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CHAPTER 03
āThatās strange. Why donāt I know that?ā
Right now, he was stationed here with his army, practically occupying the territoryāyet this place belonged to the very princess standing before him.
She was the rightful heir to the throne and the head of all mages in existence.
In that case, shouldnāt he at least know something about her?
But he didnāt even know her name. Worse, he hadnāt even thought it strange not to know.
This didnāt make any sense. He was stunned by the utter blankness of his mind.
āPrincess.ā
āWho? Oh, you mean me?ā
āI know itās rude, but⦠may I ask?ā
āAsk what?ā
āMay I have the honor of your name?ā
The intense look in his eyes, as if determined to finally learn the answer, startled Taeri. She hesitated, unable to answer right away.
Is it okay to tell him that?
She couldnāt exactly bluff her way through it with a made-up name.
After a momentās consideration, she decided to skip the bad acting and just tell the truth.
āMy name is Taeri.ā
āTaeri.ā
Taeri⦠Sonetti? That sounded very off.
Claude silently mouthed the name to himself, trying to make it fit, then quickly regained his usual courteous posture.
āI apologize for my repeated disrespect.ā
āItās fine, really.ā
āI only came to greet you. If you experience any discomfort while staying here, please let me know. Iām sure His Majesty will also be concerned once he hears that the Princess has returned.ā
If Taeri had actually been a ārealā princess, those words wouldāve been enough to make her throw a drink in his face.
He had barged into her empty home and taken over without permission, yet he was acting like he was the rightful owner and she was just some guest.
But Taeri didnāt get angry.
In a way, the protagonist was always meant to be the victorious one. Thatās how the story goes. Thatās how she could eventually find a way back home.
He was the hero destined to save the world.
So honestly, she was even grateful heād opened the door to cooperation.
āAlright. Iāll let you know if I need anything.ā
āThereās no need to clench your fists so tightly just to say thatā¦ā
āThen, can I ask something right away?ā
āā¦Go ahead.ā
āWhatās the current situation here? Has anything⦠changed?ā
What she really wanted to ask was, āHave you seen a dragon? Or even signs of one?ā But saying that out of nowhere would definitely make her sound crazy.
Gotta ease into it.
Thankfully, Claude didnāt find her question strange.
āAh. You mustāve been shocked by how much has changed.ā
Returning to her homeland after years, only to find it in ruins and crawling with a foreign militaryāit was only natural that it would feel alien.
For the first time, Claude found something he could empathize with in her. Determined to reclaim the lead in the conversation, he reminded himself of his duty as the enemy commander.
āWhen we arrived, most of the cities had already been wiped out. The only thing left was a final line of defenseāwalls erected between the forest and the villages.ā
To block the monster waves pouring out of the forest, mages had burned away their own life force and magic to erect a massive mana barrier.
Even the knights of Valorant, who had once scorned magic as vulgar, were left awestruck.
āOf course, the cost must have been devastating. Still, the time they bought allowed many to escape safely. I presume thatās how you survived as well, Your Highness?ā
What was once a proud magical kingdom had now become an overrun ruin, reduced to a trial ground for thrill-seeking adventurers.
Honestly, from Claudeās perspective, the fact that anything here was still standing was a miracle.
āSecurity will be strictly enforced from now on, so thereās no need toāAre you listening?ā
Something felt off.
Up until a moment ago, sheād been talking openly, saying whatever she pleasedābut now she didnāt respond at all.
With her eyelids lowered, she looked gloomy. Maybe even like she was about to cry. Claude, who had been leaning back comfortably, immediately sat up straight.
Was I too harsh?
This wasnāt what he intended.
He was only trying to play the role of the enemy commanderānot actually hurt her.
Not at all.
He dropped the authoritative act almost instantly.
āAre you alriāā
Claude instinctively reached out.
But just as his fingers were about to touch her, in the split second when her face lifted, he saw itālike a faint mist in her eyes.
Her expression was blank, but a shadow of sorrow hung behind it, like a silent backdrop. His chest tightened in that brief moment.
As she noticed his approaching hand, her eyes widened slightly.
āWere you worried?ā
āNo.ā
Worried? Absolutely not.
It just felt⦠off. Thatās all. It just kind of got to him.
Claude denied it faster than light, but Taeri shook her head slowly.
āYou were worried. You were afraid I got hurt. Itās all over your face.ā
āWith all due respect, thatās quite a misreading.ā
āIām fine. Iāve become too numb to get hurt by everything now.ā
Yeah right. What a lie. Heād seen it.
