Arriving in Wang Du, I immediately began to look into autopsy. After the training was over, I headed to the library on that leg, and I scratched and read and fished for less literature. And as I gathered the information, one question began to snap my neck.

To resolve that question - I am now ambushing in front of Arnold's dorm room.

As soon as I finished my training, I came running, but they were right about that. Soon Arnold came to the front of the room.

"Mr. Arnold."

While his eyes were slightly rounded by the fact that he was being ambushed, Arnold calmly urged him to say, "What?"

Perhaps he's already guessed why I'm here.

"Can I ask you one thing?"

You decided it wasn't appropriate to talk in the hallway, Arnold invited me into the room. That should be a silent affirmation.

Surprisingly, Arnold's room was exactly the same interval as mine and Chelsea's. That said, I don't get that narrow impression because I'm using the room we use alone.

With his back stuck to the door, he threw an inquiry at Arnold, who was nestled at the window.

"Mr. Arnold is not autistic, is he?

Arnold with slightly rounded eyes. But he immediately answered clearly in a cloudless tone.

"Ah. If I may add at last, Elvira developed autopsy when she was three years old. I already had strong magic, but slightly inferior to me when I was 3"

To that answer, I realize that my question is probably clear to him. Meaning that Arnold, who usually only replies with a small number of mouths, deliberately adds that he is more magical. That 's--

"... why hasn't Mr. Arnold suffered from autopsy"

I don't know.

While I was aware that it might be some rude remarks, I ran into the question straight away. Then Arnold shakes his head clearly.

The black eyes that stared at me were shining a strong light, so much so that they had the illusion that they were often stared at. From that look, I'm just a little relieved that the question I arrived at wasn't wrong.

Suddenly, I breathed deeply and opened my mouth.

"For once, I read literature about autism from one end to the other. All the literature I read, without exception, was closed with this one sentence."

- Autologous disease has a powerful magic power in the small body, but it is a tragic disease caused by self-defense.

Suppose a young child has so much magic in his body that he can't hold it. Then, the body can't stand its too strong magic, and it takes its limits. Try to avoid it and let the magic slip away little by little, regardless of the will of the owner. But because the owner of the body does not grasp the movement of its magic, it cannot be missed as far outside as it thinks - the theory is that its magic, which could not be missed in an attempt to escape, wanders through the body, causing autopsy.

Sure enough, if you look at the data from the past, all the patients had above-average strong magic. The time of onset of autologous disease was also childhood, mostly up to the age of 5, and the “cause” spelled out in the literature appeared to be particularly so.

But there I remembered. The face of a senior, who is carrying the profession of the youngest Wang conjugator and sorcerer of the Knights.

If you say it's caused by too much magic, why hasn't Arnold developed a disease?

"Does Elvira feel weak or something? Are you allergic?

"No, that's not true. Elvira is usually an active kid who runs around more than me, even though she suffers from autopsy. Instead, my body is as strong as it is my age."

My doubts grow deeper and deeper into Arnold's words.

Why did Elvira develop and Arnold did not?

Because Elvira was a girl and her body was smaller than Arnold, the boy? Maybe Arnold is special and has resistance to autopsy?

No, nothing's just between the Rocco brothers and sisters.

Indeed, autopsy could not help but be described as a disease in which a child with strong magic develops. But with strong magic and a bite to say, from the eggs of a rare magician like Elvira - if you say it in a deliberate bad way - there were some patients up and down the top at best.

If you're a magician with as much magic as this, that's what the Chevalier Knights have. Yet they have not developed autologous disease. Why is that? I just thought there were factors involved other than magic.

"- To see past patients with autologous disease, you can see that it does not develop in those who do not possess above-average magic,"

Arnold's words dragged me up, sinking abundantly into the sea of thought.

"Patients have 60% female and 40% male gender. I wouldn't be able to say it's gender biased just because of the small number of references. Childhood by the age of 5 is more than 90% at the time of onset. Then the time to death is shortest and 9 years, long and 42 years too wide"

Arnold put his arms together. Then he deepened the wrinkles between his eyebrows and pulled his jaw all the way. By doing so, nature and Arnold's gaze fall to the floor.

