Chapter 4
2. The Empireâs Shadow, the Birth of House Ersioni
At that very moment, Caesarâwho had been turning the entire mansion upside down looking for his daughterâsnapped his head up at the sound of her voice echoing in the distance.
âPrincess!â
Thud!
He rushed forward, ready to catch her the instant she came into sight.
But his daughter leapt so powerfully that she slammed right into his face instead.
As a result, Caesar fell flat on his back.
âUgh⊠Lirian, are you all right?â
âYep!â
âThank goodness.â
He sat up with his daughter in his arms.
Even with his hair mussed and clothes rumpled, Caesar somehow still looked dashing. Proof that true handsome men stayed handsome no matter what.
Running his fingers through his messy hair, he asked,
âSo, what was it you were saying?â
âOh, right. Daddy!â
âYes?â
âI regressed.â
Lirian gazed up at him with sparkling eyes, full of expectation.
âHm.â
Her mysterious violet eyes reminded him of someone mischievous. Caesar chuckled.
âDid you now?â
âYes!â
âThen weâll have to eat fried eggs again tonight. Since the ones you ate this morning donât count anymore.â
Blink.
Wait. That wasnât the reaction she expected.
âNo, thatâs not what Iââ
âWhat? You donât want fried eggs?â
âN-no!â
She tried to explain, but in the end, she lost to fried eggs.
Damn it. World-saving: 0. Fried eggs: 1.
âIâll eat them! But first, Daddy, listen to me.â
She lowered her voice dramatically, determined to convince him.
âTwelve years from now⊠the Abyss⊠the world will end⊠if we donât stop itâŠâ
She tried to summarize the future as best as her brain could manage.
ââŠAnd thatâs why this happened.â
It wasnât perfect, but it was her best effort.
âSo we have to stop the destruction before twenty years pass!â
Clenching her tiny fists, she shouted with all the seriousness she could muster.
That should be enough to convince him.
âOf course, Daddy understands. This time youâre playing⊠Hero, right?â
Huh?
âOur princess, your vocabularyâs getting so impressive.â
Smiling proudly, Caesar seemed utterly convinced it was just another make-believe game.
Lirianâs face twisted.
âThatâs not it!â
âOh? Then is it⊠Villain vs. Villain? A game where bad guys fight each other?â
âAaagh! Itâs not a game!â
No matter what she said, he only thought she was role-playing.
Finally, she used her trump card.
âDaddy, I hate you!â
âL-Lirian?â
âDummy, dummy, dummy! Youâre an orc! An ogre! A troll!â
âW-what harsh wordsâŠâ
Reeling from the blow, Caesar stumbled back. But fiery Lirian didnât stop. She hopped to her feet with all the indignation of a betrayed daughter.
âIâm leaving!â
âLirian, wait!â
And thus, father-daughter bonding time ended in disaster once again.
Caesar felt troubled.
Since the day before, Lirian had shut herself in her room.
Not even eating.
Could she⊠have been serious?
His expression hardened.
âLirian.â
Knock, knock.
âMay I come in? We need to talk.â
That night, he stood before her door, voice low and heavy.
Click. Creeeak.
After a moment, the door cracked open.
Through the gap, he glimpsed her plump cheeksâthinner than before. The sight pained him.
With a sigh-like smile, he asked,
âMay I come in?â
She nodded, and he stepped inside.
Father and daughter sat a handspan apart on her bed.
Awkward silence filled the air.
Lirian fidgeted with her fingers, head bowed, while Caesar simply watched.
At last, he spoke.
âAbout what you said yesterday. Daddy thought about it.â
Her fingers twitched.
âFirst, what I want to say isâŠâ
ââŠ.â
âIâm sorry.â
Her head turned slowly toward him.
âFor not taking you seriously.â
He reached out and gently stroked her hair.
With a pained smile, he said,
âWould you tell me again? I want to hear your story.â
Her lips opened, closed, then finally she nodded.
They talked for a long timeâabout everything.
At the end, Lirian emphasized,
âIf we donât stop the dragon, so many people will die.â
Her fists clenched tight.
âSo please, Daddy.â
She looked up at him with eyes full of trust and desperation.
âHelp me.â
It was his daughterâs plea.
Caesar didnât answer right away.
Instead, he knelt before her, pulling her into a firm embrace.
âWere you hurt?â
She hadnât said much about her family in her story, but from that absence alone, he understood enough.
How many nights had she cried herself to sleep, facing the worldâs storms alone?
ââŠNot hurt. JustâŠâ
That was how she put it.
That meant the Lirian who had lived through destruction still existed somewhere.
What had become of her?
Caesar didnât dare imagine.
His body trembled faintly as he held her.
Startled by his unexpected reaction, Lirian stammered,
âI-Iâm fine, Daddy. ReallyâŠâ
Her small hand patted his back, comforting him.
Caesar clenched his teeth.
She was only twenty-five in that other lifeâstill younger than he was now.
I wonât let such tragedy touch her future again.
They said people grew strong when they had something to protect.
Then how strong must a parent become?
