Chapter 74

“Dada!”



Giggle!



Winley only got up when it was already late evening. Looking at her with concern, Davey asked, “Are you feeling better?”

“Of course, Big brother. Your younger sister is quite healthy.”

“Nonsense.”

“Me! Red Ribbon slept, too!”

“Bl... Blue Ribbon, too!”

It was still shocking to hear that swords could sleep.

Davey didn’t know what the children were laughing about, but the children ran around the room, giggling joyfully.

“It’s fascinating. I don’t know if it’s because of those children, but... I feel a lot better than usual.”

Aside from feeling well rested, Winley’s amount of mana had probably increased too. She was also a mage, so she would’ve absorbed some of the power the two children, who were balls of energy, had released.

“That’s a relief. Hey kids, do you want to go play outside for a bit?”

“Okay!”

After the children answered simultaneously and scuttled out of the room, Davey turned to look back at Winley. “Are you okay now?”

“Yes, thank you for your concern.”

“How long did it take you to travel here? I would’ve gone instead, if you had contacted me.”

“H—How could I? You’re busy, too...” Looking like she was going to cry, Winley lowered her head.

“Okay. Explain it to me.”

Winley nodded with tears in her eyes, and she finally revealed the severity of the situation. “We first brought priests, but they said that it was an illness incurable with holy power... So, we called the doctor, and they said that they couldn’t cure it either...”

“They couldn’t cure it?”

Comforted by Davey’s presence, Winley began sharing her concerns. She revealed that Portna, her bodyguard and close friend, had been shot with a poison arrow by the thieves instead of herself. Because Winley had fallen into a trap after chasing the thieves too far, she would’ve been severely injured or maybe dead if Portna hadn’t taken the shot for her.

“What about an antidote?”

“The priest did remove the poison with an antidote spell, but blue-black spots began showing up after that... And she keeps coughing up blood...

Sob

...

Weep

...”

The real problem only showed up after Portna had returned to the camp after being detoxified. She began suffering from a high fever, and blue-black spots started showing up on her body. From then on, she began coughing up blood and gradually losing a lot of weight.

Confused by Davey’s words, Perserque tilted her head.

“There’s something called causality; there’s no such thing as a result without a cause. Portna was shot with a poisonous arrow, and she received an antidote spell, but she became sick the next day. She seems to be suffering from an unknown illness, one that not even the priests and doctors know of... It makes no sense.”

There was no way that the barbarians, who had to live off of thieving and attacking the outskirts of the kingdom because they didn’t have their own territory, could get their hands on that kind of poison. And it couldn’t be just any ordinary poison if the priests and doctors had given up.

-Then, in that case...

“Someone gave the barbarians a poison with a special kind of virus...” Davey, who trailed off, sighed and then continued, “Or there’s a possible cause of the illness that Winley didn’t mention.”

‘Although, I feel that it’s the first one.’

Whatever the illness was, Davey needed to know the cause to discover an appropriate treatment. This was one of the first things he had learned when he had been taught the art of medicine: understanding the overall situation.

“Come in if you’re here.” Davey threw the documents that he was reading while standing onto his desk. “And don’t try to discern me.”

If someone else saw Davey, they wouldn’t know who he was talking to. As he mumbled into the emptiness, a man wearing a black mask soon appeared in front of him with a faint presence. Looking over, Davey thought to himself,

‘He seems quite skilled.’

“...” The man who silently bowed to Davey was wearing a black uniform and mask. The only body parts that Davey could see were the man’s strong, large hands and sharp eyes.

Regular people would probably instinctively freeze up at the man’s hidden killing aura, but Davey wasn’t really tense at all. After all, he wasn’t particularly impressed by the man’s concealment skills.

“I heard that there’s something you need,” the man said after a short silence.

“Yes, I apologize for making you come and go when you’re busy.”

“...It’s an honor that you have asked for me.”

“Sit.” Davey offered the man the seat that was in front of him. He sat down, but the man chose to remain standing.

The man’s gaze seemed to suggest...nervousness. It was probably inevitable that he felt that way, since Davey had found him right away despite his usage of concealment skills to hide his presence. By nature, assassins were extremely wary of people who could find their location.

“I’ll be straightforward with you. I want to buy some information. How much can you offer?” Davey asked.

“Everything...” The man answered without an ounce of hesitation. “Has a price.”

‘Of course. Nothing is free.’

“Then, you can get me anything if I pay the right price?”

“If you pay appropriately, we can get you information about the underwear color of the kingdom’s princesses. If you want, we can also get you the underwear itself...”



Tsk

, what would I do with such a dirty thing?” Davey chuckled hollowly at the man’s calm but confident voice. The man did promote his guild’s information gathering ability and drive, but...

‘What a weird way to express it.’

As Davey looked at the man in shock, Perserque crossed her arms and pouted as if displeased. A short silence surrounded the office.

A lot of intelligence guilds in the Rowane Kingdom were exceptional, but they were still just minor intelligence guilds of a small kingdom. However, Davey could strongly feel that this man’s guild was a part of something bigger; it seemed like they worked continent-wide.

Of course, Davey wasn’t surprised since his territory was getting the spotlight and becoming a site of exchange as several merchant companies, wizard towers, and schools of alchemy were gathering. However, it was inevitable that the shadows grew alongside the light; intelligence guilds were known to sniff out money better than merchants.

It was safe to say that Davey’s territory had new information to be discovered every single day, so it wasn’t weird that an intelligence guild that worked on a continental scale had an eye on this place. That pretty much meant that they probably had the ability to get Davey what he wanted fast.

Davey could see the man’s serious gaze when they made eye contact. The man would’ve heard about him if he wasn’t an idiot, and so, the man probably knew that he wasn’t going to say anything lighthearted. Furthermore, Davey wasn’t a well-known person, but had seen through his concealment skills.

Davey kind of felt bad. He could see how tense the man had become, but he still had to ask for what he wanted.