Chapter 30: How a Mercenary Carries Out a Mass Firing
As soon as Regina left the reception room, she shivered from the cold floor. Unlike the carpeted room, the hallway was paved in stone and freezing.
âRegina.â
âEek!â
She turned at the deep voice calling herâand suddenly felt herself being lifted into the air. Valentin had picked her up with one arm.
âPlease put me down. Youâll strain your leg.â
âAs long as you weigh less than Thomas or Allen, Iâll be fine.â
âBut I can walk barefoot. I have tough feet.â
âThis is a legendary romance. I canât be the kind of husband who ignores his barefoot wife.â
Regina flushed a little, remembering what Valentin had said earlier. He held her with one arm, leaning on his cane as he walked steadily. She stopped struggling, surprised by how secure it felt. With the view from higher up, she was reminded of riding on Mautâs shoulders as a childâlike asking for a piggyback ride.
âValentin, did you really want to kill Count Shubel?â
She had thrown herself at him to stop him. She had felt the real murderous intent behind his grip. And now, his shoulders twitched slightly at the question.
ââŠWhy? If I say itâs a request, will you do it?â
âAssassinations like that go against Persona’s rules. But I might be able to beat him within an inch of his life. Of course, it wonât be cheap.â
Where did the joke end, and the truth begin? Regina heard Valentinâs faint laughâthen it vanished just as quickly, like it had never been there.
âI donât joke about requests. I never say things I donât mean.â
She knew that well. Valentin tilted his head toward her golden-brown hair brushing his cheek as he walked.
âThen were you serious earlier?â
âHm? About what?â
âWhen you said youâd protect me and this castle with your life.â
Ah. Regina finally remembered saying that to Shubel. She had been so furious at the time that she hadnât even realized what kind of threat sheâd made. But it hadnât been a lieâit was part of the job.
âYes. As long as Iâm your wife, I plan to protect you like that.â
At her answer, Valentin lowered his head and smiled. It wasnât his usual trembling, haunted smileâbut a soft, innocent one, like a childâs. If Regina had seen it directly, she mightâve been surprised.
âI like hearing that more than I thought. Thanks to you, I donât think the Count will ever come back to Valmen.â
âThen itâs a big win. I was afraid of what he might do next if he did.â
âYou mean the Count?â
âNo⊠me. I hated him so much, I mightâve killed him even without a request.â
Valentin laughed again, and Regina simply hoped his shaking shoulders wouldnât drop her.
He carried her all the way to the sofa inside her room, ignoring every request to be put down.
MeanwhileâŠ
After seeing Count Shubel off, Phinette was in the most awkward situation of her life. She had fully believed that the noble Count would kick Regina out of the castle.
But this? This is insane!
This shouldnât have been possible.
âPhinette Baymon. I trust your skills.â
Even while running away with his tail between his legs, Shubel had thrown one last task on her.
âThat crazy prince seems different now. I think itâs because of that woman mercenary. Keep an eye on her.â
If she failed here, the Renzier family would never take her back. But how was she supposed to handle this? That mercenary scared off nobles like it was nothing! And I acted like I was completely on Renzierâs side in that room!
Phinette didnât even have the nerve to enter the castle. She just circled one spot, chewing her thumbnail until it bled.
âUgh, theyâre short on staff, so they canât fire me right away. Iâll lay low and look for a chance.â
She decided to wait quietly for a while, and when the moment came, sheâd find something useful to report.
âI can do this. Phinette Baymon.â
She truly believed she still had a chance. So she stayed hidden. Once the proud maid who strutted around the castle, she now hid in a dusty storage room during work hoursâterrified of running into Regina.
She avoided attention and didnât bully the other maids for a while. That alone, she believed, was enough to count as her repentance. But when people start to feel confident⊠thatâs often when despair strikes.
Three days after Shubelâs visit, an emergency assembly was called first thing in the morning. The Duchessâs ordersâfamous now for kicking out a Countâwere absolute.
