Chapter 8.
1.Becoming the Villainâs Secretary (8)
I bolted out of the office. This time, I made sureâreally sureâthe door was shut.
As expected, Father was still at the imperial palace, and we went home together after work like a pair of ducks.
And that night, Father came into my room absolutely hammered.
âMy daughter! My lovely daughter! My beautiful daughter!â
âUgh! You reek of alcohol!â
Good grief. Where did this man even drink this much? Didnât he brag that heâd been sober for twenty-three years?! Lies. All lies.
After dragging him to my bed and sitting him down, he grabbed both of my handsâand suddenly burst into tears.
âDâDad?â
The old habit slipped out of my mouth from shock.
The Count of Nostalgia melted instantly at that one wordâDad.
Hearing âDadâ for the first time in a long while, he started bawling even harder.
âYes, Iâm your dad. Blain. Iâm your dad⊠Dad willâhicâDad will save youâŠâ
âW-wait. What?â
Save me from what now?
âF-from that bastard⊠Dad will definitely save you.â
He pressed my hand to his cheek and sobbed like a child.
âEven Lady Gloomy wonât answer her calls, and I only have you leftâhicâDad will save you. I wonât let that man take you. Just trust me. Okay? Hicâmy daughterâŠâ
He must have been really shaken from meeting the Emperor today.
Well, canât blame him. Heâs always been a soft person.
I watched him for a while as he cried himself to sleep, still clutching my hand. A few strands of white hair stood out among the rest.
He used to scare the life out of me at first, but now heâs just⊠a cute, ridiculous old man.
He isnât even my real father, yet I feel tenderness toward himâmaybe because I really learned to trust him.
I never had a dad before. Somewhere along the way, this man became one.
âYouâve worked hard because of your troublesome daughter. Thank you, Dad.â
And thus another chaotic day came to an end.
I stared blankly at the tower of documents rising to the ceiling.
Helwid spoke.
âYou can handle it, right?â
âYouâre seriously saying that?â
âIâm always serious.â
He smiledâbright and annoyingly dazzling.
How did this even accumulate in just one day?
âWell, who told you to run away?â
When I glared, he casually spun his fountain pen and flipped a page like heâd done nothing.
Ugh. Infuriating.
âYesterday YOU gave me a break. YOU followed me even though you knew I ran away. YOU ignored the fact I was kidnapped. YOU sent me home. Where exactly is MY fault here?â
He looked at me, amused.
âSo youâre saying youâll disobey an imperial order?â
So what if heâs the Emperor?
âBeing Emperor means exactly that.â
I swear Iâm going to take off those medals and teach him humility one day.
âEven without the medals, Iâd still win.â
âStop reading my mind.â
âYouâre not even trying to hide it anymore.â
âYou always see everything anyway.â
âI donât read it. I see it. My secretary has a very expressive face. No need to thinkâyour face tells me everything.â
I instinctively touched my face. Helwid laughed, clearly entertained.
âAnd your movements are dramatic too.â
I feel like Iâm being played with from start to finish.
âOh, and all this needs to be completed by noon tomorrow.â
ââŠWhat?â
Heâs insane. Noon tomorrow? That means I have today afternoon and tomorrow morning to finish ALL THIS?!
Where did he even get this many documents?!
He really lives to torment me.
No matter how much I glared, Helwid didnât budge.
Sigh. What a cursed fate. I donât just have a lot of workâI produce rivers of it.
I took a deep breath and picked up the nearest document.
Time passedâGod knows how muchâand my whole body ached. The papers still formed a mountain.
Everyone else who transmigrates ends up rich and happy. Why am I the only one stuck doing labor?
Just as I was about to take a short breakâclick.
ââŠHuh?â
âWhat is it?â
Helwid didnât even look up.
âThe door⊠I heard it lock.â
âOhhh.â
He smiled gently, like he had done something thoughtful.
âFinish the work, and itâll unlock.â
ââŠWhat?â
âSo you donât run away again.â
âWhat? N-no, wait. Locking a person inside is a bit⊠Thatâs basically confinementââ
âMm? It is confinement.â
You didnât know?
NO??
âConfinement is a crime.â
I frowned. Helwid stretched lazily.
âItâs fine. I have a legal reason to confine you.â
âLegal⊠confinement?â
Why does that sound ominous?
âWhat reason?â
He answered with a sly grin.
âOvertime.â
âŠWhat the hell.
âAn employer ordering overtime is perfectly legal.â
âIâm a civil servant.â
âIâm the Emperor.â
OH MY GOD. THATâS NOT HOW THAT WORKS.
âDonât worry. Iâll pay overtime.â
Thatâs not the point!!!
While I silently had a mental breakdown, Helwid looked extremely pleased.
âYou canât leave until the work is done. So, good luck.â
ââŠFood?â
âProvided.â
âShower?â
âBathroomâs right there.â
âSleep?â
He stared at me.
âWith this workload, how could you possibly sleep?â
Kill me.
Please.
âDonât worry. Iâm considerate.â
Sure. Considerate. Right.
âI wonât leave you alone.â
ââŠWhat?â
âIâll stay with you until youâre done.â
ââŠWhat?â
âLetâs have a productive night.â
He laughed like he was excited about overnight overtime.
Right then, the bells rangâdong, dong, dongâmarking noon.
âTwenty-four hours left.â
He took a sip of lukewarm coffee, voice disturbingly calm.
Somebody. Please knock me unconscious.
âTsk. You get indigestion every meal.â
The door was still locked. Even the palace priest couldnât get in.
Regardless of how I begged, the Emperor himself was now pricking my finger to release bad blood.
âOw!â
âDonât be dramatic.â
âYouâre literally stabbing me.â
âThe bloodâs practically black.â
Helwid wiped the drop away with expensive cloth.
âDo you have a weak stomach?â
âNo⊠normallyâŠâ
âThen why now?â
Because Iâm trapped in a room with you until noon tomorrow, eating every meal while staring at your face.
But I couldnât say that. He narrowed his eyes knowingly.
His blue eyes narrowedâdangerously closeâand my breath caught.
Before I could look away, he smiled like a predator.
âOh, Count Nostalgia came looking for you.â
âFather?â
âYes. I informed him that youâll be released at noon tomorrow.â
My adorable emotional mess of a father must have exploded.
âSo? Where is he now?â
âI sent him away politely.â
Of course. I wasnât expecting much.
âHe left just like that?â
âI said Iâd imprison him if he didnât.â
âReally?â
âOf course, I meant imprisoning you.â
ââŠMe?â
âYou.â
âBut heâs the Count!â
âAnd? I canât imprison a Count.â
He smiled like it was obvious.
So I get âlegal confinement,â but the nobleman is immune? Unbelievable.
âAnyway. Weâre halfway done already. As expected of the secretary I chose.â
You give the disease and the cure.
âI gave the cure too. I pricked your finger.â
I refused to respond.
âCoffee?â
âYes, please.â
He brewed it himself. The Emperor. Making coffee. With his own hands.
Because assassins sometimes poison his tea, everything he drinks must be tested and made with silver utensils.
Even soâthe Emperor making coffee?
âMy secretary likes coffee, not tea. We have that in common.â
He handed me a cup with a pleasant smile.
Well⊠every office worker prefers coffee during forced overtime.
And why is he still here? Donât emperors usually slack off? Why does this one work harder than anyone?
I sipped the coffee while sneaking glances at him.
Maybe because he brewed it himself, but the aroma tasted⊠better.