(From Maxwell)
One day I received two mail deliveries; the first one was an invitation for Rosanne's birthday party. That was quite the surprise, for as long as I had known her, she had never celebrated it, nor made any mention of it. She cared a lot for other people's birthdays though, she had even made me tell her when mine was two or three years ago, and had made a point of inviting me for dinner on that day every year since then.
The other package was a manuscript that contained a more detailed description of the symptoms and effects of the curse of Calliope. I came to know about it after thinking that the context of the legend might give us a better insight on it. So I looked up battles similar to the one mentioned in the tale we already had. Of course, there had been way too many conflicts between two armies near a temple or church, but I felt like the name of the priestess that released the curse was a hint in itself. Calliope. That was a name that originated in the Minoan region, after one of their muses. It was possible that the name had been adapted in retellings, but at the moment I decided to go for the most obvious and straightforward route.
Eventually I found a promising suspect, a conflict that had happened centuries ago, between the Minoan civilization and the "ancestors" of ours, the Achaemenids. Once in this trail, I managed to find a reference to a manuscript written by a traveling historian called Deucalion, who had recorded the effects of a sickness that resembled a lot of what we knew of the curse. Moreover it was reported they had interviewed people who had witnessed the events just a couple of months after it had happened, or so they claimed.
The problem was that there was not a single copy of that manuscript in our nation, just references to it. All the copies that had once existed had been lost to time. In a last attempt, I sent requests asking for it to several libraries in other countries, just in case. The replies I had gotten, at least from those that bothered to send a reply, were as depressng as expected. Some had scraps of the original manuscript, barely anything of substance, while others had also lost theirs. When I was about to lose all hope, I received that package from all the way beyond the Sindhus river. The sender was a librarian that called herself Yamma. I didn't remember sending a letter to her, but the message that was annexed to it seemed to address this.
—I heard of your plight from a friend, Doctor. We have the manuscript you are looking for, in a perfect state I must add, so I'm sending you a copy of it. I have to say, I am quite disappointed with the care other librarians had of such remarkable works. Our manuscript was written into an ancient version of our language though, so I am also sending you a dictionary I have written myself. With that, someone like you should have no problem translating it. May the gods guide you, Doctor.
I was rather confused after reading that letter. But despite the new challenge presented by this stranger that acted so familiarly towards me, I had to recognize this was exactly what I had asked for, so I started to work on translating it. Still, I couldn't help remembering that woman I had met before, who apparently was also from Bharat, and had also treated me as if she knew me. For a moment I considered the possibility that they were the same person, or related in some way at least, but that would have been too much of a coincidence. Perhaps it was just an aspect of their culture.
I finished translating right before Rosanne's party, and I was actually a bit excited to show her the results of my research, but Carmila made it very clear that it was a work-free day. I thought it wouldn't matter, we could talk about it the next day. Rosanne certainly could benefit from resting more, and it wouldn't hurt me to take a break.
But then, at the very end of the party, Carmila fainted. We took her to her room, where I analyzed her state. I had brought Sylphie with me, just because she had slithered around my arm and refused to let go of me, but that allowed me to realize a more thorough inspection. I was hoping she had just overexerted herself, but I realized that was not the case very quickly. Her symptoms were almost identical to the first stage of the curse as recorded by Deucalion; her fingers and toes were turning black, but not due to necrosis, and her hair was losing its pigmentation, turning into a whitish silver. She got an intense fever, followed by sporadic spasms. But more importantly, when I examined her mana flow, I found out it was completely erratic, even more so than Rosanne's had ever been.
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Reincarnated as the mother of an otome game's villainess?!
FantasyAfter giving birth to her first daughter, Rosanne Dragonroot remembers all of her previous life in "our world", and realizing she has reincarnate in the world of an otome game called "Promises of an Enchanted Hearth", in which her daughter serves as...