“I had hoped our first eting would be more formal and wholeso.”
She laughed as if amused, tapping the table with her fingertips. The tallic bracelet clinked rhythmically against it.
“But sitting before is so rogue priest, far from refined, solving problems in the most unheard-of, worst possible ways. I’m experiencing firsthand that your abilities as Nicolaus know no bounds and keep reaching new peaks, but honestly, I didn’t expect you’d go this far.”
“Whatever you say, that wasn’t the plan.”
“Do you think anyone lives exactly according to plan? Your exceptional trait is turning variables into opportunities. Ah, now I see—this is the key.”
She snapped her fingers and whispered, as if luring in.
“You made it this far because you took risks others wouldn’t dare. You’ve never adapted to the waves of those ordinary fools, have you? Am I wrong? Your dinsion is one level higher than theirs, so you and those fools can never mix, nor have you ever tried.”
“I don’t think that way.”
“Be honest. Have you ever understood the ridiculous movents of that crowd?”
When I didn’t answer, she quirked the corner of her mouth.
“…We have more in common than I thought. So, who knows your true face? Your adjutant, who’s never far from your side, must know, and His Majesty the King of Bavaria, too, of course.”
She smiled, her eyes crinkling.
“It’s an honor. To be one of the few who know who you are. I wish I’d been the first, but that wasn’t possible, was it?”
I know where this is going.
As expected.
She doesn’t just know I’m Nicolaus…
“Deputy Minister Adrian Askanian must be feeling quite complicated.”
She knows I’m Lucas Askanian, too.
Of course. If she didn’t, that’d be disappointing in its own way.
“A 20-year masterpiece has gained a will of its own and is smashing every board, and knowing this, he’s already missed his chance to act. Even what Adrian Askanian knows is just the tip of the iceberg. If he finds out his little brother has beco the Empire’s saint… that’d be a sight. I’m really curious what they’re preparing now.”
“You’re curious about all sorts of things.”
“Of course, Deputy Minister Adrian Askanian will safely inherit his dukedom and keep thriving. If you attack , I’ll send Nicolaus Ernst after you.”
“…”
“That should balance the scales, don’t you think?”
I sneered and shook my head.
“You’re full of hot air. Your Highness won’t attack .”
“I’d like to hear why.”
“With Adrian Askanian’s approval rating far surpassing yours right now, how could you?”
“…”
“How could you let such a golden opportunity pass? Your Highness is in a position where you should be grateful and accept it if Nicolaus—that is, I—interferes with Adrian Askanian’s ducal succession.”
I spat the words with a mocking laugh.
Perhaps sensing the flow of my magic power, she raised an eyebrow in surprise and let out a small chuckle.
“The people want Adrian Askanian as Emperor over Elisabeth Hohenzollern. Sure, it’s just talk, but Adrian Askanian, despite being a mage, considers the lives of non-mages and throws himself into danger for the people. In that situation, does it seem likely Your Highness would take the high-risk move of bloating Adrian Askanian’s influence?”
To this country’s people, Adrian Askanian is close to a true reforr from above, the only noble who genuinely cares for the common folk.
It’s a path Adrian Askanian deliberately chose to boost his approval.
“Your choice of words is a bit surprising.”
“Are you shocked by ‘people’ or by ‘just talk’? Be precise.”
“Both. The Empire’s 100 million population are loyal subjects who obey the Hohenzollern dynasty. There’s no German who isn’t a vassal of the Hohenzollerns. ‘Subjects’ is the most fitting term—not ‘people’ or ‘citizens.’ You likely judged that, given the Empire’s quasi-absolute monarchy, even ‘citizens’ implies subjects of the Second Empire, inseparable from subservience. So, you use ‘people’—just people, not Hohenzollerns’ or the Second Empire’s.”
“You know well.”
“Hahaha…”
She shook her head. Her yellow eyes glead with brimming intrigue.
A whisper ca low amid the sound of rain.
“Treason, Sir.”
“…”
“This, above all else, is treason. Saying Adrian Askanian’s approval far exceeds mine isn’t the issue. Freeing the 100 million population—that’s the most decisive, grave treason.”
