Chapter 9
An army without a commander is like a ship without a captain.
That means it is very dangerous.
âSo we ran like crazy for four days to get hereâŠâ
And this is how we are treated?
Blocking the exhausted Berwen Knights was not the enemy, but our own alliesâthe Count of Hessenâs territory.
âThis is ridiculous. We came to help.â
To avoid making the local people nervous, I and the Berwen knights wore robes.
A group of robed knights turned their horses away from the wall.
âWhat did they say?â
âWellâŠâ
One knight hesitated, then spoke.
âThey say we must pay a toll.â
âDid you say you were knights?â
ââŠYes.â
âAnd that we came as support to help them?â
ââŠYes.â
Ha. Are they crazy?
I wanted to just give up and leave.
But the people living here did nothing wrong, so I rode closer to the wall.
âI told you already! You canât pass if you donât pay the toll!â
âHow much?â
âOne thousand gallons!â
One thousand gallons was a full year of living costs for a normal family!
âI could pay it myself, butâŠâ
This was basically saying, donât pass.
âWho made this rule?â
âOur count did!â
âThe Count of Hessen?â
When I said that, the soldier swung the spear in his hands.
âSo this place is rotten too.â
Just by how he held the spear, I could tellâhe was not a knight. Just a soldier wearing knight armor.
âA count? You want to die? Is the count your friend?â
âNot a friend, butââ
In a blink, the sword hidden in my robe touched the soldierâs neck.
I didnât want to use force.
âBut it works best.â
There was no time to explain everything.
âYou could say⊠he is my superior.â
âWhat?â
âThis man is His Grace, the Duke of Berwen.â
The knight beside me quietly warned him.
âThatâs impossible!â
Even with a sword at his neck, he didnât believe it, so I let a faint aura flow from my blade.
Aura is the sign of a Sword Master.
When he saw the light around the sword, the soldier dropped to his knees.
âIâIâm sorry! There are many people pretending to be knights these days! I was just following the countâs ordersââ
âFine. I understand. Now open the gate.â
If the top is rotten, the bottom will be too.
Too tired to talk, I waved my hand.
The disciplined soldier opened the gate.
ââŠDid they sell the gate?â
I was speechless.
A gate that should need four men to open was opened by one man alone.
The gate was thin. Just for show.
âThe gateâŠâ
The Berwen knights exchanged looks.
I lowered my voice.
Five years of acting practice were not wasted.
âThis is wartime. Do you not know what is important?â
A serious, heavy voice came out.
The meaning was clearâthis would be dealt with after the war.
âYes.â
Luckily, the knights agreed.
As we crossed the countâs land, I felt something was wrong.
The closer we got to the border with Bahat, the more refugees we saw.
I felt sorry for the people, butâŠ
âIt feels like we are losing.â
Why are bad feelings always right?
As soon as we reached the border fortressâ
âYour Grace, youâre here!â
Knights who had arrived earlier explained the situation.
ââŠThat many injured?â
I clenched my sword as I watched the wounded and medics moving around.
The battlefield was filled with the air of defeat.
âWhy?â
âThe Count of Hessen forced civilians to fight.â
âArenât those regular soldiers out there?â
âHe disbanded the army to save money.â
Ha. I was going insane.
âThen the force that can fight now is basicallyââ
âOnly us.â
So all the suffering outside was done by the Berwen Knights.
âThis isnât support. This is carrying everything alone!â
Why does this remind me of group projects in college?
âOpen the gate.â
When I approached in a black robe, the soldiers of Hessen didnât know what to do.
âNow.â
Again, I lowered my voice and pointed my sword.
Same reason as before.
No time!
âY-Yes!â
As the gate opened, I thought:
So this is why crazy tyrants live like that.
Life is easier this way.
The border gate still needed four soldiers and pulleys.
As it opened, the smell of the battlefield grew stronger.
Burning smoke. The smell of blood.
I still canât get used to it.
