Dorothea Angelluâs personal maid arrived in front of a room, pushing a cart loaded with large boxes.
It was the bedroom of her master, Dorothea.
Knock, knock.
âMy lady, the dress sent from the dressing salon has arrived.â
Knock, knock.
âMiss?â
The maid knocked again and again, but Dorothea was silent. Unable to enter without her masterâs permission, she had to wait patiently for an answer.
Some time passed before a figure staggered down the corridor.
Pale, as if heâd never seen the light of day, with his eyes narrowed. A slender body, a frail, restless faceâŚâŚ.
The maid, recognising the otherâs countenance, bowed hastily.
âWizard.â
ââŚâŚ.â
Gabe didnât even bother to look at the maid, just glanced at the cart parked beside her. The gaudily wrapped boxes dazzled him.
They were luxuries that seemed to cost a fortune.
âThese are the items that Miss ordered this time-â
The maid didnât even finish her sentence.
Bam!
Gabe burst through the door without knocking. Startled by the suddenness, the maid clapped her hands over her mouth and cried out in a shrill tone.
âStop, WizardâŚâŚ!â
â You can go.â
Still not looking at the maidâs face, Gabe waved her away.
The maid didnât say a word, for he was her superior. As she scurried away, silence fell over the hallway and the bedroom.
Gabe strode boldly to the bed and flicked open the canopy.
Hugging her knees, head bowed, Dorothea spoke without lifting her face.
âYou may be my master, Gabe, but you shouldnât come into a ladyâs bedroom like this.â
Dorotheaâs warning didnât faze Gabe in the slightest. He just glared at her coldly.
âGet a grip, Dorothea Angellus.â
âI know, and Iâm trying.â
âAny work on your powers?â
ââŚâŚ Not yet.â
âYou said it yourself. Elodie Perdia is just a bastard with no powers, but you have the power of one of the Four Great Families.â
It was true.
Elodie Perdia, who had been an insignificant subject, had recently become a nuisance.
From being the ugly duckling to suddenly being favored by House Perdiaâs family and now being called the savior of the Temple of Ishtar.
But no matter how distinguished Elodie might be elsewhere, as a direct descendant of Angellus, Dorothea wielded great power.
Gabe whispered to Dorothea as she fidgeted with the quilt, thinking of that fact.
âThe only thing you have more than her is power, and even that needs to be practiced, donât you think?â
A sneaky voice gnawed at her heartstrings. Dorotheaâs voice trembled slightly as she raised her head with a grim face.
âNow, what are you trying to tell meâŚâŚ?â
âHow long are you going to stay in the mansion and live like a loser?â
âWell, thatâs-.â
But that was to be expected, she thought.
Her humiliation at the Fountain of Ishtar had already been reported, and if she showed her face, sheâd be a laughingstock in social circles.
âIf itâs that damn skin, Iâll get you an antidote.â
ââŚâŚReally?â
Now she couldnât remember a time when her skin was smooth. This horrible face seemed to be hers since birth. She felt like she would do anything to make this horrible rash go away.
The corner of Gabeâs mouth lifted at Dorotheaâs expression.
âSo youâre going to bend to my will?â
âBut the publicity is stillââ
Dorothea hesitated.
Tak.
Gabe slammed the newspaper he was holding down in front of her. Dorothea, whoâd been bombarded with articles covering her story, looked up at Gabe in disgust.
âNewspapers are uglyâŚâŚ!â
âFront page. Look.â
Although she didnât want to look at the newspaper, she couldnât argue with Gabe.
Dorothea bit her bottom lip hard and looked down at the paper.
[Exclusive. First Prince Adenmir and Elodie Perdiaâs breakup is imminentâŚâŚ imperial aide âwill make an official announcement soon!â]
ââŚâŚ!â
Dorotheaâs eyes widened as she read the headline and she looked up at Gabe again with a fresh gaze.
âDorothea Angellus. This is the news youâve been waiting for.â
The breakup of Elodie Perdia. It meant the end of Elodieâs power.
The corners of Gabeâs mouth twitched upwards as he watched Dorotheaâs face light up.
Dorothea Angellus. A nuisance to deal with, but too useful to give up.
