"Say whatever you want, I definitely won," the princess declared, smiling like a well-fed cat.
"That is quite the achievement, considering it wasn't a competition," my assistant responded in a deadpan grumble.
"You just say that because you lost."
"Once again, and I cannot stress this enough, I couldn't have lost since it wasn't a competition."
"You wouldn't say that if you were the one who won."
My assistant sent her a scathing glare (read: she slightly furrowed her brows) before she turned to me and said, "Chief, please say something."
"Huh? Sorry, what were you talking about?"
This time she turned said scathing glare to me, but then she shook her head and said, "Nothing."
To be perfectly honest, I was listening (otherwise I wouldn't have been able to describe what they were saying, duh). I just refused to get involved in their bickering. Not that I wouldn't have stepped in if the situation evolved into a full-fledged argument, but as things stood, I needed my attention elsewhere.
We were already on our way home after the last stop of our outing, a dinner at an extra-fancy restaurant (a different one than where we had our lunch). The sky became overcast while we were at the karaoke bar, so dusk settled a little earlier than usual. Because of that, I was paying extra attention to our environment, scanning every alleyway and crossroad for signs of the mysterious Faun.
I even went as far as to try and use my Far Sight to find him, but no matter how hard I tried to picture him in my mind, I couldn't see anything. Maybe I needed to have prolonged contact with people to be able to look for them? Or maybe it could be as simple as knowing their actual name (which in this case I didn't)? Damn, I was always putting off learning more about my Far Sight in favor of more pressing issues, but at this moment I would've given an arm and a leg to know what made it tick.
I obviously didn't make any headway on that front during the couple of minutes it took to take the princess home. It didn't mean I stopped trying until we got there though.
When we arrived at the gates of the mansion, I was once again hit by how it looked both majestic and utterly ridiculous in the suburban neighborhood. One would think I'd get used to it after a couple of visits, but no, it was just as jarring as the first time. But back to the gates: upon our arrival, we were greeted by a familiar-looking maid. She was young, tall, and wore her long blonde hair in two tidy braids on the back of her head under that white frilly headwear-thing that all stereotypical maids sported all the time. Her name was... Ugh... something starting with ‘M'...Melissa, maybe?
She clapped her hands and the gates opened by themselves, though the soft whirring noise coming from the nearby bushes told me it was probably just some mundane machinery that did the heavy lifting. She lowered her head and curtsied to us as we came closer.
"Welcome back, milady. Shall I tell the staff to prepare the parlor?"
"The parlor?" the princess muttered uncertainly. The maid looked over each one of us in turn and lowered her head apologetically.
"My apologies. I presumed we were having guests."
"Oh no, they are just—"
The princess began, but it was at this moment that a sudden idea kicked down the back doors of my frontal lobe screaming, urging me to step forwards and raise my hand in a hurry.
"Actually!" I interjected loudly, baffling everyone present for a moment, including myself. I cleared my throat and smiled awkwardly before I lowered my voice and continued. "Actually, I don't think we have seen your mansion from the inside, have we?"
"No, we haven't," Judy answered immediately, apparently deciding to follow my lead even though I gave her no reason to do so. My assistant was on the top of her game as always. I sent her an appreciative glance and faced the other two again.
"Isn't this a good opportunity to do that? It would be a better way to end the day than to just separate here."
"True," Judy nodded and we both looked at the princess expectantly. She was taken aback by our proposal at first, but she quickly collected herself and grinned at us in full nobility mode.
"I agree. I don't think there should be any harm in doing so." She turned on her heel and addressed the maid next. "Please tell the twins we have guests after all. Could you prepare us some tea and biscuits?"
"Most certainly," the young servant woman answered with another curtsy.
I let the princess cross the gate first and urged Judy with my eyes to follow. I trailed after them a few steps behind, but as I entered the courtyard I immediately gestured for the maid to come closer. She was confused at first but still walked over to my side in the end.
"Yes? Can I help you?"
