âWelcome, Secretary Rosaline!â Hui greeted her happily, hugging her as if she was an angel of salvation.
Rosaline limped into her room, which was in the middle of being organized. Hui approached her.
âWhat happened?â
Hui smiled awkwardly.
âWhich family did His Majesty order to oust?â
She shook her head.
âWho was sent to the border?â
Once again, that wasnât the case.
âThen, is it about the Margove BankâŠ!?â
Truthfully, Rosaline had mixed feelings about them getting investigated, but that shouldnât have been serious enough toâŠ
âWhile itâs true that the president of the bank is currently locked in the dungeons, thereâs something even more important!â
âWhatâs wrong?â
âThe empress dowager has made her move regarding the empress selection, so a lot of last-minute changes are being made! Because of that, His MajestyâŠâ
âIâll take it from here,â interrupted Cahir, who came in suddenly. âHui, can you give me a seat?â
Rosalineâs heart pounded as his eyes remained on her.
Hui quickly picked up the mop, excused herself, then escaped from the room.
âYour Majesty, I apologize for my late greetings.â She curtseyed.
âNo more greetings, Rosaline.â Cahir laughed, prompting her own to bubble forth.
âYes, Your Majesty. Do you have any orders for me?â
âBe my empress.â
Everything stopped. Rosaline, Cahir, even the air.
She blinked.
âWhat in the world? Just what has the empress dowager done?â
***
Four days ago, Duke Magnis had gone to the palace.
After that, Azela had sauntered into Cahirâs office, and despite his hatred of her, he couldnât very well chase her out.
Obviously, this was a development that Rosaline didnât like.
***
âDear Empress Dowager, what brings you here?â
Azela unblinkingly laughed, revealing a practiced smile meant to be applauded by others.
âYour Majesty is struggling with the issue of choosing the empress, so how can a mother rest in peace?â
She meant that she didnât like the plan for the selection.
âThis is all quite different from tradition.â
She really, really didnât like it.
Cahir slowly walked from his desk, gesturing to a couch on one side of the office. âLetâs sit down and talk. Derek, please.â
Derek bowed and went outside.
âAh, you guys should take a break too,â he told his guards. âI have a long conversation to share with the empress dowager. Please, go ahead and sit.â
The guards followed Derek out of the room.
Cahir wasnât doing this out of politeness or respect, but rather an unwillingness to be troubled by Azelaâs nitpicky attitude.
âThereâs no one listening here, so please put away that pretentious smile and say what you want.â
His own smile dropped.
The silence was almost deafening, and Azela never did stop smiling. The atmosphere made him even more impatient, but he knew that nothing that witch would ever say would be beneficial to him, so he didnât rush her.
âOf course, Iâm here about the empress selection.â
Cahir frowned. The noble council had already agreed, so any vetoes from him would necessitate another meeting. On the other hand, the empress dowager generally didnât attend such meetings, so she wasnât in a good position to make demands.
âThe empress will be the mother of the empire. We canât let young and inexperienced nobles decide who she will be.â
Basically, she was indignant that she was being excluded from the process.
âItâs already been decided,â Cahir said, annoyed.
âBut the authority of the empressâ appointment rests with me, not the emperor. These are the laws of Aetheus.â
âI know that.â
âDamn it. I should have gotten rid of that first, but I let myself get pushed into this by Pasita and those damned aristocrats who only ever care about their own safety. Stability, my footâŠâ
In any case, Azela was telling the truth.
But again, the council had already approved of the revised empress selection. Was it too much to hope that the empress dowager would move on?
âOh my, oh my⊠Your Majesty, I am not trying to interfere with your work. Please proceed according to the plan.â
What was it this time? Didnât she just say that it couldnât be left to young and inexperienced nobles?
âThis sly woman⊠Maybe I should have watched her more closely.â
âWhat do you want, then?â
âPlease pick three.â
âThree?â
âYes, Your Majesty. I would like you to choose three from those presented at the noblesâ meeting, and leave the final selection to the hands of the elders.â
âThis is ridiculous. Youâre just going to recommend Duke Magnis as an elder.â
What are you going to do if I say no?â
âThen weâll have to get back on track. Arenât you a nobleman who values tradition?â Azela looked relaxed, as if she had already built a force that could shape public opinion.
âVery well. However, I have a condition.â
ââŠ?â One of her eyebrows rose significantly. âWhat is it?â
âI hope we can have one more person to help make the final decision. How about the priest of the new temple so that we can ensure fairness?â
Azela considered it. The priest from Berlos? Fine. She only needed to know who he was and sheâd be able to buy him off.
âAlright, Your Majesty. Then, Iâll be leaving.â She beamed, then stood and ran into a maid.
âEmpress Dowager⊠TheâŠâ
âNo need. Iâll have tea in my palace. Iâve heard some suspicious stories about strange drugs in their drink.â
âAh⊠This servant wouldnât dareâŠâ The maidâs hand trembled.
âIâm just kidding. His Majestyâs maid would never do such a thing to me, his mother.â Azela turned to look at Cahir, as if to say that he would never be free of her.
He grinned as he saw through her childish intentions.
***
âWhy did she come here?â Derek approached Cahir, who was laying on the sofa and staring sullenly at the ceiling. His own expression was dark, likely because the maids explained what had happened, and it grew even darker after a brief explanation. âWill it be faster to just convince the elders and nobles?â
âNo. I need a candidate who will definitely be on our side.â Cahir sat up, eyes glimmering.
***
That night, Cahir stood on the balcony under a moonless night. He cringed whenever he heard the patrolling guardsâ armor clank, an uncomfortable side effect of his heightened alertness that had always served him well.
âSomeone on my side⊠Definitely on my sideâŠâ
He reflected on his conversation with Azela. Three candidates. That meant she was confident that her pick would be one of the finalists.
His head hurt.
âI have a hunch on who it is. Azela wouldnât leave this matter to chance.â
On his end, that meant that he needed at least one candidate who was fully one of his own.
âDelia?â
But Hamburgâs daughter was already married. Besides, she wasnât exactly the best person to win over the nobility. She once ran around with a knife and refused to even touch an embroidery hoop.
Cahir didnât want to marry her either.
And so he was back to his original problem, as no other family completely loyal to him came to mind.
âIntelligent, unconditionally on my side, like⊠Ah?â
It was as if a bright star shone on his head. Like a flash.
âRosaline!â
âWhy did I think of her just now!?â
She was the perfect empress candidate, so much that he felt a bit pathetic for only realizing it that late. She was the perfect partner for him.
If it was Rosaline, it was possible. She looked as good as him, was even wiser than him on some occasions. She was one of the best people he had ever brought to his side.
âIf itâs Rosaline, no one has a problem.â
He suddenly felt so much better. Cahir grinned as he walked to his bed. He hadnât been able to sleep well for the past few days, but now he felt like he could contentedly fall asleep as soon as his head hit the pillow.
***
Three days later, Rosaline was brought back into the palace.
Cahir had made a long speech to Derek that she was the answer to everything.
âSheâs just the perfect woman.â
As soon as she arrived, Cahir went to her bedroom to talk about the plan in person.
***
Rosaline looked even prettier than usual after their long time apart. Cahir wondered if it was the food at the Verite estate. Perhaps he should ask what it was so that he could have her eat it every day.
Her greeting was so elegant as well.
âIf anyone in the world could be better than me, it would have to be her.â
Cahir was confident that she would play the role of the empress excellently. She would be the type to be praised for future generations to come.