Cassion gritted his teeth, unable to hide his displeasure.
He couldnât believe they dared to block him.There was a faint hint of anger in his voice.
Satin sighed and soothed him, his voice softer and more persuasive than before.
âThereâs still soot in the air. You can still smell the smoke. It will have a bad effect on Master Cassion, who has bad lungs. Iâve cleaned the outside, but the inside isnât as nice looking.â
Cassion looked down at Satin in doubt.
âIt doesnât even smell like burning, youâre lyingâŚâŚ.â
âThis is what Master Tamon had ordered. I was ordered not to let anyone inside the East annex.â
When Tamonâs name was mentioned, Cassion, who was about to question Satin further, frowned and went silent.
He paced around with a nervous look on his face.
Whenever he came to the mansion in the capital, he always stayed in this east annex. The view of the ocean from the main room on the third floor was particularly spectacular.
Having lived mostly inland, he loved a room with a view of the sea.
Tamon also always took care of Cassionâs needs. Tamon would give him any room he wanted. Cassion thought it was natural.
He didnât think there would be anything in the past, present, or future that would prevent Tamon from doing the same for him.(Cassion)
Cassion frowned and looked around, he couldnât believe there was a fire.
He didnât see any soot, let alone broken parts, but still, they said it was fire.
âWhen did the fire start?â
âIt happened last week. It was the day Master Tamon left, so he decided to block it in a hurry and restore it slowly. I ask for your understanding.â
Satin replied politely, bowing his head deeply in coercion.
ââPlease, I beg you. Letâs go to the west annex. I filled the west garden this year with Master Cassionâs favorite Ahamoni flowers. Itâs spectacular as well.â
Satin has been with the Krasis family for a long time as a butler.
Of course, it was Tamon to whom he owed his allegiance, but he had also often taken care of Cassion since he was a child.
Cassion stared at Satinâs head and had no choice but to look away.
âOh, well.â
He could make a fuss, but he didnât need to be so hung up on the east annex.
And if what Satin said was true, it was nothing good for Cassion to stay there, because as Satin said, he didnât have very good lungs. Fortunately, he hadnât had any pain for two years now, but there was nothing wrong with being careful.
It was miserable to lie in a sickbed. He had enough of lying down when he was a child.
âOkay. Then take me to the west annex, Satin.â
âThank you for your understanding. This way, please, Master Cassion. Thank you for coming all this way. Did you have a good time on this trip?â
Satin smiled and tried to get Cassion in a good mood.
Satin hurried over to guide him, but the knights guarding the East annex didnât falter.
Cassion, who was walking behind Satin, turned around and stared at the motionless knights.
After staring at them for a while, he smiled brightly.
âYou put up knights to prevent people from entering the annex just because of the fire? Arenât they my brotherâs elite knights?â
Cassion was young and ignorant of politics, but that didnât mean he was stupid.
He approached them again, staring at the knights.
âStep aside. I wonât stay here, but I have to see whatâs inside. Did you lie? I need to see if itâs not.â
âMaster Cassion! Ah! Why? Youâre looking a little pale, you should come in and get some rest.â
âYouâd better listen when Iâm still being nice. I thought I told you to get out of the way.â
But no matter how many horrible Cassion looked or said, no one retreated.
Cassion was more than a little perplexed, and on the other hand, he was angry.
He had never seen anything like this before. No one in his life has ever blocked him.
Not even his brother, the Devil of War, had ever established any authority over Cassion.
He was, and he deserved to be treated as such.
âMy brotherâŚ.would never have instructed you to stop me. Out of my way, Satin. I donât believe a word youâre saying.â
This was the Krasis family townhouse. The mansion in the capital.
Cassion was also a member of the Krasis family and was one of the owners. He, too, had a right to this mansion, a right that Tamon had guaranteed him.
âThatâs not true, because my brother would never block me.â
So now there was something strange about the situation.
