By now, it was routine for Kasser to always pull out the silver platter located to the right of his desk before heād get any work done in early mornings. The platter held a multitude of letters, promptly delivered by the Grand Chamberlain. Scanning the pile of envelopes, he stopped as soon as he saw a single letter with a golden wax seal.
Only the Sang-je used gold wax, which would mean this was an important letter.
These letters were more often than not advisories or notes to the knights and were sometimes categorized as classified, different from the everyday mail he would see on the silver platter.
He quickly snatched the letter, set aside the platter, and hastily unsealed it. As he read through the contents, his face slowly drained of all color before he froze completely.
āGrand Chamberlain!ā He called out, and the doors to his office, which was connected to the Grand Chamberlainās smaller office, promptly opened.
āYes, Your Majesty?ā The Grand Chamberlain took a step forward as he replied, bowing in greetings.
āWhen did this mail come through?ā
āIt was this morning, Your Majesty.ā
āWho brought it in?ā
āIt came early in the morning by a mail coach. There was nothing different in the time, or the postman, Your Majesty. Would you like me to acquire further details?ā
āā¦ No. That wonāt be necessary,ā said the King before he gestured the other away.
Then, Kasser reread the letter. Trying to commit the letter to memory, dissecting it with great care.
There was no doubt in his mind that it was indeed the Sang-je himself, whoād signed the letter. After all, using the Sang-jeās signature had to undergo a series of procedures to assure authenticity and confidentiality. This was more time consuming than a normal seal.
The king would then receive the letter, delivered by the Sang-jeās knight before the knight would head back with a reply from the receiver to his master.
Itās not a confidential letter, butā¦
In hindsight, there was nothing special about the letter. It was but a general greeting. However, Kasser wasnāt close enough to exchange personal letters with the Sang-je. He did not feel any need to develop a certain friendship with the Sang-je either. Kasser had married and didnāt need anything further from him.
The Kingdom of Hashi traditionally was literally and figuratively far from the Holy City. Other kings frequented the Holy City. Some spent the active periods in their own kingdoms, and when the dry periods commenced moved to the city.
But the King of Hashi never left his kingdom, save a few occasions to visit the Holy City: when the Sang-je had summoned, and for his marriage.
Kasser never felt comfortable staying in the Holy City. But ever since he was crowned king, he had to visit the Holy City during the start of every dry period. He also needed to get married to procure an heir to the throne. And the best part of being married was that he no longer had to visit the city as often.
He re-read the last line of the Sang-jeās letter.
The gate of the city is always open and will never turn you and your sufferings away. Please convey my regards to Jin Anika as well.
It was merely a formal expression. It was no secret that the Sang-je treasured the Anikas, so it wasnāt unusual that he would send his regards.
But this letter wasnāt an ordinary letter.
The Sang-je would always send out two letters a year, a letter of encouragement before the start of the active period, and a letter of consolation right after the active period. As he had received this letter since he was a prince, he assumed that all the other kings received the same letter.
He pulled out a letter of encouragement he received earlier that year. On the bottom of that letter was the same line. It always saidā¦
The gate of the city is always open and will never turn a blind eye to your sufferings.
Kasser then ordered the page to bring in all the letters from the Sang-je he had ever received as king. He spread out the letters on his desk, comparing them and carefully noting the closing line of each and every letter.
Without fail, they concluded with the same sentence every time. He never paid much thought or attention to that final line; he didnāt regard it as the main message of the letter after all.
How odd! He mused to himself as he studied the latest letter heād received.
Now that he was reading the line carefully, he realized that they werenāt words of comfort. The words held a greater purpose as if some sort of demandā the kings were required to report to the Sang-je if anything was wrong with the Anikas they were with.
Maybe Iām just over-analyzing this? He didnāt have anything to report to the Sang-je, nor did he need his help.
Except for the queenās memory loss.
But that was something that he made sure no one outside the palace knew about. There was no way the Sang-je would suspect something had happened in the Kingdom of Hashi. Heād always finished his letters with the same remark. It was nothing new.
Nonetheless, Kasser couldnāt ignore his intuition, the one thatād kept him alive to this point, which told him there was more to this line.
He sat back down and took out a piece of parchment and pen, as he decided to reply, thinking the Sang-je would send a more direct letter if there was anything he needed to say. His hand hovered over the paper in thought, before he wrote down with smooth and swift strokes, articulating everything in a formal and respectful manner.
As he wrote the letter, Kasser pretended nothing was amiss, and that Jin Anika had certainly not lost her memory. Then, he outlined with great care his gratitude at receiving the unexpected letter. He included words of flattery, and a few more which held no meaning to him if only to prompt a reply from the Sang-je.
He needed to be careful.
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