Wandering Witch - The Journey of Elaina - LN 01
Wandering Witch - The Journey of Elaina - LN 01
Wandering Witch - The Journey of Elaina - LN 01
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are
the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any
resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is
coincidental.
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E3-20191218-JV-NF-ORI
Contents
Cover
Insert
Title Page
Copyright
Afterword
Yen Newsletter
CHAPTER 1
The Country of Mages
As I passed through the huge gate, two strange signboards standing side
by side caught my eye. I peered at them in confusion.
The first sign depicted a mage straddling a broom, enclosed in a circle.
The sign beside it showed the image of a soldier walking, surrounded by a
triangle.
What’s with these signs?
I knew the answer as soon as I looked up—above the crowded brickwork
houses and beneath the gleaming sun, mages of all kinds were streaking
across the sky in every direction.
I see. It must be a rule in countries where they only permit mages to enter
—most everyone’s flying around on a broom, so very few people choose to
walk.
Satisfied with my explanation for the signboards, I pulled out my broom
and sat on it sideways. With a push off the ground, I gently floated up into
the air in a living demonstration of the signboard.
“So flying is the preferred mode of transportation here, huh?”
And with that, I saw the mages’ country as it was meant to be seen. Above
the reddish-brown roofs stretched out like so much dry earth, mages drifted
through the air. Some had stopped their brooms to have a friendly chat, while
others flew by with bundles of baggage tied to their brooms. There were
suspicious, witchy-looking old women as well as children racing through the
sky, vying to see who could fly higher.
These people must live their whole lives in the air.
It was a really wonderful scene. It almost took my breath away.
I joined their ranks, soaring above the country, aimlessly surrendering to
the flow of air traffic around me. Suddenly a sign secured to the top of one of
the roofs caught my eye. It was apparently an INN. I passed it without
stopping and saw the word GROCER next. There were others: a BUTCHER and
Any human who can use magic starts their training as a novice. Not everyone
can become one, and in most cases the ability is passed down through blood.
My parents were novices, too.
Apprentice witches rank above novices, but they’re one level below full
witches. As the name suggests, the title of “witch” applies only to girls and
women. I have no idea why, but women naturally have greater magical
ability than men. That’s why only women can attain ranks higher than
novice.
There’s only one way to become an apprentice: pass the magic exams and
receive the corsage that proves your status. There is no alternative method.
However, the exams are brutal, and many people drop out before they reach
the end.
After becoming an apprentice witch, one undergoes a very specific
training regimen to earn the title of “witch.” This means long days of hard
work under the watchful eye of a proper witch, until the apprentice finally
wins her approval. The training might last a single day, or it might take ten
years. It all depends on the individual’s own efforts and on the witch who is
serving as her teacher.
When someone is officially recognized as a witch, she receives a star-
I had gone through a lot to get that brooch, and it held a lot of memories
of my time with my teacher. Losing it was a bitter pill to swallow.
If I had lost it when I first became a witch, I’m sure I would have noticed
right away. But after wearing it every day for two years, I was probably too
accustomed to just always having it on me.
“…Sigh.”
This was depressing.
After the search, I returned to the inn and ate dinner, then entered my
room using the key I got from Saya, remembered I hadn’t taken a bath yet,
and headed straight for the big bathroom instead.
I soaked in the hot water for a whole hour as my mind wandered. Ah, I
must have dropped it when I collided with Saya…but it wasn’t there… How
mysterious… I stretched out almost fully and filled the big bathtub (I was
alone). Then, just before I melted away into the hot water, I sat my heavy
body back up.
And then I went back to my room…
“Ah, hello—”
…and found Saya inside.
I closed the door. I took a step back and checked the room number. Yep, it
matches the number written on the key. Strange. Maybe I was just seeing
things?
I opened the door once again.
“Ah, hello—”
It was the fourth day of my stay in this country—and the third day of our
intensive training regimen. Unlike the search for my brooch, which had not
seen any headway (though I had simply been asking around), Saya’s
education was progressing rapidly and didn’t seem like it would stop anytime
soon.
“Next, let’s study some offensive spells—how is your wind magic?”
“Wind magic?” Saya sat atop the scorched reddish-brown roof, head
tilted.
I nodded once and answered, “Yes, wind. By controlling the flow of the
air, you can block the other participants.”
This was the slightly unconventional method that I had used during my
own practical exam. Changing the flow of the air had been surprisingly
effective, and even now I remembered how the other contestants had lost
their balance and fallen from their brooms or swerved into buildings.
Wind control was both easy to learn and a powerful weapon. If we had
enough time, I definitely wanted to teach her.
“Well then, hit that can over there with a blast of wind, please.”
I pointed at the cans we had set up on the peak of the roof across from us.
There was about one house’s worth of distance between us and the cans, so it
wasn’t a difficult task at all.
“It works best if you visualize making a ball of air and hitting the cans
with it—like so.”
I waved my wand, and instantly, a strong wind grazed one of the cans. It
teetered back and forth with a clatter.
I turned to face Saya, who was looking at me dubiously. “It didn’t fall
down, did it? Did you mess up?” she seemed to be asking.
But I did that on purpose. Really!
“All right, give it a try.”
“…L-like this?”
With a whoosh, Saya waved her wand. Air magic is one of the first types
The truth behind the mysterious disappearance of the brooch had turned out
to be really quite simple.
“There was a young girl who ran into you, right? After you flew off in a
hurry, she picked up the brooch.”
Her eyes still glittering with the money I’d given her, the old woman told
me she’d seen it all happen. And her story was the truth; a part of me had
suspected the same thing. To not find it after searching around so
thoroughly…someone must have picked it up.
I’d suspected something was up from the start.
……
Saya.
Your broom control was almost too bad—enough to make me think that
you were flying badly on purpose. After all, if you couldn’t fly your broom
well enough, you wouldn’t even be allowed in this country.
At first, I had assumed that Saya was a local, but when I asked her about
it, she said she was a mage from an eastern country who had come here under
special circumstances. If that was true, it was even stranger that she couldn’t
fly her broom. And so…
…Here’s the truth. I doubted you from the very beginning. I waited and
waited for you to give my brooch back. “But you hid it and never gave it back
to me. Instead, you said you wanted me to stay with you forever. I’ve had it
up to here with you,” I told her.
Saya sat on the bed, hanging her head. I wondered what emotion was on
I thought back on it several months after I had left the Country of Mages.
Six months, to be exact.
About half a year has passed since I met that girl, lost my brooch, and got
it back—wow, time sure does fly. Truly.
