Volume 8 Chapter 3 (2/2)

”You need only remember this,” the merchant's voice was already fading away yet it was still accompanied by a booming reverberation. ”You asked me who I am, but my own name has no significance. However, I come from the Barbaroi village. For now, remember only this.”

Ax abruptly looked around, but there were only the soldiers, who looked as though they too had only just come back to themselves, and the merchant's figure had disappeared.

He mobilised a great many soldiers and had them search the surrounding area; but the middle-aged man, the three unusual dragons that he had with him, and, of course, the dancer who called herself Tahī, were not to be found.

Soon, the sun began to rise. Ax was bathed in the light that was s.h.i.+ning brilliantly over the mountain ridge and, as the shadows were driven away, he began to wonder if that night's happenings hadn't all been illusions.

However -

Garda and… Barbaroi.

Ax tightly grasped the war fan that he carried closely on him. At this point, Garda's name needed no explanation. As for Barbaroi, it was the name of a village said to be located around the sacred ground of Kurán. According to legend, the Ryuujin, the original inhabitants of the planet who had once been displaced by mankind, still lived in that land.

He was suddenly seized with the thought that there might be an as yet unknown link between the rampage of the sorcerer who called himself Garda and Mephius' sudden invasion.

”Hmph,” Ax gave a loud snort. ”Whatever plots may lie beneath the surface of this world, they are all simply preparations to allow me, Ax, to govern the whole of the western lands. Just as Garda himself was. I cannot die until the power of the Bazgan House s.h.i.+nes upon the entirety of this western wilderness. That is the only thing which is certain. That is the only thing I need pray for.”

The next thing Ax thought was -

It's a good thing Ravan isn't here.

There could be no greater disgrace than to be killed by a woman he had called over himself. Being scolded directly was fine but with Ravan, he would definitely be in for relentless and unending sarcasm.

At the same time, when he thought that if Ravan had been here - I wouldn't have gotten into that situation in the first place - Ax felt uncomfortable for a reason other than having had his life targeted.

Coming home from picking wild plants, Rone saw a throng of people around his house and smiled wryly. Holding that feeling back however, he shouted loudly -

”Hey!”

The crowd scattered at once, its members running off in different directions. Most of them were teenage boys.

”It's the Mephian kidnapper,” one of them shouted jeeringly.

Thereupon, another took up, ”He's kidnapped someone from the mountains again.”

”Next time, find a good bride for our brother, 'kay!”

The tanned youths were making a racket partly to hide their embarra.s.sment. It wasn't surprising. The border village was relatively large but even so the population didn't reach a thousand. Around it, only the mountains and the wilderness stretched out and the boys were starved for excitement.

But Rone liked it. It had not yet been three months since they had arrived in this village which lay west of the River Yunos. In other words, even though they were Mephian, the Tauran villagers had warmly welcomed them. At first, his wife had missed life in the city but now she had made friends with women of her age and her figure as she tilled the fields had gradually become a familiar sight.

”The beans I planted are finally hard enough to crush,” she had said not long ago, proudly showing them off to Rone.

He was both surprised and moved that his wife, who was use to a prosperous lifestyle, was so resolute. Although life wasn't easy, it was secure.

What's left…

Rone's remaining worry was about his daughter. Because there had been a complete upheaval of their environment half a year ago, Rone thought of things from their life before as distant; but for his daughter, that one nightmarish day still felt like it was yesterday. She wasn't able to adapt as flexibly as his wife had.

On this occasion, Rone had encountered a strange continuity.

It was the incident that had the children hooting ”kidnapper”. About half a month earlier, as he was on his way back from his daily task of gathering wild plants, he had suddenly noticed a path to the side that he hadn't taken before. He had been starting to become familiar with the surroundings. Curiosity overcame him and he turned his feet in that direction.

The harvest was poor. He found neither edible plants nor any kind of subst.i.tute for them. Just as Rone was about to turn back home, he had spotted the figure of person who had collapsed looking as though they were leaning against a tree.

The man was covered in wounds all over. There seemed to have been some kind of medical care performed but the skin showing through the crude bandaging was burned and darkish with solidified blood stuck to his entire face. His clothes were in shreds.

He had wondered if maybe he had been caught stealing in a town somewhere and, having been chased out, had been reduced to becoming a tramp.

The man was still breathing. Rone had hesitated for a moment but, as someone who had been chased away from the place where they had been born and raised, he resembled him in a way. Lifting the man onto his shoulders, he had returned to the village.

They had shared their meagre provisions, called the elderly man who was the only one in the village to have any medical knowledge, and had treated his wounds. Although in effect, that had only meant applying medicine made from squeezing herbs and replacing his bandages with new ones.