Of course. No surprise there.
She stared at with a lingering smile before speaking.
“…As the Crown Prince, I can say this. But at my core, my thoughts aren’t so different from yours.”
She murmured, lost in thought, as if chewing on sothing.
“I like it.”
“…”
“Humans should be human. We know what happens when human identity is tied to being soone’s subject or a nation’s component. They live not for themselves but for the collective, internalizing its ideology and values, ultimately dying as fodder for an illusory group. But what happens if you strip away that affiliation? Does a utopia unfold?”
It wasn’t hard to guess what she’d say next.
Her argunt partly aligns with my thoughts.
“No. We’re left with ethnicity, race, won and n, new and old generations, bourgeoisie and laborers.”
She looked at with warm eyes and said,
“Your attempt is futile, Sir. Humans can’t escape classification. Finding a group to rely on is the fundantal principle of human life, and the barbaric sense of security from destroying out-groups instinctively drives them.”
“…”
“The imperial family, the Empire, are human constructs. Humans gave us the right to rule them to secure a comfortable group, and we must respond to their instincts.”
In the end, we can’t find common ground.
We start from the sa thoughts, intersect a few tis, but diverge irreconcilably at the conclusion.
From my perspective, knowing the history beyond this era, her insight into the future is sharp and accurate, but she uses it to defend absolute monarchy.
As a leader guiding the masses, her insight should point toward belief in humanity’s self-improvent, but it doesn’t.
Perhaps she had no intention of prolonging the talk as before, as she quickly wrapped up.
“That’s not what I ca to discuss today. Let’s get to the point.”
“Fine by .”
“You said you didn’t co to kill today. I’m the sa. Not just today, but going forward, I have no intention of killing you.”
Her arm remained unchanged. She tapped her still-pristine white wrist with her fingers and said,
“You know why.”
“Your Highness has a goal you haven’t told about, and you need to achieve it.”
It’s not ‘probably need.’ You *need* .
Based on my deductions, she can’t kill . Her ability requires . Considering the Chairman’s insight, I mustn’t let anything slip or say too much in her presence, but this one thing I can make clear.
Her goal is to lt into the furnace of Abraham.
“Hm, I love how your thoughts are always unexpected. Usually, people would say, ‘If I’m killed, I’ve set up a chanism to expose your identity, so you can’t kill .’ That’s the easiest story to co up with, isn’t it?”
“Don’t you know why I didn’t say that?”
I asked with a smile, and she grinned, satisfied.
“Of course. The mont you present ticulous evidence and logic proving Abraham is the Crown Prince, every dia outlet you arranged to publish it will cut contact with you. The Emperor and the imperial governnt will end the Abraham investigation, find a scapegoat to execute, and you’ll end up in the execution chamber for spreading falsehoods.”
“You know well.”
“Even if I’m willing to be punished, the environnt around won’t let it happen. Punishnt goes to those who prioritize truth over structure. That’s why, instead of putting in front of a cara, you tead up with a Pleroma senator to expose Abraham.”
The Crown Prince exhaled as if finishing a major task and gazed out the window. As raindrops pounded the glass, she said in a leisurely tone,
“Father, our goals are now clear.”
Her tone shifted again.
I raised an eyebrow slightly at her eccentricity.
Of course, it also ans she won’t treat as Nicolaus.
“You’re sitting here to collect data on , predict my future actions, and gather information to kill . Your goal isn’t the Crown Prince’s downfall but Abraham’s death.”
“No surprise there. It’s not much different for Your Highness.”
“Indeed.”
A serpent-like voice slithered into my ear.
“Your knowledge exceeds my comprehension. How you baptized Marco Schreiber, how you fueled his resistance through the Labyrinth—it’s all a mystery to . I know nothing about you, but I’d wager you have abilities beyond common understanding, just like .”
Like rewinding ti.
Or seeing others’ Labyrinths.
Accurate words.
She fiddled with her bracelet, aligning it precisely over her artery again.
