Chapter 51
 Iâm Heading to the Royal Palace Right Now
 When Anette was still the commander, subjugation expeditions never took this long.
No matter how late, she always returned within a week. So it had come to feel like a givenâshe never died and always returned on time.
âIt might be because the knights departed later than scheduled. In the meantime, the number of monsters couldâve increased, making things more difficult.â
âOr perhaps the newly appointed commander, Sir Millard, was eager to prove himself. With a shift in leadership, the atmosphere may have changed, and they couldâve ventured deeper into monster territory.â
Courtiers tried to reassure the worried king with various suggestions.
And to a certain extent, they were right.
During the last expedition, Anette had returned injured, prompting the king to make a swift decision regarding her position. Removing her from the role of commander and appointing the vice-commander, Jeon Millard, in her place hadnât been a difficult decision.
Everything had been swiftly reorganized. Yet, for some reason, the royal knights delayed their departure multiple times and eventually left well past the original schedule.
Still, they had left, and there hadnât been any issues beforeâso surely, they would return safely this time too.
The king stroked his chin, still wearing a doubtful expression despite the courtiersâ calming words.
His gaze unconsciously shifted to his leftâto the man who had not spoken a single word during the entire meeting.
The man with navy hair and amber eyesânone other than the Marquess Millard, father of the new commander Jeon Millard.
His face remained cold and detached, not showing the slightest concern even while listening to a conversation about his only son.
âHeartless bastard.â
The king inwardly cursed him, even though he himself had remained indifferent when his own daughter had been attacked by monsters with no one to protect her.
Of course, the king understood why the marquess behaved as if he felt nothing for his son or the world.
He wouldâve rather not had to see that expression, but there had been no one as capable as the marquess to fill the position of chancellor.
Lamenting the lack of talent in his kingdom, the king furrowed his brows and looked away.
The matter of the royal knights had already left his mind.
At the Same Time
The Heyworth Royal Knights were at a temple near the capital of the Heyworth Kingdom.
It was routine for the knights to purify themselves at the temple before entering the palace.
Now, with their purification complete, every single member of the Royal Knights wore a dark, grim expression.
âVice-CommanderâŚâ
Brahman tried to speak in a devastated tone but paused.
The amber eyes, which had never once lost their composure, were tremblingâno, they seemed to be burning with something indescribable.
The man who wouldnât bat an eye even if the sky were falling now radiated a chilling aura as he stared into the void. Brahman was so stunned, he forgot what he had been about to say.
He glanced at Jeon, then sighed and rubbed his face with both hands.
He still couldnât believe what had happened.
He recalled what happened just an hour earlier when they had entered the temple for purification.
The priests, who usually greeted them with sour expressions, had unusually welcoming faces this time.
They never offered their services for free and had always made the knights feel unwelcome, especially giving Anette a hard time. Yet now, with her gone, their attitudes had shifted noticeably. It was disgusting.
Though they were all silently displeased, they couldnât skip the purification ritual, so they endured.
Then one priest casually dropped a remark.
<âStill, the Alkan Empire is really something. How could they make someone like that their Grand DuchessâŚâ>
The knightâs ears perked up. The priest didnât even finish his sentence, merely clicking his tongue in disbelief.
It was then they realized why the priests had greeted them so cheerfully.
<âWhat do you mean by that?â>
<âThe Alkan Empire?â>
A sudden sense of dread fell over the knights.
The priests, now realizing the Royal Knights were unaware of the situation, wore awkward expressions.
A new recruit, Luke, spoke up in a trembling voice.
<âWho exactly did the Alkan Empire take in as their Grand DuchessâŚ?â>
<âWell, you see⌠the former commander⌠sheâŚâ>
The priests stammered, caught off guard by the weight of Lukeâs reaction. They had assumed the knights already knew Anette had gone to the Alkan Empireâand that, like them, the knights would be relieved she was gone.
They thought they could vent freely about how an unspeakable event was taking placeâa member of the Alkan royal family marrying someone tainted with the seed of monsters.
But the knightsâ murderous expressions forced the priests into silence, until finally, under pressure, one of them confessed.
<âThe former commander⌠sheâs entered a political marriage with Archduke Harzent of the Alkan EmpireâŚâ>
<âBullshit! Watch your mouth!â>
<âWhatâhow dare you use that word with a priest?â>
<âThen donât speak bullshitââ>
<âEnough, Luke!â>
Brahman, still reeling from the shocking news, snapped out of it and stopped Luke and the priest from escalating the situation further.
Reluctantly, he apologized, coaxed the priest back into cooperation, and they completed the purification ritual before leaving the temple.
Now, every knight stood in silence, their faces stiff with despair.
Anxiety, dread, and fear gnawed at them.
Luke finally spoke, his face pale.
âVice-Commander⌠Is it true? Did the commander reallyâŚâ
ââŚâ
âThis is all my faultâŚâ
âNothing has been confirmed yet.â
Jeonâs sharp voice cut through Lukeâs self-blame.
The trembling in his amber eyes had vanished. His previously intense expression returned to its usual cold, unreadable calm.
Brahman blinked, looking at Jeon who had reverted to his stoic self.
Then he turned to Luke, who was crying openly now, and let out a sigh as he wiped his face.
Luke was only seventeen, a fresh recruit who had joined less than six months ago.
Every knight in the Royal Order owed Anette their life in some way, but Luke owed her even moreâbecause of her injury.
He had made a grave mistake in the last expedition and wouldâve died if Anette hadnât shielded him.
As a result, the tendons in Anetteâs left handâher sword handâwere completely severed.
While others insisted sheâd recover and return, Luke couldnât believe it. He had been consumed by guilt.
Now, it seemed his fears were coming true.
âY-youâre right, Vice-Commander. Nothing is confirmed.â
âYes, surely the priests misunderstood something.â
The others began chiming in, trying to comfort Lukeâand themselves.
Still, the priestsâ words had been too specific to dismiss.
They mentioned that an engagement contract had already been certified by the Alkan Empireâs temple. That the imperial envoy had entered the capital that very morning with an enormous bridal tribute procession.
Yet the knights denied it all.
Even Brahman forced a smile and added:
âYes. Itâs absurd. The commander would never leave us like that.â
Unlike Luke, Brahman had served in the Royal Knights even before Anette joined.
He and Jeon had spent ten years at her side.
They couldnât believe it.
Anette had cared about the Royal Knightsâmore accurately, she had nothing else to care about. There was no way she would leave without even a farewell.
At the root of their thoughts was arrogance. The belief that Anette could never abandon them.
But Jeonâs amber eyes, which had finally stilled, began to waver again at Brahmanâs words.
âReally? Are you so sure?â
Jeon recalled Anetteâs faceâalways unreadable, rarely emotionally swayed.
She had never formed strong emotional attachments and was numb to mental anguish.
The knights, for all their grief, hadnât exactly been warm toward her. They had never expressed how much they relied on her, or how proud they were to serve under her.
So perhaps she truly had no attachment to them.
Maybe she had left them behind with a clean heart and a light step.
Especially with that look in her eyes the last time they metâvoid of any lingering affection.
ââŚâ
Jeon clenched his fists tightly and gritted his teeth.
He had told himself heâd seen it wrong, that he was mistaken.
But now, he wasnât so sure.
âIâm going to the palace. Right now.â
Jeon declared in a steely voice.
The knights, slouched like abandoned puppies, all looked up in unison.
They were afraid that Anette might really have left, but until they saw it with their own eyes, they refused to believe it.
Their capes, bearing the crest of the Heyworth Royal Knights, fluttered behind them as they left the temple.
And so, they rushed toward the capital of Heyworth.