Hunting Contest (12)
Kergel turned to the place where Roelinâs horse had been. Then, Roelin soon followed after him. After glancing back at her, he slowed down a little and opened his mouth while trying to keep his pace with her.
âAnyways, did you hunt a little?â
ââ¦No.â
Roelin hesitated at his question before she answered in an awkward tone. Then, he asked back while narrowing the forehead.
âAre you saying that you didnât even catch a single rabbit?â
ââ¦yes. It was still a lot of work for me.â
Roelin hesitated and continued.
âAnd to be honest, I donât even like it.â
ââ¦â¦?â
He stopped to listen to Roelin and stared at her. Roelin was just standing there together while looking rather awkward.
âCatching innocent beasts simply for fun⦠It may sound like a pretext or an excuse to Your Majesty.â
âNo, I believe you.â
âWhat?â
âI believe in your words. I donât see it as a mere excuse.â
Kergel coughed in vain as he saw that the blue eyes of the woman who was looking at him trembled a little and felt like something was shaking in her heart as well.
ââ¦You believe in me?â
âThere isnât a need to misinterpret your words, is there? There is nothing wrong with accepting it as it is.â
ââ¦â¦â
âIn addition, I can understand it when I saw you petting the wolf a while ago. Iâve never seen a person talking to a wolf like that. By the way, do I look really like the wolf that much?â
âWhat? Thatâsâ¦â
Roelinâs eyes widened instantly like that. She was embarrassed and couldnât respond properly since she never thought that Kergel would have heard it.
Kergel burst into laughter once again when he saw that.
âYou donât have to be that surprised. Iâm not trying to say anything to you.â
âI never meant it in a bad wayâ¦â
âI know. You didnât mean anything bad. By the way⦠am I really kind?â
He shut his mouth for a moment and asked her a question slowly. Roelinâs face eventually turned red like a ripe tomato. She then nodded without that flushed face of hers.
ââ¦yes.â
ââ¦Iâm glad you felt that way.â
Kergel responded awkwardly when that he felt that his face was burning too while he looked at Roelin who was with a positive answer to his own question.
Then, he whistled softly. Soon afterwards, Roelinâs horse that had heard the whistle from afar, began to run.
âIâll teach you how to whistle later. It would be quite convenient in using it to call him.â
ââ¦yes.â
The faces of the both of them who were talking rather awkwardly while looking at the approaching horse had been so red that it was nearly impossible to determine  who was even redder.
***
âBert, take that.â
âArgh! What is this⦠Huh? What kind of a fox is this?â
Bert picked up that something which flew at him suddenly and soon opened his eyes wide. Heinez also appeared suspicious when he was right next to him as he confirmed what Kergel had thrown at Bert.
However, Kergel continued to talk to Bert with a calm look in return.
âThat was what you had hunted.â
âWhat? I hunted? What? Are you talking about this fox? Your Majesty was the one who hunted this, right? Thereâs Your Majestyâs arrow as well, but why are youâ¦â
âYou shot with my bow. I didnât mean to hunt much anyway. Therefore, Bert, I have lent you my own bow.â
âWhat are you talking about, Your Majesty?â
Bertâs face turned even more strange. However, Kergel merely continued to speak with a calm look.
âIsnât it cruel to hunt innocent animals just for fun?â
ââ¦Yeah.â
Bertâs expression distorted as if he was talking utter nonsense. Heinez looked at him with a face that seemed hard to understand as well.
âAnyway, make sure that the both of you understand itâs like that. I wasnât the one who caught that. Got it?â
Kergel headed somewhere with a light look on his face as if he had finally left the troublesome burden behind.
Bert looked at it and tilted his head before opening his mouth then.
âHeinez, did you hear what His Majesty just said?â
âYes, I did listen to it.â
âHow cruel it is to hunt innocent beasts. Is that what His Majesty actually wants to say? Lookâthe one who had piled up a heap of hunting beasts instead.â
ââ¦I know.
Heinez then simply gazed at Kergelâs back with a vague look eventually.
***
As a result, Bert, who had hunted a fox with white fur, ultimately won the hunting competition. Everyone was surprised that the Emperorâs aide, who had never been able to be at the top of a hunting competition so far, hunted a rare fox and subsequently won the championship in an instant. However, their surprise didnât end just there.
Their emperor, Kergel, was disgraced as the first Emperor in Seroifâs history who was not able to hunt a single beast in a hunting competition.
No, not only that, but the Empress also did not hunt a single beast, so it would have been more accurate to say that the said couple had set a record of the âfirst time in historyâ together.
Those who participated in the hunting competition were utterly surprised that such an unusual thing had transpired.
They made all kinds of assumptions and began to discuss why couldnât the Emperor catch a single beast at all when that said person would have always put multiple heads together whenever they had encountered it, but it was just impossible to find out the answer.
âOnly the Emperor, himself, would know.â
Or wouldnât Heinez, who was the closest aide to the Emperor as well as the Chancellor, be the one that understood his heart best?
But people couldnât ask Heinez anything at all.
This was because he, who had always been cool-headed and rational, was seen to be muttering words that others could not understand with a rather blank face all alone.
âI donât think so. I donât think so. For that mere reasonâ¦â
He sometimes shook his head as if he was amazed. He knew that peopleâs views towards him were subtly changing, but Heinez could not afford to care about it at that moment.
His Master, who acted rather absurdly, was the actual problem.
Heinez shook his head repeatedly and stared at Kergel. Whether or not Kergel was aware of his confusion and worries, Kergel still looked quite calm.
Rather, he looked somewhat satisfied beyond the realm of being calm.
In fact, all the Emperor had gained in this hunting competition was a long-standing disgrace in the entire Imperial history.
âWhat is it that you like so much?â
Heinez pressed down on his forehead and murmured dejectedly.