Late in the 10th month, 1,546th year, Continental Calendar — Princely
Capital Van.
A little more than three weeks had passed since the army of the
Elfrieden Kingdom had come to occupy Van, the capital of the Principality
of Amidonia.
The people of Van had looked harshly on their conquerors when they'd
first arrived. However, with Souma keeping a tight rein on his soldiers,
public order had improved, and with the lily root dumplings being
distributed, the people were no longer at risk of starvation. Their distrust of
the soldiers was gradually fading as a result. The fact that the nobles and
knights who would normally have worked to foment a rebellion had all fled
the city likely helped, too.
An air of calm was beginning to take hold in the city.
Though, that said... while it would have been nice if it had been purely
calm, it seemed that the music program Souma was broadcasting had the
people of Van burning with a passion for the arts. On every street corner
there were minstrels, street musicians, and street performers of all kinds
plying their trades.
On top of that, there were those who wanted to repaint their homes to be
more colorful, and even those who wanted to produce wall murals
displaying the beautiful countenances of Juna and the loreleis, Chris the
newscaster, and Aisha, who was known for her part in hosting the program.
Things were beginning to get out of hand.
Who would have believed this had been the capital of a militaristic state
merely one month ago?
Souma called this period of Van the Amidonian Renaissance.
Sudden changes were always fraught with confusion, and in Van there
were daily conflicts over the best places to hold street performances. The
Forbidden Army troops who had been left to occupy the city were sent out
to mediate, and the soldiers of the Army and Air Force who were camped
outside the city looked on them with pity. Still, such disagreements never
led to a major riot, and Van was more or less peaceful.
However, this day began with Aisha shouting noisily. "P-Princess!"
"Eek!" Liscia shrieked.
It was morning. Liscia had been getting dressed in the room she was
using as her own when Aisha had barged in without so much as a knock at
the door. It was so sudden that Liscia froze in surprise, but when she
remembered she was in the middle of getting dressed, she continued putting
on her uniform and asked, "Wh-What is it, Aisha? Why are you so
flustered?"
"Th-That's... His Majesty... His Majesty is..." Aisha sputtered. Perhaps
because she was out of breath, she was having a hard time getting the words
out.
"Calm down," Liscia said. "Take a deep breath."
"R-Right." Aisha took a deep breath, as instructed. She swung her arms
up and down in time with each heaving breath.
Once she was sure Aisha had calmed down, Liscia tried asking again.
"So, what's going on with Souma?"
"Right," Aisha said. "I went to the governmental affairs office to greet
His Majesty like usual this morning, but he wasn't there. Instead, I found
this note he left." Aisha passed the piece of paper to Liscia.
Liscia took the piece of paper and read it over. It said, "I am going on a
journey. Please, don't look for me. - Souma Kazuya."
Liscia pressed a hand to her temple and sighed, while Aisha returned to
freaking out.
"Wh-Whatever shall we do? We must search for him at once!"
"I'm telling you, just calm down," Liscia said. "Souma's taking the day
off."
"Huh? A day off?" Aisha stared at her blankly.
"Right," Liscia said, with a nod. "He's with Tomoe. It looked like he'd
been getting pretty close to the breaking point with his workload lately, so I
suggested he take some time off. I even cleared it with Hakuya. When I did
that, Souma said, 'Well, maybe I'll just laze around in some room making
dolls, then.' It didn't sound healthy, so I asked Tomoe to drag him outside
for me."
"I heard nothing of this!" Aisha exclaimed. "I am His Majesty's
bodyguard, you realize?! Why didn't he take me with him?!"
When she saw Aisha with tears forming in her eyes, Liscia gave a shrug.
"You stand out too much. This was a primarily human country, so dark
elves stand out to begin with, and with your recent fame from the broadcast,
you're not exactly going to be able to keep a low profile."
"This was enemy territory not that long ago, you know?!" Aisha
complained. "If anything were to happen to His Majesty and Tomoe..."
"Have no fears," Liscia assured her. "They're in disguise, and Juna and a
number of elite marines will be watching over them from the shadows this
time."
"Madam Juna is accompanying them, too? Well, in that case, he should
be safe..." Aisha got that far before Juna's mature smile flashed through her
mind.
To Aisha, Juna was the ideal woman. Gorgeous, graceful, gentle... She
would have given anything to be like her. However... setting that aside,
when she imagined Juna's smile, every instinct Aisha had as a woman
began setting off alarm bells.
If we let our guards down, she's going to run off with all the best parts,
she thought.
"He will be safe... won't he?" she asked.
"..."
In truth, Liscia had been thinking the same thing, so she had nothing to
say in response.
◇ ◇ ◇
"The weather sure is nice today, huh, big brother?" Tomoe asked.
"It sure is, Tomoe," I agreed.
I was on Van's shopping street walking hand-in-hand with my honorary
little sister, the mystic wolf girl Tomoe. There had been a nigh lethal
amount of administrative work to do lately, so Liscia, unable to watch me
torment myself any longer, had suggested that I take my first day off since
that time I'd patrolled the royal capital.
I figured if I had time off, I'd rather use it to laze around, like a father on
vacation, but Liscia had said that was unhealthy and ordered little Tomoe to
drag me into the castle town.
It was a place that had been enemy territory until just recently, so we
were lightly disguised today. My facial features were supposedly similar to
those of humans from the Nine-Headed Dragon Archipelago, so I was
dressed like a traveler from there. I wore a traveling cape and conical straw
hat, making me look like Kitakaze Kozou. Tomoe, meanwhile, wore a white
robe with a hood, like a white mage from some game. Honestly, I'd
wondered if it was worth the trouble of disguising ourselves to go out, but...
"Wowwie, there are so many different shops, big brother!"
...when I saw Tomoe so excited, nothing else mattered anymore.
"If you see one that catches your fancy, why don't we go inside?" I
asked.
"Okay! ♪" she sang.
When Tomoe gave that energetic reply, I patted her on the head. The hair
between her two wolf ears was fluffy and soft to the touch. It felt amazing.
Ahh... So soothing.
I tried talking to the person who was on the opposite side of me from
Tomoe, too. "Juna, are you okay with that?"
"Yes," Juna said, giving me a soft smile. "If it pleases you, Master
Kazuya."
For this undercover vacation, instead of Aisha, I was supposed to have
Juna and around ten of her marines watching over me from the shadows.
...Yes, from the shadows.
