Crowe caused it - rather than the crowd reacted hypersensitively to Crowe's scheme - the noise had various effects on each side of the relationship, but some of them seemed to be only right and just right.

"Depending on what you say, I'm in a lot of trouble."

It is Sir Wilmand Partridge, the master of this mansion, who is zeroing (spilling) stupidity on Sir Rupert Holbeck, a young friend in the dining room.

"I have trouble telling you... how rare is the kingdom... how stuck is it?"

"I'm just an archaeological student. Not a magician, not a magician, not an ancient scripture scholar..."

"But... is it magic that turns the human body into gold? At least I've never heard of it."

"I was wondering if there were any traces of it in ancient civilization..."

The Heads of State, who also regained their calm with the reprimand of Morfan, went from there to reconsidering whether the golem of witnessed gold was truly a human achievement. At a time when the countries concerned, Theodoram and Marcus, have not granted access within the dungeon, only some of the golems obtained by Theodoram and Marcus are subject to consideration. The two countries also refused to grant it, but agreed to provide the results of the detailed examination in the form of a report. And the other clue, a copper corpse, but this one is because the number of fragments is there - or did you just want to let go - both countries agreed to give samples. After revisiting them, some facts came to light.

The first is a copper body that became a spark of noise, but the internal human structure remained almost precise, but can I just say that humans were transformed into metal? As a result of the sober consideration of each country, it was concluded that there would be none. Just for the first time, there was no basis for judgment. However, dating the golden golem was an interesting discrepancy. The Golem did not preserve its internal structure as a human body.

"... but the copper corpse is also believed to be the result of a failure to alter the internal structure the same way as the one in the Golem"

"Are you trying to tell me you failed to remodel and died?

"You can't deny that possibility."

Here Military Sergeant Lembach coughs up and joins the conversation.

"As a matter of fact... I tried to make the soldiers who witnessed the (Kurum) golem portray themselves..."

That being said, the sketches brought up by the military secretary all depicted short legs and long hands.

"Don't you think that's not the right balance?

"No? As a golem, that would be a normal outfit, wouldn't it?

"That's the problem. If you've turned a human into a golem, why do you even need to change the balance of your body?

"Well... there's a good balance as a golem... Oh, so there's no reason I bothered to use the whole human body as an ingredient..."

Then Secretary Merca joins the story.

"I've tried to (string and) some literature, but Golem's sorcery seems to be already established sorcery. And the ingredients are stones and soil. Sometimes I seem to use wood, but nothing said I would use a body. It seems that necromancy is the use of corpses in materials, but there is no use for golems."

"... I mean... you think there's no benefit in daring to turn a corpse into a golem?

"Not from what I've looked into."

Even at the Royal Academy of Lectures in the Kingdom of Illustration after changing places, consideration was still being given to the golden golem.

"... when you calm down, you have a lot to worry about. The biggest of them is why they bother to make golems out of gold."

"Assuming for some reason... even if there was a special reason to need a golem of metal called gold, it would still be too much to run into the investigative teams of both countries as that golem pushed in the verdict"

"Um... I guess the investigation team was' caught 'after all"

"I don't care about the golem, why bother using the human body as a material to make gold?

"I was curious to fish for the literature in the library, but I didn't see any examples of human bodies... or animal bodies being used as whole materials for alchemy. There was something similar to one of the curses..."

"A curse?

"Uhm. But it's not gold, it's 'Fool's Gold', or a curse that turns your body into a yellow iron ore. It seems to be a material, not an entire body. It doesn't say anything about it, but it seems that the gut or part of the body tissue is atrophied or depleted."

"... there's nothing unusual inside the copper corpse - except that it's made of copper - but they didn't see it... it's not gold, it's not a yellow iron ore, so I can't judge anything."

Here, Dwarves, who specialize in geology and minerals, join the story.

"That's a little off topic..."

"I need any information now. Talk to me."

"Um... I don't think there's a gold mine in the vicinity of the border, and I don't think it's geological."

"... that gold, which should have been the ingredient of the golem, cannot be picked near that?

"I don't think so. By the way, the Yellow Iron Ore was picked there."

"Then where did you get the gold that became the ingredient? No, more importantly, how did you get a dungeon like that in that place?

"I don't know the reason for the latter... The former reason is that I brought it from somewhere else (approximately) or..."

"... created with alchemy, or"

"If that alchemy needs something over there, the muscle goes through...... what material did you have to specialize in that area?

"I can't think of anything like that. What about the lords?

"No... as far as I'm currently known, I don't think so"

"Current (...) or..."

"... because ancient (...) civilization is... wouldn't it be too cheap?

"I don't know if the one up there is in the middle of nowhere... even if I shake it..."

Sir Partridge, with the expression of being made, was painfully rubberized - with a body such as a fire across the shore - but...

"... Rupert, can you think of anything?

Fire powder is flying over here. Even though his lord sees Lupa with the notion of wanting to slice the straw, he can only be confused as Lupa the Messenger.

"My specialty is insects, right? Even if they talk like that..."

"Whatever you want, don't you think?

"Crowe would know something..."

What perplexing Lupa remembered then was the heirloom of a giant ant digging a hole and collecting gold. I never cared about it as mere inheritance...

"An ant monster who digs up gold and collects it..."

"I remember another thing. I forgot where it was, but there was a rumor somewhere that putting a piece of metal in an ant's nest would change whether it was gold or silver."

The confusion and straying on the part of the kingdom, which was conveyed Lupa's information via Lord Partridge, were further exacerbated.