Chapter 383: "Su Rin, You Died So Miserably

Having heard her words, Su Ming'an could only sense the irony.

"Righteousness."

...There was never any clear-cut "righteousness."

It was a belief, not a concept, dependent solely on the subjective judgments of people; there was never any objective, correct righteousness, only a "better, more suitable" righteousness. It was the result of people standing on their side of the argument.

The Princess believed that killing the traitorous Su Rin, who dared to dream of overthrowing the dynasty, was justice.

Whereas the Sea Monsters considered killing the Princess, whom everyone saw as a monster, to be justice.

To save what they deemed as the righteous side and defeat what they deemed as the unrighteous side.

Clearly,

The Sea Monsters standing on their side saw the Tulip Princess, who was eager to reclaim the throne, as "unrighteous."