"Thank you, Lily, for vessel number four"

"Yeah."

Lily's girder four arrived at the workplace three days ago.

By now, the workers Cuff has hired will be on paper.

I was meeting Lily at my usual coffee shop.

We're both talking about private clothes.

"I'm surprised it's even finer."

"Well - I added one more tool. A cone with a small hole in it."

hee ~.

"That's why I made the stick thin."

"Hi, I think I'm taking care of you"

"That's okay. I also get 6,000 ruga, so I can buy one of the tools for less."

Indeed, when it comes to six thousand ruga, it is a great deal of money.

It's a price we haven't been able to pay for in sales yet.

I haven't studied management, but I'm worried about the extent to which it's acceptable as capital investment costs.

"So, what are we talking about today? Another extra order?

Yes, it was.

"I've been thinking about something, and I was hoping to get some advice from someone at the correctional facility."

"Hmm? Not Sham or His Highness."

"Hey, Carol, I think we're talking face to face."

"Maybe you mean that book?

... Yep.

How did you know?

"I've never seen Yuri-kun's face like that. Wow. Surprised?"

I'm surprised.

"You understand very well. Amazing."

How did you figure that out?

"Hey, we're not stupid, either."

"Did you read it"

"I could read. I could read."

Did they read it?

That book is about a book that's out in the penitentiary.

In correctional institutions, things like peer magazines have traditionally been turned and read.

Selling paper as paper is not as much gold as it is.

Still, big sales are going up, but if you book it and sell it, it's double the money.

If you let it circulate like it is now, one of these days someone will try to make it into a book, but you don't have to give that person the money to do it.

But when it comes to books, there are only a few people in this country who can read the letters.

More than half of humans won't buy it even if it's a book because they can't read the letters to Matomo.

Also, even if it's cheap, it must be an expensive item if you try it from the common people, so it's hard to get a book out that you still want to buy.

So what books should I publish?

You need to target people who have money, can read letters, and have quite an obsession with reading.

The purchasing staff that existed close to me were the daughters of the correctional home.

If they could publish your book, they would buy it all. That's an arithmetic.

The dormitory of the correctional institution is a very large building with all the female students stuffed.

Of course, both Mr. Lily and Sham live there.

I don't know where it came from, but this is called a birch dorm.

With a high population density, that would make distribution easier.

"Is that what Mr. Lily reads?

"Wow... Yuri, ask the maiden that kind of thing."

Something made me look bad.

Really?

Are you out of control?

I thought it was just a birch dorm, publishing something like a birch in a literary magazine, in the form of a collection of high school literature.

Is it not?

"Well, if you blame me, I'll read it too..."

He seems kind of backwards.

And you look embarrassed.

Why.

"In what way is it read?"

"What shape?

"I don't care about the content, but I want you to tell me who wrote it, in what form, and how it circulates in the dorm. I don't know where you're going last."

"Oh, that's the thing"

"Yes."

"I'll tell you because it's not a secret, but don't tell me that I told you."

"Absolutely."

"In correctional institutions, there's a race of authors in every age."

Author.

Of course, you mean the person who writes the book.

"Authors are people who read books from past eras and have had to wake up to their hobbies and take a brush or"

What the hell is that?

"When the author decides to take the brush, he starts writing, spells it out when he finishes writing, and makes it a single book"

Like me, they don't buy a blank book and write it freely, they write it on parchment and then spell it on the book.

In reverse order, but I guess this one is more orthodox in the sense of bookmaking.

"You know, when you have a book, you get your friends to read it. Have a friend read it and give it back to you later. Why don't you lend it to me again? He's gonna be missing, but he's gonna be visible."

Is distribution in a rental style?

I don't do mass issuing.

"But what's going on with the old book management when it's that system? Besides, I think the person who wrote it will have an amount of parchment money that doesn't make me stupid. Are you just spending?

"Well, I'm going to talk to you."

"Oh, yes."

Looks like we got ahead of ourselves.

"There's a room in birch dormitory called the Correctional Room."

Correctional room.

For some reason, that sounds kind of a horrible name.

For some reason I held the image of a warm heart pulsing red and black with dokundokun in the heart of the dorm.

"No room for that upbringing except for dormitories. Cleaning is done by dormitories, as cleaners are prohibited from entering. It's a kind of secret room. There are books in that room written by historical authors. This coffee shop will surprise you with a bookshelf."

When it comes to a room about this coffee shop, it's pretty big.

More than a thousand books could come in.

It's a much more luxurious library.

