Episode 44
āSo youāre saying the prince of Aint might have been sold at Carrieās bar?ā
āThatās a possibility. Or he might have been passed on to another slave dealer. Thatās why I wanted to see if Sir Reynald might know somethingāwould that be okay?ā
āI donāt mind.ā
Lynolph wrote his home address on a piece of paper and handed it to me. He added that since Reynald had seen my face before, he wouldnāt be suspicious, and asked me to tell him not to worry because he was healthy and doing well.
Right away, I set out on a trip to find Lynolphās house, as written on the note. It was a small two-story home on the outskirts of the capitalānothing compared to Ronās enormous mansion, but tidy, charming, and picturesque, like something straight out of a painting.
Knock, knock.
I rapped on the door, and heard movement inside. Thump, thump, thumpāsmall footsteps approached, and soon the door opened.
āUh⦠Lord Ail?ā
āHello. Weāve met before, havenāt we?ā
Reynald blinked in surprise, then stumbled through recalling my name. When I grinned and extended my hand, he shook it with a bewildered look.
Following his lead inside, I saw the neat interiorāwarm wooden furniture in a clean living room and bedroom. The modest house reflected the personalities of the brothers Rey and Lyn in every corner.
āSo, um⦠what brings you here? Did something happen to my brother? Has a trial date been set?ā
Even though Reynald had a rough idea of Lynolphās situation, he didnāt know the full details, and concern filled his face. Before his worry could deepen, I waved my hand.
āSir Lynolph is fine. I came for another reason today.ā
āAnother reason?ā
āYes. I wanted to hear about the time you worked at Carrieās bar. Would that be okay? I know it might be a painful memory.ā
He had been sold there as a child and worked like a slave for ten yearsāit had to have been hell. I asked in as careful a tone as possible, worried I might upset him. But to my relief, Reynald readily nodded, saying it was fine.
āThings got better after my brother became a knight. Thanks to him, I could meet my quotas and didnāt get beaten anymore.ā
I looked at his young, innocent face speaking so brightly, and clenched my fists.
This kind of thing had to be wiped out. It was the worst kind of cruelty humans could inflict on one anotherātreating people like objects to be bought and sold.
āDo you remember anything from ten years ago?ā
āHmm⦠Ten years ago I was so little, so I donāt really⦠Why?ā
āI was wondering if you ever saw a boy with blue hair and blue eyesāhe wouldāve looked like the sea itself, and was about four years old.ā
āWas he a slave? Or like me, a kid sold to work at the bar?ā
āMost likely a slave.ā
āA slave⦠hmmā¦ā
Reynald thought for a moment, then shook his head. Even if heād been young, he said, he wouldnāt have forgotten such a striking-looking child if he had seen him.
But since he hadnāt worked directly in the slave trading section, he couldnāt be completely sure. Looking down with a downcast expression, he added,
āActually, I only found out recently that the bar was being used as a slave market. I was always on the first floor doing serving work⦠Sorry I couldnāt help.ā
āThatās fine. Donāt worry about it. Then⦠do you know anyone who worked in the slave trading section back then?ā
āHmm, ah! Maybe Sister Marian would know.ā
Apparently, Marian was the oldest of the kids working at the bar and acted like a pillar for the others. Being the oldest, she handled all sorts of tasks at the bar, so she probably went into the slave trading area too.
āAnd blue hair and blue eyesāthatās a rare combination. If she saw him, sheād definitely remember.ā
Unfortunately, Reynald didnāt know where Marian lived now. She had suddenly quit one day, and he didnāt even know if āMarianā was her real name. That meant the lead was practically useless.
I asked him more about Carrieās bar, then left his house.
The more I heard, the angrier I becameālike watching a movie or drama villain torment the main character. Buying and selling children like slaves, beating and exploiting them if they werenāt āvaluableā enough.
Even though I had already read about this cruelty in official documents, hearing it firsthand made my blood boil all over again. But Carrieās bar had already been shut down, and the people involved had all been sentenced to heavy punishments by the Crown Prince. They were living lives worse than deathāthere was no point in staying angry.
Back at the palace, I went straight to Marquis Orionās office in the underground information bureau.
āComing to me with nothing but a name and asking me to find someone? Weāre short on people right now. Even if we werenāt, thatās not enough to track someone down. The Empireās huge, you know.ā
āāMarianā isnāt that common a name, is it? Canāt you at least compile a list? We could check identity tags or something. Iāll do the searching myself.ā
āItās not common, but itās not rare either. And a lot of commoners donāt even have birth records. A list will only get you so far.ā
āStill, we should try. You never knowāwe might get lucky and find her in one shot.ā
I refused to back down, countering each of Orionās objections. He frowned at my retorts but didnāt bother scolding me.
Well, what could he say? We were both carrying out the Crown Princeās orders. If it came to it, I could even bring up the prince himself.
But then Orion said something that made me pause.
āMarian⦠Marian. That name sounds familiar.ā
He tapped the table with his index finger, then suddenly yanked open a cabinet behind him. Inside was a sea of file folders, crammed so tightly they looked ready to spill out.
Holy crap. All thatās information?
The underground office was filled wall-to-wall with these filing cabinets, aside from Orionās desk, his chair, and a few extra seats.
If all that was paper recordsā¦Ā Wow. If thereās ever a fire in here, itās over.
This world didnāt have USB drives, external hard drives, or computers. Paper burned easily, even from a small flame. It looked like they had everything from the Empireās history to private details about important figures stored hereāone fire could wipe out the lot.
As if reading my mind, Orion smirked.
āYou were just thinking how disastrous a fire here would be, werenāt you?ā
āHuh? How did youā¦?ā
āEvery rookie in the bureau says the exact same thing. Donāt worryātheyāre all recorded on magic stones. These are just the originals.ā
Ah, right. This world had those overpowered magic stones instead of computers. If you added a little modern ingenuity, you could probably make something like a smartphone.
While I was daydreaming about that, Orion pulled out the folder heād been looking for and handed it to me.
āYeahāMarian. That was the name of a maid who once served under the Second Prince.ā
āThe Second Princeā¦?ā
Mishy?
My mind raced. Waitāwhy did I first go to see Mishy again? Oh right, it was about money given to a retired maid. And that maidās name⦠was Marian.
Carefully taking the folder, I flipped through it. It contained basic information about Marianārecords from when she joined the palace, along with details the bureau had gathered independently.
āWe keep records on anyone close to the royal family. Itās probably not a coincidence. Go find her first. If sheās not the Marian youāre looking for, then weāll move the bureau.ā
It did feel a bit like he was trying to send me on a wild goose chaseābut I couldnāt refuse. There was still a chance she was the right Marian, and maybe Iād get lucky.
Nodding, I committed her address to memory. All investigations start with taking a leap into the unknown. I summoned the same rookie-year determination Iād had fourteen years ago.
If Marian had left the capital, finding her would have been hard, but fortunately she was still here. I gave Mien an apologetic batch of cookies for asking āAnother business trip?ā and headed out of the palace.
At first, leaving the palace had been excitingāheart-poundingābut it hadnāt taken long for me to get used to it. Now, even passing through the palace gates felt ordinary.
The capitalās mansions of high-ranking nobles like Ron surrounded the palace in a loose ring. Beyond that lay the commercial district, bustling with lower nobles and wealthy merchants.
Iād been here plenty of times beforeāCarrieās bar was located here, and Lynolphās house wasnāt far.
A bit further on was the area where commoners lived. I didnāt know its official name, but since most commoners lived here, Iād dubbed it the ācommoner district.ā
What? Donāt give me grief about my naming sense.