"I really hope so," I told her while glancing back at the girls. They stopped only a couple of meters ahead of us, where the princess was in the middle of animatedly showing Judy around a small pond. I turned my attention back at the maid and, after pondering on her name for a few seconds longer, took a stab in the dark.
"Melinda, right?" If she was surprised, it didn't show on her face, but instead she just nodded sharply. She was a professional. "Is Sebastian around?"
"Yes, von Fraenir is in the mansion. Do you wish to keep your presence hidden from him?" I raised a single brow at her inquiry, so she added, "I was under the impression you are not on the best of terms."
"That is a very polite way to say that we hate each other's guts, but you are actually correct. However, I would actually like to ask for the opposite. Could you tell him I wish to talk to him?" She blinked at me like she didn't understand the request, so I added, "It's about draconian business."
Her eyes narrowed in a frown and she nodded sharply. I returned the gesture and swiftly followed after the others, who were in the process of discussing the architectural style of the mansion's veranda. I wasn't particularly well-versed in the field of architecture, so I pretended to understand what Elly was talking about and periodically nodded in agreement to whatever she said.
One thing was clear though: the place was fancy as hell on the outside, but it held no candle to the interior. The foyer even had a big, crystal chandelier that would've looked gaudy anywhere else, but since everything was so gaudy to begin with, it fit right in. I admittedly knew even less about interior design than architecture, but looking at the décor made me think of the word ‘Victorian'. It was all about showing off the wealth and patina of the household, though the amount of gold and rare wood in the hallways was maybe a bit of an overkill.
The parlor itself wasn't half shabby either. It was huge, dominated by a gently burning hearth surrounded by a set of old, leather-bound red sofas arranged around a coffee table. It had a thick glass top sitting on four cast-metal legs in the shape of, surprise-surprise, dragons. The walls were also covered with a series of fancy (not to mention expensive) looking paintings depicting aged patriarchs with stern brows, unexpectedly outnumbered by the matriarchs trying to out-glare the men. I guess it ran in the family.
"That one is great-grandfather Antonio. He was a duke in Italy," the princess chattered as she pointed at the next painting in turn. We were going backward in chronological order, and I could see the change in the art style of each painting, but even the latest one seemed quite old. It was a little disappointing, as I was actually hoping to see if they had a cubist portrait. It would've looked hilarious in this environment, but alas, I had no such luck.
"Are all of them your ancestors?" I asked as I arrived at their side.
"Yes." Elly nodded with a proud smile. "These are the members of the main family from the past five hundred years!"
That made me remember a question I wanted to ask for quite some time, so I raised my hand like in the classroom and waited for the princess to notice me.
"Yes?"
"I have a question."
"By all means, ask."
I pointedly looked over the paintings one more time before I turned back to her.
"Looking at the age of these portraits makes me curious. Just how long do you draconians live?"
Our host raised a contemplative finger to her lips.
"It depends. Those with thinner blood only age a little slower than humans, so... about one hundred and twenty. Give or take a decade."
"And the ones with thicker blood?" Judy followed up while inconspicuously poking at her phone. She must've been taking notes for a while by now. Elly cocked her head to the side in reaction, with her finger still on her lower lip.
"I... Actually, I don't know. Being a draconian is very dangerous, so few of us die of old age. I think father once mentioned that my great-grandpa lived for over three hundred years and he was the oldest living draconian at the time." She paused, and seeing the completely unrelated expression of interest on my face, she continued with renewed vigor. "I don't know how old one of us could get, but dragons were rumored to be so long-lived they were practically immortal, so I don't see why we couldn't be like that once—" She suddenly winced, apparently remembering something unpleasant that momentarily scrunched up her face. She shook her head and forced a smile onto her lips a moment later. "B-But that's beside the point. Let's talk about something more interesting."
"No no. This was very interesting. Thank you very much."
"You are... welcome?" the princess answered with a somewhat confused expression, probably completely unaware of the fact that she just handed me the last puzzle piece I needed to make my upcoming discussion with the annoying butler a hundred times more profitable.
