Chapter 56 - Otto’s Consultation Room
Ascendance of a Bookworm
When I step outside, I am dumbfounded by just how much snow has accumulated. During the winter, Iâm essentially just a shut-in, so Iâve almost never really been outside like this before. So, when I look up at the snow, piled higher than I am tall, I canât help but stare blankly in awe. Through the alleys leading to the main streets, a narrow pathway has been shoveled out, allowing travelers to somehow manage to make their way forward, but the mounds of snow alongside the path look terrifyingly close to crumbling down on top of us.
âMa?ne, up here,â says my father. He leans down, stretching both arms wide, and I quietly let myself be picked up, clinging to his head. If I were to try to walk through this, we wouldnât make it to the gate in time for my fatherâs shift. Now that Iâm being held up, though, my head is above the snow. A cool wind blows across the broad, white expanse, sending eddies glimmering across its surface like ocean waves.
âDaddy, are you going to be shoveling snow on the main street today?â
âThe noblemen have to be able to drive their carts,â he agrees.
ââ¦In this snow, Iâd think Iâd rather stay inside.â
With this much snow on the ground, I thought there wouldnât be that many people out and about, but there are quite a few more people hurrying about their business than I expected.
âThereâs a lot of snow out here, but thereâs still so many people outside,â I say.
âItâs one of those rare days when the snow isnât falling, isnât it? When it is, thereâs about as few people out as youâd expect.â
As he says this, though, a sprinkling of snow starts fluttering down from the sky, prompting my father to pick up the pace.
âItâs starting to snow. Letâs hurry, Ma?ne. Hold on tight!â
âAaah!! Iâm gonna faaall!!â
We arrive at the gate, clamoring the whole way. After taking a moment to roughly brush off the snow clinging to us, we quickly head towards the night duty room. After a light knock on the door, we push it open. A desk has been set up near the fireplace, atop which a veritable mountain of paperwork has been stacked, behind which is Otto, working on calculations.
âOtto, your long-awaited assistant has arrived!â says my father. âMake room by the fire.â
âSquad leader, thank you very much! Iâve been waiting for you, Ma?ne.â
The documents atop the desk rustle as Otto tidies them up, making space for me to work at. Judging by the absolutely enormous smile heâs giving me as he welcomes me, it looks like the work has piled quite high, too. I pull my slate and slate pencils from my tote bag, then haul myself up onto the slightly too-tall chair.
âNow then, Ma?ne. Please go over the calculations for this duty post, and make sure they match up.â
âOkay!â
Well, it looks like I wonât be able to have my discussion until this mountain of paperwork is first straightened out. I look at the pile of documents that had been set heavily on the table in front of me, and pick up my pencil.
For a while, we work in silence. The only sounds that filled the room were the quick snap of beads from Ottoâs calculator and the scratching of my pencil against my slate.
A knock at the door cuts through the silence, and a young soldier steps into the room.
âExcuse me. I have a question for Ottoâ¦â
âMa?ne, you handle this one.â
Otto doesnât even look up as he volunteers me, his eyes glued to his documents and his calculator.
âHuh? Me? Oh, um, wait one moment, please, let me just finish this lineâ¦â
I finish working out the calculation, mark the answer off as verified, then look up. The young soldier looks at Otto, who is flicking the beads on his calculator around with frankly terrifying intensity, then at me, then sighs, holding out a roll of parchment.
âPlease help me with this.â
âWhat is it? â¦Ahhh, a nobleâs introductory letter. Is the Private First-Class on duty?â
âNo, he has the night shift todayâ¦â
âThen, get the chiefâs stamp and make immediate arrangements for them to head towards the castle walls. Since itâs been a long journey through all this snow, even the gentlest noble might be on edge, so be as quick as you can.â
âYes, ma'am!â
âIf you do have to keep them waiting, I think you should make sure thereâs a fire in the waiting room, get them in there immediately, and make them some warm tea.â
âUnderstood.â
The young soldier salutes, then rushes out of the room. I return his salute, then turn back around, resuming my calculations.
âYouâve gotten good at that,â remarks Otto, taking a brief break from his calculations to rest his hands.