As soldiers struggled to lower the drawbridgeâ
Neigh!
My black horse reacted to the blood smell.
While calming the horseâ
âItâs not fully down yetââ
When the drawbridge was halfway down, I kicked the horse.
The strong black horse ran up the slope and leapt forward.
For a moment, it flewâ
Then landed lightly.
At the same time, my robe flew back, revealing my armor.
âWhy am I entering so dramatically?â
Even I felt embarrassed.
âIâve been trained in obsessive-tyrant acting for five yearsâŠâ
Rosaline taught me not only expressions, but how to move.
Every action was trained to look impressive.
âThis is embarrassing.â
Still, I drew my sword.
âShabiyan isnât even watching! Why am I trying so hard?!â
While shouting in my head, I rode forward gracefully.
*
Lewin didnât know this, but Shabiyan saw everything clearly.
Just before noticing Lewin crossing the drawbridge, Shabiyan was staring down at the canyon.
Her nose was red from crying. Her wrists were tied with silk.
She looked like someone who escapedâand she had.
âLetâs just take her.â
âYour Highness!â
âSheâs a prisoner anyway. Battlefield or palace, whatâs the difference?â
Taken at night, wrapped in cloth, she was brought here by carriage.
She escaped when the guard was careless.
She reached a dead-end cliff.
Below, a battle raged.
Thenâ
The drawbridge opened, and a figure on a shining black horse burst out.
âThe Duke of Berwen!â
The horse landed perfectly.
The black robe flew away, revealing solemn black armor.
âThe Black Knight.â
The Black Knight. The reaper of the battlefield.
As he crossed the field, everything changed.
Leading the losing side, he released aura from his sword.
With one swing of silver lightâ
Arrows aimed at his allies were cut down like rain.
ââŠAmazing.â
Moonlight-like silver aura.
Shabiyan couldnât look away.
She wiped her eyes again and again, trying to see clearly.
In her crystal-like eyesâ
Was admiration.
*
At the same timeâ
Kellian lay under a tree near the battlefield.
A black panther rested its head on his hand.
He stroked it slowly.
The panther purred.
âYour Highness. You must return to the capital.â
Kellian ignored him and closed his eyes.
His red robe loosely covered his sun-tanned skin.
Even looking like a beggar, Kellian looked like a god of war.
âArenât you curious?â
âAbout what?â
âThe face of the mad Emperor of Hailen.â
Kellian smiled.
âThey are just old friendsââ
âFriends?â
Kellian opened one eye, sharp.
âWould a friend cause chaos in another country?â
His abs moved as he spoke.
ââŠTruly insane.â
Thenâ
âYour Highness!â
A knight stopped so suddenly he almost fell off his horse.
Kneeling, he shouted.
âThe Duke of Berwen has arrived! The Second Princeâs side is losing badly!â
âIs that so?â
Kellian stood and mounted the horse.
âYour Highness! You canât go!â
âGather the knights at the Second Princeâs camp. He must not know Iâm here!â
He rode off.
He should never have come here.
This war was meant for the Second Prince to lose!
Thenâ
âWhy are you here, brother?â
âSupport.â
âLike that?â
They met.
The aide lowered his head.
No one believed Kellian.
Butâ
âRun while you can.â
The Second Prince was fleeing his army.
Before he could explain, Kellian had already ridden into battle.
âSo thatâs the Duke of Berwen.â
The battlefield was ruled by one man.
The duke cut down commanders, breaking the chain of command.
âHa. Now I see.â
Kellian laughed.
âHe cuts only the tendons.â
Not hands. Just enough to stop them holding swords.
That was harder than killing.
People said the duke was cruel.
Butâ
âHe captures enemy leaders and leaves them crippled.â
Kellian thought it was to show power.
But nowâ
âHeâs ending the war with fewer deaths.â
âMaybe heâs gentle.â
Kellian grew curious.
âWhat kind of face is under that helmet?â
âReward whoever removes it.â
He smiled.






