It was a few weeks after the first episode of The King's Brillunch had
been broadcast.
That day, a petition was delivered to Prime Minister Hakuya Kwonmin.
The personnel department had been the ones to organize it, but it
included names from the royal guard, the maid force, and every other group
within the palace. Marx, who was now the chamberlain, and Ludwin, the
head of the royal guard, had put their names on it, as well.
Wondering what it could be, Hakuya quickly perused the contents to
find...
"...Ah, I see."
Hakuya agreed with the petition despite himself.
◇ ◇ ◇
"So, there you have it. I will be insisting you take time off, sire,"
Hakuya said.
"There I have what, exactly?" I asked. "I still can't make heads or tails
of what's going on."
While I had been working in the governmental affairs office, Hakuya
had suddenly come in and said, "Take time off." Then he'd casually
dropped the bundle of papers he was holding onto the desk I'd been
working at.
"This is a petition I received from the personnel department," he
informed me. "According to it, 'When those at the top do not rest, those
below them find it difficult to take time off.' You will find Sir Marx and
Ludwin's names on here, and I, your humble servant, have added my own
name, as well."
Ah... Now that he mentions it, I haven't taken time off since being
summoned here, have I? I thought.
It wasn't that I wasn't resting at all. Recently, now that I had gotten used
to using Living Poltergeists, I'd sometimes left the paperwork to my ability
and gone to do things like make dolls in Liscia's room. If I let part of my
mind work while part of it rested, I could work 24/7 without feeling the
slightest bit exhausted. However, according to Hakuya, it seemed that
wasn't the issue here.
"Even if you are resting, you are always in the palace, correct?" he
asked me.
"Yeah, just in case anything happens."
"I am telling you that it does not look like you are resting when you do
that. And, because it does not look like you are resting, everyone else finds
it difficult to rest themselves. Please, understand that."
"That's easy for you to say..." I said.
"Normally, I would want you to take a large block of days off to rest,"
he said, "but..."
"Do we have that kind of time?" I asked.
"We do not."
"I figured..."
As a matter of fact, there was a mountain of things that needed doing.
Expanding and strengthening the military, meeting with VIPs, creating
documents for external use, pushing forward all sorts of reforms... the list
could go on forever. Even Aisha's request that I go to the God-Protected
Forest as soon as possible was on hold at this point. Though I had at least
told them how periodic thinning worked. In this country beset by internal
and external issues, there was no time we could afford to waste.
"However, if this lowers morale, and as a result work efficiency, I
believe your hard work may be self-defeating," Hakuya explained.
"Well, what do you want me to do, then?" I asked.
"Somehow, I will find time to give you a day off," he said. "Why not use
it for an outing somewhere?"
An outing, huh...
"Since I don't get many days off, what if I said I want to use it to lie
around in my room?" I asked.
"That request is rejected. I must ask you to take your vacation in a way
that your subjects can see you enjoying it."
"...You still call that a vacation?"
In my opinion, it's only a day off if you're able to do what you want with
it. I gave Hakuya a meaningful glance to try to convey that, but it was met
with utter indifference.
"Is this not the perfect opportunity? You can use the time to see the
castle town with Princess Liscia."
"You're sending me out on a date?" I asked.
"You two are betrothed, so please go out and show the people how close
you are."
"Oh, come on, now this is just turning into part of my official duties," I
protested.
Do you want us to do stuff like they do on the Imperial Family Album
TV show?
"...And what'll we do about guarding me?" I added.
"Is that not what you have Aisha for?" he responded.
"First you tell me to go on a date, now you're telling me to bring another
woman along?!"
"Why, it will be like having a flower in each hand," Hakuya commented.
"I am most jealous."
"You don't mean that..."
Sigh... Well, it's definitely some long awaited time to rest. I guess I can
enjoy it with the mindset that I'm going out to have fun with friends. I can
go around to all the places in the capital I've been interested in. Let's see...
checking out that singing cafe that Juna works at might be nice.
"...Okay. Fine, I'll take a day off," I said.
"Your understanding is appreciated."
As Hakuya bowed reverently, I gave him a cold look.
"Now then, where's Liscia at?" I wondered.
I wanted to let her know we had a day off, but she wasn't in her room.
Usually, that meant she was somewhere in the palace's training facility.
When I had ascended the throne, Liscia's position as royalty had gone up in
the air. Now all that she was left with was her military rank, so acting as my
advisor (which, mind you, was pretty hard work) was the only job she had
now. She'd been complaining lately about how she had nothing to do other
than join the royal guards for training, hadn't she?
First I visited the shooting range, then the indoor training grounds.
Finally, when I visited the inner garden, I found Liscia in the middle of
crossing blades with Aisha.
"Hahhhhhhhhh!"
With a loud cry, Aisha swung a sword that was as tall as she was.
In contrast, Liscia silently read her opponent's attacks, striking with her
rapier.
It was hard for an amateur to tell which of them had the advantage. Was
it Aisha, who was unleashing an attack that would be crippling if it landed?
Or was it Liscia, who dodged that attack, unleashing three sequential thrusts
with her rapier?
Was it Aisha, who knocked those thrusts aside using nothing more than
the gauntlet she wore? Or was it Liscia, who used the opening that left her
with to step on Aisha's great sword, preventing Aisha from lifting it up?
...Is this really a practice match? Their swordplay was so intense, I
couldn't be sure how serious they were.
"Sonic Wind!"
"Ice Sword Mountain!"
Now they've started using magic and skills!
Aisha's Sonic Wind was apparently a skill that released a "cutting wind"
from her great sword. When Liscia dodged, it cut the tree that had been
behind her in half with a diagonal slash.
Meanwhile, Liscia's Ice Sword Mountain seemed to be a skill that
instantly froze the ground like a skating rink and shot icy spikes out of it,
but Aisha cut down all of the spikes that looked like they might hit her
using her great sword.
...What's with this battle to the death?
I had already seen magic in this world. Recently, in order to practice my
ability to manipulate dolls, I had been using a mannequin to go out and hunt
monsters, so I had often seen the adventurers it encountered use magic
(though it was usually when my mannequin got mistaken for a monster and
attacked).
However, with the magic that ordinary adventurers used, the most they
could do was things like shoot flames, shoot ice, or heal minor wounds. I'd
never thought magic used by someone experienced would be this
incredible.
Aisha was strong, but Liscia seemed pretty capable herself. As the two
fought, their eyes were filled with life, sparkling even, as if they had
discovered a worthy rival.
So these are warriors, huh... Wait, if I let them keep going, they're going
to wreck the castle!
"Both of you... cut that out!"
""Yes, sir! Wait, wha?!"" The two of them returned to their senses,
landed on the ground, then both slipped on the ice and fell on their rumps in
unison.
"A-A date?!" Liscia exclaimed.
"Yeah."
When I explained to her that I had a day off, and that Hakuya had
recommended I spend it going on a date with her, Liscia looked
dumbstruck.
"Wait... Is that something we should be doing because someone else told
us to?"
"I feel the same way, but... in Hakuya's mind, royal dates are probably a
part of our duties."
"What an inhumane way of thinking," she muttered.
"'Before I am a human being, I am the prime minister.' That's probably
something he'd say."
"Ha ha ha!" she giggled. "He would."
"So, before we're human beings, he wants us to be king and queen,
basically."
"...Sorry. That one I can't laugh at."
The two of us sighed in unison.
Hakuya was sharp, reliable, and he took his work seriously, but he could
take loyalty to his post too far sometimes. Well, that wasn't to say he didn't
have a soft side. Recently, he had started tutoring Tomoe at her request.
"Well, I'm happy for the day off, and I figure heading out somewhere is
okay, right?" I asked.
"I suppose so," she agreed.
"Oh, oh! In that case, please, come to my forest!" Aisha raised her hand,
trying to get our attention, but I shook my head.
"I still have a pile of official work to get through. It has to be somewhere
we can make a day trip to."
"Ohh... Even by horse, it takes three days each way to get to the GodProtected Forest..."
Yeah, that's out of the question.
"You'll have to give up on it this time. But I did teach you how to do
periodic thinning, didn't I?"
"Yes. However, there are some among the dark elves who are blindly
stubborn... 'What is this nonsense? How can you suggest that we dark
elves, protectors of the forest, cut down trees?' they say."
Ah. Yeah, you get types like that in every world.
I respected their desire to protect nature, but when that desire goes too
far, it reaches a level of arrogance, and it can actually be a problem. Nature
isn't so weak that that it needs humans to look down on and "protect" it. If
anything...
"That's why I want you to come, sire," she explained. "To give them a
good shouting at."
"...I get it. The moment I'm free, I'll go."
It feels like the number of things that I need to do is only going up, but...
saying that won't help matters, will it? I thought.
"Please do. If it will help, please, use my body, my life, in any way you
see fit," Aisha said, bowing her head.
"Well, then I've got a favor to ask right now..."
"Yes, sire! You want me to see to your needs?" she asked immediately.
"Why is that the first thing that comes to mind?!"
"Well, I did just finish pledging my body to you."
"Souma..." Liscia said dangerously.
"Of course I'm not going to ask for that! Liscia, stop giving me that
look!"
When Aisha got worked up, it seemed she had a way of letting herself
run wild.
"I just wanted to ask you to be my bodyguard while we go into the castle
town," I explained.
"Y-You want me to join you two on your date?" she asked.
"Well, if it were just me and Liscia, we'd be in trouble if anything
happened," I said. "We may be calling it a date, but really we're just
walking around town together, so you don't need to let that bother you."
"...It bothers me, though." For some reason, Liscia was pursing her lips.
Maybe she'd wanted to go on a date alone together? ...Nah, couldn't be.
I mean, even though we were betrothed, that was just a formality.
"Well, that's how it is," I said. "I'll be counting on you two when the
day comes."
"Yes, sire! Understood!" Aisha said enthusiastically.
"...Fine, I get it." In contrast to Aisha's enthusiasm, Liscia seemed
dissatisfied somehow.
And so, our day off came.