"Um, Juna? Why are you wrapping yourself around my arm?" I asked.
Juna had wrapped herself around the arm I wasn't using to pat Tomoe's
head. She was incredibly close. Right now, Juna was wearing a longsword
on her back, with breastplate armor over top of her clothes. With her
dressed up like a typical female adventurer, I didn't feel those voluptuous
things pressed up against me. Still, I could feel Juna's warmth directly on
my arm.
Juna seemed to see how flustered I was, and she flashed me a
mischievous smile. "Oh, is it wrong for me to do this?"
"It's not a matter of right or wrong... Weren't you supposed to be
protecting me from the shadows?" I asked.
"We're protecting you like we're supposed to," Juna said. "Right now,
my elite marines are protecting you in the shadows. They're circling ahead
of us to watch for any potential blind spots, too."
"No, but... isn't your face out there, too?" I protested.
The people of Amidonia should know Juna's face from the music
program. Even if she wasn't as recognizable as the dark elf Aisha, Juna
wasn't hiding her face at all right now. Wasn't someone going to notice her?
When I asked her that, Juna giggled. "It should be fine. I was wearing
makeup then. I should have given off a very different impression."
Now that she mentioned it... Juna was only wearing the bare essentials
of makeup today. Whenever she stood on stage or before the jewel as a
lorelei, she must use charming makeup that would be recognizable from a
distance. The Juna I saw now had a natural beauty, but just taking off her
makeup made her look younger than usual. Right now, she actually looked
her age.
"That's right," Juna said, as if reading my mind. "...The reason I look
like a mature adult is because of that makeup, got it?"
"No, I'm pretty sure the way you act is part of it, too..." I said. "So it did
bother you?"
"I am a girl, after all," she said. "Does it bother you linking arms with
me, sire?"
Juna wore an expression that seemed somewhat uncertain. That face...
She just wasn't playing fair.
"It's not that it bothers me," I said. "Bring it on."
"Hee hee," she giggled. "Thank you."
"Whew... You sure are amazing, Juna," Tomoe said. "I wish I could be
like you."
"...Don't you think you're fine just the way you are, Tomoe?" Juna said
pointedly to the girl who was looking up at her with great respect. Tomoe
was cute, and she might develop into a beauty like Juna as she grew up.
Once she grew up and learned how to play games with men, it could be the
birth of an incredible little tease.
While I was thinking about that, I ended up walking with Tomoe's hand
in mine, and Juna wrapped around my other arm. Nobody realized our true
identities, but the jealous looks from passing men and the whispering of
housewives trying to guess at the relationship between the three of us
started to make my stomach hurt.
In order to distract myself from it, I tried talking to Juna. "Well... Where
to? Unlike in Parnam, Van doesn't have much in it, so there aren't many
places I want to go patrol."
"When you're out on the town on your day off, I don't know that you
should be thinking of it as patrolling." Juna laughed wryly at my
workaholic thought process.
Sorry for being so work-obsessed, I thought.
Then, Juna took a peek over at Tomoe before whispering in my ear,
"How about giving Tomoe some new clothes as a present? Since she's your
honorary little sister, you can call it a gift between family."
"Ohh, there's an idea."
Now that she mentioned it, ever since I'd accepted Tomoe as my little
sister (though, technically, she was Liscia's adopted little sister and my
future sister-in-law), I had been busy with administrative work and hadn't
been able to act like a proper big brother. Tomoe had been working hard on
negotiating with the rhinosauruses and shoujou, so it might be nice to spoil
her rotten today.
"Juna, do you know a good place for that?" I asked.
"I've done my research," she said. "Leave it to me." She placed her
hand on her chest, bowing slightly.
Juna recommended a clothing store on a street corner.
The little sign out front had words meaning "The Silver Deer" written
on it in a stylish font. From what was on display in the show window, it
looked like it dealt not just in clothing, but in shoes and apparel, too. It was
hard to judge with my untrained eyes, but the products on display all
appeared to be of high quality. It was very much a high-class shop. The sort
of place a guy like me, who had always bought his clothes on sale from the
major retailers, would never come to.
Incidentally, ever since coming to this country, I had worn whatever I
could provide myself or we already had on hand. Lately, the work I'd done
creating and maintaining the Little Musashibo dolls had improved my
sewing skills, so I was making everything but my underwear myself. I
technically had what would be considered a highly-paid position, so I could
afford to make custom orders, but I had no interest in indulging myself with
luxuries now. The shirt and pants I had on under this traveling cape, as well
as the hooded robe that Tomoe was wearing—both of them had been made
by me.
"You can even make stuff like this. You're amazing, big brother,"
Tomoe said.
When Tomoe showered me with that look of respect, I could feel my
head swelling with pride. "I can't buy the clothes I was used to wearing in
my own world here, after all. Though I'm doing it half as a hobby," I said to
hide my embarrassment, then looked to The Silver Deer. "Still, this is a
surprise. A stylish store like this in Amidonia, of all places."
"I hear it originally dealt in men's clothing and apparel," said Juna.
"After that broadcast, when women started dressing up, they began stocking
clothing and accessories for women as well."
It seemed their selection changed in response to customer demand.
"Still, it's quite a selection, don't you think?" I asked. "Where do you
suppose they order it all from?"
"There are trade guilds," said Juna. "While they may not be able to do
much about food, which is in short supply, the guild can arrange for them to
buy any other kind of goods. For the merchants, Elfrieden and Amidonia
are both sources of goods and also valued customers."
"How crafty..."
Of course, it was those crafty merchants who maintained the balance of
supply and demand... but that was neither here nor there, and I figured we
shouldn't loiter out front forever.
"Well, how about we head inside?" I asked.
When I went inside, gesturing for the two of them to follow, a man with
ash gray hair who was dressed like a bartender was arranging products on
the shelves. He seemed like the sort of middle-aged gentleman that the
aroma of black tea would suit well. When he noticed us, he stood with his
feet together, brought a hand to his breast, and then bowed. "Welcome. Are
you travelers, perhaps?"
"Ah... Erm..." I stuttered a bit. While revealing my true identity was out
of the question, how was I to explain the combination of a man in a conical
straw hat, a beautiful female adventurer, and a wolf girl in a white hood?
While I was wracking my brains to come up with something, Juna stepped
forward.