âUse your powers solely for my benefit, andââ
Gabe stalked out of her room, his thoughts unspoken.
***
With the Duke of Perdiaâs permission, the annulment proceeded at a steady pace. It was a different pace to the one taken when I expressed my desire to marry him on my own.
âSomehow unfair.â
In the first place, it was a marriage between families, and the engagement was a political one, so there was no need for me to intervene.
I didnât have to see the first princeâs face, and I only had to sign the documents sent by the butler from time to time.
Obviously, the breakup was only to be discussed between the two parties and their legal guardian, the Duke of Perdia.
Meanwhile, Jansi found out the news like a gloomy villain and came to visit me.
âLili, how do you feel?â
âHow am I feeling?â
âYeah. You said you wanted to break up the other day, Lili, and you got your wish.â
âWell, I donât really have any thoughts. If you ask me if I like it or not, Iâm leaning towards the good sideâŚâŚ.â
The reason for the breakup was to stop wasting time. Weâre not getting married in the future anyway.
Iâm not sure what will happen in the future because itâs already different from the original story, but when Estelle appears, the first prince will probably fall in love with her.
He doesnât like me, and I donât have any feelings for him.
Finally, in the near future, I will become independent from Perdia and leave the capital city of Somnia.
There were so many reasons to break off the engagement.
âI would not have broken off my engagement if it had been to my advantage.â
Stroking Greed â who was pretending to be a fox â on his lap, Jansi smiled meaningfully.
âThatâs another surprise.â
âWhat?â
âNothing, but congratulations anyway.â
âThank you..?â
I replied, feeling strange. My brother, congratulating me on the news of my breakup and accepting a thank you?
âIs thisâŚâŚ?â
Jansi, who was obviously smiling at my confusion, changed the subject.
âI stopped by today, Lili, because of the interim report you asked for a while ago.â
Thatâs what I had asked him to do. His eyes locked with mine as he grew serious. He nodded, then added, âYes, the movements of the Mercenary King, Ian.â
âDid you find out anything?â
âWell, it really hurts my prideâŚâŚâ
Jansi said, ruffling through his hair.
âNothing.â
âNothing?â
âNope. No history from the time of his birth until he showed up in Somnia. Like he never existed.â
ââŚâŚIs that possible?â
âThatâs why Iâm so ashamed of it. Apparently, some of the Emperorâs entourage found out that he came from the slums, but thereâs no record of that.â
âThanks for letting me know, Brother.â
âNo problem. Itâs a favor for my dear sister, of course.â
Jansi grinned in a creepy sort of way.
âHaha,â I laughed awkwardly and waved it off.
âAt this point, Iâm getting a bit of an odd feeling myself, so Iâm going to investigate further to see if I can find anything.â
âIâm sure youâll do great!â I said, one hundred percent sincere.
âBecause itâs none other than Jansi Perdia, the number one mastermind behind the scenes.â
Jansi, who had no idea that I was having such thoughts, looked at me in admiration.
âLili, Iâm impressed that you have so much faith in me.â
âHaha.â
âIn that sense, Lili, can you please put your hand on-â
ââŚâŚ!â
Is he trying to fumble with my hand again?!
I, who had no intention of putting myself under the threat of imminent annihilation, jumped up from my seat before Jansy had even finished speaking.
âOh, come to think of it, I was just getting some water to bathe in! Have a good night, then! Many thanks, Brother!â
ââŚâŚYes. Get some rest, Lili.â
Jansi smiled and left the bedroom. As the door closed, Greed, who was curled up on the sofa, yawned languidly.
âGood job, pretending to be a fox.â
[That human has a way with words.]
âReally?â
[Thought I was going to see Irkala.]
He seemed to imply that he almost went to the afterlife because he liked it so much, but there was a huge secret that Greed didnât know. I laughed sinisterly at Greed, who was still languidly stretched out.
âBut, Greed, do you know something?â
[Do know. What?]
âBrother Jansiâs power, itâs the power of annihilation.â
Greed licked its forepaws and stiffened.
[AnâŚâŚnihilation?]
âIf he touches it, itâs gone.â
[Thatâs a lie!]
Greed howled.
