Bottled Happiness

 

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.

“I guess you could say that I’m free, but you could also say that I’m

busy.”

“So you’re free!”

……

“By the way, is there a village or town where people live nearby?” If I

didn’t find a place to stay, I’d be camping out in this meadow, and I can’t say

that was a very compelling option.

“If you’re looking for a village, there’s one over there.” He pointed, and

there was indeed a small village…or something village-esque. It seemed very

isolated.

“Uh-huh.”

“Actually, that’s my village.”

“Ah, so you’re the village chief? Pleased to meet you. My name is Elaina.

I’m a traveler.”

“Oh, pleased to meet you. I’m Emil— Wait, no, that’s not what I meant! I

meant that’s the village where I live.” Emil puffed out his cheeks.

“I knew that. It was just a joke.” I smiled.

Emil turned sulky and hugged his bottle instead of replying.

When I looked more closely at the bottle, I could just barely make out the

shape of something wriggling inside it—a kind of floating white mist that

moved like a living thing.

“What is that?” I pointed at the bottle.

He had probably wanted me to ask. With a proud snort, Emil gave me an

answer. “This is the bottle where I’m collecting happiness! The instant a

person or animal feels happiness, I transform it with a spell and gather it up

in this bottle.”

“Huh…”

Magic can move objects, transfigure things into flame or ice or…anything

else, really, and duplicate things right before your eyes. You can use it to fly

on a broom, to make the wind blow, or to change yourself into a mouse. But

gathering up happiness the moment it’s felt means transforming emotion

using a spell.

This might be interesting.

“Can I open it and look?”

“O-of course you can’t!”

When I stretched out my hand, Emil squeezed the bottle even tighter in

his arms and retreated a little. With a hostile look in his eye, he proclaimed,

“I’m doing this for a girl I like, so I won’t let you touch it!”

“Uh-huh.”

“Um, are you mad?”

“No, I’m actually kind of impressed.”

I recalled a book I had read a long time ago. It was the story of a husband

who walked around outside, magically duplicating beautiful images the

moment he saw them and taking them home to show to his sick wife who

couldn’t leave the house. Now how did that story end, again? It was a story

from long, long ago, so I had completely forgotten.

“There’s a girl you like?”

“Hmm? Yeah, she’s a maid named Nino who works at my house. She

always seems so gloomy, so I’m going to give her some happiness.”

So that’s why he’s stuffing happiness into a bottle.

He held the bottle up high for me to see and stared at it lovingly. He

looked quite content; if you really could transform the expression he was

wearing right then, you could bottle up some really good happiness.

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

only about ten houses sparsely populating the area, all built of wood. Some

small fields and wells were interspersed among them, as if to fill in the gaps.

Oh, wow. “What a peaceful village.”

“Isn’t it?”

We got down off our brooms and passed between two trees that served as

the gate for the village. Straight ahead of us on the road sat a house that was a

large, splendid mansion in comparison to the others. By which I mean—well,

it was about the same size as most normal houses in other countries.

“Is that the village chief’s house?”

Pointing at the building, Emil nodded. “That’s right. And it’s my house,

too.”

“Oh?” Then it wasn’t necessarily wrong to say this village was Emil’s

village.

“…You don’t seem impressed, miss.”

“Oh, should I have been more surprised? Wow, that’s amazing, you must

be really rich!”

“Um…I mean, that’s not…” A shadow fell over Emil’s expression.

“Anyway, Emil, when are you going to give that bottle to the girl?” I

asked, and he lit up again. His emotional highs and lows were entertainingly

extreme.

“Today! I’ll give it to her after lunch. Oh yeah, you should join us! Nino’s

cooking is the best!”

“I’m happy you want to invite me, but I just ate.”

“Okay, I’ll have Nino make you a small plate! Are there any foods you

can’t eat? I’ll ask her not to use them!”

It seemed like he wanted me to stay for lunch no matter what. Well, I

don’t have any reason to refuse, do I?

“No, I’m fine with anything, but I really did just have a meal, so please

ask her for a small portion, okay?”

“Leave it to me! I’ll get you some really yummy stuff!”

But you’re not the one making the food. It’s Nino.

And that’s how I came to be a guest at the home of the village chief.

Despite the luxuriously large outward appearance of the house, the

interior was totally average. The dining room that Emil showed me was

decorated with old furniture, and the chief’s household seemed to live a

modest life just like the rest of the simple village. Actually, I was getting the

impression that the estate was just a big plot of land they didn’t know what to

do with.

“Okay, have a seat.” Emil pulled out a chair and gestured me toward it,

and I sat.

