Chapter 1
âGet away from me, you witch!â
âDonât come near us! Youâre creepy!â
Childrenâs mocking voices echoed as they surrounded the little girl.
At the center stood a small child with shining silver hair and blue eyes, shouting back in frustration.
âIâm not a witch!â
Her defiant tone must have annoyed them, because one of the children picked up something from the ground and threw it at her.
âDidnât you hear me? I said get lost!â
The object flew close enough to graze her face as she dodged. It nicked her cheek, leaving a thin cut behind.
âIf the headmaster sees this wound, sheâs going to go crazy.â
The girl turned her gaze toward the child whoâd thrown it, dread filling her as she imagined the punishment waiting for her later. The sharpness in her eyes made the boy flinch and step back.
Without hesitation, the girl lunged forward and punched him in the face.
The boy staggered, clutching his cheek in shock as the girl shouted fiercely, not even minding the sting in her knuckles.
âYouâre going to get the same treatment from the headmaster!â
It was as if her motto was âAn eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.â
âHey! Grab her!â
The boy whoâd been hit barked orders at the others, and the rest of the group rushed in to hold her down. The girl struggled desperately in their grip.
âStop it!â
But of course, none of them listened.
âThe headmaster says that face of yours is special? Iâll make sure you canât use it anymore!â
The moment the boy said it, his fist swung toward her.
Bound tightly, she couldnât avoid it. She squeezed her eyes shut, bracing for the pain.
How much time passed? It should have landed by now.
But no pain cameâonly an eerie silence.
The girl slowly opened her eyes.
âW-What is thisâŠ?â
The boyâs fist hovered an inch from her face, frozen in midair.
The boy himselfâfrozen solid.
The children pinning her downâfrozen too.
Every single one of them stood motionless, as if turned to ice.
âAgain⊠like last timeâŠâ
It wasnât the first time this had happened. It had happened in the town where sheâd sold flowers, in the orphanage a few days agoâand now, again.
âWhy does this keep happening?â
A sudden, stabbing pain exploded in her head. The girl fell to her knees, clutching it.
And at that moment, the frozen scene shatteredâlike breaking ice. The children started to move again.
âShe did it again! Just like before!â
The boyâs face twisted in terror as he unclenched his fist.
âSheâs going to hurt us all someday!â
âShe used that weird power again!â
Fear and disgust filled the room. The girl stumbled backward, unable to defend herself this time. She didnât even know what this power wasâso how could she deny their accusations?
âWhat is all this noise!â
The headmasterâs shrill voice sliced through the chaos as she flung open the door. The children went silent at once. Her heavy footsteps thudded across the floor, full of irritation.
Her eyes immediately caught the cut on the girlâs face.
âYou filthy brats! How dare you scratch her face!â
The headmaster called all the orphans âfilthy thingsâ or âvermin.â
Born unwanted and abandoned, growing up trampled like weedsânone of them had real names.
âHeadmaster! She did this to me!â
The boy pointed at the girl with teary eyes, and the others quickly chimed in.
âThatâs right! She threatened us with her weird powers!â
âStuff started flying around the room! We almost got hurt!â
They spewed out the kind of lies that would provoke the headmaster the mostâanything that sounded expensive or troublesome. It didnât matter what was true. As long as the blame landed on one person, theyâd be safe.
âWhat? This filthy brat caused trouble again?â
The headmaster yanked the whip from her belt and lashed it at the girl. The girl flinched and curled into a ball.
Just then, the door opened again, and a boy ran in.
âHeadmaster!â
The raised whip froze midair as she turned to glare.
âHow dare you interrupt me?â
âIâm sorry! I brought the liquor you asked me to buy earlier. You said it was urgent.â
At the sight of the bottle, the headmasterâs face brightened. Her tone softened, rare for her.
âGood work, Rick. Hand it over.â
Taking the bottle like it was a precious treasure, she turned to the children.
âGo get treated. Especially you! Make sure it doesnât scar.â
Then, as if even a second was too precious to waste, she left the room.
The moment the door closed, Rick rushed to the girl and helped her to her feet.
âAre you okay? Letâs get out of here.â
Afraid the headmaster might suddenly call them back, the two children hurried out of the building and exhaled in relief.
âThat mustâve hurt. The headmasterâs been on edge since she said a guest was coming.â
Rick wiped the blood from her forehead with a damp cloth, trying to comfort her.
âA guest? Who?â
âYou rememberâthe ones who came not long after you used your power for the first time here?â
âOh, those creepy people?â
Theyâd been strangeâwatching her with the kind of greedy eyes reserved for valuable objects. The memory made her frown.
âI donât like them. They were looking at you weirdly. Be careful.â
âI know. Especially since the headmaster called them around the same time I started having these⊠problems.â
It was obvious. It had to be because of the strange power inside her.
âRick⊠do you think Iâm really a witch?â
âYou idiot. Even witches have to control their powers before they can do bad things. You canât even do that.â
Her trembling question made Rick meet her eyes.
âBesides, in one of the fairy tales I read, witches commanded dragons. Youâve got a long way to go before that. So donât listen to what those kids say.â
He clearly already knew what had happened in the room earlier.
ââŠYou noticed?â
âThe air in there said it all. I shouldâve gone in sooner and stopped them. Sorry.â
âWhy are you sorry? Itâs fine. I hit him harder anyway!â
âHow is that fine? You got hurt. Here, let me treat it.â
Rick gently pulled away a strand of hair stuck to the blood on her forehead and took out an ointment from his pocket.
âWhere did you get that?â
âI hid it while cleaning.â
âWhat if the headmaster finds out? You know she hates when anyone uses her things.â
The headmasterâs temper was unpredictableâshe might have ordered them to be treated, but if she found out her belongings were used, sheâd explode.
âShe wonât notice for a while. The moment she got the liquor, she went straight to her office. Sheâll be out cold soon.â
The girl grimaced, easily guessing what that meant.
The bottle didnât just contain alcohol.
ââŠYou didnât run into any trouble while running her errand, did you?â
âI just did what she askedâpaid for it and brought it back. Though⊠sheâs been sending me out more often lately.â
âSheâs insane. Making a nine-year-old buy her liquor.â
Rick chuckled, giving her a teasing look.
âSays the seven-year-old.â
At that, the girl sighed, remembering something she often forgotâher age.
She was seven this year.
Or rather⊠technically seven. Because she carried memories of her previous lifeâwhen sheâd been fifteen.
A time when her fatherâs violence had reached its peak.
âWell⊠yeah.â
She forced those memories back down.
Sheâd died at fifteen, only to wake up again in the Hertia Empireâa name that felt oddly familiar.
Thatâs when she realized it was the same empire from a tragic novel sheâd once read, âThe End of Revenge.â
âTo think Iâd actually end up inside a novelâŠâ
At least sheâd been reborn as a nameless orphan, sheâd thoughtâuntil strange things started happening.
Her unnaturally beautiful appearance.
The mysterious power she couldnât control.
There were too many signs for her to just be a background extra.