I was ready to move on, but no matter how hard I tried to ignore it, the skewed gender-ratio was bothering me, so I asked, "By the way, is your family more likely to have daughters? Is it a draconian thing?"
Elly didn't understand my question at first, but then she followed my gaze, and once she saw that I was still looking at the paintings, she quickly shook her head.
"Oh, that's not it. Those are the wives of the past patriarchs."
"That doesn't add up," Judy noted at my side, and I shoved my agreement with a grunt. My ballpark estimate said that for every male portrait, there was an average of two and a half women.
"It's because the patriarchs of the past had more than one wife," Elly informed me like it was common knowledge. "It was necessary to keep up the bloodline. Dad doesn't practice it, but one of my uncles has three wives, and my grandpa…"
The princess continued to explain her family's peculiar traditions, but I couldn't really pay attention, as the word 'precedent' was ringing in my head like a naval cannon. Nudging Elly to invite us in was rapidly turning into one of the best decisions I've ever made. I couldn't help but wonder if I could keep up the track record during my meeting with the butler as well.
By chance (or maybe not, as I could totally imagine her waiting until we finished talking), the blonde maid showed up in the doorway and gestured to me. I smiled back at her and said to the girls; "Uh... I think I drank one too many cans of coke today. I need to use the toilet." The princess let out a soft giggle and was ready to show me the way, but I raised my hands apologetically and subsequently pointed at the maid. "You really don't need to. I'll ask her. You two stay here and have your tea. I'll be back before you know it."
As if they were waiting for my words as well, a pair of thin maids with bob-cuts entered the parlor pushing two small serving carts; one with an elaborate porcelain tea set and another with a veritable mountain of biscuits and other sweets. I smiled at them appreciatively, though they didn't return the gesture. They were also a little familiar, and after wracking my brain for a few seconds I could recall them from the time when I first took the princess home. They didn't seem particularly friendly back then either, so I just shrugged them off.
Following this, I headed towards the blonde servant still standing by the doorway and she immediately turned around to lead the way. I followed half a step behind her as we ventured into the depths of the estate. That might have sounded overly dramatic, but trust me, the place was massive.
Long story short, navigating the hallways and stairwells of the mansion for several minutes, we arrived in front of a heavy mahogany door with the words ‘Sebastian von Fraenir' engraved onto its surface at eye-level with a thick, golden font. So the guy had his own office with his name on it. Neat. I was ready to knock and enter, since I was in a bit of a hurry, as I told the girls I was only leaving for a couple of minutes, but I was stopped by a polite cough at my side. I faced the young maid with a curious "Yes?"
"Before you enter, may I ask you something?"
"Of course."
"Considering that this might be the last time we have the fortune to talk..."
"Well, that's not ominous at all!" I grumbled with a roll of my eyes. I could swear I saw the corners of her lips twitch, but she continued like I didn't interrupt her.
"... I was somewhat curious about one thing. How did you know my name?"
"It's because the princess told me." I wanted to add a soft ‘Duh!', but I refrained.
"She did?"
"Yes, just a couple of days ago, actually. During lunch break, to be exact." I paused and flashed a smile. "By the way, I appreciated your help with the lunch box. It was delicious."
"The lunchbox was milady's creation in its entirety. Neither I nor any other servant took part in its making." She corrected me in a slightly mechanical voice, like her line was rehearsed or something.
"Except for suggesting the pepper," I corrected her playfully.
"... She told you about that too?"
"Of course she did. Why, is that strange?"
She paused again while she collected her thoughts and finally shook her head.
"No, it isn't." After a moment more she gave me a shallow curtsy and bow. "Please continue to support milady in the future."
I was taken aback for a moment, but in the end I let out an awkward chuckle and answered with, "That was actually what I wanted to ask you."
She nodded with a level of solemnity that was completely unbefitting the situation and excused herself. She pattered away in a dignified strut, her large skirts all but billowing as she walked. I waited for her to disappear out of sight before I turned to the door and promptly knocked.
