~Chapter 30~
How many times can you say âI hate youâ in just a few short lines?
Mari Egbert, glaring at Esther with dagger eyes, clearly wasnât friendlyâbut Esther hadnât expected her to be this hostile.
ââŠItâs black.â
Just solving Ernheart Egbertâs black exclamation mark problem had restored her magic drastically.
It had even fixed her speech.
Whatever else happened, she couldnât give up on a black exclamation mark.
So, the conclusion was simple.
âGrandma!â
First, act clingy.
âAre you feeling okay?!â
Esther beamed like an innocent child who didnât know anything.
âShe wonât spit on a cute face.â
Besides, lately sheâd gotten plumper, with even fairer skin!
But her expectations were completely wrong.
âWhoâs your grandmother? Tsk, no manners. Canât you tell if Iâm fine or not just by looking? And what are you wearing? You reek of poor upbringing. I donât know how you seduced Ern into giving you the successorâs seat, but with me, that wonât work.â
Her words came rapid-fire without a pause, leaving Esther speechless.
âI told you, I never seduced that grandpa.â
Not that there was anything to seduce.
âI donât fall for cuteness.â
Your husband didnât eitherâhe fell for the idea of saving you.
âWait, so you do think Iâm cute.â
Esther thought blankly.
âEven if you wore a pink lace dress, held cookies in both hands, nibbled them while sipping hot chocolate, and tilted your headâletâs see if Iâd fall for it.â
ââŠâ
What is this?
Are you telling me to do it or not?
The description was so detailed, it almost sounded like she was telling her to try it right now.
âItâs⊠just my imagination, right?â
As Esther rolled her eyes, Mari spoke again.
âSince Ern already reported to the imperial family that youâre the successor, I canât remove you right away, but in a year Iâll have the authority to change itâand Iâll strike your name out immediately.â
From behind, Esther could feel the people watching nodding along.
âNot a single person here is on my side.â
But the satisfaction of crushing them all when she rose to the top would be that much sweeter.
âThis is the Egbert familyâhow could we hand the succession to someone with tainted blood like yours?â
âUh⊠hmmâŠâ
Tainted� I have origins.
If you want to be exact, Estherâs origins were from the demon race itself.
âMother, please be reasonable. I donât care if you remove her from the succession, butâŠâ
Kaelos Egbert stepped in, but Esther quickly cut him off.
âWow, whatâs âoriginsâ?â
âWhat?â
âWhatâs origins, Grandma?â
At her words, Mariâs face wrinkled in displeasure.
âIt means pure blood. Not the kind of blood from someone whose background is unknownââ
âWow! Then your grandmotherâs grandmotherâs grandmotherâs grandmotherâs grandmotherâs grandmother all had pure blood too?!â
Of course not.
Over a thousand years ago, humans and many other races lived together.
From the very beginning of the world, no human had purely human blood.
Not even the most fanatically pure-blood families.
âWow, amazing!â
ââŠâ
Esther spread her arms wide in innocent admiration.
âI read in a book that in the past, the world was one, so demons and humans married, and even angels and devils got married!â
Esther hopped excitedly like a child.
âSo your ancestors must have carefully kept the bloodline by marrying only chosen humans because they knew someone in the future would build a great family!â
As she spoke loudly, all eyes turned to her.
They looked shocked, but Esther ignored them.
If you wanted to trace origins, you had to go back to the beginningâand by that measure, no one was âpure.â
ââŠâ
ââŠâ
ââŠâ
No one dared to speak.
The silence was heavy.
They all knew Mari Egbert was scary, and how much she loved and took pride in the familyâs bloodline.
They themselves felt pride and superiority over their own bloodlines.
âOh⊠right. Youâre not supposed to mix with tainted blood, right? Then you shouldnât hang out with Grandpa eitherâŠâ
She herself had already broken the rulesâforcing them on others was worse.