âMaster CassionâŚ.â
âThis mansion belongs to my brother, but it also belongs to me. Listen to your master!â
Sighing, Satinâs earlier irritated expression disappeared and he put on a determined face.
âStrictly speaking, my master is Tamon Krasis. Likewise, the master of this mansion is the stern Tamon Krasis. I am following my masterâs orders.â
It was a hard, cold voice that Cassion had never heard before. Satin quietly took out a letter from his pocket and unfolded it.
âI have a message from Master Tamon to tell you that there may be something you do not understand.â
Cassion frowned as he took the paper Satin.
The words written in the paper were brief.
[Close the east annex and not let anyone in. Until I come back, no one else is allowed.]
The word âno one,â written with such force, referred to Cassion. He knew it right away.
He gritted his teeth silently.
â. âŚâŚ Why on earth?â
His eyes crumbled as he stared at the east annex. Whenever he came to the capital, it was this east annex that he mainly used. It was a fact that had never changed over the past twenty years.
ââŚâŚGet out of my way!â
âIf you donât obey me, I will use force to subdue you.â
Despite Cassionâs shouting, Satin was calm. Cassion was confused.
âThis canât be happening. My brother wouldnât do thisâŚâ
His head tangled in a jumble.
Cassion clenched his teeth as he tried to yell again. Then, after glaring at Satin, who didnât flinch like a stone, he kicked him in the shin.
ââIâm not going in! Iâm not going! Iâm really going to the west annex!â
Cassion turned back with a huff.
Somewhere in the east annex, Roselyn was watching Cassion.
***
ââŚHow old is he?â
âHe just turned 20.â
Asrell said, smiling gently .
Roselyn stared at the back of the distant black hair.
Cassion was tall and large. The brothers looked alike.
At first glance, all were similar from the energy, moods, the style of their clothes, and even the way they walk. Was this how Tamon looked when he was younger?
No.
They might look alike on the outside, but Roselyn could tell they were different. His attitude toward people, the pitch of his voice, the faint look in his eyes when he was trying to get what he wanted, were all completely different.
Tamon was very good at delving into peopleâs minds and getting what he wanted out of them.
He could appear menacing or smile gently, depending on the situation, but he never showed any emotional turmoil.
Even when Tamon was younger, he must have been as supple and spontaneous as a young snake.
He wasnât a shrewd person who became skilled in a year or two. More than half of it was innate, Roselyn could have sworn.
In contrast, Cassion Krasis was more hostile.
He looked furious and didnât hide it. He wasnât good at dealing with it.
âHe may look like that, but heâs really not that bad.â
âWhat?â
âMaster Cassion.â
Asrell, who was making Roselynâs bed, quietly opened her mouth, and Roselyn looked back at Asrell.
âHe was born with a weak body. To give you an idea of how weak he was, all the doctors in the kingdom said he couldnât make it past the age of ten.â
It was something that Roselyn also knew.
Because she was well aware of the story of Tamonâs brother, who had gone to the countryside because of his bad health.
âMy grandfatherâs grandfather came into the Krasis family as a gardener, and ever since then my family stayed with the Krasis. Now, my parents are still guarding the Krasis headquarters on the northeast border. But they are not gardeners, theyâre chefs.â
Asrell was originally born in Krasis territory, spent all of her childhood in her parentsâ home, and came up to the capital and worked for Tamon.
She hinted that she remembered the Krasis more clearly than she remembered her work.
âWhen Master Cassion went through several near-death crises, his mother started looking for fortune tellers instead of doctors. She didnât believe in the temple either. She gave them huge amounts of money many times, but Master Cassion never got better.
The fortune teller she found said to separate the two brothers.â
So they stayed in Belbourn, the most rugged region of Amor.
âThe Lady of the house (*Cassionâs  mother) left to the countryside immediately. The Count stopped her, but no one could stop her strong will.â
âShe was desperate, wasnât she?â
âYes, thatâs right. Because âŚâŚ she had already lost her first son to the same disease.â