Chapter 61
âThe Demon Princess and the Teacher of Formulasâ [Demon Princess Arc â ]
The October morning wind brushed against the stone walls of the tower, stretching the shadows of the tree-lined path.
It was the day of the academyâs twice-yearly entrance ceremony. The clear chime of the spireâs bells rang out, and the schoolâs emblem flag fluttered with the scent of a new season.
Class Cross had advanced to their second year, and Lutitia and her classmates were now officially seniors.
From the balcony overlooking the courtyard, a single newcomer at the end of the line caught everyoneâs eye.
Her hair shimmered like molten moonlight, faintly tinted with the hue of cherry blossoms.
Her eyes were a deep violet, reminiscent of a tranquil lake.
Her uniform was cut in a way that complemented her figure, her long legs striking enough to make one question their own eyes.
Her chest rose and fell modestlyâbut enough to make politeness hesitate.
(âŚSheâs proportioned like she was built on the golden ratio. Not the kind of balance you can simplify.)
Kai quietly took a candy from his pocket, popped it into his mouth, and let the sweetness steady his pulse.
The ceremony proceeded smoothly.
The principalâs voice, warm yet taut, carried through the hall. Fine wrinkles gathered at the corners of his eyesâcreases born not of age, but of worry.
âTo the new students entering this term: Learning is born from the courage to meet the unknown. Respect one another, study well, and play well.â
As applause spread, the silver-haired girl from earlier stepped forward to deliver the new studentsâ address.
There was no waste in her movementâher balance smooth as ripples across still water.
âI am LiriciaâŚ,â she began, but hesitated a moment before omitting her surname.
Even so, her clear voice carried the calm rhythm of someone long accustomed to books and formulas.
âI wish to study the Principles here. I look forward to learning under your guidance.â
A soft murmur passed through the crowd.
It wasnât just her beautyâit was her words, precise and disciplined, that marked her as a true scholar.
(Oh? Nice tone. Fits well⌠but her mana flowâitâs too smooth. Unnaturally so.)
Kai rubbed at his ear, shelving the thought for later. Now wasnât the time.
âLook, Kai. Long legs,â
Lutitia whispered, elbowing him with her usual cheer.
âThatâs what you noticed? I mean, youâre not wrong. Measure them and I bet youâd get some golden ratio number.â
âNot that Iâm losing to her.â
âIf the contest is leg length, youâre at a disadvantage.â
âChest too.â
âYou just said that out loud, huh.â
Lutitia laughed softly, the faint blue flame in her eyes flickering playfully before fading again.
When the ceremony ended, it was time for class assignments.
Before the door of Class Cross Year 2, twenty first-year students stood in perfect formation.
Their posture was uniform, almost militaryâbut beneath that order was the whimsical scent of stray cats.
(They look disciplined, but one signal and theyâd scatter like sparks. Interesting bunch.)
âCome in,â Kai said.
Twenty voices overlapped in unisonâ
âYes, teacher.â
Among them, one tone resonated low and steady, like a deep note echoing from the gut.
âWelcome. This is the kitchen where we cook magic using mathematics. The only thing you should fear is the test.â
âSo⌠the tests are scary, teacher?â
The deadpan reply from a short-haired boy in the front row drew laughter from the class.
âAlright then⌠Liricia, would you introduce yourself for us?â
Liricia stepped forward.
Her posture was perfectâher breath and gestures deliberate and elegant.
âI am Liricia. Until now, I have studied the formulas inscribed in the Principles and added some of my own commentary.
Here, I wish to deepen my understanding of describing magic through logic. I look forward to your lectures, professor.â
Someone in the back whispered:
âShe said sheâs looking forward to them. A flawless beauty said that. Our teacher really is amazing.â
âShh. Sheâs still talking.â
Lutitia hushed them, though a faint smile played on her lips.
(âCommentary.â âMy own.â Thatâs not something a normal first-year says⌠And that mana waveâtoo calm. But fine, leave it for now.)
âAlright then, letâs begin.â
Kai drew a circle and a line on the blackboard, sketching a simple wind formula in polar coordinates.
âThis is a âwindâ spell that adjusts humidity and temperature just right. Today, weâll learn how to make the formula resilient to fluctuations.â
âProfessor.â
Liricia raised her hand.
âThat coefficient⌠is this the core of the fluctuation control?â
âWhere exactly are you looking?â
âAt the tolerance of minute oscillations. This is where the casterâs inconsistency factors in.â
âHeh.â
Kai smiled.
âThen, go ahead and show us.â
She approached the board and added a slender auxiliary line into the equation.
A faint pat sounded, softer than a rustle of fabric.
The air in the room settled, and the lace curtains by the window lifted gently.
â…Whoa.â
A second-year muttered, while several first-years simply nodded as if it were normal.
To them, perhaps, it was.
(Beautiful. Too beautiful. The wavefront doesnât collapse. âŚDonât jump to conclusions yet. The real testâs still ahead.)
The lecture went on.
Chalk danced, formulas layered across notebooks, and Kaiâs rhythmic tone softened each difficult concept.
The second-years looked reassured; the first-years, amazed.
The classroom grew pleasantly warm with focus and laughter.
