āYouāre going to surrender? Are you out of your mind, Duke?ā Carlton smiled, dumbfounded. The sound of his laughter was jagged sharp, piercing Luisenās back.
āYouāre surrendering now? Then you should have opened your gates yesterday with open arms if you wanted to spare your life. Weāre having a hard time out in the open, all because youāve been stretching this battle out. So far, it seems like youāve been expecting others to roll onto their stomachs by the force of your good nameā¦ā
Carlton slapped Luisen on the back of his shoulder, the force of which made his body reel. āUnfortunately, Iām not that merciful of a person. If youāve started a war, you must take responsibility for it, my lord.ā
Carlton began to slowly creep his sword out of its sheath. A hollow sound rang in the air, and he brought the tip of his sword up to Luisenās nose.
āIāll kill you first and then sweep through your land. I donāt know how to end things peacefully; those who fight me must be beaten to the bitter end. Especially a noble like you.ā
This crazy bastard.
Fear threatened to overwhelm Luisen. The anger in the knightās eyes was sincere; none of his words betrayed any hesitation. His nicknames, the butcher and the slaughterer, were no exaggerations. He was someone who had no qualms about killing aristocrats.
No, rather Carlton was enjoying this situation. While wandering, Luisen had met many folks who hated aristocrats. However, the difference between those men and Carlton was that the common man held fear for a nobleās power. However, Carlton did not share that fear.
āIām really going to die if this continues.ā
Luisenās back became wet with cold sweat. He had to think of something. He had to say somethingā¦no, not just anything. He had to say something to unnerve Carlton and to suppress his anger.
Luisen was already prepared for this situation.
He didnāt want to waste his second miraculous chance at life, so he had been thinking hard about how best to beg Carlton to spare his life. While walking along the forest road, he thought and thought again, revising his words.
However, Carlton was a crazier person that he could have imaginedāa hopelessly mannerless one as well. No matter if they were currently enemies, the opposing lord should have been treated politely and not like human luggage. And if the enemy leader surrendered, one should listen carefullyā¦but instead Carlton immediately took out his sword?
Carltonās sword began to move.
āThink. Get a hold of yourself, Luisen Anies. Think!ā
He whipped himself with his words. His mind became blank, however, and he could only spit out one phrase.
āIf I die, so will you.ā
āAh. Whatās this? Iām doomed.ā
These were words that incite conflict, right?
āWhat?ā Carltonās countenance became more frightening. Luisen hiccuped once.
āHave you said all that youāve wanted to say?ā Carlton continued, āWhat glorious last words.ā
āNo, no!ā
However, the words were similar to what he wanted to say. The overall meaning was conveyed, but the placating words Luisen had carefully chosen to soothe Carltonās temper had all disappeared.
""
āAhh, why now?! I wanted to be level headed in my explanation!ā
He felt an urgent need to rectify his words. Luisen quickly continued before Carlton could say anything else.
āWhat are you going to do after killing me? Can you manage the wrath of the first prince or the other nobles?ā
āWhat will I do? The first prince will praise and reward me for executing his will,ā Carlton said.
āYou think the other aristocrats will allow you to get away with this? This body is still one of the remarkable great lords. My vassals will not remain peaceful.ā
āDo you still believe anyone is on your side?ā
āNo, thereās probably no noble family willing to help.ā
It was a bitter truth heād experienced physically. Even if they were Anies vassals in name, the support base had long been divided and bankrupted by the princesā struggle for the throne and civil war. Half of his retainers had switched to the first princeās side, while those that still supported the second prince had lost political and military strength and could not afford to help Luisen.
āI have no one on my side, but you, too, have many enemies. If you kill me, theyāll clamor for your blood under the pretext of my murder.ā
āI care not what the other nobles say. I only followed the princeās orders. Prince Ellion has never punished me for killing anyone, no matter how important a noble he may be.ā
āYes, but those are civil war circumstances.ā
At the beginning of the civil war, Prince Ellion was driven to a northern fortress in an initial defeat. To showcase his strength and to continue the momentum of victory, the prince severely punished the nobles who supported Prince Paris. Carltonās cruelty proved to be the perfect display of strength, thus the prince deliberately overlooked Carltonās behavior.
āGet a hold of yourself. The civil war is over,ā Luisen said.
āā¦..ā
Carlton wavered. Luisen didnāt miss how his eyes shook slightly through the gaps of his helmet. He had to have felt that the situation was changing rapidly. To have rapidly risen in status from the son of a low-class peasant to the princeās confidant, he must have had more than brawn. It would have been more advantageous for Luisen if he wasnāt a fool who only had strength.