"Come in," came the familiar voice of the old butler from inside. He didn't have to say it twice, as I already had my fingers on the doorknob.
The inside of the large office, or whatever it was called, somehow managed to be even posher than the rest of the mansion. It also had a gently burning fireplace like the parlor, but instead of the unified look of that room, this place looked more like a giant, elaborate trophy room filled to the brim with objects from vastly different cultures. The floor was covered by Persian rugs, the furniture looked vaguely Chinese, the walls were covered in a wide variety of wild game trophies, plaques with various weapons and other items mounted on them, and there was even a full set of gilded plate armor standing in the corner holding a plain spear that nevertheless shone with that ethereal glow I already began to associate with magic.
Combine that with the red lighting of the room, provided by the open fireplace and the last rays of the sunset, and add in that weird smell of history that seemed to permeate every really old place, and it truly felt like I stepped into a different world altogether. I didn't wonder for long though, as the old butler cleared his throat and drew my attention to him. He was standing by a large, curtained window and stared into the distance. Or maybe he was just refusing to look at me as some sort of silly social power-play. Sure, we could still see each other in the eye through his reflection on the glass, but it was still rude.
"So it is true." He let out a decidedly sinister chuckle. "To think you would willingly come to my lair to have counsel with—" His eyes suddenly opened wide and a second later he turned on his heel and shouted, "Put that down!"
"What, this?" I waved the statuette I picked up from the drawer next to the door. It looked similar to one of those Neolithic fertility idols, except obviously more recent. "I was just curious. What does it do?"
The butler rushed up to my side and snatched the statuette out of my hand.
"It is none of your business. Who gave you permission to touch anything?!"
"Sorry, but it's just hard to contain myself with all of these interesting things around me. Like that creepy Japanese doll over there, or that lion head on the wall, or that spear. Especially the spear."
The old man's face tensed up as he looked me over again. He placed the statuette back onto the drawer and faced me with a measured voice.
"What do you find interesting about that spear?"
"It's enchanted or something," I told him off-handedly while I walked over to one of the old sofas and gestured for my host to join me. "Anyways, I came to talk business, so we should get started."
Sebastian glared at me before he sharply exhaled through his flared nostrils and walked over to the sofa in front of mine.
"And here I was hoping milady has finally convinced you to apologize for your insolence. How foolish of me."
"Foolish indeed," I nodded sagely, completely ignoring his thundering eyes. "I am looking for information."
"Are you now?" He swept back his monochrome hair as he sat down and looked me in the eye. "According to what I've heard, you wanted to discuss," he raised his hands and continued, in air-quotes, "'draconian business.'"
"Well, kind of. It would be more accurate to say that what I want to discuss might interest you as the steward of the Dracis family. It might even concern the estate's security."
The change in my tone made him falter for a moment, but at last he let down his hands.
"Speak then."
I took a deep breath and began, "First and foremost, I wondered if you knew about any out-of-place characters wandering in the neighborhood."
He eyed me for a few seconds, but then he said, "Only a trio of children of your age. They have been wandering around the streets as if looking for something, but they hardly seem to be a threat to us."
"I think I know the guys you are talking about, and I agree. Those guys couldn't threaten their way out of a wet paper bag if their lives depended on it."
"... That doesn't seem to make any sense."
"I know. It sounded better in my head," I told him with a sigh before I continued. "Let me try this from another angle: what can you tell me about Fauns?"
The word immediately resulted in a surprised look that slowly eased back into a scowl.
"And why do you think I could tell you anything about Fauns. They are creatures of the Abyss, not of our kin."
"True, but considering you have been around for, what, fifteen centuries? I figured you might have picked up a few bits and pieces along the way."
The old man's demeanor changed again, this time hovering between caution and open hostility.
"I have to say, I have no idea what you are talking about."
