â?â
â..?â
Alon couldnât help but feel endlessly bewildered as he watched the woman suddenly shed tears.
She had simply been staring at him before abruptly starting to cry.
âDid I⊠do something?â
A flood of thoughts raced through his mind, but naturally, he hadnât done anything.
In fact, he hadnât even had the time to.
The moment of confusion lasted only briefly.
âIâm sorry, something suddenly got into my eye.â
ââŠIs that so?â
âYes.â
ââŠI see.â
Alon could only reply hesitantly to the womanâs slow explanation.
No matter how he looked at it, it didnât seem like something got into her eye; it looked more like she was crying out of sorrow.
But since she insisted that was the case, pressing the matter felt inappropriate, so he decided not to dwell on it.
ââŠâŠShall we introduce ourselves first?â
âYes, I am Lina, the head of the Greenwood Trading company.â
For a moment, Alon tried to recall anything about the Greenwood Trading company, but he quickly gave up.
âIt doesnât seem to be a particularly famous Trading company.â
All he knew was the information heâd just heard from the attendant earlier.
âI heard you wanted to discuss something with me regarding gold crafts. Is that correct?â
âYes, thatâs correct.â
âThen letâs hear it in detail.â
She nodded as she wiped her eyes again.
***
30 minutes later.
âMarquis.â
âWhat is it?â
âDid the discussion go well?â
âIt ended well enough.â
âOh, really?â
Alon asked at Evanâs surprised reaction.
âWhy are you looking at me like that?â
âItâs just⊠Normally, discussions with Trading company heads donât end this quickly. And weâre talking about gold crafts, arenât we? I assumed there would be a lot to negotiate.â
âWell, youâre not wrong.â
Alon nodded in agreement.
âIndeed, the value of gold crafts is high.â
Gold itself was expensive, and the value of crafted gold items could vary greatly depending on the artisan.
Of course, Alon had a general understanding of these common sense matters, even if not in detail.
âHonestly, I was a little surprised too.â
âWhy?â
âThat it ended so quickly.â
In truth, Alon had been bewildered the whole time at how smoothly things had gone.
âThe terms were too good.â
Good terms, from Alonâs perspective, were naturally not a bad thing.
However, the better the terms for Alon, the worse they should have been for the other party.
At its core, negotiations were about balancing mutual benefits and losses.
If one part of the deal was advantageous, there had to be other parts that required compromise.
This principle had held true in all the transactions Alon had made with numerous Trading Companies so far.
Yet in this negotiation, even before they began, there were many terms disproportionately in Alonâs favor.
ââŠSomething feels off.â
That was precisely the point Alon found peculiar.
While the negotiation ended successfully, no matter how he thought about it, Alon couldnât figure out what the Trading company was gaining from the deal.
âWell, if I had to nitpick, itâs not exactly a losing deal for them either⊠But still, there were definitely parts where they couldâve been more ambitious. Why did they give up on so much?â
As Alon pondered further, he eventually shrugged his shoulders as he often did.
The outcome was good.
Since the contract didnât put him at any disadvantage, there was no need to overthink it.
ââŠThough I still donât understand why she was crying at first.â
The fact that sheâd burst into tears the moment she saw him left him puzzled as well.
âOh, by the way, Marquis.â
âWhat is it?â
âThey say the vice tower master has discovered a new formula.â
ââŠIs that so?â
With no time to dwell on his thoughts, Alon rose from his seat to head toward where Penia was.
***
Meanwhile, Lina, the head of the Greenwood Trading companyâor rather, the Elf Queen Magrina, who had just been speaking with Alonâwas lost in a deep sea of thoughts.
The human disguise dropped, and Perion, who had accompanied her as her escort, gazed at her with a somewhat peculiar expression.
The reason lay in the queenâs demeanor earlier.
ââŠWhat was that?â
Perion couldnât understand her overall behavior today.
The queen had left Greynifra, a place she absolutely should never abandon, to visit Marquis Palatio for a single reason.
To confirm whether Marquis Palatio was the Primordial Elf or not.
But inwardly, Perion believed this journey would yield little result for the queen.
If Phildeâthe highest-ranking wizard among the elvesâwas correct in her assumptionâŠ
Even if Marquis Palatio were the Primordial Elf and recognized his sister, Queen Magrina, he wouldnât acknowledge her openly.
In other words, under such limitations, the queen had no way of discerning whether Marquis Palatio was the Primordial Elf.
Thus, despite the queenâs resolute conviction that she would confirm it by seeing him in person, Perion had maintained a skeptical stance.
HoweverâŠ
ââŠWhy did she shed tears?â
Although the queen now appeared deep in thought with a serious expression, Perion had undoubtedly witnessed it.
Just earlier, the moment she saw Marquis Palatioâs face, a single tear had streaked down her cheek.
