Chapter 12
The bag was heavier than Ray expected.
He had only offered to carry it on a whim, but now it felt like that whim had turned into a surprisingly good decision.
He rolled his shoulders, testing the weight again, and frowned slightly.
âWeâre just going to a small village forest. Isnât this a bit too much?â
âNot at all! You never know what could happen!â
ââŠHmm?â
âDonât just âhmmâ it away! No one in our village thought a huge accident could happen in this little forest either, remember?â
At that, Ray finally nodded.
She wasnât wrong. The accident he and Theo had suffered was one of the biggest incidents this quiet village had ever seen.
Even Ray, who had survived countless battlefields, admitted that this one had been serious.
âHmmâŠâ
âAha! Youâre quiet because you know Iâm right, arenât you?â
Perea teased, grinning as Ray pursed his lips.
He raised one eyebrow, visibly annoyed â but his tail twitched, betraying his mood.
Of course, Perea caught it immediately.
She had studied veterinary medicine; she could read animal body language better than anyone.
Her cheerful laughter echoed down the narrow forest path.
***
After walking for a while, the two of them reached a large, black crater.
In the bright daylight, the accident site looked even more severe.
It was almost a miracle that Ray had escaped with only his injuries.
The smile vanished from Pereaâs face.
Rayâs expression hardened too as he began scanning the area carefully.
She followed him, searching among the broken trees and scorched earth.
âAre you looking for something? Should I help you search?â
âIâm not sure what Iâm looking for. I just said it was an accident.â
His curt reply made Perea frown, but she quickly realized â maybe he truly didnât know what caused the accident either.
It wasnât as if he had been drinking while driving the princeâs carriage.
And this forest wasnât known for monsters or magical beasts.
Unless lightning had literally fallen from the clear sky, there was no reason for such destruction.
She decided not to take his short answers personally and instead began her own observations.
Fortunately, since the accident, the rabbit villagers had been too scared to come near the forest. Nothing had been moved or damaged since that day.
As she sifted through the pile of carriage fragments, something shiny caught her eye.
She crouched down. It was a roughly cut yellow gemstone, rimmed with dull silver.
But instead of reflecting light like a jewel, it seemed to swallow it â dark and cloudy, almost ominous.
âRay!â
She called out, unease creeping into her voice.
Ray, who had been inspecting nearby trees, quickly approached.
âWhat is itâ? âŠWait. ThatâsâŠâ
âYou know what this is? It feels⊠I donât know, cursed? Like itâs possessed by an evil spirit or something!â
It was an odd thing for a trained veterinarian to say, but that was exactly how it felt.
Perea instinctively stepped back from the strange stone.
She expected Ray to scoff at her superstition â but his face grew serious.
He prodded the gem lightly with the tip of his sword sheath, then straightened up and pulled her backward.
âStep back.â
âW-was I right?! Is it really possessed?!â
Perea screamed, tracing a cross in the air with trembling fingers.
Her heart was pounding. I knew it looked too ugly to be normal! Oh no, an actual cursed object? I thought that stuff only existed in ghost stories!
Tears welled up in her eyes â Perea was infamous in the village for being terrified of anything supernatural.
Her reaction was so over the top that Ray grimaced.
To his sensitive beastman ears, her voice was painfully loud.
And honestly⊠it was broad daylight. Was she really that scared?
With a sigh, Ray grabbed her wrist and pulled her closer â sheâd run all the way to the edge of the clearing without noticing.
âW-what are you doing?! Iâm going back to the villageâ!â
âItâs not cursed.â
ââŠReally?â
Only when Ray repeated himself did Perea slowly lower her hands and undo the little cross sheâd made.
Still, she kept her hips tilted backward, clearly ready to bolt if anything twitched.
The thought that sheâd abandon her companion and flee at the first sign of trouble was exactly why Ray sometimes found humans scarier than monsters.
Suppressing a dry laugh, he went on:
âHave you ever heard of a monster bomb?â
âA⊠monster bomb?â
The term wasnât completely unfamiliar. Pereaâs brow furrowed as she tried to recall her studies â then her eyes widened in realization.
âI know! Theyâre made by refining monster stones, right? But waitâ are you saying this thing is one of those?â
Her pupils trembled violently.
A monster bomb was far worse than a cursed item.
Yet this time, instead of running, she stepped forward to look closer.
Ray immediately pulled her back behind him.
âI told you not to get close. We donât know when or how it could explode.â
âIt wonât explode.â
âHow can you be so sure?â
Ray gave her a skeptical look, his icy blue eyes narrowing.
But Perea met his gaze confidently.
The truth was â her minor in university had been Monsterology.
Sure, she was terrified of ghosts or curses, but when it came to living creatures, her curiosity knew no bounds.
Whether it was beastmen, animals, or monsters, she wanted to understand them all.
She had spent five straight years studying with barely three hours of sleep a night, cramming every bit of knowledge she could into her head.
Now, that knowledge was finally useful.
âItâs simple if you think about the active duration of a monster bomb. Though newer versions might work differently, letâs set that aside for now.â
She paused, recalling her old lecture notes vividly.
Even if it was just a minor subject, she remembered the theory as if sheâd studied it yesterday.
âFirst of all, look at the transparency â itâs too cloudy. The stronger the bomb, the brighter and clearer it shines, like a real jewel.
And see this silver casing? Itâs supposed to turn black right before detonation, but this one hasnât changed color at all.
So Iâm certain this oneâs a dud â itâs not going to explode.â
She explained smoothly and confidently.
Her reasoning was solid â enough to make even Ray reconsider.
Then, with a hopeful smile, she added carefully:
âSo⊠can I keep it?â
âNo.â
âEhh? Why not?â
âEven if youâre right, itâs still dangerous. Weâll destroy it here.â
He refused flatly.
Perea deflated, then clasped her hands together like she was begging for mercy.
âJust five more minutes! Let me examine it a bit longer before you destroy it!â
âHaaâŠâ
âPlease, Rayâ I mean, Ray oppa! The Empireâs most handsome, most skilled knight!â
Ray sighed deeply, looking at her as though sheâd just insulted his ancestors.
Still, he gave a reluctant nod.
He wouldâve preferred she didnât call him oppa ever again, though.
Perea cheered quietly, bouncing in place like an excited puppy.
If sheâd had a tail, it wouldâve been wagging furiously.
âHow come you didnât recognize it at first, though? You seem to know a lot about it now.â
âBecause itâs my first time seeing a real one! I only studied from books!â
âAhh.â
âAnd honestly, I didnât think theyâd be this small. The pictures in textbooks made them look huge!â
She laughed awkwardly.
The bomb was smaller than a fingertip â so different from the massive devices sheâd imagined.
âMakes sense,â Ray said quietly. âThis oneâs a modified version.
Iâve only ever seen them right before or right after explosion, so I didnât recognize an inactive one.â
He stared intently at the tiny object resting in her hand.
He knew someone who liked to modify these bombs â someone who always made them in this exact yellow color.
If this one had actually gone off instead of misfiringâŠ
Rayâs expression turned deadly cold.
The air around him sharpened like a blade, radiating a killing intent so intense that Perea instinctively flinched.
A shiver ran down her spine.
She didnât know who he was thinking of â but she could feel it.
Whoever had done this wasnât just dangerous⊠they were someone Ray hated deeply.