At Saint-Noel Academy, it was time for the winter break after the Holy Eve Festival. In previous years, Mia always left for Lunatear ten days after the festival, and then attend her birthday festival.
This year, she left early because she had to do something. Mia and her group didnât go to the imperial capital, but instead to the Rudolvon Outcounty. On their way to Tearmoon, they went through the south of Belluga.
As a bit of trivia about time travel, it was the same path that the Sunkland army had taken when the empire had been destroyed by a revolution.
From there, they moved in secret toward the Yellowmoon domain.
You know, thereâs something really satisfying about marching down this path. This is what I call poetic justice.
After all, the Chaos Serpents had gotten Mia in a corner through this route. Now she was using the same route to corner them. Every step she took made her happy to get back at them.
They went around the Sealence Forest, then headed straight north. Soon, they reached a village near the Yellowmoon capital.
There, they met Ludwig and the Princess Guard, who were standing in a line at the village entrance to greet her.
âWe are overjoyed that Your Highness has returned safely,â Ludwig said as Mia got out of the carriage.
âYes, itâs good to be back.â Even though Mia tried to get Ludwig to stand up, he stayed on his knees and kept his head down, which made Mia frown. âIs there something else you want to say?â
After a short period of silence, Ludwig said, âNo, Your Highness,â in a serious voice. âI canât say anything to defend myself. I canât make up for the bluner I made, and all I can do is apologize.â
âOh? A blunder, you say?â
âEven though I knew that assassinâs path would take him through Belluga, I wasnât able to keep Your Highness out of harmâs way,â he said with regret in his voice. Miaâs eyes grew wide when she saw what was happening.
My! A glum Ludwig? Now, you donât see that every day! Fascinating!
She had no choice but to look.
After all the lectures and scoldings he had given her in the previous timeline, seeing him dejected was a real change.
However, I canât just leave him like this. He doesnât look very productive. Soon, there will still be a famine, and Iâll need him to be at his bestâŠ
She nodded to herself in thought.
Then, in a soft voice, she said, âPlease stand up. If not for you, then do it for me. Ludwig, you are not to blame for what you have just said. There will always be things that go against our expectations. And as you can see, I am safe and sound. Isnât this enough?â
âButâŠâ He stayed on his knees.
When she saw this, she put her hand under his arm and gently pulled it, which made him look up.
âUnfortunately, we donât have time to split hairs right now,â she said. âWe have to get Citrina out of danger as soon as possible. Iâd appreciate it if youâd join me in the carriage and fill me in on whatâs going on.â
Ludwig looked at her for a moment, then let out a short sigh. âI thank you, Your Highness, for giving me this chance to make up for my mistakes,â he said, bowing his head again.
âEnough with the mistakes,â Mia said. âLess atoning, more rescuing. Come on, hurry up.â
â
As Ludwig got into the carriage, he looked around to see who was there. Prince Sion, his servant Keithwood, and Prince Abel were there. These were familiar faces.
The fourth person, on the other hand, said, âPleased to meet you, Ludwig Hewitt. Iâve heard a lot about you from Princess Mia.â
Monica Buendia gave him a polite smile while wearing her maidâs uniform.
âMe, too, Miss Monica. We really appreciate the help youâve been giving us with this,â Ludwig said, returning her smile.
After saying hello to the other passengers, his face changed. âNow, excuse me for being so direct, but letâs get down to business. I have it on good authority that Lady Citrina and her servant Barbara have already returned to the Dukeâs home.â
As soon as he said that, tension filled the room.
âWhen you say âreturned,â do you mean that they are still there, Ludwig?â asked Abel. âTheyâre staying at Yellowmoon manor?â
âThey got there yesterday,â Ludwig said with a nod.
âA trap, then? It looks like theyâre waiting for us,â Abel said with his arms crossed. âI thought for sure theyâd try to raise an army out of desperation.â
By taking Citrina back to the Yellowmoon domain with her, Barbara had already limited her own choices. They could either start a civil war in the empire or uproot their whole clan and go live in hiding somewhere else.