Liscia, Aisha, and I were walking along a shopping street in the castle
town of Parnam. Hakuya had said, "Please go out and show the people how
close you are," but apparently that had been a joke, because when the day
came, he asked us to be discreet. Well, for the king going down into the
castle town, Aisha alone probably wasn't enough security, after all.
So, I wore a uniform from the Royal Officers' Academy in Parnam and
passed myself off as a student. ...Which I actually was, given that I had
been in university back home.
By the way, Aisha and I were just wearing school uniforms, but we'd
realized people would recognize Liscia, so she had her hair in braids and
was wearing vanity glasses, giving her an honors student look as a disguise.
With this, if anyone looked, all they would see was three students out on the
town for their day off.
"Heya, buddy, you've got some real beauties there with you! If you're a
real man, how 'bout buyin' them some of my wares as a present and
showin' off how generous you are?" a middle-aged guy at a stall with
accessories on display called out to me in a Kansai accent. Apparently, the
merchant slang from this world got translated as a fake Kansai accent to my
ears.
While turning the man down with a tactful smile, I talked to Liscia.
"Liscia, you sure do look good in glasses."
"I-I do? ...Thanks."
"Sire! What do you think of me in a school uniform?" Aisha quickly
raised her hand. Lately, she'd been downright aggressive about doing that.
"...Uh, yeah, it doesn't really suit you," I said.
"Why not?!"
Yeah... the Officers' Academy's uniform was something like a blazer,
and that didn't go with her brown skin and silver hair at all. I don't know
how to say it, but it felt like I was looking at someone cosplaying as a
character from a school anime. Like how there aren't pink haired girls in
real life, and even when girls dye their hair that way it just looks completely
unnatural? There was a clash between the realistic and the fantasy here, you
could say...
"Personally, I don't think it looks that bad on her, you know?" Liscia
said.
"Princess!" Aisha exclaimed.
"Yeah. Well, I'm sure it's probably just because I was judging her by the
standards of my own world," I said.
Really, this is a diverse world with many races. I should try to get used
to it as quickly as I can.
Rattle, rattle, rattle...
"And, anyway, Souma, it's not Aisha that's bothering me, it's that thing
you're dragging behind you," Liscia said.
"Hm? This rolling bag, you mean?"
"That's a bag? It has wheels on it!"
"Yeah," I said. "There are caster wheels underneath, which makes it
easy to carry heavy things."
"My word, what a convenient thing to have." Aisha's eyes were wide.
Not surprising, since these weren't common in this country yet.
I had special-ordered this one from a craftsman in the castle town. The
person who'd made it for me had said he wanted to sell them himself, and
I'd allowed it so long as he didn't try to keep a monopoly on the concept. If
there turned out to be demand for them, they might not be so unusual a few
years from now.
"But sire, if you want your luggage carried, you need only ask..." Aisha
protested.
"We're supposed to be disguised as school friends. It'd be out of place
for the guy to be making a girl carry his stuff," I said. Besides, a bunch of
my self-defense equipment was in there. I couldn't let go of it. "Also,
Aisha, stop calling me sire. Technically, we're supposed to be incognito
here."
"Yes, sire! But what am I to call you, then...?"
"Just address me normally, no formal title. If you'd like, you can even
use my given name, 'Kazuya.'"
""Huh?"" both girls exclaimed.
Huh? Why is Liscia confused, too?
"But... Souma, isn't your given name 'Souma'?" Liscia asked.
"Huh? Souma's obviously my family name. Kazuya's my given name."
"But you said you were Souma Kazuya, didn't you?"
"...Ah."
Shoot. In this country, they follow the European style, where given name
comes first. I should have given my name as Kazuya Souma. Oh, I see!
That's why everyone's been calling me King Souma. Now that I think of it,
it's weird to have "king" attached to a family name. In a hereditary system,
you'd have a large number of kings with the same name if you did it that
way.
"I-Is it too late to correct it?" I asked.
"Probably? Everyone thinks you're Souma, and I think all your external
correspondence has been under the name Souma Kazuya."
"Augh! To think I was making such an awful mistake..." I moaned.
"Well, maybe it's not so bad?" Aisha asked. "Why not use one name in
public and the other in private? So, on private occasions like today, I'll call
you 'Sir Kazuya.'"
With Aisha finding ways to cover for my mistake, I just got more
depressed about it. "Now I have Aisha, of all people, having to cover for
me..."
"Just what do you think of me as, Sir Kazuya?!"
"What are you, you ask...? A disappointing dark elf?"
"That's just mean!" she exclaimed.
"Honestly, cut the stupid banter, you two, and let's get going," Liscia
urged while I was still dealing with the teary-eyed Aisha.
Yeah... It's fine to say let's get going, but we haven't chosen a particular
destination, I thought. "Is there somewhere you girls want to go?"
"No," Liscia said.
"Wherever you go, I will follow, Sir Kazuya," Aisha added.
"Yeah. At least pretend to think about it, you two."
If they pushed the decision off on me, I wouldn't know what to do. Now
that I thought about it, this was my first time walking around the castle
town. The last time I had come here, we had just galloped straight through
on horseback, after all.
Hmm... In that case, maybe that's all the more reason why I should take
a good look around. Even if we just meander around, it'll still be new to me.
"Well, let's just take it easy," I said.
Parnam Central Park.
A large park in the center of the royal capital, Parnam.
Though it was called a park, there wasn't a playground or anything like
that. There were just trees, shrubs and flowers that had been planted there,
but the grounds were three times the size of Tokyo Dome. In the center of
the park was an impressively large fountain with a Jewel Voice Broadcast
receiver. When there was a broadcast happening, it could project a massive
image that was large enough to be seen from 100 meters away. There was
amphitheater-style seating around the fountain, and during the last Jewel
Voice Broadcast, a crowd numbering in the tens of thousands had
apparently gathered there.
You know, it might be interesting to hold a live concert there, I thought.
As soon as Juna's broadcast program using the Jewel Voice Broadcast gets
up and going, I'd really like to plan something like that. Someday, this
fountain plaza might become a stage singers from across Elfrieden aspire to
stand on, like the Budokan or Hibiya Outdoor Theater.
...Well, that's enough of my idle fantasizing. Anyway, we had come to
Central Park.
"This is a lovely place full of natural beauty," Aisha said.
"Even though it's in the middle of the city, the air is so clear," Liscia
commented. "Mmm."
Aisha looked around full of curiosity while Liscia stretched widely.
"Huh? But I don't remember the air being this clear before..." she
murmured.
"Well, yeah, I worked hard to arrange that," I said.
"You arranged it? Did you do something to this park?"
Liscia seemed puzzled, so I puffed out my chest and explained. "Not just
to the park. I prepared infrastructure all over the underground of Parnam,
and I could go further and say I made preparations in regards to the laws, as
well. If you compare things to a few months ago, I think you'll find
environmental hygiene has improved considerably."
To be blunt, before my preparations, the environmental hygiene in this
country had been on the same level as Middle Ages Europe. Which is to
say: it'd been disgusting.
Horse dung had been left lying out in the streets as if that were perfectly
normal, and people had just poured their domestic sewage into ditches
along the roadside. I'd heard it had smelled absolutely foul in summertime.
Because the concept of hygiene hadn't existed, these problems had just
been left alone. But when horse dung dries out, it turns into dust which is
lifted into the air. When that gets into people's lungs, it causes a variety of
respiratory diseases.
That was why the first thing I had done was set up an aqueduct and
sewer system.
"An aqueduct and sewer system," Liscia gasped. "When did you have
the time to make those?!"
"Actually, there wasn't that much effort involved," I shrugged. "There
were underground passages running all over Parnam to begin with, you see.
All I had to do was run water from the river through them."
"Wait, those were escape tunnels for the royal family!" she cried in
outrage.
As Liscia had said, in the event that the capital came under attack, and
the fall of the royal family became unavoidable, those tunnels had been
meant for the royal family to escape through. Even if the enemy discovered
them, they had been built like a maze in order to hinder pursuit, and they
covered the entirety of Parnam. What was more, they had been built in three
layers. All of that had been very convenient for repurposing them as an
aqueduct and sewer system.
First, water from the river that ran near Parnam had been drawn into the
first layer, which served as an underground aqueduct. That water was now
being used in wells and public bath houses that once relied on underground
water. The third layer was used as a sewer, ultimately emptying out into
sedimentation ponds outside the capital where the sewage would be filtered
before being returned to the river once more. The system had been designed
so that the water that made the full trip around the city in the first layer
would ultimately drain into the third layer. We had filled in the second layer
and set things up in a way that bad smells from the third layer wouldn't rise
up into the first.
"If you've turned them into an aqueduct and sewer system, what do you
plan to do if there's an emergency?!" Liscia demanded.
"If we get to the point where the royal family needs to flee the capital,
the country's already finished, isn't it?" I asked. "If it were up to me, I'd
probably surrender at the point when the enemy was closing in on the
capital."
"That easily?" she exclaimed.
"Liscia, so long as a king has the people on his side, he's safe."
This was another lesson from Machiavelli. According to him, The best
possible fortress is not to be hated by the people.
A prince has two types of enemies. Traitors within, and foreign enemies
without.
If you have the support of the people, traitors can't gather supporters or
incite the people into rebellion, so they'll just have to give up. On the other
hand, if you're hated by the people, there will be no shortage of foreigners
willing to assist them in your eventual downfall. So Machiavelli says.
"Even if I lose my title, so long as the people are still there, there's a
chance for revival," I said. "On the other hand, if the king is the only one to
survive, without any people left to support him, he'll just be eaten up by
another foe himself."
"...It's a hard world, huh," Liscia murmured.
"That's reality. Well, anyway, the aqueduct and sewer systems were easy
enough to make, but when it came to the sedimentation ponds... Ah, let's go
sit over in the shade."
There wasn't much point standing around while we talked, so we went
over to sit in the shade provided by some trees in the park.
Not long after we sat down, Aisha was leaning against a tree and
beginning to nod off. She probably couldn't keep up with the complicated
subject matter. I had to question whether it was okay for someone who was
supposed to be my bodyguard to be doing that, but, well, knowing Aisha,
she could probably protect me in her sleep. I kept talking.