I had traveled to another country so far away that people would ask,
“Huh? Country of Mages? Where’s that?”
The reason I was reminiscing was that I happened to catch sight of her
name as I was browsing through a bookstore.
APPRENTICE WITCH ADVANCEMENT EXAM PASS LIST
Printed on a sheaf of really cheap-looking straw paper was the newspaper
put out every month by the mysterious organization known as the United
Magic Association, which was responsible for conducting the apprentice
witch advancement exams, among other things. The results for the exams
given all over the world, plus a few words from the passing candidates, were
displayed on the front page.
Her name was there.
“Hey, no reading in the store.” The shop owner appeared from the back
and yanked away the newspapers.
“…Ah—” But I wanted to keep reading.
“You wanna read? You gotta pay.”
It was the start of an in-between season, not quite spring, not quite summer.
Cutting through the cool, dry air, I flew among the broad-leaved trees of a
forest. The forest seemed to be quite expansive; I’d been making my way
through for some time now, but there was no end in sight.
As I wove my broom right and left to dodge the trees overhanging the
extremely narrow path, the pesky branches kept rubbing against me.
I couldn’t see the sky from where I was. Far off in the distance, I could
just barely make out something sparkling on the other side of the mesh of
green. The trees were too overgrown for me to see anything more.
“…Whoopsie.”
Because I had been looking up instead of ahead, a tree branch had
snatched my pointy hat. I stopped, went back, retrieved it, and then was on
my way through the cramped forest again.
These woods are so dense. I should’ve just flown over them, I thought
regretfully, but it was already too late. I had come far enough that doubling
back now would take too much time. I could try to force my way up and out,
but I had a feeling my hat wouldn’t be the only casualty.
Somehow, it felt like I was always running late these days. As for whose
fault that was, it was…well, completely mine, but so what? I kept on flying,
mentally complaining to no one in particular.
I don’t know how far it was, but after a while, the path suddenly opened
up.
“Whoa…,” I murmured.
There in the clearing was a field of flowers.
As I approached, I saw flowers of red, blue, yellow, and other hues spread
out below me. Every one of them was standing tall and proud, reaching for
the sun. When the breeze from my broom brushed past the blossoms, petals
scattered into the wind along with a refreshing aroma.
The fragrance, sweet enough to cleanse the depths of my soul, wafted up
as the vibrantly colored blossoms danced in the breeze. Holding my hat with
After that, I entered the country and found that there wasn’t much in the way
of sightseeing, so I headed for an inn. I rented a room for only one night, took
a bath, and slid under the covers.
Staring up at the cheap wooden planks of the ceiling, I deliberated about
the flower field, and about the girl sitting there.
There was a book I had read a long time ago, The Adventures of Niche, in
which there had been a story about another strange plant. As I recall, in one
part of that story, there was a plant with a mutation that caused it to absorb
magical energy rather than exude it the way normal plants did. It gained
sentience and eventually became violent.
First, I should clarify that the substance we know as “magical energy”
flows freely from every part of the natural world. Flowers, trees, and other
flora especially produce and exude magical energy by absorbing sunlight.
Honestly, I don’t really understand the theory behind it all.
Anyway, the human body is typically unable to absorb this energy, but
there are certain people who can harness it regardless, and even use it at will.
We call them mages.
That’s why our powers can reach their full potential in the middle of a
forest overflowing with raw magical energy. When I was still studying to be
a witch, the place where my teacher trained me was also a forest.
You could say that we mages resemble the mutated plant in The
Adventures of Niche. We have become able to handle things that humans
ordinarily can’t.
…Or is it that people who can’t do magic are the rare ones?
I don’t know which is which. I feel like it might not be a good idea to
think too deeply about these things. Plus, sitting and trying to puzzle it out
doesn’t amount to much in the end. It’s like trying to logic out which came
first, the chicken or the egg. Completely unproductive.
“…Yawn.” I covered my mouth and rubbed my eyes. I’m not tired yet.
I’m fine. Not tired, not tired—the flower field.
Then…I could see the forest in the distance. I looked toward the area I
had come from the day before and took off on my broom.
A few scattered trees led the way, as if they had been flung from the
forest, lending a different hue to the sea of green spreading out before me.
The cool wind blew wildly, twisting me around and chilling the earth. Clouds
hung in the air, blocking out the sunlight. The gray sky had already begun to
turn the color of lead.
It’s going to rain soon.
In the forest, I avoided the creaking trees that brushed at my shoulders and
found the clearing.
There was the flower field.
It looked as gloomy as the sky, and the faded colors were completely
different from the vibrant tableau of the day before.
“……”
And the flowers were not only the wrong colors, but the wrong shapes as
well.
As far as I knew, I had retraced my path from the day before, so I
shouldn’t have ended up in a place that looked so different despite its
similarities. However, there was a certain uneasiness that I couldn’t shake.
I got down from my broom and walked over to the source of my unease.
My foot made an unsettling squish when it touched down, and I could feel the
flower petals dying underfoot.
A pleasant scent hung in the air above the flower field.
In front of me was a person. The true source of my discomfort was there
—she was the discomfort.
“……”
It was the young girl who had given me the flower bouquet, and now there
A few days earlier, his younger sister had been kidnapped by a strange
group. The muscleman hadn’t been around, and so he hadn’t been able to
About an hour had passed since the gloomy-faced young man had left.
A single young woman walked by. Her dress was plain, and so was her
face—everything about her was plain, really. She looked about the same age
as me.
There was plenty to work with, but she was squandering her potential with
clothes that looked like they came off the closet floor, to say nothing of her
poor skin and hair regimen.
Just like my dull silver coin. And so my next customer had been chosen.
“Hey, you!” I called out to her as she passed by, head down. “Am I
correct in assuming you are struggling to find a lover?”
The young woman jumped in surprise and turned toward me. “…M-me?”
“Yes, you.”
“Um, who are you?”
“Goodness, how rude of me. I completely forgot to mention that I am a
traveling fortune-teller,” I said shamelessly, then pushed up my pointy hat
and stared at her.
The circle of men around me brought me through their bland city and
arrived at a very bland palace. Save for the ludicrous prices, there was really
After that, I went to the room provided by the young king, lay down on a soft,
fluffy bed for the first time in a long while, and reviewed my strategy. I had
to wait until it was time to act.
When the sun outside my window had completely set and the sky had
been painted in darkness, I opened my eyes.
It’s finally time.
I took out my wand and placed the tip against my head. “Ey.”
With a little poof! I became a small mouse.
