Is It Natural for Men to Hold Hands?
Walking down the street lined with laboratories, they passed a building blackened from fire.
It was Fritzâs lab.
âMr. Galeâs husband⌠in the endâŚâ
Alchemists wearing gloves and masks were burning Fritzâs experiment logs and equipment.
Fritzâs desk, with its broken legs, had its drawers pulled out like a tongue and was waiting for the incineration process.
Unlike the upper drawers, stuffed with notes and miscellaneous items, the bottom drawer was filled with things that didnât suit Fritz at all.
âAre those all dried dandelions?â
Flowers she had also seen on Mr. Galeâs desk.
For someone as sensitive to variables as Fritz, it was surprising that he could possess such sensibility.
When she turned her head, she saw Bolton standing with a complicated expression, evidently recalling Fritz as well.
âLetâs go, Bolton.â
Lukna linked her arm through Boltonâs, who looked sullen, and led him toward the dock.
Even though he could be lively, Bolton was easily discouraged by even small things, like a large child in a grown manâs body.
âI still donât understand why senior did what he did. Iâll probably never know why he betrayed the master, and that makes me feel awful.â
âShould I sing a song for you?â
Having once won a street karaoke competition in her past life, Lukna was confident in her singing.
âSure. Sing a line.â
Bolton chuckled and nodded, and Lukna hummed a tune.
Instead of the song she had planned, a melody she didnât even consciously know slipped out naturally.
The familiar tune was reminiscent of what she had heard in a dream.
At that moment, a small lab door swung open, and a voice snapped, âDidnât you see the âNo Hummingâ warning?â
Another door followed suit, with someone yelling, âYouâre the loudest! Havenât even written a dissertation yet, and youâre raising your voice?ââsparking a quarrel.
âIâm sorry,â Lukna bowed in apology, feeling the alchemistsâ attachment to their experiments.
Then, a hand suddenly appeared and lifted Luknaâs head by touching her forehead.
Raising her gaze, she saw Martian silhouetted against the setting sun.
Though his student uniform was still spattered with blood, his faceâwashed somewhere along the wayâlooked cleaner than before.
âYour head is too light, Lukna.â
Martian, offering advice that didnât quite feel like advice, took Luknaâs hand from Boltonâs arm, grabbed her wrist firmly, and strode forward.
âHey! How long are you going to hold that idiotâs hand?â
Bolton, trailing behind, muttered in frustration.
He had expected Martian to release her eventually, but it seemed they were heading to the academy while still holding hands.
âThat Martianâs funny. Is it normal for men to say someoneâs pretty and hold hands like that?â
âAh.â
Finally realizing, Martian let go of Luknaâs wrist.
He hadnât intended to hold her hand, but seeing her linked arm with Bolton made him act impulsively.
Her pale skin was softer than lambâs, and though he barely squeezed, a red mark remained.
âGeez, you really squeezed that idiotâs wrist. By tomorrow itâll bruise.â
Bolton, grateful that Martian was a great alchemist, pulled out a small round ointment container from his pocket.
Martian intercepted it midair and said, âThanks,â as he took it.
âWhat are you doing now?â
âWasnât it meant for you to apply it?â
Martian pointed to a long scar running along his neck. Clearly worse than the mark left on Luknaâs wrist.
âHuh? When did you get hurt? I didnât notice with all the blood earlier. Did you do it on purpose?â
Embarrassed at not noticing his friendâs injury, Bolton cleared his throat awkwardly.
In fact, it was rare for Martian to get hurt in battle.
âThe red eagle we missed at the end used a strange trick.â
âWhat kind?â
âHallucinatory-type dark magic.â
Martian opened the ointment and rubbed it over the wound.
âDid that really work on you? What kind of hallucination made you falter?â
Boltonâs question went unanswered. Martian only glanced at Lukna briefly before looking away.
He applied the ointment to Luknaâs red-marked wrist. Seeing this, Bolton couldnât help but exclaim.
