âGuardian? Whatâs that?â
âA startup company dedicated to the security, inspection, and auditing of Leviathanâs affiliates.â
â...I get the security and inspection, but what kind of company is dedicated to auditing? How does that even make sense?â
âIt doesnât. Especially if you know who the executive is.â
âWho is it?â
âThat son of a bitch.â
âYou mean⦠That mad dog?!â
âWhat other son of a bitch is there?â
âWhy, thatâs nonsense! How can that bastard, of all people, get our groupâs prosecuting authority? How is that any different than giving him the permission to cut our throats?!â
âIt is our princessâ order.â
âEven if it isâ¦!â
âEnough. Donât cross the line. She may not be the brightest, but our princess is still the princess.â
âBut still, how could she fall in love with the enemy of our clan and sell us out?!â
âJust hold it in for now. Iâm sure the elders wonât just allow this to happen.â
âGrrr! I canât believe he would tempt our innocent princess and do something like this⦠That shameless, perverted old geezer!!!â
***
âMy ears are really itchy for some reason.â
âI can make an appointment with the Intensive Care Unit if needed.â
â....I mean it feels like someone is talking about me. A lot⦠Not that Iâm dying from itchy ears.â
âThatâs a relief.â
âJust be honest and say youâre regretful. Donât say stuff you donât even mean, itâs giving me goosebumps.â
But she did not bat an eye. She only stopped herself from dialing 119 with what looked like genuine regret.
âIf you donât need anything else, may I leave?â
âWhat are you in such a hurry for?â
âIt was the princessâ order to minimize interruptions to the Master of Swordsâ personal time.â Wei-Ling, the female transvestite, added on with her cold voice. âOf course, if the Master of Swords wishes to review the security and inspection system and create a manual, I would be happy to give him the work.â
ââ¦All right. Youâre free to leave.â
âExcuse me, then.â
As if she knew what he was going to say, Wei-Ling turned around as soon as she heard his answer and rushed off.
Limon clicked his tongue.
âHow uncompromising.â
â[Thatâs not uncompromising. I think she just really hates your guts, boss.]â
âSame thing. Itâs a given rule in the workplace to not be obvious you hate your superior.â
â[Itâs not very persuasive coming from someone who would grab the director by the neck whenever he got bored.]â
âAnd youâre definitely more persuasive, coming from someone who talks back to her boss all the time.â
The bluebird on his head, Yoo Na-kyung, paced back and forth between who was the better employee. She was the one to put an end to the futile debate.
â[Anyways, be grateful you got a good subordinate. Me included, but a competent secretary like Miss Wei-Ling is hard to come by.]â
âWell, youâre questionable. But I do agree sheâs competent.â
It had already been a couple of days since Li Chingwei gave him the position of Guardianâs CEO, with Wei-Ling at his side as his secretary.
In that time, Limon had nothing to do. But a lot still went on in Guardian.
Official documents were distributed to Leviathanâs affiliates run by the Black Dragon Clan. General information for each subsidiary was organized, and immediate employees were recruited.
All these were practically all done by Wei-Ling alone in just a few short days.
âNo wonder the princess picked her out.â
â[Sheâs an elite in the Black Dragon Clan, right? Then, sheâs obviously going to be basically one of the best in the world.]â
âWell, thatâs true. Martial artists who have reached the level capable of harnessing Psionics are skilled at everything, after all.â
â[Unlike you, right?]â
ââ¦What are you coming at me for?â
â[Well, obviouslyâ¦]â
Yoo Na-kyung didnât flinch one bit seeing Limon clench his fists. Rather, she scoffed, and hit Limon with the cold hard truth.
â[Itâs because you're still at the same place you started. Even with a first-class violinist like Julia as your teacher.]â
***
***
Limon furrowed his brows. Unlike how smoothly Guardian was going thanks to Wei-Ling, he was completely at a dead end with the violin. That was why moments later, Julia was looking at the young, black-haired man named âLiâ with a frustrated look.
âLi, can you still not do it?â
âRegretfully.â
âAre you sure you really reviewed and previewed the lessons? You werenât being lazy, right?â
âI hate to be the one saying this, but Iâve only been sleeping one hour a day to make more time for practice.â
âBut you donât look very tired.â
âIâm naturally quite⦠Very healthy.â
She eyes him suspiciously as he answers brazenly, letting out a small sigh.