I had cast a spell on myself to change shape. I was tired, so I didn’t really
want to do it, but there was no way around it. My transformation let me move
about with ease as I ran toward my goal, recalling the map I had asked the
young king to show me earlier.
Since there was a possibility I would meet a violent end if I went down
the wrong corridor, I chose to move through the attic instead of the dazzling
palace interior. I pitter-pattered along the dusty floorboards until I arrived
After that, the two men were arrested when the palace guards came to
investigate the commotion. They were brought before the king and forced to
spill the whole truth.
Father and son had been scheming to take over the country.
As I suspected, the new currency had been counterfeit. Apparently, the
experts who had told the young king the currency was genuine had accepted
bribes from the adviser and were dirty fakes themselves.
The two had tried to plunge the country into chaos on purpose, creating
doubt about the successor to the crown. Their plan was to direct the blame
onto the young king and orchestrate his fall from grace. They must have
hoped the adviser could become the new king, with his son as his heir.
Well, that plan ended in failure.
Now they were locked up in jail. I didn’t know what would become of
them, but I didn’t need to involve myself in this any further.
After the cross-examination of the two conspirators was complete, I was
summoned up between the thrones to accept a gift from the young king.
“Thank you very much.” I checked the contents and nodded. Inside my
purse was a large number of antiquated coins.
As my second condition for predicting the future of the country, I had him
exchange all the money I had earned for the old type, to rid myself of any
counterfeits.
“I will exchange all the counterfeit money that circulated throughout the
country.” The young king sounded exhausted. “It seems the majority of the
money in your wallet was counterfeit as well.”
“I expected as much.”
The meaning of my promise to predict the future of the country had
become a bit vague. Since I had rid the young king of the real problem
As I flew my broom over gently sloping meadows, the sound of the wind
rustling through the grass reached my ears. The warm sunlight and cool
breeze made a pleasant harmony. I wanted to fly around this place forever.
I steered my broom left and right, and I could hear it cut through the wind
—hyoom, hyoom—making my ride a little more fun. But unfortunately, the
fun never lasted long, and this time was no different, as a less pleasant sound
on the wind brought my enjoyment to an abrupt end.
“Huh? What’d you say? Try saying that again, bro!”
“Huh? I told you, I’m the best, bro!”
The uncommonly refreshing atmosphere was spoiled.
When I turned my head to figure out where the voices were coming from,
I saw two men standing in the middle of a meadow arguing about something.
They were dressed in different-colored clothes, and the snippet of
conversation I’d overheard told me they were brothers.
“No way, I’m better than you. Absolutely!”
“No way, of course I’m better. No younger brother has ever surpassed his
older brother!”
“Ha-ha! What an outdated way of thinking. A real antique outlook.
Younger brothers throughout history have grown by observing their older
brothers’ failings. They can avoid mistakes before they happen, and that
makes them stronger.”
“Ha-ha! What a stupid thing to say. That must be a story from back when
older brothers were useless human beings! But I myself am already a
flawless, perfect specimen! I don’t make mistakes, and even supposing that I
did, they would be mistakes at a level higher than you could ever reach.”
The two shouted nonsensical insults at each other, glaring and yelling
things like “Huh?” and “You wanna go?”
Anyway, what’s an “antique outlook”? Or a “high-level mistake”? I was
puzzling over this when I met the gaze of the one I assumed was the older
Wind ran over a gently sloping meadow tinged with brilliant green. The
wildflowers glimmered in the sunlight like the surface of still water, swaying
in the wind.
When I looked up, there was a small cloud swimming leisurely across the
sky, and I felt like I could reach out and touch it.
A single witch was flying across this captivating vista on her broom. She
was in her late teens, and she wore a pointy hat and a black robe with a star-
shaped brooch over her breast. There’s no need to tell you who she might be
— That’s right. She’s me.
Now, we can take the time to really appreciate this amazing scenery, but
let’s move the story along…
I saw a person standing all alone in the middle of the meadow. When that
person caught sight of me, they waved.
They don’t look hostile. I’ll wave back—as elegantly as possible, of
course.
“Heeey! Heeeeey!” The person was hopping up and down, waving their
arms, and trying their best to call attention to themselves… I guess they
really want me to come over there.
I changed my broom’s course a little and made my way over to them.
“Yay! You came!”
When I got there, I found a young boy hugging a bottle in one arm.
“Hello there.” I alighted from my broom and bowed slightly.
“Hiya! Wow, miss, you’re a real witch!” The boy glanced at my brooch
and then smiled.
“What are you up to?” I asked.
“I’m on a happiness hunt!”
“Oh? What do you mean by that?”
“A happiness hunt is a hunt for happiness,” the boy said. “By the way,
miss, are you busy right now?”
Is he…asking me on a date? No, no, surely not.
After that, we rode on our brooms and headed for the village. Emil was
indeed a mage, but since he had mentioned magic spells earlier, there had
been no need to ask. That said, I was very curious about what the boy had
been doing in the middle of the meadow.
“I was testing to see whether I could take happiness from plants, too,”
Emil said, flying behind me.
“How did it go?” I asked.
“So-so. The spell let me transform something like emotion, but it was kind
of hazy, and the color was cloudy. So I let it go.”
“My, my.”
Well, they are plants, after all. If you asked someone whether plants have
distinct emotions, they would just look at you funny. Plus, if you knew the
answer was yes, you might not be able to eat a salad ever again. Perhaps it’s
best to let some mysteries stay mysteries.
“Ah, there it is.” He pointed to the village I could see just ahead.
It was a tiny village, small enough that you could probably walk the
circumference of the pitiful perimeter fence in under an hour. There were
And that’s how I came to be a guest at the home of the village chief.
I was within sight of the next road when I remembered the ending of that
I walked around both the Eastern and Western parts of town for as long as
time would permit in the hopes of finding some information.
However, the longer I walked, the stranger it got. I hadn’t been able to tell
because there were so few people out in the morning, but in the afternoon
when the streets were full, there were so many people crossing the bridge that
it was like there was no clear division at all.
Even stranger, despite their own signs reading WE CANNOT SELL TO
Still feeling uneasy, I hunted for an inn on the Western side of town.
There are lodgings on the Eastern side, too, but I can’t stay over there. I
can’t sleep unless I’m in a proper bed. Or maybe I just have a harder time
adjusting to Eastern-style rooms. I’m not the biggest fan of walking barefoot
on straw mats.
I walked around and around the town, then went into the cheapest-looking
inn. It had a sign out front that read WE DECLINE THE PATRONAGE OF MEMBERS
OF THE RICE FACTION.
Well, let’s just ignore that.
