"You mean when she cut her hair?" I asked.
"I saw her determination and resolve in that act," he said. "As a person, as a
woman, the princess has grown into an individual who can stand on her own two
feet. I don't want her to dull that resolve by clinging to a dying man."
He's rejecting Liscia for her own sake, huh, I thought. Honestly... What a stubborn
old man.
"I, too, have something to ask," Georg said.
"What?"
"What has become of the soldiers in the Army and Air Force who rebelled against
you alongside us?" he asked. "And what of the nobles who engaged in corruption and
then rebelled?"
"In recognition of their valor in the Amidonian war, I have pardoned the soldiers
of the Army and Air Force for their crimes," I said. "The House of Vargas rebelled
against me, but I must consider their accomplishments up until the time of the
former king. I have decided that only Castor and Carla will be judged for their
crimes. I abolished the Duchy of Vargas, but I allowed the disowned eldest son to
inherit the family name, and granted him just Red Dragon City as his fief. Though,
that child still being young, his mother Accela and their steward Tolman will assist
him in his duties. As for Castor and Carla themselves, to repay Excel's
accomplishments in the war effort, I have heard her plea and, at a later date, I will
judge the two of them personally."
Georg closed his eyes and remained silent. How must he have felt listening to me?
"Now, as for the corrupt nobles... I abolished their houses, confiscated their
domains and assets... and had them executed," I said. "For those who acted directly, I
did so publicly. For those who were merely implicated, I did so privately."
Under current law, treason was a crime that carried a death sentence for
relatives of up to three degrees of consanguinity. If, like Georg, they had cut ties with
their families properly, their uninvolved relatives wouldn't have had to get involved,
but the vast majority of the corrupt nobles had neglected to do that. They must have
thought they couldn't lose.
Worse yet, in addition to treason, they bore charges of corruption, bribery,
collaborating with Amidonia, misdeeds within their own fiefs (under the protection
of their own status, they'd engaged in murder, rape, theft, etc.), and so on. Anyway,
they had broken the laws like crazy.
For those whose only crime was treason, like Georg and Castor, I still received
petitions to spare their lives, but for these people, I actually received petitions
calling for me to murder them more brutally than I did.
"The system of collective responsibility is supposed to hold their families
responsible for not stopping them, right? Isn't three degrees of consanguinity a little
much?" I asked.
"There is nothing else to be done for it," said Georg. "If humans or beastmen live
to see their great-grandchildren, they've lived a very long life, but there are races
that live to see their great-great-grandchildren and greater's faces while still being
active. Because of that, the punishment had to reach farther."
"Still, too many innocent people died!" I cried. "Hakuya and I worked like
madmen, and we were just barely able to reform the law to only cover two degrees
of consanguinity in time. We also stayed the execution of everyone under the age of
thirteen, and had them placed in the care of orphanages or the church, but that was
the best we could do..."
Those under ten had been placed in an orphanage run by the state, while those
who were between the ages of eleven and thirteen had been left with the church.
The difference between the two was whether they would be able to marry and
have families of their own in the future. For those in the orphanage, it was possible,
but those given to the church would be cut off from secular life and be unable to
marry. Furthermore, among the people implicated by association, there had been a
woman who had given birth less than a month ago, so she had also been left with the
church along with someone to watch her. If she tried plotting anything untoward in
future, she would be dealt with then. That was about all I could do right now.
"I'm... opposed to the system of collective responsibility," I said. "The only ones
who should be judged for a crime are those who commit it. Even if they are related,
it's wrong to execute an innocent person. And publicly, at that. In order to judge
heinous crimes, and as a deterrent against them, I can't let go of the death penalty.
That's why I don't want that penalty to be a public spectacle, and I want to reform
the minds of people who see it as one."
"The country is already yours," said Georg. "I believe you should do as you see
fit."
"...I will," I said.
"Sire, is it hard on you, taking the lives of others?" asked Georg.
I must have looked pretty anguished, because Georg said that as if trying to
comfort me.
"How could it not be?!" I burst out. "On my orders, countless lives vanish. The
weight of that responsibility feels like it's going to crush me. Up until half a year ago,
I was just an ordinary guy, damn it!"
"I've read about it in the princess's letters," said Georg. "She praised you as a king
among kings. She wants to support you, with all her body and soul."