"I couldn't let raw sewage drain into the river. Domestic sewage often
has pathogenic bacteria and parasites in it, you see. In order to protect
against those, we need to let the water sit in a place where it can filter
through sand and pebbles... in other words, a sedimentation pond."
"P-Pathogenic bacteria?" Liscia cocked her head to the side. It seemed
those were unfamiliar words for people in this world.
Well, there was probably no need to get too sensitive about it just yet.
The people of this country had no concept of pollution. That was because,
with this country's standards of living and level of technology, even if they
dumped untreated sewage into the river, it wouldn't make much of a
difference.
However, as the country grew and its technology advanced, there were
sure to be problems with pollution. The sooner I tackled that problem, the
better. The Japanese people had learned about pollution by experiencing
Minamata Disease, Itai-itai Disease, and Yokkaichi Asthma. There was no
need for the people of this country to experience anything like that.
"So, did something happen with these sedimentation ponds?" she asked.
"Right, so I used the Forbidden Army to dig holes for the sedimentation
ponds..."
"What are you making Sir Ludwin and his men do?" she exclaimed.
Well, if I'd hired workers, that would have been expensive, and I'd
wanted to teach the soldiers of the Forbidden Army "combat engineering"
skills. Digging holes, filling them up, reinforcing them. It was the perfect
practice for digging trenches. It seemed battles in this world were still
fought on the open field, so a group that could use trench warfare tactics
like in World War I would stand head and shoulders above the rest.
Anyway, I digress.
"While I was having them dig, we came across a large pile of monster
bones."
"Bones?" she asked.
"Yeah, bones. Dragon bones, giant bones, all kinds of bones."
It's like a monster graveyard, one of the soldiers doing the digging had
said.
Dragons, giants, gargoyles, and more. There had been a large quantity of
clearly non-human bones just scattered around haphazardly.
By the way, of the creatures I just listed, dragons were the only ones that
weren't monsters.
Dragons had a degree of magical power that was incomparably higher
than what wyverns had, they were intelligent, and apparently they could
even take on human form. They had a pact of mutual non-aggression with
the human race, and had built their own country in the Star Dragon
Mountain Range. The chief of the Star Dragon Mountain Range, Mother
Dragon, was strong even by dragon standards. She was said to be an
incredibly beautiful specimen, and was even worshiped by some people.
Basically, dragons were terrifying god-beasts, but they were also another
race, just like humans and dragonewts were.
Anyway, let's get back to the story.
According to the scholars who investigated those bones, they were in a
geological stratum from thousands of years ago.
"So, there was a dungeon there?" Liscia tilted her head quizzically, but I
shook my head.
"I said they were in a certain geological stratum, didn't I? Thousands of
years ago, that place would have been the surface."
"The surface...? No, you can't mean... Sometimes monsters do come out
from a dungeon, but never on so large a scale. Outside of the Demon Lord's
Domain, monsters never swarm over the surface like... Ah!" Liscia gasped,
shaking her head as if trying to clear it of the thought that just occurred to
her. "Hold on! The Demon World only appeared for the first time ten years
ago!"
"In other words, this means, even before that, there was an era when
monsters roamed the surface," I said. "If you think about it, there are
dungeons all over this continent with monsters living inside them. For some
reason, the monsters that lived on this continent thousands of years ago
vanished, and some small portion of them survived by secluding themselves
in dungeons. That's the idea that the scholars came up with."
This was like discovering that there were dinosaurs still living in some
unexplored region of the world. Or like seeing a pandemic of a virus
thought to be eradicated. Though, whether that hypothesis was right or not
remained to be seen.
"Well, what then?! The monsters and demons that destroyed the
Northern Countries didn't 'come here,' they 'returned,' is that it?!"
"That, I don't know," I said. "It's dangerous to jump to that conclusion
at this stage."
What were we trying to fight against? What were our enemies? It was a
question where choosing an easy answer wasn't going to cut it.
"Also, there's one more thing bothering me..." I went on.
"There's more?!"
"Even setting aside the issue of the bones, I needed to get that
sedimentation pool made. So, I had the scholars keep archaeological
records of the bones that were dug up. The thing is, a full skeleton's worth
of the largest and best preserved dragon bones has gone missing. Even
though I know it was disassembled for display and sent to be stored at the
Royal Parnam Museum..."
"So, it was stolen, then?" Liscia asked.
"That would be good news... Well, no, not good news, but still. With a
full, 20-meter-tall dragon skeleton, even if you disassemble it, it's not going
to be easy to transport. Despite that, there's no sign that it was taken out of
Parnam. And yet, the bones are still missing now. It's as if the full set
suddenly started to move, took wing, and flew away."
"Ah! No, it couldn't be! A skull dragon?!" she cried.
"That's what the scholars suspect."
A skull dragon. Apparently, there were monsters like that.
They say a raging dragon can level a kingdom. Dragons have vast stores
of magical powers within their bodies, and those reserves remain in their
bodies after death. Normally, the magic power gradually drains out, but
when a dragon dies with regrets (or, rather, when its body is left in a bad
environment for too long), on rare occasions, it may turn into a skull
dragon.
These skull dragons are designated by the country as Special A-Class
harmful creatures. Winged ones can fly, even though they have no
membranes between their wings, and they spread a miasma that brings
death to all living things. They can also use the dragon's Dragon Breath
technique from when it was alive, so when one appears, it is a living
(unliving?) disaster that requires the full mobilization of a country's
military to defeat. That alone was reason for smaller countries to go to the
Star Dragon Mountain Range, where the dragons live, to seek assistance.
However, this time, things were different.
"If that were it, Parnam would already be enveloped in miasma," I said.
"The scholars performed a magical test to make sure there was no risk of
that happening, after all. There shouldn't have been any magic left in that
fossil."
"I see... That's good."
"Still, that's why I don't get it. Where did those dragon bones vanish
to?"
It had already been close to a month since the dragon bones vanished.
Despite that, there was still no sign of them, so did that mean they had been
carried outside the walls somehow, after all? If so, what was the purpose?
There was apparently little use for the bones once the magic left them. They
had lost their value as a magic catalyst. The best that could be done with
them was to put them in a museum (of course, I would need permission
from the Star Dragon Mountain Range for that) and use them as a tourist
attraction.
I didn't get it. That was why it bothered me.
I lay down on my side. Liscia frowned at me, but I didn't care.
"You're getting your clothes dirty, you realize?" she commented.
"They can be washed. Besides, considering my position, I can get
someone else to wash them for me."
"A king can't let himself get dirty all over," she said.
"Yeah, I'm sure dignity is important and all, but... it's a pain in the butt."
"As one of the people who forced this on you, it's not my place to say it,
but give up and accept it."
"Right, right. Whew, having time where I'm off completely sure is
nice." I stretched my arms and legs wide. How relaxing it was to not have a
single part of my spirit working.
Now that I thought about it, I had been working constantly since coming
to this world. There were things to do, things I ought to do, things I had no
choice but to do, piles and piles of them, and so I had been using my head
all the time. Having this sort of time where I didn't need to think about
anything... it was the best.
"Ahh... I wish I could just melt away and return to the soil," I
murmured.
Liscia was silent. After seeing me like that, she seemed to think for a
moment, then hesitantly said, "Do you want... to rest your head in my lap?"
◇ ◇ ◇
I sat with my knees bent, resting Souma's head on my thighs.
When someone rests their head in your lap, they can either do it with
their body lying horizontally or vertically from your perspective. This was
the vertical variety.
When I peeked down at him, my face was reflected upside-down in his
eyes. Souma's head was lying between my two thighs, and it tickled a little.
"Th-This is... kind of embarrassing, you know." Souma's face was a
deep shade of red.
...I was sure mine was, too.
"Who do you think this is most embarrassing for?" I asked him. "The
person giving the lap pillow, or the person using it?"
"I don't know... Maybe it's 'for the people watching,' don't you think?"
he said.
"Ha ha ha! You could be right."
If Aisha hadn't been asleep, what expression would she have made?
When she saw us looking like a couple who were engaged, would her
face have turned red? Or would she have said, "Princess, I'll not allow you
to do that! If anyone is to be his pillow, it will be me!" or something oblique
like that?
When I saw the fondness that girl showed Souma, sometimes I felt there
was something more than just loyalty there...
Somehow, I suspected that out of those two options, it would have been
the latter of the two.
"...Do you think we look like we're engaged?" I asked.
"Well, in name only," he said.
"In name only..."
Any time it came up, Souma always told those close to him that our
engagement was just temporary, and he was only holding onto the crown
for a little while. Once the kingdom was reasonably stable, he probably
planned to abdicate the throne to me. I felt like that was the reason he
always carefully explained the reforms he was carrying out to me. I think I
understood enough of who Souma was as a person to figure out his
intentions there.
Souma didn't desire excessive wealth or fame. He just wanted to live in
peace and quiet. For Souma, being a "king" bound by "noblesse oblige"
was the exact opposite of his calling in life. Even though my father had
made the decision, I felt awful that we had pushed this burden off onto him.
...But, right now, this kingdom was changing to center around Souma.
This country, which had been thought of by the surrounding nations as a
moldy old kingdom that never changed, was now changing. It was thanks to
Souma that we had been able to cope with the deepening food crisis. As for
Hakuya, Poncho and the others, they had only volunteered to serve because
Souma was there. Even if the throne were abdicated to me, could I keep
them all tied down here?
But besides that, more than anything, I myself wanted Souma to stay in
the kingdom. And so...
"Souma... Does it bother you to have me as your fiancée?" Those words
naturally came to my lips.
Souma's eyes went wide, and he turned his bright red face to the side.
"...It's not fair for you to put it like that."
"O-Oh, yeah?" I stammered.
"Then are you fine with it, Liscia? Having me as your fiancé?"
"I don't mind." I was a little surprised myself that I was able to say it so
clearly. Though, after I did, I felt just a little embarrassed. "You know, I
think you're better suited to rule this country than I am, Souma."
