Chapter 13
âBecause you made me cry earlier, Iâll let you lick me today.â
âWow!â
Shayla was a generous rabbit.
Even though they had reached a dramatic agreement, she had made the boy cry, so she wanted to compensate him properly.
âBut only once.â
Ah⌠look at that boyâs smell. Shayla, now transformed into a rabbit, shook her head in despair.
She looked pitifully at the excitedly bouncing Callion, then lifted her chin.
âMy ears are completely off-limitsâŚâ
She barely finished speaking before the boy suddenly rushed in, mouth wide open.
Chomp.
Then he placed Shaylaâs head entirely in his mouth as if he were going to swallow her.
ââŚâŚâ
In an instant, Shayla found herself trapped inside the wolfâs mouth. She fainted for a few seconds before snapping back awake.
She was in complete shock, unable to comprehend what had just happened.
Meanwhile, the little wolf pulled the rabbitâs head out of his mouth, held Shaylaâs body between his front paws like a bone, and began licking her eagerly.
He licked so fiercely that her head was soaked as if dunked in water.
ââŚDonât you think this is a little excessive?â
Shayla couldnât bear it anymore and protested quietly. But Callion, as if enchanted, continued licking with total focus.
âEnough now.â
Despite her attempts to stop him, he showed no sign of stopping, so Shayla finally had no choice but to revert to human form. It was pure instinct.
âI wasnât done yetâŚâ
Callion, still thirsty, moved his tongue as if savoring the taste.
âYou werenât done? Wasnât that enough?â
âI feel like I need to leave my scent on rabbit-Shasha⌠I want to protect you.â
Strictly speaking, it wasnât about leaving his scentâit was about thoroughly drenching the fur on top of her head with saliva. ButâŚ
âWas this boy always this energetic?â
No, he hadnât been. This was the first time.
He had always hidden under a dusty bed or stared blankly through a foggy window. He had always acted like a prisoner, hiding and watching the world from afar.
âNow I understand it clearly.â
Callion, who had always been passive in his reactions, living only inside this room, not eating until fullâthe little wolf.
âYouâre late in growing, which is why youâre late in turning human, Leon.â
Shayla recalled her rabbit form. Though she was still a small rabbit, she was the size of a nine-year-old girl by human standards.
âLook, youâre seven now, and your ears still arenât fully upright. Isnât that strange?â
From any angle, he looked like a little wolf, not an adolescent one.
âYour growth has stalled. Thatâs certain.â
Except for those teeth.
âHow do you know all this, Shayla? I want to be smart like you.â
He murmured in awe.
âI read it in books.â
âBooksâŚ?â
âYes, books contain everything you donât know.â
Leon tilted his head, blinking his round eyes.
âSo you can read letters too?â
âYou⌠donât know?â
ââŚâŚâ
The heir of a ducal family, seven years old, and he still didnât know how to read?
Is this the mindset of the north? No matter how busy they are guarding the empireâs bordersâŚ
âHeung.â
The boy immediately shrank and hid under the chair, tail tucked. Before, he would have shouted âDonât ignore me!â but this change was new too.
âWhat am I really going to do with him?â
Shayla let out a deep sigh.
âThe road is⌠very long.â
* * *
Leaving the sleeping Callion under the chair, Shayla began cleaning the bedroom floor. His fur was so thick that if she didnât sweep daily, the floor would turn white.
A small bone he had played with, a half-eaten piece of sweet potato, peas he spat out while pretending to eat, and more.
While gathering the small pieces and wiping dust, Shayla wondered whether she was a maid or a noble lady in this castle.
As she wiped the floor, her eyes suddenly narrowed.
Under the bed, in that dark corner.
That was the place where Callion slept.
His habit of choosing dark, uncomfortable spots away from othersâ eyes had never changed.
At least Henry had given him a sleeping mat, butâŚ
âI donât even like this.â
What was called a âsleeping matâ was nothing more than a tattered piece of cloth.
Full of holes and worn outâŚ
She wanted to throw it away, but she feared the boy would end up sleeping on the cold floor if she did.
Doesnât everyone have a doll or blanket they cling to? Maybe this mat was something like that for him.
He was still sevenâa little child.
âIâd like to at least wash itâŚâ
The mat was covered in the boyâs gray fur, and it was impossible to guess its original color.
âHm?â
While removing a piece of bone, she lifted the mat, and something hidden inside rolled out.
It wasâŚ
âA ring.â
The wedding ring she received during the ceremony. The same one now on the fourth finger of her left hand.
She felt a strange sensation staring at the golden ring.
âI canât wear itâŚâ
She had only one husband, but he hadnât attended the wedding, which had made her feel insulted at first.
But looking at this ring now, she began to understand why he was absent from the ceremony.
What was the point of exchanging eternal love vows and sharing rings at a wedding?
He couldnât wear it on his front paw, and he couldnât get rid of it eitherâŚ
It was like the annoying wardrobe she couldnât throw away. Something painful that reminded him of his situation every day.
For the little boy, the wedding ring carried that meaning.
So he had no choice but to hide it under the mat, out of sight.
He kept it in the safest place for him, where it wouldnât be stolen.
Shayla gripped the ring tightly.
âIâll take this. You donât mind, right?â
âUngâŚâ
Callion answered even in his sleep, without opening his eyes, and it was adorable.
âI have to find a way. A way for this boy to carry the wedding ring with him.â
After a long day of playing with Callion, Shayla dragged her tired body to wander the castle library until dawn.
