Chapter 48
The Princess' Bedroom Doll
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As the young Raha poured out her sixth cup of tea, her nanny, Countess Borbon, approached and said with a smile.
âIf you keep doing that, people will know you can detect poison, Princess.â
ââ¦â¦!â
âBy the way, it seems that the one with the eyes of the inheritor can sense bad intentions. Thatâs a blessing, Princess.â
There was no need to ask how the Countess knew. As a nanny, Countess Borbon came to the conclusion every time she saw Raha spilled the tea.
âWhy donât you drink the poisoned tea? Do you want to live?â
âBecause itâs disgusting.â
âAre you going to drink it if itâs not disgusting?â
âYes.â
The tea with the poison came several more times. There were flowers and little gold floating in them. There was also a tea with an exceptionally beautiful touch. But Raha did not drink even one cup. When the forty cups of tea had been thrown away, the Empress knew.
Raha never drank the poisoned tea. Still, the poisoned tea was delivered from the main palace. As if they could not forgive Raha for ruining the perfect life of their beloved Karzen.
Countess Borbon said, staring at Raha as she poured out the tea.
âIf you keep throwing away the poisoned tea, your opponentâs patience will run out. Then theyâll find another way to kill you.â
âYes.â
âIs that what you want to do?â
âYes.â
âWhy?â
Young Raha frowned.
âI told you. I want that.â
ââ¦â¦.â
âThey all just want me to die. Iâm sorry sometimes.â
ââ¦â¦ what?â
âIf I had a little more courage, I would have died. Iâm a cowardâ¦â¦..â
Her father, mother, and her twin. All of them want her dead. What if she had been a little braver?
Countess Borbon stared at Raha and sat down opposite her. She pulled out the silver brooch she wore on her dress and dipped it in the teacup.
It was proof of the poison that rose in pitch black.
âThis is a mild poison.â
When Raha stared at it without reply, Countess Borbon smiled. She inked the quill and wrote several lines on a thick sheet of paper, which she folded well and placed in Rahaâs pocket. It was a message to Duke Esther.
Then Countess Borbon lifted the teacup with a look of utter pity.
âPoor little Princess.â
ââ¦â¦?â
âYou donât have any adults to feel sorry for you.â
ââ¦â¦.â
âDonât go to the Empress, but go to the Nobility Council and tell them I have fallen ill. Princess.â
Did Raha tell her not to drink? How did she feel when she saw Countess Borbon vomiting blood? What screams did she run out to get help for the nanny?
It was a winter Wednesday with lots of snow.
Suddenly the Empress, who hated Raha terribly, would send Raha to a detached palace. The Empress said she would let Raha rest comfortably in a beautiful place.
But it was strange that there were no servants, but Rahaâs nanny, Countess Borbon, came with her so it wasnât particularly inconvenient.
Raha wondered why the Empress was so good to her.
Suddenly there was a heavy snowfall, and it was not easy to get around. It was during this winter that Countess Borbon passed away.
It was more than a week later that Raha was found with Countess Borbonâs decomposing body.
âThe previous empress is also very wonderful. She said that if the Princess doesnât drink the tea, she will use my sisterâs little son as a starter through the dessert method.â (Duke Esther)
ââ¦â¦.â
âThe word is the starter, and if it is the dessertâs way, what is the difference from a slave? Princess has numerous slaves, so you probably wonât have any special feelings.â (Duke Esther)
ââ¦â¦.â
So that day when Countess Borbon drank Rahaâs tea instead was the âlast dayâ that the Empress had decided upon.
Perhaps if there was anything the Empress could not have calculated in advance, it was that the protection of the eyes of the heir was more amazing than she thought. Besides, Countess Borbon died with too much pomp and circumstance. Thanks to that, the old nobles held a trial and the Empress was in question.
It was a stormy day. The empress, who had been ill for the mere fact that Karzen did not have the eyes of the heir, died less than two years later.
Duke Esther continued before parting ways.
âSo, the princess, donât take poison and die. Even thinking of my sister.â
âIs it okay to die in other ways?â
âOf course.â
Duke Esther said in an indifferent tone.
âThe short life of the Princess is what I long for. As you may know.â
Raha smiled faintly.
âYes.â
ââ¦â¦.â
âOf course I know it well.â
Because it was Duke Esther who later learned how Countess Borbon, who was as perfect as a painting, had broken down.
