âLouina unnie. Is this answer real?â The Ethereal-ranked wizard, Rose Rio, asked out of suspicion.
Louina shrugged. âWhat do you mean?â
âDid Deculein really write this answer?â
Rose Rio was an Ethereal-level mage with impressive short pink hair, but she was actually younger than her, hence why she called Louina unnie.
She was a support and healing genius who only stayed in the Magic Tower for six months, climbed up to the Isle of Wizardâs Wealth afterward, and reached the Ethereal rank at 25 years old.
âYeah. Deculain wrote it himself.â
ââŚâ
Rose Rio still couldnât believe it. Gindalf, sitting quietly in another chair, asked, âReally? Iâm suspicious of Deculeinâs nature. I know his situation, after all.â
Gindalf, who was now in his 70s, was the personification of old wizards in fairy tales. He wore round glasses and had long grey hair and a beard.
âNo, this bothers me more than that.â Rose Rio pointed to the last part of Deculeinâs Theorem.
[⌠In addition, 48 runes were successfully interpreted and organized, but they were not published since they didnât fit the topic.]
âIs this for real? He said he interpreted several runes? Thatâs got to be a lie.â
Louina laughed bitterly. âI already took a look at his interpretation paper. I even saw it recited.â
Deculein had shown her some of the rune interpretation paper.
Of course, they might think he was wrong, but it was surprisingly easy to tell whether it was correct or not.
He had to memorize the pronunciation. The runic language itself was imbued with magic, so just speaking it correctly would consume mana.
âThat guy, Deculein, has linguistic talent. I heard he speaks ten languages.â
âHuh, really? I canât bring myself to believe that.â
Rose Rioâs eyes remained squinted as Gindalf chuckled, stroking his beard.
âRose, feel free to think about it as you deem fitting~â
In fact, runes werenât even her current priority.
The five-year period Deculein demanded was still stuck in her head.
âIt canât be, right? There isnât a disease that canât be cured even with Yuklineâs financial and political power.â
Even after repeating that in her mind, she couldnât think of any other way to explain it.
â⌠I promised, didnât I? Five years. You will not be my stumbling block, and I will not be your stumbling block.â
Why did he promise five years?
âArenât you four years younger than me? You still can grow a lot, so time is definitely on your side.â
Why did he say that?
â⌠It doesnât make sense.â
Time was definitely on his side.
If it were the usual arrogant Deculein, no, even if it werenât, he wouldnât say things like âtime is on your sideâ while solving the Symposium problem.
The honor and feat of interpreting the runes would shine brighter as time went by.
Louina soon shook her head, however.
âPhew. What does it matter?â
Whenever she remembered all that Deculein did to her in the past, her body still trembled. Deep inside, her hatred for him continued to burn like embers.
However, no matter if she liked it or not, Louina was a thorough wizard. She was accustomed to the law of the jungle and was an extremely rational animal.
Therefore, rather than burning with passion, she calmly set herself up to achieve her true goal.
The McQueensâ magic vision.
The title of head professor.
She didnât care about anything else other than that. She would willingly bury the humiliation, personal feelings, and family resentment she suffered from him for those objectives.
Besides, as Deculein, sheâd be free in 5 years anywayâŚ
âIs he going to release this â48 Runes Interpretationsâ today as well?â Rose Rio asked. Before Louina could answer, she continued with a sigh. âIn any case, letâs head out now.â
She created wind and rolled the curtains in the waiting room.
Behind it stood the short chairman like a statue.
â⌠Ahaha.â Receiving Rose Rio and Gindalfâs gazes, she laughed and, clenching her fists, asked, âDeculein has the interpretation of 48 runes?! Did he really interpret 48 runes?! Is he going to reveal it today?! Itâll be a mess!â
âYouâll have to ask him since heâs the only one who can answer that, Chairman.â
âNo! This is not the time!â
The chairmanâs eyes filled up with mischief, her expression screaming, âIâm going to spread the word right away.â
Watching the chairman run away, Rose Rio burst out laughing.
âThat unnie doesnât change~â
âYour accent is still noticeable.â
â⌠Me? What do you mean? Iâm speaking using the standard accent.â
Rose Rioâs hometown was Rococo, which was on the outskirts of the empire. It was a rural area famous for its strong accent.