After I had spent several days there, I began getting ready to set off again.
This blend of Western and Eastern cultures was of course quite fascinating,
but if I may be blunt, that was the only thing it had going for it.
I felt like I had seen enough.
Ultimately, I was leaving without understanding an essential part of the
place, but oh well…right? I didn’t care enough to really go digging for
answers. Though I would listen if anyone cared to explain why the
We proceeded all the way down the canal, where I was shown to the
castle watching over both cultures. They walked me through the perplexing
interior of the keep, a blend of Eastern and Western styles, and finally we
arrived at an enormous reception hall.
The hall looked like a Western-style room and an Eastern-style room had
been cut in two, and one half of each had been stuck together.
It doesn’t go together at all…
I heard someone closing the door behind me as I stepped into the room,
and I could see two thrones a little farther ahead. The man and woman seated
there appeared to be in the middle of an argument. They didn’t seem to notice
me there at all.
“I’m telling you, the match ought to be a game of shogi! There’s no other
way!”
“That’s because you’re better at shogi! How many times do I have to tell
you we ought to play chess!”
“And how many times do I have to tell you, you’re better at chess!”
“Grrr…”
“Rrrr…”
The volatile atmosphere seemed like it might erupt into violence at any
Now I understood why the residents of each town totally ignored the
signboards. It had been two years since the king and queen had said they
were going to hold a contest and unify under one culture or the other. Time
had just passed by without anything happening, and none of the citizens
probably cared about a bunch of signboards erected for the sake of a quarrel.
The signs had already become nothing more than decorations.
Looking at it a different way, it was a sign that the authority of the crown
had become meaningless. Right now, no one in the whole land was actually
paying attention to what the royals said.
“Ah, Madam Witch. How did you like our country?”
The guard came out to greet me as I returned to the gate from the palace. I
passed right by him, and only turned around after I had set foot in the outside
world.
Gazing at the curious collision of cultures, I said, “It’s a nice, peaceful
place.” Though I can’t speak for its future.
Maybe the king and queen would realize they had been wasting their time
and turn their attention back to ruling. Maybe they would keep dragging it
out, and the whole place would get stranger and stranger. Or maybe
everything would stay as it was.
Whatever ended up happening, it was no concern of mine.
“That’s right; it is a nice place, isn’t it?”
The gate guard nodded with satisfaction.
Rainfall sent the fragrance of flowers wafting through the forest. The grass
and trees glittered in the sunlight filtering down through the canopy. A lovely
girl flew by, riding a broom down the sole path to her destination.
Upon her breast was a star-shaped brooch. From her pointy hat, which she
diligently kept in place with one hand as she flew, to the black robe covering
her body, she looked every bit a witch. Just who could she be?
That’s right. She’s me.
I was flying along on my broom, headed for the country closest to the one
I had left a few days ago—the one divided between Eastern and Western
cultures. From what I had heard, the country ahead was very, very plain. Just
an ordinary place full of people who were ever so slightly more muscular
than average. Exactly what is normal about that is another question.
Well, if they’re anything like a certain individual I met some time ago
whose muscles have replaced his brain, I suppose they might live quite
happily, but…I’ll probably only spend one day there and then leave.
Such thoughts wandered through my mind as I gazed at the scenery
speeding past.
To put it bluntly, I had nothing to do. That’s why my ears perked up when
I heard some distant noise in the still forest.
“All right, let’s go over the rules one more time. The two of us are going
to make one lap around the forest path, and first person back to this spot gets
to be her boyfriend. Is that right?”
“Y-yeah. No problems here.”
“…No cheating, right?”
“N-naturally. I w-would never do something like that.”
“…I wonder…”
One man had a lively, energetic voice, while the other sounded heavy and
muffled. Sounds like they’re having a race. Sounds interesting, I thought,
when there came another voice.
It felt wrong to fly on past after making eye contact, so I slowed down.
Unfortunately, that was my first mistake. As I pulled up closer to the black-
haired girl, she grabbed me and pulled me down off my broom.
“Kyah! So cute! Oh, that brooch is something only witches have, right?
Wow! That means you’re a witch, right?”
“Um, yes…”
“Amazing! You’re so cute but you’re a witch, too?! That’s so cool!”
“Uh, thanks…”
“So you can do magic, right? I mean, you were just flying on a broom!
Wow!”
“Sure, yeah…”
“By the way, do you have a moment, like, right now?”
“No, um…”
“Yippee! Now I have somebody to wait with!”
“Um…” Just a second! Listen to what I’m saying!
The girl practically dragged me over to where two guys were standing, all
the while calling me “cute” and wowing over and over again. The two guys
looked me up and down.
“You’re gonna wait with a witch, huh? Well, I guess we won’t have to
worry about you getting attacked by a bear or something. Good, good,” said
the handsome man.
“Y-yeah. It’s a relief. Whew,” the plump man said, breathing heavily.
……
I whispered to the girl standing next to me, “Just what is going on here,
“Ready, go!”
When I clapped my hands, the two of them took off running at the same
time.
“Raaah! Her heart is mine!” Mr. Perfect started out enthusiastically.
“Ngh, phew…hah, hah.” Mr. Porky was exhausted the moment they
started running.
Huh? How strange. I expected Mr. Porky to be unleashing his awesome
hidden power right about now.
After the two had completely disappeared, I turned to question the girl.
“Why are you having them compete?”
“Hmm?” she asked in a muffled voice as she took a carefree drink of
water. She pointed to the water bottle. “Who do you think got this water for
me?”
“Hello again.” I bowed quickly to the three who had descended on us, and the
big guy flexed his facial muscles… By which I mean he smiled.
“It’s been a while, Madam Witch.”
“Indeed it has, Muscleman.”
It was the incredibly brawny man I had met several days earlier. I didn’t
I endured day after day, and before I knew it, I had spent a month as Miss
Fran’s apprentice.
It happened while I was going through my nonsensical daily lesson, using
wind magic to fell timber and cut it up for firewood, then burning it with fire
magic, and finally dousing the fire with water.
“My, my. You’re quite reckless, aren’t you?”
Miss Fran was standing right behind me. As I recall, this was the first and
last time she was ever nearby when I was practicing magic. I stopped what I
was doing and rushed over to her. I thought maybe she had finally decided to
teach me something.
However, my fleeting hope was smashed in an instant.
“What do you want? I don’t really have anything to teach you, you
know.”
In the end, she really had no intention of teaching me any magic, and she
just stayed there behind me watching me practice.