"Oh come on," I exclaimed with a wave of my hand. "There are records of you going back as far as the early middle ages. True, they are fragmentary and vague, but there aren't exactly a lot of people related to dragons with white stripes in their hair running around kidnapping royalty for ransom. I'm surprised no one else made the connection yet." At this point he looked like he was ready to snap my neck and bury me in the backyard, so I sighed and waved again. "Don't get so worked up, I just told you no one else made the connection that you are not just a draconian in service of the Dracis but an actual—" I was suddenly interrupted when the old man's body started making actual, literal cracking noises as he grew a good head taller in a matter of seconds. I raised my open palms in surrender and hastily added, "I figure you already know what I'm talking about, so I won't spell it out."
The now oversized butler steadied himself, and after a couple of seconds, he somehow deflated to his original size while he still glared at me with actually glowing eyes.
"Give me one good reason why I shouldn't fry you where you are," he hissed through clenched teeth.
"I can give you three," I answered with a smile to make sure the cold sweat on my back wouldn't show on my face. "One, it would damage the sofa, and that would be a shame. Two, it would make the princess sad, which is an even bigger shame. Three... you can't."
His eyes still burning with a strange red glow (which was probably not just the ethereal magic light I have been seeing recently, as it was casting shadows around me), Sebastian slowly cocked his head to the side.
"And pray tell, just why can't I erase you right here and now?"
"Remember those records I told you about?" I asked, and he nodded. "They are not exactly public, but if I stumbled upon them, so can someone else. Even if something happens to me, they are still out there. Sooner or later others might find out, and then they might use it as a bargaining chip, like blackmailing you, or selling it to a third party that may or may not be hunting your kind."
"You are doing that already."
"No, I am not blackmailing you yet. Quite the opposite, actually. I'm offering you an opportunity to get rid of some stray evidence pointing at you being more than just an old draconian."
"Indeed. You are catching on quickly despite being so old."
Sebastian snorted and his eyes finally stopped glowing. He fixed his tie and sat down again.
"Not that it seems to matter to you. Back in my days, the young actually respected their elder."
"I see." I smiled at his slightly less murderous tone and clapped my hands in a gesture to dispel the previous tension. "Now that we have all that behind us, let's talk business. So, about Fauns. What can you tell me?"
The old butler leaned back in his seat and crossed his legs before leaning forwards again and resting his chin on his knuckle.
"Would you mind telling me why you want to know about them? Does it have something to do with your first question?"
I hesitated for a moment, but I decided to be honest about it.
"It does. I ran into one this week." The old man's face became stern again, but this time it was not aimed at me. His eyes hurried me to continue, so I did. "It was after dark, only a couple of streets from here. I couldn't make him out properly, but I'm fairly sure it was a Faun."
"This is the first time I've heard of this. It is indeed a security risk," Sebastian stated in a surprisingly soft voice. "Boy, if you told me this from the beginning, it would have made your whole charade unnecessary."
I wanted to ask what kind of ‘charade' he was talking about, but I refrained. I shrugged and continued by saying, "So, what can you tell me about Fauns?"
My host gave me a wry look before he let out a soft grunt and answered with, "They are the loyal lapdogs of the Abyssal Lords. The older they get, the bigger and more dangerous they become, but they are not a threat." I once again tried to imitate the way Josh raised only one skeptical eyebrow, and seeing it made Sebastian clear his throat. "To us. They are no threat to us. To you, however..." There was another long pause as the butler's eyebrows slowly furrowed, resulting in a question. "Tell me, boy, how did you meet this Faun? Was it after the young lady?"
"It was probably hunting me," I answered him honestly, earning another skeptical look from the man.
"Would you mind telling me why you would think a Faun would 'hunt' you?"
I let out a self-derisive chuckle and awkwardly scratched the base of my neck as I told him, "You see, I might've ever so slightly antagonized the current head of house Inanna."
"... How so?"
I let out another awkward laugh while trying to find a way to change the topic, but the butler's eyes looked so uncharacteristically curious I gave in and told him, "Well, I told him he sounded like a creepy uncle in public, then I called his death threats lame, and in the end, I gave him an embarrassing nickname. Oh, and I called him a dick a couple of times in conversation. That's all I can think of right now."