“Thanks. By the way, where is that maid of yours?”

“I wonder… She’ll probably be here soon.”

“And the village chief?”

“He should get here soon, too.”

“What’s with that noncommittal attitude?”

After I spent some time conversing with Emil, I sensed someone coming

up behind me. Not in a sixth-sense kind of way, though; I just heard the

noise. Anyway, I turned around.

“…Ah.”

There was a young girl. When our eyes met, she jumped in surprise and

gave a small, frightened bow. It was really kind of pathetic.

Judging from her clothes, this is the maid in question. She wore an apron

dress (the classic maid outfit) that was a little too big for her petite frame.

“How do you do? Might you be from the East?”

Her glossy black hair was pin straight, and her eyes were a deep, dark

brown. She resembled a certain apprentice witch whom I had met in another

country, also from the East. That apprentice’s hair had been a little bit

shorter, though.

“Ah? Uh, um…”

Maybe it was rude of me to suddenly ask where she came from. The

bewildered girl glanced to Emil for help.

“Yes, she is. My father found Nino in an eastern country.”

“I’ve heard they’re having you work as a maid in this house?”

The girl called Nino gave a small nod. “Y-yes…the village chief treats me

very kindly.”

Her reply was mechanical, as if she was being compelled to read a script.

“Where is the village chief now?”

“Ah, um… He is in his study now, working…,” she said, gripping the

hem of her dress. “Um, did you have some business with him?”

“No, not really.” I shook my head.

I’m probably going to meet him when it’s time to eat anyway, so there’s

no need to press.

When that little exchange was over, Nino lowered her gaze as if to avoid

making eye contact. She didn’t seem particularly good at talking to people.

But the boy who loved her didn’t care at all as he bounded over to her and

leaned down to see her eyes. “Hey, hey, Nino, what’s for lunch today?” I

couldn’t see his expression because his back was to me, but I’m sure it was a

broad smile.

“Ah, t-today is…grilled fish, on request from the village chief.”

“Yay! Say, if it’s all right, could I get you to make some for that girl,

too?” Emil pointed at me. Nino looked at me for a moment and nodded

slightly.

“See, miss?”

“I appreciate it. Thank you, but I’m not very hungry, so please make mine

a small portion.”

“…Y-yes, miss.” As Emil had said, Nino certainly was gloomy. If

someone walked in just then and saw her face, they might assume the two of

us were bullying her.

“Oh yeah! Hey, Nino, after we eat lunch today, I have a present for you.”

“Ah, f-for me…?”

“Yep. Hope you’re excited!”

“N-no…that’s all right. I-if you give something to a servant like me…the

village chief will be angry…” Even beyond the humble phrasing, it was a

particularly servile thing to say.

“It’s fine, it’s fine. I’ll explain it all to Father.”

“Oh, but…”

Impatient, Emil played his trump card against the meek girl. “Well then,

it’s an order from me. How about that?”

“……”

His feelings must have gotten through to her; after all, he was very direct,

maybe overly so. Nino nodded slowly. “If it’s an order…,” she said, then

smiled faintly.

He smiled back at her.

I was quite bored for the next little while.

Emil diligently went to assist Nino, leaving the guest (me) all alone in the

dining room. I had also headed to the kitchen to lend a hand, but Emil turned

me away with a dazzling smile. “You go sit down, miss! The two of us will

do the cooking!”

There was no one to talk to and nothing to do but wait for the time to pass,

extremely unproductively. I can’t sit still. I want to read a book or

something. But I don’t carry books around…

I ended up passing the time doing nothing but sitting in my chair.

I had been waiting several minutes when a plump man sat down across

from me.

“Ah, a rare guest.”

He wasn’t especially old or young, possibly late thirties or early forties.

Maybe. I guess?

“Good afternoon. Would you happen to be the village chief?” I asked,

convinced that he must be.

“Indeed.” See?

“I am Elaina, a friend of your son’s. I’m a traveler. Nice to meet you.”

“A pleasure to make your acquaintance. I am Emil’s father.”

I know that. And now he had made his appearance with perfect timing.

Exactly when I was in need of something to do.

“Mr. Village Chief, how long have you been in charge around here?”

“Since the very beginning.”

“Is that so?”

“Mm.”

“It’s a lovely village.”

“Mm.”

“Do you have any local culinary specialties that you’re known for?”

“No.”

“Not at all?”

“Mm.”

“…Is that so?”

I feel like I continued this futile attempt at conversation with the chief in

bits and pieces, but I have absolutely no recollection of what we discussed.

To put it bluntly, I learned nothing.