âActually, yours isnât that strong. When I first went to Rococo, I thought I was in a different country~â
âWhat? Wow, your regionalism is too strong. I didnât think you were this type. For your information, itâs not that different.â
âSay âbullfight.â âBullfight.'â
ââŚâ
Rose Rio stayed quiet.
*
The capacity of the Grand Hall was 400 people. Although it was small for its awe-inspiring name, it was still more than good enough to prove the solution of the Symposium.
Actually, the word âGrandâ in its name itself wasnât wrong.
About 300 years ago, when the designer and archmage of the Isle of Wizardâs Wealth, Loplan, built the Megiseon, this was the widest hall.
It had become the place of culture and tradition since the beginning of the floating island.
âHow⌠H-h-howâŚâ
Perhaps that was why Allen was now showing symptoms of anxiety disorder.
âCalm down.â
âYes, yes. Yes.â
He couldnât stay still even while in his seat.
He clenched his left hand around his trembling right hand, causing the tremor to spread throughout his body.
Like some kind of gym nerd.
ââŚâ
ââŚâ
Seeing him like that, I felt like Allen was impressive.
His original personality was nothing like that.
His acting was very natural.
âWhew. Whew. Whew⌠Hic! Noâ hic! This is going to be a problem. Why am I getting hiccups now?!â
I silently looked at my [Rune Interpretation Summary], a compilation of the 48 different rune interpretations in addition to the 14 runes that had been interpreted in the magical world.
I thought about making it public, but I decided against it since it was impossible to predict what kind of impact that would make. It would be better to keep it in my head for now.
Misuse of it could lead to an atomic-bomb-level disaster like the Manhattan Project, after all.
âPfff.â
But it was really weird.
When I looked at this font, I smiled involuntarily.
Maybe it was because it reminded me of a voice, almost like I was experiencing a hallucination.
âKim Woo-jin! Look at this.â
Memories of the past played back like a faded film.
âItâs a rune that is being conceived by the setting team. Did they mix Hebrew and Latin?â She put her hands together under her chin as she acted as cute as usual.
âNow, Woojin, you just need to clean it up. Try other fonts too. Make it look a little old.â While talking about its setting, her gaze on me felt sincere and clear.
âWoojin, you look handsome when you are concentrating.â
Her name was Yuli.
âHmmm.â
Kim Woojinâs memories remained in me.
âWhat? If thatâs the case, Iâm way out of your leagueâŚâ
However, her voice gradually faded.
ââŚâ
Was it because time had passed?
It felt like I could forget about her now.
⌠Brrrr.
Allenâs vibrating sound brought me to reality. What was he, an alarm clock?
âAllen. What about the slab of stone?â
âH-here! itâs here!â
Allen handed me the slate. It was a type of intermediary in which a large mana stone was processed into a slab and then engraved with runes.
âKnock, knock.
Finally, the knock came, indicating that the time had come.
âLetâs go.â
Allen got up, trembling, and went out of the waiting room with me.
âFollow me.â
We followed the guide and stood on the stage of the hall with the curtains lowered.
âIt will start soon. Thereâs only two of you?â
âYes.â
âY-Y-Yes.â
Behind me was a large blackboard and chalk. The hall was 30 years old, so its fixtures had a classic feel to them.
âProfessor Deculein of the Imperial University Magic Tower will now defend his answer to Symposium Question Number 6.
The voice of the moderator resonated in the hall.
As expected from the Isle of Wizardâs Wealth, not a single noise could be heard.
Swoooshâ
Beyond the opening curtains was the Grand Hallâs audience area, which had been filled to maximum capacity. Nevertheless, I immediately noticed one person.
⌠Julie.
I could find her instantly, no matter where she was or what kind of crowd she was buried in.
It was due to the affection that became part of my nature.
The judges for todayâs proof were Ethereal-ranked Rose Rio and Gindalf, Monarch-ranked Louina, and Astal, an addict.
I wasnât nervous at all. As I once said, the attention and stares that were pouring on me felt rather proper.
Such was the effect of very natural elitism.
