Chapter 11
Tap, tap, tapāonly steady footsteps echoed down the hall.
Gerard finally broke the silence, still sounding dissatisfied.
āMy lord⦠are you truly planning to keep it by your side?ā
āWhat?ā
āThat thieving squirrel, my lord.ā
The words sounded absurd even to himācalling a mere squirrel with honorificsābut he couldnāt exactly speak down to it either.
After all, that squirrel was no ordinary creature. It had been personally brought in by Duke Kreutz himself.
So Gerard and the household had no choice but to treat it not as a criminal but as a proper guest.
ā¦Even if it was locked in a cage.
What on earth are you thinking, my lord�
Gerard frowned, unable to hide his disapproval.
He had served Kain for more than ten years, yet lately, his master was becoming unreadable.
He hid things, acted differently than before⦠and now, paranoid as ever, he had brought home a squirrel.
Not just any squirrelāan obviously unusual one.
āIt must be a spy sent by a rival house,ā Gerard pressed.
At first, heād been sure it was a beastman in disguise.
It understood speech too easily, acted far too cunning for a mere animal, and even deceived him more than once.
But every inspection came back the same:
āThere is no mana whatsoever. If it were a beastman, there would be traces.ā
The physician repeated this verdict every time.
And every time, Kain only muttered, āI see,ā with a look Gerard couldnāt read.
Clearly, he knew more about this squirrel than he was saying.
āIt must have been raised for some special purpose.ā
āSpecial purpose?ā
Kain suddenly halted.
āThink about it. Its fur is as soft as a luxury rug, its appearance⦠unnaturally cute.ā
Gerard spoke with utter seriousness.
āThere is no way such a creature survived in the wild. All the more reason to send it out of the castle before it causes trouble.ā
That was why he had dragged the subject out.
But his master had no such intentions.
āThe castle is already crawling with spies. One more acorn-sized one wonāt change anything.ā
āā¦.ā
Gerard fell silent, stung. He couldnāt deny it.
Kain had inherited the title the moment he came of age, and the world had been circling like vultures ever sinceāwaiting for the last black dragon of House Kreutz to fall.
As long as he lived, their ambitions were restrained. If he fell, wealth and power would flood into their hands.
Assassins come almost every night now. Sleeplessness had become a constant companion.
āStill, I must object. Lord Ferdinand is here, and the Imperial Court willāā
āEnough.ā
A small gesture cut him off.
They had reached the dukeās bedchamber.
Beyond this door waited the squirrel.
Locked up, no doubt bristling with indignation.
He imagined it glaring at him, chattering away in its ridiculous squeaks.
And strangely, he smiled.
It was oddly⦠thrilling, knowing someone was waiting for him.
āWhen I hold it, I feel at ease somehow,ā he admitted inwardly.
In the forest, last night in his room⦠each time, that calm had led him to real sleep.
Was it the squirrelās ability? Or something else entirely?
He intended to find out.
But more than thatā
āItās entertaining.ā
Its frightened little face, its nervous chattering⦠and those cherry-red eyes that revealed its every thought.
āNothing unusual to report, my lord,ā the guards saluted.
Kain pushed open the heavy door.
And thenā
āā¦.ā
āWh-what⦠is the meaning of this?ā
The cage was empty.
Snacks gone, squirrels gone.
The room erupted into chaos.
āSearch the castle! It couldnāt have gone far!ā
Gerard quickly barked orders while Kain stood frozen, jaw clenched.
Gerard glanced nervously about, whenā
Chirp!
From between the cushions of the sofa popped a fluffy white bundle.
It flicked its tail arrogantly, as if mocking them outright.
āThere! The repeat escapee!ā
***
āDefiance, then.ā
āWithout question. Itās declaring, āSuch a pathetic cage canāt hold me!āā
Kain and Gerard stared down at me grimly.
As for meā¦
Yes, I was imprisoned.
In this cursed pouch that had become my second skin.
Whew, that was close.
Iād overheard word of Kain heading my way and had sprinted for my life across the ceiling beams.
If not for Sebi guiding me through shortcuts, Iād be mounted on the wall as a trophy by now.
āMaster Squirrel, you are the Dukeās guestābut also under protective custody. Leaving your assigned area constitutes escape.ā
āIn Kreutz lands, escape is punishable by execution.ā
ā¦Since when did master and servant banter so perfectly in sync?
I had a lot to say about that, but for now, I kept quiet.
If scolding was the worst of it, Iād endure an hour of nagging gladly.
Besides, I had more pressing concerns.
Any moment nowā¦
I glanced at the doorājust as a knock sounded.
Lunch had arrived.
Not the formal dining hall meal, but a lighter spread: simple dishes on a single tray.
There it is!
My eyes locked onto the soup sprinkled with parsley.
The very same soup Iād seen in the kitchenāwhere the maid Redcarrot had slipped strange powder into it.
āThe other dishes might be safe⦠but I canāt risk it.ā
There was only one solution.
Flip the whole table.
I was already poised, hidden in the pouch, ready to spring.
Gerardās eyes lingered on me like a hawk, but when one of the servants raised the silver spoon for poison testing, his gaze shifted.
Perfect.
I held my breath, waiting.
But thenā
āā¦Huh?ā
I froze.
The silver didnāt change color. Not at all.
āIt is safe to eat, my lord.ā
Safe?
Impossible.
I had seen Redcarrot sprinkle powder into that soup.
I had heard her curse Kreutz under her breath.
And yetā¦
No time to hesitate.
Kain lifted his spoon, ready to take the first sip.
If I was wrong, Iād be punished harshly. But if I stayed silent and it was poisonedā
āTh-the squirrel! Itās escaping again!ā
I shot out of the pouch like an arrowā
Straight at Kain Kreutz.
Thud! Clatter!
I crashed into his hand just as he lifted the spoon. The utensil flew from his grip, spun through the air, and landed with a splash on the luxurious carpet.
Soup spilled everywhere.
Chaos.
Success!
The soup lay overturned on the floorāmission accomplished.
But the silence that followed was deafening.
Gerardās face had gone pale as chalk.
And Kainā¦
Kainās face twisted, his expression the very picture of wrath.
āYouā¦ā
His hand reached for me, and instinctively, I flinched.
That reflexāan old scar I couldnāt erase.
My father, the Marquis, had always called his beatings ādiscipline.ā
But instead of striking, Kain paused. His brows furrowed at my reaction.
āā¦If you have something to say, say it. Donāt throw yourself into harm.ā
To my shock, he pulled out a handkerchief and gently wiped my back.
Apparently, Iād splashed soup all over myself too.
No wonder my skin stung.
āā¦Squeak.ā
But I couldnāt speak, could I?
I fidgeted helplessly with my paws.
Kain sighed heavily.
āFetch the physician. And bring cold water and towels.ā
He issued the order to a servant.
Meanwhile, Gerard stared at the stained carpet, his voice unusually grave.
āMy lord⦠along with the physician, we must also summon the guards.ā
Ha he’s sweet?