"Yes. These two personages come from a kingdom in the Nine-Headed
Dragon Archipelago. They are Kazuya, the heir to a crêpe fabric merchant
in the Echigo Kingdom, and his younger sister Tomoe. I am their humble
servant, Silvia. Master Kazuya will one day inherit the family business, and
so we are traveling across many countries to broaden his horizons."
She was very eloquent.
Nice work, Juna, I thought. And, wait, I'm impressed you actually
remembered my nonsense backstory about being the heir to a crêpe fabric
merchant in the Echigo Kingdom. Even I had completely forgotten that
backstory. Also, who is Silvia supposed to be?
The middle-aged man didn't show any particular interest. "I see," he
said with a gentle nod. "I apologize for taking so long to introduce myself. I
am Sebastian, the proprietor of this establishment."
With that name, are you sure you aren't the butler, rather than the
proprietor? I thought for a moment, but I reminded myself that not all
Sebastians have to be butlers.
Smiling, Sebastian asked, "And what may I help you with today?"
"Well... do you have anything that would look good on my little sister
here?" I asked,
"Whuh?!" Tomoe reacted with surprise.
I put my hand on top of her head, patting her from over top of her hood.
"Well, that's how it is, so if you see anything you like, let me know, okay?"
"Um... But..."
"It's fine. Let me act like a proper big brother every once in a while."
With those words, I pushed Tomoe off towards Juna.
Juna nodded to me, taking Tomoe by the hand and going to look at the
wares on display. Tomoe was stiff at first, but she was a girl. As she looked
at the different items with Juna, I could feel her gradually getting into
shopping.
Now, this left me as a man with little to do. I enjoyed watching the
beautiful woman and little girl enjoying themselves shopping for a while,
but I got tired of just waiting, and wandered around the store myself.
They had clothing, shoes, accessories, and even makeup. There was a
really wide selection of items here. Truly, it was the 109 of Amidonia...
Well, not that I'd ever been to 109, or even to Shibuya, for that matter.
Perhaps because the women of Van had begun awakening to fashion, more
than eighty percent of the sales floor was devoted to women's products.
This shop had supposedly catered only to men before, but now it had coats
for them, and that was about it.
As I was looking around, I found a number of products that interested
me.
The first was lipstick. It was a color lighter than light pink.
The second was a hair accessory. It was made with gold and little stones,
making it seem like a quality piece, but it had a ladybug motif, making it
seem incongruously childish.
The third was a choker. It was made of blue leather with silver foil
scattered around like stars. The clasp was made of gold, with a design like a
bird spreading its wings.
They all looked good.
Then, finally... the last thing that caught my eye was a pair of tiny
loafers meant for a young girl. They had clips with a ribbon motif on them,
and were absolutely adorable.
These loafers... I think they might look perfect on Tomoe, I thought.
"Hey, Tomo—"
"Master Kazuya."
Just as I was about to call out to them, Sebastian stopped me. I turned
around, thinking it suspicious, and Sebastian said, "Pardon me for the
sudden interruption," with a bow. "There was something I've been wanting
to ask you, Master Kazuya. Would that be acceptable?"
"...What is it?" I asked.
"Let us suppose that, on the battlefield, the generals had gathered for a
war council."
...What? Battlefield? War council? Why's he bringing this up all of a
sudden? I thought.
"Let us also suppose that the first idea brought up at that war council
was a good one. If you were the supreme commander of that army, would
you immediately adopt that idea?"
"...I wouldn't," I said. "I'd think there might be better ideas."
"Precisely," he said. "That is why, if you were one of the generals, and
you wished to have your idea adopted, rather than submit it at once, you
should wait until the council comes to an impasse."
"I see... I see..."
"What I mean to say is, the games played between men and women are
also a battle."
"...Ah," I said. "I get you."
I finally understood what Sebastian was trying to say. He was saying I
should wait a little longer before pushing the loafers I thought would look
good on Tomoe.
That was fair enough, because Juna and Tomoe were enjoying looking
through the other products. If I brought them something good now, it would
be like pouring a bucket of cold water on them when they were having a
good time. If they chose to go with it, their fun time would end, and if they
choose not to, it'd be awkward for me. Neither of those was what they
wanted.
I was deeply grateful for Sebastian's consideration. "You, sir, are a
wonderful tactician."
"I am honored by your praise." Sebastian placed his right hand on his
belly, respectfully bowing to me. It was a theatrical gesture, but it was
smoothly delivered, so it didn't offend me.
Then, something occurred to me.
"By the way, you just used a war council analogy..." Could he be aware
of our true identities? I brought it up because I thought he might be, but
Sebastian hurriedly shook his head.
"Oh, my... Pardon me for that. Until just the other day, I had only dealt
with the nobility, you see. I can't seem to break the habit. If I offended you
somehow, I apologize. I have a regular customer who is fond of such
banter."
"...No, it's no big deal," I said. "Is that regular of yours a soldier?"
"No, no, more like an adorable little tanuki," Sebastian said.
A little tanuki, huh. Between the proprietor I couldn't get a read on, and
this person he called a little tanuki... I was intrigued. But, setting that aside
for now, I bought a few things quietly so that the other two wouldn't notice.
After that, I waited for the two of them to finish looking things over, then
recommended those cute loafers to Tomoe. Tomoe was hesitant to accept,
as I expected she might be, but she seemed like she liked them, so I halfforced them on her as a present.
Tomoe held the box with the loafers in it tight to her chest. "Th-Thank
you... big brother... I'll treasure them..."
As she said that, tears formed in her eyes, so I patted her head gently.
Maybe now we'd been able to act a little like brother and sister. If I thought
about it, the only ones I'd been able to call family before were my
grandparents. But now there was Liscia, there was Tomoe, and there were
Aisha and Juna.
...Yeah, it's nice being able to feel connected to people. As I patted my
little sister's head, that thought really began to sink in for me.
Juna was standing next to us, watching with a smile.
"Ah, Juna," I said. "Hold on a second."
It was just past noon when we left Sebastian's store. While we were on
the move, looking for some place to maybe get lunch, I had Juna stop for a
second.
"Is something the matter?" she asked.
I handed Juna a little bag as she looked at me quizzically. "I wanted to
give this to you."
"To me?"
Juna accepted it, opening it up, and inside was that ladybug shaped
accessory. It was one of the ones I'd secretly bought earlier.
"Huh?!" she cried. "Um, what is..."
"You're always doing so much for me," I said. "It's my way of saying
thanks."
"No, I couldn't possibly accept something like this. I don't have the
right..."
