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Zach Zykers A line left Voca and Edda went home.

Norma also went home. That is, in Goncourt Mansion.

The next day, when Lacruz, the brushwriter who slogged in the question, came along, he was in a state where he couldn't have them away from him except for mealtime. I'm sorry it wasn't a day and it lasted a few days.

Lacruz is a man who reads materials when he is tired of his work and heals his fatigue, and the state of his life, as if he were a clergyman, devotes everything to the service of a copy. And I'm burning enough passion to dedicate the rest of my life to this big job.

By the way, when it comes to why Norma lives here in Goncourt Mansion, it's because he became the successor to the Goncourt family, but the existence of this Lacruz has something to do with Norma taking it on.

The story goes back to last year's promise to Armamir.

It was on the seventeenth day of the ninth month of last year that the Medicine St. Visiting Mission left Voca. The Armamir First Class Cleric, on leaving, said, "As soon as we get to King's Capital, we'll arrange for one pen writer to be dispatched to Voca for about a year. I think it will be early in the year," he said, "but this" early in the year "naturally meant that it would be the beginning of the year to start arranging for a writer.

The return of the Wang capital will be at the end of the ninth month or at the beginning of the tenth month. And Cleric Armamir must submit this report to all places. The preparation of that report and the compilation of the dossier also take a certain amount of time. Then we have to start sorting out conversation records immediately. Even if it's a little bit further to the book, it's a visiting mission that all those people participated in, and they're bound to report to their temples and institutions what happened in Voca.

The fact that Master Scarabelle, who was ill and fading, regained his health, and the discovery of problems related to [purification], is a major incident that cannot help but catch the ears around him. An inquiry, like a raging tao, should push the Armamir priest.

If we think about those things together, instead of starting to arrange for a writer early in the year, Norma thought it would be sooner if we could start during the year.

Still, Norma, within the ten months, finished writing the preface and commentary to The Pharmacological Prelude. This book has less portions, and is easy for beginners to understand. Besides, because Norma originally supplemented and prepared the manuscript, the description is also very simple. Now that we have the first job to give to the writer, Norma was perfectly relieved to be able to work sparingly, no matter how the work progressed.

Norma was perfectly sweet about Cleric Armamir's ability to handle affairs.

At the dawn of the year, a letter came from Armamir on the third day of a month. Since the writer will arrive in Voca with two disciples in the middle of a month, it was about asking for your accommodation arrangements.

"Is this about the month of next year?

And that's what Zinger asked me.

I secured a room in the clinic where the three of us could stay just in case. Two of them are rooms filled with materials, but I don't want you to forgive me.

A line of writers really arrived on the 21st of a month. along with tons of luggage. And when he had unloaded his things, he and his escort returned to the king's capital.

Leaving the packing to the two disciples, LaCruz began his work the day after his arrival.

However, the first job was not a copy. He explained the importance of the publication plan to Norma and consulted him on how to proceed from here.

Until this time, Norma thought that publishing a book meant copying and binding the letters beautifully and putting a cover on them. But publishing the book wasn't about that. Norma herself had seen something called a book when she was at her father's home, but she had no idea what it was like.

First of all, the book has a set size. That standard is strictly established by the Hundred Minutes method. Needless to say, the centimeter method is a unit of length that is widely used on the continent, and it is the centimeter method that divided it into centimeters based on the "one step", which is the length at which the decoy takes a step.

The "Grand Prix" is a standard of one step high, that is, one hundred cents. This can only be used in the Great Book, which is used for the crowning ceremony of kings. The width will be 70% of the height. This is the same with other standards. The Bibliography has a size and weight that cannot be carried alone. It should be noted that once completed, the dictionary will not, as a general rule, turn the page.

The Code is a standard of sixty heights. It is the size of a book describing ecclesiastical law, and important books such as the records of the decree and the authentic history of the country are made in this size.

The "celebration" is a standard of fifty heights. It is the size of the Collection of Commandments (Festivals) used during the major festivals and the largest size allowed by the nobility to make and hold books or give them away.

The Abbreviation is a standard of forty minutes high. It is the size of the Collection of Commandments (Abbreviated Celebrations) used in daily worship.

The "Dictionary" is a standard of thirty minutes in height. It is the magnitude of a collection of commandments given to a faithful nobleman.

The "Civil Code" is a standard of twenty minutes in height. It is the magnitude of a collection of commandments given to the faithful common people. Books of this standard are not allowed to be foiled or gold foiled.

Something called a book must be one of these six standards. Most importantly, the length of [minutes] varies subtly in regions and so on, and there is also a practice of watering up heights and widths called "decorative widths" and so on, so there is diversity in the actual book size. However, the standard requires any of these six. When it comes to this book, because the two standards above cannot be used, it must be essentially four standards below [the celebration].