After a little while, Nino and Emil brought in the food. As the two of them

prepared the table, my faint feelings of hunger were accompanied by an

indescribable unease.

“……”

I could’ve sworn I only asked them for a small portion.

“Huh? We did make it small!” Emil replied, staring at me in puzzlement.

“See, the fish is small, and we gave you a little less salad.”

Well, now that you mention it, I can tell you gave me a little less, but I

would have been fine with less than half of what you prepared.

“Um…p-perhaps it really is too much…? If you can’t finish it, please feel

free to leave some behind…”

“……”

I was silenced before I could say anything.

Standing next to Nino, Emil was glaring at me. And his eyes said, “Don’t

you dare leave any behind.”

I ate it. I cleaned my plate, in fact. It truly was a very delicious meal, but I

only tasted the first few bites. After that, it became a chore of cramming the

remaining amount into my stomach. What a waste.

“Thanks for the meal! That was really delicious, Nino.”

“Th-thank you…very much.” Nino gave an embarrassed little bow. “I’ll

clean up the dishes…” She stood up and gathered the plates and glasses. Emil

lent a hand, as if it was a matter of course.

In that case, I’ll help, too. I started to stand up, but again Emil turned to

me with a smile and said, “Oh, you’re fine, miss.”

As the two of them headed for the kitchen, I posed a question to the

village chief. “Where did you meet Miss Nino?”

After draining the rest of the water in his glass, the village chief answered

me. “I bought her in the Orient,” he said, as if it were the most ordinary thing

in the world.

Bought. In other words… “She’s a slave?”

“Mm. I got her several years ago. My wife left us, and for a while, I

couldn’t handle all the housework.”

There was plenty that I wanted to say, but I refrained. Silently, I prompted

him to continue.

“Back in those days, I traveled to the East from time to time for work, and

that’s where I found her. The price was a little higher than I would have

preferred, but she was adequate at housework, and more importantly, she had

a nice face and looked like she would grow up to be a beautiful woman. I

bought her without a second thought, and it was a good decision. She’s made

a fine maid.”

The chief let out a vulgar laugh.

“Does Emil know?”

“I think I told him, but he doesn’t seem to mind much that his playmate is

a slave.”

Emil had said the village chief had “found” Nino, so he might not have

realized she was a slave.

But even if Nino had been bought, I had a feeling that Emil wouldn’t

change his behavior toward her at all. He seemed to treat everyone the same.

Nino returned quietly from the kitchen the moment our conversation

broke off, glanced at our glasses to make sure they were empty, and then

cleared them one by one from the table. She kept her head down the whole

time. I think she had overheard our conversation.

“Hey, Nino, where should I put this big plate, again?”

“Eek…!”

There was an ear-splitting crash.

Emil had suddenly come out of the kitchen, and Nino had collided with

him on her way back in, dropping the glasses in her hands. Shards of all sizes

were scattered around their feet.

“What the hell are you doing?!” the chief roared from across the table. He

stood up in a rage and grabbed the stupefied Nino by the lapels of her apron.

“Clean this up immediately, you worthless girl! How long will I have to wait

before you can complete all of your tasks perfectly?!”

“I-I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry…”

“Stop it, Father! That was my fault, wasn’t it?! Don’t just blame Nino—”

“Shut your mouth, boy!” Emil shuddered and hung his head.

Apparently deciding he had yelled enough, the chief let go of Nino and

jerked his chin toward the glass. “Clean that up.”

With tears welling in her eyes, Nino nodded and bowed over and over to

the two of them and to me. “I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry…,” she repeated,

as if the words were a spell to protect her.

This is extremely unpleasant. Really, this is so uncomfortable.

I pushed back my chair, crouched over the wreckage of the glasses, and

pulled out my wand. “This isn’t bad at all. As long as you have all the pieces,

you don’t need to clean it up.”

I used a convenient time-reversing spell designed to fix wounds and repair

things. A white mist-like substance brushed the transparent shards. As time

reversed, the pieces gathered together, then returned to their original form.

I handed the restored glasses to Nino. “Next time, be careful not to drop

them, okay?”

I could tell she had no idea what had just happened.

“Oh, thank you. You fixed the glasses even after witnessing that

disgrace,” the village chief interjected from beside me in a calm voice. “Hey,

you thank her, too.”

Wait, you shouldn’t force people to say thank you.

“…I’m sorry.” What’s more, Nino had missed the point and said the

wrong thing. She was bowing deeply.

“Don’t apologize, say thank you, Nino,” I said.

Nino raised her head and choked out the words in a tearful voice. “Thank

you…very much.”

“I can do spells like that, too, you know.”