âNice to meet you,â I said calmly. âIâm Head Professor Deculein. I will now begin discussing my answer for Symposium Problem 6, Proof of Runes.â
* * *
⌠Deculeinâs theorem was carried out step by step, and the Grand Hall watched him in a quiet atmosphere.
A document titled âDeculeinâs Theoremâ was distributed to all attendees.
âIf I were to interpret the inscription in question 6, that is, the runes, the following sentences are revealed.â
[Where there is light and will, there is God.]
[God hid out of fear of human worship.]
About half of the interpretation of this inscription had already been achieved by âRouten,â a Monarch-ranked wizard, along with the linguistâ Frange,â leaving nothing special about my discussion regarding it.
However, past that was where my main point began.
âGet rid of the second sentence here. Itâs useless.â
Deculein boldly deleted the second sentence.
âOnly the three runes corresponding to âlight,â âwill,â and âgodâ in the first sentence serve as a magic circuit, and the rest are just materials for combination.â
[Where there is light and will, there is God.]
[××Î ×¤× ×Š×Ď׊ ××ר ××× × Îś, ×׊]
The first sentence hovered in the air.
Although the runic language seemed to reject the interpretation itself, I insisted on it.
âThe first step in deciphering these runes is âsegmentation.'â
Deculein shredded the runes. The entire sentence scattered in the air, forming several pieces.
âThe first sentence has a total of 13 syllables, but there are 45 segments in those 13 syllables as well.â
It was similar to how the syllable âhibâ was segmented into three phonemes: âh,â âiâ, and âb.â
Runes were still languages , after all.
âBut the number of combinations of these 45 segments is nearly innumerable, reaching at least 3,923,023,104,000, possibly more.â
Three trillion nine hundred and twenty-three billion twenty-three million and one hundred and four thousand or more.
âBut there is a second process in that number. Itâs about âdiscoveringâ and identifying the most meaningful rune combinations among them. The process is as followsâŚâ
From then on, Deculeinâs theorem entered a field that ordinary people couldnât understand.
For almost two hours, countless combinations of runes unfolded like waves, which then turned into a certain shape, forming a magic formula.
It was a job that required a lot of effort and time.
That was the result of breaking through a certain limit after combining [Understanding] with the âsetting knowledgeâ in the head of game designer Kim Woojin.
ââŚNow, take a close look at this.â
If he summarized all of the above in two sentencesâŚ
âThe runes were disassembled, and a magic circle was created from that combination. However, itâs very different from the standard magic circle of modern times.â
Rose Rio asked, âIs that combination certain? If the number of branches is that large, other combinations are also possible, arenât they?â
Her voice had a strong accent.
âRunes can be considered the magic of language itself. Think of it as a proverb that gives strength to your voice.â
She was becoming a bit bothersome, but Deculein continued talking without showing any emotion.
âI only selected combinations that are âeasy for humans to pronounceâ because they are âoralâ rather than abdominal, peritoneal, and cerebral.â
More than the difficulty of pronouncing the standard language for Rose Rio, there were clearly structures that humans couldnât even voice out.
Deculein dug into that point.
âHmm.â Rose Rio was convinced, and Deculein gestured at Allen through a glance. Allen ran and handed him the magic slab.
Deculein placed his hand on it.
âNow, let me demonstrate the answer.â
At that moment, a quiet heat dawned upon the stillness of the Grand Hall.
Excitement engulfed everyoneâs eyes.
ââŚâ
Deculein closed his eyes. In that state, he carefully repeated the process demonstrated today.
He disassembled the runes, summarized the rune combination formula, reconstructed the combination into a magic circle, and finallyâŚ
He mumbled an unknown rune.
ââââ.â
Where there was light and will, there was God.
Through that single sentenceâŚ
WhoooooshâŚ
A blue light rose from the slab. The wind blew as an apparition appeared, filling the Grand Hall with unidentified scenery.
It depicted the past where runes were very common.
The scene moved slowly as if borrowing a human eye.
The white marble floor, the beautiful statue, a priest kneeling in the middle of the templeâŚ
After a while, the priest opened his mouth, putting his hands together as if in prayer.
