A gap in the orbit connecting island to island, an empty place where magic dust floated in vain.Sylvia sat on a pile of stones in that dark, vacant lot and stared into space.
Caught by the gravity of the Floating Island and revolving around it, the flow of the rocks and mana was captured in her eyes.
âHave you sorted out all your thoughts?â
Idnik called out the question, taking a step closer.
Sylvia nodded silently.
A hawk landed on her shoulder, her more agile and sharper familiar. The panda was dozing, lying on her thighs.
âThen what will you do?â
Sylvia looked at the countless fragments floating in the sky.
The broken materials that did not form an island took someoneâs shape. They were sculpting her memories.âŚDeculein von Grahan Yukline.
Was he just feeling guilt, pity, or sympathy for her?
But how could he say that even after killing her mother, he was helping her? Sylvia recalled his blue eyes, as dazzling as crystal but infinitely cold.âŚBlood ran down that beautiful face, a red that dyed him.
Her motherâs blood.
âI will hate you to the death. To the end of this world. Iâll put my heart into it.â
Idnik didnât answer. She watched the scenery Sylvia had caused, observing the torrent of her mana.
Rock fragments, sand shavings, and dying moss clung to this small area of the earth, gradually increasing in size.
The things that failed to become an island and were dropped off constituted a new island.Then, a voice called out to Idnik, mysteriously as if descending from the sky.
Idnik and Sylvia looked up.ââŚItâs been a long time.â
There was a blue being. It was a form whose entire body was made of mana, vibrating like an illusion.
The manâs perfectly sculpted body consisted of only an upper body and torso, but his height reached 2m.Recruit Rodran; he was a transcendent existence in the magical world and the most wanted person on the Floating Island.
His title, Soldier of the Gods, was derived from that bizarre appearance.
âThe Voice is approaching.
âI know. What about the thing I asked for?â
Rodran looked toward Sylvia.
She met his gaze.
âYou are the one who killed him.Sylviaâs face turned cold as pain like a knife stabbing her heart assailed her.
âThe creature that your mana unconsciously manifested devoured a demon called the NescÄus. The creature and the demon intertwined and became a mutation.
âSo does that mean that, to some degree, itâs the demonâs fault?â
At Idnikâs words, Sylvia shook her head. No defense was needed.
âThen it also means that Iâm a murderer. The person I killed must have had a family⌠Iâm not that different from the Professor.â
Idnik let out a small sigh. She was Sierraâs daughter, born of Iliadeâs blood. Either way, it wasnât a good combination.Sylvia turned to Idnik.
âWhat is âthe Voiceâ?â
ââŚItâs a demon.â
âYes. An ancient demon. Whether in the form of a human or a monster, real demons are easy to deal with. You can just kill them. However, those who are phenomena or concepts, like the Voice, are very tricky to deal with.â
Sylvia shot up, then walked over to look up at Rodran.
âThen will that demon be dealt with by the Yukline family? Will Deculein go to him?â
Rodran looked straight into her eyes without saying a word. A dry, parched gold jewel resided there, an ocean of mana churning inside.
âYou are the quality of eternal immortality.Eventually, Rodran said that and left. It was a tribute from a historical figure in the magic world.
But Sylvia didnât show the slightest excitement as she stared into the empty sky.
âOn the Floating Island, there is an unwritten rule that the person who discovers an island is the owner.â
She stretched out her hand.
Mana erupted from her slender body like a volcanic eruption.The gushing mana gathered the fragments of the area and gave each material a new color.
She would re-create the whole thing as an island.
âSo this island is mine.â
Idnik crossed her arms. A tree had grown right next to her, so she leaned against it.
âThen, what will be the name of the island? You need a name to declare ownership.â
Sylvia turned to her.
ââŚAnonymous Island is enough.â
* * *I arrived at the Imperial Palace, walking quickly down the hallway without meeting anyone. Keironâs words were written on the paper I still held.[The door to the basement opened.]I reached the wooden door leading to the basement of the Imperial Palace. Keiron stood next to it like a statue.
âHow is Your Majesty?â
âSheâs in bed.â
I was sure. The door to the basement opened only at the moment Sophien was engulfed by indolence.
âAre you going to head in?â
Keiron remained expressionless and placed his hand on his sword. He meant to serve as an escort.
