Chapter 216
Chapter 216
"I said beef. Beef, Professor Garcia!"
"...Have you really changed your personality?"
Before Professor Garcia's eyes could shift to contempt, Professor Parsellet swiftly and frantically explained the recent events.
Consequently, Professor Garcia's expression changed as well.
"Really? That's impressive!"
"Why such a reaction?"
Professor Parsellet was slightly flustered. The response was too mild for her liking.
"Ah... I'm sorry."
Professor Garcia looked embarrassed.
Having seen other professors react with astonishment numerous times, Garcia's reaction was not as surprised as Parsellet had anticipated.
While Parsellet might think, 'What is this? A genius?!', Garcia's reaction was more like, 'Oh, so it happened again...'
"I've heard a few times in other lectures how impressive it was."
"This is different from that!"
Professor Parsellet spoke with a voice full of injustice, so much so that another personality almost burst forth.
"It's different from just starting a fire well or casting curses well..."
"Was it not the same in other classes... Is there a problem?"
At Professor Garcia's words, Parsellet hesitated.
Separate from her feelings of injustice, there was indeed a problem.
"There is one."
"What kind?"
"I'm not sure how to deal with it."
"Ah."
Professor Garcia immediately understood what the other was saying.
Professor Parsellet was known among the faculty for her laissez-faire teaching style.
The students she had taught divination magic to had chosen to study under her after they had discovered their talents on their own, rather than being directly nurtured by Parsellet.
"Ah. Well, divination magic is especially hard to spot talent in... Maybe you could pay more attention to it?"
"How?"
"Teach more powerful and complex divination spells..."
"No. It's dangerous."
Professor Parsellet replied irritably.
There's an adage that a talented mage is more dangerous.
This was especially true in the realm of divination magic.
No matter how strong one's intuition and inspiration, or how well one pays the magic cost, danger never completely disappears.
Even if only once in a thousand attempts, paying a different cost could be fatal for a mage.
Even experienced and skilled mages make mistakes, let alone the younger ones.
"That makes sense. Then how about treating him like you usually treat your other students?"
"What if he loses interest in divination magic and stops caring?"
"Uh..."
Professor Garcia was at a loss for words.
Not because it was hard to answer the statement, but because it was surprising to hear such a thing from Parsellet.
Normally, Parsellet would have coldly said, 'If they lose interest or stop caring, then that's the end of our connection.'
"Isn't that how it should be?"
"How can you say that, Professor Garcia? Even if he stop learning divination magic, how could you?"
"...I, I'm sorry."
Professor Garcia apologized, feeling unjustly accused.
'To think she always says that...'
"I may seem indifferent, but I don't completely neglect nurturing my students."
"I know."
Garcia knew that although Parsellet appeared indifferent to taking on or seeking new students, once she accepted a student, she took very good care of them.
Parsellet's seemingly indifferent attitude might have been due to the nature of divination magic itself.
"Though I might cause a fuss whenever my personality changes."
"Ah. That's certainly a bit..."
"..."
At Professor Garcia's absent-minded reply, Professor Parsellet's lips protruded in a pout.
"With such talent in divination magic, it's impossible not to refine it."
"That's true..."
"Why?"
"It's nothing."
A thought briefly crossed Professor Garcia's mind, 'Haven't I heard similar things from other professors?' but it quickly faded away.
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