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Apothecary Diaries: Volume 15 (Light Novel) (eBook)

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eBook Download: EPUB
2025
250 Seiten
J-Novel Club (Verlag)
9781718361461 (ISBN)

Lese- und Medienproben

Apothecary Diaries: Volume 15 (Light Novel) -  Natsu Hyuuga
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While pursuing the secret of the mysterious jade, Maomao and Jinshi found more than just the tablet's owner-they've also discovered a forbidden book that has long lain hidden. As the book is gradually reconstructed, they discover that the knowledge and secrets within might be extremely important to someone very unexpected. Meanwhile, Maomao finds herself helping her father Luomen in what appears to be a large-scale drug trial...but what are they treating? And why?


While pursuing the secret of the mysterious jade, Maomao and Jinshi found more than just the tablet's owner-they've also discovered a forbidden book that has long lain hidden. As the book is gradually reconstructed, they discover that the knowledge and secrets within might be extremely important to someone very unexpected. Meanwhile, Maomao finds herself helping her father Luomen in what appears to be a large-scale drug trial...but what are they treating? And why?

Chapter 2: Smallpox and Chickenpox


The day after the test, Maomao was taking stock of their inventory as usual.

Why would they handpick people to do drug trials? she wondered.

It was her fault for pondering while she worked.

“Yikes!”

She was so distracted by her ruminations that she almost knocked over a jar full of medicine. She was saved by Yo, who had come to help her and luckily was standing nearby. She propped the jar up and prevented catastrophe.

“Phew... Sorry about that. Thanks for the help,” Maomao said.

“Is something on your mind?” Yo asked.

Yo was the taller of the two palace ladies who had recently joined the service. She was assigned to a different place from Maomao, but frequently came to her to learn how to mix or preserve herbs and medicines. She was a quick study, and Maomao enjoyed having a student who rose to her teaching.

“Oh, nothing much,” she said now, trying to energize herself with a slap on the cheeks.

Still, she couldn’t quite get the thought out of her head. Just then, she happened to catch sight of Yo’s long sleeves. “I realize this isn’t very polite, but may I make a request of you?” she said.

“Yes? What?”

“Would you show me your smallpox scars?”

Yo’s arm was covered with small welts from smallpox. An outbreak of the disease had destroyed her village.

Yo looked dubious for a moment, but then she rolled up her sleeves. Her arms were covered in small scars like tiny red beans.

“Are they that unusual?” she asked.

“No, but I’ve never had the chance to examine smallpox scars up close,” said Maomao. Some of the customers at the apothecary shop had had them, but no one had been eager to show them off. Maomao knew very well that it was not a nice thing to ask for.

“Are the scars only on your arms?” she asked.

“No, I have some on my shoulders and neck as well. But a lot fewer than some other people.”

“You think that’s thanks to Kokuyou’s treatment?”

“Yes,” Yo said simply.

Kokuyou had highly visible smallpox scars on his face, but he was surprisingly cheerful in spite of it. He had been a doctor in Yo’s village, and although he acted awfully frivolous, Yo trusted him implicitly.

“This treatment—what exactly did he do to you?” Maomao had heard some sort of explanation before, but she wanted to be sure.

“He made a wound on my skin and rubbed powder made from an old scab into it. I’ve heard you can also inhale the powder through your nose, but he didn’t have enough for that.”

“Hoh, hoh.” Maomao nodded; this was definitely worth asking for details. “How bad were your symptoms after the treatment?”

Yo crossed her arms and closed her eyes. “Let’s see... I got a pretty serious fever, but the blisters didn’t spread all over my body. Most of the other kids who got the same treatment had similar symptoms, or maybe slightly milder. A few of them hardly had any blisters at all, and their fevers went down after a few days.”

“So there are significant variations among individuals.” Maomao looked for a notepad so she could write all this down. Yo insisted it wasn’t worth it, but Maomao wanted to make sure she remembered.

“Yes, pretty significant, I’d say. It depends somewhat on each person’s physical size, but I suspect it mostly has to do with the amount of the toxin they were exposed to. You’re working with scabs, right? So it’s hard to make sure everyone gets exactly the same amount.”

Maomao hmmed and crossed her arms. Yo was intelligent: She could speak objectively while including elements of her own observations and suppositions.

“What happened to the people Kokuyou didn’t treat?” Maomao asked.

“My father had had smallpox before, so he just had a minor fever. Everyone who was strong enough left the village when the outbreak began. The only villagers left were my family and a few children. Oh, and one adult survived. Everyone else was killed.”

