Chapter 27 â The Empress Dowagerâs Fury
Camilla sat stiffly in the defendantâs chair, her face pale and frozen.
Across from her, on the plaintiffâs side, sat Sharon Abner and Wendel.
The rest of usâincluding meâwere seated right behind them.
Soon, the heavy doors of the courtroom opened.
I quietly watched as people in judicial robes filed in, filling the front seats.
Some of them were surprisingly shortâalmost child-sized.
âSee those three wearing the fanciest robes?â whispered Joe, one of Sharon Abnerâs attendants, grinning with excitement. âThose are the chief judges.â
I gave him a polite, awkward smile.
âThe rest will sit in the observation seats. Theyâre Imperial officials, but they donât have any authority hereâtheyâre just spectators.â
When I first met Joe back at the mine, I hadnât realized something very importantâ
He talked a lot.
âAnd look there, behind the judgesâ benchâyou see the statue holding a chalice? Thatâs the first emperor! You already know the Holy Grail symbolizes the Tarantha Empire, but let me tell you why heâs holding itââ
âŚHe was unstoppable.
My ears were starting to ache, but I nodded along anyway.
It was obvious he loved children.
Ever since our first meeting, heâd followed me around, calling me cute.
always eager to teach me something new,
and constantly saying how nice it felt to have a child around the Abner estate again.
Miel and Soya told me I didnât have to listen to his endless chatter.
But I chose to let him talk anyway.
âYou can never have too many allies,â I thought.
You never know when they might come in handy.
âIâll give it a few more days before officially writing Joeâs name in my notebook,â I decided.
That was whenâ
âEveryone, please be seated.â
The presiding judge, sitting in the middle, spoke in a solemn tone.
The room quieted immediately.
âWe will now begin the trial regarding the falsification of the Lides Mana Mine contamination reportâŚâ
And so, the trial officially began.
What followed was⌠painfully boring.
The senior judge read through the Abner familyâs accusation line by line,
then accepted each piece of evidence one by one.
Wendel submitted the magical recording crystal as key evidenceâ
the one that clearly contained Camillaâs voice.
It captured her attempt to bribe the new mine managerâ
proof so solid it was practically unshakable.
There were also witnesses to support it.
and the gold coins that had once belonged to Baron Roman.
âThen why do I feel uneasy?â
I frowned, narrowing my eyes.
Something about the judgesâ expressions felt⌠wrong.
Especially the head judgeâthe one leading the trial.
âMarchioness Camilla Coel,â the presiding judge said,
“Do you admit to the charges brought forth by House Abner?â
ââŚNo. I deny them.â
âAnd which parts do you deny?â
âOur Coel family had a business partnership with the Abners.
Those payments were not bribesâthey were goodwill incentives.
After all, increasing mining output benefits both our families.â
âPlease, go on.â
âAnd as for the contamination reportâthere was no manipulation.
There are documented cases of contaminated land suddenly purifying itself for no apparent reason. Itâs right here in this record.â
âSo, what youâre saying is the mine was indeed contaminated before.
but then the pollution suddenly vanished.
and the Coel family was simply caught off guard?â
âExactly!â
The exchange between the judge and Camilla sounded completely off.
âHeâs basically helping her come up with excuses.â
Sharon Abner must have noticed it too; her face darkened.
I glared at the presiding judge.
ââŚHeâs been bribed. Big time.â
Nothing else made sense.
They had clear proofâa magical recording of Camilla trying to bribe the new manager.
Yet this was how the trial was going?
âOr maybe sheâs using her connection with the EmpressâŚâ
I was still running through the possibilities whenâ
âTo summarize,â the head judge announced smoothly,
“The Coel family denies all accusations.
Furthermore, the claim that theyâve been embezzling mine profits lacks evidence.â
A wave of murmurs rippled through the observers.
The judge met Camillaâs eyesâand continued.
âHer argument is quite reasonable. The Abner familyâs evidence is vague and insufficient.â
Sharonâs fist clenched tightly on the table.
But I took a deep breath and forced myself to think clearly.
âThereâs no winning this. Even solid evidence doesnât work here.
So Imperial trials really are all about bribery.â
There was only one path forward now.
Call for a delayâ
then find a way to win the judges over before the next trial.
âWe canât win with just witnesses or proof. We need a bigger card to play.â
But what could possibly match the Coelsâ bribes?
We couldnât outspend them.
We had no allies in the Imperial court.
Then, suddenly, a thought struck me.
âWait⌠howâs the Crown Prince doing lately?â
If heâd listened to my advice, things shouldâve improved for him by now.
âMaybe thatâs our only shotâŚâ
I was lost in thought whenâ
âWhat a disgrace this has become.â
A commanding voice echoed through the courtroom.
The presiding judgeâwho had been fawning over Camilla moments agoâfell silent.
Everyone turned toward the voice.
In the observation seats, a figure in a deep robe slowly stood up.
Then, in one smooth motion, they pulled back their hood.
Gasps filled the air.
I froze, eyes wide.
âW-waitâwhy is she here?!â
The person glaring coldly at the judges was none other thanâ
the very person Iâd just been thinking of.
The Empress Dowager of the Taranta Empire.
***
âEvidence that the contamination report was falsified!
Proof that embezzled funds went straight to the mine workers!
Even a recording of Marchioness Camilla trying to bribe a new inspectorâ
and you dare call that âinsufficientâ?!â
The Empress Dowager marched right up to the front.
The judges stared, frozen with shock.
âWhen did the Imperial Court become this filthy?!
I step away for a few years.
And youâve turned my empire’s justice into a cesspool!â
I gawked at her, stunned.
In both my past and present lives, this was the first time Iâd ever seen the Empress Dowager in person.
âIâve only ever seen her in portraitsâŚâ
In my previous life, she had secluded herself completelyâ
never showing her face to anyone.
âSo why is she here now?â
Then I realized it.
There was only one explanation.
âThe Crown Prince mustâve listened to me!â
Months agoâ
the day I first met Prince Tianâ
Iâd whispered something in his ear.
***
âIf that old man bullies you againâŚâ
ââŚâ
âTell your grandmotherâthe Empress Dowager!â
In my previous life, when Tian was stripped of his title,
The Empress Dowager had been the only one who stood by him.
Even after losing her beloved husband,
even while being isolated by Empress Karinâs faction,
sheâd protected her grandson until the very endâ
ready to give up everything for him.
âSheâll definitely be furious if she finds out,â Iâd told him.
“Her Majesty, angryâfor me?â
âOf course! Sheâs your grandmother!â
Iâd seen the way his eyes had trembled then.
Tian had always believed he was alone.
Surrounded by the Empressâs cruelty and the servants loyal to her,
He must have felt powerless.
And that kind of helplessnessâ
Children learn it far too easily.
âPromise me youâll go to her.
Tell the Empress Dowager everythingâthat Empress Karin is hurting you.â
ââŚâ
âPromise, okay?â
And now, unbelievablyâŚ
He’d actually done it.
Heâd gone to herâand sheâd come here herself.
I stared in awe when suddenlyâ
âYou useless, greedy worms feeding off the Empireâs wealth!â
The Empress Dowager snatched up a stack of papers from the judgesâ desk.
Then she rolled them up andâ
âY-Your Majesty!â
âP-please forgive us!â
âstarted whacking the judges over the head.
Whap! Whap! Whap!
Everyone in the courtroom froze, too stunned to move.
âWhen I was the Chief Justice of this Empire,
The courts werenât like this!
Do you have any idea how hard I worked to build this institutionâ
and youâve turned it into garbage?!â
âŚWait.
The Empress Dowager was a former chief justice?!