He was somehow trying to get on his back and drop the person off him.
âSheesh! Youâre reallyâ!â
Olka Barraport swears in a hushed tone and corrects his disheveled posture.
A stronger force than ever before strangled him again.
Bellesac reached back and tried to grab Olka Barraport, but the power of the Knight was unbeatable.
It was all the more difficult that he was strangled in the back.
âHaa! Ugh!â
Bellesacâs mouth opened wide and the sound of harsh breathing came out. His head was about to burst.
âI donât want to die like this!â
Bellesac somehow tried to tear the rope wrapped around his neck.
There was red blood flowing out of his wounds, but he couldnât care less. Red blood spattered on Bellesacâs white clothes.
âI donât want to die! Someone help! Help me!â
Bellesac wanted to shout.
âGasp! Gasp!â
But he couldnât even scream with his current situation.
âItâs your decision. Donât regret it.â
The words that Firentia said, rang in his head.
âJust hurry up and die.â
He heard Olka Barraport muttering impatiently.
Heâs getting exhausted.
Desperate, Bellesac once again tried to move his body. But it was already too late.
Contrary to his will, Bellesacâs movement gradually subsided.
His limbs, which he wanted to swing with all his might, were only convulsing.
He couldnât see anymore.
He couldnât even feel the awful feeling of the rope digging through his neck.
He was dying.
Bellesac peed at that terrible thought.
âPlease, someone, save me.â
He screamed silently.
It was then.
A loud noise was heard, which was the only sense that seemed to be working.
And.
âCough! Cough! Cough!â
The pressure that was strangling him disappeared in an instant.
Bellesac instinctively swiveled his body to the side and breathed in the air in a hurry.
âCough! Woh! Ah!â
In tear-jerking pain, Bellesac trembled with relief that he had âlivedâ.
âHuhâŠ.â
His eyes closed, savoring the precious feeling of being able to breathe again while spewing forth sounds that werenât human-like.
Soon, a sharp, eye-opening pain hit his face.
Wam!
âHow long are you going to lay down? Get up and move.â
âUgh.. whoâŠ.â
Bellesac raised his eyes and looked up at the man who slapped him on the cheek.
However, all he could recognize was a pair of red eyes.
ââŠ.Should we just say that he died.â
The man in front of him murmured in a low voice and someone next to him stopped him.
âHey, Your Highness, donât do that. They will be waiting for him.â
Bellesac quickly rubbed his eyes. Only then did his hazy vision becomes clear.
âAhâŠ.â
The door was torn open, and Olka Barraport fell on the floor, unconscious.
Three people, including Lignite Leumann, who is known as the closest aide to the Second Prince, were seen searching the arms of Barraport.
âHey, look at this.â
âHey, Lombardy. Hereâs your suicide note.â
Ted laughed and took a piece of paper from Olka Barraportâs arms and threw it on Bellesacâs lap.
[âŠ.Repenting for the sins of attempting to kill the EmperorâŠThe First Prince is just a victim of this incidentâŠ.for the sins I have committed with my own lifeâŠ]
A chill settled over Bellesacâs spine as he read the note.
âIsnât this exactly your handwriting?â
Steeley asked as he laughed knowingly.
âIs there anyone around you who can copy your handwriting and write a suicide note?â
âI think heâs completely lost his mind.â
Lignite flicked his tongue at Bellesac, who was blankly looking at a suicide note bearing his name.
âGet up.â
Then Perez approached and grabbed Bellesac by the collar and lifted him.
It was a swift move as if holding a teacup, to lift a large adult man with one hand.
Bellesacâs body staggered by the rough handling. But no one was there to sympathize with him.
âLetâs get going, Your Highness. Leave this guy to me. Iâll be interrogating this one!â
Lignite Leumann spoke with his feet on the chest of Olka Barraport, lying on the ground beaten like a pulp.
âFollow me.â Perez said as he took the lead first.
Without asking where he was going, Bellesac drooped his shoulders and followed suit.
A carriage was seen waiting outside the Knightsâ building.
But Perez opened the door to the luggage compartment, not the main door.
âGet on.â
âBut this is a luggage compartmentââ
But before Bellesac could even finish talking, Perez grabbed Bellesac by the collar once again and threw him into the luggage compartment.
Thud!
âUgh!â
Bellesac held his head in pain, but there was no change in Perezâs expression.
âA baggage fits in the luggage compartment.â
After saying that, he just slammed the luggage compartment door closed.
