Became a Medieval Fantasy Wizard - chapter 2
# 2
There is a term called ‘dragon
reverse scale’.
It refers to a scale that
sprouts upside down in a dragon’s jaw, touching it supposedly causes the dragon
to rampage, incinerating its surroundings.
Thus, it often refers to ‘the
point you should never touch’ as the reverse scale.
A woman is not a being that
grows scales, but she has a limit. That limit for women is ‘age’. This can be
explained biologically since the chance for a woman over 30 to bear healthy
children rapidly decreases. No parent in the world wishes for their offspring
to be born sick or weak. So, men instinctively prefer younger women. Women, in
turn, wish to remain eternally young. Unlike women, men don’t see their
reproductive abilities diminish with age (although their virility might). It is
not uncommon to hear stories of men over 60 getting women in their 20s
pregnant. That’s why men are unperturbed when hearing the term ‘Uncle’. Ageing
is sombre, but it’s not something one can deny. However, for a woman to be
called ‘Auntie’ is a blow, suggesting the end of life. Hyperbolically speaking,
it sounds like, ‘You, as a woman, are finished’. “Am I… an auntie now?”
She shudders. Even from a
distance, the shaking of her shoulders is evident. The younger sister has no
idea.
My little sister had disappeared
somewhere. I wasn’t worried. She moved around all the time and this place was
as familiar to her as our yard. Go ahead, and eat some wild strawberries first.
I focused my attention on the woman in front of me.
“Excuse me, but who are you,
traveller?”
The woman looked a bit surprised
as she looked back at me.
Polite speech that didn’t match
his age. Completely different from my little sister.
“I am Eredis. A wandering
wizard.”
“…A wizard?”
I was surprised. This place is
medieval, but it’s a fantasy world. A land where monsters and magic exist.
Here, a wizard is another name
for war. Where there is war, there is a wizard. Actually, seeing a wizard for
the first time, I felt an inexplicable fear. The wizard is a vague entity.
Obviously, since I have never met one in my past life, that existence can only
be fearful.
‘Why is a wizard here…’
I recalled the common sense of
this world.
A wizard is another name that
means war.
‘Could it be…war going to happen
soon?’
But soon I shook my head. The
ruler of this village, the Feldenberg family, is not wealthy enough to wage war
by bringing in a wizard. They are just able to fend off thieves; what could
they do with a wizard? But, of course, we cannot disregard thieves. Once
thieves establish a system, they become an army, and the leader of the thieves
is often eventually called a lord. Still, to properly conduct war, the power of
the Feldenberg family is woefully inadequate.
“I came to find a black-haired
boy who lives in this village…”
“Pardon?”
The woman who introduced herself
as Eredis looked intently at my hair as she spoke.
If he wasn’t a child with the
disgusting hobby of dying his hair, Ian would be the ‘black-haired boy’ that
the wizard was looking for.
“Do you know of any other
black-haired boys?”
Ian shook his head.
He was the only black-haired
boy, hence the honourable nickname: ‘Ian the Raven’.
“I’m the only one.”
After observing Ian for a
moment, the wizard Eredis burst into a cheerful laugh.
“The time sorcerers, really.”
‘Time sorcerer?’
To Ian, these words were
incomprehensible.
#
Eredis Manscarl was a wandering
wizard.
The Empire’s wizards can be
categorized into two main classes; secular wizards and truth-seekers.
Secular wizards – commonly
referred to as “wizards” – are those who learn magic to influence others. War
wizards and university professors of magic belong to this group.
On the contrary, truth-seekers
don’t settle in one place, they are always on the move.
Their sole purpose is to explore
magic. They are the ones who spare no effort to achieve greater success.
There isn’t a clear distinction
between the two. A truth-seeker might accept the favour of a noble and settle
down, or a comfortable person might choose a journey for magical attainment.
Eredis leaned more towards being
a truth-seeker by nature.
Achieving higher grounds and
becoming a great wizard.
Leaving her accomplishments to
future generations to progress the world. These were Eredis’ reasons and
purpose in life.
At thirty-five, she was a pretty
well-known wizard among other wizards. Once a person attains a certain level of
stability in life, they naturally desire to have children. Having achieved
respectable accomplishments as a wizard, Eredis began to entertain the slight
yearning to take on an apprentice.
As if penetrating her every
thought, a magician came looking for her. His name was Gerard, a comparatively
ordinary man from Eredis.
“Do you not want to take a
disciple these days?”
“Where did you get that peculiar
idea from?”
For a wandering magician to come
‘looking for her’ was strange in itself, but Gerard was a notorious spacetime
magician with no ability to control the storm. Their ability to control time
and space allowed them to pull threads of the future from beyond time,
resorting to offering ‘prophecies’ as a kind of mischief. It was never clear
what they had actually seen in the future.
Gerard offered Eredis some
unexpected information.
“Seek out a black-haired boy in
the Feldenberg territory of Kolabrun. If you make him your disciple, good
things will inevitably happen.”
Eredis dismissed Gerard’s advice
with a snort.
The prophecies of spacetime
magicians were usually like that – do something somewhere, and good things will
happen. It was an open secret that spacetime magicians shared visions of the
future amongst themselves. Moreover, she knew that at the meetings of the
spacetime magicians, there were endless debates on what constitutes a ‘better
future’. To realize their version of a ‘better future’, spacetime magicians
wouldn’t hesitate to manipulate people in the present. That’s why they were so
often scorned. It was annoying to see them in the background constantly
whispering about the future, trying to play God.
