~Chapter 29~
Nikolai stood alone in an empty void. In that emptiness, only the Abyss existed.
He stepped closer and reached out. The Abyss flowed like water and wrapped around him.
[Darkness will rule the world.]
âWho is âDarknessâ?â Nikolai asked urgently.
The god he served was fickleâappearing in dreams, saying a few words, then leaving. Nikolai had to get all the information he could.
[The one blessed with waterâs healing, earthâs might, windâs immortality, and fireâs grace.]
Larvihan!
[Beware of him. Do not be fooled by his wicked tongue. Darkness is always a step ahead of you.]
âJust one more answer, pleaseâjust one!â
Nikolai cried, but the Abyss around him slipped away into a deeper dark.
He snapped his eyes open, drenched in sweat, a deep crease in his brow. He stripped off his clinging clothes and went to the bath.
Under the cool stream, he reviewed the dream. His dreams were always clear.
The god he served had marked Larvihan as an enemy and kept whispering, Eliminate him. From the way the god described Larvihan, Nikolai felt fierce hatredâhardly the tone of a god of mercy and love.
âUghââ
A stabbing pain shot from his stigmata. He braced against the wall, panting. Gradually the pain ebbed. It always came without warningâ
Whenever I think irreverent thoughts.
Nikolai took it as punishment from his god. The god was closer than people thought. He finished bathing with a prayer.
Since he had received a message, he would go see Lovelace.
âWhat can you do, Paolo?â
Larvihan asked the boy sitting up straight before him.
âA little Franzic, basic arithmetic, an introduction to Archidesâ philosophy, beginner Old Tongue, beginner Divine TongueâŠâ
âPathetic.â
Larvihan clicked his tongue.
âForgive me, my lord, but for a seven-year-old, thatâs quite advanced,â Maxmuel cut in.
âHeâs not just any seven-year-old. Heâs Lovelaceâs brother.â
At Lovelaceâs name, Paolo tensed.
âMaxmuel, bring the books.â
Muttering that this was too harsh for a child, Maxmuel still stacked the prepared books like a mountain.
âTen volumes of Imperial History. Two of Philosophy. If you know Franzic, Amerique will be easyâmaster both while advancing Franzic. You can digest this in, say, three days?â
Paolo stared at the stack blocking his view and felt faint.
Read all that in three days? No, he said digestâso understand it too.
âItâs too much, Teacher Larvihan.â
âDo it anyway. With will that weak, how will you protect your sister?â
Sister.
That was Paoloâs sore spot. Not long after meeting Lovelace, he had heard of her hardships in the slums from Larvihan.
While he hid at a not-so-grand villaâstill far better than the Countâs ruined lifeâunder the butlerâs care, Lovelace had lived on candy picked up off the ground.
âSo listen to your sister,â Larvihan had added, after telling the tale.
And what had Paolo answered then?
âIâll make Sister happy.â
Lost in thought, Paolo jolted at Larvihanâs voice.
âCanât do it?â
He said it like Paoloâs failure was certain. Paolo met his eyes; the childlike gaze vanished, replaced by a defiant spark.
âI can do it.â
Larvihanâs lips curved. The Harmelda house matched him well. Paolo, who didnât whine, pleased him a little.
âDrink cocoa while you work.â
âI wonât!â
The cute lieâPaolo still hadnât fully dropped his guardâbut Larvihan let it pass with a smile.
While Larvihan was âtormentingâ Paolo with lessons, Lovelace interviewed Becky and Nora.
She asked the questions she and Larvihan had prepared the night before. Becky and Nora gave answers almost identical to Larvihanâs model solutions. Lovelace decided to hire them.
âGood work.â
Larvihan returned from teaching and handed her a cup.
âOh!â
Lovelace brightened and took it.
âYou know this drink?â
âIsnât it coffee?â
She blew on it to cool it.
âHow did you know? Itâs hard to importâfew taste it.â
âDo I look like âjust anyoneâ?â
She wasnât, but coffee was a luxury the Harmelda budget could barely afford. Larvihan didnât pry into how she knew it.
âAs long as it suits your taste.â
âItâs not deliciousâbut itâs good when youâre tired.â
He said growers drank coffee as medicine, not for flavor.
âItâs not undrinkable,â she said. The bitter, toasty taste ending in a little sourness wasnât bad.
âThank you, Larvihan.â
âFor what?â
âFor teaching Paolo.â
She lifted the cup with a smileâadorable enough to jab his conscience. Maxmuel had just told him, âEven a fifteen-year-old would struggle with that load.â
When I was young, I handled more, he thought. With himself as the standard, nothing seemed enough.
âLarvihan.â
âMm?â
âIâm a little worried.â
He set the cup down and moved to stand before her.
âWhat worries you?â
âIs it all right for me to clean out vassals like Viscount Nerk however I wantâŠ?â
Vassals ran territorial affairsâand formed the houseâs political power. She had cut them off and hired people from lesser families or commoners instead.
Sheâd purged the corrupt, but if politics got rough, the Harmelda house had also lost a supporting bloc.
âYou didnât purge everyone. Other houses remain.â
True.
Among the influential, she kept good relations with those who hadnât caused problems. Fearing they might feel threatened, she even sent letters explaining her reasons and small gifts.
âWhat are you afraid of?â
Lovelace spoke honestly about her fear.
Larvihan always seemed to know everythingâand he usually did.
âIf thatâs the problem, thereâs nothing to worry about.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause Iâm on your side. Iâm a Duke of the Empireâsomeone even the Emperor canât push around.â
âThatâs⊠oddly comforting.â
âYou donât understand at all, do you?â
She didnât. Or ratherâshe didnât believe. There was no guarantee Larvihan would treat her well forever. One day, after reaching his goal, he might leave.
Bitter thought.
Her face dimmedâand so did his.
She doesnât trust me? His pride pricked.
âWant me to show you, Rey?â
âShow me⊠what?â
âHow great your future husband is.â
Self-praise wasnât his style, but if she wouldnât believe otherwiseâ
âHow will you show me?â
âOpen the lawbook on your desk. Read any article.â
Suspicious, she did as told.
âCriminal Code, Article 22: Punishment for theft is as follows. When a noble harms a noble, he repays with an equivalent item. When a commoner harms a noble, he repays double and serves three years of laborâŠâ
Thatâs wrong. Her brows drew together. Larvihan snapped his fingers.
âLetâs change it. Even if a commoner harms a noble, repayment is equalâno doubleâand no forced labor. How about proposing the amendment under Count Harmeldaâs name?â
âThe nobles will explode.â
That was how class society worked: nobles thought their privileges were natural rights. Touch those, and shockwaves followed.
âI said Iâd show you my power, Rey. Try it.â
His confident smile woke her competitive streakâand she disliked the current law anyway.
âConfident? Letâs bet.â
âAll right. Iâll grant a wish.â
Surely even Larvihan couldnât easily change a law all nobles would oppose.
She had already forgotten he had just changed the law about married womenâs names and titles.
âHow about it? If youâre not confident, give up.â
âFine. Grant a wish.â
She agreed at once.
âRest up, Rey. Weâll need to fit your wedding dress soon.â
Larvihan laughed, waved, and disappeared.
So confident it spills out of him.
She smiled at his retreating back. It was confidence born of skillâbut sometimes it felt like cute bluster.
Cute? Larvihan?
Even after reading the original novel, to think that⊠I must be losing it.
She pushed away the stray thought and bent to workâwhen it happened.