[Notice of Admission to the Pavilion Empire Training Center â Lilith Rubinstein
As a talented person from a great Empire who Primera called, you have been selected for admission to the training center.
Please proceed with the admission procedure by May 21, 1779, the convocation date.
If the person who is supposed to be admitted doesnât show up at the training center within three days of the admission date and doesnât have a good reason, they have violated the lawâŠ]
Was this how the Korean soldiers who had to go to the K-military felt when they received the enlistment notice?
Dad held me in his arms and silently read the notice for a long time before sighing deeply.
âWhy sigh? Iâll be right back.â
âIt must have come to Cheshire, too. When I registered as a guardian, I asked for the same admission date.â
Oh, enlisted together. Thatâs not bad.
âLilith.â
âUng.â
âShould I postpone it for two years? Admission notices come from the age of seven, but mandatory admission is from the age of nine.â
âWhoa, no! Iâm going to go quickly!â
Dadâs shoulders drooped.
Thatâs really nonsense.
My body needs to use my abilities as soon as possible to consume my vitality.
Otherwise, I would barely grow for two yearsâ.
âItâs a disaster. A disaster. My identity will be revealed in the neighborhood.â
I was trembling because I had sprained my spine.
âYeah⊠My daughter is smart, so it will take a month.â
âThatâs right. Believe me. donât worry.â
âHaa. One week leftâŠ.â
Dad looked like a dead man.
âThe problem is that itâs not my enlistment.â
Itâs Dad.
Itâs been a few days since I received the letter from my father, but Dad has not responded.
âNo way⊠Read and ignore? You didnât read and ignore it, did you? That Enoch Rubinstein?â
I thought it was a letter that could definitely stir up the main characterâs strong desire to start a revolution.
Didnât he know that his daughter would be safe, unlike the original, andâ that he wouldnât have to be the Emperorâs watchdog for her?
I grabbed my head and was horrified.
âN, no. I trust Dad.â
Itâs Enoch Rubinstein, a righteous protagonist with keywords such as #goodness #justice #revolutionary!
âMore than that, princess.â
âUng?â
âDad will be going somewhere for a while.â
âUng? Where?â
âIâm going to buy our princessâ birthday present?â
âUng. Where are you going to buy the birthday present?â
âOh, itâs a bit far. Iâm thinking of taking a warp gate from the temple and going to the central part.â
âWhoa, I see!â
I cleared my chest.
âAs expected, he didnât ignore reading it. If itâs the central part, he will go see Joseph LĂŒttman as I told him to.â
This proceeds according to the original!
âI thought it would be a bit difficult to go there in one day. But Iâll definitely be back before the princessâs birthday.â
âWhat? You go now and come back for my birthday? My birthday is only 3 days away?â
âUng.â
Do you want to get Joseph LĂŒttman in 3 days?
I was dazed and only blinked my eyes.
Joseph LĂŒttman.
Let me explain a bitâ.
The machinator of the main character, Enoch Rubinstein.
A character that Enoch Rubinstein already had in his hands when the original story started.
There is a past in which he made a name for himself in the Capital with his outstanding political skills in his youth, but disappeared due to some kind of incident and lived like a poor man.
In a conversation with Enoch Rubinstein, thereâs a line that says, âDo you remember how you struggled for three months to get me, Your Excellency?â
It doesnât say where Dad met Joseph and how he conciliated himâ.
I had to infer the meeting of the two from a few lines of the story and conversation, which were briefly described.
âWhatâs certain is, Joseph wouldnât have said he would help Dad easily from the beginning.â
Thinking back on the hardships of three months, I clearly remember Enoch Rubinstein replying with a smile, âHaha, thatâs right.â
âUgh, heâs going to be with Joseph in three days.â
And I know to some extent, the story of Joseph, who abandoned everything and went into hidingâ.
âIâm sure Iâll be helpful.â
I nodded and said.
âI want to go too.â
âUng?â
âIâll go too. I will choose the gift I want to receive.â
âAh, thatâs a bit. Dad will be back soon. Actually, Dad is⊠Well, I have a friend over there. Iâm going with to see that friendâs faceâŠ.â
âWhere are your friends, Dad?â
âDoes Dad have friends too?â
âAaaagh, I hate it! Take me too! I hate sleeping alone! I donât want to be alone without Dad!â
âNo, princessâŠâ
âI wonât be able to see Dad anymore when I go to the training center soon! I hate that too!â
âOh, yes, Dad too. Dad doesnât want to be separated from our princess either. ButâŠâ
âWaaaa!â
I clung to Dadâs neck, put my head down, and cried and complained.