"Old and new books, they're all in there"

"It's a little library,"

"If you take it outside the dorm, it will be difficult."

Is that even the code of doorstep?

"So, the director of the correctional room is supposed to be the concurrent director."

"Heh."

"The book the manager admitted was bought at the dormitory expense and put in the book collection."

Eh.

You're buying it out of dormitories?

"It's expensive enough to iron out the bookmaking and paper bills. Then, as long as you write something hectic, you don't turn it on red."

"So you can't even take it to the copybook store and make a reproduction?

"Basically. Taking it out of the dorm is not possible with special permission from the dorm manager, but taking it to a photographer is a kind of contraindication after all. It means the copywriter will read it."

A typist is someone who writes letters.

To put it badly, the profession of manpower replacing printing presses.

"But when you graduate, you can't go to the dorm and pack it, so you want to keep your thoughtful book private."

A thoughtful book when I was a student, even if I was put in a similar situation, is something special.

If I had money, I would like to own it privately.

When you grow up, interrupting the dorm to go read may not be possible, but it's the same as adults going to the primary school library to play, which will still be difficult.

"In that case, you have to photograph yourself or let the girl with the child photograph you."

Wow.

Copying a book is a hell of a lot of heavy labor.

I didn't expect a noble woman who wasn't a common man to do it herself.

"But don't they sell much?"

"I don't think so."

Lily answered with a cup of tea.

"Modern authors are told that they have great talent. In the history of birch dormitories, there are about five authors famous enough to retain their name, but they say they will take their name to it."

Ho.

"If you can get that person's work out, do you mean you can sell it?

I don't know what Lily calls awesomeness.

"Think about it. There are over 500 kids in birch dorms, right? The author will issue a new issue, I'll lend it around. That's right. But it's only a little over 360 days a year."

Oh, you mean that.

Think about it, the problem was obvious.

"Not everyone in birch dorms has that kind of hobby, but everyone who borrows it, even if they read it in a day, waits in order for over a year. In fact, the authors of the modern era produce two or three books a year. No matter how much I want to read it, it doesn't matter."

Even if I wanted to, I couldn't mass produce it.

That's a big deal.

Even if a best-selling author puts out a book, he has to wait more than a year to read it.

It would be such a painful situation for this reading that there would likely be tears of blood.

Even if you are lucky enough to read it early, if it is a good book, it is the mood that you want to read it back.

But that won't happen either.

In addition, schools have a system called graduation.

Those approaching graduation, etc., would be more painful.

Because if you do poorly, chances of reading may be lost forever.

"But then, selling what we put out here is"

"If it's about half the price of a parchment book, I think a lot of kids will buy it."

"No. Isn't it against something like the birch dorm code?

If you're going to sell it in a place like an open market, as you're distributing paper now, you can ignore the code to a certain extent.

A code is something that changes from time to time, and if you ignore it, you can just have a new code.

But if I were to sell that book, I would now sell it in a completely closed world.

It's forbidden for men in the dorm, so I can't even get in.

Correctional institutions are a world ruled by codes, so if you break the codes, no one will buy them, and if you pass unscrupulous, you will have a bad reputation.

I don't feel very good about getting bad reviews in birch dorms draining witches.

"I don't know... hey, I don't know that far. What matters is that this is a hobby activity. The author sticks, he's not forced on anyone, and because he's become popular, he's bound to have to be in a room of upbringing. So... um, but..."

Something seems troubling.

"Something wrong?

"I don't think there's a problem, but the code doesn't exactly make it a letter. Of course, curfew or if I bring a man in, it'll take a letter... So what..."

I won't boil it off.

"In other words, are there people who want to be forced to interpret it as one of the codes, even if the requirements are not in agreement?"

"That's not true."

Mr. Lily pointed at me in a bishy way.

"Even in books that were highly regarded, I'm inherently free to put them in a room of upbringing, but I guess it's with the guy who thinks it's one of the codes to let them in, because everyone lets them in. I knew it."

There are people like that in every world.

There are people who cannot distinguish between their own rules and those of universality.

"Well there, demand will do something about it. We need to make compromises."

"Oh no, I guess so. If we are in a dispute about the current order, it would be really stupid..."

He looks kind of bitter.

I don't know, I guess I have something to think about.

"Either way, you need to speak directly to the author. Is that popular writer someone you know Lily?

"No. But if you go to the big library, you'll be fine."

Oh, the big library?

I don't know, I guess.

"I see. Okay, I'll visit. Do you know your name?"

"Piña Collata or"

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