Eredis pondered.
She thought – Gerard had seen
some strange future that he was now pushing her to make a reality. Spacetime
magicians did not speak explicitly about the future. The first reason was that
they were not 100% sure of the future, and the second was a prohibition on
disclosing prophecies.
There was no reason for Eredis
to heed Gerard’s advice.
While Gerard would be
disappointed, he would soon move on to seek another future.
Yet, the spacetime magician’s
proposal was enticing. They enjoyed changing the future by using others as
chess pieces. To manipulate others, they needed a premise, which usually goes
like, ‘Good things will happen if you listen to me.’
True enough, good things did
happen if one followed the word of a spacetime magician.
But it felt terrible to become a
puppet in their schemes.
This was the second reason why
spacetime magicians were reviled.
‘Maybe I should go just for
fun.’
While Gerard made the
proposition, it was Eredis who had the choice.
There was no need to seriously
consider it. Just act based on your mood. Do it if you want to, and stop if you
don’t. However, Eredis hadn’t been feeling great lately. Her magical progress
was halted by a wall, stuck in one place. With no recent happiness in sight,
she thought it may cheer her up to go on a journey. After all, travelling was
what Eredis had been doing her whole life. Shortly after, she headed straight
for the Kolabrun region. And as cursed by the Time Mage’s prophecy, she met the
young boy with black hair. The first button of the prophecy was stitched
together.
“Little one, what’s your name?”
“It’s Ian.”
Eredis gently touched the boy’s
head. His eyes, a mix of curiosity and fear, shone brightly with charm.
According to Gerard, the Time mage. She should take this unfortunate kid as an
apprentice, right?
“I suppose there’s no need to
beat around the bush. I came here to make you my apprentice.”
“… Eh?”
Ian was speechless at Eredis’s
sudden proposition. Here was a woman he just met today, saying she was going to
make him her apprentice. Surely, apprentice isn’t a euphemism for experimental
sacrifice, is it?
“You’re… taking me as your
apprentice?”
“Indeed! I want to teach you
magic. What do you think?”
“…”
Ian could not continue speaking.
A tremendous shock had hit his head.
Whether in his past life or
present one, skills were power.
As the saying goes, if you learn
a skill, you won’t starve to death, and artisans are respected everywhere
because they do work others cannot.
Therefore, there is always a
price for learning a skill.
Whether that’s money or
connections. Without offering something in return, one cannot learn a skill.
This is exactly why Ian cannot
dream of a job besides farming.
Not only does he lack money, but
there’s also nobody around to teach him a skill. Who in their right mind would
hand over their precious means of livelihood to a stranger for free?
In this world, it’s absurdly
tough to even begin to learn a skill.
After establishing some
acquaintances through introductions, you have to serve as an apprentice for
years at the very least, conforming to the artisan’s ways.
You provide meals, take care of
the artisan’s family, do mundane tasks, and accept verbal abuse…
Only after being treated like a
slave for 3-4 years will they finally begrudgingly teach you the simplest of
skills. After learning each skill one at a time, you begin to dream of working
independently after about 10 years.
If your master happens to be a
famous artisan, new apprentices might come in during this time.
Then there are the first,
second-line apprentices. That’s how the hierarchy gets established.
While the gap between ranks
isn’t substantial when it comes to an individual taking on an apprentice, in
guild-like places that have been in business for over 100 years, the rank
system keeps expanding, and various bad customs grow like cancer cells.
Polishing your senior’s shoes,
and preparing their tools in advance.
Always greeting them with a
90-degree bow. Smiling and accepting even their crappiest jokes…
Anyway.
Learning someone else’s skills
is no easy task. The only ones who would teach their skills without any
recompense are parents.
But an exception had just
appeared before him.
Eredis.
“I…I don’t know.”
Good things usually come with a
catch.
Crooks exploit human greed to do
their business. They play with people’s hearts by whispering extraordinary
offers that only a fool would refuse.
If Ian had been an ordinary
medieval man, he might have fallen for it right away.
But Ian was a reincarnated
medieval man.
His Korean black hair served as
proof.
“Is she a fraud?”
Human trafficker. That’s the
term that comes to Ian’s mind.
To begin with, Eredis did seem
like a real wizard. Because she was travelling alone as a woman. Otherwise, her
companions must be hiding somewhere in the forest. That would make her a
kidnapper.
‘…What?’
Meanwhile, Eredis was speechless
at the change in Ian’s eyes.
It’s inappropriate to claim
herself, but Eredis is one of the most popular wizards nowadays. In other
words, she is a wizard in high demand.
Even the noisy ones have already
started calling her ‘the great Eredis’.
And she, Eredis herself, had
asked if he wanted to be her disciple.
What’s with that look in his
eyes? It was as if he was looking at a street vendor fraud!
If she went to any city and
announced that Wizard Eredis was looking for a disciple, it would be
overflowing with volunteers.
However, the pure evil from the
boy, who was completely unaware of that fact, left a scratch on Eredis’s pride.
“What do you not understand?
Huh? Tell me.”
Ian was in a dilemma. How could
he say ‘You seem like a fraud’ indirectly?
So, he said this.
“Big sister… seems like a fake
magician.”
“???”
Eredis was staggered by the
shock.
Wizard Eredis.
To be slapped with it by Ian,
right after his sister…
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