âYou canât⊠You really canâtâŠâ
âWaaa!â
âHaa, my princess.â
Dad muttered to me in his arms as I struggled and soothed.
âWhat should I do if you donât want to be separated from Dad like this? Dad has to live with the princess for the rest of my life, it canât be.â
âTake me too! Iâm coming too!â
Dad stared at me with a puzzled face.
* * *
As always, it was my victory.
After Dad announced to the family that he would buy my birthday present, he took me to the temple.
It took only an hour from the temple to get to the central part of the country by the warp gate.
âAs expected, magic is the best.â
As I remembered the day I came to the Capital in half a day, I felt the greatness of magic.
âGood? It reminds me of the old days, doesnât it?â
âRight.â
Central Valterac is bigger than my hometown, Xenon, but it has some similarities.
Commoners roam briskly between nice buildings with a quiet landscape.
It was a town where no nobles except for the Lord, so everyone lived comfortably.
âItâs really niceâŠ.â
âRightâŠâ
No one recognized Mr. James in disguise and me in commoner clothes.
Itâs been a while since Iâve been enjoying this freedom.
Dad asked, and then he headed to the cityâs back alley.
The biggest gambling house in Valterac was there.
âWow, this really isnât the place to bring kids.â
It was a legally operated gambling house, but like all gambling houses, the atmosphere around it was harsh.
People who smoke cigarettes with swollen eyes.
People were crying, shouting, and grabbing the pants of a guard at a gambling houseâ.
âI am crazy.â
Dad stood at a distance and looked at it, then looked at me blankly next to me and sighed.
âItâs really crazy. Really.â
My muttering Dad tapped my forehead once.
âOh?â
Then I felt as if I had eaten mint candy.
It sounded like magic.
âWhat is it?â
âBecause smokes is not good for my daughter. Dad made it so there was no smell and no smoke.â
âAha, thank you.â
Dad took my hand and headed to the gambling house.
Two large guards stood guard at the entrance.
Then I suddenly had a question.
âHmm, Dad was a smart, quick-witted, and sensible main character who could do anything, so why did it take him three months to get Joseph?â
Was Joseph an incredible iron wall?
âŠI soon found out the answer to that question.
âIâve never seen your face here. Are you here for the first time? The entrance fee is one gold coin. If you go inside, they will fill your ticket.â
At what the guard said, Dad shook his head.
âIâm not here to play games. Iâm looking for someone. Would you please find out if any of the guests is Joseph LĂŒttmann?â
My confident Dadâs question dumbfounded me.
The two guards blinked their eyes, then looked at each other. Their expression was like, âWhat is this b*stard saying?â.
* * *
Of course, we were kicked out.
Dad sat far away and scratched his head.
I sat next to Dad and felt sorry for him as I watched him.
âI can see why it took so long to get Joseph.â
My good Daddy, who has never been to a place like thisâ.
My Dad who never touched a gambling gameâ.
Perhaps in the original work, it would have been difficult to see Josephâs face, who lives in a gambling house 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
âI canât. JustâŠâ
âWait, wait.â
I caught Dad.
âAre you going to take off your disguise? Iâm a duke, so open the door. Can I meet a friend?â
âIt should be. They say we canât just go in.â
âPhew, isnât there a reason why Dad tried to meet your friend disguised as Mr. James in the first place?â
When I asked Dad a question, he leaned back in his seat.
âRight. Well, heâs a little bit. Dad thinks⊠If he knew who Dad was, he wouldnât like me very much. Itâs hard for him to have a comfortable conversation.â
âWhen are you saying itâs your friends again?â
âIt was a lie. Itâs not really friends. He is someone I want to be friends with.â
âI see.â
âAnyway, so as naturally as possibleâŠ.â
âAre you trying to get close?â
âThatâs right.â
âThen you shouldnât reveal that you are the Duke. Foolish Dad.â
âBut there is no other way.â
âDad, the gambling house⊠is always open to anyone who wants to gamble.â
I squatted and flicked my index finger at Dad.
âHow much money did you bring? Look.â
âMoney?â
Dad opened the bag of money he was wearing around his waist.
About twenty gold coins.
He had no intention of gambling, so of course, it wasnât a big amount.