No one was supposed to get executed in the first trial, and yet Iâd ended up getting executed.
The mafia members could assassinate two people each night, so two of my classmates had to get eliminated on the first day at night.
However, a development different from the original took place once again.
Ellen, not Harriet, had become one of the victims on the first night.
âWh-what the⊠Bertus isâŠâ
And shortly after, Louis Ankton of Class B was summoned to where I was, a depressed look on his face.
Ellen and Louis were the ones eliminated on the first day.
Things were still pretty much on schedule.
They were eliminating the smart ones first; Ellen was certainly smart.
âD-doesnât that mean that our grades will be bad?â
Louis seemed to be worried about his poor performance that time around.
âLouis, you donât have to worry about that because our grades will be determined by combining Class Aâs and Bâs performance, unless the assassins win.â
âAh, yes, is that so?â
âYeah.â
Mr. Mustrang came around to visit and reassured Louis, telling him that he didnât have to worry about his grades being determined by what order one got eliminated in.
Likewise, Mr. Epinhasuer came around to visit us as well.
Ellen, to be exact.
âNumber two, you failed. You know the reason, right?â
âYes.â
After Mr. Epinhauser said those words in a calm manner, he left again.
Sheâd failedâŠ
Those words left both me and Louis Ankton perplexed.
What?
Why did she fail? Doesnât the order in which the students are eliminated not matter?
But of course, Ellen reacted as if she knew whatâd happened.
âWhat did he mean? You failed?"
When I asked her that, Ellen answered after picking up one of the cookies placed on the table.
âI just asked one of the assassins to kill me.â
What?
Ellen had already identified the identity of the mafia members on the first day, and it seemed like sheâd just gone up to them and asked them to kill her.
âNo, but why?â
If sheâd figured out the identity of the mafia, she couldâve just followed the rules of the mission. Sheâd ended up dying because sheâd gone up to them after finding out who they were and asked them to kill her.
Why the hell did she do something like that?
Ellen glanced at me after hearing my question.
âYouâre all better.â
ââŠWhat does that have to do with anything?â
âLetâs train.â
No.
No, seriously.
She didnât seem like it, but she seriously had a talent for changing the subject.
* * *
Ellen and I sat on a terrace of the mansion and drank some tea while eating cookies.
Louis seemed to have been really tired, so heâd just gone to one of the empty rooms to sleep.
I didnât know how, but Ellen had actually managed to figure out the identities of the assassins. Maybe sheâd got a clue from them trying to get me executed so adamentally.
Anyway, I believed that Ellen just wanted to get eliminated quickly to train with me the rest of the time rather than completing the mission by identifying the assassins.
That was probably why Mr. Epinhauser said that sheâd failedâbecause she dropped out on purpose.
NoâŠ
But if that was the case, wouldnât it have been better to just reveal the identity of the assassins at the next dayâs meeting and quickly finish the mission?
That way, we could have returned to Temple a whole lot earlier.
Of course, we could just hang out in that mansion, but if the mission concluded, all of us could have returned.
âWhy did you drop out? You could have just finished the mission quickly. We could have gone back to Temple then, you know?â
âI suppose so."
Ellen fiddled with her cup of tea, gazing at the snowy scenery stretching out beyond the terrace window.
That, too, could be called a breathtaking scene.
The snowy garden was shining brightly in the moonlight, even though it was night.
Ellen obviously knew that if sheâd finished the mission early, we couldâve go back to Temple together. Temple was a much better environment to train in than that place.
Ellen didnât look at me.
âYouâll be busy in Temple.â
ââŠâ
She continued to speak without turning her head.
âYouâll be so busy you wonât have time to train.â
She thought that I would be preoccupied with something else when I went back to Temple, not caring about training. Although I had become unable to train due to my injuries, she seemed to think that there wouldnât be any difference when I had become able to train again.
She thought that I wouldnât train with her anymore in Temple because I had so much work to do.
Ellen chose to voluntarily drop out to make time for us rather than make us quickly return to Temple by finishing up the mission.
Until the mission was overâŠ
We were able to train together.