In his blue eyes, a light blazed, fierce as dawn breaking.
âAll right. Letâs do it.â
Saving the world?
If it meant protecting his children, he would gladly take it on.
âFamily meeting.â
The next morning, after father and daughter had reconciled, Caesar declared solemnly.
âFamily meeting?â
âItâll be your first. Whenever something important comes up, the entire family gathers for discussion.â
This was the famous Ersioni Family Meeting.
The thought of seeing her mother and brothers again filled Lirian with joyâbut also curiosity.
After all, her three brothers were in the capital, and her mother was living alone in some far-off northern estate.
Why her mother chose such a place, Lirian never knew. Theyâd promised to explain when she was older, but then the AbyssâŠ
Donât think about it. Donât think about it!
She shook her head hard, pushing away the memories.
âSo, when is it?â
âLetâs see⊠threeâŠâ
She assumed it would be in thirty days.
ââŠtwo, one.â
âLirian! My baby girl!â
Bang!
The door slammed open, and a whirlwind swept her up into the air.
âDid you miss Mommy?â
Dark violet hair, eyes glowing with magical power, breathtaking beautyâ
It was Duchess Resa Ersioni herself.
Lirianâs face went blank.
ââŠMom?â
Why was she here?
The north was at least a three-week journey away!
âAhem.â
As Resa showered her daughterâs cheeks with kisses, Caesar cleared his throat and slipped in to hug them both.
âIf you think you can steal all of Lirianâs cuteness, think again.â
Resa gave him a sidelong glance and laughed.
âPlease. Iâm an expert in these matters.â
And Caesar grinned back, moving closerâ
âWaaah! No! Thatâs R-rated!â
Lirian threw herself between her parents to stop the lip-to-lip affection.
Thus proving herself a true âfire attribute filial daughter.â
Though disappointed, Caesar sulked adorably, while Resa gazed at him fondly.
And Lirian suddenly rememberedâ
Oh right. Daddyâs the younger one.
She felt like sheâd stumbled onto a parental secret she shouldnât have.
âWhat about the others?â
âThey said theyâd take the warp gate this morning, so they should arrive within an hour or two.â
Warp gate! That explained it.
So thatâs it. The Mage Tower still exists at this point.
Warp magic circles could only be installed at mage towers, not used individually.
But when the Abyss erupted, the Mage Tower was one of the first places destroyed.
Thatâs when the world lost its mobility.
Her violet eyes gleamed.
She was starting to see where the future needed changing.
âAre my brothers coming too?â
âSay âare coming,â Lirian.â
âAre my brothers coming?â
âGood girl. Theyâll be here soon. Want to take a nice bath with Mommy until then?â
âD-dear?â
âYou stay here. Donât get between us girls.â
Poor Caesar looked utterly left out as Resa whisked Lirian away to the bath.
Cuddled in her motherâs arms, Lirian whispered in her heart,
Sorry, Daddy.
âThis oneâs cute, and so is this one⊠Oh, they all look perfect on you, what do I do? I canât choose!â
She had forgotten.
If her father was a kiss maniac, her mother was a dress-up fanatic.
Fresh from her bath, Lirian sat on the bed in twin pigtails, staring seriously at dozens of outfits spread before her.
At this rate, theyâd never pick one in less than three hours.
âMom, I want this one.â
âThis? You like it?â
âYep!â
âThen thatâs the one.â
Being a dutiful daughter, she quickly picked the nearest dress-and-ribbon set to save her mother the headache.
âOur Lirian, youâre so beautiful.â
Resaâs lively eyes softened with tenderness.
She, too, hadnât seen her daughter in so long.
So longâŠ
Lirian felt the same, but her head started buzzing with a thought she couldnât quite grasp.
Ugh, brain strike! No thinking!
Having used her head too much lately, her brain refused to cooperate.
If it was important, sheâd remember later.
For now, she followed her parents into the grand hall, where the Ersioni Family Meeting was held.
At her seat, labeled [Lirian (Youngest)], she glanced at the three empty chairs and tilted her head.
âMy brothers?â
âHere they come.â
âWeâve returned, Father, Mother.â
Click. The door openedâ
And in walked a boy like something out of heaven.
Soft black hair, gentle blue eyes, a faint smile.
It was the eldest, Seran.
Age: nine.
ââŠ.â
Next came the second, Yuri.
Sharper features, dark-tinged black hair, and silence like a blade.
At seven years old, he scanned the room, nodded with satisfaction, and quietly took his seat.
Even without expression, his thoughts came through.
Finallyâ
A commotion erupted outside the door.
âThe thirdâs always so full of energy.â
âHeâs going to hurt himself one day.â
âChildren grow by stumbling. You worry too much.â
Resaâs voice was calm, unlike Caesarâs anxious muttering.
âHe was right behind me a moment agoââ
And with Seranâs quiet observation, the door slammed open with a bang.
âDad! Mom! Brothers!â
The whirlwind of noise burst into the room.
âAnd shorty! Howâve you been?!â
The moment the third son charged in,
The entire hall fell silent.