Son-con â Vol. 2 Ch. 31
This was the first time I had such a clear vision of what I wanted.
The red-haired lady knocked on my head with a gun barrel, and with a small wooden stick in her mouth said: âDonât disparage Elizabeth in my workshop⌠If somebody finds out, both you and I may lose our heads.â
While she did say that, I didnât feel like she was worried. She probably just said that because Nier was present. I originally intended to explain what happened to her majesty last night, but I ended up getting frightened by her instead. That was the first time I felt afraid of power. I also came to the realisation that perhaps I canât change Nier.
The young girls were willing to die with just a word from her majesty. They didnât die for their own ideals or dreams, or some sort of lofty goal. The young girls were willing to pierce their heart with their sword simply because they were told to. Iâve never witnessed such an era and therefore have no way of comprehending the way they think.
I really donât get it. Can such an empire last long? When I posed the question to the red-haired lady cleverly, she knocked on my head.
âIf you ask me whether Elizabeth is a good ruler, Iâd honestly say âyesâ. You can tell by looking at the citizens. As long as they stay in line, they get to go on with their lives. Their income isnât low either. They donât even get taxed one-twelfth of their earnings, and neither do they have to deal with mandatory military service. Merchants arenât restricted by what goods they decide to sell. There are no restrictions on scholars, poets or mathematicians etcetera either. Government decrees are also very reasonable, which is why the people whole-heartedly and voluntarily obey Elizabeth.â
âKilling people is Elizabethâs personal hobby. Elizabeth may kill but she never kills indiscriminately. Itâs just that sheâs extremely sensitive about imperial power. She interprets disobedience and indecorous behaviour as mutiny and will kill those that do so.â
The red-haired lady looked at the rifling, and then looked at me and said: âElizabeth does kill a fair bit, but she is a wise and able ruler. She commands people very intelligently. She kills and conquers because of her past. Prince, do you know how she raised an army? Back then, the imperial capital was just a mere city. Your grandfather, Elizabethâs father was very fervent. He was very kind to the barbarians around. When a famine struck, he welcomed the barbarians with open arms. Those barbarians repaid him by storming the royal palace, decapitating him, and throwing his head down before Elizabeth. They then filled it up with wine and forced her to drink it. If she disobeyed, they were going to have her bare their children. Elizabeth was therefore forced to drink that wine mixed with her fatherâs blood out of his head.â
Seeing my shocked face, she laughed out loud and said: âDo you know what happened after? The barbarians vanished and nobody saw them again, because Elizabeth killed anybody that was blood-related to them. At that time, Elizabeth sold her palace, and her clothes for funds to train an army. After she slaughtered all the barbarians, she used the head of their leader, filled it with wine â so it was a drink mixed with brain-parts and blood, and Elizabeth drank two skulls of blood-wine. Do you think sheâs a benevolent ruler?â
âStill, she canâtâŚâ
âYou didnât witness Elizabethâs past. She was much more extreme in the past. She drank blood in the past, you know? She could only drink wine if there was blood mixed in there. During that time, the blood of young girls was prepared specifically for her. She also brought her sword with her to the conference chamber during that time. And if somebody did so much as sneeze, their head would be flying the next moment.â
The red-haired lady shrugged as though it was âwhateverâ, and then attached the barrel and firing device together. She then looked at me and continued: âIt was only after she had you that she became less violent. Although you canât say sheâs benevolent right now, she at least doesnât kill indiscriminately anymore. Elizabethâs heart became distorted long ago. If a war truly breaks out, I donât think there will be Castor will have many survivors.â
âDidnât you say she doesnât kill indiscriminately?â
âYeah, she doesnât. But you canât put up a resistance. If you put up a resistance against her forces, then youâre an enemy. If thatâs the case, Elizabeth will definitely kill you. Her father was killed because of his benevolence and because he was an approachable individual. Do you think sheâd go and develop a close relationship with somebody? Elizabeth is a wise ruler, but sheâs also destined to be a tyrant. Prince, what sort of emperor do you aim to become? Forgive me for being blunt, but if you intend to become a benevolent emperor, then I donât think you should return here to humanity.â
âNo buts. An emperor who doesnât kill will be killed. No benevolent emperor ever met a good end. Thereâs always somebody eyeing the power of royalty, and the only thing that can make them give up is dominance. Your majesty, a throne soaked in blood may feel uncomfortable to sit on, but itâll allow you to sit on your throne for a litte longer.â
I silently took my long rifle she handed me. This is basically the beta version of the rifle I was making for Lucia. I can create guns here at this workshop without worry as this red-haired lady doesnât sell these things or have any thoughts of producing them. Sheâs just purely interested in these things. I can tell. She doesnât serve any customers and doesnât create any weapons⌠But what Iâm curious about is why nobody messes with her.