"Even if I'm suited for it... are you going to get engaged to someone you
don't love?"
"Isn't that what it means to be royalty?" I asked.
"I'm not royalty. Besides... I'd rather marry for love."
"Then... do you hate me, Souma? Can you say for sure that you'll never
fall in love with me?" I asked.
"Urgh... I told you, it's not fair when you say stuff like that. The thing
about men is, if a girl shows even the slightest hint of liking them, they'll
fall for her. That's the sort of creatures we are. If a beauty like you says that
to me, Liscia... there's no way I wouldn't start to feel conscious of you."
Souma had said something that sounded like an excuse. He was
surprisingly calm and realistic in his duties, so it was funny to see him
flustered in a situation like this.
I giggled. "You can make the country move, but you're hopeless when it
comes to this."
"...I lack the experience. In so many ways."
"I spend all my time in my studies and military duties, so I haven't had
much experience either, you know?" I said.
"Don't act like it's the same for guys and girls. Our base specs when it
comes to love are completely different."
While we were talking about that, a hesitant voice spoke up. "Um..."
When I turned around, Aisha had woken up at some point, and she was
looking at us with a wry smile that looked like it had been concentrated to
three times the usual intensity.
"How much longer do I need to pretend I'm asleep for?" she asked.
""...""
We both leapt into the air.
◇ ◇ ◇
After leaving the park, we walked around the castle town some more. It
was noon and we were getting hungry, so the three of us decided to head to
the singing cafe where Juna worked.
As we walked down a cobblestone path, Liscia said, "So, about what we
were talking about earlier..." and asked me a question. "You mentioned
changing the laws, as well. What was that about?"
"Oh. What I did was convert the smaller roads into pedestrian paradises
and nationalize garbage disposal."
"...I'm sorry. I have no idea what that means."
Well, no, I suppose she wouldn't have. They both tied back into the
hygiene and sanitation problem, though.
"Well, first, let me explain the pedestrian paradise thing. This one's
simple. I prohibited carriages from using anything but the largest of
thoroughfares. Carriages that carry merchandise receive a special
exemption, but only for a few hours in the morning. We've been walking in
the middle of the street all this time, and nobody's run us over yet, right?"
"Now that you mention it..." Liscia looked all around, not spotting a
single horse.
"This provides an easy reduction in the number of horse accidents,
creating a safe environment for people to shop, which helps to stimulate the
economy, but... the main goal was to clean up all the horse dung."
"Horse dung?" Liscia repeated.
"When a horse is on the move, you generally just leave its droppings
behind, right? Well, that dung dries out, gets picked up by the wind, and it
harms the lungs of those who inhale it. The more unsanitary a place was to
begin with, the more likely horse dung is to be left alone. If we limit the
horses to the main roads, it makes collecting their droppings easy. This
ought to bring down the number of people contracting pneumonia
considerably."
"Huh?! That's all it takes?!" Liscia exclaimed.
"...Yeah," I said. "'That's all' it would have taken to save lives."
"Urkh..."
It may have been a harsh way to say it, but I couldn't have her writing
off something that would mean the difference between life and death for
people with a "that's all it takes."
"Well, in some ways, I can't blame you," I said. "The concept of
hygiene doesn't exist yet in this country. In fact, only two of the medical
professionals I've met with understood it."
I think I've mentioned before that because this country had magic, its
technology was sort of all over the place. Well, that was true in the field of
medicine, as well.
As you might expect from a fantasy world, this place had what was
called recovery magic. By converting magic into certain wavelengths
within the body, it heightened the body's natural healing ability. It was
effective in treating external injuries, such as scratches, cuts, and bruises.
Really impressive practitioners could even reattach an arm that had just
been severed.
If this was all someone saw of it, it would seem like a miracle.
On the other hand, recovery magic couldn't treat viruses and infections
that the body's natural ability to recover couldn't. All people had to lessen
the symptoms of those were medicine men and women who could brew
herbal remedies. Furthermore, for the elderly, whose natural healing ability
had declined, it wasn't effective in treating external injuries, either.
Once you know how something works, it might be easy to think, "Oh,
that's simple," but most people in this country didn't even know about
microbes, let alone viruses. When people try to find answers to questions
they don't have the necessary knowledge to answer, they're prone to
finding answers that fall within what's common sense to them.
"Healing magic doesn't work" would equate to "Even miracles can't
cure it," and then turn into "It's a devil's curse."
People put together these sorts of formulas in their heads, then end up
using bizarre occult goods in their attempts to treat the illness.
"If you buy this pot, you'll never get sick" actually worked as a sales
pitch in this world, so it was nothing to laugh at. If you're going to buy
something like that, you might as well wrap a leek around your neck before
you go to sleep instead.
However, there were buds of hope. The two doctors I just mentioned. If
I could have those two lead a reformation of medical practice in this
country...
"Hey, Souma, what are you mumbling to yourself for?" Liscia's voice
snapped me back to reality.
"Sorry," I said. "I got to thinking for a moment there."
"Geez... Okay, so what did you mean when you said you nationalized
garbage disposal?"
"Exactly what it sounds like," I said. "Liscia, do you know how trash is
generally disposed of in this country?"
"Garbage is sorted into 'burnable' and 'non-burnable,' then burned or
buried accordingly, right?"
"Wow, you were able to answer that pretty easily," I said.
"Did you think I was ignorant of the peoples' lives just because I'm
royalty? Don't insult me. I lived in the dorms when I went to military
academy, I'll have you know," she said indignantly.
I see. So she's not as ignorant of the world as I thought...
"But you're still wrong."
"Huh?" she asked.
"I said 'generally,' didn't I? Your answer is still only representative of
upper class thinking. It's a world away from the common way of thinking."
"W-Well, what is the common way of thinking about it, then?" she
asked.
"Aisha, how do your people dispose of garbage in the God-Protected
Forest?" I queried.
"Hm? Garbage?" Aisha's eyes went a little wide when I suddenly turned
the conversation to her, but she was able to come up with an answer right
away. "Let me think... We burn it."
"Is that all?" I asked.
"That is all."
"That can't be right! What do you do about the things that won't burn?!"
Liscia objected, but Aisha just stared blankly back at her.
"Would you even throw out things that aren't burnable to begin with?"
Aisha asked.
"Of course you would! What else would you do with broken tools?"
Liscia demanded.
"We fix them and keep using them."
"...Huh?"
"We use kitchen waste as fertilizer. With pottery that is too broken to
repair, we break it into fine pieces and scatter it over the ground. If metal
tools break, we fix them so they can be used again. If they can't be fixed,
we sell them to a used metal dealer." (A type of merchant who collects
scrap metal.) "The only things we throw out are splintered wood and
damaged leather armor, but... we burn those in our campfires."
This time, it was Liscia's turn for wide-eyed surprise. I couldn't help but
laugh a little at their exchange.
"Ha ha! Aisha's got it right this time."
"Soumaaaa..." Liscia moaned.
"Don't let it get you down so much," I said. "For the upper classes who
have to keep up appearances, and for the military whose equipment can
mean the difference between life and death, it's probably best for them if
the things they have are practically brand new. However, for ordinary
households, that isn't the case. Now, Aisha's example takes it to an extreme,
but people in the capital handle things in a similar fashion. The main
difference would be that they burn their kitchen waste, too, I guess? Also,
for oversized trash, like wooden furniture, they customarily gather it all in
the main plaza once a year for burning, don't they? So they're the same in
that they only have burnable trash."
In this world, there was nothing like plastic or styrofoam that needed
special treatment before it could be reused. Most tools were made of iron,
stone, soil (which includes glass and ceramic) or wood. They could reuse
iron by melting it down, and if they just left stone lying around, it would
blend in with the natural scenery around it. The one exception was artificial
substances that were created by mages using magic (magic substances), but
these were valuable in and of themselves, so they were almost never thrown
away.
As for things made of metal, they could be expensive, too, so the
common people did everything within their power to repair them. Beating
iron back into shape was easy, after all. When there was really nothing they
could do, and it seemed cheaper to just buy a new one, they would sell it to
a used metal dealer for small change. Used metal dealers collected this
metal and melted it down, recasting it into other metal products.
However, this was being done by individuals, so they didn't have good
facilities for it, or the ability to devote a large amount of time, so they could
only produce low-quality metal as a result. All they did was melt it down
and then let it harden, so impurities got mixed in in the process. As a result,
low-quality metal ended up circulating in the country.
This country was resource-poor. If low-quality metal was all that could
be obtained locally, people would be forced to import high-quality metal
from other countries. I wanted to limit that spending as much as possible.
However, if I tried to tell the used metal dealers, who were acting as
individuals, to reuse the metal in high-quality impurity-free metal, it wasn't
going to happen.
"So, that's why I've nationalized garbage disposal... Basically, I had the
country take over handling it. Even if it's difficult for an individual to do,
when the state does it, we can afford to spend money on it, arrange for
specialized facilities, and we can take the time to do it right, too. We can
pull every last nail out of the wooden boards people throw out, then reuse
the iron."
"That's amazing and all... but what about the used metal dealers? Aren't
you stealing their jobs?"
"Oh, that's fine," I said. "For that work, I'm retaining the used metal
dealers as civil servants."
They were low-wage workers anyway. They paid a small amount to buy
up scrap metal, then melted it all down to sell to the trade guilds wholesale.
However, since they could only produce low-quality metal, their prices got
haggled down to almost nothing, and they saw very little profit for
themselves. As a matter of fact, used metal dealers were at the very bottom
of this world's hierarchy. Because they dealt in garbage, people looked
down on them.
"However, now that it's a public sector undertaking, the cost of buying
the metal will be footed by the country," I said. "The items to be melted
down can be recast as high-quality metal in good facilities provided by the
country, and the country will negotiate with the trade guilds, so there's no
need to worry about their prices being haggled down to nothing. What's
more, they will be paid a monthly salary that's equal to the average monthly
income in this country. If you compare that to what they were making
before, it's probably a ten-fold increase, don't you think?"
"Well... I can't see them complaining about that," Liscia admitted.
