Kazuya stepped out of the dormitory, straightened his back, and walked down the path to the main school building. Along the way, he spotted his homeroom teacher, Ms. Cecile, standing on the lawn, her head slightly tilted to the side.
A brunette with a petite frame and shoulder-length hair, she wore large round glasses, and had a somewhat childish air about her. For some reason, she looked downcast so early in the morning.
âGood morning, Teach.â
âOh, Kujou.â She smiled.
âWhatâs wrong?â
âUhm⦠wellâ¦â
Ms. Cecile pointed to some trees beyond the lawn, toward the tall hedge that separated the campus grounds from the outside.
âThere were beautiful violets blooming in that area, but it looks like someone stepped on them yesterday. Itâs a shame. Why would anyone go through there? Thereâs no path or anything. Thereâs just a hedge beyond that.â
âYeah⦠Huh?â
Kazuya held his tongue. Oh, crap.
He was in the area yesterday when he and Avril sneaked in through a hole in the hedge after being late for curfew. Maybe they were the ones who stepped on the flowers.
Not noticing his ashen face, Ms. Cecile walked away, crestfallen.
Noon.
After quickly finishing his lunch in the schoolâs vast cafeteria, where sunlight poured in through the mosaic glass ceiling, he got up. Avril, slicing her bread, spotted him. She followed him with her gaze, wondering where he was going.
Kazuya headed for the library on the outskirts of the campus. The wind was stronger than yesterday. It made for a chilly weather, despite summer fast approaching.
Not a single student was hurrying away from the school building at this hour. Kazuya hunched his shoulders as he stumped down the empty, narrow gravel path.
âVictorique?â he called as he climbed the narrow, wooden stairs, fully knowing that she wouldnât answer.
Up⦠Still going up.
When he finally made it to the top, Victorique was there as always, with several large leather-bound books spread in a circle around her. She was sitting⦠no, today she was lying on her stomach, elbows propped on the floor, her puffy cheek sitting on her small palm. She held a ceramic pipe on her other hand as usual, bringing it to her mouth and smoking it.
âYouâll get your clothes dirty lying around like that.â
âWas there an article in the paper that caught your attention?â
Kazuya opened his mouth, then closed it without speaking. Wondering how she knew everything, he plopped down beside Victorique.
âOw!â
His butt crushed something round and hard. He jumped up. It was candy that Victorique had left scattered all over the floor. A macaroon sprinkled with cocoa powder.
âAnother mess,â Kazuya said wearily. âWhy donât you get a jar or something? I sat on one of your candies.â
Victorique looked up. Her emerald eyes grew wide in shock. âAaaaaahhh! My macaroon!â
âCrushed into smithereens. Iâm throwing it out.â
âNo. Be responsible and eat it.â
âCome on. Itâs practically powder.â
âKujouâ¦â She stared at him for several seconds. âEat it.â
ââ¦Yes, maâam.â
Kazuya reluctantly brought the crushed macaroon into his mouth. Chewing, he sat back down beside Victorique and showed her the morning paper he got from the dorm mother. She kept her face in her book, not sparing him a glance.
âInspector Blois had not solved the Dresden Plate theft,â he said.
ââ¦Ahuh.â
âArenât you surprised?â
âIt looked like there was more to the case. But I didnât want to get too involved with the men of the Blois family.â
âHuhâ¦â
âThey all have weird hairdos.â
ââ¦All of them?!â
Victorique raised her head and yawned loudly. âItâs probably genetic.â
âThatâs not how genetics work. Besides, your hair is normal.â
âI have my motherâs genes.â
âHmmâ¦â Kazuya nodded.
With a distant look, he thought about the family that he had left behind in a faraway island country across the ocean. His father was a soldier and a strict man who always did the right thing, a man among men. His two older brothers were like their father, men of high caliber, perhaps too high for his taste as to be a little rough around the edges. His mother, on the other hand, was a gentle and kind woman, and his sister, who was two years older than him, was as lovely as his mother. Sometimes he wondered why he didnât take after his father, despite being a boy, but he never said it out loud because it seemed like he was forsaking his beloved mother and sister.