But although the man had returned to his senses, he must have had a terrifying experience; he remained lying all day long and, even now, barely spoke. He appeared to have nightmares every night. In these past few days, however, he seemed to have regained some presence of mind; his wariness had considerably decreased towards Rone and his family, and he mumbled words of grat.i.tude when they brought him his food.

Whatever the case, Rone had been relieved when that happened.

”This is…” Rone had muttered unconsciously just yesterday morning as his feet came to a stop along the mountain path.

Less than a kilometre from where the man had been, he came across another person who had collapsed.

This time, it was a woman. Moreover, a girl still only fourteen or fifteen years old. Her condition wasn't as awful as the man's had been but she was bleeding from the head and her skin had turned ashen.

There were two more points that were strange. The girl was wearing what was evidently a flight suit for riding an airs.h.i.+p, and also, she was probably neither Zerdian nor Mephian.

Rone thought it suspicious, but he couldn't ignore the situation this time either, so in the end he had brought the girl back to the village.

”You're a man who is good at picking people up,” the village chief had said, half in amazement, half in exasperation.

As a matter of course, the girl became the talk of the village. As with the man, Rone's guess was that she had fallen into vagrancy or slavery; but whatever the case, she was a young girl. All sorts of rumours sprang up. There were stories that she was a woman from another country who had fled because some foreign king was going to force her to become his mistress, or that she was a princess from a coastal country who had been carried here by the current after the s.h.i.+p she was travelling on was s.h.i.+pwrecked.

The beautiful girl who had collapsed in the mountains had especially stirred up the interest of the youths and they were often found surrounding Rone's home, in the hopes of being able to peer inside the house.

While he was sending them away, the doctor had once again provided his care.

”There is nothing to worry about,” the doctor had nodded when he had left the girl who was sleeping in bed. ”The head injury is nothing too serious. She has been weakened after using up a lot of her strength but she should recover considerably with two or three days rest and proper meals.”

”I see.”

”Still…”

”Still?”

Nothing, the old man shook his head and left the house. Rone could easily guess what was on the doctor's mind. The man was one thing but with the girl... there were too many mysteries. The doctor was probably worried about inviting trouble to the village.

It was situated not far from the border with Mephius and they had just heard that there had been an armed skirmish.

That was another reason why the youths seemed more impetuous than usual.

The situation is on the verge of military action again.

Amidst all this Rone uneasily wondered, even though she was just one girl, if her enigmatic presence was a good thing for the village.

He entered the house just as his daughter was coming out of the guest room in which the girl had been laid.

”And that child?”

”She has woken up. I'm just preparing breakfast with mother, so wait a bit, Father.”

Oh - Rone's eyes opened a little wide as his daughter seemed to have changed slightly. When he had brought the man in, she had not dropped her fear and wariness but, no doubt feeling pity for a girl younger than her, she was starting to be actively involved in looking after her.

”Say,” she spoke while tying on her ap.r.o.n, ”don't ask that girl too many questions. She looked like she didn't want to talk about herself.”

”Yeah.”

”A bit like us…”

Cutting off her words, his daughter started preparing the meal. Rone understood what she wanted to say.

They were holding secrets.

Rone Jayce.

Half a year earlier, he had been a regular soldier in the imperial capital, Solon. Moreover, he had been part of Emperor Guhl Mephius' Imperial Guards.

His daughter's name was Layla. Thanks to the influence of her father the imperial guard, she had grown up without lacking for anything; at around the time she was to turn eighteen, she had married a man of the same age and from a similar military background.

Layla's happiness should have been at its peak, but was suddenly taken from her; and the one who caused her downfall, as well as the rest of Rone's family, was Gil Mephius, the very son of the emperor whom Rone had sworn to protect.

Gil proclaimed his ”Right to the first night”, something which the imperial family had never once exercised, and had forcibly pressed Layla to sleep with him. Not only that, but the one made to stand guard at the cheap inn he brought her to was her own father, Rone.

For Rone, it was like something from a nightmare.

He had broken through the door to hold back Prince Gil and stop that barbarity. Of course, he knew that doing so would cause his own ruin. What came next still clung to his eardrums -

A gunshot

As the sound of that shot echoed in his mind, Rone s.h.i.+vered. They had become entangled, Rone had ended up pulling the trigger and Gil - the successor to the throne of the Imperial Dynasty of Mephius - had sunk to the filthy wooden floor, a silent corpse in a pool of blood.

Hugging his sobbing daughter, Rone had resigned himself to death. He believed that as long as he could protect his family, it didn't matter if he was torn limb from limb, or made to fight a hundred gladiators, or eaten alive by dragons.

Besides, the first to come rus.h.i.+ng to the scene had been a leading n.o.ble called Fedom Aulin. There was no longer any hope of escaping.