âYes. If NescÄus comes out of this door, then please follow instead of killing him.â
I slowly walked over and pushed on the door.Beyond the door, there was a notification announcing my resumption of the quest.
ăThe Darkness of the Imperial Palace ¡ Devilâs Mirror: Episode 2ă
* * *
âŚThe gardens of the Imperial Palace.Sophien was walking along the lakeshore, relieving her pain. She was revived, but the pain of being killed by an ax lingered.The sounds of the birds chirping were bothersome to her ears. Sophien turned to the servant next to her.
âWhat is the date today?â
âItâs June 3rd.â
Did she come back?
Half a year after her death, she had no choice but to admit that fact.Of course, at first, she sighed in relief, but she later realized its wrongness. Only time had rewound, but her illness remained.
As she sighed, Sophien, who had been staggering through the garden, suddenly sat down at the shore of the lake.
She glanced over the shining surface.A look of astonishment alit in her gleaming eyes. She took one step, then two, back, falling on her butt.
âYour Highness! Are you okay?â
The servants rushed over. Sophien, standing with their support, pushed them away.
âAre you okay-â
âIâm fine. Iâm fine, so go. Go. Stay over there.â
The servants stepped back, and Sophien swallowed.
The clear lake in the garden, she stared at the waterâs surface that sparkled like a mirror.There was a man there. It was the one who introduced himself as a professor in the past, an illusion caused by the disease before her regression.
âSo, we meet again, Your Highness.Sophien instinctively looked back. He wasnât behind her. She plunged her face toward the lake.
âYes. Thatâs right.
âHow did youâŚ?â
As soon as Sophien realized she had regressed, she made a portrait of the professor and ordered a search.
But nowhere on this continent was there a professor who looked like the man in her memory. She thought it was just a hallucination caused by her illness.
-Didnât I tell you?
The professor who had now reappeared spoke, as before, with an arrogant and handsome expression.
âI will always be with you during your process.
Sophien stared blankly at him.
She laid her hand on his face, fingers grazing across the shore of the lake. There was a thud, and the water sloshed.
âOh! Your Highness! Stop it!â
âNo matter how painful it is, taking your own lifeâŚâ
The servants who misunderstood her behavior rushed in, and Sophien, who was dragged away, was soon confined to her room.
Even then, her mind remained fuzzy.
âAre you okay?A professor who never disappears, standing as an illusion in the mirror.
When she didnât even move, the professor sighed.
âI exist. If itâs that hard to believe, bring a tight-lipped, trustworthy person. Iâll let him see me too-
âNo, this is enough.â
Sophien shook her head firmly.
âI believe you, Professor. You are the only one who is connected to my last lifeâŚâ
* * *
âŚFor the next two months, I spent time with Sophien in episode two.
The quest goal was vague, so IÂ had no choice but to stay.
Simply put, it was an exploration. Of course, there werenât many things to do with Sophien in the past. She couldnât leave because she was sickly, and most of the time, she was confined to the garden or the Imperial Palace.In this mirror, my only role was to act like someone she could talk to.
In the meantime, Sophien revealed many things to me.
Her life was a history of surgery and healing, in a series of vain wishes and hopes tortured. She was only nine years old, but the weight of those years was heavier than anything.
Sophien revealed it all calmly.Time passed like that⌠and today.âI am still dying.Sophien said her death in bed was not far off.
âI even went through the miracle of regressionâŚ
Professor.Sophien paused for a moment and gritted her teeth.
âIf I⌠come back to life again⌠ugh.
The pain was assailing every inch of her body.
âCan I still see you thenâŚ?
I answered immediately, causing Sophien to smile bitterly.âWhat are you glad for?â
-You are handsome. If you looked like the many eunuchs hereâŚ
I wouldâve broken the mirror when we first met.It was a very real reason, but no laughter came out.âŚ
For two months, I witnessed this childâs slow and winding path to death. Of course, that kind of pity did not bother me, but not smiling was the politest dignity Iâve learned.
âProfessor. Iâm not afraid of death, but of painâŚIt was at that was moment, next to her, the NescÄus appeared.
The one I saw was an ordinary skeleton with a scythe. The Reaper.âNo worries, your highness.â
It was proof that I had no fear, but Sophien was going to die soon.