There was no reason for Ellen to do something like that though.
She had no reason to pay so much attention to my personal training. As the gap between us was still very big, Ellen wouldnât be able to gain anything from training with me.
She was so hung up about it for apparently no reason.
I didnât have much to say to that.
âDid you feel sad?â
ââŠâ
Ellen took a sip of her black tea, which she usually didnât drink, before she fiddled with her cup again. She was still looking at the pale white snow field, not facing me.
âA littleâŠâ
Even though she knew that it wasnât something that could be helped, Ellen still felt sad.
âArenât I strange?â
She felt sad when she actually had no proper reason to feel sad.
Even Ellen herself felt that she was acting strange.
âNo, being human in general is strange to begin with.â
That was all I could say. Ellen smiled at my words, soaked in the soft moonlight as she opened her mouth once more.
âTrue.â
Ellen was the most beautiful drenched in moonlight, perhaps because she possessed the Moon Goddessâs Sword.
It was hard to even look at her properly.
âBecause you are very strange as well.â
That might or might not have sounded like criticismâŠ
* * *
It was midnight, so I wanted to get some training in, which was why Ellen and I entered the indoor gym after a short tea break.
I didnât have to do it, but there was no reason why I shouldnât.
I could still see the snow falling outside of the gymâs window.
It seemed like Ellen had been able to pinpoint the assassins straight away, but I still wondered how sheâd managed to figure it out.
âHow did you know who the culprits were right away?â
âWellâŠâ
Ellen seemed troubled.
âYou have the greatest influence over our classmates.â
Ellen didnât usually talk much, but that didnât mean that she couldnât. She knew how to speak coherentlyâjust like she did in the Darklands.
My influence was the highestâŠ
While it was quite shameful for me to say it myself, it was true. Although I wasnât really close with either the Class A or B students, I had a lot of connections, and because of the founding of the Magic Research Society, three of the B Class students had entered my sphere of influence as well.
âIf I was one of the assassins, I would deal with you first.â
ââŠErm, I know youâre talking about the mission, but isnât it a bit terrifying putting it like that?â
What did she mean with âdeal with meâ?
Actually, if she ever tried to, I wouldnât be able to do anything against itâI would just be cut into tiny pieces.
âBut what does me being their first target have to do with catching the culprits?â
âIf you hadnât been executed during the meeting, you would have been assassinated on the first night; then they would have nominated another influential person as the assassin.â
ââŠI see.â
Unless I was actually constantly going around with another person, they would have tried to assassinate me.
There were detailed missions, so at some point, I would have ended up alone.
âFirst, their number one target, you, got executed at the meeting, after that, they would aim for the next target.â
âOh⊠Youâre right.â
âI believed that there were a total of four candidates that couldâve become their victims on the first night: Bertus, Charlotte, Louis Ankton, and Harriet.â
Those who were smart beyond comparison⊠Two of those four would be the first victims.
âHowever, there was also a possibility that the assassins were among those four. If I shadowed one of them who absolutely couldnât be an assassin, they would show up sooner or later.â
In fact, Bertus and Charlotte were the chosen assassins.
âHarriet absolutely couldnât be the assassin.â
ââŠWhy?â
ââŠIf she were one of the assassins, she would have liked the situation, but she didnât really seem happy at all.â
Did she?
In the end, I had been executed unanimously, but itâd happened so quickly that I had no time to check how each of the students had reacted.
No, if that was the case, she should have defended me.
âŠNo, actually, she would have rather choked herself than say something like, âYou canât just kill Reinhardt because of his personality!â in front of all the other students.
âSo I was hiding near Harrietâs private room and found Charlotte. Thatâs it.â
The assassins were different people, but the development was similar to the original story.
The first nightâs victims were supposed to be Harriet and Louis AnktonâŠ
However, unlike the original, Ellen actually wanted to give up on the mission, so sheâd found one of the assassins by waiting near one of the likely victims and asking them to just kill her, not the person they originally intended to kill.
She didnât immediately identify Charlotte as an assassin, Ellen had just thought about what she would do if she were one.