As a matter of fact, we hadn't received a single complaint. Quite the
contrary: when the minister of state who had been given the garbage
disposal portfolio had gone to survey the reprocessing facility, he had been
greeted with tearful thanks by all of the workers.
"But, if you aren't careful, couldn't that be more expensive than
importing it from another country?" Liscia asked.
In response to Liscia's point, I nodded and said, "Yeah, kinda."
Elaborating, I added: "At this stage, we're probably a little worse off
doing it this way. However, money spent inside the country has a
completely different meaning from money spent outside the country. If we
spend money outside the country, that's an outflow of capital, but if we
spend it inside the country, it stimulates our own economy."
"Th-The economy again, huh..." For Liscia with her military
background, it seemed she wasn't as strong with this sort of topic. The
military had its own bureaucracy, so officers probably only needed to think
about maintaining supply lines.
"Okay then, I'll give you the military angle," I said. "Let's talk
diplomacy. If we can conserve the resources in our country, other countries
can't use the resources we import from them as a card in their diplomacy.
For instance, what would we do if the Principality of Amidonia, which has
been eagerly eyeing our country, were to halt their export of iron to us?"
"...We'd be in trouble," Liscia said. "There's no telling what demands
they might present us with to reopen trade."
"That's right. I did it with an eye to preventing that sort of situation,
too."
I'm not going to name names, but in my world, there had been a country
that used the rare resources they produced as a diplomatic tool to pressure
other nations. Though, once a certain island country got serious, they found
new import routes from other resource-rich countries, and they developed
alternative technologies, which caused the other country's rare resources to
plummet in value.
"If we can be frugal with our resources, that will limit the damage if
another country halts its exports to us, and if we store the excess we have in
peacetime, we can be prepared for that if it comes to it," I explained.
"I see," Liscia said. "So even if it puts us in the red, there's still meaning
in nationalizing it."
Liscia was a quick learner when it came to military and diplomatic
matters. She was probably the type whose ability or inability to learn a
subject was a faithful reflection of her personal preferences.
Incidentally, while we were talking about this stuff, Aisha announced,
"Forget about that, I want to eat!"
She looked ready to cry, like a dog that had been forced to wait for a
long time.
The singing cafe, Lorelei, stood on a sunny street corner. This was the
place where Juna worked.
When I had heard the words "singing cafe," I'd imagined a place with a
karaoke machine, where the customers could sing freely, but the singing
cafes in this country were a place to enjoy your afternoon tea while
listening to the loreleis sing. In the evenings, it stayed open and turned into
a jazz bar. Were there places like this back in Japan, too?
"You're going to show your face in there, right?" Liscia asked. "Let's
hurry up and go in."
"I'm hungry..." Aisha moaned.
With both of them urging me onward, we went through the door and into
Lorelei.
From the moment we entered the cafe, I could hear Juna singing. When I
heard that voice, I went weak in the knees.
Oh, right. I did teach her this song, didn't I? I realized.
That was Juna for you: she had mastered singing the English lyrics that
even I wasn't so good at.
"Oh, what a wonderful singing voice. I really must hand it to Madam
Juna," Liscia said.
"I don't know what the words mean, but it's a nice tune," Aisha added.
Aisha and Liscia both seemed deeply impressed. Well, of course they
were. It was a good song.
I had promised to teach Juna the songs of my world, but once I thought
about it, I only knew old songs I'd learned because of Grandpa's influence,
and songs that had shown up in anime and tokusatsu, because I was into
those. I was hesitant to go teaching her anime songs right off the bat, so I'd
chosen this song, which was like an anime song, but not: Neil Sedaka's
"Better Days are Coming."
You might know it better as the song that Mami Ayukawa covered as Z
— Toki wo Koete, the opening to the mecha anime Mobile Suit Zeta
Gundam. Now, this is only my personal opinion, but I thought for ordinary
music, Hiroko Yakushimaru, and for anime songs, Hiroko Moriguchi's
songs would suit Juna's voice well. I wanted to hear "Tantei Monogatari"
and "Mizu no Hoshi ni Ai wo Komete" with her voice.
The cafe had a relaxing, retro-modern style to it. Sitting ourselves down
at one of the tables, we listened to Juna sing for a while. A few minutes
later, Juna finished her song and came over to us.
"Why, Your..." she began.
"Hello, Juna," I said quickly. "You may not remember me, but I am
Kazuya, the successor to a crêpe fabric merchant from Echigo!"
In order to cut off Juna, I started talking a mile a minute. Being the
smart, talented woman that she was, Juna recognized what was going on
just from that. "Oh, yes, Kazuya. Right. It's been so long. How is your
father these days?"
"Why, he's too energetic for his own good. Just recently, Mother found
out he was having affair. Now wasn't that trouble."
"I see. Kazuya, do be careful about how you handle women yourself,"
she said, going along with my story.
I couldn't very well have her bowing and calling me "Your Majesty" in
a place like this with so many people watching, after all. I was supposed to
be in disguise. Still, I had to be impressed with her ability to instantly ad-lib
a response to my random nonsense. I definitely wanted her at the castle.
"I'll pay you five times what they pay you here, so will you come be my
personal secretary?" I asked her.
"I appreciate the offer, but I think this job where I can let the customers
enjoy my songs is my calling, so I'll have to decline." She let me down
lightly.
Yep. Even the way she rejects me has class.
"That's a shame. But, they do say that rather than put wild flowers on
display in your room, the flowers are more beautiful left blossoming in the
fields."
"Oh, but if you love and adore them, not just put them on display,
flowers will shine even in a vase," she retorted.
"I see. I must endeavor to be worthy of loving and adoring them, then."
"Yes, worthy enough to convince the flowers they want you to take
them."
"Ha ha ha ha ha."
"Hee hee hee hee hee."
Juna and I laughed together.
As she watched us, Liscia seemed slightly taken aback. "Somehow,
when you two talk, it's like you're each probing the other's intentions."
...Or so she thought. You're wrong, Liscia, I said silently. Most likely,
this was Fig. 1: A younger brother who wants to act more mature than he is
being gently chided by his big sister for it.
...I'll bet that's how it was. Even though we were practically the same
age.
"Slurrrrrp... Gelin udon truly is delicious, isn't it?" Aisha said happily.
We had decided to stay at Lorelei and have lunch there.
Polishing off her gelin udon as fast as you would a bowl of wanko soba,
Aisha shouted "Seconds, please!" thrusting the bowl out towards our waiter.
A cafe isn't the place to be eating like that, you know... I thought.
"Still, gelin udon at a cafe...?" I wondered.
"Did you not like it?"
Juna looked worried, so I shook my head, saying, "Oh, no. I just thought
it was odd to be slurping udon in a classy place like this."
"Ever since that broadcast, there have been a lot of people wanting to try
it," she explained. "Besides, we aren't through the food crisis yet, so we're
grateful to have these sorts of inexpensive ingredients we can use."
"I'm working on it, but... sorry I'm not doing well enough," I said.
"No, Your... Kazuya, I think you're doing well."
When Juna gave me that gentle smile, it made me feel all warm and
fuzzy inside.
Kick! Kick!
Okay, Liscia, stop kicking my shins under the table, please.
"Don't you think Souma treats Juna differently from how he treats
everyone else?" Liscia asked.
"Ahh, slurp... I had... slurp... noticed that, too," Aisha agreed.
"...Hey, I can't help it," I protested. "I get nervous when I'm talking to a
beautiful, older girl. Also, Aisha, eat or talk. Pick one."
"Slurp."
What, you're choosing to eat? I could have poked fun at her, but that
comedy routine's too overdone, so I just let it go.
"...This after he told me I was beautiful, too," Liscia said.
"Actually, Liscia, I think you're beautiful in a different way than Juna is,
you know?" I said.
"Wh-Why were you able to hear me?!" she exclaimed.
Uh, if you don't want to be heard, lower your volume a little, would you?
...Part of it was that I was strangely conscious of her because she'd let
me use her lap as a pillow.
"Y-You could have pretended not to hear," she stammered.
"Like I could let it go by," I retorted. "I'm a healthy young man, so don't
say things that are going to make me so conscious of you so often."
"Oh, my, your faces are all red. You're both so innocent." Juna watched
us bickering with a smile.
Next to us, Aisha slurped her udon like she was pouting. "Slurp... Why
does he notice the princess's affections... Slurp... but mine get ignored...?
Slurp. Ah, I'll have another bowl, please."
"It may not be my place to say it... But perhaps he doesn't take you
seriously because you act like this?" Juna suggested.
"Madam Juna?! What have I done wrong?!" Aisha exclaimed.
"That appetite of yours. When I first saw you in the castle, you looked
like a brave and dignified woman who was willing to address the king
directly, but recently you're just a disappointment who's eating all the
time."
"Wh-Whaaaaat?!" Aisha started to look at us with eyes that seemed to
plead, "Tell me she's lying, Your Majesty, Princess."
Liscia and I smiled, then both raised our arms in front of us in an X.
After all, I agreed with Juna 100%.
"Poncho's clearly been stealing everyone's attention from her," Liscia
said.
"Where did that dignified Aisha go, I wonder?" Juna asked.
"Wahhh! It's the forest's fault for not having so many different types of
food!" Aisha wailed.
"Besides, what do you think you're doing trying to seduce a guy who's
already betrothed...?" I added.
"""Huh?""" All three stared at me blankly.
Did I say something strange?
"Um... Souma? In this country, polygamy is tolerated, so long as you
have the wealth to support multiple wives, you realize?" Liscia said.
Juna nodded. "It works the other way around, too. Polyandrous
arrangements are possible for powerful women, as well. It's uncommon,
though."
"If men were limited to one wife, the house could die out if something
went wrong, after all," Aisha agreed.
Liscia, Juna, and Aisha told me this with straight faces.
Are they serious...? Ah, no, I guess they probably are serious.
This world's society still hadn't gotten out of the Dark Ages. They
didn't have a stable birth rate, and their hygiene and medical knowledge
were underdeveloped. On top of that, they were living in these troubled
times, so there were probably few people living to the average life
expectancy. Furthermore, in a Middle Ages-type society, where the "house"
is an important concept, provided you have the wealth to support them, the
more potential heirs the better. That was probably the reason why they
allowed polygamy. Even I could understand that.