âNext time, I will be by your side again.â
ââŚYes. Iâm relievedâŚ
I couldnât kill those demons. Inside this mirror, I couldnât offer any helping hand to Sophien on the other side.
âI hope⌠to see you againâŚ
Sophien quietly closed her eyes.
The NescÄus stretched out its hand to her sleeping form and gathered the essence of her regression. It truly was like a bee.
âEpisode 2â
After that, the system message floated before my eyes.
The number âtwoâ shook, and the newly engraved number wasâŚ
ăEpisode 7 ă
At that moment, I opened my eyes to hear Keironâs voice.
I looked toward him, raising my eyes. I was once more surrounded by the scenery of the Imperial Palace. The two months spent with Sophien dispersed like a dream, and I returned to reality.
Now my mind was full of questions. Why did it jump straight from the second to the seventh? If the regression episode did not continue linearly, I wouldnât be able to keep my promise.
âDeculein. Are you okay?â
Blood vessels swelled in my temples, perhaps due to his obsession. I was furious as I looked back at Keiron.ââŚIâm fine. How many days have passed?â
âNot even a day has passed. Did you find out anything?â
I shook my head.âI donât even know the purpose of it yet.â
I knocked on the wooden door. There was, of course, no reply.
âYou donât even know the purpose?â
ââŚIn this world, there are demons that exist, there are demons that are phenomena, and there are demons that are concepts. The NescÄus is a third-class demon that exists. On the other hand-â
âIs this underground demon a phenomenon?â
âYes. It is a phenomenon and a concept.â
âŚThis underground past was Sophienâs world. The world left before the regression; that was when Sophien died.
The Devilâs Mirror was not a reproduction of her past. Sophien regressed and stored the abandoned worlds.
Therefore, this underworld was real.It was still a hypothesis, but it would probably continue with the memory of the current Sophien.
âDeculein. I am following NescÄus now.â
The Keiron standing here and the Keiron following NescÄus had the same soul but different bodies. That was Keironâs magical talent.âLet me know when he gets to his destination.â
I walked through the corridors of the Imperial Palace. But stopping at a point, I looked back to Keiron.âNescÄus must have kept Her Majestyâs Spirit somewhere⌠but Keiron.â
Keiron looked at me without a word.
âHow much can you sacrifice for your Majesty?â
His answer was immediate.
* * *
Sophien opened her eyes slowly, feeling pressed down by a feeling of sorrow she had rarely felt in this life. From somewhere, she could hear Keiron.
âAre you awake?â
Sophien glanced to her side. Like a metronome, the knight stood there as if announcing reality.âCanât you see it?â
âHow are you feeling?â
ââŚWhat happened with Deculeinâs class?â
She listened for a couple of hours and then fell asleep.
âThe class was over, but the cat touched the barrier on the 80th floor, and their writing was blown away.â
ââŚIs the cat okay?â
âYes. Some wizards lost their temper, but the chairman stopped them. And now-
âThe red-haired Munchkin, who sat atop Keironâs head, cried.Nodding, Sophien pushed her body up and leaned against the window.
The gardens of the Imperial Palace could be seen in full bloom right outside.âWhen I was youngâŚâ
Sophien carefully recounted the events and vague memories of days that had already disappeared.
ââŚNo, itâs nothing.â
A sadly sunken past. Her faint voice barely reached her ears.âNext time, I will be there.Then the next time, he did not come. He broke his promise. HoweverâŚWho was he?
âI had a bizarre dream.â
Sophien sat back against the bedframe. Her hair was fluttering in the gentle breeze coming in from the open window. The fragrant petals clung to her pure white face.Sophien looked at him.
ââŚKeiron, was it you?â
âI need a more detailed explanation.â
âNo. Forget it.â
Returning to reality, the Emperor yawned, those unfamiliar memories buried deep within her.
âHaaah⌠do I have anything else to do today?â
âThere is a trial by the upper ranks who have been given mana stones from the Altar.â
âAh, shall I cut those assholes throats myself?â
âIt is forbidden. The trial is not over yet.â
âAnyway. Let me do something before I fall asleep again. Today I am physically fineâŚâ
⌠As she eagerly rolled up her sleeves, she stretched again.Deculein watched her from afar.