âAh! Wait, Father! You shouldnât talk to Grandma either! If you have tainted blood, you canât talk to her⊠And since your father is Grandpa, youâve got tainted blood too! Oh, and Uncle! That means none of us should talk to Grandma!â
Even Kaelos Egbert seemed at a loss for words at the sight of the little girl openly declaring everyoneâs bloodline tainted and suggesting they ostracize Mari.
ââŠEnough.â
Uncharacteristically, Kaelos glanced at Mari Egbert and spoke quietly.
Esther blinked at his words.
Mari was glaring at her with sharp eyes.
Looking at the locked exclamation mark above her head, Esther froze.
âOh no, thatâs right!â
What was I doing?!
I shouldâve been acting cute to build closeness, not arguing with her.
Iâm doomed.
Esther rolled her eyes nervously.
âHehe⊠Thatâs not right, is it? We should all get along.â
She spoke with a lisp, but the mood didnât soften.
If anything, the lock above the exclamation mark seemed darker. As she forced an awkward smile, a parchment appeared.
[She hates how you twist correct points into arguments. And changing your words midway? She thinks you have no backbone.]
Was this parchment developing its own personality? It had a knack for making people uncomfortable.
ââŠHehe, Grandmaâs the best.â
âGet out.â
âYes! Grandmaâs little Esther will leave now! Iâll come back tomorrow!â
Esther quickly waved and ran out of the drawing room. Outside, Shiphon and Denver were waiting.
âYoung Miss!â
âAre you alright?â
At their words, Esther buried her face in her palm and sank to the floor.
ââŠNo.â
Embarrassing.
âLetâs go. Grandmaâs furious.â
ââŠYour way of speakingâŠâ
âItâs clear now. And youâre not using odd grammar anymore.â
Esther nodded.
âIt just happened.â
Her head was now full of language knowledgeânot just the imperial tongue, but she felt she could speak any language.
âA genius becoming even more of a genius!â
ââŠAh, yes.â
Shiphon smiled awkwardly. He really couldnât hide his expressions.
âAnd I have to go back to the library. I still havenât figured out what that disease is.â
âAbout that⊠Iâve lived a long time, but Iâve never heard of such an illness. I even asked through the guild, but found nothing.â
âYeah, but Iâve seen it in a book. Itâs probably a very old diseaseâmaybe it doesnât even exist anymore.â
Still, if it was recorded in ancient texts, there was a good chance something remained.
âI hope the book is here.â
If not, there might be trouble.
âYouâre quite a strange person, Young Miss. You feel like someone whoâs lived for centuries, not just five years.â
Denverâs words made Esther blink.
Heâs sharper than I thought. But even to a subordinate, she couldnât reveal she was a demonâlet alone a former Demon King.
âIf youâre neglected since youâre a baby, you end up like this.â
âUsually, neglected babies die.â
ââŠâ
Canât argue with that.
She glanced at him, then turned her head away.
Having Denver around made life easier, but his attempts to dig into her secrets were⊠uncomfortable.
âLetâs go to the library.â
âYes, Iâll escort you.â
âIâll go to the annex and get some snacks,â Shiphon said.
Esther was about to nod when a thought made her tilt her head.
âWait, Iâm the successor now, right?â
Whether or not they replaced her in a year, as long as she was the successor, she had authority over the whole household.
Esther grinned mischievously.
âYeah, but Iâm the successor now. So I can take food from the main houseâs kitchen.â
ââŠWhat?â
âAnd I can spend money freely. Iâll even raise your salaries.â
Itâs not my money anywayâso why not?
Itâs just a year of happiness. I should start projects and stash away plenty of side money.
A money-draining parasite? Thatâs the easiest thing in the world.
Itâs what Iâm best at.
A demon should act like a demon.
Now that I have power, I might as well use it openly.
âYep, double salary!â
At her shameless abuse of power, Shiphon and Denverâs eyes went round.