"So it really was... just a dream?"
Muen leaned back against the headboard, eyes fixed on the ceiling where the golden chandelier swayed gently overhead. A wave of relief surged through his chest.
He was alive.
Heād been stabbed straight through the vitals with a dagger ablaze with an evil godās fireāand yet, he was still breathing.
Had the heavens finally decided to show him mercy?
"According to the master," Anne began, "the formal attire you were wearing at the time was actually a high-grade defensive magic artifact. At the critical moment, it absorbed most of the impact on your behalf. Thatās what saved your life."
"I see..."
Sorry, dear formal suit. I spoke too harshly about you before. Your twenty kilograms of dead weight wasnāt a flawāit was your warm, reassuring thickness that saved me!
If I get the chance, Iāll have you repaired and wear you again, not for vanity, but to repay your life-saving grace!
"So, what about my injuries now...?"
Muen looked down at his hands. To be honest, considering how severe the wound had been, he didnāt feel any real pain at the momentājust a faint sense of inner depletion, like his whole body had been hollowed out.
"It was Her Highness, Princess Celicia," Anne said.
"She summoned the Royal Magus Corps' Chief Healing Mage to treat you personally. Thanks to that, your injuries were stabilized from the beginning. Itās just that your body was too weak, so you remained unconscious for quite a while."
"How long is āa whileā?"
"Youāve been asleep for three full days, Young Master."
"Three... days?"
Muen exhaled slowly. "Thatās... longer than I thought."
"By the wayā"
The moment Celicia was mentioned, Muen tensed up. He couldnāt help but ask, cautiously:
"Did Celicia say anything about me?"
"Say anything about you...?" Anne tilted her head, a puzzled expression on her face. "What do you mean, exactly?"
"Like... anything bad about me."
"That, Iām not sure. But I donāt think so," she said after thinking for a moment. "When Her Highness left, she chatted with the master for a ā NоvеlŃŠ³ht ā (Donāt copy, read here) bit. They seemed to get along well."
"I see..."
Muen let out a long breath.
So in the end, Celicia hadnāt exposed the whole beastly act.
Was it for the sake of her own reputation... or because heād saved her?
"Young Master Muen."
"Hmm?"
"I know this may be a bit presumptuous, but... I have to ask."
Anne suddenly crouched down beside the bed, the faint scent of flowers drifting to Muenās nose. For some reason, her voice carried a strange chill to it.
"Are you so nervous because... when you were alone in that room with Her Highness, you did something to her?"
"Of course not!"
Muen shook his head vigorously, face taut. "That was the princess, for godsā sake! If Iād done anything, Iād already be dead!"
"Is that so? I suppose youāre right."
Anne seemed to accept the explanation. She didnāt press further. Instead, she picked up the medicine bowl once more.
"Here. Time to drink your medicine. Itās already gone cold."
"Can I skip it...?"
Looking at the dark, murky liquid in the bowl, Muenās newly recovered expression collapsed.
"Iām scared of bitter things."
"That wonāt do, Young Master. Your first priority is to nurse your body back to health."
"But didnāt you just say Iām already healed?"
"Technically, this isnāt medicineāitās a tonic. It only looks like medicine. And besides, I knew you donāt like bitter things, so I added sugar."
"Really?"
"Really."
"All right, then..." Muen stretched out a trembling hand. "Give it to me."
Anne: "..."
Muen: "?"
"Feeding you, Young Master, is part of my duties as your personal maid."
"But I can move my arms just fine..."
"Young Master Muen, are you trying to take away my only livelihood?" Anne wiped at imaginary tears. "If you donāt want me anymore, Iāll go hand in my resignation to the master right now. Iām just a weak little maid who knows nothing except how to care for you. If I get thrown out, Iāll be all alone in the world. And if I meet bad people, Iāll have no choice but toā"
"Okay, okay, fine! Feed me! Just please stop talking!"
Muen surrendered without a fight.
Come onāhe was a dukeās son, right?
Getting hand-fed by a beautiful girl was the ultimate fantasy of every shut-in nerd!
"Here you go, Young Master. Open wide. Aahhhā"
"Why does this feel like Iām a toddler... Aahhhāugh, bitter! I thought you said there was sugar?!"
"Oops. Maybe I misremembered. Now, come on, aahhhā"
"How do you āmisrememberā something like that?! Youāre definitely treating me like a baby! Aahhhā"
"Youāre almost done, Young Master! Just two more spoonfuls! Aahhhā"
"Iām telling you, Iām not a kid! Aahhhā"
...
...
"By the way," Muen asked suddenly, "has anything bad happened because of that incident?"
After all, an assassination attempt on the Empireās princess was no small matter. There was no way something that big hadnāt caused ripples during the three days heād been unconscious.
And as his personal maid, Anne would definitely have investigated.
"There were indeed some consequences," Anne said as she cleaned up the bowl. "First, regarding the assassinsā identitiesāafter the master interrogated them personally, it turned out the ones disguised as maids werenāt trained death assassins. They were bounty hunters whoāve long operated out of Bellrandās underground, a group that worships a so-called evil god by the name of the Withering King."
"Supposedly, theyāll do anything as long as theyāre paid."
"The Withering King... bounty hunters..."
Muen muttered under his breath.
From what he could remember, the original novel never mentioned an evil god by that name, let alone bounty hunters devoted to such a deity.
As expected... the novelās scope was far too limited.
Muen sighed internally.
Novels are always written from the protagonistās point of viewāthey canāt possibly depict a fully realized world, nor every development that happens outside the main storyline.
In other words, once the plot veers off from the book or drifts too far from the protagonistās path, everything becomes completely unpredictable.
"You neednāt worry, Young Master. That organization was wiped out last night by the master himself," Anne added casually.
"...I see."
Muen blinked, then smiled faintly with relief.
Even though the story no longer followed the original novel, he was still a dukeās son.
He didnāt need to worry about how these things were handledāthere would always be someone to deal with them in his place.
"And what about the mastermind who hired the bounty hunters?"
"That remains unknown for now."
Anne shook her head. "Every single member of the organization had a curse placed on them. The moment theyāre asked that question, they spontaneously combust."
"Just as I thought..."
Anyone bold enough to launch a direct attack on the princess would never leave loose ends.
But even the beggars on the street knew there were only a few factions with the motive to assassinate Celicia.
"Itās said His Majesty the Emperor was furious about the incident. Heās personally ordered a purge of the rats in Bellrandās underground."
"...Well, damn."
Muen let out a bitter laugh and muttered to himself:
"Looks like Iād better stay away from the black market for a while."