âYour Highness. Lady Mullaney has arrived and is waiting for you in the drawing room.â
Heinley was sitting on his bed and studying a property list. He looked up at McKenna, then set down his list with a frown.
âWho is Lady Mullaney?â
âThe twelfth candidate for queen. You should meet her.â
Heinley sighed. His days were like this of late. McKenna would bring a young noblewoman from a well-known and wise family and get them to meet. Heinley though that half of them seemed to come from the same family. As rumored, he was not interested in any of them.
âIsnât it time to stop, McKenna?â
âWe can stop once you have chosen a queen.â
Heinley sighed again but did not argue back. He knew better than anyone that McKennaâs reasons were justified.
âI donât need to be married until another year or two.â
âBetter if it was sooner, Your Highness.â
ââŠMaybe youâre right. Otherwise, my sister-in-law would be caught in the middle.â
There were many significant changes when a generational shift occurred. Fortunately, people were the most open to change at this time, and it was a critical period when the new queen would organize the court in her own way. Heinley was close to Christa, and was accustomed to the system and methods she had established when she was queen. However, if Christaâs system remained for too long after Heinley became king, it would be difficult for the new queen to make changes. It was for this reason that McKenna was concerned.
Heinley stood up with a grim look on his face.
âAlright, I should go. Even if I say no, I should still see her. Thereâs no reason to create unnecessary grudges.â
âOf course.â
McKenna quickly helped Heinley pull on his jacket.
âBut why did you keep looking at the property list?â
âTo create a new knighthood title.â
âTitle?â
âYes. It will have a nice name.â
âWhat?â
âAnd it will be given to the most courageous and loyal knights.â
âWill that be necessary? Arenât there already many good knights?â
âWeâre constantly in need of talent, McKenna. Who knows if in a few years, there will be so few knights you can count them on one hand?â
âI see.â
âIf I create a highly desirable title, the knights will compete with each other for it. One of the virtues will be loyalty, which is naturally beneficial for me.â
âAhâŠâ
âThe question is how to make it desirableââ
Heinley suddenly halted, lifting his hand to signal McKenna to be quiet. McKenna had a bewildered expression on his face, but he soon realized what Heinley was up to.
As they talked, they soon arrived at the parlor room where Lady Mullaney was waiting. There were quiet voices coming from the room. Heinley crept up to the doorway.
âI didnât say anything I couldnât say, did I?â
âIt was quite impertinent.â
âIâm sorry Christa, but you are no longer queen anymore, am I right?â
âThe position is vacant, but Iâm the closest one to it at the moment.â
âI donât know. Youâre the furthest away from it. None of the nobles can sit on that throne.â
âNo one can say otherwise to me until a new queen comes. And even if I had to take a step back, I would still be the former queen. Should I listen to such talk from you, Lady Mullaney?â
âYouâre the one who came in first and gave me all kinds of orders.â
âI can say that to anyone who comes into my house.â
âThis is not your house, is it, Christa?â
ââŠWhat?â
âYouâre not the kingâs mother, and if you continue to stay at the royal palace, you will feel uncomfortable about the new queen. Youâll continue to act like youâre the reigning queen.â
âLady Mullaney!â
âIn the old days, your predecessors went to Compshireâs mansion. Thatâs the custom.â
There seemed to be an argument between Lady Mullaney and Queen Christa. McKenna murmured in half awe and half astonishment.
âShe truly is a nobleâs daughter.â
When the new king inherited the throne after the previous kingâs death, the previous queenâs position wasnât ignored either. If she was the kingâs mother, she would naturally be honored more than the king, but if she wasnât the kingâs mother, this policyâs purpose was to block the power of the previous queen. This was why Wharton III asked Heinley to take care of Christa, for fear of her clashing with the one rising to the top.
âI feel sorry for Christa, but that is how power is distributed.â
Heinley tapped the door instead of answering McKenna. At the sound of the noise, the pair inside the room stopped talking immediately.
Heinley opened the door, and Lady Mullaney and Christa looked taken aback. Heinley greeted then both with his customary smile. McKenna glanced at Christa with a signal to leave, allowing only the other two to remain in the room. However, before Christa left, Heinley spoke to Lady Mullaney first.
âWhat you said Lady Mullaney. I heard it all.â
Lady Mullaneyâs eyes widened in surprise, as well as Christaâs. McKenna opened his mouth to protest Heinleyâs words, but Heinley continued before he could say a word.
âIt is a realistic problem, Lady Mullaney. But it is not for you to worry about.â
He subtly sided with Christa.
Lady Mullany paused, then gave a murmured acquiescence and smiled again. She gave a formal bow and left.
However, the tension did not dissipate even after she exited the room. Christa seemed deeply embarrassed, and McKenna gripped his hair and gave a frustrated groan. He didnât seem to like the fact that Heinley let Lady Mullany go without even talking to her for five minutes.
âYour Highness, Iâm telling youâŠyouâre too much.â
âBy letting her leave?â
âYou canât get Empress Navier out of your mind.â
âYou say that, but youâre the one that canât get the other noblewomen out of your mind, can you?â
âYour Highness, for your sakeââ
âNot for mine, but for the noblewomen.â
ââŠâ
âAlthough you are in a hurry to choose a queen, a few days wonât be enough to properly integrate her. Right now, I have the coronation and various other things to organize. Letâs take care of those first.â
Heinley patted McKenna on the shoulder several times and left the parlor room. He was likely going back to his bedroom to look at his property list again. McKenna caught up to Heinleyâs side and dropped his voice to a whisper.
âIf you want the Empress as your queen, youâll have to wage war to have her.â
Heinley looked startled.
âOf course, war will someday happen. But the people will not welcome a queen who brought war to them.â
Heinley didnât say a word back. He entered his bedroom, but instead of looking at the property list, he sat at his desk and took out a paper and pen.