After the village chief had shut himself in his study and Nino had gone

back to washing dishes, Emil grew sullen.

You don’t have to put on a brave front.

“Oh no, I’m sorry. In that case, you didn’t need my help at all.”

“No, I did, because I couldn’t do anything. Thank you, miss.”

“Don’t mention it.”

“But just so you know, I can do that.”

“……”

It must be embarrassing to have your weakness exposed in front of the girl

you like.

“You don’t really have anything to worry about.” I clapped a hand on his

shoulder. “Anyway, right now, Nino must be very upset. Isn’t this your best

chance to give her your present?”

“Miss, you’re a genius…”

“Oh-ho, do go on.”

His hopes rekindled, Emil’s mood improved immediately. He’s such a

simple child. It’s adorable, really.

Hiding the bottle behind his back, Emil waited for Nino to finish her

work.

“…Ah.” Nino trudged out of the kitchen and cringed in surprise when

Emil suddenly appeared before her, like a small animal. Maybe she

remembered running into him earlier.

Emil took a step toward her. “Nino, I told you that I had a present for you

after lunch, didn’t I?”

“…Y-yes,” Nino answered hesitantly.

“Here. This is your present.”

Emil held the bottle out to her. Nino stared, nonplussed, at the squirming

white haze inside. She clearly had no idea what this was.

“This here is a bottle that I’ve filled with happiness.” Emil put his hand on

the cap. “Inside it’s full of happiness. I went all over collecting it from

people.”

“…People’s happiness?”

Nino tilted her head in confusion, and Emil grinned.

“You can only see it once, so watch closely, okay?”

With a satisfying shunk, he uncapped the bottle. Now that it was free, the

white mist flew out of the bottle, up to the ceiling. When the ceiling was

completely covered with white clouds, small particles began slowly swirling

around in the mist.

Like shards of glass, the particles sparkled with reflected light to create a

fantastic display. The shining particles were the fragments of happiness Emil

had collected, projecting the scenes that had inspired them.

Joy at the birth of a child. The contentment of viewing a picturesque

landscape. The subtle delight of finding a pretty flower. The satisfaction of

overcoming a hardship. The quiet pleasure of sprawling out in the sunlight to

read a book on a day off and dozing without a care.

“The outside world is full of so much happiness, you see.” Emil took

Nino’s hand. “So don’t be so sad all the time. I’ll be here to make you happy,

too.”

As for Nino, she watched the shining lights in amazement, and before

long she was silently weeping. She held a hand over her mouth to stifle the

sound as the tears trickled down her cheeks.

Emil smiled, a little confused, and gently embraced her.

The tears flowing down her face glittered just like the fragments of

happiness.

“You could stay a little bit longer.”

We were at the two trees that stood in place of a gate. Emil had come to

the edge of the village to see me off, and he was pouting like an abandoned

puppy. Next to him stood the maid, Nino. She had never been very

expressive, so I couldn’t tell whether she was saddened by my departure.

I shook my head. “Sorry, but I can’t take it too easy,” I said, taking out

my broom.

“…Come see us again then, okay? Nino and I will cook for you again, and

it’ll be even better next time. Okay?”

“Y-yes…we’ll be waiting.” Nino gave a little bow.

I got on my broom and rose into the air. “Okay. I’ll come again. Someday

—definitely.”

When my travels are at an end, perhaps.

The two of them waved at me as I receded—Emil waving both arms

around wildly, and Nino waving calmly and delicately.

“……?”

I accidentally made eye contact with Nino.

Her eyes were like deep darkness, and I mean more than just the color.

They were longing, desperate, as if she were in a state of unimaginable

despair. As if she were already dead. It was nothing like when we’d first met

in the village chief’s mansion.

…I wonder why.

I was within sight of the next road when I remembered the ending of that

book I read long ago.

The story of a husband who walked around outside, magically capturing

beautiful vistas the moment he saw them, and taking them home to show his

sick wife, who couldn’t leave the house.

I wonder how I forgot about it until just now. It left such an awful

aftertaste.

The story ended when the wife, who yearned to see the scenery for

herself, forced her weakened body to move and died even sooner than she

was supposed to. It was a fable, and the moral was “The things we think we

do for the sake of others are not always what’s best for them.”

What was Nino thinking after she saw the contents of that bottle, I

wonder? What decision would she have reached? She couldn’t possibly—

“………”

No, no way. She wouldn’t.

When I looked back, the wind was running through the broad meadow of

brilliant green. The wildflowers shone in the sunlight, like the surface of still

water swaying in the wind.

It really was a beautiful place. But I had no reason to ever return.

If I did, I would just end up feeling sad.

 

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