MPNS Ch 52
by berryChapter 52
It was exactly ten minutes before the appointed time.
Nikiel, thinking it a good sign, took the basket from Paulâs hands himself.
Paul nearly fainted in horror, his voice ringing solemn as if in battle:
âYour Highness! I must carry it!â
Nikiel answered indifferently. It wasnât heavy enough to warrant such fuss.
âYouâre too small to carry all this.â
âHeight and strength have nothing to do with it!â Paul squawked, face flushed.
But Nikiel ignored him entirely. Whether it was a servantâs burden or not, he carried the basket himself and walked on.
When it comes to food, no one can resist.
True to his Korean heritage, he believed the stomach was the surest way to win a manâs favor. Humming cheerfully, he headed for the domed entrance of the training hall.
Yet in truth, Nikiel hardly thought he could smooth everything over with a single meal.
The former Nikiel had caused Yullan far too much trouble, their animosity wellâknown. Food alone would never suffice. But sincerity mattered most. Even wild beasts, if shown steady, harmless attention, learned to distinguish friend from foe.
So, Nikiel decided to think of Yullan as a wild wolf.
Not an inaccurate picture, he admitted to himself. After all, the man literally is one.
And thinking of him as such awakened a spark of affection. Even if he failed today, there was still time before the Subjugation Tournament. If he could at least lay groundwork for closeness, his instruction might be better for it.
But of course, things never go as hoped. At the gates, he was stopped.
Marshal Benedict Sommes himself appeared, face careful with apology, and forbade the basketâs entry. The giftârejected before even passing the doors.
Nikiel stared, half annoyed, half exasperated.
âMy lord⊠these are simple provisions, nothing more. Hardly weapons.â
He spoke plaintively, basket in arms. To see his carefully prepared peace offering struck down before even crossing the threshold was almost laughable.
Benedict wore the same strained look. Bowing, he said,
âYes, Your Highness, we know. We are grateful beyond words. I heard too you sent a feast of delicacies to our barracks. For that, the knights thank you. But⊠our lord once gave a strict commandâŠâ
He faltered.
Nikiel regarded the redâhaired Marshal calmly. Behind him, other knights lined the entrance, clearly nervous, waiting by the confiscated basket.
He replied with composure.
âVery well. You must obey your superior. But then tell me exactly what command this was, so that I may at least understand.â
Benedict winced audibly. The dukeâs rank may outrank a prince, but his subordinate plainly did not. To bar a royal entry was perilous enoughâand to refuse explanation was worse.
He had expected at least a slap the moment heâd asked to examine the baggage. Instead, Nikiel had given it over without complaint. Quiet. Composed.
Too composed. That frightened him more.
Why⊠why is he carrying it himself?
For a noble, let alone a royal, to bear luggage himself was unheard of except in war.
Nikiel had only Paul with him. No entourage, no tail of attendants. Just the single steward at his side.
Benedict had actually stretched his neck when they arrived at the yard, waiting for the dozens of servants that never came.
This was Nikiel Ossinisâthe man renowned for dragging whole courts of servants just to fan him, fetch cups, hold napkins. Whole salons laughed at his extravagance.
Yet here he stood, alone but for one steward.
And Benedict realized at last: Sir Allewyn hadnât been joking, after all, when heâd reported the prince wandering alone in the woods. Heâd thought it impossibleâNikiel, alone? But he believed it now.
Drawn from his thoughts, he heard Nikielâs tone again, steady and polite:
âMarshal. Would you not explain?â
He bowed his head in surrender. He could hardly stand there shameless before such civility.
Trembling for words, he finally answered:
ââŠDo you recall, perhaps, the Feast of the Holy Blood, two years past?â
Recall it? Of course not. But Nikiel kept his face still, feigning thoughtful recollection. Playacting memory, hoping it would suffice.
That feast celebrated the tale when the god Solius himself shed divine blood to repel monsters, feeding it to them as offering; awed, they withdrew. It was commemorated at winterâs end with balls and festival.
Yes⊠I read that once, in a religious compendium. He grasped at that thread, keeping the mask of false reminiscence.
Encouraged, Benedict pressed on, hesitant but clear.
âAnd do you remember the glass of wine you offered His Grace at that ball?â
Nikiel smiled faintly, unwilling to confess ignorance.
Benedict grimaced.
âA cherry brandy⊠the scent was very fine. Butâunfortunately, Your Highness, that cup had been laced with⊠stimulant given to kennel dogs. A⊠rutting agent.â
ââŠStop.â
Nikiel cut him off, face blanching.
A rutâdrug for stud hounds? Seriouslyâ? His stomach heaved. Of all the depraved things the real Nikiel had done, to slip animal rutâmedicine into Yullanâs wineâ
No wonder the Duke hated him. To a man cursed to transform into a monster wolf under madness, what deeper insult than to be fed a dogâs heat draught?
The wonder was that Yullan had not killed him outright.
Nikielâs face was pale as he forced words.
âEnough. Search my basket as you will. Orâif it pleases youâI shall taste every dish myself.â
âHâHighnessâ!â
âNot for your thanks. Because you cannot be expected to trust me. So I will be my own poisonâtaster.â
Benedict blanched now in turn. A royal, offering to test his own food! It was unheard of. Unimaginable.
But Nikiel reached calmly toward the neck of a waiting wine bottleâ
And then, a low voice intervened.
âEnough.â
The voice was Yullan Baltâs.
Note
- Feast of the Holy Blood (ì±í ì¶ìŒ): Religious holiday commemorating the god Solius offering divine blood to appease monsters.