There has to be some meaning to this, I told myself over and over,
chanting the words in my heard like an incantation, and earnestly continued
my nonsensical routine.
“Before long, it’ll be time…,” I thought I heard her mumble.
After we went back to her house in the woods, Miss Fran told me everything.
“It was about a month ago when I met your parents. They handed me this
request, along with a large sum of money. ‘Please put our daughter through
extremely strict training,’ it said.
“I had absolutely no idea what they were trying to say, so I tried to ask.
Your parents told me they were worried about how you would do going
forward. They feared that if you surged ahead as you were, never learning
failure, and then lost your way later on, you might find yourself in real
trouble.
“Your parents deserve some credit; I want you to understand that they did
not make up this plan because they wanted me to bully you, okay?
“They had their own reasons for bringing their plan all the way to
someone like me. Your hometown, if I’m not mistaken, is in the Peaceful
Country of Robetta, right? The witches who live there are intimidated by
your abilities. I heard they all said they couldn’t teach a girl like you. After
all, that country is very, well…peaceful, so there really aren’t any high-
caliber witches around…
“So your parents predicted that all the witches in your country would
reject you, and so they came to me. To make a long story short, they said you
were too full of yourself, and so they thought up a plan to put you through a
I trained under Miss Fran for one year. After the warning about persevering
too hard in my first month, the true training finally began.
“Good morning, Elaina. I’m hungry, so please make something to eat.”
“Here, have some weeds.”
“…Um, is this your way of giving me a hard time?”
“I was told not to endure too much abuse, so I decided to try being honest
about my feelings. Specifically, the feeling that making breakfast for my
teacher is a pain.”
“……”
“Just joking.”
Eventually, we settled on eating the bread that we had baked the previous
day.
As before, I sometimes felt a bit like Miss Fran’s servant, but if I thought
of it as compensation for all the magic she was finally teaching me, it wasn’t
painful at all.
Oh-ho, this isn’t torture! It’s my tuition.
“You have skill and talent,” Miss Fran said. “If there’s one thing that you
don’t have, it’s experience.”
And in order to rectify that, I sparred against Miss Fran over and over.
Every day was very enriching.
The many days that I spent there afterward seemed far shorter than the
hellish first month. Almost every day we would have intensive magic
training, then return to the house in the forest for magic studies. It was so
During my training with Miss Fran, there was one incident that left an
especially deep impression. I was practicing my magic in front of her house
in the forest as always.
“Elaina,” Miss Fran said abruptly, “there are bottles sitting over there,
right? Can you see them?” Sure enough, there were two wine bottles standing
where she was pointing.
“Yes, I can see them, but…what about it?”
“Strike one side with a wind spell.”
“……”
The distance between the two bottles was about the width of one tree. To
be clear, there was plenty of room. There was so much leeway that I thought
she was making fun of me.
“Okay.” I waved my wand and manipulated the wind. The mass of air
made a little hyoom! as it went straight for the bottles, hitting one directly, as
I had aimed it to do. The bottle flew end over end and landed in the
underbrush.
“Okay, I did it.”
But Miss Fran shrugged as if to say, “Good grief.” “Did I tell you to
knock it away?”
“…Uh, but didn’t you say to strike it?”
“Let me tell you something. If you’re an apprentice witch, you pass the
test by knocking it away. But full witches must have more reliable and
precise skill than that.”
“…Huh.”
“A witch doesn’t knock down the bottle; she aims for the midway point
between knocking it down and not. To put it simply, like this—”
Miss Fran waved her wand, and the wind headed straight for the
remaining bottle and hit it directly. However, the bottle did not fall over. It
just wobbled around and then stabilized.
Miss Fran smiled. “Oh, good, it worked… All right, just like that. Witches
must learn to control their magic precisely. So no more knocking them
down.”
“……”
After I had spent about a year as her apprentice, I got to the point where I
could begin to compete with Miss Fran.
And I was able to win against her—once. That day became the final day
of my apprenticeship. Wearing her usual smile, she said, “There is nothing
left that I can teach you. You’ve grown quite strong.”
To this day, I can’t recall how I was able to win that last time. It was
probably just chance. Miss Fran removed the bellflower corsage from my
breast and in its place pinned the proof that I was a full-fledged witch.
Several of the people surrounding me left the circle and huddled together
somewhere else, then came back and said, “We have something to discuss
with you, so we’d like you to come with us.” That was all they would tell me.
Whether because of their amazing powers of persuasion or because the
faces of the adults were all deadly serious, I had agreed to go with them
before I even realized it.
The man and a number of the other adults brought me to the largest house
in the village. We walked into the dining room, where a young man pulled
out a chair and said, “Please have a seat.” And so I sat.
Two people sat down across from me. The one on the left, from my
perspective, was the man in his thirties or so who I had encountered first…
He had calmed down, as if the fire in him had gone out, and he suddenly
seemed like a different person.
The old man with the white beard sitting to the right (possibly the head of
the village) crossed his arms and opened his mouth to speak.
“We understand now that you are not Mina. Our sincerest apologies.”
“It’s fine.” Understanding that is the first step.
“However, you look exactly like her; the resemblance was enough that the
villagers confused you for her. Just like two peas in a pod, you could say.”
The thirtyish man nodded vigorously.
The old man stroked his beard. “First, let us make our request. Traveler,
just for one night—even less than one night, in fact—could you please
pretend to be Mina?”
“…Why?”
I had an inkling that it might have to do with the famous Abel.
“Mina had a boyfriend. His name is Abel, and he’s very serious, very
Even though I hadn’t agreed at first, I eventually decided to go along with the
old man’s suggestion. There was no risk to me, and I would have been an
awful person to refuse at that point.
That said, I was a traveler. I didn’t want to spend a whole day in a dull
village with no inn in sight. If possible, I wanted to get on my broom and
hurry to the country that was said to have the cure-all medicine.
That was why I presented my conditions up front. “I’ll cooperate. But
only once. After I meet Abel, I’m resuming my travels immediately.”
The two of them said that would be fine. Once that was decided, we
hurried to prepare. I was taken from the big house to another house, where
several girls and women from the village awaited me. They varied widely in
age, from young girls to old women.
Among them, one particularly elderly woman seemed to be the person in
charge. Small wrinkles lined her face as she spoke. “All right then, let’s get
ready. Men, get out!”
In an impressive display of violence, the women in the house began using
sticks to beat back all of the village men who had come to see the spectacle,
I was upset by the idea that he had spotted the deception due to some
“She was really kind, and cute, and good. She was wasted on me. She was
the only one who supported me.
