Chapter 10
âShould I call you Lord Hale?â
This time, Leon fell silent for a moment. Yuliana noticed his eyes distant, as if he were searching through forgotten memories. She calmly waited for him to answer. After a short pause, Leon cautiously asked her:
âAre you perhaps a friend of Ihwa?â
âWe were friends, and she was like a sister to me.â
Not only that, but she had also been a disciple, a teacher, and family.
The three years spent with Ihwa were the time Yuliana had traveled across the Empire, barely sleeping and enjoying every moment. Now, Ihwa was no longer by her side, a person whose whereabouts were unknown.
âIhwaâs friends are my friends too. If you donât mind, just call me Leon.â
âIhwa called me Yus.â
âNice to meet you, Yus. I apologize for being rude in our first meeting.â
âFrom now on, call me by my name, Leon.â
âHmm, youâve already forgiven me, Yus?â
As the boundaries between Yuliana and Leon softened thanks to Ihwa, Dillon piped in with a hiss. It seemed he didnât like Leon, especially remembering how Leon had harshly grabbed Yulianaâs wrist on their first day. It seemed he wasnât warming up to Leon just yet.
âWell, he apologized, didnât he?â
âHmph.â
Dillon grumbled, puffing out his feathers with an annoyed posture. He usually acted sharply around people he didnât like.
Yuliana smiled and patted Dillon‘s feathers. The soft feathers slipped between her fingers, giving her a sense of calm. Dillon, seemingly pleased with her touch, lowered his neck slightly.
âThank you for letting me know that Ihwa is safe, Yus.â
âYou donât seem like someone who would try to harm Ihwa.â
âWhyâs that?â
âWell, you were the first to ask about Ihwaâs well-being. If you didnât like her, would you ask that?â
âTrue. It seems weâll be talking for a while. Let me order some tea.â
Leon called a servant to order tea. A moment later, the servant brought a teapot and tea cups.
On a night with a full moon, the tea was made from leaves that glistened silver only on that particular night, steeped under the moonlight. The tea leaves sparkled in the cup, reflecting the moonâs glow. This was Ihwa‘s favorite tea.
The winter apple pie served alongside was also delicious.
âThe scent is wonderful.â
âItâs delicious. Ihwa and I used to eat this often when we came here.â
âIt would have been nice if Ihwa were here too, so the three of us could eat together.â
A brief silence followed. If Ihwa had been here, there would have been someone to answer. It was Leon who broke the silence.
âYou mentioned that you were curious about Countess Edith.â
âThatâs right.â
âWhat are you curious about, Yus?â
âHuh?â
âJust say it casually.â
âDoes that mean weâre friends now?â
âYes.â
âIf we get closer, thatâll be quite a problem.â
Yuliana blinked in surprise. Without any warning, it felt like a carriage rushing at full speed without any signals. She thought Leonâs approach was much subtler than Ihwaâs, who had taken years to get closer. Leon had slithered up without notice, and now he was comfortably settled next to her, almost like a snake coiling up beside her.
But for Leon, the fact that Yuliana had allowed him to speak casually was already a significant gesture of friendship. He had made an effort to reach out to Ihwa‘s friend.
However, Yuliana, raised in the rural village of Orbes, where nobles didnât come by and where the lord didnât make any visits, took it all in stride. To her, nobles were like dragonsâshe knew they existed, but she had never met one before.
âWhy are you so curious about Countess Edith?â
âWell… For you, it may not be a big deal, but for me, it is.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âBecause sheâs my first customer.â
Since Countess Edith had been a childhood friend of Leonâs mother, he had seen her often growing up. The Hales had invited Countess Edith and her husband to dinner several times.
Leon knew what it meant to Countess Edith when it came to meals.
âItâs difficult. Countess Edith doesnât enjoy eating… or rather, doesnât enjoy food itself.â
âYeah, it seems like that. Thatâs why Iâm worried.â
âIf you use only the best ingredients, you shouldnât make her angry.â
âBut she said Ihwa‘s cooking was delicious.â
It was clear that Countess Edith had found Ihwa‘s cooking delicious. After three years, as soon as Ihwaâs restaurant reopened in Grand Blanco, she came back to visit. There must have been many reasons, but Ihwaâs cooking was certainly one of them, even though she didnât say it outright.
âCountess Edith was a guest at Ihwaâs restaurant. I want to make her happy.â
At Yuliana‘s words, Leon silently nodded, lost in thought. He wanted to give Yuliana some useful information but couldnât think of anything helpful at the moment.
