Chapter 18
The one radiating that murderous aura was, of course, Kain.
But the guest across from him was no pushover either.
âHaha, hardly. I may not be eager to live long, but Iâm not eager to die today either.â
âI didnât ask for your philosophy. Deafness isnât something curable, it seems.â
âSo now I must call you âDuke Kreutzâ instead of âSir Kreutzâ? Your tongue is still as sharp as ever. I suppose that canât be cured either.â
The fact that someone could face Kain Kreutz without yielding even a single word was astonishing.
And moreâ
âThis tea is excellent. I hear youâve purchased lands in the south recently? Seems the rumors were true.â
He even sipped tea with an easy smile.
My curiosity flared hotter.
Who in the world is this man?!
Who else could dare match Kain Kreutz like this?
Determined to find out, I crept closer, silent as frost on glass. I pressed my face to the floorboards, peeking through a thin gap.
Thereâ!
Golden hair that gleamed like sunlight.
Even seated, his bearing screamed high nobility.
And thenâhis head lifted.
Our eyes met.
Cold blue eyes locked directly onto my hiding place in the ceiling.
Did he⊠see me?!
The hairs on my neck bristled. Predator. A top predator.
At the same time, a shard of memory stabbed deep.
Iâd seen those blue eyes beforeâthree years ago, on the cliff where I lost everything.
* * *
The audience chamber chilled with tension.
âLord Astrahan, have you finally gone mad?â Kain snapped.
The man, his golden hair nearly too bright to look at, was Erjin Astrahan.
If Kreutz ruled the north, Astrahan dominated the east.
âFortunately, not yet,â Erjin replied, finally looking away from the ceiling.
His lips held a faint smile, as if joking, but his drooping eyes betrayed nothing.
That was typical of Erjin Astrahan.
Ten years ago, when Kain first visited the Astrahan estate, the boy already had those frozen-fish eyes.
Always smiling, always politeâbut utterly hollow.
Even as a child, Kain often thought:
That blank stare⊠Astrahan is finished.
And he still thinks so now.
Power of a ducal house, responsibility of heirânone of it weighed on this languid, idle wastrel.
âWhat a pity,â Kain said flatly.
Truthfully, he couldnât care less about Erjin Astrahanâs mental state.
âYour concern is touching. I suppose it pays to live long enough,â Erjin murmured.
âEnough chatter. Why are you in my fortress?â
Kain cut straight to the point. His mana surged, filling the chamber like stormclouds.
Outside, guards collapsed one after another, crushed by the killing intent.
Even Erjinâheir to the only mana said to rival Kreutzâwasnât unscathed.
He tugged at his cravat with a grimace, breath heavy. Buttons popped loose under his rough hands, his once-elegant posture collapsing into disarray.
Yet his face, sharp and refined, remained composed.
âI didnât come by choice,â he said.
From his coat, he produced a letter sealed in gold.
There could be only one source.
âThe Imperial crest,â Kain sneered.
âThe Emperor commands the formation of a joint investigation into the Baron massacre,â Erjin said.
âI heard no such decree.â
âOf course not.â
A thin smile tugged Erjinâs lips, even as he winced under the pressure.
He didnât need to spell it out.
The capitalâs nobles and the throne already considered Kain guilty.
But sending imperial investigators risked outright conflict with House Kreutz. So they sent a proxy.
Someone with legitimate standing in the investigationâyet enough ties to Kreutz to be tolerated.
The heir of Astrahan.
âThe Emperor commanded I not return until your name is cleared, Duke Kreutz.â
Kainâs eyes narrowed. âSo youâre here to watch me.â
âIf thatâs how you hear it, so be it.â
Erjinâs pale eyes curved faintly, as if smiling. For now, the matter was settled.
At least, for that day.
* * *
Lacking grounds to throw him out, Kain assigned Erjin a guest chamber.
Days passed.
Contrary to expectations, Erjin made no move to stir trouble.
Trying to lull us before a knife to the back?
I perched on my usual windowsill, tail twitching, eyes fixed on him.
Spying on him had become my daily routine.
And in truth, his days were easy to summarize: daydreaming or napping.
Look at him nowâsprawled in the courtyard, lazing like a cat in the sun.
Brave, or simply foolish?
I clicked my tongue.
Thenâ
âChrrt?!â
I ducked beneath the sill.
Erjin had suddenly sat upright, gaze fixed right at me.
Impossible. Did he sense me?
No. Couldnât be.
Three years on the run had honed my stealth to perfection. No noble wastrel could pierce it.
Peeking again, I sighed in relief.
Not meâhe was just shifting spots, lying back beneath a treeâs shade.
Still, from here I couldnât watch any further.
âChrrt.â
That was enough for today.
I brushed off my paws and hopped down.
âQuite the life you lead.â
A voice sighed above me.
Well, I canât deny that.
âDonât nod at me like that. I was talking about you, Lady Cherry.â
Gerard, hands on his hips, frowning down at me.
âChrrt?â
Waitâyou meant me?
âDo you realize how much work is piling up while you waste time like this?â he scolded. His tone was sharp, like a boss reprimanding an underling.
And behind himâ
âCherry.â
Kain, rubbing the bridge of his nose.
He didnât need words. His expression said everything.
You like him?
His golden eyes narrowed. Dangerous.
Gerard, obliviousâor deliberately provocativeâpoured oil on the fire.
âIâve suspected it for a while, but Lady Cherry clearly has an eye for beauty.â
What?!
I glared furiously, but he continued.
âShe canât look away from handsome knights. Sometimes she stares at you, my lord, when youâre working. Why, sheâs even given me a few lingering looks.â
Absolute nonsense!
âAnd nowâLord Astrahan. The Empireâs most famous beauty, with golden hair and azure eyes. Who wouldnât admire him?â
The longer Gerard spoke, the harder Kainâs face froze.
Until finallyâ
âHah.â
A humorless laugh slipped from his lips.
you’re doomed girl~
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