Edgar narrowed his eyes at seeing Rubicaâs eyes shine like that. It was similar to the expression she had made when she saw him for the first time. At the time, Edgar had been unimpressed to see her. He just thought, âItâs happening againâ. Someone falling with his beauty wasnât even something to be surprised about. He had been just slightly interested in her for not being able to hide her excitement.
But very much annoyingly, it turned out Rubica didnât look only at him that way. She sometimes, no, often made that expression. She had even looked at the cake at dinner that way. It made him feel just a little bad.
âEdgar?â
Edgar kept looking down at Rubica, so she hesitated for a second and called his name. Edgar smiled at his own childishness for getting annoyed at such a trivial thing and took her hand.
âLet me show you.â
Deep darkness filled their way to where the mana quartz statues were. On their way, Edgar started to feel better and better. He thought he had made the right decision when making the guards go away.
âUgh!â
His good mood reached its height when Rubica held him tightly because of something that leaped out of the darkness. He didnât have a habit of feeling happy when seeing others suffer. But the tighter Rubica held him while shaking in fear, the higher his lips curled up.
âShh, itâs just a squirrel.â
âA squirrel?â
Because of the war she had suffered, Rubica reacted sensitively to the darkness and to things that abruptly leaped out. She had never seen something good leap out of the darkness. She thought that round thing jumping out of bushes was a bomb. So, she then let out a sigh of relief. The place was peaceful, at least for now.
âYou are more faint-hearted than I thought.â
Edgar said with laughter which angered Rubica. She wanted to get away from him, but she couldnât calm down just yet. Instead, she pinched his arm with all her might.
âHow much do we have to go? Youâre not doing this to me on purpose, right?â
âOf course.â
Edgar had to fight the urge to take a detour to see Rubica get surprised again as he showed her the way. Rubicaâs eyes soon widened when seeing the spectacle in front of her.
âWow.â
Mana quartz statues were decorated around the glowing fountain. Rubica could put her fear away thanks to the statuesâ light. She let go of Edgarâs hand and started to look around.
Each mana quartz statues let out a different color of light according to its mineral component and content of mana. Most let out a moon-like blue light, but a few glowed in red and yellow. Rubica was impressed to see the craftsmenâs skills of carving them in accordance with each mana quartzâs color.
â... but this one is barely glowing.â
She said so when seeing a baby angel statue. Its light was so faint that she had almost passed by it thinking it was just an ordinary statue.
âMana quartz exposed to the air loses its light after about a decade.â
âIt loses its light?â
Rubica hadnât known that. It was a rare stone only those with both wealth and power could get. It was so rare that only huge trading companies sold it, and only the nobles of high ranks put it in their gardens, so most people knew almost nothing about it.
âThat is why it is even rarer. No matter how much they mine it, its light eventually fades away, so the supply cannot fulfill the demand... the mana quartz of the Seritos Mountains has all already been consumed. In a way, it is even more precious than mana stones.â
Listening to Edgarâs explanation, Rubica looked at the bright smile of the angel again. This mana quartz will eventually lose light and look like ordinary marble. Thinking so made her feel somewhat sad.
The transience of beauty that disappeared in time was making it even more beautiful. If it wasnât going to become an ordinary stone eventually, it wouldnât have been that rare. To such a stone, rarity and value were inseparable.
âHow is that fountain glowing?ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âIt has mana quartz in it.â
Before Edgar could say more, Rubica ran to the fountain and tried to look in it. She couldnât see well because of the spraying water, but Edgar was right. There was a shining stone in the shape of a person inside.
âThat is...â
âThat was made in the form of my mother.â
Edgar spat it out instantly. He could barely stop himself from clenching his teeth and, instead, he smiled.
âMy father commissioned it.â
âOh, itâs amazing. Your father must have been a great man.â
âYes. He was great, yes...â
Rubica could read bitterness in his reply. She just thought that bitterness came from the pain of losing his entire family in one day. She thought she had touched a wound without meaning to, so she took a step to look somewhere else.
âRubica.â
Edgar grabbed her wrist. In spite of the dim and beautiful lights of mana quartz, his face looked dreary and ominous.
âThat statue actually had a pair.â
âA pair?â
âYes, a statue of my father.â
Rubicaâs heart beat fast. She had a bad feeling about it. However, she had no choice but to ask the next question. It looked like Edgar would never let her go if she didnât ask that.
â... where is it now?â
âI smashed it.â
âYou smashed it?â
âYes, I smashed it with a hammer.â
Normally, Rubica would have scolded him for smashing such an expensive statue, but now she wouldnât dare. Edgarâs expression looked scary as if he could easily kill a person now, but at the same time, it looked so sad.
âI burned all of my motherâs belongings and my fatherâs.â
Rubica realized why there had been his grandmotherâs dresses among the dresses Ann had prepared for her but not his motherâs dresses.
âI warned you in advance. You may talk about my mother in front of me. But as for my father... donât even say a word about him.â
Rubica silently nodded at that warning. At the same time, she got questions. She could understand him burning his parentsâ things and smashing one of their statues and drowning the other in the fountain. Even thinking about them must be painful. It had been such a sudden death of a couple who loved and cared about each other so much.
But then, only grief and longing should be on Edgarâs face. That was how he looked like as he looked at his motherâs statue, but he had an anger and will to kill as he spoke of his father. She had been unable to feel his grief and longing.
It looked like... he hated his dead father.
***
Rubica got dressed in her nightdress and lay on the bed. Then, she realized she hadnât talked to Edgar about what happened in the morning. Edgar came out of the bathroom. Good timing. White steam was around him. He still had the hotness of the bathroom. His wet hair fell a little below their usual place. Normally he was beautiful but hard to approach, but now he looked so soft and relaxed.
Rubica found her heart beating fast again at this new aspect of him. Even the most beautiful person tends to get boring when seen every day, but Edgar was different. He looked like the incarnation of beauty. How can a human be like that?
âYour Grace, we have brought what you wanted.â
Edgar sat down on an ottoman next to the bed and waved his hand. It made the maids leave the room. Being alone with him was not comfortable, but now Rubica had a chance to talk more freely. What had happened in the morning wasnât something she couldnât talk about in front of others.
âEdgar, I want to ask you something...â
âHmm.â
Edgar wasnât listening to her. He poured water from a kettle in a pot. Was he making coffee? At this hour of the night? Rubica narrowed her eyes but continued.
âWhen I woke up this morning, all of my maids including Ann said I smelled of your perfume.â
Edgar almost dropped the pot. He looked away and turned the sandglass on the table.
âWhat did you do to me last night?â
âWhat did I do? Youâre asking a strange question. You seem to think of me as a shameless man.â
Rubicaâs eyes got even narrower. He was getting mad too easily. It was suspicious. The guilty manâs voice is always the loudest.
âThen why on earth did I smell of your perfume? I slept at that end of the bed and you slept at this end.â
âI donât know.â
Edgar tapped the sandglass with his finger and desperately tried to find a way to change the subject. Unfortunately, he couldnât think of anything good.
âItâs suspicious.â
âNo... I didnât break the promise we made.â
Edgar felt a little guilty and quickly added. The sandglassâ sand was now in the bottom half of it. He poured out the water in the cups. Rubica muttered to herself when seeing that.
âStrange.â
âWhat?â
âI didnât say much, but you said you didnât break our promise first. Itâs very strange and suspicious.â
Edgar ended up spilling the water from the cup. He then quickly offered Rubica a fine cup of the drink to change the subject.