But then, the situation had veered off in a strange direction.

”The prince is still breathing. What happened here is a disgrace for the imperial family of Mephius. Do not speak of it to anyone. Instead, if you leave everything to me, your family will not have to worry about a thing.” Fedom had said.

His words were irrational and coercive, but things had turned out as he had said; no pursuers were sent from the castle after Rone's family, nor had the death of Crown Prince Gil been publicly announced. Not only that but, very shortly afterwards, Gil Mephius, who should have been dead, had gone to Seirin Valley to hold the wedding ceremony with a princess from the neighbouring country of Garbera.

Rone and his family has left the capital before the stories of Gil's heroic accomplishments had spread throughout Solon. They had feared for their safety. It did not take any deep thought to realise that it reeked of a national conspiracy.

They also had the intention of escaping any investigation since many of the guests invited to the wedding knew that Gil had invoked the right to the first night. A short while before that, the family of Layla's marriage partner had indirectly suggested that the engagement be annulled.

They had wandered from place to place in Mephius and had once been on the verge of settling in a village not far from Apta.

However, he heard a rumour that Gil Mephius would arrive as lord protector of Apta. He did not want that name to reach his daughter's ears. Furthermore, he had received a letter from a man that he had known well in a village where they had previously stayed for about a month. It stated that a man, who claimed to be one of his acquaintances from Solon, had come by to visit him, however Rone did not know him.

Was he sent by Fedom?

Rone had shuddered, turning pale. To be looking for him after so much time, he wondered whether he wasn't trying to kill him in order to seal his lips.

Rone had immediately gathered up their belongings and had set off with his wife and child. They had crossed the border by taking a mountain path at the north of the Belgana Summits. For ten days they travelled south. It was a journey to a new land.

His wife and child had been beginning to show fatigue when, by chance, they had arrived at this village. Naturally, it was a Zerdian settlement but, at the time, the mood towards Mephians had been friendly. This was because none other than Gil Mephius had effected a reconciliation with Taúlia. Rone had mixed feelings about it but, at any rate, the villagers had received the foreign travellers without being guarded.

A few days into their stay, upon learning that Rone and his family had no particular destination, the village chief had offered them a house and field.

From the time they had left Solon, his daughter, Layla, had been in the depths of despair; she had been brooding so much that her father worried if they took their eyes off her, she might end her own life. However, having been driven to end their travels at life in this village, little by little she had started to show signs of recovery.

But then roughly two months earlier, completely unexpected - and, it should perhaps be said, very belated - news had reached the village.

The report of Prince Gil's death.

Rone Jayce had a strange sense of shock but, whatever had happened, he had left everything to Fedom and had fled from Solon. He didn't dwell over it anymore than necessary, however when Layla heard about it, she closed herself off just as she had before. Perhaps it was because, whether she wanted to or not, it had made her think back to that time or perhaps it was because she had been left with a strange feeling of loss when the one she bitterly resented had suddenly died.

Is it going to take a long time again? Rone had been wondering uneasily, but then Layla had superimposed her circ.u.mstances and those of that girl's; it was no wonder that she had become sympathetic towards her.

”I'll go and talk with her a little,” Rone said to Layla. ”It's alright, I'll just have a chat.”

”Be careful now.”

”Having raised a daughter, I can say this with confidence: I do have a minimum of delicacy.”

Is that so - Layla smiled in spite of herself.

When he opened the door, the girl was looking out of the window from the bed. A hedge could be seen. It was from there that the crowd of youths earlier had desperately been gathering.

”Was it noisy?” Rone asked as gently as possible.

The girl turned her gaze towards him. There were bandages wrapped around her head but she had no other obvious injuries. Looking at her anew, she was a fair-skinned girl with well-proportioned features. The slightly too-large clothes covering her body were ones he remembered Layla wearing before. Despite the fact they were somewhat ill-fitting, her still figure on the bed, bathed in the brilliant suns.h.i.+ne coming in from the window, looked to Rone like an image from a scroll.

”You are Layla's father,” the girl said in a clear voice. ”Thank you for saving me.”

”No, no, I just happened to be pa.s.sing through.”

Rone continued to talk about nothing in particular as he pretended to tidy this and that in the guestroom. Her face looked a little tired but she didn't seem to be experiencing any after-effects from her injury. Just as the doctor had said, she had simply been completely exhausted.

”You haven't asked me anything.”

”I don't mind waiting until you feel like talking. This is an easy-going village and the people who live here move unhurriedly with time and nature.”

The girl lowered her eyes slightly and seemed, with that one change in expression, to express grat.i.tude.

”My daughter will be bringing something to eat later. She is also an easy-going girl. Since she doesn't have many friends of the same age in the village, it would be a big help if you could become someone she can talk with.”