"Pass it here." I took the ladybug from Juna, fixing it in her hair.
Yep, it looked just like I'd imagined it would. It was far too childish a
design for the usual mature Juna, but when the younger-looking Juna of
today wore it, she looked like a young girl trying a little too hard to be
mature. It was cute.
"It really suits you, Juna," I said.
"Ohh..."
When I acted like I was the more mature one, Juna uncharacteristically
blushed. I felt like I'd finally won a small victory over her, the one who
always seemed more mature. Juna whipped her head to the side and looked
away.
"Sire. If you are going to give presents to women, make sure you give
them to the princess and anyone else simultaneously. In your position,
you'll probably end up taking multiple wives. If that happens, you can't
play favorites. You have to either love all of them equally, or accept that
marriage is just another political tool and love none of them. Anyway, not
causing discord between the women in your life is another of your duties,
okay?"
Juna spoke rapidly, trying to distract me. That she spoke so much was
proof of her embarrassment.
"It's okay," I said. "I have something for Liscia and Aisha, too."
When it came to accessories, Liscia tended to prefer ones she could wear
in battle over ones that were just pretty. I'd chosen the blue leather choker
for her because it was stylish, yet wouldn't get in the way. For Aisha, who,
like Juna, was always helping me out, I planned to give her that lipstick I
found which would go well with that healthy brown skin of hers. While
hosting the music program, it seemed like she'd been worried about how
feminine she was.
"So you don't need to worry about that," I explained.
"I-Is that a fact...?" she asked.
"It is. And by the way, Juna?"
"...What is it?" she asked.
"It's not 'sire,' it's 'Master Kazuya,' remember?"
"Ah..."
For a little while now, Juna had been calling me "sire" instead of
"Master Kazuya." It looked like when she started talking fast at me, she
really was trying to hide her embarrassment.
Juna had a sullen look on her red face. "Master Kazuya... is a
surprisingly big bully."
"Is he now?" I asked.
"Yes. And quite the ladies' man," she said, wrapping herself around my
arm again. Even more tightly than last time.
Over my shoulder I could see Juna's embarrassed smile, with that hair
piece shining above it.
"Wow... there are lots of little shops out, big brother!" Tomoe cried
gleefully, seeing all the street stalls lined up in the plaza.
In our search for a place to get lunch, Juna had led us to the plaza with
the Jewel Voice Broadcast receiver. This place had been an open field only
a month ago, but now it was packed with stalls selling food and assorted
goods. We had only just set foot in the plaza, but we could already hear the
owners of stalls calling in customers, and customers haggling for a better
deal.
The faces in the crowd were diverse, too. Housewives were here to buy
ingredients for dinner. A group of craftsmen was here for lunch. Even offduty soldiers from the kingdom's forces were here to buy snacks.
Must be from the Army, I thought to myself. The Army and Air Force
soldiers camped outside were allowed to enter the city when they were off
duty.
I could also see a large number of non-humans who looked like travelers
or adventurers. Race, job, nationality... none of it mattered here. It was one
big hodgepodge of people of all ages and genders.
"...How did it end up like this?" I wondered.
"Thanks to Sir Poncho, Van's food crisis has been alleviated
considerably, but only so many people can produce food good enough to
support a restaurant," Juna explained. "However, the people who think they
can manage a food stall gather here. This is the largest marketplace in all of
Van now."
"In an out-of-the-way place like this?" I asked. "Wouldn't they be better
off on the main street?"
"It's because the receiver for the Jewel Voice Broadcast is here."
"Oh, I get it..."
Ever since that music program had aired, as a test, we had been
broadcasting Chris Tachyon's news program during the day and the singing
program at night. The customers hadn't gathered because there were stalls
here; the stalls had gathered because there were people here waiting to
watch the Jewel Voice Broadcast.
It's kind of like the black market in post-war Japan, I thought. Maybe
it'll end up like Ameyoko someday.
Juna and the loreleis only appeared on the music program on weekends.
On every other day of the week, we ran a program where contestants
hoping to become loreleis competed. The Jewel Voice Broadcast was
always live, so if the loreleis had been the only ones who ever appeared on
the program, it would have put too much stress on them.
If anyone who appeared on that contest program was deemed to have a
gift for singing, they could be newly instated as a singer like Margarita, or,
if they were attractive, a lorelei. If they were male, they could debut as one
of the new class of male idols: the singing knights, orpheuses.
The program was simulcast in two countries, Elfrieden and Amidonia,
and it could be seen in any city where there was a receiver. The reaction
might be different in Amidonia, or the cities in Elfrieden might be reacting
similarly to this.
I'll need to estimate the economic impact of this later, I thought with a
grin. That was when Tomoe pulled on my coat.
"Big brother, I'm hungry," she said.
"Oh, right," Juna said. "Well, how about we get something from one of
the stalls?"
"Yeah! ♪" Tomoe sang.
"Then that's what we'll do," said Juna.
The three of us looked around the different stalls. Forty percent of the
stalls sold food, twenty percent sold various accessories, twenty percent
sold equipment, while the remainder dealt in other things.
It looked like a lot of the food stalls were selling skewers. Van was a
long way from the sea, so they could only get their hands on river fish, and
with the food crisis, grains and vegetables were in short supply. For meat,
on the other hand, all they had to do was hunt wild animals.
They were likely selling meat that had been hunted outside the city
walls. Because of that, none of the stalls openly stated what kind of meat
they were selling. This was worse than them mislabeling their meat to sell it
at a higher price; it was a total mystery what creatures any of it came from.
"It feels like a gamble buying any of the skewers..." I muttered.
Horned rabbit meat, I could probably handle, but giant rat and lizard
meat, well... I think my sanity stat would take some serious loss from eating
that. Besides, if they had just hunted whatever they could get their hand on
from the nearby fields, there was no telling what diseases or parasites it
might have. There were no food sanitation laws in this world, and none of
the cooks were licensed.
I'll need to institute all of that, too, eventually... I thought.
"It's fine," Juna said with a very lovely smile. "I had the marines come
here ahead of us and serve as poison tasters. Allow me to guide you to a
safe stall."
"Poison tasters?! Not taste testers?!"
"If anything were to happen to you, it would be a national crisis," she
said. "It's only natural that we would test anything from the market for
poison. Your body is no longer yours alone, you know?"
