âYou mean that Empress Navier will be the queen of the Western Kingdom?â
âYes.â
âYour Majesty...did you blackmail her?â
â...â
âI apologize. I didnât mean to suggest that you were a bad person. If not, then why would the Empress become queen?â
âThere seemed to be a reason, but she couldnât say more because we had parted quickly.â
Heinley momentarily fell into silent thought.
âPerhaps Emperor Sovieshu is about to divorce her.â
âOh. Oh, my god.â
McKennaâs eyes widened when he fully absorbed the fact that Navier and Heinley would be wed.
âShe surprisingly may be well-suited.â
âSurprisingly?â
âEmpress Navier. She usually follows rules perfectly.â
Whatever the circumstances were, it was unprecedented that an empress of a country proposed to the king of another one. McKenna didnât know if he could describe it as a proposal, but...
âWas it done with sincerity?â
âDonât joke about that, McKenna.â
âWhat about you? Did you accept wholeheartedly?â
âOf course.â
Heinley looked at McKenna as if to say, âDonât ask such an obvious question.â
âWell, we were going to start a war, use Miss Rashta as a shield, and take the Empress hostage...but this is certainly better than the original plan. But it wonât be easy, Your Majesty.â
âI know. There is so much to prepare.â
A carefree smile flitted across Heinleyâs face.
âBut I cannot make an empress a queen.â
It was a joke, but it wasnât easily understood. McKenna blinked in confusion, before his eyes widened in realization, and he leapt to his feet. Heinley was referring not to a Western Kingdom, but a Western Empire.
âYour Majesty, you mean...!â
âThereâs a lot of hard work ahead of you, McKenna.â
Normally McKenna would have complained in frustration, but he looked on at Heinley with deep happiness and admiration.
The people of the Western Kingdom had a slight sense of inferiority to the Eastern Empire. Although each countryâs strength and ability was roughly equal, the West was treated as a second tier country after their forces were defeated by the mage army. Foreign countries followed the Eastern Empireâs example, and while Western Kingdom was nowhere a weak country, it was treated as such. Discontent was bound to grow.
Heinley smiled at McKenna and slapped his back jovially.
âCome on, I was going to do it anyway. Donât you remember our promise?â
âI do...IâI am happy though.â
Heinley teased McKenna for a little longer, and then pulled out a letter.
âDeliver this to Empress Navier.â
McKenna gave a grumbled sniffle.
âNow that itâs turned out like this, more letters will be exchanged. My poor long-suffering wings.â
However, McKenna still had a smile on his face.
âIâm sorry. But from now on, we need to be careful, as the contents of the letters are things that should not be exchanged in a normal matter.â
âYou talk as if it already wasnât.â
In a flash, McKenna transformed. As his clothes fell to the ground, a beautiful blue-feathered bird flew upwards. Heinley tied the letter to the birdâs ankle, stroked his head, and opened the window.
A corner of Heinleyâs chest swelled with pride. The feeling had rested in him ever since he met Navier in Wirwol. While he was saddened that the Empress did not love him, he was happy enough to cover it all up. Meanwhile, McKenna, a staunch opponent of Heinleyâs love for Navier, unexpectedly said that she was suited for him. There may have been a slight sense of sarcasm, but Heinley couldnât help but smile.
There was a knock on the door, and a secretary outside asked for permission to enter. Heinley rang the bell on the wall as a signal, and the secretary came inside.
âYour Majesty. There is news from the spy in the Eastern Empire.â
âWhat is it?â
âThe successor to the Troby family had tried to harm the Emperorâs baby, and was subsequently banished.â
Heinley lifted his brows in surprise. Empress Navier came from the Troby family.
âThe Empressâ brother was banished?â
âYes. Emperor Sovieshu sent knights to confirm the departure.â
Heinley jumped to his feet.
âWhere is he now?â
âHe no longer seems to have any involvement with Emperor Sovieshu, and the spy did not choose to follow him.â
Of course, the spy did not know of Heinleyâs unrequited love for Empress Navier, and so he had no good reason to track Koshar.
âFind the Empressâ brother and bring him to me.â
âYes, Your Majesty. â
After the secretary left, Heinley sat down on a chair and crossed his legs. As McKenna said, Empress Navier was a strong follower of rules and convention, so something serious must have happened if she had come to Heinley.
âDoes Queenâs brotherâs banishment have anything to do with this?â
***
As soon as McKenna received his orders to deliver Heinleyâs letter, he flew to the Eastern Empire without a day of rest. He had been back and forth several times, and was familiar with the route to the Empressâ bedroom.
When McKenna approached the window, he spied a red cloth hanging from it. McKenna had a moment of foreboding, but then he smiled when he remembered that red was a symbol of good fortune in the Eastern Empire.
âI thought she was cold. She has an unexpected charming side to her!â
She must have hung the cloth symbolizing her marriage to Heinley.
âPerhaps Empress Navier also has feelings when it comes to King Heinley as well.â
McKenna swooped down towards the window, but then a stabbing pain to his side caused him to gasp.
He fell down, down, down.