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I can’t use magic.

Eventually, I came to that conclusion about myself.
And those people who were so full of praise, of ecstatic flattery, when I was initially judged to possess all six Attunements — when my magic eventually failed to manifest, they puzzled over it, then began to turn on me.

It might have been inevitable.

The goose that they all knew could lay golden eggs, failed to.
That was me. No doubt all the adults were grinding their teeth out of intense frustration.

In simple terms, whether a person had magical aptitude, and whether they could use magic, were two separate matters.
Certainly, as long as magical aptitude — the Attunements — could be verified, it was possible to use magic. Although it was quite a journey to go from one to the other, the end result generally was the ability to use magic. In almost every case.

That’s right, in almost every case.

But as the keyword here was ‘almost’, there were a rare few who, in spite of having the aptitude, would never be able to cast magic.

I was one such case.

Under those circumstances, they would usually conclude that the person in question didn’t have the ability to invoke their own magic, and so close the books. And that unfortunately soul would be returned to the streets.
But things didn’t turn out that way for me. You see, I was in the virtually impossible situation of having all six Attunements. Some of the adults refused to give up, and the remaining majority screamed about the danger of returning someone like me from whence I came.

Even though my magic wouldn’t manifest at all, it might someday.

That, they insisted, was dangerous.
And so I was locked up inside the Schola Magorum. It wasn’t as if they expected my magic to activate anymore, but fearing that it would, they all but imprisoned me.

What in the world did I do to deserve this?

It had nothing to do with me.

It had nothing to do with me.

It had nothing to do with me.

It had nothing to do with me.

It had absolutely nothing to do with me.

And yet, at first I blamed myself for its failure to manifest. I thought I was at fault for being unable to work hard enough. I was in the wrong for being unable to meet the expectations of those around me.

He wouldn’t come to see me because I couldn’t work hard enough. That had to be it.

What would happen to the goose that wouldn’t lay golden eggs?

He said it. ‘I’ll make it so you can use magic.’

I leapt at the offer.
If I could just use magic, everyone would acknowledge me. I’d be able to leave this place — and I’d be able to see Big Brother, too.

And so I obtained the magic I craved so much.

In exchange for becoming something other than human.

I woke up.

I blinked several times.

— I did.

My first thought wasn’t ‘Why am I alive?’

I seemed to be me.

Upon waking up, I found myself lying in bed in my assigned room at the mansion. I didn’t have the faintest idea what had happened after I blacked out or why I was here. But considering that I wasn’t in jail, apparently things had settled without getting too serious, in various senses of the word.

Leon was — I turned my head to the side. There was the chair I asked for, and sitting on that chair — was Leon, asleep. At the sight of him, an indescribable emotion welled up within me.

Leon’s okay. And he’s right there.

I felt my eyes grow hot as it tore at my heart, but I bit my lip and endured. It’s not that I feel like I’ve gotten easily moved to tears recently, but… I’m pretty damn sure it’s [Chris’s] influence.

Looking at Leon’s sleeping face, I sighed in relief.

Speaking of [Chris], it’d been a long time since I’d dreamed of her.
It was the continuation of a dream I had before. Did I dream of it again just now? Why? Was it the effect of [Chris’s] consciousness eroding my own?

The new dream revealed all sorts of facts to me.

And, in order to make that possible, she sacrificed her humanity.

That solved two riddles.
The first wasn’t a big deal, but it was about how [Chris], the only of her kind, was so little-known. Guildmaster Arc had said it too. That he’d only heard rumors.

That was because her magic ultimately didn’t manifest.
She got magic after that, but even so, knowing as much as I did about the story, I could predict that that fact, too, had been suppressed.

Then, the other. And this one was important.

As a rule, alteration isn’t something performed on the human body. But, a body that wouldn’t take injury. Its tirelessness. And the form of its invoked magic, which even stumped Irene.

Even though I say ‘alteration’, it hasn’t been a hindrance, I guess.

The particulars aside, the result was that she finally managed to get her hands on the magic she longed for.

That part, I couldn’t fill in right now.
But I knew Leon, and Lucien, were involved somehow.

Especially Leon.

In her mind, at least, Leon had betrayed her.

In that case, something must have happened between them after that.

What happened?