The first prince knew that once he would become king, the nobles would no longer be his enemies. They would become vassals who would pledge their allegiance and riches to him.
As soon as the civil war finished, the first prince would have started to see his world through different eyes. Yesterday they may have been an aristocrat who stood on the enemyās side, but today they would be possible taxable resources and servants. A kingās subordinate would never dare violate the kingās authority.
The same went for the nobles. Even though they may fight as if their lives were on the line, they would not hesitate to join hands with the enemy to maintain their noble authority. They would marry and exchange political hostages for that goal. This was the enduring ruling-classā philosophy.
If Carlton acted as he pleased, regardless of oneās status as enemy or ally, the nobles would all unite to eliminate him. His excellence only mattered in times of warāthe nobles wouldnāt let any commoner dare defy the natural hierarchy. It was obvious the nobles were waiting, grinding their teeth, searching for the opportunity to pay back their humiliation.
In that sort of situation, the first prince must have thought deeply about how to best proceed. It would be a waste to eliminate a man of Carltonās talents, and the prince held a debt of gratitude to him. However, he was far too merciless and aggressive to be part of his retinue. Carlton would have been the best hunting dog, if only he could have been controlled.
āThatās why the prince sent you here. He wanted to see if you can act tactfully and control your bloodlust,ā Luisen said.
āā¦.The prince is testing me?ā Carlton asked.
āThatās right. Why else would you be sent here? As you know, all of our elite soldiers have been taken as prisoners of war; we lack the resources to fight properly. Even the foot soldiers enlisted by the southern nobles on the first princeās side would have been enough to take care of us. Donāt you think this is excessive?ā
āā¦.ā
āPut simply, itās a test to determine whether or not you are a hunting hound that can distinguish whatās appropriate to bite or whether you are a rabid dog that needs to be put down. If you kill me, youāll die.ā
It hadnāt come out exactly as heād planned, but Luisen finished speaking everything he had prepared. He sighed inside, āDid everything sound plausible?ā
Although Luisen talked confidently, as if these were his own distinguished words, the ideas were not solely his own. His deductions were the combined efforts of bits of wisdom picked up from his wandering beggarly days and from the teachings of his saint.
If only heād had half the insight he did now. Perhaps then he wouldnāt have lived so miserably. Even still, Luisen was not naturally smart. These were lessons he may have forgotten if not for the life or death nature of his situation.
In addition, this battle was a test for Luisen as well. The first prince desired a vision in which the Duke of Anies laid flat before his authority. He was testing to see if Luisen knew the value of his own life. A test to see if he knew how to behave and whether or not he could be loyal to the future king.
Before regression, both Carlton and Luisen failed spectacularly. Both of them chose the worst path, surpassing even the princeās imagination. Luisen ran away during the battleās climax, and Carlton, enraged, went wild, massacring everyone and setting the land ablaze.
āThe first prince probably didnāt know weād be this reckless.ā
As a result, Prince Ellion suffered greatly through a grievous famine as soon as he became king.
Anyway, Luisen had said everything heād wanted to say. Carltonās reaction?ā¦.Typical. He became very cross and sarcastic.
āWould someone who knows the princeās intentions so well gather the mere farmers to defend their castle? In the middle of harvest season?ā
āThatāsā¦.an internal issue,ā Luisen spoke vaguely. It wasnāt a complete lie. If he were to say something unbelievable like heād changed his mind after returning from the futureā¦he would be strangled by Carltonās bear-like hands.
āHa, internal circumstances. Does that soothe your conscience? Did you think that I would just say āAh? I understandā if you spoke so lengthily? I came all the way here; I canāt return empty-handed.ā
āIāve been talking for so long! Iāve explained twice over why your life would be forfeit!ā Seeing his words go in one ear and out the other, Luisen slowly began to get frustrated.
āIf Iāve argued this much, the least he could do is to pretend to think about it!ā
āThen, why are you so agitated?ā Luisen said.
āWhat?ā
āArenāt you feeling insecure about your position with the prince? Youāve come all the way down south, away from his retinue. Youāre here feeling uncomfortable for some unknown reason, anxiously hunting and dragging your feet.ā
āMe? Nervous?ā
āIf you donāt believe me, cut my throat here. In the coming new year, you will hang from the wall.ā
āYouā!ā Carlton raised his sword high. Luisen distantly heard Rugerās screams of āMy lord!ā and āOh my god!ā Though he was trembling, Luisen still kept eye contact, glaring at Carlton through the small gap in his helmet.