âYou know? This is the first time youâve shown concern over someone elseâs injuries since enrollment. Youâre really acting strange lately, you know?â
âLikewise, you suit it too, Bolton.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âYour new eye.â
Martian chuckled and pointed at Boltonâs prosthetic eye.
âYouâjust now noticed that?â
Bolton blushed fiercely again, snorting.
âBolton always reacts like this whenever someone is even half as good-looking as him.â
Lukna, still holding out her wrist, clicked her tongue.
âYou already noticed my injury, so whatâs with that?â
âThatâs why you pretended not to notice my prosthetic earlier?â
âNot really.â
Martian answered ambiguously and finished applying the ointment to Luknaâs wrist.
Even with the warmth of the ointment seeping into her skin, the sensation along his fingers was embarrassingly intimate.
Lukna relaxed her fingers into a loose fist and thanked him.
âTh-thank you.â
Then she hurried ahead of Martian.
By the river, other students were sitting and enjoying a break.
Chad, who had behaved suspiciously throughout the muster, lay flat on a rock, napping comfortably.
Passing by, the students nudged Lukna.
âHey, Lukna Golden. I heard you saved the Great Sage? Didnât expect you to be so capable.â
âWhyâs your face so red? Did you see a mermaid you liked on the way?â
Lukna gave a brief nod in response to the teasing question and found a quiet spot.
Her heart still raced. To calm it, she picked up a pebble from the ground and carved her name into a large rock, the dust from each letter helping her embarrassment dissipate little by little.
When Martian arrived, the students surrounded him.
âMartian, heard your last feat was incredible? Covered in blood, is that true?â
âWhile we were cleaning the central tower, that happened?â
âIs that wound from the dark magic cast by the Red Eagle officer? Not that itâs pleasant, but itâs the first time Iâve seen you injured, so itâs interesting.â
The students bombarded Martian with questions.
He answered each politely while his blue eyes scanned the surroundings.
Immediately, he spotted Lukna standing by the river.
Through her round head and platinum hair peeked small ears, bright red, resembling ripe harvest fruitsâŚ
âI wonder what theyâd taste like if I bit them.â
Distracted by the studentsâ questions, he spoke before realizing it.
âUh? You tasted them through the dark magic?â
âOh, sorry. My mind wandered for a moment. What was the question again?â
Martian attentively listened to the students, yet his gaze never left Lukna, carving her name into the rock.
Gale, the academyâs health teacher, rented a small one-room apartment near the school.
Though her salary allowed for a better place, Gale loved this tiny room that fit her body perfectly.
Supporting herself with her staff, she arrived early at the clinic, drew back the curtains, and opened the window.
The squeaky, old hinge swung outward, letting in a fresh morning breeze that cleared the room of the sharp smell of chemicals.
âBy now, it should be over.â
She felt the wind on her face and thought of her husband.
âFritz⌠what choice did you make?â
Gale fiddled with the head of her staff, where the Philosopherâs Stone was set, then sat on a small chair.
She closed her eyes, embarrassed to face the rising sun, even though she couldnât see much with her eyes shut.
Born a mermaid, Gale had always been alone.
There was no particular reason she settled on the Isle of Wisdom after drifting with the currentsâjust a whimâand she became an alchemist.
Her talent was extraordinary.
She grew so rapidly that alchemists once considered her worthy to succeed Kuran as the Great Sage.
Her flawless growth began to falter only after repeated failures in producing the Golden Elixir.
âIf I keep this up, I might even ruin the Philosopherâs Stone Kuran entrusted me with.â
The Philosopherâs Stone was a rare item that could only be used with the Great Sageâs permission and helped greatly in transmuting materials by seeing their essence.
âI canât believe something so precious was entrusted to me⌠Iâm hopeless.â
Desperate, Gale shut herself in her lab, isolated from the world.
It was then that she met Fritz, the human alchemist.