What, am I pregnant now? I wanted to quip, but I got what she was
trying to say. I didn't know if I'd be able to use Living Poltergeists if I was
sick from food poisoning. If I couldn't, that would mean the country's
administration would be short several instances of me.
...Yeah, it looked like poison tasters were going to be a necessity, for my
people's sake. I'd just have to accept it.
"And? What was the result of the poison tasting?" I asked.
"One person complained of stomach pain and dropped out."
"Dispatch a messenger to the castle!" I exclaimed. "Whenever a dish
including meat or fish is sold, the ingredients must be listed in the store!
Inform them that if they fail to do so, or if there is an error in the
ingredients displayed, their business will be shut down!"
"Understood." Juna sent one of the marines who were guarding us to run
off that message to the castle.
This was the moment the Elfrieden Kingdom saw the beginnings of its
first food safety law.
I intended to expand the range of things that required their ingredients
be posted in due time, but before that, I wanted to clamp down on meat
fraud. If there were bacteria or parasites, it could be a matter of life and
death.
"O, fallen marines," I mourned. "I will not let your deaths be in vain."
"No, they're not dead. It's just food poisoning," Juna said, rolling her
eyes.
No, no, even food poisoning can be a matter of life and death, I'll have
you know, I thought. Once, my grandfather had eaten some raw eggs that
were past their expiration date. He got salmonella, and was hospitalized for
days. Fortunately, it wasn't too serious, but his refusal to throw out a few
eggs that were ten yen apiece had cost him tens of thousands of yen in
hospital fees. Grandma had teased him about that for a good long time.
Well, setting that aside for now, we bought our skewers from a place
Juna suggested, along with some mixed juice from a fruit seller, and sat
down on a simple bench to eat.
Tomoe chomped right down on her skewer. "Yeah, this is delicious, big
brother."
"Yeah. This meat is pretty good," I agreed.
"The juice is delicious, too, Master Kazuya," said Juna.
The meat was nice and juicy. It wasn't that far off from the beef skewers
that were sold at festivals, so I asked what meat it was. It turned out it was
from a bigbull, a big, buffalo-like animal.
The juice wasn't chilled, but it was getting to be late in autumn now, so
it didn't feel too warm. It was a bit sour, but that was refreshing after eating
the greasy meat skewer. With our stomachs now full, we took a breather and
relaxed for a bit.
Tomoe started nodding off next to me, so I decided to let her have a nap.
Tomoe rested her head in my lap, she curled into a ball, and her breathing
became shallow. When I petted her head, it was silky smooth, like a real
dog's fur.
"Hee hee, isn't she just the cutest?" Juna said as she peered at Tomoe's
sleeping face. Then, moving in close enough that our shoulders touched,
she quietly whispered with a sad look on her face, "I hope these peaceful
days last forever..."
"Please don't go saying things that trip event flags like that," I said.
"You know that can't happen, right?"
Juna nodded. "The Imperial Army is almost here. They number nearly
50,000."
"50,000? That's fewer than I thought," I said.
We had a force of 45,000 troops from the Elfrieden Royal Army
gathered in Van now, so our forces were more or less equal. Of course, once
Amidonia's troops were added into the equation, they'd no doubt had the
superior force, but I had expected them to come with three times our
number.
For the Gran Chaos Empire, which had called for mankind to unite
against the threat of the Demon Lord's Domain, I highly doubted that they
wanted to open a new front against us, but if they'd brought enough troops
to make it possible for them to take Van, it would have worked to intimidate
us.
And yet, Juna shook her head. "Most likely, the Amidonians were
hesitant to allow that. They must have been worried that if the Empire came
with a huge army, there was a risk they'd take this country for themselves."
"As the country that issued the Mankind Declaration, I somehow doubt
the Empire would do that, though, you know?" I said.
If they said they wouldn't recognize any changes in borders on one
hand, and then launched a war of invasion on the other, the Mankind
Declaration wouldn't be worth the paper it was written on. If that happened,
they would lose the trust of the countries in their alliance, and the Empire's
strategy of uniting mankind in the face of the Demon Lord's Domain would
collapse.
"I mean, that's exactly why the Empire offered to mediate," I added.
"Amidonia has already circumvented the Mankind Declaration," said
Juna. "Having betrayed the trust of the Empire themselves, they may be
nervous about being betrayed in turn."
"...Like being caught in their own web of lies, huh."
They had been caught in their own trap. The principality had acted
against the wishes of the Empire, but they had to cling to its authority now
that they had found themselves in a crisis. They must have felt somewhat
guilty about that.
On top of that, nobody respects opportunists, so they had lost the trust of
other countries. They had to be trembling with fear that the Empire would
abandon them.
"It makes you want to roll your eyes a bit... but it's convenient for us," I
said. "If there's a rift between the principality and the Empire, there may be
room for us to act."
"Hee hee hee, it's time for our king to show off his skills," said Juna.
"...I wish you wouldn't put so much pressure on me, you know?" I
asked.
"Oh, my, and here I thought you were Master Kazuya right now?" she
responded playfully.
She probably wanted to get back at me for earlier. That was Juna for you
—just when you thought you had a leg up on her, she'd turn things back
around.
"Good day, everyone. It's time for News Elfrieden."
Then, suddenly, we heard Chris Tachyon's voice.
It looked like it was time for the afternoon news broadcast. When I
looked up, the image of Chris reading out the news was displayed on the
mist in the air.
Wow... So this is what our broadcasts look like to the people in town, I
thought. This was my first time seeing it on one of the fountain receivers.
With the screen being as big as a movie theater's, it made quite an impact.
"Now, our first story of the day. The new coastal city under construction
in Eastern Elfrieden, Venetinova, is currently nearing completion. With
Venetinova in place, shipping by land and sea will become more efficient,
allow for the faster delivery of commodities to..."
This news would had been gathered from all around the Elfrieden
Kingdom (which included Van), using messenger kuis like the one Aisha
used to stay in contact with the God-Protected Forest. (Messenger kuis were
birds, like messenger pigeons. Using their homing instinct and their ability
to detect the waves emitted by their master at long distances, they allowed a
specific individual and location to contact each other.) Their strength was
that even mountain villages that didn't receive Jewel Voice Broadcasts
could still receive information. However, unlike the Jewel Voice Broadcast,
which could communicate information in real time, that information would
come a day or two late.
For instance, if an incident occurred in Lagoon City in the far northeast
of Elfrieden, the information wouldn't be directly delivered to Van. Instead,
it would wait for the kuis that carried news to each city at regular intervals.
