But I didnât feel any better.
I chimed in and complained.
âIsnât Aedis sad? Iâve been waiting for this moment ever since I changed my body. I was dreaming about doing various things with Aedisâ body.â
âOh my. Iâll have to add that to the wifeâs wish list.â
Aedis laughed. Even if it wasnât today, it seemed like he would listen to it someday.
I spoke to the voice we heard before our bodies returned to normal.
âI can never forgive you for calling what made us suffer like this a game.â
Aedis ran his hand through my hair and wondered.
âThatâs strange. The wife didnât seem to suffer at all.â
âHmm, hmm. anyway! Letâs go catch the culprit right now! According to Paimon, the cats might know something.â
âAre you not going to do what you were going to do?â
âEven, even if you tempt me like that, I wonât fall for it. Iâm very, very angry right now.â
But my eyes overflowed with longing, and my hands still held Aedis.
âWife, your words and actions donât go together.â
ââ¦Iâll play with you now.â
I said nothing and let go of Aedis with tears in my eyes.
The need to refrain from using his powers was gone, so Aedis immediately moved to the North with me.
Seeing us suddenly return to Cyclamen castle, Sarahâs eyes widened.
âYour Grace? Why are you back already?â
âI came for a moment. What about the cats?â
âTheyâre gone. But will they come back tomorrow? The work rules from a long time said that it was normal for cats to disappear during a full moon, so donât go looking for them.â
Sarah commented indifferently.
I tilted my head, having been able to guess the correlation between the full moon and cats only through ãCollection of Northern Fairy Talesã.
âIs it different from the work rules the chief handmaid showed you? How long ago do you think it was?â
Sarah explained with an excited expression.
âThat was a work rule used 30 years ago. Besides that, when I saw a long shadow wandering alone in the hallway at 3 am, I greeted three times and asked to pass by. We all saw it, so do you want me to bring it to Your Grace?ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
It wasnât even a Napolitan ghost story,* what an odd rule.
Well, Cyclamen Castle is very old, so it wouldnât be strange if there were about ten ghost stories.
âIâll see it later.â
While I was chatting lightly with Sarah, Aedis located the cats. They were beyond the Crystal Gate.
âNot surprising.â
I knew it.
Beyond the Crystal Gate, you will find the largest monster habitat on the continent.
Rumors about the mysterious fish that live only there and wild bears the size of a house are still rife.
It must have been the best place for the unusual cats to go to play during the full moon.
Aedis made sure I put on my coat and moved us there.
Eventually, the place we arrived at was an ice forest that glowed blue.
The trees that rose through the ice were also tinged with a soft blue color, and I felt as if I had fallen on the boundary between reality and fantasy.
If it hadnât been for resisting my husbandâs temptations, it would have been interesting to watch it.
I hurried. After passing some trees, I saw three cats perched on an icy rock.
And that wasnât all. Birds lurked in the branches, and creatures with shining eyes lurked in the shadows.
âThere must have been a party here while we were at the parentâs gathering.â
I summoned Peep.
âPyaak!â
Peep jumped out and ran around and buried itself in the snow. I shook my head and put Peep in my pocket.
The cats watched the scene and meowed like saying something.
âPeep, translate it for me.â
âPpii.â
Peep wiped the snow and used its superpowers.
Soon the catâs words began to be understood by me, too.
âItâs Eve!â
âItâs our master!â
⦠Me? Not Tolymann Elliott?
The birds were agitated by the catsâ conversation. All of them seemed to envy the cats who had me as their master.
I approached the cats.
âUntil now, Aedis and I swapped bodies? Do you know anything?â
I went straight to the point, but the raccoons nearby opened their mouths.
[âThat, that is nonsense! Are you really Lady Maeviaâs familiar?!â]
[âLady Maevia spoke to me first!â]
I tried to ignore the exclamations that came from everywhere.
âIâm in a bad mood. Can you be honest with me?â
Carolina, the smallest cat, smirked.
âIâll tell you! Everything! But you must do us a favor.â
Then Maximus and Isabelle made their demands as if they had been waiting.
âPlease give me scratches!â
âScratch my chin! Say Iâm pretty!â
Aedis spoke.
âThere are a lot of unnecessary demands.â
The cats quickly became polite hearing the voice cooler than the atmosphere surrounding the icy forest.
âThe fairy is over there! Go straight ahead!â
âWhat are you guys doing! Donât block the road! Get out of the way!â
With the catsâ urging, the animals scattered and cleared the way.