“Even after I fell ill, she took care of me and never acted as if the task was
After his story was done, the sick man looked out the window with tired,
vacant eyes. The wind blew; the withered leaves danced and, finally, fell.
“Are you all right with that?” They were trite words, but I couldn’t find
anything better to say to him.
“Of course not. It’s a sad thing to be apart from the one you love.”
“……”
In that case—, I was about to say, but I stopped myself.
Both Mina and Abel were sad to be apart, but they would have to
overcome it. And they seemed to be doing their best to make it through. An
outsider shouldn’t butt in to such a private matter.
“I’m glad I met you, Miss Traveler. You’re not really Mina, but I still feel
like I got to see her one last time.”
“…I’m also glad I got to meet you.”
“That’s good…,” he mumbled, and then said, “Miss, you’re a wandering
I left the hut and went straight back to the house where I had changed clothes.
Then I had the crowd of women take the corset off. They had tied the back
too tightly for me to take it off myself.
“Did it go well?” the old woman asked me after I had changed back into
my robe.
I gave a phony answer. “Yes. He never suspected a thing.”
“Thank goodness. He must have been happy to be able to see Mina in his
final hours.”
“……”
His final hours?
“So what is Abel doing now?”
“He was tired from talking after so long, so he said he was going to sleep.
Please leave him alone until tonight.”
“I see. Understood. I’ll tell the village headman, too.”
The village headman must be the old man with the white beard. “Please
do.”
I put on my star-shaped brooch and my pointy hat, and my transformation
was complete. I had returned to my usual self.
“What will you do now? If you’re staying in the village, my house is open
to you, but…”
I was happy for the suggestion, but I shook my head. “No, thank you. I’m
going to leave the village now. I’m in a hurry to get going.” Also, I want to
try to make it to that big country.
“…That’s too bad.”
A forest path cut through a stretch of nearly uniform trees. It was unpaved
and uneven, little more than a gap where no trees grew.
Above it flew a single girl on her broom. The swaying branches
whispered as she passed by, and the trees tossed their leaves into the air as if
they were celebrating a toast.
The lovely young lady was a witch and a traveler.
Her ashen hair shimmered in the sunlight, and her lapis lazuli eyes seemed
to be gazing beyond her path to somewhere far into the distance. She wore a
black robe, a pointy hat, and a brooch shaped like a star, and it wouldn’t be
an exaggeration to say that her witchy appearance only added to her appeal.
This young lady, who no one could possibly describe as anything other
than lovely…who could she be?
That’s right. She’s me.
“……”
I had already gotten some information about the country that was
supposed to lie ahead. Among the merchants who made their living in this
area, that country was called all sorts of strange names: “the big yet small
country,” “the country of only handsome men and beautiful ladies,” “the
walled country,” “the old-fashioned country,” “the forbidding country,” “the
curious country,” and so on. I had come to wish that they would at least be a
little more consistent.
Anyway, the only thing I was certain of was that a strange place lay
before me. I wondered just what kind of strangeness it had in store for me,
and what made it so mysterious. I had tried asking the merchants, but it was
no use. In the end, if I wanted to know what the place was really like, there
was nothing to do but go there and check it out myself. I was kind of looking
forward to it.
Just going on a stroll wouldn’t be enough to show whether this country was
as odd as I’d heard. Stepping through the gate, everything appeared
exceptionally ordinary, although it would have been more appropriate to call
the place a walled village rather than a country of any description.
Most everything was built of wood, and every house appeared to have
been made from rough timber. Most likely, people had simply cleared the
path I had just traveled down and used the trees to build houses. The problem
was that all of them were falling apart. They were so shabby that they looked
like they’d had an encounter with the Big Bad Wolf.
By the way, the people living in the houses…were pigs!
I slipped past the sluggish-looking horse and the fat men and went through
the secondary gate.
Inside was a whole other world, so different it made me wonder what on
earth was the deal with the backwoods hamlet I had passed through before.
The bare, unpaved earth I had been walking on…was no more. Solid-
looking rust-colored bricks were lined up to form the road.
No, they don’t just look solid, they are solid.
The houses built along the gently winding road were also made of brick
instead of wood. They would be sure to stand up to any huffing, puffing wolf.
As I walked on, the aroma of coffee reached my nose, and I spotted a
café. A number of people inside were smiling at me.
Proceeding onward, I saw a bakery, just the type I love. This country
didn’t seem to have any street stalls or any other roadside businesses. The
“…Phew.”
For the time being, I returned to the road I had come in on and burst into
the coffee shop. I had to flee. It was too uncomfortable.
“Welcome. What’ll you have? …Tch,” a man with a doglike face (fat, of
course) asked me, a creepy smile spreading over his lips.
“Um, I’ll have the breakfast set.” I chose the first thing on the menu. And
the cheapest.
“Certainly.” The waiter hurriedly left my side and started whispering
about something with another waiter.
Well, I suppose they’re making fun of my appearance.
“……”
It wasn’t important enough to think about, or to say anything about. What
is the deal with this country? Beyond the second gate, the concept of ugliness
was quite different than usual.
“Hey, look…an uggo’s sitting over there.”
“You idiot! Be careful when you talk about the uglies. What if you get
infected?”
“C-crap…sorry!”
“Sheesh…”
Leaving aside the issue of whether ugliness was contagious, even here
inside the coffee shop, the other customers were glaring daggers at me. I
really didn’t understand it at all, but it seemed that I was the target of some
local prejudice.
“Apologies for the wait. Here is your morning set.” The waiter looked
down his nose at me as he set down coffee and bread. And jam.
A very modest set. As expected for the cheapest thing on the menu.
Still smiling his creepy smile, the waiter said, “Pardon the request, miss,
but when you have finished eating, would you please leave the shop right
away? We’ve had complaints from other guests, so…”
“Um…”
I heard laughter from one of the seats.
If you use this map, you oughtta be able to get to the next country. Good luck,
missy.
The head of the village I had stayed in the day before had said something
like that and pressed a map into my hands, so I had tried my best to follow it.
I spent half a day flying my broom at a low altitude, grazing the ground
with the map in one hand. Sure enough, I eventually made it to my
destination without incident.
Still, well, how should I put it…?
“……”
This place is a ruin, isn’t it? There’s nothing here.
Everything was dead. The gate closing off the outside world was left
open, and I flew right in without getting off my broom. The interior was in
the same state—some houses were roofless, overgrown with moss; some
were just skeletal structures; some had been reduced to so much rubble.
Rubbish, debris, wreckage everywhere.