Sebastian gave me a measuring look before he simply stated, "Exactly the kind of insolence I expected from you."
"Hey!" I protested, albeit feebly, before I shook my head and said, "Anyways, we were talking about the Faun, right? Have you heard anything about looking one in the eye?"
By this point most of the hostility of the old man completely disappeared in favor of curiosity.
"Looking them in the eye..." He stroked his beard for a while, probably stalling for time just to piss me off, and after a while he shook his head. "It has been ages since I have last seen one of those brutish creatures in person, and I never had any problem looking them in the eye. I have, however, heard tales about how a single look from a powerful Faun could paralyze even the bravest warrior. I always considered that just a poetic way of saying they were quite frightening for your ancestors."
"So you have heard nothing about after-images? Or glowing orange specters?"
"No, I can't say I have."
I clicked my tongue in frustration. "Damn, I thought if there was anyone who knew about this, it would be a—" I swallowed back the end of my sentence upon seeing the hostility returning to the old man's eyes, and I hastily replaced it with, "a steward of the Dracis family."
"Life can be disappointing like that," Sebastian murmured while crossing his fingers on his lap. "So, about those ‘bits of information' you were talking about..."
I mirrored his pose and shook my head. "So far your secrets and what we just discussed are not even in the same ballpark. You are going to have to give me more. A lot more."
"You are testing my patience, boy..."
"That's strange. I've heard the elderly were supposed to be quite patient." I shook my head with a smile and looked the man in the eye. "I want an exchange of equal value."
The old man exhaled in exhaustion.
"Fine, name your price."
"More information," I answered immediately. "I would like to have access to any records you might have. History of draconians, biographies, past involvements, any info you have on the other Old Blooded, et cetera."
Sebastian lapsed back into glaring at me.
"You are getting greedy, boy."
"I know," I answered with a grin. "But I also thought of a bargaining chip that I would throw in as a gratis."
"Oh? And what would that be?"
I let the smile creep even wider on my face.
"I heard you are not exactly on good terms with the knights with the ridiculously long name?"
The old man's demeanor took a sudden turn to the grim at the mere mention of 'knights'. It wasn't the kind of anger he showed whenever I messed around with him, but a genuine, coldly burning hate.
"You are a master of understatement," he much less said than spat the words at me, and I reflexively swallowed, but then I immediately retreated behind my fake smile.
"Why, thank you." I paused here for a moment to lean closer and spoke in a softer voice, "So, what would you say if I told you I could give you detailed information on their activities in the past couple of months?"
The old man's eyes flared up with a mixture of surprise and suspicion.
"And how would you even have such information?"
"Does it really matter? I have it, and while they are as good at covering their tracks as you are, there's still a lot of evidence you could mine out of it. Who knows what kinds of disasters you could avert by having all that at your fingertips?"
Sebastian grit his teeth in frustration, yet it didn't take long for him to relent.
"So let me see if I understand your proposal. You wish to trade my identity and information on the movements of the accursed knights, information that you refuse to source, in exchange for access to the Dracis library."
"If by ‘library' you mean the archives the family accumulated over the centuries, then yes."
"And what if the information you provide proves to be useless."
I shrugged.
"Hey, the same could be said about your library. It might be completely useless to me." I leaned forward even more and linked my fingers for emphasis. "But what if it isn't? Can you afford the chance?"
The old butler followed my example and said, "In other words, we are both gambling. At worst neither of us gets what they want, at best we both walk away content." He narrowed his eyes and added, "The only problem is that I'm not going to gamble on our household's security."
"You don't need to. You can exclude any information that would pose a direct threat to the Dracis family or yourself."
"How generous of you."
"I know," I answered with a self-conscious grin.
