Chapter 26 â The Trial of the Coel Family
I didnât have the courage to face that shimmering blue blade.
So, I shut my eyes tightâ
and clung to Sharon Abnerâs arm with all my strength.
âY-you canât kill her! If you do, we canât use the recording I made with Uncle Wendel!â
While Camilla was confessing every one of her crimes in the tent,
I had been waiting outside with Wendelâ
holding tightly to the magical recorder in my hand.
Explaining how things ended up this way⌠well, itâs a bit complicated.
***
Two weeks earlier.
I had been summoned to Sharon Abnerâs office.
It was to discuss the purification formula that Owen and I had finally completed.
After listening to Owenâs explanation about the formula,
The Duchess asked him a few questions about how my lessons were going.
And then the topic of the Coel family came up.
âI figured out most of the situation when I executed Roman.â
âOh, you mean that contamination fraud case?â
âYes. I plan to report the Coel family to the Imperial Court.
but the legal process is⌠bothersome.â
I pretended to focus on my snacks.
But my ears were wide open to the voices of Sharon Abner, Owen, and Wendel.
âAs expected, sheâs going to report them.â
I already knew sheâd reach that conclusion.
The Taranta Empire had a very strict class system.
But that didnât mean high nobles could act however they pleased.
âEven if sheâs a duchess, Sharon still has to go through the official process to punish Camilla.â
And since the Coel family was rich and influential in the noble society, itâd be even harder.
âThe royal advisors say it wonât be an easy fight,â Sharon murmured.
âThey say trials in the Imperial Court arenât about truth⌠but about power.â
That, unfortunately, was true.
Once a case reached the Imperial Court,
facts didnât matter anymore unless there was clear, undeniable proof.
like a recorded confession or a visual document.
âBut still,â Owen said, âwe know Baron Roman took bribes from Camilla.
Wouldnât filing the report still be better?â
Sharon was silent, lost deep in thought.
Thatâs when I spoke up.
âTeacher! Thatâs not real proof, thatâs just⌠belief!â
Sharon turned toward me.
Owen looked confused, as if wondering why I was talking again.
âTo win a trial, you need real evidence! Like papers, witnesses⌠or a confession!â
The Imperial Court these days was a joke.
They made all sorts of laws and talked about “justice.”
but never actually used any of them.
In my previous life, every time the Longton family was dragged into court,
Lambert Longton would rage for days afterwardâbecause he knew the truth.
Judges didnât care about the case or the truth.
They sided with whoever they wantedâ
usually the ones who paid them the most or were socially connected.
âThatâs why material evidence became everything.â
Without it, the side with better connections always won.
âAnd for the Abners, evidence is absolutely essential.â
They didnât have endless money.
and they werenât especially close to the Imperial Family either.
But the Coels?
The wealthiest house in the empire.
If the Abners were known for their military,
and the Longtons for knowledgeâthen the Coels were power through money.
And Camilla Coel, the Marchioness,
was adored by the noble social circleâ
even personally close to Empress Karin.
âWithout solid evidence, weâll lose for sure.â
âOh, and I read in a newspaper once,â I added brightly.
âthat the most convincing evidence these days is a recording of the criminalâs confession!â
Sharonâs expression turned thoughtful.
She murmured quietly,
âA confession⌠so weâd have to make Camilla admit her guilt out loud.â
I kicked my legs beneath the sofa and asked,
âWhy, Duchess? Do you need someoneâs confession?â
Then I shot my hand into the air.
âThen Iâll go and ask her myself! Iâll record it secretly for you!â
Sharon stared at me for a moment.
then burst into a quiet laugh.
âIf you went, sheâd probably confess everything just to please you.
Unless someone she doesnât recognize sets a trapâŚâ
Her voice trailed off.
Wendelâs eyes widened too.
After a long silence, he spoke seriously.
âYour Grace, may I suggest something?
What if you go to the mine yourself?â
That was classic Wendelâsharp and dependable.
âThe woman bribed Roman and stole resources for ten years.
Sheâll definitely try again if she gets the chance.â
Inside, I was grinning.
âYes, thatâs exactly what I wanted you to say.â
Once the idea was on the table, things moved fast.
âI still know a few workers who secretly communicate with the Coels,â Wendel said.
âIâll use them to leak a false investigation date.â
ââŚâ
âTheyâll take the bait. They have no other choice.â
âYouâre right,â Sharon said firmly.
She stood up from her chair.
âDo it immediately. Iâll deal with Camilla myself.â
Then she paused by the door and looked back at me.
ââŚIf you want to come, you may.â
âM-me?â
âYouâre the duchyâs ward. You should know where your familyâs funds come from.â
I quickly shut my mouth.
But then I jumped down from the sofa and saluted.
âYes, maâam!â
***
And thatâs how I ended up all the way out here in the far north.
âYou canât kill her! If you do, W-Wendel Uncâ!â
I hung from Sharon Abnerâs arm like a desperate little doll.
pleading with teary eyes.
Wendel hurried over and spoke to the Duchess.
âLady Annelia is right. You didnât come here for punishmentâyou came for justice.â
He was right.
If Sharon killed Camilla now,
thereâd be no trial, no compensation,
no way to reclaim the fortune that had been stolen from House Abner.
Sharon exhaled slowly.
âIâm not going to kill her,â she said. âDo you think I went through all this trouble just to end it here?â
Only then did I breathe a sigh of relief and let go of her sleeve.
Then I handed the magical recorder to Wendel and glanced toward Camilla.
She sat frozen in the chair, trembling.
Her pale face was blank with shock.
I noticed the glittering bracelets and jewels still clinging to her wrists.
I couldnât help but think bitterly.
âYou thought money could buy everything, didnât you?â
Now sheâd lose not only her stolen fortune,
but also the reparation fines and the bail required by the Imperial Court.
Honestly, I was still angryâ
especially remembering how Soya had been slapped by Ruby Coel.
âLet this trial go smoothly,â I prayed silently.
âThatâll make it worth it.â
It didnât take long for the news to spread across the Empireâ
that Camilla Coel had faked the mine contamination for profit.
âI didnât even try to make it public,â Sharon said in confusion.
“Yet the rumors spread everywhere.â
But I knew why.
âSo I told my friend about it, and she was shocked! She said she had to tell her mistress immediately!â
âCamilla might act polite in noble circles, but among servants?
Everyone hates her. Even the commoners know what sheâs like!â
***
The Coel family were simply facing the consequences of their own actions.
Their reputation had finally caught up to them.
Because public opinion was so strongly against them,
The trial date was set in record time.
While waiting for the court session, my daily life didnât change much.
Iâd wake up early and eat breakfast.
Read with Miel and Soya before lunch.
Then lessons with Owen, snacks with Arwin, and dinner afterwardâŚ
âI keep eating all the time. Iâm getting chubby! Whoâd need a chubby genius?â
I poked my round cheeks in dismay as I jumped down from the carriage.
Today was the day of the trial.
And once again, I was at the Imperial Palace with Sharon Abnerâ
because, as her ward, I had to âobserve important family matters.â
But then I remembered something Owen had said earlier.
âApprentice, canât you tell? Thatâs just an excuse.â
âAn excuse? You mean her saying itâs because Iâm her ward?â
âYeah. If you ask meâŚâ
âIf you ask you what?â
âItâs separation anxiety, thatâs what.â
I froze on the palace steps, blinking.
âWait⌠separation anxiety? From me?â