"But Liscia's mother is the only queen I've met..." I objected.
If it was a polygamous system, wouldn't Liscia's father, the king, have
had more wives? I mean, I was getting hassled by Hakuya to hurry up and
produce an heir, too.
"Oh, actually, my mother was the one who held the royal authority,"
Liscia explained. "She's the daughter of the man who was king before my
father, you see."
"Hold on, that king married into the family?!" I burst out.
"Yes. After they married, she left ruling the country to him, though.
That's why my father could never have slighted my mother by taking
another woman as his queen. ...I can't say for sure that he doesn't have any
bastards, though."
"Huh? Was it okay for me to take the throne when he abdicated it to
me?" I wondered.
"There's no issue. Father was the one who stood out, but he couldn't
have abdicated without Mother's consent."
In other words, that abdication hadn't been an arbitrary decision by the
king, but something he had had the queen's understanding for as well, huh?
"Besides, I was the only one with the right of succession, and I would
have had to take a husband anyway, so it's not that big a difference, really,"
Liscia added. "It's just a matter of whether I hold the royal authority or my
partner does."
"...Well, couldn't you have been the ruler then, instead, Liscia?" I asked.
"You'd have needed to seek my approval for each and every one of your
reforms, you know? Wouldn't that be a pain?"
"Well... Yes."
Now, Liscia wasn't pigheaded in any way, but if I had needed her
approval for every little thing, my reforms would have been going much
slower. Besides, if the person with ultimate deciding power and the person
driving the reformation were separate people, there would be no guarantee
that the members of a counter-reformation faction wouldn't try to get
between the two and stir up unneeded trouble.
"Your father made a brave decision by transferring everything to me at
once, huh..." I said.
"You're right... I'm sincerely able to see how impressive that was now."
Though, it did mean the burden had been shifted to us.
We both sighed in unison.
"So, if you wanted it, Souma, a polygamous relationship is... possible,"
Liscia said.
"You'd be okay with that, Liscia?" I asked.
"I wouldn't be happy about it, but if it keeps you on the throne..."
"That's being way too understanding..." I murmured.
"I'll tolerate up to eight, myself included."
"That's a lot! I couldn't take responsibility for that many!"
Now, when she told me I could have a harem, it's not like the idea
wasn't appealing, but... I dunno, I could only imagine it being a lot of work.
I wasn't the type that could bear to disagree strongly with women, and I
could tell that the more of them there were, the more constrained I'd feel.
"By the way, why did you choose that number?" I asked.
"I can have you all to myself for one day a week," she said.
The weeks in this world were eight days. Incidentally, there were four
weeks in a month, making each of them 32 days. There were twelve months
in a year, so this world had a 384-day year.
Wait, that's why?! I realized, registering what she had said.
When she said that, Juna and Aisha started whispering about something.
"If there were eight of us, do you think we would only get it once a
week?"
"It doesn't have to be that way, I'd think? If you and another wife each
invited the other on your days..."
"I see. It's not necessarily just once a week! You're brilliant, Madam
Juna."
"...But wouldn't you want to have him to yourself?"
"Ooh, there's a conundrum."
No, no, Aisha, Juna, why are you getting so into talking about this?!
Having them at the same time... I can't say I wouldn't be into that, but
I'd have to become king for that. I was torn between my realistic
personality, which wanted to avoid the hard work involved if I took the
throne, and my desire to pursue that masculine ideal.
Just then, as I was starting to feel incredibly awkward...
"No, you can't do that! Absolutely not, Hal!"
"Why won't you understand?!"
At a table far away from ours, a young couple in military outfits were
having an argument.
The man was a tall human with distinctive red hair. He looked like he
was over 190 centimeters tall. He was broad-shouldered, and even through
his uniform, I could tell he had a solid build.
The girl, on the other hand, had blonde hair in a short bob, with two
triangular ears up top, and was a little on the petite side.
Is that girl a mystic wolf, I wonder?
"That girl's a mystic fox," Liscia told me, but I couldn't tell the
difference. "You can tell by their tails. She has a fox tail, see?"
"They're both canines, so can't we just lump them both together as
mystic dogs?" I asked.
"If you say that, you'll get both the mystic wolves and the mystic foxes
angry. Kobolds are mystic dogs, so it would be like lumping humans
together with apes."
"...Tell me about all these things I shouldn't say to certain races later,
please."
That's another world for you. You never know when you'll step on a
landmine like that, I thought.
As I was thinking that, the mystic fox girl was pleading. "I'm begging
you, Hal. You can't go to the Carmine Duchy right now! Army General
Duke Georg Carmine is hostile to the new king. There could be a civil
war!"
"That's exactly why I'm going. If there's going to be fighting, that's a
chance for me to get promoted, isn't it?" The one called Hal, who seemed to
be a young man of about 18, gave her a dauntless smile.
The mystic fox girl, on the other hand, wore an expression clouded with
anxiety. "Hal, the way you think about war is too simple. Your father called
you back home because he was worried about you being like that!"
"It's none of my old man's business! He's served under Duke Carmine
for years, but now that things don't look so good, he's hiding in the capital,
the coward! I don't need to listen to him!"
"Your father understands what's happening. Duke Carmine is rebelling
without just cause."
The two kept quarreling.
As she was watching them, Liscia clapped her hands together in
recognition. "I thought I recognized him! The man is Officer Halbert
Magna."
"Is he someone you know?" I asked.
"He's the eldest son of a distinguished family in the army clique. Since
his academy days, his combat abilities have put him well above the rest of
his peers. He entered the land forces after graduating, but... I guess he's
returned home since then."
"He sounds surprisingly well known," I mused. "Well, how about the
girl, then?"
"I don't know... I've never seen her in the army..."
"That girl is Kaede Foxia," Juna answered on Liscia's behalf.
Huh? Why does she know? I wondered.
"Because she's a regular here," Juna said without my asking. "If I recall,
she mentioned she's a mage serving in the Forbidden Army."
"If she's in the Forbidden Army, is she an earth-type mage, then?" I
asked.
This world's magic could be divided into six elements: fire, water, earth,
wind, light, and dark.
Fire, water, wind, and earth manipulated their respective elements for
attack spells, while light was generally healing-type magic. Dark was
unique in that it didn't, strictly speaking, manipulate darkness. All the
unique spells that didn't fall under the previous five elements were lumped
together under the "dark-type" categorization.
In terms of magic type, my Living Poltergeists would have been dark.
Every person in this world was aligned with one of these elements, and
they could use magic to some degree. As you would know from Liscia and
Aisha's training, people could imbue their weapons or attacks with magic of
their element, as well.
Those who could cause greater magical effects than ordinary people
were called mages. Mages could manipulate flames, cause whirlwinds,
form craters in the ground, and sink battleships with their incredible
powers.
When mages joined the military, their type determined where they were
sent. Fire users went to the army, wind users to the air force, water users to
the navy, and earth and dark users (not that there were many of the latter)
went to the Forbidden Army, while light users were distributed equally and
played a similar role to combat medics.
Honestly, I was opposed to this inflexible way of distributing them, but
the army, navy and air force were under the control of the Three Dukedoms,
so I couldn't mess around with them.
Someday, I want to reform that system.
While I was thinking about all that, Kaede and Halbert kept arguing.
"Duke Carmine would never lose to that inexperienced king!"
"Duke Carmine's been acting strange lately! If we start fighting amongst
ourselves, only our neighbors stand to benefit! Amidonia wants to reclaim
the lands they lost to Elfrieden two kings ago. And as for the Turgis
Republic, with more than half their territory frozen, they want fertile land
and a warm water port. If there's a civil war, they're sure to intervene. Duke
Carmine must know that..."
Huh, it sounds like Kaede has a good understanding of the situation in
the neighboring countries.
The country to the west of this one on the world map, the Principality of
Amidonia, had seen roughly half of their territory stolen from them under
the expansionist policies of Liscia's grandfather. That was close to 50 years
ago, but they were still eyeing this country for any opportunity to regain
their lost land. For this country, it was clearly an enemy state.
To the south of Amidonia, on the southern edge of this continent, was
the Turgis Republic, which, like Kaede said, was a frigid land that was
mostly frozen.
When you looked at this world's map, the further south you went, the
lower the temperature dropped. I didn't know whether that was because
(speaking from a Japanese person's perspective) this continent was in the
southern hemisphere, or if their concept of north and south was reversed, or
even if it was because of some mysterious magical effect, but the further
south you went in Elfrieden, the colder it got, and the further north, the
warmer it got.
Because of the kind of country they were, "Go north" was a national
policy for the Turgis Republic.
However, of the countries they bordered, the Gran Chaos Empire was
massive, so they could ill afford a conflict with them, while the mercenary
state of Zem was their ally, meaning they couldn't invade there, either. That
narrowed their potential targets for northward expansion to Amidonia or
Elfrieden.
In other words, both Amidonia and Turgis were like ravenous wolves,
ready to pounce on this country at the soonest opportunity.
"What is Duke Carmine thinking when the neighboring countries have
designs on our territory?"
"...This is Duke Carmine you're talking about. I'm sure he has a plan."
"Aren't you going to think for yourself, Hal?!"
"The fact of the matter is, many nobles have given up on the king and
they've gone to serve under Duke Carmine, haven't they? His failure to
keep them here is proof of the king's ineptitude."
"I don't know if the new king is competent or not, but up to this point,
I've seen no misrule under him! Besides, most of those nobles gathering
under Duke Carmine are those who've lost rights under the new king's
finance reforms, or who were investigated for corruption and are
discontented over having their assets seized, you realize?! Even if you
restored their rights, do you really think that would make this country a
better place?!"
When Kaede pressed him on it like that, Halbert's gaze wandered. "I'm
sure Duke Carmine is thinking this all through."
"There you go, talking about Duke Carmine, again. Don't you have an
opinion of your own, Hal?"
"J-Just shut up, okay! What, Kaede, do you think you can see the
future?! Well, I can!"