ââââ.
A beautiful sound rang out, its gentleness spreading throughout the hall. Everyone closed their eyes to focus their attention on their ears.
The divine tone itself, unfortunately, did not last long. It just burned like a match and then faded away.
âŚ
The sound that rang like a low tide was swept away by a high tide of silence.
Deculein then continued, âThis inscription was a hymn to the gods.â
It was magic that had already been lost and a fragment of the past known as the âage of the gods.â
Some might mistake it for nothing but a hymn at first glance, but the archaeological value of its entirety was immense, and the ideas that came from that answer would lead to other magical inventions.
âThe proof is over.â
Deculein finished his theorem like that.
The auditorium was quiet, the feeling of runes lingering around every person like drizzle.
Judge Gindalf asked, â⌠Thatâs impressive. But is this the end?â
âThere is a paragraph at the end saying that other runes were interpreted and compiled into a summary.â
Gindalf remained subtle, but Rose Rio decided to be upfront.
Deculein understood what she meant, but he shook his head.
âI will not reveal the interpretation paper.â
âHmm. Do you refuse to reveal the interpretation paper? Or is it that you donât have it?â Rose Rio asked.
Deculein looked at her sternly and pulled out the documents from his inner pocket.
âThis is the interpretation paper of 48 runes. This is the only original in the world, and I made no copies of it.â
Then the Grand Hall swelled with a small commotion.
Deculein looked into the interpretation paper and muttered softly.
â××Ş× ââ×××ââ××âââ
The sound of runes echoed through the space around him. Most of his mana was consumed just by reciting three words, but it would be enough to prove its content.
â⌠I interpreted many runes that remain unknown to the magical world.â
Deculeinâs words stopped abruptly, looking at the document he made. His expression seemed to wriggle with worry.
âSince they donât fit the topic and they can be misused if I were to reveal any more than thisâŚâ
In an instant, a fire broke out, its creator being Deculein, and transferred to the [Rune Interpretation Summary] held in his hand.
âI will destroy it here.â
âââ!
Flames engulfed the document, causing it to cry out with a strange sound. The runes written in it resonated with the magic.
Just like that, the research that Deculein had been working on for about three years turned into ashes swept away by the wind.
âOh?â
The Grand Hall grew speechless. The surprised wizardsâ mouths sank more heavily than any commotion, but Deculein, after cleaning the mess he left behind, only said, âNow, letâs start the Q&A.â
No one asked questions.
* * *
[Player: Yulia]
â Level: [ 7 ]
â Mana: [ 4,507 ]
â Mana Rating: [Rank 4]
â Talent Type: [ Origin ]
â Attributes: [ 3 ]
â Personality: [ 7 ]
â Appearance: [ BlondeăťRed Eyes ]
⌠Yulia was lying on an empty bed, contemplating her own identity.
Blue letters fluttered in the air, displaying information about her character, including her levels and attributes under the category called player.
It was a system that only Lia could see.
She didnât know why she came to this world.
She knew neither the process nor the culprit of this phenomenon. She didnât even know their ultimate motive. There was no way she would, considering this phenomenon itself was far beyond science.
As the lightning at night heated the entire company building, she closed her eyes once and then opened them.
She just became a player in the game.
It was something she had read in novels, but she didnât struggle like the main characters.
Lia was, by nature, very adaptable and talented, and her appearance was the same as the original Yulia, although she was a bit prettier. Hence, it wasnât difficult for her to adjust to her new life.
The problem was her age and starting point.
She began at the âThe Archipelago Sea,â which was far from the gameâs main quest.
At 14 years old, she was thirteen years younger than her actual age.
Fortunately, her body had grown rapidly, and her unique survivability and spirit of improvement allowed her to reach mana rating level 4, butâŚ
âReconciliation? Nonsense!â
Deculein.
She didnât know what kind of trickery it was, but the villain, whom she left alone since she couldnât react with her current body, reconciled with Julie!
She still couldnât believe it!
ââŚâ
Lia bit her nails.
Julie and Deculein had an irreconcilable relationship. Although they were opposites, her final puzzle was him.
The game system itself was built that way.
The core of Julieâs story, a Named character, was, in the end, Deculein.
