Raymond might already be searching for her, and if he couldnât find her, he would probably commit suicide to follow her. Carynne thought about this absentmindedly and realized it was actually a good method. She decided to advise Raymond not to wait next time and just commit suicide. Waiting too long had made him cry too much.
Thinking of Raymond, Carynne slowly closed her eyes.
âBut when I opened my eyes, I found myself hereâ¦â
Carynne felt the walls of the room with her hands, trying to figure out the location.
It seemed like she had been here before. As she felt along the walls, she slowly found the spot where the lantern had been hung before. With a clatter, she found the extinguished lantern.
Fortunately, there was a matchbox right next to the lantern. After several attempts in the darkness, Carynne finally managed to light a match.
âWhere are we!â
ââ¦Isella, Iâll say it again⦠Promise me you wonât scream.â
âWhere exactly are we?â
Where, indeed.
The owner of this place was obvious. The person who held the real power in this country.
âHaa.â
Carynne sighed as she lit the lantern. The small flame illuminated the area. Isella stumbled toward the light. Her face was covered in blood. Damn. Carynne reached out to Isella, but she avoided Carynneâs hand.
âWhere are we? And why are we here? Why havenât you been telling me properly?â
ââ¦As I said before, itâs better if you donât know.â
Carynne answered calmly.
The owner of this room was Crown Prince Gueuze. He probably wouldnât kill her outright. As she resembled his mother so much, she would be more useful alive than dead. Though, for someone with Carynneâs weak constitution, she had no intention of playing along with him.
âShould I just kill myself and be done with it?â
Carynne looked toward the wall where a decorative sword was hung. But it was too high. Her arms couldnât reach it. Last time, Crown Prince Gueuze had killed his son and left the sword on the ground, making it possible.
âWhat a hassleâ¦â
Carynne thought about ways to take her own life. She knew from her past lives that biting her tongue wouldnât kill her. Would smashing her head against the wall work? She had never succeeded in killing herself that way.
She should have replaced the necklace with a sturdy rope like last time. That would have made it easier to succeed. Carynne lamented her inadequacy. How could she die?
ââ¦Carynne, b-blood⦠you have blood⦠on your faceâ¦â
And then there was Isella.
Seeing Isellaâs blood-streaked face in the dark, Carynne felt despondent. Isella had also been kidnapped and had blood on her face from being hit on the head with something.
Carynne touched the back of her head and spoke to Isella. Fortunately, it seemed like her head wasnât cracked open.
âIsella, your face is covered in blood too.â
âW-What? Really? Oh, so thatâs why⦠Wait, let me see the lantern.â
Isella snatched the lantern from Carynne and hurriedly wiped her face with her sleeve. When she saw the blood soaking into her sleeve, she panicked.
âAhhh!â
âShh.â
âAhhhhh!â
âIsella. Be quiet.â
âIt hurts! Thereâs b-blood!â
The blood had been flowing all along, but now it seemed to bother her more. Carynne approached Isella and examined her head. She was bleeding from what appeared to be a blow. But seeing her moving around normally, Carynne realized there were more pressing concerns.
âIsella. Calm downâ¦â
ââ¦Agh.â
âIsella!â
And then, still with her mouth open, Isella fainted and collapsed to the ground.
Carynne quickly put her ear to Isellaâs chest, but her heart hadnât stopped.
ââ¦What should I do?â
Carynne lifted the lantern higher.
The true nature of the room hidden in the darkness was revealed.
The room still had corpses hanging on the walls. Fortunately, there werenât as many as last time. At a later date, the room would be filled⦠but for now, the grotesqueness was somewhat diminished due to the comparatively fewer number of bodies hanging.
ââ¦Isellaâ¦â
It was still revolting, but given that it was her second time seeing this room, Carynne could look at it calmly without screaming. She sighed, noticing that the number of bodies, or what had once been bodies, was significantly fewer than before.
âWhat should we do?â
Once again, she was entangled with Crown Prince Gueuze.
* * *
âI still canât believe it.â
Marquis Penceir cut him off before Raymond could even mention the suspectâs name. He looked like he didnât want to hear another word. Raymond pointed to the documents he had brought and began to speak.
âMarquis, I was very hesitant about whether to inform you of this.â
âDo you understand what youâve just said? Do you realize how dangerous this action is?â
The evidence, statistics, testimonies, and suspect sketches Raymond presented all pointed to Crown Prince Gueuze. Raymond had practically fabricated the evidence while knowing the answer from the very start, but to the unsuspecting marquis, it was disturbingly accurate.
Despite this, the marquis had no intention of accepting it. He, too, was part of the royal family.
âAll this evidence points to the royal palace.â
Raymond said, staring at the Marquis.
âWe must stop more people from dying.â
âYou must think you have seven lives. Iâll pretend I didnât hear any of this.â
âMarquis.â
As Raymond spent more time with the marquis, he became aware of the marquisâs cold side. It was something he hadnât noticed when he was younger.
The marquis detested Verdic for developing weapons or managing conflicts, but he never actively opposed Crown Prince Gueuze either.
The number of victims Raymond had identified reached the thousands. Outwardly, Marquis Penceir and Crown Prince Gueuze appeared to be quite close. The marquis couldnât have been oblivious to the crown princeâs gruesome secretsâyet, he never opposed the man.
In the end, he was just a pawn to the marquis. The marquis was someone who could discard him for political purposes. To ascend to the throne.
Prince Lewis would eventually die, and the marquis would be king. Raymond had seen the marquisâs dirty side and had even become his scapegoat. As people moved to a larger stage, the ease with which they used and discarded others increased.
Marquis Penceir rarely wanted to intervene in this matter. He pushed the documents Raymond handed him aside and advised,
âTake care. Sometimes you have to endure.â
âPeople are dying even now. Look at the timing of the discovered corpses and the near abductions. The people are anxious.â
âFar more people are dying on the border right now. A few disappearing in the capital isnât even noticeable. Itâs still too early.â
The marquisâs eyes were cold. To him, Raymond was still a naive youngster. Seeing Raymond with dangerous evidence made the marquis suspicious.
In the past, he had held more information than Raymond, so he could handle Raymondâs actions with ease. But now, realizing Raymond had more information, he reacted sharply. The marquis was displeased with Raymond leading the conversation.
âMarquis.â
âMore importantly, itâs not your business. Why are you so concerned about those missing people? Most of them are prostitutes, arenât they? Donât worry about it.â
âDo prostitutes deserve to die?â
The marquis merely scoffed at Raymondâs provocative words.
âIsnât it better than you dying? Donât speak so arrogantly.â
âMarquis.â
Nevertheless, the current marquis didnât seem at all inclined to accept Raymondâs opinion.