My pencil keeps moving as I reply. âTheyâre all dealt with the same way, after all.â
The work done at the gates is pure bureaucratic red tape. Fundamentally, the response to every situation is the same. Once youâve read through the manual once, you can deal with everything that isnât completely out of the ordinary.
After calculating for another long while, Iâve gotten a little tired. I tidy up the pile of calculations Iâve verified, then lean back, stretching my arms wide. Otto, as well, seems to have found a stopping point, and starts gathering up his documents.
âMan, Iâm tired,â he says. âShall we take a break?â
âPlease,â I reply.
Otto brings in some hot tea from the mess. As we slowly sip at it, I start asking him for advice.
ââ¦and then, thereâs what my mother said to Lutz when we were talking. She said that if he was always looking after me, then he wouldnât be doing enough work to really be pulling his weight as an apprentice. If he was keeping his attention on me, heâd leave the job half-finished.â
Otto gives me a look as if my motherâs words were the most obvious thing in the world.
âIsnât that obvious? If heâs only doing half of his work while looking after someone else⦠of course it would wind up half-finished. If Lutz is really aiming to become a merchant, he canât afford to spend his time looking after you, I think.â
ââ¦Thatâs what I thought.â
Right now, weâre not yet apprentices, so we donât do any actual work at the store. We just go there to deliver our goods. As such, Lutz is able to keep an eye on my physical condition while we work together. When we become apprentices and have to do real work, heâs very likely not going to be able to stop worrying about me, and I canât let myself put him under that sort of burden.
As I sit there, wondering what I should do next, Otto looks down at me with gentle eyes.
âHey, Ma?ne. Are you serious about becoming a merchant?â
âThatâs my plan for now, yes. Iâve been thinking of a few things I might be able to commoditizeâ¦â
My decision is based on the fact that you canât buy or sell things without the approval of the Merchantâs Guild.
âLeaving commerce aside, I think it would be better if you didnât work at Bennoâs.â
Itâs already been decided that my apprenticeship would be under Benno. Iâve lately been feeling anxious about my actual work, but Iâd like to know why Otto is telling me that I shouldnât work for Benno.
âWhy do you say that?â
âThat storeâs growing quickly. Every single person there is working earnestly. Itâll be exhausting work, and I donât think your body can take it.â
The reason he gives me as he lightly shrugs his shoulders is the same reason Iâve been feeling anxious, and the same thing that I heard from Benno the other day.
ââ¦Mister Benno actually asked me the same thing, whether or not I could really do the work.â
âThereâs work to be done that just involves doing calculations and validating documents, but even a merchantâs job has deadlines, so itâs hard to entrust that kind of work to a girl who could collapse at any moment.â
âThatâs true, isnât it.â
I know full well that Benno has been thinking about how the information in my head could be turned into new goods or otherwise profited from, which is why he doesnât want me to go to any other shop. However, when you think about my ability to actually work in a shop, my lack of strength and stamina is a fatal flaw.
Hiring an employee whose health makes her actual attendance rate constantly uncertain would be a hard decision to make, even in Japan. If I were in charge, I wouldnât want that kind of employee.
âMy other opinion is the kind of harsh thing you donât really say around children, do you still want to know what it is?â
I tilt my head slightly to the side in thought, and Otto studies my reaction closely. The ultimate reason I came here was so that I could get an honest, objective opinion from someone like Otto, who doesnât feel like they have to handle me with care. Under the table, I clench my fists, steeling myself for whatever answer Iâm about to get, then slowly nod.
âPlease.â
âThe number one reason I think you shouldnât go to work for Benno is, frankly, human relations. Youâre going to wreck the social dynamic of the shop. If a brand new apprentice is, thanks to her poor health, constantly taking time off from work and, when sheâs actually there, only doing physically undemanding work, wouldnât all of the other employees feel more and more upset as time went on?â
ââ¦Right.â
Even if itâs made clear that the problem is my health, there will almost certainly be problems with the people who see that kind of favoritism, even if they arenât immediately apparent. Iâd been working so frantically to make sure Lutz secured his apprenticeship that I hadnât actually considered what things would look like after Iâd actually started my own.
âAnd then⦠I think thereâd be a problem with your wages, you know?â
âHunh? My wages?â I hadnât even considered thinking about my wages being a problem, so my voice comes out a little weird. I tilt my head doubtfully to the side.
