(2)
Hugo soon held a detailed investigative report on the Count of Matin in his hands. The more he read, the more unpleasant the document became and as he flipped through the increasingly unpleasant document, he clicked his tongue.
In the Countâs first marriage, he got divorced after five years; in his second marriage, the wifeâs family took action and invalidated the marriage in about a month. And his third marriage ended in a divorce, a few months ago. And it was just a month ago that the Count made a marriage proposal to the royal family for his fourth marriage. It was not an uncommon thing for an aristocrat to get divorced, but the Count was over the top.
His official children were three sons. There was the eldest son, who was born from his first wife, and the second son, who was an extramarital child, entered into the legal registry by his first wife. His first wife seemed to have used the legal registration as a condition to get divorced. The third son was born from his recently divorced wife and there were a few more illegitimate children that the Count did not retrieve.
It was written in the report that the Count likely had a problem with his male function, due to the fact that he was promiscuous when he was younger and had not had a child for nearly a decade.
Although the man was garbage, Hugo thought there was a high chance of Kwiz accepting the bastardâs marriage proposal because he offered quite the dowry.
Kwiz only acknowledged his sister from the same mother, Katherine, as his blood relation. His brothers were opponents that he wanted to kill if possible, and his sisters were deadweights eating away at the royal palace budget. When he was Crown Prince, Kwiz greatly despised the way the previous king had crapped out children all over the place.
The late king placed kingship in sight and idly watched as the princes killed each other. Rather, he thought that his childrenâs fierce power struggles increased his influence.
For a king like Kwiz who loathed his fatherâs debauchery, he was the type to practice moderation with women. He had only three concubines and even that was due to the need to further his interests. It was unknown what means he used but there were no children between him and his concubines.
If Kwiz were to accept the Count of Matinâs proposal and push ahead with marriage, the target would be Princess Cecil, who turned eighteen this year.
âHow did my wife know that he would make a marriage proposal to the royal family?â
Hugo wondered for a moment, but he didnât linger on the thought for long. This was because another thought occupied its place. Just as his wife said, if she had stayed in the palace, the princess to marry this bastard would have been her. Princess Vivian would have become the wife of this garbage.
He felt like shit. It was something that didnât happen but the mere possibility that it might have happened made him burn with icy fury.
Hugo thought carefully about how to deal with his wifeâs request. It was quite cumbersome to retrieve a marriage proposal that had already been sent to the royal family. Asking the king would just create another chance for the king to make demands and he didnât know what the king would ask for.
Hugo called Fabian, gave him the report and ordered him:
âGet rid of this man. I donât want him in my sight.â
âShould it be complicated or simple?â
âSimple.â
âYes, sir. But about the pendant you ordered me to find previously. I apologize. I have not found it yet.â
Fabian was uneasy every time he came to the ducal residence to give a report because his lord had not mentioned the pendant all this while. There was no place he didnât ask his subordinates to comb through, but he didnât even get a single clue.
âHm? Ah, you can stop looking for that.â
Hugo had forgotten to mention that they didnât need to look for the pendant anymore. But he didnât feel sorry at all for the people who had been diligently looking for it. Not knowing the exact circumstances, Fabian was just glad that he wasnât reprimanded.
And about a week later, the Count of Matin died in a carriage-flipping accident.[1]
* * *
Hugo informed Lucia about the death of Count Matin. Of course, he didnât say that it happened under his orders.
âI looked into handling your request and learnt that he died in an accident.â
His reaction was impassive as if it was an unknown stray dog that had died. Lucia understood. To him, the Count of Matin was really nothing, his existence was even worse than a stray dog.
â...An accident?â (Lucia)
Lucia couldnât believe it. How much had she cursed him in her dream? She pleaded and begged for his death, even if she was punished for it. Maybe her desperate curses were heard and caused him to meet a miserable end by decapitation, but he was a someone that seemed like he wouldnât die from something as fleeting as a carriage accident.
Hugo wrapped his arms around her absent-minded figure, as she had fallen into deep thought.
âIs it shocking that he died?â (Hugo)
â...Shocking? Yes, perhaps...â (Lucia)
âWhy?â
âFor it to be that trivial...I thought he was someone that wouldnât die even if you killed him.â
Hugo thought that for the standards of his innocent wife, who had lived sheltered in the palace and married him immediately after, the Countâs behavior was very shocking.
When the standard was the world which was overflowing with evil, someone like Count Matin was nothing but filth clinging to the soles of oneâs feet. But she didnât need to know stuff like that. It was enough for her to know someone like the Count of Matin as the standard for the peak of evil.
âHeâs already dead. Stop thinking about it. He cannot marry anyone now, let alone the princess.â
â...I see.â
Suddenly realized something, Lucia wondered aloud.
âThen what will happen to the Countâs household...â
âHe has a son, so his son will inherit his title.â
âThe divorced countess has a young son.â
Since the Count of Matin was dead, the future where the Matin family was exterminated after being caught up in a plot of treason would change, and the future of Bruno fleeing to a foreign country would also change.
Lucia thought the precocious Bruno missed his mother a lot, even though he didnât say it. He was still a young child who needed his motherâs embrace.
Count Matinâs eldest son, who was to inherit the title, did not seem like he would care and attend to his younger brother. From what she saw in her dream, they were brothers who treated each other like strangers.
âIf the Countess wants, I can arrange for her son to be taken to her parentâs home.â
Hugo pressed down the irritation deep in his heart and spoke kindly. He didnât like it when her attention was somewhere else. He wanted all of her attention to be on him.
He didnât tell her that the Countess might not want to take her son back with her. If the Countess remarried, her son would become a burden.
And if the Countess chose her son, she could not remarry for at least ten years, until her son became an adult. There were not many cases where a noblewoman sacrificed herself for her child. The Countess was more likely to think of her well-being first, before her sonâs.
âReally?â (Lucia)
Can you really do that? Seeing her sparkling eyes, Hugo chuckled. His wife tended to underestimate him too much.
There were few things in this world that he could not do. Even the role of an envoy that reaped peopleâs lives was his. Only the divine ability of reviving the dead was never his.
âSo forget about it now. And donât worry about these things anymore.â (Hugo)
âOkay.â
She smiled sweetly as if she was shaking everything off, and finding that so pretty, Hugo bit her tender cheeks. Startled by his action, Lucia stared at him then she wrapped her arm around his neck and hugged him.
âIâm really thankful, Hugh.â
âIf youâre thankful then give me a gift.â
Lucia burst into laughter then lifted her head and kissed him lightly on the lips.
âI love you. Is this not enough?â
He hugged her tightly and whispered into her ear:
âItâs more than enough.â[2]
Hugo couldnât believe how much happiness this small woman brought to him. He wished there was someone to tell him if it was really okay for this to keep on being this way. He felt uneasy because it seemed like his fate, which had only been cruel to him, was suddenly acting fickle.
Translatorâs Corner:
[1] His carriage flipped upside down and he died. Not sure how else to word this.
[2] Overflowing is the exact word used here but I tweaked it to make sense.