***
Early in the morning in a small mansion at the end of the Lombardy estate.
âOh, Bellesac!â
âMother!â
When the carriage with Perez arrived, Bellesac and Serralâs unmoving reunion took place.
âBy the wayâŠâ
ââŠWhy is he getting out of the luggage compartment?â
Perez shrugged his shoulders at Serralâs question.
ââŠ?â
âWellâŠâ
Iâm sure Bellesac didnât go in on his own.
But it didnât matter to me where Bellesac got on, so I turned to Serral and Bellesac again.
âOh my god, youâre injuredâŠ!â
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Serral was horrified to see the dark red marks on Bellesacâs neck.
âOh, Sir Olka Barraport broke in and strangled himâŠâ
He didnât need to explain more.
Realizing what had happened, Serral silently looked at the terrible marks on her sonâs neck and turned to me.
âYou must have known what the Empress was like. So youâre not surprised, arenât you?â
Serral shook her head with a troubled look at my words.
âI knew⊠I knew what my cousin was capable of, but I was afraid. I was so afraidâŠâ
Serral spoke to herself in a voice full of regret. She looked very exhausted.
Serral approached me a few steps and said.
âThank you, FiâNo, thank you, Deputy Head.â
âThereâs nothing to be thankful for.â I said, glancing at the old mansion where they would live in the future.
âSince it was in my best interest to let Bellesac live rather than to die at the hands of the Empress, thatâs why I helped.â
Serral looked at me with mixed emotions. Then she took a letter out of her arms and held it out to me.
It was a purple letter.
âThis isâŠâ
I took it and handed it over to Perez right away.
Itâll be a weapon that Perez can use if itâs in his hands more than mine.
âBellesac.â
Instead, I called Bellesac, standing behind Serral with his shoulders shrinking.
âFrom now on, you and your mother will live here as if you are dead.â
âEh, here?â
Bellesac looked around the mansion with bleak eyes.
It was a building with traces of the years left intact in scarlet bricks.
He canât get his act together until the end.
âWhy, donât you think itâs not enough?â
âItâs not like thatâŠâ
I walked in front of Bellesac.
âDonât get me wrong. You and I use the same surname, but you with lowly blood will never be part of the family.â
In my previous life, the words that Bellesac said as he slapped me in the cheek rang in my ears.
He also looked at me with a clear, contemptuous gaze as if looking at a dirty thing.
Thinking about what happened back then, I was furious.
âYou can only live as our servant as you are now.â
But the current Bellesac, who is standing in front of me, was far from spitting at my feet.
He was still stupid and foolish, but he was terrified. His veins were about to burst, he gave off a disgusting smell and looked like a mess.
âYou called me half-blood.â
Bellesacâs complexion turned white at the words I muttered in a grave tone.
âSorry! Iâm sorry! I didnât know any better at that time! Iâm sorry, Deputy Head.â
Bellesac plunged to his knees.
I looked down at Bellesac and said, âYouâll lose everything with that half-blood word of yours, Bellesac.â
âPlease forgive meâŠ!â
My anger slowly died down.
It wasnât in vain.
Itâs one of the fruits of my labor that Iâve built up since I returned.
My foolish cousin was just obtuse, lazy, and infinitely evil to the weak.
I slowly opened my mouth at Bellesac.
âIâll send you money in your name to live and eat every month. But thatâs all youâll ever deserve with your patronizing breed.â
I said with a low voice.
âLive like a dead man. Donât let me hear your name again if you donât want to lose any more than this.â
I stared at Bellesac for the last time and boarded the carriage that Perez had been riding on.
Perez followed right behind me.
A glimpse of Bellesac, who was still kneeling on the ground can be seen outside the carriageâs window, but I did not look back.
There was still silence in the carriage.
âIf you interrogate the Knight that tried to kill Bellesac, you may find out something.â
When the Lombardy mansion began to appear, I asked Perez.
âBut why arenât you looking good, Perez?â
Perez didnât speak as if he was agonizing over something at my question.
I asked while looking at him.
âYou⊠Is there something wrong?â
I felt anxious. I felt like there would be one more hidden move by the Empress.
And when I got out of the carriage, I could see the figure of someone approaching me fast.
âMiss! Lady Tia!â
As soon as the carriage door opened, Laurelle rushed in and shouted.
âHuaa! The Imperial Knights raided the Pellet Company and Brotherâs house!â