Mr. Gilmouth and his master reunited, maybe five minutes.\n
I donât know, Mr. Gilmouth feels a little old.
Itâs your fault, Iâm sure.
Still, Mr. Gilmouth will be polite to his master, too.
Mr. Druid is basically polite, too, and he just has vegetables sometimes.
âMaster, thatâs about it. Gilmouth will be useless.â
âOh, my God, thatâs pathetic. What if I canât say this back?
No, I donât know if itâs possible because Gulbal hasnât been able to handle it.
Iâm trying, so I think I can give you a little backup.
Or is this how to support you as a master?
I see the masterâs face all the time.
Sounds like a lot of fun.
âSo, are the top adventurers wiped out?
â⌠ha, I honestly donât know. Itâs the third day Iâve lost my voice.â
Day 3âŚ.
The problem is getting bigger than I thought.
When the top adventurers returned, they assumed that some solution would be found.
No way, I never thought I wouldnât come home.
âThen I guess youâre thinking of your next handâ
âŚâŚâŚâŚ
Mr. Gilmouth gives a harsh look and shuts up.
Donât you have the next hand?
Or rather difficult?
âGilmouth, Iâm telling you, donât get involved.â
Mr. Druid spits out words in such a voice that he has never heard of them.
It was so different that I didnât know whose voice it was for a moment.
âOh, I know. I donât want to be a scrap.â
Involve?
Crumbs?\n
I donât know, but it seems pretty difficult.
Hmm, I wish I could help you⌠because Iâm weak myself.
When it comes to doing something, you will rely on Ciel.
Thatâs everything, too.
No way, I need to help you with something I can do myself.
âWhat? Thereâs nothing you can do in this situation.â
âMaster, this is all I canât give inâ
Mr. Druidâs harsh eyes stare at his master.
The Master seems a little surprised by that gaze.
I took a slight breath and nodded, âOkay,â you wouldnât know why.
⌠My father, heâs cool.
I blush my head to say a few words, but letâs stop now.
Later, let Sora and Flem hear it.
âOh, yeah. I found Ivy funny.â
No, itâs funnyâŚ
And I think there are other people who have noticed.
âWhat is it?
âHave you looked into cases where demons become violent?â
âYeah, sure. It was a fairly long time ago literature, but there was something I could determine to be a similar situation, but I couldnât use it.â
âWhatâs life expectancy?
Mr. Gilmouth sees his master with a questionable look.
âThatâs right. Itâs that half-way piece of literature. The demonâs name, or even the details, would have helped with this one. Why such literature existsâ
Is that how you interpret it after all?
âLook, Druid, this way of thinking is normal. Ivyâs a little different.â
âMasterâŚâŚ not at all. Huh.â
Master, I donât feel like now is the time to prove it.
Mr. Druid is shuddering, too.
âWhat is it, since just now? And Ivy noticed something.â
âA different interpretation of that literature.â \nMr. Druid pinches his mouth before his master says anything.
Iâm sure if youâre a master, itâs because you pinch extra words.
âDifferent interpretation?⌠I donât know. Whatâs that supposed to mean?
âIt wouldnât have written any information identifying the demons, would it?
âOh, thatâs why I thought it was an unusable literature, isnât it?
Ivy thinks life expectancy is important.
âLifespan?â
Mr. Gilmouth looks at me, so he nods and gives his consent.
âThatâs right. I was wondering if any demon that died in its lifespan would have the same phenomenon. So I didnât dare write anything that would allow me to identify the demons. And itâs written in such a way that it doesnât even identify the demons that have become violent.â
âI mean, any demon could be affected, so I donât have any demon informationâ
Mr. Gilmouth with a slightly surprising look.
âI see, then that way of writing literature also makes sense⌠wellâ
Mr. Gilmouth has come up with something.
If this makes a difference in my interpretation, I guess Iâm sorry.
âIf so, what does the solution mean?
Yes, thatâs the problem, isnât it?
Ferocious by eating dead demons in their lifespan, which means there should be no more dead demons there.
Yet they burn demons that have died in their lifespan where the solution lies.
I have no idea what that means.
âThatâs right ~. I donât know where it isâ
I feel that whoever wrote this literature has only written important parts so as not to create misunderstandings.
I mean, the solution, too, should be a succinct way to write it down.
âI ate it and you still have it? I ate⌠havenât you actually eaten?
âIvy, whatâs up?
Hmm?
Have you spoken the words in your head?
âWhat is something that wonât go away if you eat it?
â⌠uh, naked?
\nI guess the longevity demon has a lot of strength.
So old and weak that you wonât be attacked.
âStrong demons, they have magic because theyâre demons, right?
âThatâs right, itâs a monster.â
âRight. Um, what happens when the magic of a demon is strong enough to live on?
âHmm?â
Master tilts his neck.
âThe magic power of demons strong enough to live for over 200 years and not be attacked in old age. Itâs quite powerful magic.â
Is there ever a magic overflow from the carcass?
If it overflows.
âYou can eat magic.â
ââ âHuh?
âWhen you die, your body will overflow with magic, and the other demons who ate it will become ferocious⌠what a stupid idea, isnât it? But this idea leaves a carcass, so you can solve the problem of burning it.â
Oh, my God, you think too much.
âIvy!â
âHa!â
Surprised, all of a sudden Mr. Druid screams.
What? Iâm sorry.
Did something go wrong?
âWow, Ivy is. Hahaha, right. Magic.â
My master sends me a very impressive gaze.
What, whatâs scary?
âThank you, Ivy. Right, magic.â
Uh, whatâs the thanks?
I donât know what that means.
âSpeaking of which, there was something in the report about magic. At that time, I processed it as having nothing to do with this one.â