Everyone gathered in front of the castle: maids, butlers, gardeners, even knights. A strange tension filled the air as people whispered.
âIs she going to punish the ones who bowed to the Count?â
âYeah. We almost went to war with House Renzier.â
âShh! Watch your mouth!â
Phinette growled, and the maids fell silent. But everyone knewâno one was more afraid of what was coming than her. Some even snickered behind her back.
But she didnât have the energy to scold anyone. She was too focused on the nightmare unfolding.
She said nothing for three days⊠Why now? And where is the head steward?
Everyone was here, down to the last servantâexcept Confe. Phinette noticed the absence.
âW-whereâs the steward?â she asked, gripping the shoulder of another maid.
âIâm not sure. I think the Duke gave him separate orders this morning⊠But Head Maid, are we going to be okay?â
âSheâs coming! And⊠this feels serious.â
Whatever Phinette was thinking vanished the moment she saw the Duchess appear.
âEveryone, attention!â
Regina stepped out in a graceful dress. Thomas shouted loudly, and Phinetteâs heart began pounding wildly. Sweat trickled down her temples.
âIâve gathered you all here because I have something important to say.â
Reginaâs voice echoed. Unlike the shy, soft-spoken noblewomen, her voice was strong and clear. Everyone listened.
âFirst of all, Iâm firing everyone who received a letter of recommendation from House Renzier.â
Just one sentenceâand a wave of shocked murmurs spread through the crowd. The most shocked of all was Phinette. She pushed through people to stand before Regina.
âThis is unfair! Do you know how many people that is?!â
âMore than thirty,â Regina replied coldly.
Behind Phinette, many flinched at her words. Regina scanned them quickly, then locked eyes with Thomas.
With things getting serious, it was likely suspicious movement would appear among the knights too. But it seemed Thomas had secured enough trustworthy people. Regina chose to believe in him for now.
When Regina looked away, Phinette grabbed her dress and clung to it in desperation. Shame meant nothing anymore.
âThis is unfair! You canât fire us without a reason!â
âNo reason?â
Regina threw several account books at her. One was familiar. The rest were ones Phinette didnât recognizeâand then she realized they were from others.
âAnyone who stole from this castle should be rotting in the dungeon. But I wonât waste guards watching you. Since weâre short on staff after firing so many.â
âTh-thatâsâŠâ
âIf anyone else thinks this is unfair, you may have your resumes back. Most of you only listed House Renzier as your reference anyway.â
People whoâd relied on that name lowered their heads in shame.
âThat name may have been powerful once. But not anymore. Count Renzier is now a threat to House Julius.â
âMy lady! If you fire us like this, the castle wonât have enough staff! Things could fall apart. At least give us some time!â
Regina looked at the maids kneeling like rats and gave a cold smile. These were the same people who used to glare at her in the halls like they wanted to tear her apart.
âYouâre not needed!â
âSheâs right! Get out already! Weâll do your jobs!â
Shouts of support came from the maids and servants who had been mistreated by Phinetteâs group. The backlash was loud and fierce. Phinette and her followers were stunned into silence. Regina raised her hand, and like magic, the shouting stopped.
âWho said we donât have enough staff?â
Regina had stayed up all night writing lettersâfor this very day. One of them went to the Marquess of Felgburg, who owed her a favor.
âCome in.â
At her signal, about a dozen people stepped forward. At the front was a confident-looking middle-aged woman.
Everyone instantly understood: these were the new hires, replacing those being fired.
âAnyone with a Renzier recommendationâpack your things and leave today.â
Now, no one could fight back. All they could do was leave as quietly and quickly as possibleâthe only âloyaltyâ they could show to House Julius.
ââŠThe lady is something else. Who knew she had ties to the Marquess?â
Allen whispered to Thomas from the sidelines. How could a mere mercenary be connected to someone as powerful as the Marquess of Felgburg?
There was no way to know.
This is so satisfying to watch her clean out the rats đ Thanks for update
Yes, absolutely! I hope you’re enjoying the novel and staying with it till the endâthank you so much!