We sat in silence for several minutes while Sebastian mulled over my offer. It also gave me a little time to think about what I was doing, and it made me want to hit myself. Talking with the butler itself was a spur-of-the-moment idea, but it somehow spiraled into something far more dangerous. But then again, I was looking for information of any kind, and having a different source aside from the Celestial Hub might not have been such a bad idea.
At last, Sebastian harrumphed, drawing my attention back to him.
"Very well, boy. I naturally have to discuss this with the patriarch, but if he agrees with your terms then, I shall grant you access to our library." He paused meaningfully before he added, "I hope you will live up to your end of the bargain, or I might really just have to hunt you." He paused again, this time more spontaneously, and for the first time, I saw him smile. It was unnerving, to say the least. "Though, on second thought, at least I can look forward to that if you turn out to be a sham."
"Good for you," I told him with a fake smile and stood up. "How long do you think the process will take?"
"I will have our answer by tomorrow night."
"I can work with that," I told him before clapping my hands. "Now then, if you excuse me, I have to get back before the girls start missing me."
I offered him a hand to shake and he grudgingly accepted it, though he made a point out of crushing my poor fingers. It wasn't that bad though, and it only took about ten minutes for the feeling to return to my hand. Anyways, I left after he made some more thinly veiled threats and headed back to the parlor... or I would have if I had any idea about where to go.
As I mentioned beforehand, the mansion was pretty big and uniformly posh, and I really couldn't remember the way I came from. For a moment I even entertained the thought of turning around and asking the old butler for directions, but then I remembered that I had some alternatives, so I just used my Far Sight to figure out which direction to go... which actually provided me with a new surprise.
I already figured out that if I was only using my Far Sight in general, without any person in mind, I could tell where certain people were in relation to me. This is how I figured out that there would be a secret underground mage school dungeon thing underneath Blue Cherry High even before I actually learned about it. As I did just that and slipped into a shallow daze, I could quickly pick out the princess and Judy, but there was another presence very close to me. I focused on it, and suddenly I (or at least my vision) was back in Sebastian's ‘office', where he was in the middle of a heated conversation on an old-school rotary phone.
The door was probably soundproofed, I figured, but more importantly, this meant that I could use my Far Sight on Sebastian as well. I was fairly sure I couldn't do that before, and the only thing that changed was...
"Physical contact, huh?" I mused as I continued rubbing my still aching right hand. That was nice to know.
That said, I didn't actually listen into the man's conversation, as I was in a hurry. I focused my attention on the girls and after some trial and error, I managed to bumble my way back to the parlor. I was prepared for some apologizing about my tardiness, but maybe exactly because of that, I was woefully unprepared for the sight as I entered the room.
I only left for about twenty minutes yet the entire place changed, courtesy of the mountain of clothes strewn on the sofas and tables. They looked like gowns of various levels of fanciness, yet they were draped over the furniture like they were work clothes a tired guy threw down after a long day at his job. My two companions, on the other hand, were nowhere to be seen. I was just about to use Far Sight again when I noticed some movement near the back door at the other end of the parlor, which itself was a new find I didn't notice before.
"Oh, you are back," Melinda noted dispassionately as she walked in. "And with all limbs attached. Impressive."
"Thank you, I guess," I answered reflexively and waved towards the clothes. "What is all this about?"
"Milady wanted to ask Miss Judy's opinion on some of her formal wear."
"Just on a whim?"
"Yes. Is there a problem with that?"
"No, it's just unexpected," I told her while I looked over the mess again. "I also don't know where to sit."
"There is no reason for you to sit down. They should be back at any moment."
"If you say so..." I responded half-heartedly as my eyes lingered on the gowns. Some of them were surprisingly risqué, but before I could study them any further, I noticed that the blonde maid was staring at me expectantly. "Yes? Is there something else?"
"I was just wondering, if I am not indiscreet, about how well your counsel with meister von Fraenir went."
"Oh, that?" I shrugged as I ran my eyes over a red dress that looked like it was made to be held on by double-sided tape. I momentarily tried to imagine the princess in it, then Judy, then finally I returned my attention to the conversation before I started blushing. "It was less ‘counsel' and more ‘mutually advantageous agreement', but yes, it went well."