Otto sighs. âYouâre already bringing in a huge amount of profit to the store, Ma?ne. Thereâs no way the other apprentices will be making as much as you are, right?â
âMy base pay would be the same. I thought Iâd just be getting my share of the profits added as a special caseâ¦â
Although Lutz and I have waived our profits for making paper in order to secure our employment, Iâve been planning on holding tight to the profits on any goods we come up with after that. I have no intention of handing over all of my secrets for free.
âEven if itâs a special case, youâre still going to be a brand new apprentice earning more money than the ten year veterans at the store. I really think thatâll be a huge problem.â
âOhhâ¦â
Human relations certainly are very quick to strain when moneyâs involved. What Otto is pointing out is completely correct. On top of that, if human relations collapses, then thereâs a high probability that the shop itself might go down too. A shop, ultimately, is made of people.
âIt really does look like I shouldnât work at the shop, no matter how you think about it.â
Every one of Ottoâs points is correct, and I have no rebuttal for any of them. Iâm starting to feel like all I would do at Bennoâs shop is sow the seeds of discord amongst his employees.
âAnd then, thereâs one more thing I"m worried about.â
âWhat is it?â I urge him on. Heâs laid out so much stuff already, I can take whatever heâs got left.
He leans in a little closer, lowering his voice. âMa?ne, your illness⦠itâs the devouring, isnât it?â
âMister Otto, you knew about it?!â
My eyes open wide, but Otto starts lightly shaking his head in denial.
âAh, no, I didnât. I learned about it after Benno brought it up as a possibility. The other day, Corinna came to me and asked, âdo you know anything about this disease called the devouring?ââ
âMiss Corinna did?â
âA little while ago, Benno was unusually out of sorts, it seemed, and he said something about it to her. Something about how the devouringâs symptoms had suddenly manifested, and someone nearly died in his shop? Around then, the squad leader started acting extremely out-of-sorts, too. Between his behavior and what Corinna said, I pieced together that you must have been the one to collapse from the devouring.â
ââ¦Iâm sorry to have worried everyone so much.â
It looks like the story had spread far and wide. Iâd collapsed in Bennoâs shop and gotten carried to the guild masterâs house. In hindsight, that must have been extremely conspicuous.
âThe squad leader said youâd been cured, but⦠from what Iâve heard from Benno, itâs incurable, isnât it?â
ââ¦Thatâs right.â
The magical implement might have staved off the devouring for the time being, but even now I can feel it building back up again. Freida, as well, had told me that itâs going to build back up to overflowing again in less than a year.
âHave you told him?â
âNo, not yet,â I reply. âMy familyâs so happy now that they think Iâve been cured, so telling them that I havenât been isâ¦â
Talking about the devouring would involve discussing a lot of extremely painful subjects, like how much magical implements cost or how much longer my life will actually be, so when the subject comes up Iâve been dodging around it as obliquely as I can. I donât know much about it myself, other than âthereâs a strange fever that keeps building up inside me on its own and if it overflows then I dieâ, so itâs really just difficult to talk about in general.
Otto shakes his head slowly, a stern expression on his face.
âYou should tell them. Your father thinks youâve been cured, so he probably thinks that youâll be just fine going to work. Once youâve made sure to take care of the things you need to take care of today, then we can start talking about your job prospects for tomorrow. If youâre just going with whatever works in the moment, youâre going to cause a lot of trouble for a lot of people.â
âI understand.â
Since Iâve recently realized myself that I have a tendency to charge ahead without regard for how much trouble Iâm causing others, I have no choice but to meekly agree with Ottoâs rebuke.
âSo, for the future, since youâll need magical implements to live, if you want to meet with the nobility then you should go to the guild masterâs shop, I think. Bennoâs shop is big, but itâs still very new. No matter how hard he tries, history and tradition carry a lot of weight. Thatâs not the kind of thing you can get past so easily.â
âThat may be true, butâ¦â
As I waffle, Otto raises his eyebrows.
âIs there some sort of problem with you not working at Bennoâs?â
âItâs not that I wouldnât be working at Bennoâs, itâs that I donât like the guild master. Heâs pushy, and the way he runs his business isâ¦â
Being overbearing might be a necessary quality for a merchant, but I canât stand that he tried to deceive me by quoting a too-low price for a life-saving magical implement. Iâm certainly thankful, but I have no intention of making his acquaintance.
