Chapter Three Hundred and Six: New Year’s Festival 2
“You two, it’s about time to enter. Save the affectionate exchanges for the hall. Make sure all the guests can see how close you are. Let everyone understand that there’s no room whatsoever for proposals involving a second or third wife.”
“…Yes, Brother.”
Helfried’s words sounded as though he were poking fun at what had happened during the hunting festival the other day. Karen wrapped both arms around Julius’s arm as if to encourage him when he nodded with a stiff expression.
As far as Karen was concerned, what Julius had done at the hunting festival’s award ceremony was something to be entirely welcomed. She had no desire for things to remain in that vague, ambiguous territory—the sort that, by the conventions of noble society, could be read as a soft acceptance, or perhaps a refusal, or perhaps a door left open depending on circumstances. That would not do at all.
Even so, what Julius had done had gone against the wishes of Helfried, the Earl of Ehlertt. Afterward, Julius had apparently been summoned to Helfried’s tent, interrogated, and thoroughly scolded.
Karen had learned this from Licht, since Julius had stubbornly refused to tell her himself.
Helfried looked back and forth between the two of them and let out a slow sigh.
“…At the hunting festival, I was in the wrong.”
“Brother Helfried?”
Julius opened his eyes wide in surprise. Karen, knowing little of the subtleties of noble society, caught his reaction and understood that it was indeed unexpected—she stared at Helfried wide-eyed.
“It was plain as day that you had no intention of marrying anyone but Karen. So I should have laid the groundwork from the start. By not refusing that young lady’s offer on the spot and instead deferring to a later reply, it would have signaled that she was a woman worthy of standing beside you, the winner of Ehlertt’s hunting festival, as your wife. I should have confirmed your intentions beforehand—whether you were willing to help establish her standing in that way.”
“…I was the one at fault for not deferring to you, the head of the family. There is no need for you to concern yourself, Brother.”
Helfried shook his head, as if to dismiss Julius’s words.
“As a matter of fact, I was scolded over this… by Sieg.”
“What? Not by Lady Alise?”
“My, Ms. Karen, you seem to have a great deal of faith in me.”
Alise responded to Karen’s inadvertent remark with a beautiful smile. Karen hurriedly tried to explain herself:
“Oh—no, I don’t mean that I’ve been thinking, even a little, that you seem to subtly keep Lord Helfried under your thumb while keeping up appearances of deference in public—not at all, not even slightly—”
“If I had truly managed to keep this man under my thumb, Sieg wouldn’t have been forced to say something so difficult. I’m sorry to have disappointed you, Ms. Karen.”
Rather than being offended by Karen’s words, Alise smiled with a somewhat dejected expression.
“No, I’m not disappointed, it’s just… Master Sieg, really?”
All eyes turned to Sieg. He met Karen’s gaze and gave a small shrug. She suddenly noticed—whether from a year’s worth of growth or the height of his shoes, his eyes were now nearly level with hers.
“Someone as powerful as Uncle Julius should really be allowed to be more selfish than he is. The hunting festival made me feel that very clearly. And yet I thought Uncle Julius was too considerate of others.”
Skilled fighters had come to the hunting festival from all across the territory and even from neighboring lands, seeking to battle monsters. Watching how those warriors had carried themselves had apparently left an impression on Sieg. And his observation had struck remarkably close to Julius’s true nature.
Julius had surely understood from the time he was thrown into that dungeon that he had to become useful to his father—strong enough to be worth keeping alive. When he was brought into noble society, he had likely convinced himself deeply that he had to be a convenient existence for those in power around him.
That was probably why Julius had been far more devoted to the Ehlertt Earldom—to Helfried—than others of equal strength would have been. To outside eyes, it would have looked like nothing more than a close bond between brothers.
“Uncle Julius has always been too kind. All I told Father was that I thought Uncle Julius deserved the same rights as his strength warranted. I don’t know what Father makes of it, but when it’s my turn, you’re allowed to live however you like, Uncle.”
Sieg said it as though speaking to Julius, but his eyes were on Karen—as if he was certain that telling Karen would ensure Julius actually lived freely.
Leave it to me. Karen pressed a hand to her chest and gave a firm nod.
Helfried said, flustered:
“No, from my time onwards, Julius is more than welcome to live as he pleases!”
“And yet, despite saying that, you still haven’t fully accepted what Julius did, have you?”
“…I simply never imagined my dear little brother’s rebellious phase would come like this—this late in life. I only need a little more time to accept it…!”
“Rebellious phase…”
Julius blinked, genuinely puzzled. To Helfried, who knew nothing of the burden Winfried had placed on Julius’s shoulders, Julius’s attempt to set that burden down must have looked like nothing more than a late-blooming act of defiance.
It struck Karen as somewhat too light a way to see it, given everything Julius had been through—but she watched Julius carefully to see what he would make of it.
At last, Julius let out a sudden laugh.
“Yes—yes, I suppose I am going through a rather delayed rebellious phase!—So, I do hope you’ll find it in your generous heart to forgive me, Brother Helfried.”
“There is nothing to forgive. As long as you are happy, that is all that matters. The fact that it came so late is likely my own fault for burdening you. If I ever lean on you again and cause you needless hardship, please scold me and put a stop to it—Alise.”
“Fufu, as you wish, Lord Helfried.”
“And I’ll be throwing my full support behind Julius’s rebellious phase, so please be prepared for that, Lord Helfried!”
“Karen, your support is far too terrifying. I sincerely ask you to reconsider.”
If Julius was going to call it a rebellious phase, Karen intended to throw herself behind it wholeheartedly.
Whatever he had imagined Karen might do, Helfried pleaded with her in dead earnest. Watching Julius laugh at Helfried’s alarm, Karen joined in—and then Alise and Sieg as well, their voices rising together in laughter.
Before long, the music drifting from the hall shifted in tempo. The time had come to make their entrance into the New Year’s Festival.