"I am glad to hear that. That means I—"
Whatever she wanted to say was cut short by the back door opening again and the princess backing out of it while dragging something.
"Come on! Stop being so obstinate!"
"I'm not," came the slightly petulant answer from the other side. The words barely registered though, as my attention was caught by the princess's attire. It was a shiny, silken one-piece red dress with a narrow neckline that plunged down nearly to her belly button and an open-sided skirt that revealed that she was barefoot. As Judy was dragged into the parlor, I saw that she was also wearing a dress. Hers was infinitely more modest, and it reminded me of a dark-blue Chinese qipao, but it also had detached sleeves with those weird fingerless evening gloves that ended with a ring one had to put on their middle finger.
They weren't wearing any makeup or had their hair done up (not that they needed to, considering the way hairdos worked around these parts), yet they looked so different that if I saw them on the street, it might've taken me a while to recognize them. They were really pretty. Or rather, prettier than usual.
"Come on, we need to take up our place before he comes back!" Elly insisted while dragging my assistant, and I found this to be a good opportunity to interject.
"Actually, I'm already back."
The princess froze in place and glanced over her shoulder.
"Oh... H-Hi Leo..."
"Hi," I answered her awkward greeting as she straightened herself and gave me an embarrassed smile.
"You... Um... You were late, so we thought..."
While the princess shared her excuses with me, I slowly walked over to her and took a better look at her from up close.
"Hm... This dress really suits you."
"You... think so?"
"Yes. It might be a little bold, but it brings out your... personality."
"He is talking about your br—" my assistant offered her deadpan contribution to the conversation from the side, but I cut her off.
"Yep, red fits your personality perfectly. And the cut really emphasizes your... eyes."
"He still means your bre—" Judy interjected again, but I cut her off once more.
"Yes, the blue of your eyes really comes to the forefront like that." I looked at Judy to see if she had anything else to add, but she only gave me a ‘We both know what you really mean, and you would only cut me off anyway, so why should I bother?' look (admittedly her eyes were a little verbose every once in a while.) As I looked over though, I found myself paying extra attention to my assistant as I slowly circled her. "Speaking of blue, this dress looks great too."
"If you say so," she feigned disinterest, but the slight flush on her cheeks betrayed her.
"Yeah, it suits you surprisingly well."
The blush immediately disappeared as it came as she narrowed her eyes.
"'Surprisingly'?"
"Oh come on, stop complaining and just take the compliment," I told her while I poked her in the crease between her brows. "By the way, while I would be lying if I said it wasn't fun to see you girls in a different outfit, I still can't help but wonder what this is all about."
"It was Eleanor's idea," Judy told me as she removed my finger from her de-scowlified forehead.
"I-It wasn't just to show them off to you!" the princess exclaimed once her words sank in. "It's for the ball!"
"... What ball?"
"The Christmas ball!"
"Oh, that..." I nodded knowingly even though this was the first time I've ever heard of it. "But it's only October."
"You can never start preparing for these things early enough," she told me with a puffed chest that threatened to spill out of her outfit. "Gowns like these have to be fitted before the event, so we have to pick them in advance."
"I see..." I agreed noncommittally as I turned to Judy. "And you?"
"I was just swept up in it."
I was about to ask what they were planning to do with the rest of the outfits scattered in the parlor when the princess suddenly inserted herself between us.
"Actually, now that you are here, you could help us choose!"
"Us?"
Judy sounded a little startled, and I shared some of her sentiment... but then again, this was an opportunity to look at pretty girls wearing tastefully skimpy clothes, and while I was trying not to get myself bogged down on the relationship end of things yet, it didn't mean I didn't appreciate the female form. Not to mention, if playing around like this helped them bond, it was an absolute win for me.
"Fine by me," I told them with a smile, and much to my surprise, my assistant didn't even protest any further.