Capital.
âI heard that you were staying close to Bronzegate.â
The vendor shook his head at Ellenâs words from underneath his umbrella.
âIt was like that at first, but weâre gradually trying to settle down properly.â
They were slowly trying to get away from Bronzegate. That was why they moved their base completely while it was raining, that was how he explained it.
However, where they were going was close to the border between the Capital and the outside area. Only after riding the train until the end did they get off.
This was a remote area with only a few buildings and even fewer people.
They couldnât help but feel nervous because they were heading to such a deserted place. âWhat if this person wasnât a good person?â These types of thoughts bubbled up in them.
ââŚIâm scared.â
âItâs alright.â
Harriet was speaking in halting words as if her voice was failing. As a response, Ellen whispered to her that she had nothing to worry about.
That put her mind at ease when she thought about how great Ellen, who was able to fight orcs on her own in the jungle, was.
Even if that vendor thought about harming them, it would be in vainâhe was definitely easier to deal with than those orcs.
Fortunately, she could lay those worries to rest, as they were able to see a huge tent after they walked with the vendor for some time. It was set up in a distant and quiet vacant lot. Inside the tent one could hear the loud roaring of people.
They could also see a construction site. It seemed like they were building something.
âAre⌠are they constructing a building?â
âI think so.â
It was raining, so they werenât continuing the construction at the moment, but looking at the pillars and constructions, it seemed like they were trying to build a fairly large building.
âAlright, you guys followed me here and I brought you here, but once you get in here, you have to be careful of what you say.â
âCareful?â
The vendor saw Ellen tilt her head and nodded his head.
âBig sisâs personality is quite⌠Just know that she doesnât care whether youâre a Temple student or not.â
Ellen nodded and Harriet sighed in slight annoyance that she had to be careful around a mere beggar. Harriet was a great noble who shouldnât have a reason to talk to such lowly people in normal circumstances.
The large tent was completely open at one side so that people could look into it from outside. They thought that those beggarsâ appearance and conduct would be incredibly shabby, but they were a little different from what Ellen and Harriet had imagined.
Although they seemed to have a hard time managing due to the heavy rain, compared to the shabby beggars they encountered in the Wenster Market, they seemed like nobility. Everyone was wearing proper clothes, after all.
ââŚYo, whatâs with the kids?â
Their eyes widened slightly when their colleague returned with the two girls following him.
ââŚThese girls grew up fine, didnât they?â
Even though Harriet was wearing casual clothes, one could still recognize her as a first class noble or someone very wealthy, and Ellen looked far from a beggar as well with the energy she emitted and the clothes she wore. Their bearing and attitude were also indicative.
Harriet looked a little exhausted, and Ellen was calm. Still, the people started to mumble at the sudden appearance of those two pretty girls.
A young woman with messy white hair stood before them. Her attire wasnât much different from the others, but the pressure those golden eyes emitted showed that she wasnât an ordinary person.
Ireneâs Wild Dog.
âWhoâre these kids?â
Loyar frowned when she saw Ellen and Harriet standing before her.
The two introduced themselves as Reinhardtâs classmates.
ââŚIs that so? But how did ya find this place?â
Loyar seemed wary about why those two who seemed to be Reinhardtâs classmates went there. The only reason she could think of was that they might have found some clues to Reinhardtâs hidden identity.
âReinhardt went missing.â
ââŚWhat did you say?â
Not only Loyar, but all the club members present were completely shocked.
Originally, the Thievesâ Guild planned on using Reinhardt as bait to catch Loyar.
However, a long time had passed since then, and the Rotary Gang was completely unaware of Reinhardtâs disappearance.
Please report us if you find any errors so we can fix it asap!