”Of course,” the girl smiled.

After he left the room, Rone gazed at the door he had just shut as though trying see through to the other side.

Yep, looks like she is no ordinary la.s.s.

Rone had served as an Imperial Guard in the capital city of Solon. He was acquainted with many sorts of people; to say nothing of the emperor, there were numerous n.o.bles, soldiers, scholars, and wealthy merchants.

That la.s.s has ”understanding”, thought Rone.

When facing a person for the first time in an unknown land, with what kind of att.i.tude should one receive them, what kind of words should one choose? What Rone meant by ”understanding” were the manners of those belonging to the highest cla.s.ses.

I should keep an eye on her for now.

And then, if he turned out to be correct, he wanted to gather information about the skirmish between the west and Mephius. There might be some relation.

If possible, Rone wanted to protect the injured man and the girl.

But their existence might be a threat to his family.

If the lives picked up with these hands, like this…

The sound of a gunshot echoed in his mind once more.

After Rone had left the guestroom, the girl gazed out of the window again.

Platinum hair glittered as the morning light washed over it. It goes without saying that she was Garbera's third princess, Vileena Owell.

After wandering lost on the mountain path and finally collapsing, she had been found by Rone.

In truth, there had been a lot that she had wanted to ask him. How did the battle between Mephius and Taúlia end? Were there any noticeable movements from either camp? Whether or not it was known that she, the royal princess, had gone missing - or put otherwise, whether or not Mephius or Garbera had issued an official statement.

But if her ident.i.ty was revealed, Rone might notify Apta immediately; and afterwards she would clearly be sent back to Mephius' capital, Solon, or to Garbera.

And then…

Resolving herself to bearing the disgrace, flying out of Apta, and bringing secret information to Taúlia would lose all meaning.

Vileena tightly gripped the edge of the blanket.

One way or another, she wanted to stop the war between Mephius and the west. Absorbed in that thought, she had even gotten Krau and Hou Ran involved and had jumped into an airs.h.i.+p. The former Imperial Guards who had served the prince were being held restrained in Apta. Emperor Guhl Mephius seemed to want to accuse Taúlia of a.s.sa.s.sinating the prince as an excuse to attack the western lands. As such, they who had testified to General Oubary's crime were a hindrance. If things were left as they were, Gowen and Hou Ran might be executed for conspiring with the west and taking part in the prince's a.s.sa.s.sination.

In that situation, she had not wanted to escape somewhere safe by herself. But that said, what could her tiny self do on her own? In fact, she had been wounded after having tried to stop the war.

Even though I was born into the royal family…

She had been saved by the kindness of strangers.

She had no influence in this land where n.o.body knew her. In fact, what would have happened to her if Rone hadn't by chance been pa.s.sing by? A starving wolf was not likely to leave her alone because she announced that ”I am a princess of Garbera”. Hunger was unbearable for royalty. Thrown out into the night, she truly had not been able to do a thing, and would have quietly stopped breathing.

She thought of how she had cried miserably at her own powerlessness.

The rights, the duties, and the power of the royal family, what are they really?

”The royal family has a duty to devote themselves to the country's affairs.”

Those were the words that her grandfather had taught her in the past. And those were the words that she herself had spoken to Mephius' crown prince in the past.

At that time, had she truly believed that?

Now that the concept was once again thrust before her, Vileena's thoughts were paralyzed.

Vileena's hand left the blanket and touched the medallion hanging at her neck.

At that moment, the door opened again and Layla appeared. On her tray was bread and a meaty soup.

”Is that some kind of amulet?” Layla asked. Her bright voice and expression must have been inherited from her father, as her smile was a lot like his.

She placed the tray near the pillow on the bed.

”Or is it a present from your lover?”

”No,” thinking that she might be suspected of hiding something, Vileena showed Layla the reverse side which did not depict Garbera's national flag. ”It was a present from me.”

”Eh? Then - it was rejected?”

Vileena laughed at her outspokenness. Layla looked embarra.s.sed.

”I'm sorry, that was rude.”

”Not at all. But… it might be something like that.”

”A man who would behave like that after receiving a present from a girl as cute as you is best forgotten fast. He definitely likes men. Do you know the Badyne faith? Apparently, the believers practice those kind of customs and…”

After getting that far, Layla leaned far out of the window.

”Hey!” She shouted.

Boys had begun to turn up at the hedge again. Waah - their voices sounded panicked, or perhaps over-excited.

”Ah!” Layla exclaimed in an oddly high-pitched voice. ”Isn't that Lennus from next door? And he even gave me flowers before, the philanderer.”

Despite herself, Vileena smiled again.

The steam wafting up from the soup was slightly warm.

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