âBennoâs the same, isnât he?â
âHmmm, Mister Bennoâs pushy, and heâs greedy when it comes to money, and heâs the kind of person who tests other people the moment he meets them, but I can tell heâs picked up on a lot of my flaws and is helping me try to grow past them.â
âOhhh?â he says, an unsettling smile spreading across his face.
His expression gives me pause. Iâm absolutely certain my last sentence is going to go straight to Bennoâs ears.
âAlso, I havenât decided yet if I want to live the rest of my life stuck uselessly under a noblemanâs thumb.â
Now that Iâve finally started to think that I actually want to keep living with my family, Iâm finding it difficult to imagine wanting to live as a noblemanâs pet, especially when I donât know what kind of treatment I would wind up facing. Like Freida, said, my choices are to either rot away surrounded by my family or to live out my life in a nobleâs captivity. If I had to make that choice right now, I think Iâd choose my family.
âWell,â says Otto, âif you havenât decided what you want to do with your life then thereâs not a lot to talk about. If youâre not going to work for a shop for the sake of building connections with the nobility, then I think even more that you should think about your other options besides working at a shop. Honestly, from where Iâm standing, if you and Lutz do the "Ma?ne thinks it up and Lutz makes itâ thing and make sure to keep control of the profits and the rights, thereâs no need for you to actually work for a shop, I think.â
I give him a big nod. I certainly havenât been thinking about anything but working alongside Lutz, but if thinking is the only thing I can really do, then thereâs no real need for me to work for a shop in order to do that.
As I nod to myself, mulling his words over, Otto breaks into a beaming smile. Itâs such a brilliant smile that itâs actually a little suspicious.
"Let me see⦠perhaps you could have a job that lets you work from home and keep a close eye on your health, like transcribing letters or copying paperwork, while also just focusing on developing new products? You could force your products onto Benno, and then when your health is good you can come help me with my work here. Your life wouldnât be much different than it is right now, which I think would be great for your health in the long run!â
ââ¦Iâll think about it.â
Maintaining the status quo might indeed be best for my body, but Iâm incredibly wary of the intent behind that suspicious-looking smile.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âWell, this is something youâll have to talk about with your family first.â
âIâll do that.â
âNow then, break timeâs over. Letâs get back to it, shall we?â
Otto clears away our cups, and I put my slate back out in front of me. My pencil clacks against its surface as I go back to working out the numbers, making sure thereâs no mistakes in Ottoâs calculations.
Talking with my family, huh⦠Iâm scared that if my father knew that I only had a year left to live that heâd go insane with grief.
***
âMa?ne, letâs go home.â
By the time my father, finished with his shift, comes to the night duty room to pick me up, Iâve done far too many calculations. By this point, Iâm dizzy. When I close my eyes, all I can see are numbers floating through my brain.
âYouâve been a big help, Ma?ne,â says Otto as we leave.
Otto, whoâs been flicking beads around on his calculator this whole time, is still very energetic. Iâm starting to think that clerical work involving nothing but calculations might be utterly impossible for me.
âDaddy, arenât you cold?â
Snow lightly falls from the sky as we walk home. My father has wrapped me in his coat as he holds me in his arms, but while Iâm nice and warm, I canât help but think that he must be freezing.
He just smiles and shakes his head, though. âIâm not cold if Iâve got you, Ma?ne. Iâm actually really warm!â
âAh,â I say.
He truly loves his family and is ridiculously devoted to his daughters. How will he react when I tell him about the devouring? I worry that his smile will freeze off of his face. Itâs a scary thought, but⦠I canât avoid this topic any more.
âWhatâs wrong, Ma?ne? Youâre looking a little gloomy.â
ââ¦Daddy, Iâve got something to tell you. About my sickness.â
With just those words, my father stops walking, his face rigid. His mouth tightens, and he looks down at me very seriously. He casts his eyes away for a moment, then starts walking again, more quickly this time, hurrying as if heâs trying to run away from something.
âLetâs talk about it when we get home. Your mother will want to hear about it too.â
âYeah.â
I canât tell what heâs thinking about, but my fathers armâs tighten around me, holding me closer to him, as if heâs never going to let me go.