So it wasn’t the case, evidently, that once you had smallpox, you could never get it again.

“That’s terrible,” Maomao said. “What did you do with the bodies?”

“We burned them and then buried the bones,” Yo said after a moment of hesitation. “And the houses.”

Smallpox could spread just through old scabs. Simply burying the bodies would have been too dangerous. Yet some considered burning a corpse to be blasphemous; doing so must have taken no small amount of courage.

“That’s when all of you came to the capital together.”

“No, not all of us. The one other surviving adult outside my family went somewhere else. But I want you to know that we were careful to disinfect our clothing before we came into the city, and to be sure that we had completely healed.”

She wanted to emphasize that she had not brought plague into the royal capital.

“I know,” Maomao said. “And I won’t tell anyone about what you did with the corpses.” She was starting to think that she would have to interrogate Kokuyou a bit further about smallpox treatment.

I can check with Pops too.

There were plenty of other capable doctors around as well. The older ones might remember something about that outbreak of smallpox.

With all this chatting, Maomao suddenly discovered they were done with their work. “I’m going to take the medicine you’ve made—come with me, please,” she said.

“Yes, ma’am.”

They would leave the commonly used medicines at the medical office. “We might encounter some rough customers, but just stick with me. Don’t let them see that you’re afraid, no matter what they say to you,” Maomao told Yo.

Maomao’s office was near the training grounds where the soldiers practiced, which meant there were a lot of, in her words, rough customers. Yo might still be a bit countrified, but Maomao couldn’t have anyone laying a hand on her dear younger colleague.

As they passed by the young men, the soldiers shot them appraising glances. Yo stiffened slightly; Maomao trotted along as if nothing were happening.

When they arrived at the medical office, the elderly doctor was chasing out a soldier who’d come in with a graze. “You call that an injury? That’s nothing. Get out of here!” He might look like a grandfatherly old man, but he was an experienced hand in this office and was used to things getting a little mean.

“Couldn’t you have just slapped some salve on it to put his mind at ease?” asked Dr. Li, who as a fellow bodybuilder had some sympathy for the soldier.

“I cleaned the injury,” the old doctor shot back. “Look, that was the guy who was guffawing about breaking one of the other men’s arms the other day. If he thinks he deserves kid gloves, he’s going to find all I have for him is some spit and polish.”

“Ahh, one of those gutless wonders, eh? I daresay you should have rubbed salt in the wound to disinfect it,” said Dr. Li, who sounded more like a musclebrain every day.

“I have medicines to deliver,” said Maomao, entering the office and taking off her portable medicine cabinet.

“Delivery’s here,” Yo echoed, imitating Maomao.

“Well, well, what a sweet young thing you’ve brought with you today,” said the elderly doctor.

“My name is Yo,” she told him. “I just started this year.” Evidently this was the first time they had met.

“We don’t get a lot of young ladies around here. Too many rough-and-tumble types.”

I’m here,” Maomao said stiffly.

“You and Miss Chue are special cases. In flower terms, I would say you’re an obako and a dandelion.”

So she was in the same category as Chue now?

Dr. Li and the elderly physician were both relatively decent toward young women, so Maomao didn’t worry about having Yo there. If anything, it made her acutely aware that those in charge must have been thinking the same thing when they assigned Maomao to this office.

That was enough chitchat as far as Maomao was concerned. She resumed her delivery.

“When you deliver new medicines, check the date on any medicines left over,” she told Yo. “Put the ones with the oldest date on top, and if they’re too old, throw them out.”

These deliveries were regular affairs, so they didn’t throw too much out. Unlike the rear palace medical office, this was a proper place of business.

I wonder how the quack doctor is doing, Maomao thought.

Luomen was there now, so the rear palace medical office was probably running smoothly. If Maomao had any concerns, they were mostly for the quack doctor’s job. It appeared Luomen had been given some new task, however, and Maomao did worry a little bit about how things would go from here.

She noticed there were no injured patients around at that moment, so without slowing in her work, she decided to broach the subject she’d been wondering about. “Have either of you physicians ever had smallpox?”

Yo looked mildly shocked, but she didn’t stop refilling the medicine.

“The pox? Doesn’t everyone get that?” Dr. Li asked.

“I think...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 12.9.2025
Reihe/Serie The Apothecary Diaries
Illustrationen Natsu Hyuuga
Übersetzer Natsu Hyuuga
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Literatur Krimi / Thriller / Horror Krimi / Thriller
Schlagworte Drama • eunuchs • female protagonist • History • Light Novel • Mystery
ISBN-13 9781718361461 / 9781718361461
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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