I looked at Leon, breathing softly in his sleep.

The empire’s Third Prince, Leon Stroidel. Asleep in the room of a transsexual former slave who might not even be human, none of that background was anywhere in evidence. It was the usual Leon.

Isn’t that enough?
The shocking revelation, the discord that lingered within me, melted away before his sleeping face.

Slowly lifting myself up, I got out of bed.

But I wasn’t surprised. The fact that I was even alive to begin with was a greater mystery. And if I wasn’t human, then I guess it was even less of a mystery. Or maybe there was something special about that knife?

I sat down on the bed in front of Leon.

When he wakes up, I’ll tell him ‘good morning’.

Imagining it, my lips curved into a smile.

As I expected, or rather, more than I expected, Leon was wonderstruck when he woke up. He hugged me, lifting me up into the air before turning a somersault and pushing me down onto the bed.

Leon. His true identity, the Third Prince of the Greya Stroidel Empire. Leon Tyrell Stroidel.

Right now, he was showing me a new side of himself yet again. Laughing with the innocent face of a child, he was delighted that I’d woken up.
Seeing that, I felt like the distance I sensed back then had shrunk back to how it was before.

On the other hand, I couldn’t say anything to him about the contents of my dream.

And then there were those details, and the conclusion Leon would definitely end up coming to — I was afraid to even imagine what kind of emotional damage it would do to him.

I wanted to ask, but I couldn’t.

If not for the night of the rampage, I might have spoken about the business of her humanity.
But knowing what I did now, there was no way telling Leon about it seemed like a good idea.

It couldn’t be helped, so I decided to shelve it for now and ask about something else.

From what Leon told me, I’d collapsed and stayed unconscious for five days.
I was surprised, but when I thought about it, I had the feeling that this pattern was increasing. When I fainted after the crest appeared during my time at the Telaberan estate, I woke up the next day. When I cast magic during the fight with Maddox, it took three days for the shock to wear off. And this time, it was five.

Could it be that I naturally passed out when I used magic? Well, even if that were the case, I didn’t have a particular fainting spell that time with Guibenague, and I wasn’t invoking magic this time to begin with.
But even so, there was something like magic involved here. I’d have to be careful from now on.

…More importantly, what frightened me was the magic activating of its own accord.

Yeah, and it was something Irene’s master had me hold on to. Could it be that her master had foreseen this, and so had it delivered to me…? Am I overthinking things?

In any case, I wanted to meet this master sometime and ask about it.

I didn’t think too deeply about it when I got it, but looking at it again, it was a knife of mysterious craftsmanship.
A glossy black knife. When I pulled it from its sheath, it was a unified whole from blade to handle, without a single seam. The whole thing was black. I didn’t have the slightest idea just what kind of mineral it was made from. Not metal, I knew that much.

Lightly touching my finger to the tip of the blade, it was unexpectedly blunt, the edge running harmlessly over my skin.

Though at the time, there was nothing else I could do. I didn’t die in the end, but still, I didn’t think I was wrong to do it. If I hadn’t, then other than myself, the root cause, Leon, Aira, Palmira, and Allie, too, would have died. I was sure of it.

“Come to think of it — ”

“What is it?”

Suddenly remembering, I turned the conversation to Leon, who’d resumed his seat on the chair.

“What happened with Palmira?”

Setting Aira aside, Palmira had turned her sword against the Third Prince, Leon, amid the turmoil. What’s she doing now? Normally, it would be impossible for her actions to lead to anything other than the death penalty, but this is Leon. I want to believe that that definitely wouldn’t be the case.
But Allie was there too, and there’s a problem of position. It didn’t seem to me like she’d be considered innocent, either.

“Right now, Miss Palmira is — ”

Author’s Notes

In order to write this scene, switching to Leon’s first-person POV would have been optimal, but due to the story being first-person, I didn’t really want to switch POVs.
Putting together a side story is a separate matter, but in the original story, at least [Chris’s] POV won’t be changed, I expect.

Look — just look at that ending. That had to be on purpose.
Anyway, I was wondering how Leon turned a somersault while hugging a sitting Chris and all, but I kinda figured it was a pick-up and spin or something. And going by later chapters, I’m inclined to say that nothing actually happened between them besides an infodump. The height of romance here, folks.

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