She suffered endlessly from Deculein, overcame her scars, and bloomed desperately as a flower of eternal winter.
Hence, reconciliation could never happen.
No, it was only when she had a conflict with Deculein that Julie would be able to overcome her own injuryâŚ
âMan⌠Itâs chaos beyond chaosâŚâ
Of course, Lia had some doubts.
Just as she became a player herself, wouldnât Deculein be a player as well?
According to the novels she read, people from reality often possessed villains.
â⌠No way.â
That was nonsensical.
Deculeinâs actions, which Lia read in newspapers, were by no means at a level that the player could do. Deculein was too damn hard to play in the first place.
âTsk.â
But again, whenever she thought of Deculein, he reminded her of that guy.
Kim Woojin, his role model.
When she first heard that from the author, she was jealous, and there were many complaints about why they did it without Woojinâs permission, but the Deculein she saw in the photo definitely resembled him.
Of course, only in appearance.
â⌠He must be fine.â
Lia laughed lightly.
He was brittle, indecisive, and fragile, but that only showed how delicate and wounded he was.
Even though they broke up without being able to be together until the end, he remained by her side as her friend.
ButâŚ
âAt least⌠I wish you werenât here.â
No matter how much she missed him, this world didnât suit him.
He was far too childish, so she thought she alone was enough for this kind of hardship.
âEven though I miss you sometimesâŚâ
Lia looked out the window. Beyond that, the daily life of the Principality of Yuren was tumbling.
âNot bad.â
Day by day, Kim Woojin aside, she was getting farther away from Deculein, but she had the characteristic of being an âadventurer.â
ââ[Adventurer]ââ
â Rating: Unique
â Description:
â Gains the qualities of a natural adventurer.
â The more one wanders the continent, the higher their growth rate.
â Oneâs mana and stamina increase according to the number of areas they have explored.
ââââââ
Thanks to this, her growth was rather steep, and above all, the princess named Maho lurked in Yuren.
Her first goal was to get her quest from her.
âSigh.â
After brushing her thoughts away, Lia looked around her, then moved and pulled out the wooden barrel she had hidden under her desk.
âWhen youâre sad, Look at the money box.â
Occasionally, she received pocket money from Ganesha or earned it by doing chores and errands secretly.
After she crossed over from the archipelago to the continent, she earned about 5,000 Elnes per month, but unfortunately, she couldnât collect all of them.
She sometimes lost her temper, wasting her Elnes on gummy candy and chocolate.
Her characterâs personality was so childish.
Regardless, although she had spent a lot of money, she had also saved quite a lot.
âHuhuhuhuâŚâ
Lia took out the money box and looked at its contents.
Ten bundles of fifty ten Elne bills, a bundle of fifty 100 Elne bills, three silver coins, and five copper coins she found along the way.
A total of 10,035 Elnes.
10 million Korean Won.
âThis is swelling up. Yes, yes. Yes.â
First of all, after collecting 30,000 Elnes and investing in the redevelopment of Yuren, her savings would grow larger again through real estate and gamblingâŚ
Giggleâ
Lia, who had been smiling slyly, suddenly looked innocent again, blinking emptily.
â⌠Should I buy some sweets? I think itâll be fine since I have a lot of money.â
She blankly grabbed the three silver coins.
âOh, no!â
But she immediately came to her senses and put it down.
That occurrence always surprised her. It might be perhaps because of her personality, but whenever she was just a bit negligent, she recklessly pulled out and wasted money.
âGather moneyâ Watch it happilyâ A little carelessnessâ Hey, I have a lot of moneyâ Buying some sweets should be okay â Iâll grab chocolate and ice cream since Iâm already hereâŚâ
That was the flow of her thoughts.
That was especially the case with chocolate, a very expensive snack in this world.
Knock, knockâ
She then heard sounds coming from outside her room. Lia immediately hid her money box.
The Red Garnett Adventure Team had a lot of debt, so if they found her stash, theyâd act like a mother stealing her childrenâs new yearâs allowance money while saying things like, âIâll give it to you later, leave it to me~â
âWho is it?â Lia opened the door, speaking as brightly as possible.