Then, when the kui carried the news to another city, other kuis would leave
that city to bring the news to other cities. The kuis had to fly long distances,
so this was to protect against communication being cut off if a kui was
attacked by a predator en route. By the way, urgent news would be
delivered not by messenger kui, but by wyvern riders.
Because of that, it wasn't possible to deliver all the news that happened
in a day on that same day.
"Now, onto our next story. In the early hours of yesterday morning, a
minor fire broke out in Van..."
From there, Chris reported the various accidents and incidents that had
occurred in the kingdom, followed by information on how to cook lily root
dumplings and other useful information for people's daily lives.
As for myself, I thought it would be convenient if we could incorporate
a weather forecast into the program, but that seemed like it would be quite
difficult. There was a certain amount of weather lore in this world, and
there were people who could predict the weather by reading the clouds
based off many long years of experience. However, as I just mentioned,
without a high-speed means of communication, we couldn't transmit that
information in real time.
News about typhoons can be a matter of life and death, so I'd like to
figure out something... I thought.
As I was thinking about that, I heard a sudden sigh.
"To think they'd use the Jewel Voice Broadcast like this..."
In front of me, a girl dressed like an adventurer stood with her back
facing me. She stood with her back straight, her airy golden ponytail
swaying behind her. For a moment, I thought she looked a lot like Liscia,
but this girl had her hair tied back in a higher position, and Liscia's hair was
medium-short now. The girl turned to show me her pretty face in profile.
"We absolutely must implement this system in our country," she said.
"When I return, I'll draw up a proposal for it. Still, just how would you
come up with such an advanced idea?"
She asked me that with a straight face.
What's this, out of nowhere? I was thinking, when Juna stood up beside
me. Then she placed herself between the girl and me.
"Juna?" I asked.
"Be careful," Juna cautioned as she stood there to protect me. She had a
grim look on her face, and it was apparent from her tone of voice that she
was worried. "This girl is an accomplished warrior. It's regrettable that
Aisha isn't here. Even if I were ready to die taking her down, I don't know
that I could stop her..."
"Is she that strong?" I asked.
Seeing the cautious reaction from Juna, the girl with the ponytail
grinned. "You needn't worry, I have no hostile intent, Lorelei Juna Doma."
Juna inhaled sharply. "You know me..."
"Of course," she said. "I approached you because I'm aware of who you
are. We have agents of our own, after all."
That means she knows who I am, too, huh, I thought.
She must have planned to make contact here knowing that I would be
coming in disguise. This had happened because the establishment of an
intelligence corps for the kingdom had been delayed by my doubts in the
personnel I had to run it.
But, if she says she has no hostile intent...
"You're with the Empire?" I asked.
"Yes," the girl said, bringing a hand to her chest and bowing her head.
"It's a pleasure to meet you, Sir Souma Kazuya. I am the younger sister of
Empress Maria Euphoria of the Gran Chaos Empire, and the one who
handles military affairs in her stead, Jeanne Euphoria."
I whispered to Juna, "What happened to our guards?"
"It seems she has guards of her own, so they can't move," answered
Juna.
"That would be why she came alone, huh," I said. "...Take care of
Tomoe for me."
I left Tomoe, who was groggy from being suddenly shaken awake, with
Juna and stood facing Jeanne Euphoria. She had been in the reports I'd
received. There was a princess who handled military affairs under the Saint
of the Empire, Empress Maria Euphoria; and, as Maria was currently
unwed, she was also the first in the line of succession. This must be her
sister, I reasoned.
"Does Madam Maria's younger sister have some business in our
country?" I asked.
I made a point of talking down to her. Because our country hadn't signed
the Mankind Declaration, I didn't have to pay respects to Empress Maria as
my leader. In other words, as both of us were leaders of independent
nations, my rank was equal to Maria's. And seeing as Jeanne was the
younger sister of the empress, her rank was that of a vassal, and so I was
above her. I had no desire to put on airs with my own vassals, but when
dealing with foreigners, it was important that our positions be made clear.
Jeanne responded as if that were perfectly natural. "No particular
business. I simply wished to see how the person I'll be negotiating with
rules for myself, but my agents received information that you would be
sneaking into the castle town today, so I thought I might as well come
introduce myself."
So she hadn't originally planned to meet me. She'd just happened to
learn I was taking a day off while she was here, so she'd attempted to make
contact.
"Still, it was quite bold of you to come into Van while we're occupying
it," I said.
"I'm the type that only believes what she's seen with her own two eyes,
after all," Jeanne replied. "The rumors about you have reached as far as the
Empire, many of them unsubstantiated, so I wanted to find out for myself."
Rumors? There are rumors about me in the Empire? I thought.
"What sort of rumors would those be?" I asked.
"They say things like: you're 'the brilliant ruler who rescued an
economy on the brink of collapse,' or that you 'invented ways of preparing
foods that there had been no custom of eating before and saved the country
from a food crisis,' or that you 'demonstrated unparalleled strength in
battle, mowing down swarms of enemies one after another'... and more."
"There's been a lot of embellishment along the way, huh," I commented.
Not one of those things had been accomplished by my strength alone.
The economic restructuring had been the bureaucrats' hard work, and
gathering the ingredients and teaching us how to prepare them had been
Poncho's accomplishment. As for the war, I'd only set the armies in motion,
then left the fighting to stronger people. In the end, if you were to name one
thing I'd done, "I delegated tasks to people who could handle them" would
be it.
"Oh, and there were rumors that you were an 'insatiable sex fiend,' too,"
Jeanne added.
"Wait, hold on!"
Who're you calling a sex fiend?!
"Where did those rumors come from?!" I exclaimed.
"The rumor says: 'Despite being betrothed to the beautiful daughter of
the former king, he gathered beauties from around the kingdom to select a
concubine,' or something like that. Is Madam Juna here not the one chosen
to be your concubine?"
What a horrible misunderstanding! They must have been talking about
the Elfrieden Pretty Girl Grand Prix I'd run as part of my search for talented
personnel. When I'd said I was searching for people with any gift, there had
been a lot of applications in the fields of martial arts, beauty, and arts. All
I'd done was create a tournament format for them to compete in.
I hadn't even come up with the plan for Project Lorelei at that point.
Come to think of it, at the time there had been rumors that "The beauty
tournament might be for the king to find mistresses," and the nobles had all
tried to send their relatives to participate. Had other countries seen it the
same way?