Perion could confidently say it was the first time he had seen such a reaction from the queen.
She never revealed personal emotions in front of others.
While she was certainly a compassionate ruler, she bore the weight of her royal duties more heavily than anyone and fulfilled them without fail.
Could she have truly sensed something from Marquis Palatio? In a way unknown to him?
âBut if thatâs the caseâŠâ
Perion looked at her again.
By now, Magrina had returned to wearing the composed face of a ruler.
Not as a âsisterâ revealing fragments of emotion tied to the Primordial Elf, but as a clear and resolute âqueen.â
Just as Perion considered risking impropriety to satisfy his curiosityâŠ
âPerion.â
The queen, who had been silent since they left Marquis Palatioâs estate, suddenly spoke.
âYes.â
Perion held his breath for a moment.
A fleeting mix of emotions crossed the queenâs faceâregret, sorrow, and a faint smileâall gone in an instant.
After a brief pause, Magrina gave her command.
ââŠPlace the Shadow Leaves beside him.â
ââŠ! Shadow Leaves?â
âYes.â
Shadow Leaves.
For those who guarded the roots of âPaggadeâ, the Shadow Leaves were a select group of elves who protected the queen from the shadows, each of them a sword master.
They were essentially the queenâs personal escort unit.
âDo you meanââ
âYes, thatâs correct.â
ââŠHow did you realize it?â
Perionâs expression reflected his bewilderment.
Magrina recalled the gloves worn by Marquis Palatio.
Gloves that only elves could use.
More precisely, gloves that could only be used by the Primordial Elfâ
Her brother.
As soon as she saw them, tears had involuntarily flowed, but her certainty that Marquis Palatio was the Primordial Elf did not solely stem from that.
âI have my own way.â
â⊠âŠâ
The queen answered with a smile and retrieved something from her robe.
It was an old ring.
A ring so weathered that it had lost its luster in many places.
Originally, there was only supposed to be one of its kind in the entire world.
âMy own way.â
The <Ring of Restraint> that Alon had first obtained in the labyrinth now rested in her hand.
A ring gifted by the Primordial Elf.
***
At that moment, Alon wasâŠ
âHm~ So the Trading company leader just poured out everything, then cried and laughed? Is that about right?â
Reviewing the earlier events with Penia.
âWell⊠The order mightâve been reversed, but thatâs the gist.â
âCould it have been some sort of forced agreement⊠or something along those lines?â
Peniaâs face briefly showed sympathy before Alon interjected.
âWhat exactly do you think of meâŠ?â
She hurriedly waved her hands.
âOh, no, no, not that! Haha⊠Maybe the Trading company leader just has⊠mood swings?â
ââŠHmm, perhaps.â
âWhat a pity, at such a young age.â
And with that, their oddly comforting (?) conversation concluded.
***
It was dusk.
For Hidan, the regular meetings of the Blue Moon were generally a bit chaotic.
To be precise, they started quietly but grew more unruly as time passed.
While the meetings had always progressed this way, Hidan had never found them particularly bothersome.
Whenever discussions became excessively noisy or heated, Red Moon would step in to mediate and restore order.
However, at this moment, Hidan felt deeply uneasy.
The reason?
[Youâve all heard, right?]
[A birthday gift, huhâ]
It was none other than the matter of the Great Moonâs birthday gift.
No, to be more precise, it was because of the discussions regarding the gift.
[Deus, just so you know, donât go overboard with an outrageous gift.]
[I know.]
[Are you âreallyâ sure you know?]
[Yes, I plan to prepare something âappropriate.â]
[Hmm, same here. Iâm planning something perfectly appropriate.]
[I feel the same. We mustnât make the gift burdensome for Brother.]
The moons had started a subtle yet unmistakable competition.
[Hmm, everyoneâs got the right idea. It seems we all understand that giving an overly extravagant gift could overwhelm him.]
[Yes, I completely understand!]
Hidan glanced over the other moons, including Yutia.
The moons wore relaxed, knowing smiles.
At first glance, it seemed as though their words could be taken at face value, but Hidan, who frequently roamed around gathering reports, knew better.
âŠThe five moons were âabsolutely notâ preparing âappropriateâ gifts.
In other wordsâ
[Yes, we must give something at the âappropriateâ level.]
[Right, I agree. At the âappropriateâ level.]
[Understood completely. âAppropriate,â indeedâŠ]
[âŠSame here.]
[Me too!]
In this repeated conversation, everyone, except for the cheerful Golden Moon, was carefully hiding their true intentions while gauging each other.
âŠAll because they wanted to give the Great Moon a gift that would surpass the others.
Thusâ
âDo we really⊠need to go this far?â
Hidan felt his energy drain, stifling a quiet sigh deep within.