âIt doesnât look like heâs lying.â
Sleeping one hour a day surely had to have been an exaggeration, but she knew that Limon was trying. Yes, he had a pompous attitude, but he was always focused during the lessons.
The problem came with his progress.
âThen why can you still not read notes?â
âItâs hard to learn new things with an old brain.â
âPutting aside the fact that youâre too young to be saying that, grandpas over the age of 80 can still learn to read notes easily.â
Julia looked dumbfounded. It wouldâve been understandable if he was stuck on something specialized or difficult. But even after intensive instruction over several days, Li still couldnât even read simple notes. It was baffling.
âWhat I donât get is how you play while reading these things called ânotesâ. What kind of brain do you have to have to read those little tadpoles as sound?â
âLi⦠That means that the entire world has weird brains.â
âThatâs what Iâm saying.â
How has his overinflated ego not burst yet?
The weird tadpoles were the ones at fault, not him.
Julia sighed. She expected that teaching a complete outsider to music would be difficult. But who couldâve known this outsider couldnât even read music notes?! It was an obstacle she had never been faced with before.
âHm, this isnât good.â
So was the case for Limon. Thanks to the cursed violin, the fragments of starlight in Limon had significantly decreased. And every time he played it, they dissolved a little bit more.
He wasnât taking these violin lessons because he had an abundance of time. The intuition of a swordmaster who had been in countless life and death battles was telling him: this was more urgent than anything else.
But to add insult to injury, the speed at which the fragments dissolved slowed down with repeated music.
âThis wonât do.â
And yet, here he was, walking in place after passing all his work to someone else.
Limon was strugglingâmuch more than how frustrated Julia was.
The problem was that no matter how many nights he spent forcing the material into his brain, these notes were just impossible to grasp.
âTsk. Itâs not easy to learn something new at this age.â
Limon had always learned through practiceâgoing into action first and then training his body. Trying to learn music, something he had never been interested in, wasnât easy.
âGeez. Troubadours and musicians in the past played just fine without notes in the past. Why does this even need to existâ¦â
Fitting for a stubborn, centuries-old man, Limon yearned for the past whilst complaining about the current generation. Just then, Limon blinked.
âBut is reading all this really necessary?â
âWhat do you mean?â
âNotes or whatever theyâre called. Canât I just skip and learn the next thing instead?â
ââ¦Li, do you think thatâs actually possible?â
Julia, already annoyed and coming down with a headache, could feel her migraine get exponentially worse at Limonâs nonse.
âNotes are the basic fundamentals of all music. Learning the violin without knowing how to read notes is like growing a tree without roots.â
âBut that doesnât mean you canât play without them.â
âIâm telling you, you canât learn anything like that.â
âI think that would be the same if we go on like this, too.â
ââ¦â
âThink about it. You know, thereâs cases of people going into battle without an ounce of swordsmanship knowledge. And then they return from the battlefield a swordmaster."
Julia furrowed her brows at Limonâs morbid comparison. If this was a university of music and Limon was an average student, such wisdom would have been worthless.
But Limonâs learning ability was so devastatingly poor, it looked like she would only be teaching him how to read music notes for the entire lesson.
As an advocate for open education, it was a proposal she had to consider.
The problem was how.
âFine, then. Letâs say we go past reading music notes. Then, what and how are you going to learn, Li? Are you going to finally try playing the violin?â
âNot right now. Itâll all be over if you run away after listening to me play.â
âThen how do you expect me to teach you?â
Julia could not hide her expressions any longer. She didnât know what utter mess Limonâs performance would be, but she couldnât teach a student who couldnât read notes and refused to play in front of her. Even the bluebird in the corner of the room shook its head as it ate biscuits.
But Limon answered nonchalantly, as if heâd thought of the answer beforehand.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âWeâll do it the old way.â
âThe old way?â
âYouâre a musikạntin(musician) before a teacher, Julia.â
âIâm more of a geigerin(violinist) than a rootless musician, but what about it?â
âWhat do you think a musician does?â
ââ¦?â
Julia looked at Limon, perplexed. After a moment, she became aghast. She realized why Limon had chosen such an elegant word to describe her, and what the âold wayâ was.
Limon stood up. Picking up the violin case next to Julia, he spoke.
âLet me hear the best performance from the best performer. Iâll do the rest.â
Long ago, before music notes were even created. Like musicians of the past who learned countless pieces by ear, he was going to watch and learn himself.
Julia could only look at him grinning stupidly, absolutely dumbstruck.
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