Meeting up with other people can lead to arriving at very different times. I guess thatâs what happens when you donât use watches.
After having breakfast, we leave the inn right away. A lot of people are leaving at the same time too.
We advance leisurely through the street as people are setting up their stalls. I can hear angry yells too, because the morning rush is an especially busy time.
We exit through the gate and stand where we wonât be in the way. It doesnât look like Leila and the others are here yet. I donât know where theyâre staying, but if they had breakfast at around the same time we did, it should take some time for them to get here. I think theyâre staying relatively close to the western gate.
âMaster, I think theyâre here.â
Says Sera. Itâs still early, but thereâs a lot of traffic. Five merchant caravans leave while we wait.
Leilaâs party seem to have mixed feelings when they see me. It looked like Leila accepted it, but even though we left on good terms, things are still awkward because of what happened with Mia.
âWe will bother others if we stand here, so you should complain while we walk.â
Donât just assume Iâm going to complain. I start walking with an awkward smile on my face.
Mia is covering her face with her hood. Is she embarrassed? Is she having trouble facing them?
âLetâs go then.â
Leilaâs party starts moving after I give the signal for some reason.
We walk silently for a while. There are wagons passing by, so no one says a word.
The mood feels heavy, and I can feel how nervous Mia is even though I canât see her face through the hood. Hikari and Sera on the other hand donât seem to be feeling any different.
The scenery around us is peaceful, covered with wheat fields.
It canât be helped. It canât be good for Mia psychologically to drag this out any longer, so I propose we take a break, and face the six girls.
âItâs been a while.â
They nod unconvincingly.
âIs the stampede over?â
âThere was not much damage, except to the adventurers themselves. The monsters pushed close to the holy city, but they lost steam against its defenses, and from there it felt like it naturally ended.â
So their rampage was settled?
Apparently there are some in the church and guild that say that since the monsters were being manipulated by a demon, the demonâs orders rescinded once the demon left, and the stampede came to a close. Apparently normal stampedes donât end until thereâs nothing left once they get going.
âIn the end, the situation resolved itself in six days. We were cautious for a few more days after that, but there wasnât really any noteworthy movement from the monsters. But even though the damage was kept to a minimum, a different problem arose.â
âYes, master. Once word got out to believers and other people that the stampede wasnât a big deal, they started complaining about Mia being killed.â
âOne must wonder if the demon actually thought that far ahead, and controlled the scope of the stampede to drive anger towards the church.â
âI see.â
I get it, but I think theyâre jumping to conclusions. Isnât it just a coincidence?
âStill, you got here pretty quickly.â
âWe left about ten days after you did, but Yorâs father arranged for us to travel by wagon, and a fast one at that. That shortened the time it took for us to get to the border quite a bit.â
Even though they were tired, she says.
âI see. Well, Iâm just glad to see youâre all doing well. Now itâs my turn⌠Silence.â
I imagine four walls around us, and cast Silence. I also make it so noise from here wonât leak, but we can still hear noise from outside the boundaries of the spell. I feel like Iâm getting good at using this spell because itâs been getting a lot of use lately.
We get a little further away from the main road just in case, because wagons pass by every once in a while.
âMia might be in trouble if we leave it be for much longer.â
Leila and the rest of her party make dubious expressions when I say this, like theyâre asking what Iâm even talking about.
âThis isnât something I can talk about starting from the beginning, so Iâll just come out and say it. Mia isnât dead, sheâs here.â
I turn around and push her back.
âItâs been a while, everyone.â
Mia greets them while pulling back her hood, feeling embarrassed and troubled by all this. Incidentally, I told Mia last night that they thought she was dead.
âEh? Miss Mia!â
Trisha is the one whoâs most surprised. The other five canât even react, and look at Mia with dumbfounded expressions.
âW-what is the meaning of this!?â
Leila, being the oldest one I guess, is the first to shake off the shock. Although I wish she didnât grab me by the collar. Her face is too close too.
Mia steps in and pulls her away. Ou⌠Thanks. But when I turn and look, her mouth is smiling but her eyes arenât. Iâm going to have to explainâŚ
âLetâs start from the beginning. We learned of the demonâs plot later, but I learned from Dan that Miaâs life was in danger. And so, I prepared a double and made it look like Mia died.â
âSo who died instead of Mia?â
âAn assassin out to kill Mia. I think.â
It showed she was an assassin when I cast Appraisal. She mustâve done something bad.
âI see. Master, my father thought she was Miss Mia too. How did you manage that?â
âAll I can really say is that I used alchemy to make a disguise. That fooled most people, and then I burned her so no one would discover the truth. They would know for sure if they checked the body.â
âThen you should have just said that.â
âI wanted to tell Dan too, but the fewer people know the better. At the very least, itâs possible that people might come after Mia if they find out sheâs alive, right? And Dan is kind of soft-hearted, isnât he? I donât know whatâs going on in the church, but I can picture him blurting out the secret because he feels he canât go on letting people think sheâs dead.â
They donât argue with that.
Iâm sure theyâve heard all about what happened in the holy city.
âAnd sheâs technically my slave now, but there are reasons for that. Yes, a lot happened. I thought it was the best way to smuggle her out of the holy cityâŚâ
Who knew the whole slave contract process had such a loophole? Not that Iâm complaining.
âAnd, well⌠Mia is all right, but we canât tell anyone sheâs a saint. Iâm telling you this because youâre going to stay in Majolica for a while.â
I say this while looking at Yor.
âI understand master. I wonât tell my dad.â
She seems strangely convinced. Did she picture in her mind what would happen if she told him? Iâm trusting you, you know?