Countess Edith, even at the grandest feasts, never ate much. She would take just a little, like a bird picking at crumbs.
âBut how did Leon know Countess Edith?â
âAs I said, Countess Edith and my mother have been close friends for a long time.â
âHow long?â
âSince childhood. Before they came to the capital.â
âThey came to the capital?â
âYes. My mother and Countess Edith are from Syarvi.â
The name Syarvi sounded familiar to Yuliana. It was definitely a place she had been to with Ihwa. Syarviâwhere was that again? Yuliana tried hard to recall.
âCountess Edith was really good at archery when she was young. She used to always beat my mother when they competed. She would always brag about it when we met.â
At the mention of archery, Yulianaâs mind cleared. It was like walking out of a narrow street to see a wide, open sea. She had the answer. Syarvi, the farthest north of the Empire, where Ihwa and she had gone wearing woolen clothes and thick socks. The place where the sea froze.
Yuliana remembered meeting young girls practicing archery there. At the inn where they stayed for an extended period, the innkeeper had remarked that it had been a while since heâd seen a girl who couldnât handle a bow, treating Yuliana like a child. That same innkeeper had also taught her how to handle a sword.
âArchery…â
âThatâs right. The women in the capital donât usually handle weapons, but my mother, being from the Hale family, was always good at archery.â
âDoes being from the Hale family mean you need to be good with a bow?â
âItâs good to have a weapon you can handle, whether youâre a man or a woman. Thereâs even a saying that Hale sons handle swords, and Hale daughters handle bows.â
This was the first time Yuliana had heard such a thing. The capital had many such sayings. Suddenly, Yuliana became curious. If Countess Edith was such a good archer, then what happened to her?
âWhat happened to Countess Edith?â
âThey didnât praise Countess Edith for being good with a bow, but she became famous for using a fan and her tongue like a sword in high society.â
In high society, Countess Edith was like the waistâneither too high nor too low compared to the wives of the kings, dukes, or marquesses.
She had guided young ladies entering society, sometimes scolding them or mediating disputes. Over time, it became common knowledge that it was difficult to move through high society without her touch.
âWell, thatâs quite a burden to carry.â
âYou didnât think youâd understand anything about high society, did you?â
âI do, actually. Ihwa told me a lot about it. Itâs a battlefield.â
Yuliana‘s knowledge of nobility came entirely from Ihwa.
Ihwa often shared interesting stories, mostly about the love lives of the nobility, though many of them werenât true. The nobles in her stories were often exaggerated for entertainment, and Yuliana, fascinated by them, believed that mistakes in high society could lead to someone losing their head.
Leon carefully offered advice after hearing her words.
âNo, itâs not as harsh as that. Itâs still just people living their lives.â
âBut itâs become more important now. If I mess up this meal, Ihwaâs restaurant will close.â
âThatâs true. The rumors in high society wonât be favorable.â
âAnd for serving bad food, my head will be on the chopping block.â
âYou might be exaggerating.â
Even with Leon correcting her, Yuliana sighed repeatedly. The pressure still weighed heavily on her. But Yuliana could see one clear path ahead: Countess Edith had grown up in Syarvi, enduring the coldest winters for twelve months of the year.
âI have to go to Syarvi.â
âTo Syarvi?â
âItâs urgent. Iâll leave first.â
âAre you going alone?â
Yuliana looked at Leon blankly, as if asking, Do you expect me to lead an army there? Since Ihwa wasnât with her, it was clear she would have to go alone.
âIâll be going with Dillon.â
âWhoâs Dillon?â
âItâs me.â
Dillon hissed and flapped his wings.
Leon was taken aback by the idea of Yuliana going alone to Syarvi. The journey itself wouldnât be hard, since there was a long-distance portal to Syarvi from the capital.
The real issue was Syarviâs security. While it was a place where people lived, it wasnât an easy place for a woman to go alone.
âIs that feathered snake growing any bigger?â
âNo.â
âYouâre not a beast, right? No poison, I assume?â
âAre you criticizing me for being weak, Yus?â
Dillon hissed again, annoyed.
âThatâs right?â
âIsnât it reckless? How can you think of going alone?â
Yuliana, half standing, took Leonâs hand. After all, she was a girl with a deep connection to Ihwa. Leon, worried she might encounter some danger on her own in Syarvi, decided to escort her.
âIâll request leave from the knights. Iâll escort you.â