âCome to your senses, prince. Youâre the future emperor.â
She reached her hand out and scrubbed my head roughly. She smiled and said: âYour kindness is a great gift the gods gifted you, but you require the strength to protect your kindness. Elizabeth is called the King of Conquest. So what about you, prince? What do you want to be called in future? The Benevolent Emperor? Or The Last Emperor?â
I looked at her, paused for a bit, took out two Castor silver coins and said: âI donât want a war, nor do I want to slaughter lots of people. I donât believe that there is someone whoâd kill me. Conquest can get people to surrender to you, but only benevolence can get people to sincerely submit and respect you. If it were me⌠I wouldnât send people off to die on a whim.â
âYouâre not fit to be an emperor then. You should go and be the king of elves.â
The red-haired lady struck me with her blunt words and then walked up to the door. She took a smoke, slowly blew out the smoke and said: âDid you say Elizabeth was wrong? Sheâs not wrong. It was fate that caused her to turn out this way. If it werenât for that incident, Elizabeth would still be a bright girl, so donât go thinking that Elizabeth is wrong. She turned out the way she is now because she did the right thing. Now, what did you want me to do by giving me these two coins?â
âI want to examine what the difference between these two coins is. Please let me use your workshop.â
âWhat exactly are you trying to do, prince?â
I took in a deep breath and said: âI donât want a war to break out. I didnât want to bother with it before, but I do now. I wonât let the empress go and attack Castor. Yes, I donât know the people there. Yes, the people there arenât related to me in any capacity, but the people that are dying are right before me. Iâm weak. I donât have to guts to kill people and I donât want to witness war. But⌠But because of that, Iâm going to give it my best to prevent people from killing each other and a world of bloodshedâŚâ
What Castell said reminded me that an envoy dresses extravagantly as he is the billboard of his country, and yet the envoy from Castor I met had different buttons on the sleeves of his shirt. You canât seriously tell me that an envoy from another country has to fix his clothes by sewing and handiwork. That suggests that Castorâs financial power isnât as great as imagined. That means that the likelihood of them retrieving their coins and re-moulding them to raise the value of their coins is very low.
It also means that there should be something different in the mould of the new coins.
I know what Iâm going to do might cause Castor to go bankrupt like this, but if they do go bankrupt, thatâll prevent her majesty from slaughtering them.
Iâve already lost what exactly Iâm trying to do⌠Iâve never been an emperor and Iâve never received the royal familyâs education. Iâm just a normal person. I have no idea what attitude I should face this world Iâm living in right now with. I naively thought I became accustomed to this world only to find out I havenât. I just canât understand it.
Ever since coming here, Iâve truly come to the realisation that my courage and kindness doesnât work here.
I canât approach people here using my previous ways of thinking.
Authorâs Note: I believe that a lot of readers will feel the main protagonist is a very contradictory character and weak. But can you imagine what itâs like for him? Heâs just a normal person. He wasnât even a qualified soldier. He was just a technician. Heâs innately kind, so he managed to live happily among the elves who were just as kind. But his kindness is incompatible with the humans who want to conquer and rule. How could he suddenly turn bloodthirsty and violent when he hasnât lived in this sort of world before? And as such, how would he have the guts to butt heads with the empress upfront? The humans here are shady while he is the only kind existence there. The main protagonistâs growth happens step-by-step. Heâs not weak. He didnât retreat a single step as he watched the Earth Dragons charge towards him, so itâs clear that heâs not weak. However, there needs to be a reason for him to stand up. He grows one step at a time. Heâs definitely not a tyrant like Elizabeth, but neither is he a wussy.