Of course, she could have thought about it from a different angle and started of with the stupid kids (Ludwig) as well.
âThe other assassin might be Bertus.â
* * *
Reaper Scans
Translator - KonnoAren
Proofreader - ilafy
* * *
Iâd found out by asking the teachers, but as soon as Ellen had found out that Charlotte was one of the culprits, she seemed to have inferred that Bertus was also one.
So she didnât even have to ask because she already knew the answer.
âWhy do you think so?â
"Just some reverse inference because I found out that Charlotte was one of the assassins. She was also the first one to bring up the idea of executing you at the meeting as well, and Bertus reacted the most to it.â
Knowing who the culprits were would reveal the reasons for their previous actions.
As an assassin, the first thing they would want to do is get rid of me.
That was why Charlotte had said what she said, albeit in a more casual way, and Bertus had responded accordingly.
In the original, Ellen had gotten assassinated while she was half-heartedly participating.
She didnât actually want to win, but sheâd reached the truth right away after becoming serious about quickly dropping out of the mission.
Sheâd worked so hard just because sheâd wanted to drop out.
What a weird girl.
* * *
Ellen and I had a sparring match again after quite a long time in the mansion near the old castle Epiax. It had an indoor training room.
It wasnât as good as Templeâs, but ultimately, as long as we had training swords and some space, we could train. Training as a combat major was the most cost-effective.
No, I actually wondered if there was even any other major with such poor cost-efficiency as the magic major.
It had been a long time since I had a sparring match.
-Kaaang! Kagak!
âUrgh!"
âAre you okay? Are you still injured?â
Ellen spoke anxiously as she helped me up when I landed on the floor.
ââŠShould we not do this?â
She seemed to feel slightly depressed as she said that. She didnât want me to force myself if I hadnât been completely cured yet.
The first thing I realizedâŠ
âItâs not that Iâm still in pain, my body just feels kind of stiff.â
The problem wasnât that I hadnât been completely cured and still felt pain, but because Iâd rested for a bit. my body felt kind of rusty as I held the training sword. It looked like the first thing I had to restore was my flexibility before anything else.
âAnd while I donât think I can judgeâŠâ
The second thing I realizedâŠ
âSomething about you changed compared to before.â
âSomething?â
âYouâve grown a lot.â
I could feel that Ellenâs skills had vastly improved while I had been resting. I could feel it just by looking at her.
She wasnât playing around while I couldnât train. I could clearly feel that Ellen was further ahead of me than before. It wasnât just a matter of her knowing Magic Body Strengthening but her skills in themselves.
Even if I lived twice as long as her, it was a gap that couldnât be closed.
âIt had become even wider.
I knew that she was a wall that I wouldnât be able to overcome for the rest of my life, but actually, nothing would really change if she improved even further.
It kind of made me feel like crying for no real reason.
âDid I?â
Ellen tilted her head as if she didnât know anything about that.
Still, Ellen seemed to be quite happy when she heard that I wasnât that way because I was still in pain but because my body wasnât fully warmed up.
I mean, it was kind of weird.
Some might think that Ellen always looked neutral.
The only way one could find out how she really felt was by observing her subtle reactions like I did.
It wasnât like she didnât have any reactions to matters at all, but they were just very small.
When she ate something delicious, she wouldnât act like Harriet going, âOooh! Itâs delicious!â but she would blink her eyes a few times and stare at what she ate just then.
When she felt grumpy, she would pout her lips a little bit.
When she was sad, she would keep her eyes slightly lowered, staring into empty space.
Sometimes, when she was really angry, she would even shout.
I had learned a lot about Ellen Artorius.
âThen letâs start again.â
âYes, come at me.â
-Kaang!
I felt like Iâd actually learned too much about her.
* * *
âLetâs call it a day.â
âHuffâŠYeahâŠâ
After our midnight spar, I felt more exhausted and tired than usual.
I hadnât even rested that long, but I felt that my bodyâs tension had dropped a lot, which was why I couldnât hold on as long as I usually did.