"A-A concubine, am I...? Well, yes, I did know there were rumors to that
effect," Juna said, her face turning red.
Was she serious?
I hadn't known there were rumors like that... and it was kind of hard to
accept it. Ever since I had taken the throne, I had been struggling under
such a murderous workload that even my relations with Liscia had stayed
completely chaste. Actually, it was a bit late to say this now, but my
relationship with Liscia had skipped over a lot of important steps, hadn't it?
We were betrothed to be married, and yet we hadn't even been on a proper
date, let alone kissed.
While I was thinking about all that, Jeanne looked at me pensively.
"Hm... If that rumor was false, I suppose I can't use that method."
"What method?" I asked.
"Well, if you were a lecherous king, I thought if I had my gorgeous
sister welcome you and ask really nicely, you might accept our requests
quite easily."
"What were you planning to make the Saint of the Empire do?!" I
yelped.
"It seems my sister is not overly fond of that 'saint' title, but... maybe
men find her being a 'saint' quite appealing?" she asked.
"Well... I can sort of see that," I said. "The Saint of the Empire, Maria"...
The words themselves had an incredible impact. For one thing, if a woman
is being called a saint, it makes you want to see her. It raises the expectation
that she's beautiful and noble.
...Wait, I had that title of "hero," too, now that I thought about it. Even
though I'd been summoned as a hero from another world, I hadn't done
anything particularly heroic, so I'd totally forgotten.
"Titles, hm?" Juna asked. "Do you think they find 'lorelei' appealing,
too?"
"Why are you getting in on this, Juna?!" I cried.
"Oh, no... I just wondered..."
Jeanne giggled. "Hee hee! You're more fun than I thought you'd be."
Jeanne was watching us banter with a smile.
"We're not doing it because we want to amuse you, though," I said.
"No, no, the closeness between you and your vassals is a mark of the
stability in your country, I'm sure," she said. "We couldn't get away with
that back home."
"...It's different in the Empire?" I asked.
"Our territory is needlessly large, and the empress's power is great," said
Jeanne. "They call her a saint and half-worship her, so everyone is very
reserved around her. About the only people she has that she can talk with
casually are our family. On top of that, my sister takes being an empress
entirely too seriously, so she tries to treat everyone equally, which leaves
her in a position where she can't open up to anyone."
Jeanne shrugged her shoulders and looked at the crowd in the plaza.
"It was the same with this. Even though there's no benefit to us in
helping Amidonia after they ignored the Mankind Declaration..."
"For the younger sister of Madam Maria, with all the ideals she tries to
uphold, you take an awfully realistic perspective," I said.
"If the elder sister is a dreamer, the younger needs to be firmly
grounded," Jeanne said with a wry smile.
Hm... It felt like Jeanne was closer to my way of thinking than Maria.
Instead of embracing lofty ideals, she was the sort who could come up with
pragmatic solutions.
When you hold up ideals, people gather around you. However, if you
hold up those ideals for too long, sooner or later, you lose your path.
Someone has to be there to keep an eye on the ground in front of you.
Having the more realistic Jeanne by her side must have been what let Maria
keep holding up her ideals.
The Empire had the largest population on the continent. I didn't know
how many extremely talented people they had there, but in terms of relative
numbers, they must have had far more than my country.
Jeanne pointed to image of Chris projected in the air above us. "By the
way, that's an incredible way of using the Jewel Voice Broadcast. By
releasing information regularly, you use it to help alleviate the fears of your
people. Do you mind if we do the same back home?"
"...Do as you please," I said.
I mean, it wasn't like it would be hard to imitate. It wasn't something I
could forbid her from doing, either.
"Thank you," said Jeanne. "How do you come up with such advanced
ideas?"
"This is advanced?" I asked. "It was pretty normal in the world I came
from."
"The world you came from... Of course." Jeanne's smile suddenly
vanished.
As I was wondering what was up, Jeanne straightened her posture and
bowed deeply. She bent over until her hips were at a right angle. It was a
deep enough bow that, if the custom existed in this world, she might have
done a formal kowtow instead.
I was befuddled by her suddenly lower profile. "Wh-What's wrong?
This is so sudden."
"You've been horribly inconvenienced because of us," said Jeanne. "In
my absent sister's place, I apologize."
"You're apologizing?" I asked, startled.
When Jeanne raised her face, she bore a pained expression. "This is
about the hero summoning. It was our request that caused the Elfrieden
Kingdom to summon you to this world. My sister Maria deeply regrets that
you, who had done us no wrong, were cut off from your homeland and
called to this world. Please, forgive us."
With those words, Jeanne lowered her head once more.
...Oh, is that all? I thought.
"Raise your head. It's all in the past."
"But..." she said.
"Yeah, at first, I was mad, and I worked my hardest not to get turned
over to the Empire," I said. "Now, though... when I think about it more
calmly, the Empire has no reason to want a hero."
At first, I thought they'd wanted a hero to fight back against the threat of
the Demon Lord's Domain, but the more I came to understand this world,
the more I realized that probably hadn't been it.
Right now, the Demon Lord's Domain had stopped expanding. The
expansion of the border meant that the monsters that came south were
spread further, and the various countries could handle them. It was a
stalemate; with neither side able to push forward, the situation was more or
less stable.
In other words, the Empire wasn't in a situation where it would want a
hero. A superpower like the Empire had had no need to cling to a
summoning ritual that the kingdom itself wouldn't have been sure they
could pull off in the first place.
Besides, when they'd summoned a hero, they'd gotten me.
While a guy who could use incredible magic with power comparable to
a weapon of mass destruction would be one thing, or a guy who could equip
invincible sword and armor, a guy from another world with a power that
happened to make administrative tasks a little easier wasn't going to be of
any interest to the Empire with its massive population and the large number
of personnel it had as a result.
However, that being the case, the Empire had asked the kingdom to
perform the hero summoning. After considering the matter with Hakuya for
some time, we had come to a certain conclusion. It was...
"That was an attempt to show consideration, right?" I asked. "Towards a
kingdom that couldn't pay the war subsidies."
Jeanne reacted with startled surprise. "...Yes," she said with resignation.
...I knew it.
In the Mankind Declaration, which the Empire had proposed, it said,
"Countries that are distant from the Demon Lord's Domain will provide
support to those nations which are adjacent to it and are acting as a
defensive wall."