"Liscia is... doing a good job of supporting me," I said. "But I have to make a
decision that will sadden her. I... have to kill you." I placed my hand on my forehead,
speaking in a low groan. "Your plan was brilliant. Hal's old man... Glaive told us
everything. By gathering all the corrupt nobles in one place, we were able to round
up all of them and their assets in one fell swoop. It was a splendid plan that filled in a
number of gaps Hakuya and I had overlooked. But... because it can't be made public,
I have to treat you the same as I did the corrupt nobles."
There were two reasons it couldn't be made public.
The first was that there had been death caused by the fighting between the
Forbidden Army and the Army. Unlike the Forbidden Army's losses in the battle at
Red Dragon City, which were limited to one warship, the battle outside Randel had
seen losses on both sides. If we publicized Georg's true intent, the bereaved wouldn't
accept it.
The second was that relations with Zem, who had been forced to pay a ransom
for their mercenaries, would worsen even further. The way things stood now, Zem
were regretting that they had sent mercenaries to the losing side in order to take
revenge for my canceling of our contract.
If they learned that Georg and I had been secretly working together, Zem would
think the kingdom had set them up. It was actually Georg who had done that on his
own, but I could hardly blame them for feeling that way. Their feelings towards us
were bad enough as it was. They didn't need to be made any worse. That was to be
avoided.
That was why, as things stood now, Georg's plan could not be made public.
All of that said, Georg himself must have been aware of that fact. He had been
fully aware of it, and was literally trying to take the secret to his grave. How
stubborn. He really was... an idiot.
"Hey, was this really the only way? This was what you wanted? To sully your own
name, and commit a double suicide with the corrupt nobles, are you satisfied with
that?" I rose from my chair, slamming my fist into the iron bars. "Where was the
hurry? We could have taken our time to purge the corrupt nobles! The same goes
with Castor! He believed that you had some idea, followed you to the end out of
friendship and became a traitor for it! I had jobs I wanted you to handle after the
war, and now my plans are all thrown off! Sure, handling it all in one go was a big
deal, I'll give you that. The country's been cleaned up a good deal, and Hakuya's and
my stock has risen, making it easier to implement my policies. But, still, it's
meaningless if you lose you for it! Do you have any idea how much it hurts a state to
lose talented people?! It sure as hell isn't equal in value to getting rid of some
corrupt nobles!"
"..." Georg's eyes remained closed as he listened to me in silence.
I pounded on the iron bars once more. "Answer me, Georg! Are you really
satisfied with this?!"
"That goes without saying," Georg calmly replied. "From the roots of a great tree
that I thought, like my own body, would only wither away and die, I now see new
growth sprouting. All I can do is pray for it to grow up well."
"Even if it knocks down that great tree as it does?!" I yelled.
"That is the joy of seeing the next generation grow up strong," said Georg. "In
time, you will come to understand it, too, sire."
"...Will I really?" I asked.
"When a child is born to you and the princess, I guarantee it."
I slumped back heavily onto my chair. Feeling strangely enervated, I asked him
the last thing that had bothered me. "Please, tell me this... Is this something you came
up with entirely on your own?"
"What do you mean by that?" Georg opened his eyes and asked.
Don't play dumb with me!
"This is the first time we've met," I said. "Yet you have a strangely high opinion of
me. You're trying to leave this plan in my hands, as well as Liscia, who you love like a
daughter, in my hands, and the future of this country in my hands, too. It's just
wrong, no matter how I think about it. Where did that loyalty come from?"
"Is learning of your unusual talents from the princess's letters insufficient as an
explanation?" Georg asked.
"Yeah, it's insufficient," I said. "I can't see you embracing this loyalty to a bunch of
words on paper. If you were going to martyr yourself for something, it could only be
for the House of Elfrieden."
Now that I thought of it, something had been off from the very beginning.
From the moment I'd taken the throne, the path I had needed to travel down had
seemed to have been prepared for me strangely well.
I was suddenly given the throne, I was entrusted with all of the power to control
national policy, even given an engagement to Liscia to bolster my legitimacy, and
then at some point, the corrupt nobles had been smoked out for me. When I looked
back, I could see everything had been moving to make things easier for me. If that
was the will of someone... there was only one person who could have done it.
"Was this plan done on that person's orders?" I asked.
"...I will remain silent."
"Answer me," I ordered. "What does that person know, and what do you know?"
I waited for Georg to speak, but he had nothing to say to me.