âProfessor, may I ask one more thing?â
âGo ahead.â
âThis termâwouldnât it be more beautiful this way?â
âBeautiful?â
âSymmetry is born. The equation starts to sing.â
âDid you just say sing? Alright, add one more line then.â
She drew another auxiliary line.
In an instant, the formula seemed to straighten itself and indeedâsing.
âHowâs that?â
â…Itâs beautiful.â
Liriciaâs cheeks flushed faintly. Lutitia immediately raised her hand.
âKai, that singing formulaâteach me too.â
âNo priority seating for wives, maâam.â
âThere is now.â
âNo, there ainât!â
Laughter burst out, and the newcomersâ eyes sparkled.
Break time.
Some first-years by the window were unwrapping something aromatic.
âHey, whatâs that?â
âSpicy pellets, teacher.â
âThat sounds like an explosion waiting to happen. If the school blows up, Iâll drown in paperwork. Confiscated.â
âAw.â
âIâll make it up to youânext lab, weâll make them officially. On one condition: no fires.â
âYay!â
âDonât celebrate yet.â
Even while joking, their hands were quick and preciseâfixing wobbly chairs and leveling tilted desks with ease.
Their craftsmanship was almost unnervingly deft.
They were enjoying themselvesânot because they were told to, but because they wanted to.
After school.
A small crowd had formed in the schoolyard.
Second-years and first-years stood facing one another.
Seniors wanted to show their strength; juniors wanted to prove theirs. It was inevitable.
âShall we spar?â
Lutitia rested her sword on her shoulder.
âWith pleasure.â
Liricia smiled.
âRules are simple,â Kai said. âNo hitting with blades. Donât wreck the yard. If I say stop, you stopâno exceptions.â
He inhaled deeply.
The wind stilled, the air cleared.
âBegin.â
Light collided.
No clang of metalâtheir blades never truly met.
The magical âsurfacesâ each created deflected the otherâs strikes, redirecting force and angle alike.
Lutitiaâs flames bloomed like roses; Liriciaâs wind held their shape and pushed them back.
Hair arced, sand split, and their footsteps carved fine lines into the ground.
(âŚWhat is this.)
A cold realization ran up Kaiâs spine.
The layering of their formulas was too smoothâflawless.
No human caster could maintain this degree of precision.
There was no roughness, no static.
It was too perfect.
âStop.â
Kaiâs sharp command sliced the air.
Both halted instantly, blades frozen midair, not even a grain of sand disturbed.
Only their breathing carried heat.
âA draw.â
âI can still go.â
âI know you can, but thatâs enough. No craters in my yard.â
âYes, teacher.â
They obeyed instantly.
Too instantly.
It was obedience born not of discipline, but of instinctâa reflex to yield before a stronger presence.
(âŚCould it beâŚ)
A line from an old grimoire flickered in his mind:
âFickle, sensitive to strength, and once they choose whom to obey, they never waver.â
He didnât say the word aloud.
He felt that if he did, something fundamental would change.
Lutitia, catching her breath, glanced sidelong at Liricia.
âYouâre strong.â
âSo are you.â
â…Itâs annoying that I canât bring myself to dislike you.â
âI feel the same, a little.â
Both smiled.
Sparks flewâbut the distance between them grew just slightly smaller.
Later that evening.
Passing by the library tower, Kai spotted Liricia stepping out with a heavy tome in her arms.
The lamplight framed the edges of the pages in gold.
âStudying hard, huh?â
âYes. The âPrinciplesâ stored here have such a lovely scent. Reading them alone makes the formulas rise to life.â
âYeah. You like that scent, donât you?â
âI do.â
She nodded honestly. A ripple spread through the deep violet of her eyes before fading.
âProfessor Kai.â
âHm?â
âI think⌠I might fall in love with your formulas.â
âThat line belongs to me, actually,â
Lutitiaâs voice chimed from the shadows of the trees.
She naturally looped her arm through Kaiâs.
âKaiâs side is my spot.â
âQuit fighting over seats. The library doesnât assign them.â
âConceptually, it does.â
âDonât fight with concepts.â
Kai chuckled and gently separated them.
âAlright, thatâs enough for tonight. Itâs getting cold. Donât catch a chill.â
Their footsteps differed in rhythm, but somehow, their pace aligned.
Behind them, a few first-years were fixing a wheelbarrowâwithout a single nail left over.
Their hands moved with eerie precision, eyes gleaming with both amusement and faint reverence.
âTeacher, I want to see that demonstration from earlier again.â
âSure thing. Tomorrow morning, quiz time.â
âYay!â
âDonât âyayââI said quiz.â
Laughter rippled through the dusk.
The spireâs shadow stretched long, the first star blinking in the western sky.
The autumn insects began their chorus as the academy cooled, still glowing faintly with the dayâs warmth of learning.
(âŚA demon, maybe. But thatâs fine. For now.)
(So long as they sit before the blackboard, theyâre all just students.)
Kai took two candies from his pocket and handed one to each girl.
âSugarâs fuel for the brain. Take it and get some rest.â
âThanks, Kai.â
âThank you, professor.â
Two different voices, yet they harmonized in an oddly perfect way.
The night sky deepened, vast and silent.
And thus, a new term quietly began to turn its first wheel.