“Father Caetani, I have a proposal. Let’s get along well from now on.”
“…”
“Having reached this conversation, you’re already prejudiced against , viewing everything I say as wrong and rejecting it. Even if I say sothing aligning with your values, you’ll find flaws and reasons to disagree. That’s human cognition. So, we must proceed with this premise.”
The Crown Prince looked into my eyes and said,
“You’re biased. I’m neither objectively right nor wrong, and neither are you.”
I just smiled.
She’s laying the groundwork well.
She slowly swirled her now-cold teacup and said,
“Father, let say it again. You may resist agreeing, but we have much in common. We both have abilities others can’t comprehend, can’t understand the dull masses, and know what’s fundantally wrong. I may not be the first to see Nicolaus’s true face, but I can be the only one to understand your essence.”
Her eyes glowed deeper in the darkness.
“What do you think, Father?”
I snorted. When I didn’t answer, the Crown Prince smiled and asked,
“So, your answer? Wasn’t this question part of your plan?”
“You overestimate .”
I said it deliberately. It *was* part of the plan.
How could it not be?
Since Abraham’s status isn’t that of a re entrepreneur or politician but the Empire’s Crown Prince, killing her imdiately is impossible.
Also, while I already have a way to kill her, it’s not in my hands. She’s bound to draw in, so I just need to wait. She’ll bring about her own downfall.
But saying it’s part of the plan would let her glean ten pieces of information about what I know and don’t.
I can’t give her that.
“You already know my answer. Let’s do as you wish.”
The Crown Prince nodded, as if she expected as much.
“Good. I promise. No matter what, I won’t reveal you’re Nicolaus, nor will I prepare to kill you. For the ti being, I’ll refrain from acting as Abraham.”
Her wrist remained unchanged.
I looked up at her, correcting her words with precise phrasing.
“Not ‘refrain from acting’—you can’t, Your Highness. Try if you dare.”
“Haha… true. Thanks to your spectacular work, that’s how it turned out.”
She laughed lightly, wrapping up the conversation.
Checking the ti, I pushed my teacup forward and said,
“It’s getting late.”
She nodded, stood, and extended her hand. I ignored it and got up on my own. As we left the room and reached the library, she grabbed my arm and said,
“We’re warping.”
I closed my eyes and opened them, and we were back in front of the investigation scene. She turned to with a smile.
“I’m delighted to have had this brief mont of peace with you, Sir.”
“Glad you think so.”
“I’ll send a letter to your office soon, so let know a date we can et again. You don’t intend to cut contact like this, do you?”
“No, let’s et here tomorrow.”
At my imdiate reply, the Crown Prince tilted her head slightly, staring at without a change in expression.
* * *
I adjusted my mask and read the newspaper in my hand. Or rather, listened to the sound coming from the filter.
Alexander Kluger, the senator who’d drawn the public’s attention with the Abraham announcent in just two days, was broadcasting in the sa passionate tone I’d heard yesterday.
[Most of what I’ve announced to the subjects about Abraham combines my basic investigation with facts uncovered by His Excellency Nicolaus Ernst in cooperation with the Prussian Investigation Bureau. His Excellency Ernst will appear in person in the Imperial Tis this Saturday…]
Sa street, sa ti as yesterday.
This ti, even approaching the cordon, no one stopped . A detective spotted , hurried over, and greeted loudly.
“You’re here, Your Excellency Ernst.”
“Indeed. We et again.”
“We last saw each other at the Imperial Central Hospital. Congratulations on your appointnt, Your Excellency.”
“Thank you.”
Yesterday’s paper ntioned the Crown Prince overseeing the Abraham investigation. She volunteered to lure to Primrose Path.
Investigating herself—does that even make sense?
I can’t give her a chance to destroy evidence.
I handed the investigation log to the detective and said,
“I’ve reviewed all the investigation records from yesterday.”
“Oh, you’re fast, appointed just today. Shall we move now…?”
“We need to move imdiately.”
That’s why I secured the position of investigation chief.
“There should be evidence items collected by Her Highness the Crown Prince yesterday. Move them all.”
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