It was a particularly slow tone, as if you were trying to sort out my thoughts.

Think about autopsy again, guided by Arnold's well-touched voice.

"And then... right, it's unlikely something like a virus"

The residential area of the morbidity was scattered throughout. If you think you've also found a developer in a snow country, then you can't see any environmental commonalities so far that you might be found in the desert next. And most importantly, there are no cases of infected flesh parents, etc., who were baking the patient's care in a worthwhile manner.

And about the cure. Apart from treatment with restorative drugs, experimental treatments such as torturing magic to consume excess magic were also given, but none of them seemed to have worked. The ancestors were frustrated when they tried every treatment they could think of.

- That's about all the information I can tell from past cases.

Silence falls between us. I was increasingly confused.

"I'm pretty sure it's caused by strong magic. But why, Elvira, she's developing, but with a stronger magic than her, you didn't get sick. Because he's a boy and his body is bigger than a girl's? Because it's sturdy? Physical problems? Looking at past data, that's not what patients have in common. Plus, I think the number of patients is slightly lower. Sorcerers with stronger magic than past patients, that would be the lot of them in the Chevalier Knights. And yet why aren't those people developing? After all, is there a susceptible physique or something..."

Pompous and overflowing questions from next to next.

It would be best if we could solve this question. But I'm not sure I can do that now that I have little material and little time left. Besides, maybe the pathologist was carrying that fate (at best), so what a hell of a reason.

And most importantly, there's this whispering “I” in my head.

Even if there is something puzzling about the onset, I am almost certain that it is ultimately caused by the magic of the person, so I was wondering if I could do something about that magic.

I gave up my thoughts, it's just a force move. I have the courage to make this point - I thought so.

"I'm sure the magic is hurting my body. If so, if you managed to suppress or temporarily remove that magic... I think a more fundamental solution would be to take the magic itself away from him... naturally I haven't found such a cure yet"

Arnold was getting to the same idea, apparently. I guess he has been researching and thinking about autopsy longer than I have. Suppose the answer at the end of it is this - are we similarly or much stuck with out-of-the-counter ideas?

However, he did not nod at the way that Arnold would take away from him the magic that was the cause, which he presented as the most fundamental solution.

I see. If that hand can indeed be used, it is likely that the self-destructive disease will also be completely cured because the magic that is hurting him will be extinguished. It's a very quick, simple and clear way. But - I'm in trouble that way.

Elvira must be accompanied by Lukersch as a magician. If you just curb the magic, if you still take it away from yourself completely...

But I think this method might be the most appropriate one. Even if the magic of damaging the body is suppressed or temporarily removed, the possibility of recurrence is considered as long as the person has magic.

And most importantly, nothing can be turned into life. When the situation is that that's the only way, you should do it without hesitation.

But Arnold also said something about completely wiping out the magic of others, but it lacks some realism. It seems more realistic that it still suppresses magic.

- These two are the only ways to go now that I and Arnold have not been able to figure out the questions that I have, where I have had a hard time thinking and juxtaposing with others. No, even if we could figure it out, in the end, if the cause lies in the person's too strong magic, we might have to take this way.

Nevertheless, is this a lot less inclined towards the field of witchcraft than the field of conditioning? Should I still study that aspect?

In terms of the knowledge of the cook, poison grass may be more desirable than medicinal herbs. There is something about temporarily amplifying magic within the efficacy of a healing drug, but naturally the opposite does not exist.

"Right......... Um, thank you for your time. I'll do some more research."

- suppress or take away magic.

Direction set. If that's the case, we'll have to read and fish the literature again. Anyway, it's quantity. We need to find something that catches us at all.

The moment I opened the door and tried to get out of the room, I said, "Ampere!" There was a voice from behind. Looking back,

"Please."

I was told in a squeezing voice.

I nod back to Arnold greatly. And ran out.