ââ¦I guess I take after my mother too,â he mumbled.
There was no reply. Kazuya glanced at Victorique. She removed the pipe from her mouth and stretched in the manner of cats. He did not expect her small body to extend as much as it did.
âDid you come here to tell me about Grevil?â she asked.
âWell, thereâs that too.â
âYou seem to have taken a liking to my pumpkin-headed brother. Youâre monitoring his every move.â
âItâs the exact opposite! IÂ dislike him.â
âI know. I was joking. I like it when you get mad. Itâs entertaining. When it comes to Grevil, you have a very low boiling point. I find it very strange, and a little amusing at the same time.â
âSo, sue me.â He stretched his knees, then opened the paper to the page with the classified ad and showed it to Victorique.
She gave the ad a tired, cursory glance, then bolted upright. She snatched the paper from Kazuyaâs hand and brought her face so close that her eyelashes almost touched it. From left to right her head moved, over and over.
âDescendants of the Gray Wolves⦠Midsummer Feast is nearâ¦â
âWeird, huh? The dorm mother says the classified ads range from message to runaways, job hunts, to mysterious ones that reek of crime. This one is particularly cryptic. You said you were bored, so I got you a mystery to⦠Whatâs wrong?â
Abruptly Victorique rose to her feet. She moved like a puppet that had its spring wound. Her face was pale, not as pale as Inspector Bloisâ yesterday, but enough to see that she was agitated.
ââ¦Is something wrong?â
Victorique was about to break into a run, when she tripped over Kazuyaâs leg and fell flat on the floor with a loud thud. Kazuya could see the soles of her small, buttoned leather boots. Her white, frilled petticoat and embroidered bloomers bounced up for a moment before slowly settling back down on her body.
âVictorique?â
ââ¦â
The silence stretched for a while.
Victorique sprang upright. She didnât say anything.
Kazuya peered into her face. âAre you okay?â
She held her face with her small hands. âIt hurts.â
âI can imagine. That was quite the sound.â
âIt hurts.â
âAhuh.â
âI said it hurts!â
âDonât take it out on me. You tripped on your own.â For once, Kazuya had the high ground, so while he was concerned, his voice was tinged with joy. âSeriously⦠Are you all right? Come on, get up. Where were you going anyway?â
âI was trying to get the book thatâs on the shelf on the right side, seventh rack from the top, thirty-first volume to the right. Kujou, go fetch it.â
âMe?â
âItâs a thick, riveted book with a brown leather cover.â
ââ¦Fine.â
Victorique was still cupping her face, so Kazuya reluctantly went a little down the stairs and reached for the book that she asked for. The wooden staircase swayed precariously with his every movement.
Victorique came down, and with her boot, kicked Kazuya from behind. For such a ferocious move, there wasnât much power in it, as though a mere child had pushed him, but being in a perilous position, Kazuya lost his balance and almost fell.
He tumbled down the stairs. âWh-What the hell was that for?!â
Victorique scoffed. âI suggest you be careful as well.â
âYou kicked me on purpose!â
Wrapped in a tempestuous atmosphere, the two returned to the conservatory. Victorique set the book down before her. Flipping through the pages in a familiar manner, she tossed a macaroon into her mouth and threw the wrapper aside. Kazuya quickly picked it up and shoved it in his pocket.
âSince Sauvilleâs olden days, thereâs been one particular supernatural tale thatâs prevalent the deeper you go into the mountains. Iâm sure youâve heard of it. Itâs the story of the Gray Wolves.â
Kazuya nodded.
âMost of the tales are entirely made-up, but there is one credible source. The diary of an English traveler, written in the sixteenth century. Iâve been thinking about this account for a long time.â
Victorique showed Kazuya the book. He peeked at it gingerly, fearing it was written in Latin or Greek, but fortunately it was in English. Confused by the old turn of phrases, Kazuya struggled to read the account.