There was no sign of life at all, let alone people. Surely, the residents had
left long ago. The palace, the symbol of any nation, had retained a
comparatively decent exterior, though of course it, too, was abandoned. The
outer wall was so full of cracks it seemed like it might crumble at the
slightest tap. The wooden door to the palace, however, was unyielding
whether I pushed or pulled.
“…Hmm.”
I was at a loss. No, really.
Let me see, what should I do? I sat down on the stairs leading to the
palace and started to pout, but there was no one here to ask if I was okay, so I
just hung my head instead.
Do I spend another half day going back the way I came? Or do I spend a
night here? These were the two options open to me. And I didn’t want to
choose either of them. If I tried to follow the road I had come down, night
would fall before I reached a place to stay. Even if I made it back to the
After surveying the small city from above on my broom, I concluded that
the most intact building was the palace. The houses were not an option. Most
of them were so crumbled they were useless.
The door to the palace was shut tight, but if you thought about it, the place
was already uninhabited.
......Is it okay? …I can do this, right?
“…Hng.” After checking to make sure there was no one around, I used a
spell to set the door aflame, reducing it to ash in moments.
“Pardon the intrusion…” I went in.
Despite the cracked exterior, the inside of the palace was still in good
condition. It was covered in dust, but I had no objections to sleeping there.
Well then, let’s start the search. First up is securing a bedroom.
The empty castle was filled with an eerie atmosphere. It was vaguely
disquieting, as if some strange thing might leap out at me at any moment.
Feeling a curious chill, I searched for the stairs. I had walked through quite a
few palaces as a traveler, so I knew very well that there would be no room to
suit my purposes on the first floor. If there was a bedroom, it would be on the
second floor. There should also be the bedrooms for the royal family higher
up.
I found the stairs within minutes of starting my search and walked up
along the dusty carpet.
And then…
“Who are you?”
You, reading this letter, are the queen Mirarose. You know
nothing, but I am certain of this.
Why are you here? Why is everything you see outside the
window ruined? Why don’t you have any memories?
You must be bewildered, faced with all these unknowns, but
I want you to be at ease. I will endeavor to explain a bit.
If you are expecting this letter to unravel the great tangle of
mysteries you face, you will be disappointed. But at least you
can avoid ending your life early with a bad decision. In other
words, if you don’t wish to die, read on.
By the way, is it currently daytime there, or is it evening?
I’ll write with the assumption that it’s night. If it happens to be
daytime, well, you can just tuck away into a corner of your mind
the knowledge that what I am about to tell you will be important
later.
I want you to look out the window. You will see a monster on
a rampage, I’m sure. That monster is the devil that destroyed
this land and the source of your amnesia. It has no name. If we
were to borrow from the name of this place and give it a
provisional name, we could call it the Javalier.
It rises at sunset and destroys everything it can until sunrise.
If you leave the castle to find food, I recommend going during
the day. You are safe inside there, as it is the only place the
Javalier will not enter.
The goal of the Javalier is to kill everyone in this land. Every
Night fell.
The letter was right; the Javalier was indeed a monster. Its body was huge,
about the same height as the decaying buildings, and it was covered in scales
as black as midnight.
It had been named the Javalier, but it looked exactly like a dragon if you
removed the wings. I can’t say for sure, but maybe that resemblance was why
it had the terrifying power to breathe fire. It crushed buildings with its big,
brawny arms and razed houses to the ground, searching for the last remaining
person: Mirarose. It was in an absolute fit of rage.
“Wait, Mirarose, you’re a witch?”
“Wait, Elaina, you’re a witch?”
“Come on, you can tell I’m a witch by looking at me.” I was so obviously
dressed in a witchy fashion. Can’t you see the brooch?
“Just joking.” Mirarose let out a light chuckle as we watched the monster
raging outside.
I followed her gaze. “The person who wrote that letter made a really
unreasonable demand, don’t you think?”
“They sure did. To fight and win against a monster like that…it’s a fool’s
errand.”
“…Come to think of it”—there was something bothering me—“why did
they say that only the palace is safe?”
The preparations proceeded without delay. However, I did them all myself.
“……”
…I’m exhausted.
Mirarose was elegantly sipping tea and watching me work. “How is it?”
she asked in a carefree tone. “Does it seem like you’ll finish?”
I turned around, still waving my wand around like mad, and said, “…H-
how long do I have to do this until it’s finished anyway?”
Peering down into the hole, she answered cheerfully, “Let’s see. It looks
like you’re about halfway through the digging.”
“…I’m gonna die.” I’m sure it’s just my imagination, but there seems to
be an imbalance between the amount of manual labor I’m doing and what
I’m getting in return.
If you’re wondering what she was making me do, I was digging a hole. “I
want you to go to the broadest street in town and use magic to dig a hole
large enough for the Javalier to completely fit inside.” That was her
The following morning, I left the castle without so much as touching the
As I sailed over the field on my broom, a ripple ran through the flowers to
mark my progress. Bathed in sunlight, the blossoms streamed past with a
shimmer and a sound like a babbling brook.
I inhaled deeply, filling my lungs with air, and opened my eyes.
On the other side of the field stood a country surrounded by a wall.
Just how massive is this place?
I thought about trying to fly around the outside on my broom, but I
doubted I would make it back before sunset, so I gave up on that idea.
More importantly, the gate was right in front of me, so there was no need
to go out of my way to fly around. I kept straight on ahead, enjoying the
scenery, and landed.
A gate guard came out and quietly bowed to me. “Welcome to our
country, Madam Witch. Pardon the intrusion, but may I have your name?”
It was the usual immigration inspection.
“Elaina.”
“How long do you intend to stay?”
“About three days, I think.”
“What is your witch title?”
“The Ashen Witch.”
“…The Ashen Witch?” The guard stared at me.
“Is something wrong?” I probably looked puzzled.
“Ah, no, it’s nothing. Pardon me.”
The guard looked flustered, but he left me without completely losing his
composure.
That seemed to be the end of the questions. I paid one silver for the entry
toll and passed through the gate. Behind me, I heard someone say, “Welcome
to Royal Celestelia.”
It’s still too early to find an inn for the night, hmm?
I continued walking aimlessly. It was fun just wandering around this
country.
“……”
I looked up and saw a broom flying above the houses, but it didn’t look
like it was just drifting around. The man atop it was zigzagging over the
houses, dropping things as he went. When I saw someone come out on their
veranda and open it, I realized the man was delivering newspapers.
I walked down the main street and found a street packed with stalls on
either side: fruit stands, grocers, butchers, and more. There was also a bread
stall, with a sign that said FRESH BAKED!