Ellen sat next to me in a chair placed on one side of the gym.
I had become exhausted a lot faster than before while Ellen didnât even work up a drop of sweat.
She didnât have as much stamina as Ludwig, but she still had a lot.
I was tired, and it was late at night, so I felt like I was about to fall asleep.
It wasnât winter yet, but we were far in the north, and there were also some hot springs thereâŠ
There was no reason not to use them.
There was an open-air hot spring outside of the mansion, and inside of it, there was also an indoor hot spring.
Of course, there were separate baths for men and women. It was still snowing outside, but I decided to enter the open-air bath.
-WhooooshâŠ
While it was an open-air bath, it wasnât entirely in the openâouter walls made of wood surrounded it.
Anyway, I was the first to use that facility since I was the first to be eliminated.
There were wooden exterior walls, and beyond them on the right side was another open-air bath, also known as the womenâs bath.
However, the wall was actually pretty lowâŠ
Just by putting some more strength into oneâs legs, one could reach the edge of it, grab it and jump over.
I had no intentions of doing that, though.
âItâs freezing cold.â
I just wanted to enter the indoor hot spring, but Iâd wondered how long I would hold out in the snowy open-air hot spring, so Iâd gone there instead.
When I thought of it, I didnât think I ever liked to slowly soak in hot baths or something before.
âOooh.â
I felt like my whole body was loosening up because Iâd entered after I had been beaten quite badly
I felt like my face was going to freeze up, but honestly, it wasnât enough to actually make a fuss about it.
I had gotten pretty much used to pain already.
Absent-mindedly sitting in the hot spring, I looked at the snowy night sky.
-Click
Sounds of a door opening could be heard coming from behind the wall on my right.
-Crunch, crunch
I could also hear the sounds of bare feet stepping on snow. Since it was an outdoor bath, snow had piled up all around the hot spring.
I believed that Ellen had entered the hot spring because she couldnât sleep.
-Reinhardt, are you there?
No.
Why was she calling me in that situation?
I was actually holding my breath!
I donât even know why I went through that trouble though.
âYeah.â
-Arenât you cold?
âI am.â
-If you are, why did you decide to bathe outside? Thereâs an indoor bath as well, you know?
âThen why are you here?"
-Just because.
âSame for me.â
The low sound of Ellen dipping herself into the bath echoed over to my side.
Damnit.
I didnât want to think about those things, but I couldnât think of anything else.
Whatever. Iâll just go out in a bit.
-ReinhardtâŠ
Why did she keep talking to me? I felt weird talking to her with that wall between us while in the states we were in!
She had to know that she had quite the knack for putting people in uncomfortable situations while pretending not to know anything, right? If she didnât, that would be just weird!
âWhat?â
My brain was thrown into disarray, but my response came out rather naturally.
-Do you like snow?
âWellâŠâ
I couldnât even remember the last time Iâd felt like I liked or disliked snow.
I guess I neither liked or disliked it.
That being said, Iâd just gone out to the open-air bath for no reason whatsoever. I sat there in a daze under the snowy night sky despite the chilling cold.
âI guess I like it.â
Iâd gone out to the open-air bath despite the inconvenience. Maybe I really just wanted to see that snowy scenery.
Therefore, I thought that I probably liked snow.
That was how I felt.
So what about Ellen? She had said that she didnât like rainâit would remind her of the day her brother left her.
-I like it, too.
That was what Ellen said.
Just as I had gone to the open-air bath disregarding the inconvenience the cold posed, Ellen seemed to have come there for the same reason.
She liked it, too.
That answer.
It seriouslyâŠ
Felt quite bittersweet.
-Letâs make a snowman tomorrow.
Why a snowman all of a sudden?
Those random things she said from time to time really made me feel weird. First, sheâd suddenly told me to train with her, then, sheâd suddenly asked me to make a snowman with her, forgetting about training.
It was especially weird coming out of Ellenâs mouth. I would have never imagined that she would ever ask me to do something like that with her.
âSure.â
However, as expected, the answer to her question naturally left my mouth.