The Empire had wanted the Elfrieden Kingdom, as a country that was
distant from the Demon Lord's Domain, to provide support to the countries
adjacent to it. If they hadn't, there would have been complaints from the
other signatories to the Mankind Declaration.
However, at the time, with the food crisis and financial crisis slowly
pushing the kingdom to the point of collapse, it would have been nearly
impossible to find the money for war subsidies.
"That's why the Empire had the kingdom perform the hero summoning,
to give them the appearance of having provided support," I said. "In order
to keep down the complaints from the other signatories."
"...That's exactly it," said Jeanne.
"Hold on," Juna protested. "This country never signed the Mankind
Declaration. Were we ever obligated to provide support to begin with?"
I shook my head. "It's a fact that this country was benefiting from the
defensive wall the Empire built with the Mankind Declaration. Because we
have the Union of Eastern Nations to the north of us, we didn't have to
share a border with the Demon Lord's Domain." It was also a fact that the
Union of Eastern Nations was being propped up by war subsidies under the
Mankind Declaration. "If we benefit from it, but refuse to fulfill the
obligations set out under it because we're a non-signatory, that's going to
breed resentment from the signatory countries. With that as a pretext,
Amidonia might have been able to create an alliance of several nations to
invade the kingdom. With the Empire taking the lead."
"No..." Juna said, at a loss for words, but this was the truth.
In the recent war, because the only nation plotting to invade had been
the Principality of Amidonia, we had been able to induce them to do so
under conditions that were favorable to us, and defeat them.
From Amidonia's perspective, I was sure they'd wanted to make all of
the land they occupied their own, but if they had roped in the mercenary
state Zem, the Republic of Turgis, and some portion of the Union of Eastern
Nations, along with the Imperial Army, there would have been nothing the
kingdom could have done to avoid a total collapse.
I looked Jeanne straight in the eye and said, "With your goal of uniting
all mankind to prepare for the menace of the Demon Lord's Domain, the
Empire wanted to avoid that. That's why you demanded war subsidies from
non-signatories, and for those that couldn't pay, you tried to find a workable
substitute to appease the signatories, right? In the kingdom's case, that was
a hero."
"...I have no words," said Jeanne.
"To be brutally honest, the Empire didn't even expect the hero
summoning to work, did it?" I asked. "Okay, this being a world with magic,
you might have thought they'd summon something, but you can't have had
high expectations for something the kingdom itself didn't think would
work. Even if the summoning had failed, you would have been satisfied by
the fact it was performed."
"That's right. But, as a result of that, you were summoned," Jeanne said,
looking troubled. "What's more, ever since you were summoned here and
given the throne by Sir Albert, you've worked actively to rebuild this
country, even finding the money to provide war subsidies. While my sister
was grateful, she also regretted forcing such a heavy burden on you when
you were called here at our convenience. We truly are sorry."
Jeanne bowed once more.
I sighed, saying, "I already told you, it's in the past. Now that I now the
situation, I don't resent you for it. It's not like I don't have a lingering
attachment to my old world, but... but..."
I glanced from Juna, with a tense look on her face, to Tomoe.
There was nobody left who would wait for me to come home in my old
world. Since coming to this world, I had found people here who would.
Whenever I returned to the castle, Liscia, Aisha, Juna, and Tomoe would be
there to say, "Welcome home." Having felt the loneliness of solitude, that
was something I never wanted to lose again.
"I've found people here I want to protect," I said simply. "That's why
I'm not too hung up over it. Mind you, if you feel bad enough about it that
you'll recognize my sovereignty over Van, I'm not gonna complain."
When I said that jokingly, Jeanne raised her face quietly shook her head.
"...Sadly, I, too, have a family to protect."
Neither of us averted our gaze. We each looked the other straight in the
eye.
"I see... well, we'll have to negotiate, then," I said.
"Yes," Jeanne said. "Please, go easy on me when the time comes."
With an "I'll take my leave," Jeanne turned her back and faded into the
crowd. She vanished as quickly as she had appeared.
"The presences I felt surrounding us have vanished, too," Juna
commented. "It looks like Jeanne's bodyguards have withdrawn."
"She really did just come to say hello, huh..." I looked in the direction
Jeanne had left. "Jeanne Euphoria... the pragmatic younger sister who
supports the idealistic saint."
If it had only been Amidonia's crown prince, Julius, I'd have to contend
with, I felt there was no way I could have lost at the negotiations. But with
Jeanne mediating, I wouldn't be able to rely too much on his weaknesses. If
I tried to get too crafty and they saw through it, there was the risk that they
might turn things to his advantage by pointing it out.
I'll have to let Hakuya know he's going to need to give his all at the
negotiations, too...
I slapped my cheeks, trying to psyche myself up for it.
That evening...
"Liscia, Aisha," I said. "I brought souvenirs for you two."
Having returned to the castle, I gave Liscia and Aisha the gifts I'd
bought for them. Liscia got that choker made of blue leather with silver foil
scattered around like stars, while Aisha got the pale lipstick.
Liscia immediately put the choker around her neck, fingering the bird
clasp with a satisfied smile. "Thanks, Souma. I'll treasure it."
The slightly shy smile wasn't like Liscia, and I couldn't help but stare at
her, enthralled.
Whew, I was relieved that she liked it. It suited her well, and I was glad
I'd bought it.
Meanwhile, Aisha...
"Ohhhh, Your Majesty! To think you would bestow a gift even on one
such as me, I am awed and delighted! When you left me behind, I felt
down, but this has lifted my spirits as high as the heavens!"
"W-Well, good for you... Aisha..." Juna said.
"Yes, Madam Juna! With this lipstick, I swear I will polish my
femininity! Then, His Majesty will never let me leave his side... heh heh
heh."
"G-Good luck with that..."
Aisha was a little too thrilled. The happy aura beaming from her entire
body seemed to be enough to seriously weird Juna out. Juna, by the way,
was also wearing the hair piece I'd given her.
"Sire! Sire!" cried Aisha. "How is it? Does it look good on me?"
Aisha put on her lipstick and started acting flirty right away. If Aisha
hadn't been a dark elf, and she had been a mystic wolf like Tomoe instead,
her tail would have been wagging like crazy.
When she saw how overexuberant Aisha was, Liscia traced the outline
of her choker with one finger, looking to me. "Don't you think the collar
would have been a better match for Aisha?"
"...Let me go with 'no comment' on that one," I said.