"I can!" Halbert lashed out defiantly, but Kaede answered him firmly. "I
can see what's coming! That man scares me. I'm sure that the new king
will..."
"Okay, and stop," I cut Kaede off, inserting myself between the two of
them.
Both of their eyes went wide at the sudden intrusion.
I ignored Halbert's surprised "Wh-Who do you think you are, buddy?!"
with a smile to the Kaede who was sitting there with her mouth agape.
"If you keep running your mouth, I'll use my authority to have you
arrested, you know?" I said.
"You're...!" Kaede seemed to have immediately realized who I was.
"Yes I am, so keep quiet, okay?" I said. "Honestly, I don't know how
much you understand, but if you talk so confidently about it in a place like
this, it could harm the country."
"I-I'm sorry," she stammered. "But... what are you doing here...? You're
not here to seize Hal for his rebelliousness, I hope?! It's not like that! Hal's
just a little weak in the head, he would never rebel..."
Kaede completely misunderstood what I was doing and started to make
excuses. Who knows where the analytic ability she'd displayed earlier
went, but she was desperately trying to defend Halbert.
"No, I don't care what one single soldier thinks," I said.
"Th-Then why are you here?" she stammered.
"Because I was suddenly given time off," I explained. "I was just
checking out Juna's place."
"I-I see..." Kaede was clearly relieved.
Halbert, on the other hand, had been glaring at me this whole time. "You
punk, who do you think you are, butting into our conversation and then
threatening Kaede?"
"U-Um, Hal? He wasn't threatening me, you see..."
"Shut up! You be quiet, Kaede!"
"Yipe!"
When Halbert slammed his hands on the table and stood up, it frightened
Kaede.
"...What good is frightening her yourself going to do?" I asked.
"I said, shut up!" He reached out, trying to grab me by the collar, when...
"Urkh!"
...he stopped halfway. In an instant, Halbert was surrounded by the three
women who were with me.
Normally, being surrounded by three beauties would be a fantastic
situation to be in, but... I wasn't jealous of his position in the least. After all,
Liscia had drawn the rapier from her side and was pointing the tip of it at
Halbert's neck, Aisha (who had left her great sword behind because it was
too bulky) was holding his face in a claw hold, and Juna, still smiling, had a
fruit knife pressed against his back.
Whoa... Their power levels are way too high...
"Wait, even you, Juna?" I asked, surprised.
"Violence is strictly prohibited in this establishment," she said with a
grin.
"Uh, sure..."
Having found himself in that situation, even the assertive Halbert was
sweating. He couldn't move an inch, so he glared at me in frustration
through the gap between Aisha's fingers. "You punk... That was dirty! If
you're a man, how can you hide behind a bunch of women?!"
"Complain all you like, but it's kind of their job to protect me," I said.
"Actually, if I were to stand on the front line without bodyguards, I think
that would be a bigger problem."
When I said that, the girls nodded in agreement.
"If you understand that, I wish you wouldn't stick your neck into trouble
like this," Liscia scolded me.
Uh, sure, sorry, I'll be more careful.
Halbert's irritated gaze stabbed into me. "...You punk, just who are
you?"
"Hm... Allow me to respond with that great line from a samurai period
drama. 'Halbert, have you forgotten my face?'"
"Huh?"
"Why do you suddenly sound so full of yourself?" Liscia slapped me
upside the head.
Aw, come on, I've always wanted to say it.
Then Aisha raised her voice and spoke on my behalf. "On your knees!
Who do you take this man for?!"
Yeah, that's another line I wanted to use. Wait, Aisha's saying it?!
"You stand in the presence of the (provisional) 14th King of Elfrieden,
His Majesty Souma!" Aisha declared.
It felt like I could hear that show's theme music playing, but I'm sure I
was imagining it.
Regardless, I gave the disappointing dark elf a light bonk on the head.
"You're too loud. We're supposed to be incognito, remember?"
"Ah...! I-I'm sorry, sire!"
"'Sire'...? Don't tell me you're the king?!" Halbert acted surprised long
after he should have figured it out. He was the only one present who didn't
know by this point, so he seemed pretty slow-witted. Regardless, with him
being menaced with a rapier, a claw hold, and a knife, we couldn't have a
calm discussion, so I had everyone stand down.
Fixing my gaze on the relieved Halbert, I asked him a question. "Now
then, Halbert Magna, you were saying something about attacking me?"
"Th-That's..." Halbert averted his eyes.
Oh, come on, was your determination that weak?
"Should I take that to be the will of the House of Magna as a whole?" I
asked.
"Wha?! My old man's got nothing to do with this!"
"Of course he does," I said. "While I might be able to overlook a soldier
who was just following orders, traitorous nobles must be tried under the
law. They show a clear intent to rebel, after all. In those cases, the charge
will be 'treason against the state,' you know... That's a serious crime. At the
very least, those within three degrees of consanguinity will be considered
complicit in it."
"Wha...?!" Halbert was at a loss for words. All I was doing was forcing
him to face the facts, though.
"No... That's too harsh..." Kaede tried to intervene, but I raised a hand to
stop her.
"Now, let me just say, I'm not doing this because I hold a personal
grudge against you," I said. "That's what the laws of this country dictate.
Honestly, I know with long-lived races, it's not unusual for them to have
great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren around, but, even so, the
range of people implicated in the crime is way too large. Personally, for a
law like this which even punishes innocent young children, I'd like to
reform it right away, but I have so many things to do that I just haven't
gotten around to it yet."
He was speechless.
"Halbert Magna," I said formally. "You were born into the House of
Magna, a proper noble house. So, if you side with the Three Dukedoms,
they rebel, and I win, all of your kin within three degrees of consanguinity
will be executed. That's what the law says, so there's nothing I can do about
it, right?"
It would be the law that judged him, not me. There would be no room
for me to use my own discretion.
"Now, let's consider what happens if the Three Dukedoms win," I
continued.
"Hey! Y-Yeah, that's right! As long as we win, it's all good!"
"In the event that happens, what will happen to her?" I placed a hand on
Kaede's shoulder.
Halbert was clearly shaken. "No, you wouldn't dare take Kaede
hostage!"
"Oh, I wouldn't do something like that. However, she's a member of the
Forbidden Army. If the Three Dukedoms rebel, she'll be sent to the front on
'our side.' In other words, she would be your enemy." Here, I looked
closely at Kaede. "By the way, what is your relationship with Halbert?"
"W-We're childhood friends."
"Childhood friends... I see."
From the way they'd been talking and acting, I had seen signs of their
affection for each other, but... Well, there was no reason to point it out here.
"If you're childhood friends, you must care more for one another than
you would just any other person," I said. "And? If you join the Three
Dukedoms, what do you plan to do about her?"
"What do you mean, what will I do...? About what?"
"We're imagining that the Three Dukedoms win. In that case, I may
have been struck down, and you may even have been the one to take my
severed head."
"Hah! I'd be guaranteed a promotion, then!"
"...I suppose you would," I said. "So, what of Kaede? A cute girl like
her, in the losing army. When they find out, what will the soldiers of the
winning side do...? As a soldier yourself, I think you can imagine, can't
you?"
When I pointed that out, Halbert visibly turned pale. Most likely, he was
imagining "that sort" of scene. After the conclusion of a war, it wasn't
uncommon to see the defeated ravaged by the victors. Looting, arson, rape,
slaughter... The madness of war was in that it allowed these acts of
barbarity to happen.
Even so, Halbert raised his voice, as if trying to shake off his doubts.
"Duke Carmine's forces are well-organized! They would never do
something so indecent!"
"I don't know what the situation is within the army, but Duke Carmine
has more than just the regular forces in his duchy," I said. "There are also
those I stripped of their rights or investigated for corruption. Those nobles
who've raised the flag of rebellion against me. They have nothing to lose. If
they lose, death for both them and their family line awaits. So they'll throw
away their personal assets, hiring a large number of Zemish mercenaries."
The mercenary state, Zem.
West of Amidonia and north of Turgis, it was a medium-sized country,
founded by the mercenary commander Zem, who had used his wits to
destroy the country which had hired him and then build his own nation of
mercenaries in its place. They had declared themselves to be "eternally
neutral," but their primary industry was dispatching mercenaries to other
countries, so what that really meant was, "If requested, we will dispatch
mercenaries to any country." Their mercenaries were ridiculously strong, so
most countries recognized that it was better to have them as an ally than an
enemy, and so they had formed mercenary contracts with them.
"That's absurd! There are Zemish mercenaries under contract with the
Forbidden Army, too! If they send mercenaries to the Three Dukedoms, as
well, they'll be fighting against their own!"
"Oh, that won't happen," I assured him. "I terminated their employment
contract with the Forbidden Army a while ago."
Now seems like a good time, so let me talk about the military system of
this country.
This kingdom had a total manpower of around 100,000 troops. They
were divided like so:
40,000 in the army, led by Duke Georg Carmine.
10,000 in the navy, led by Duchess Excel Walter.
1,000 in the air force, led by Duke Castor Vargas.
(However, one wyvern knight was said to be equivalent to 100 soldiers
from the army.)
Of these, only the air force had a knightly title bestowed on every one of
its members (it was composed entirely of units of wyvern knights, i.e. "1
wyvern + 1 or 2 knights," so that was obvious), but more than half of the
army and navy were made up of career soldiers. They trained day and night
in the three duchies, and they received a salary from the three duchies.
You could say that the right to self-rule and the tax exemption on the
profits from their lands, along with the many other special rights given to
the three duchies, were there to support these troops.
Now, the remaining troops, numbering a little over 40,000, belonged to
the Forbidden Army, but they were further divided beyond that.
There were the Royal Guard, who reported directly to the king, and the
career soldiers who were attached to the Forbidden Army. Then there were
the noble estates (which had less rights than the three duchies) and their
personal forces on top of that. Also, due to our contract with the mercenary
state, Zem, there had been a unit of mercenaries under the command of the
Forbidden Army, as well, but I had already terminated their employment.
The reason that the Forbidden Army was smaller than the forces of the
three duchies had to do with the concept behind this country.