No bigger lie than that, huh? I bet it’s all stale.
“Excuse me. I’ll have one loaf of bread, please.”
I pulled my broom out and flew up into the sky. I wasn’t going anywhere in
particular. I just wanted to see the place from above.
“…Wow.” The view from the air was totally different from the view from
the ground. The multicolored roofs were lined up at about the same height in
a pattern of red and blue, aqua and yellow. The wind blowing past me was
pleasant, and I thought about how great it would feel to lie down on one of
those roofs and gaze up at the sky.
It would be a good idea to search for tonight’s inn from up here, too.
I flew around aimlessly, nodding greetings to the mages I passed and
waving back to the children who waved at me from the insides of buggies.
I was passing the time pleasantly enough when a thought came to me.
This reminds me, in one of the countries I visited earlier, didn’t a girl
suddenly crash into me as I was flying through the air? I wonder what she’s
doing right now? Maybe she’s in training to become a witch back in her
hometown.
“……”
I stopped my broom in midair, yanking the handle up sharply. I had gotten
sentimental remembering Saya… No, that wasn’t the reason, of course. In
fact, the two people who had pulled up in front of me had reminded me of
Saya.
“Um, can I help you?”
A boy and girl were blocking my way, apparently on purpose. They wore
black cloaks, white dress shirts with red ties, and either black pants or a skirt.
No brooches, meaning they were both novices.
“Good day. You are the Ashen Witch, I presume,” said the boy.
“Uh, w-we’re students at the Royal Magic Academy,” said the girl.
The Royal Magic Academy. Interesting. They’re from the school that
wouldn’t let me in?
“Do you need something from me?”
“Um… Could we ask you to please come with us, without asking any
“I’m sorry, Elaina. I’ll explain everything. But first, would you please come
with us to the Academy?” Miss Fran spoke apologetically, while leading me
and the students to the Royal Magic Academy. There was no way to turn
down her request. After all, I had so many things I wanted to tell her.
The cluster of twenty young mages flying together must have looked like
a flock of migrating birds.
I stared hard at Miss Fran’s back, thinking to myself. She really hasn’t
changed at all from back then, huh? I mused. I wonder how old she is now?
Before I knew it, we had arrived at the Academy.
Landing her broom on the school grounds, Miss Fran said, “Everyone,
this concludes today’s extracurricular activities. Good work. Be ready to
present your thoughts tomorrow morning.”
After replying with hollow-sounding Yes, ma’ams and Thank yous, the
students scattered. They were clearly exhausted; some of them wobbled
unsteadily through the air, while others gave up on flying entirely and walked
home.
Watching them go, Miss Fran smiled. “My, my. Do you think we went too
hard on them, Elaina?”
“And that’s my fault?”
“And mine.”
“…So you’re teaching at this school, too, Miss Fran?”
“Yes. Just before I was asked to take you on for training, the king invited
me here.”
“……” I had never heard about this. “You mean you were away from the
school for a whole year? You’re lucky you didn’t get fired.”
After that, we talked about all sorts of things. I got so engrossed in the
conversation, I completely forgot about the time. We talked about all the
different people I had met on my travels, I told her about the places I had
visited, and she told me about people from elsewhere, whose names I didn’t
know. The conversation never stopped for a moment.
I wished that time could stand still, but time flies when you’re having fun.
Before I realized it, the world outside was dark.
“Oh my, it’s so late already. Shall we stop here for today and go home?”
I wanted to talk more, though.
As we left the school building, Miss Fran invited me to stay at her house,
but I declined. The more she took care of me, the harder it would be to get
back to my travels. Parting would become that much more painful.
I walked around searching for an inn in the darkness. During my search,
the window of a house caught my eye. Illuminated by the moonlight, the
window cast a clear reflection, like a mirror.
I was positively beaming.
Morning came.
After the extracurricular lesson was over, I followed Miss Fran out of the
school building. We flew leisurely through the sky, headed for higher ground.
Eventually, Miss Fran landed her broom.
I did the same, and the tender grass swished quietly. The light green of a
wide meadow stretched out around us, drawing a gentle arc against the sky.
On the other side of a simple wooden fence was the city and its multicolored
houses. The trees near us fluttered in the wind, sending leaves floating off
into the distance. Beyond the trees stood the school building with its oversize
tower, which I had been using as a landmark. There were clouds floating
across the clear blue sky, smooth and white.
“Isn’t it beautiful? This is a place very dear to my heart,” Miss Fran said.
“Yes, I can see why.”
“I’m glad you like it.” Miss Fran’s black hair fluttered softly in the gentle
breeze. With a smile, she said, “I wanted you to see it once, before you left
the country. I love this view.”
Her smile was contagious, and I felt the corners of my mouth tugging
upward. “Thank you.”
“Don’t mention it. So you’re leaving tomorrow morning?”
“Yes. I can’t stay too long.”
“That’s too bad… My students really seem fond of you.”
“That’s just because they’re not used to seeing a young witch.” Not to
mention a young traveler.
“Even so, it’s wonderful that they took a liking to you. My students often
seem to avoid me.”
Nice to meet you; my name is Jougi Shiraishi. This book, Wandering Witch:
The Journey of Elaina, was self-published on the Amazon Kindle store at the
end of 2014, back when I was a total amateur.
My story went through widespread amendments and revisions at the
hands of the editing section of GA Books. They were kind enough to point
out every single mistake, from mistakes I hadn’t noticed on my own to typos
and omitted characters that sneaked into the manuscript when it was uploaded
to the Kindle store. There are so many odd bits when I go back and read the
original…
Anyway, among the reactions from those individuals kind enough to read
my book in this era of self-publishing, the most common has been “I can’t
read the title.” My apologies. The characters in the second part of the title are
read journey. At first I thought, Since it’s about a witch who is traveling, why
not simply call it The Witch’s Travels? That sounds good—let’s do that. But
that was a little too simple, and I realized such a title would almost certainly
get confused with other titles when people were searching, so I made up a
word by doubling the kanji character. It just means journey; there’s no deeper
meaning.
My pen name when self-publishing was Jougi, but as I’m sure you will
understand, I didn’t appear in any search results. That’s why I added my
family name to my pen name.
And so I must thank you for picking up a copy of Wandering Witch: The
Journey of Elaina.
This book is composed of strange stories in which even stranger
characters appear. In a nutshell, it’s a strange book full of strange tales.
However, nothing makes me happier than the fact that you have added such a
book to your collection. By the way, this is just between you and me, but this
book is perfect for a bookshelf (although your mileage may vary).
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