Her face mightāve been blank, but it wasnāt dry.
Sheād looked like someone drifting in the deep sea.
If she keeps bottling things up like that, sheās only going to hurt herself. Claude took a long sip of cold juice to steady himself.
āI misjudged you. Youāre a better person than I expected. Not that a protagonist could really be evil, butāā
And then he spat the juice right back out.
Damn it!
If there hadnāt been a hand in the way, he mightāve cursed out loud.
How does a place like this not have a single napkin?!
He frantically covered his mouth with one hand while looking for anything to wipe with. Then, the princess suddenly stood, cleared away his cup, and yanked off the entire tablecloth to hand to him.
āWipe your clothes first, before it stains.ā
Did she seriously expect me to use this⦠this brightly checkered thing?
And she wasnāt even worried about his faceājust his clothes.
Because they were white. And the juice might stain them.
āā¦Alright. Thank you.ā
As he scrubbed at the juice on his clothes, she frowned.
āNo, not like that. Donāt rubāpress gently so it absorbs.ā
He gritted his teeth a little, but didnāt argue. He pressed down just like she said.
Only after roughly cleaning his clothes did he start wiping the juice off his face.
Taeri leaned on the table, resting her chin in her hand, watching him swat at his own face like a flustered bird. A quiet thought slipped from her lips.
He really listens well.
āHe really is the quintessential protagonist. Even when he tries to act tough, heās still kind at heart. How can someone be so earnest and clueless?ā
That small comment heād made earlierāit hadnāt just been a minor provocation.
Someone risked their life to save you.
He probably didnāt realize how deep that cut went. If heād gone a bit further, it couldāve turned into a fatal blow.
Sheād even planned to clap back with something of her ownābut when she looked up and saw his dumbfounded, regretful faceā¦
He was biting his lip, glancing at her for cues, looking so lost.
Whatās the point in getting mad?
Her emotions had been too worn out to burn hot again.
Instead, as Claude busied himself with cleanup, she sank deeper into her chair.
ā Wasnāt it thanks to them that you survived, Princess?
ā If it werenāt for you, would your mother have ended up like that? She sacrificed herself for you!
The hauntingly familiar pattern made her murmur softly to herself.
āThen I guess⦠everyone here must resent me too.ā
Claude, who had been about to toss the tablecloth aside, froze mid-motion.
Yeah⦠sheās definitely not okay.
That blank, sunken expression was back. Her voice was flat, her face calmābut something wasnāt right.
This is driving me crazy.
Just one careless comment and now he was wracked with guilt. Why did I say that? He wanted to bite off his own tongue.
āWere you going to throw that?ā
Her voice snapped him back. She was nodding toward the crumpled cloth in his hand.
āā¦Of course not.ā
Heād actually been planning to slam it down dramatically, but he pretended otherwise, casually waving it in his hand.
āYouāre not very good at pretending.ā
āā¦ā
āI told you, Iām not mad. Relax.ā
Who said I was tense? Iām not.
But somehow, his grip loosened, and the cloth fell from his hand.
Claude cleared his throat and picked up the thread of the conversation, determined to respond properly to what sheād said earlier.
Even if it was uncomfortableāhe had to.
āResentment⦠do you really believe the people regret sacrificing themselves for you?ā
āSee? There you go being blunt again.ā
āā¦ā
āI was just kidding.ā
Damn it. His fist curled again.
Unable to say anything, he just bit his lip, while she triedāunsuccessfullyānot to laugh.
With a hint of frustration, Claude finally said:
āResentment implies blame. That because of you, things turned out this wayāand that you should do something to fix it. Itās ridiculous.ā
āWhy?ā
āWhat do you mean, why? When someone rushes into danger and saves someone, they might get hurtāor they might even die. Thatās a risk they choose to take. If they didnāt want to, they shouldnāt have stepped up in the first place.ā
And regret? Did she not understand how much the survivors cared about her?
Claude scoffed quietly.
Sheād said yesterday that she didnāt know muchāand it turned out to be true.
Now he fully understood why sheād asked about the situation here.
āAnd thatās not how it is.ā
āWhat isnāt?ā
āThose who stayed behind didnāt feel that way. If anything, they probably hoped the person they saved would live happily and safely. If someone died, theyād probably have thought the sameāeven from beyond the grave.ā
And how did he know?
Because he saw it. He heard it.
Despite all the resentment and bitterness the remaining people in this land held, not one of them ever spoke ill of the princess.
The ones shouting outside?
They werenāt from Icaris.
Not a single one of them.