âI thought theyâd just disappear,â Sion said. âThey might be one of the four, but I donât see how an open revolt could lead to anything but their own deaths right now. What would make them stand up? How many men could they get together without a good reason? It would waste the lives of soldiers. I think theyâd be better off hiding somewhere and figuring out what to do nextâŠâ
Sion thought about that for a while before falling silent.
The Serpents were scary because they didnât know who they were. Because they had no shape and were mysterious, they could be anywhere, just out of sight. Fear came from uncertainty. Also frustrating was the fact that they seemed to work mostly as a loose group of individuals who didnât tend to gather in one place.
Getting rid of one or two of them didnât change much about the group as a whole. Once the identity of a single Serpent was known, it was no longer a big threat.
In a way, they were like a swarm of locusts. Getting rid of the whole swarm is hard, but a single locust doesnât pose much of a threat.
âGiven that theyâre not coming out of the manor,â Sion finally said, âit might be a trapâŠâ
It was a tough situation that made everyone in the carriage frown, including Mia. For her, it was more complicated than that. In a situation like this, she would usually just tell her father that someone tried to kill her. In response, he would definitely call up the army of the empire.
Even the most clever traps couldnât stop an army from burning down the whole manor. However, if she did that, Duke Yellowmoonâs family would be sentenced to death for their part in setting up the incident. Barbara and the rest of Duke Yellowmoonâs family would all be put to death for their part in setting up the event.
I wonât be able to save Rina.
She was thinking about Bel, who was sitting in the carriage behind them. She had to bring Citrina back safe and sound for the sake of her granddaughter.
Also, if we got the army involved, Duke Yellowmoon would probably raise his own troops.
She knew that if it came to war, her side would win, but that wouldnât mean a good future. If Duke Yellowmoon died, there would be a lot of chaos in his domain. People would die. The land would be on fire. And the next war would be even harder to win, because the next war would be against the great famine.
In other words, Mia saw this whole thing as just a warm-up battle.
It was important to get as many advantages as possible for the real battle that was coming.
Because of this, she couldnât pay for a big military campaign. If a fight couldnât be avoided, it had to be small and over quickly.
The only forces she could move freely with were the Princess Guard and⊠Dion.
The Princess Guard and Dion?
She asked herself.
Well, I mean, Dionâs pretty much a one-man army anyway.
It makes sense to put him in the same group. While she was saying that Dion was more like a military unit than a person.
Ludwig said, âDonât worry. If problems come up, Iâll make sure theyâre taken care of.â His voice was soft, but there was no doubt in it. âMembers of the Chaos Serpents are already being caught by the Princess Guard in the empire.â
This made a lot of people gasp. Everyone in the carriage, with the exception of one person, knew how hard it was to find Serpents hiding among the people.
Everyone wanted to know how it was done, so all eyes turned to Mia, who asked, âAre they now? Thatâs very reassuring! You did a great job.â
She didnât ask any more questions and only said a few words of thanks. Still, no one complained about the lack of details because they thought her âlet it goâ attitude meant she had complete faith in Ludwigâs ability to do the job. They thought they had a simple, unspoken agreement: she told him what she wanted, and he made it happen.
She put her faith in him, and he lived up to it.
So, he didnât need to explain. Or, as some people then inferred, maybe she didnât ask because she already knew, and Ludwig was just following her detailed instructions.
The truth, thoughâŠ
My, it sounds like finding Serpents is pretty easy. That reminds me, wasnât the Holy Book of the Central Orthodox Church supposed to make them tell the truth? They sound like pushovers, to be honest. Maybe next time I should try reading to them.
âŠwas that Mia didnât have the faintest idea what was going on.
She didnât care at all about how hard her subjects worked. And they had no idea how ungrateful she was.
The rest of the people in the carriage came to their own wrong conclusions. To be honest, it was hard to tell if anyone got anything right.
The whole conversation was a long joke that needed a punchline.