âNow if you will excuse me. Princess.â
Bowing his head deeply, Duke Esther walked down the corridor to the left. Raha, who had been standing still for a while, carried her steps slowly.
She did not regret the life that had passed by. Because she survived by choosing only the best choice that she could think of at that time in the given environment.
However, if she had only one regret, it would be to drink a beautiful cup of tea at that time, one with flowers.
Then Countess Borbon would have been safe and the Countess would still be living in the beautiful home as Duke Esther painted.
Rahaâs steps gradually slowed down.
At first, Countess Borbon had tried to make Raha drink the poisoned tea as the Empress wanted. It was a natural choice because the Countessâs sonâs life was more important than Raha.
âPoor Princess.â
âYou donât have any adults who feel sorry for you.â
In the end it was a pity.
Raha hated that feeling. She hated the look in the Countessâ eyes and the expression on her face. It was a look that she felt pity for Raha. It was so much so that the Countess withdrew her original intention and chose to poison herself.
To that extentâ¦
The emotion that screamed out with every fiber of Rahaâs being when she was surrounded by horrific and pitiful situations. How miserable it made one.
How miserable it made them sinkâ¦â¦.
Raha eventually stopped. The corridors of the huge main palace, built up to the second floor, were embedded with a series of huge, ornate glass windows that reached to the ceiling.
Snow fell endlessly. Raha watched the falling snowflakes for a while and moved on.
It took a long time.
* * *
Paris grabbed Shed and wept.
âPlease be well when I leave.â
âI was well enough when you werenât here.â
âYesâ¦.â
In the Holy Land, yes. They were too soft with Shed and other experimental subjects. They felt a great rejection of using healthy people as experimental subjects, and Paris was a priest who participated in the experiments, and he always looked like he was going to cry against the experimental subjects.
Paris was not much different.
âMy divine power wonât stay in your body for long, so the Holy Land urgently brought countermeasures.â
It was a strange colored hot water medicine that buzzed in the cup.
Shed silently drank the bitter medicine. He felt lightheaded, along with a feeling of blood rushing in his body. Shed let out a low breath.
It was ridiculously difficult to pass pure divine power into another personâs body unless you were a high priest with extremely strong divine power.
Paris was a fairly strong Priest, so he could overcome the sacred power, but he could not hide Shedâs eyes as perfectly as High Priest Amar could.
Unlike the sacred power, which did absolutely no harm to the human body, the medicine inevitably left side effects in any way. Especially with a drug that changes the color of the normal eyes.
It would probably be quite hard on the body. That doesnât really matterâ¦â¦.
Another drug was the problem.
âYou just need to take this one more.â
Shed was curious about Paris, who looked at him with eyes that seemed to be crying all the time. From that moment when he first met him, he always had that kind of look in his eyes, but the expression on his face right now as if he was offering Shed a cup of poison was too much.
âParis.â
âYes?â
Did you put poison in that medicine?â
âWhat?! What do you mean by that? No, there are few side effects.â
âEven for the Princess?â
It was a strange question that Shed always asked. But strangely enough, Paris didnât answer right away. Shed lifted his gaze. He looked at Paris with a crisp complexion, and asked the same question.
âWhat about the Princess?â
âShe might feel a little bit of pressure on her bodyâ¦â
âWhat kind of pressure?â
âHigh feverâ¦.â
âYouâre crazy.â
Shed gritted his teeth.
âYou didnât say that.â
âCalm down, please. As long as you are with the Princess, there will be no such side effects.â
âAs long as I am here.â
âYesâ¦â¦â
âAnd if I leave?â
âHigh fever. â¦â¦ But the Princess will not die easily because of the eyes of the heir.
She will not die easily.
So, does it mean that it doesnât matter if you give others pain? Shed grabbed Parisâs collar. His jaw tightened.
âEnough of your pretentiousness.â
ââ¦â¦.â
âWhat the hell is this drug?â
Paris hung his head.
âThat â¦â¦. I had no choice but to use it to leave the biometric data accumulated in the body fasterâ¦.â
Ha.
Shed drew a breath. He was at a loss. All of this was part of a perfectly planned experiment from the beginning. Even if he forgot, they suddenly popped out like this and threw a personâs feelings into the abyss.
âWhy didnât you tell me in advance?â
ââ¦â¦.â
âAnswer me.â