I glanced at the raccoons as I crossed the road.
âAs Paimon guessed, the culprit was a fairy. So, are those raccoons also fairies? I donât think theyâre beasts.â
Then Maximus called me over.
âEx, excuse me, Eve!â
âWhat?â
âThat child is stupid, but not a bad child.â
Maximus said hesitantly.
âHe thought Eve would come to see him right away, but you didnât come, so he got sulky.â
Isabelle asked while licking her paw.
âDid Eve come late on purpose? Because youâre trying to break that fairyâs habit of making a fuss about stealing Eveâs attention? I know everything!â
I came late to enjoy it to the fullest.
Suddenly, a whimpering sound reached my ears.
I blinked in bewilderment before moving forward.
Something huge, the size of a house, was weeping sadly.
ââ¦â¦ A bear?â
I didnât want to say that to the raccoon fairies, but this one was a bit scary.
Is that blood on its mouth?
It, it ate fish, not people, right?
I quietly hid behind Aedis.
Aedis once said that I was cute because I resembled a polar bear. However, I wondered if that looked like me.
I gulped and opened my mouth.
âDid you change our bodies?â
The white bear looked at me. The look in his eyes was like it had starved for two days and found plump prey.
[Meâ¦!]
âWhat?â
[Accept me as a familiar, too! Iâve heard all the cats brag about it. Iâm going to be Lady Maeviaâs familiar, too! Waahh! Uwaaahh! Let me be Lady Maeviaâs familiar!]
As the bear lay down on its back and issued an unreasonable demand, the ice, which could not withstand its weight, began to crack.
Can a fairy go crazy?! I exclaimed while holding on to Aedis.
âI donât have a familiar! Those cats arenât my familiars either!â
Far from being persuaded, the bearâs eyes turned crazy.
[Then I want to be Lady Maeviaâs first familiar! Right now!]
A bear with blood on its mouth crawled toward me.
That crazy bear was ten times more terrifying than Paimonâs main body, the dragon itself.
How can that be a fairy?! Apologize to the fairy tale fairies!
Embarrassed, I caught my breath, and Aedis kicked the bear.
The bear shattered the ice and crashed into a tree.
âIf you wanted to become Eveâs familiar that much, you should have begged on your knees.â
Aedisâ words made the bear feel maligned.
[Fairies canât kneel and pray! They gave something better instead! I heard Lady Maeviaâs desire!]
Finally, the bear roared. If it wasnât for Peep, those words would only come as ferocious cries, so I might have fainted long ago.
I frowned.
âHave you granted what I desire?â
[I can hear what humans desire. Lady Maevia desired after that body, so my mischief came into play!]
The bear pointed at Aedis. The animal fairies who were watching whispered.
[What is desire?]
[I donât know either.]
[You know?]
ââ¦..Iâll kill it. Iâll shut that mouth.â
The bear in front of me was not afraid at all.
I clenched my fists while Aedis was busy giggling and laughing.
âThe wife likes me very much.â
I couldnât stop my face from burning up. I chose to attack instead of defend.
âThatâs obvious, right?! Go and attack!â
âPyaak!â
When I landed it on the floor, Peep lunged at the bear.
The momentum was great, but the bear snatched it at once.
[Whatâs this? Should I eat it?]
Peep was about to enter the giant bearâs mouth.
It wasnât a real creature anyway, so it wouldnât die, but Peep pathetically sent a rescue signal to me.
âPpppiiii! Ppppiiiikkkk!â
⦠Looking at that figure, who would think that it is an almighty lump of power?
I sighed and stepped forward a little. The bear looked more closely.
When I look up close itâs cuteâ¦â¦as if!!
I stepped back, brought Aedis to be my shield, and asked.
âWhy do you want to be my familiar?â
The bear really didnât intend to gulp Peep, so it put it down on the floor.
[Right now, no one plays with me, but if I become Lady Maeviaâs familiar, Iâll be popular, too, right? Like the cats, I will receive lots of food as presents!]
It was a very personal and earthly reason.
I begrudgingly asked.
âDonât you think that no one plays with you because theyâre afraid of getting eaten?â
â
*Napolitan horror story: so itâs a horror story that doesnât really mention the existence or the danger, but rather incites imagination. For example: not to pick up phone calls when staying in a hotel at night, or run away as soon as someone comes up from a certain room number. Thereâs no explanation as to what causes the rule or anything.