***
Isis, Lord of the Western Magic Tower, was indeed an impatient man.
He wrote to me once, but I only replied to his letters and didnât stop by the tower.
[If you donât come today, I will plant a bomb in your house.]
It was a compelling letter. I had no choice but to go to the tower because of the warning of a bomb.
The top floor of the West Tower. I was about to enter the masterâs lab when Raeyan stepped back.
âIâll wait for you outside.â
âWhy? Youâre not going in?â
âI donât like all the fuss.â
That meant he didnât like Isis being so noisy.
âIt might take a while.â
âThatâs okay, Iâll wait as long as it takes.â
When he said that, it was hard to resist inviting him to join me, but I had no choice but to leave him behind and open the lab door.
[Eek, dirtyâŚâŚ.]
Greedâs reaction to the inside of the lab was not far off from my own.
âWhat the hell is going on here?â
The lab was in such disarray that I wondered if the bomb had landed here and not at the Perdian mansion. Perhaps it was the aftermath of the magic tool research.
I made my way inside, dodging obstacles as I went, and found what I was looking for.
Amidst the filthy rubble, Isis, the small, cute lord of the west tower, was sprawled out on his back.
âIâm here, Isis.â
âYou have come.â
âWhat is the matter?â
âI have no strength to sit. You donât know, you are young.â
âThereâs not much difference in our ages, is there?â
ââŚâŚ.â
Isis lay still, staring blankly up at the ceiling without speaking to anyone. He seemed dazed.
âShall I go?â I asked somewhat snarkily.
âJust try to go. I will tear down the Perdia mansion.â
âThen tell me why youâre doing this.â
Isis, who had kept his mouth tightly shut, blurted out with a scowl of arrogance, âIâm screwed.â
âScrewed?â
âYeah. Screwed.â
In that moment, goosebumps ran down my spine. Denying reality, I asked Isis exactly that.
âYouâre not talking about the temperature-keeping wand I invested most of my life savings in, are you?â
âThatâs the one.â
âThatâs ridiculous.â
âThatâs right. The masterpiece magic wand which was the result of our conversion.â
âNo, I must be dreaming. Itâs a different tool, isnât itâŚâŚ?â
âHow many times do you have to ask, thatâs the one!â
ââŚâŚ.â
ââŚâŚ.â
There was only a chilly silence in the wrecked laboratory.
I, who had become a beggar in an instant, slumped to the ground in despair.
âMy independence!â
The independence Iâve worked so hard to save, and now itâs gone to waste.
I must save it.
I calmly asked Isis with a firm sense of duty, âWhen did you release it on the market, exactly?â
âWhen you couldnât be reached.â
By when I was unreachable, he meant when I was forced to stay at the Temple of Ishtar.
Unable to bear the thought, Isis continued lamenting.
âYou said it would be a success, but weâve only sold two since its release. Do you know how the wizards laugh at me every time they see me? I wonât let them get away with it.â
Isis gritted his teeth, heâd had enough. The wizards at the Magic Tower had largely ignored him.
âIt was obviously a big hit in the original.â
But the process was not detailed. It could have flopped and suddenly gone viral, or it could have been an intervention on someoneâs part that changed the outcome.
Or maybe it wasnât this tool.
âItâs too early to give up, Isis. Youâve only launched, not presented.â
âYouâre so young and hopeful.â
With Isis acting like the world had already ended, I went in search of the newly released tool.
I couldnât figure out what was wrong until I tried it.
âWhere is it?â
âThere.â
After digging through the byproducts of his research for a while, I finally got my hands on the tool. Isis shook his head, as if he didnât want to look at it, and explained.
âI made it to stay hot, like you said, butââ
âWhat?!â I shrieked, both ears perking up. I screamed, and Isis clamped his tiny hands over his ears.
âWhy are you screaming!â
âA magic tool that keeps the temperature hot, in the middle of summer?!â
âYou told me to do that!â
âWhat the!â
I could see why he was screwed.
âItâs like selling electric blankets in the summer!â
But thanks to him, I had a direction on how to make this project work.
âIsis.â
I called out his name, and he replied bluntly.
âWhat?â
I smiled intriguingly and looked him straight in the eye.