âWhat? They locked the door?â
She had stayed too long in Callionâs room. Of course the servants needed sleep too, but this forced Shayla to sneak in like a thieving rabbit.
âAh.â
She had to go down to the basement, transform into a rabbit, and dig a tunnel to the library.
When she lived in the capital, she never imagined turning into a rabbit outside for fear Count Lexi would find out.
But in the castle, while playing with Callion, Shayla spent long periods as a rabbit.
Had she become too careless?
Distracted by squeezing through the narrow tunnel, Shayla didnât notice there was already someone else in the library.
When she finally lifted her head after great effortâŚ
ââŚâŚ!â
Her eyes met directly with Duke Graywolf, who was holding a lamp.
Shayla froze, her head poking out from under the wall. The dukeâs cold expression didnât change at all.
âDid⌠he recognize me?â
How many brown rabbits sneak into the library at this hour?
Shayla wanted to cry.
No normal rabbit would stare into someoneâs eyes for this long!
She was in trouble.
âHeâll definitely kick me out.â
He married his variant son to save him, but now heâll discover Iâm a useless brown rabbit!
âYou still canât shake off your beastly habits? How dare you do something so barbaric in my house, you filthy idiot!â
It was as if her fatherâs voice rang in her ears. Shayla trembled in fear and squeezed her eyes shut tightly.
âMy life ends here.â
That cruel hand would grab her and throw her out of the castle. Then he would complain to Count Lexi that he sent someone unworthy of the duchyâŚ
ââŚâŚâ
But no matter how long she waited, what she feared didnât happen.
Unable to resist her curiosity, Shayla cautiously opened her eyes. The duke had already disappeared into the last shelf.
âWhat? Did he really not see me?â
Strange. Their eyes had clearly metâŚ
But he passed by indifferently, as if Shayla wasnât worth his attention.
Feeling bold, Shayla took the chance and sneaked fully into the library. Her rear got stuck in the narrow tunnel, but she pushed herself through with force.
âHuff, huffâŚâ
All this sneaking into the library was for that boy, Callion.
The more Shayla showed her vast knowledge as a learning card, the more endlessly amazed Callion became.
When she saw his innocent, admiring face, Shayla couldnât stop pretending to know everything.
âHow do you know all this, Shayla?â
âI read it in books. Everything is in there.â
It was a lie to increase credibility. In truth, she had stayed away from books for a while.
âI must never look stupid in front of him.â
A leader must be smart. The moment respect is lost, the leaderâs position is taken away.
âAnyway, I wonât run into the duke again.â
The library was incredibly vast. The shelf the duke entered was in the basement, while the books Shayla wanted were upstairs after climbing the stairs.
âChild Development,â âAlchemists of the Empire and Baltus,â âSuccessful Methods of Gem Polishing.â
She had to reinforce what she talked about today to impress the boy with even more convincing words next time.
âI need to teach him letters immediately.â
Callion envied Shayla for being able to read. He seemed to want to learn letters too.
It was obvious that, due to his feral behavior, they couldnât assign him a tutor.
Fortunately, Shayla had already taught her sister letters before.
An animal body loses focus much more easily than a human one. Teaching letters at a desk using a book, as she had learned from her tutor, would backfire.
Making letter cards and teaching them as a game was the easiest and most effective way.
âThe Easy Empire for Our Children, Starting from Aâ
Authored by Robert Wolfgang
âThis book is perfect.â
The author was from a northern family.
Shayla had lived her whole life in the capital, so she thought there might be slight vocabulary differences between her and what Callion knew.
âShould I look for more?â
The libraries Shayla had visited before were limited to Count Lexiâs library. The Count, suffering from an inferiority complex, had cheap knowledge books and handwritten copies, making calling it a library embarrassing.
The castle library, however, was the largest in the northern empire, she had heard. The shelves stretched from the basement to the third floor, impressing her.
While wandering and browsing books, a particular title caught her eye.
âUnderstanding Species â Wolvesâ
Yes, if she was going to live with this boy, studying wolves was essential!
Shayla lit a lamp on the shelf, sat on a small chair, and opened the book âUnderstanding Species â Wolves.â
She felt a little excited because she had escaped a dangerous situation.
Wolf tails are usually drooping in their natural state.
âThere really is a difference from dogs.â
She felt sorry for scolding him about not raising his tail.
The boy obeyed her enthusiastically but refused that part with embarrassmentâŚ
âThatâs why one must learn.â
Shayla turned the pages, focusing on the section about wolf childhood.
Brown, red, black, but most wolves are gray and spotted.
A wolfâs fur color can change as it grows.
âThis is it!â
Shayla felt immense relief.
From their first meeting, she had wondered why Callionâs fur was white.
Duke Graywolf had black hair, his wife dark brown.
Even in the prophecy, wasnât he supposed to be a black wolf?
âSo why is he white?â
Soft white like fluffy clouds. Pure white without a single spot!
She had feared there was a secret in his birth. She couldnât ask the servants, nor show her worryâŚ
But since fur color can change, no one found it strange.
âThank goodness.â
While Shayla was immersed in reading, she didnât run into Duke Graywolf again.
Her eyes began to close, so she set the book aside.
âI should leave a markâŚâ
But there was nothing for that.
Shayla sighed and searched her pocket. As a wise rabbit, she always carried rabbit grass.
She placed the rabbit grass as a bookmark instead of a proper one, returned the book to its place, and stood up.
â˘âĄâââââââ˘âĄâ˘âââââââĄâ˘
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