This country had originally been born through many races working
together. As a result, a member of the race with the largest population, a
human, became the king, but in order to protect the rights of the other races,
the commanders of the army, navy, and air forces would be chosen from the
other races.
So, if a tyrant took the throne and began oppressing the other races, the
system had been set up so that the armies of the Three Dukedoms, being
larger than the Forbidden Army, could remove him. Turning that around, if
one of the Three Dukedoms was plotting to usurp the throne, the system
was set up in a way that if even one of the armies were to side with the
king, the rebellion could be put down.
In a peaceful era, this might have been a good setup. However, now the
Demon Lord's Domain had appeared, and these were troubled times with
every country looking for openings to take advantage of. With this sort of
divided command structure, it was possible that we might not be able to
respond quickly enough to a sudden crisis. As a matter of fact, I was trying
to move forward with reforms, but the Three Dukedoms were giving me the
silent treatment.
Now, let's get back to how I released the mercenaries from their
employment contracts.
"Hold on, what do you mean you released the Zemish mercenaries from
their contracts?!" Liscia shouted.
"Oh, yeah, I hadn't told you about that yet, had I?" I smiled wryly at the
fact that, rather than Halbert, it was Liscia who voiced her surprise this
time. "It means exactly what it sounds like. Mercenaries are useless and just
eat up money, you know."
Machiavelli had said, "Mercenaries and mixed armies are not to be
trusted." According to him, "Mercenaries are tied to you only by their own
profit; if presented with greater profit, they will easily betray you. Yet even
when they fight, they protect their employer only for their own benefit, and
so their loyalty is not to be expected. There is no reason to hire incapable
mercenaries, and yet capable ones will always use their wits to seize their
employer's position."
In fantasy novels and RPGs, protagonists with the mercenary job often
appear, but the way the mercenary business actually worked was wildly
different from the image you'll have seen there.
Basically, they were people who made their money on the battlefield.
They held no loyalty to country or prince, quickly changing sides when the
balance of benefits shifted.
In a losing battle, they fled immediately. Even when victorious, they
would run wild. Compared to standing armies of the same size, their upkeep
might cost less, but they were a negative in the long term.
"We don't have the money to pay useless people like that," I explained.
"Even so, the mercenary contract was also proof of our friendly relations
with Zem, you realize?!" Liscia shouted.
"True, things have become tense with them since then, but you yourself
said, 'Spend always on defense, never on tribute,' didn't you, Liscia?
Unlike the empire, they can't afford to invade us themselves. Paying them
tribute to bide our time is pointless with them."
The country was getting back at me by dispatching mercenaries to the
Three Dukedoms, though.
I looked straight at Halbert. "Those blood-thirsty mercenaries are on the
side of the Three Dukedoms. Do you think they'll leave a girl in the
defeated army like Kaede alone? While Kaede is being tormented by the
mercenaries, and they're about to kill her because they're done with her,
where will you be, and what will you be doing?"
"That's..." Halbert hesitated.
That indecisive attitude of his got me steaming mad. "Will you be lifting
my head aloft in joy?! Singing songs to celebrate your victory?!
Meanwhile, your childhood friend may have been made their plaything,
then left dead at the side of the road!"
"Urkh..."
When I shouted at him, Halbert's legs seemed to give out and he had to
put his hands on the table for support. He had no comeback to that, and his
mouth was closed tightly. Kaede watched him worriedly.
When I saw them like that... I calmed down a little. "Halbert Magna.
The path you were about to choose is a dead end. If I win, you will be
executed. If the Three Dukedoms win, Kaede will... Well, she may not
come out of it all right. If you're going to make the gamble of a lifetime, at
least make sure the future you want is on the betting table."
He said nothing.
"Before you do anything rash, always think back," I told him. "Think
about what is it that you wanted, what for, and for whom? Look around
you, and think about it."
"What for... And for whom..." Halbert looked around.
His eyes met with Kaede's, who was looking at him with concern. There
were no words between them, but Halbert looked like a man released from
whatever had been possessing him.
...What happens from here on is for them to decide, I thought.
"Sorry, Juna. We were getting in the way of your business, weren't we?"
I asked. "We'll be leaving now."
Just before we left, I went to apologize for making a scene, but Juna
shook her head. "No... Sire, your words carved themselves into my heart."
After saying that, Juna seemed to hesitate for a moment. She clearly had
something to say, but was unsure whether it was okay to say it.
I waited a little while, and finally Juna looked up, her face resolute.
"Sire... I have something to talk to you about."
"Hey, Souma, there was something I wanted to ask," Liscia said.
"Hm?"
We were inside the carriage we had called to take us back to the castle
when Liscia, who was sitting beside me, asked a question.
Aisha was acting as the driver, so we were alone together in the carriage.
"About what happened earlier," she said. "You were trying to persuade
Halbert, right? When you said traitors would be judged by the law, you
seemed kind of serious."
"...Because he still hadn't acted against me, yet. If he still does after this,
I'm not going to show any mercy."
"In the end, you're still a nice guy, huh?" she said.
"Be kind to your allies, severe with your enemies," I said. "That's the
kind of king people want to support. It's not like I'm being severe because I
enjoy it. The fewer enemies we have, the better."
"Just like I thought... You're a nice guy." Liscia rested her head on my
shoulder.
◇ ◇ ◇
—The next day.
When I was in the governmental affairs office getting some paperwork
done, Hakuya came in. Then, "The head of the House of Magna, Sir Glaive
Magna, has brought his son, Sir Halbert Magna, and Forbidden Army Mage
Kaede Foxia, and is requesting an audience with you," he reported to me.
...Sounds like there's still another dispute to solve, I thought.
When I arrived in the audience chamber accompanied by Liscia and my
bodyguard Aisha, there were already three people there kneeling. In front of
the other two with his head lowered was a middle-aged man with salt and
pepper hair. In his armor, he truly looked like a warrior who had seen many
battles. Behind him were Kaede Foxia and Halbert Magna, who I had met
the day before. That being the case, I deduced that this man in front of them
with his head lowered must be Halbert's father, Glaive.
"Raise your heads, all three of you," I said.
""Yes, sir.""
When Halbert and Kaede raised their heads, I found myself transfixed
by the sight of Halbert's face. I mean, he had the marks to show he'd been
punched several times. His cheeks were swollen, and he had two black
eyes. Those hadn't been there when I'd seen him yesterday, so it must have
happened after we'd parted.
"Halbert... You're looking even more handsome than last time I saw
you," I commented.
"Urgh... Yes, sir!" A look of frustration crossed his face for a moment,
but he didn't fight back the way he had yesterday.
I wonder what happened to him after we parted yesterday.
I spoke to Glaive, whose head was still bowed. "Glaive Magna, raise
your head."
"I humbly, humbly, beg you, show mercy for my son's recent
misconduct!" That was the lamentful response that came back. He was
pressing his forehead against the floor. It was hard to tell since he had one
knee up, but he was doing what we'd probably call a dogeza in Japan.
"By misconduct, do you mean what happened yesterday?" I asked.
"Yes, sir! I heard the details from Madam Kaede. While he may have
been off-duty, he insulted you, sire, and what's more, boasted that he would
join the rebellious Three Dukedoms, which is utterly outrageous!
...However, my son is yet immature. He said those things because of his
underdeveloped brain. Your anger is entirely justified, sire, but, please, let
the blame fall on me for failing to educate him properly!"
Um... That was a little long winded, but what he's saying is "I'll take the
punishment, so please spare my son's life," I guess? I'm not even angry,
though.
"Yesterday's events happened when I was there in secret," I said. "I
don't intend to make a big deal out of it. From what I see here, he's already
been punished appropriately."
"Sire, you are too kind." Glaive apologized profusely, prostrating
himself before me.
Halbert and Kaede hurriedly bowed their heads once more.
Finally, Glaive lifted his face. "Now then, sire. I realize this is incredibly
rude, but I have come to tell you something."
"What?"
"Well... It is something best not heard by many people..."
A secret, huh? I had Liscia, Aisha, Hakuya, Glaive, Halbert, and Kaede
remain, then dismissed everyone else, including the guards. Aisha seemed
out of place, but so long as she was here, if it turned out he was using the
promise of secret information as a guise to assassinate me, I had someone to
deal with that.
"I've cleared the room," I said. "So, what is it you needed to tell me?"
"Yes, about that..." Glaive began to talk at a relaxed pace.
When we heard what it was he had to say, Halbert's eyes went wide,
Kaede looked down, gripping her fists tightly, Hakuya closed his eyes in
silence, while Aisha looked around bewildered by everyone else's
reactions...
Liscia, meanwhile, had gone stiff and expressionless, not saying a word.
There were tears streaming down her face.
As for me, it was a complicated feeling. Anger, exasperation,
resignation, sadness... All those feelings got jumbled together in my chest,
and I worked my hardest to keep them there.
I spoke in as calm and even a voice as I could manage, so as not to
betray my feelings. "Now that you've told me that... what do you want me
to do about it?"
"Nothing. I just wanted you to be aware, sire."
"...It's heavy." I stood up, giving orders to Kaede and Halbert.
"Forbidden Army Mage Kaede Foxia. This insight is too valuable, and
dangerous, for me to leave you as a mere mage. I order you to serve under
Ludwin of the Royal Guard as a staff officer.
"Huh? Y-Yes, sir!" she exclaimed.
"Army Officer Halbert Magna. I order you to transfer to the Forbidden
Army."
"Huh?! Me, join the Forbidden Army?!"
"That's right. You will be Kaede's second-in-command and report to her.
Her rank effectively makes her Number 2 in the Forbidden Army. Because
she is still a young woman, there is the risk that her subordinates won't take
her seriously. In the event that that happens, you are to make sure they do as
she says. Understood?"
"...Yes, sir!"
Thus, a new, young officer joined the Forbidden Army.
However, I wasn't feeling emotionally at ease enough to be happy a new
ally had joined us. As I forced down my violent emotions, my true feeling
seep out through my gritted teeth just once.
"Honestly, these people..."