Rashta, who considered asking the assassin to kill Viscount Roteschu once and for all, soon changed her mind.
Didnât he say that in case he died he had everything ready to spread rumors about me?
âSo, can you kill Rivetti? Viscount Roteschuâs daughter.â
The assassin accepted.
Rashta took a bunch of jewels out of her pocket and handed them to this man.
However, she changed her request at the last moment.
âNo, donât kill her. Sell her as a slave to another country, is that possible?â
Rivetti considered her a filthy slave and scorned her.
âThe filthy slave will now be you.â
***
During dinner, I looked carefully at Heinley.
Two nights ago. Although he said he believed in the existence of ghosts and was afraid of them, he led his men to the place where the ghost with a crown on his head appeared and I watched him act calmly. But instead of calling him out on the spot, I went straight to my room.
Now I remembered it again, so I thought Iâd put Heinley to the test. Yesterday he hadnât stayed at the palace on another urgent matter.
âAre you still scared of ghosts?â
âVery much so, My Queen. But by your side I feel safe.â
âReally?â
âOf course. My Queen, you give me courage.â
Smiling softly, Heinley extended his hand across the table. When I placed my hand over his, he grabbed it, kissed the back of it and smiled even wider.
His smile was charming and his attitude was lovely. However, I narrowed my eyes at him because he was trembling.
He looked cute pretending to be weak, but it was also strange. He seemed like a huge hound dog whimpering and being excessively pitiful.
In any case, one thing was clear. Heinley was a man who showed a different image as he saw fit.
It was obvious that he had a slightly different attitude when he was with me compared to when he was with others.
***
The next day, Heinley reflected suspiciously on Navierâs expression yesterday.
Navierâs expression, which was usually cold and sometimes gentle, was really strange yesterday.
Navier seemed to want to say something⊠but in the end she didnât say anything special.
Heinley felt uncomfortable, so he paced back and forth across his office with his hands clasped behind his back.
But he soon put those thoughts aside. Because the spy stationed in the Eastern Empire came in person.
The spy reported on the âphenomenon of the decline of magesâ ongoing in the Eastern Empire.
â ⊠there is a high risk in extracting mana from a skillful mage.â
âBy high risk you mean it doesnât work? Or-â
âThere have been several cases where in trying to extract mana the opposite has happened, it has increased even more.â
â⊠Itâs a difficult situation.â
Heinley frowned and pressed his temples. One skillful mage was usually more useful than ten beginner mages. It was a great loss for the Western Empire to further increase the mana of already talented mages.
âThen it is best to extract the mana just after it manifests in a person or when it is not yet well established.â
Heinley considered this a real headache and clicked his tongue. In this scenario, the war he aimed for might have to be delayed a little longer.
As Heinley pondered this, the spy continued.
âAnd this may not be so important, but Emperor Sovieshu has a new concubine.â
âA concubine? A different concubine than that woman named Rashta?â
âYes.â
âIs that concubine a mage? If not, Iâm not interested.â
âSheâs not currently a mage, but sheâs an assistant to a court mage.â
âA court mage?â
A court mage uses someone who is not a mage as an assistant? Heinley found this fact strange, so he waited to hear the rest of the story,
âWhatâs more unusual is that this is a person who lost her mana while attending the magical academy. I was wondering if it was related to our planâŠâ
âHow can he place his own concubine, who has lost her mana, as an assistant to a mage. Emperor Sovieshu is too greedy.â
Heinley laughed.
He caused quite a stir when he divorced Navier and remarried not long ago, did he already have another woman as a concubine already?
But after a while, Heinley asked as if he had realized something,
ââYou said she lost mana while attending the magical academy?â
âThatâs right.â
âHer name isâŠâ
âHer name is Evely.â
Heinley immediately recognized the girlâs name. She was the orphan girl that Navier visited at the magical academy to give her encouragement. An intelligent and outstanding girl.
What did Emperor Sovieshu have in mind having that girl with him�
In any case, this was not good at all.
The mages of the Eastern Empire were brilliant and competent. If the side effects that occurred when extracting mana from mages were studied along with Evelyâs case, it could be discovered that the phenomenon of the decline of mages had been artificially amplified.
âFirst of all, we will stop extracting mana from the mages in the capital of the Eastern Empire. Itâs better to avoid trouble.â
Although it might seem silly, Heinley quickly changed the order. He didnât want to ruin everything, so he made a cautious decision,
âInstead of extracting mana from the mages who already belong to the Eastern Empireâs Imperial Family, itâs better to make sure that the number of mages doesnât increase.â
âUnderstood.â
However, unlike usual, the spy did not leave immediately after finishing with the report.
When Heinley stared at him, wondering why, the spy opened his mouth cautiously,
âYour Majesty, if you donât mind⊠may I make a personal remark?â
âGo ahead.â
When Heinley allowed it, the spy said in a firm voice.
âI agree that Her Majesty Navier is a good empress worthy of respect. However, I am concerned that because of Empress Navier, Your Majesty will not be able to go ahead with the plans you have been preparing for a long time.â
Instead of getting angry with the spy, Heinley chose to defend himself and evade his comment.