Chapter 19
After escorting Ibria back to the lodging, El loosened his sword and stared at the mirror hanging on the wall.
His features were delicate. If his hair were long, someone might even mistake him for a woman. Now that he had grown taller, from a distance he looked like a proper young man. But up close, anyone who saw his face would be shocked and ask if he was really the El Roitz theyâd heard rumors about.
He had realized early on that his appearance didnât match the image people usually had of a strong knight. His older brothers teased him every day, calling him a girl. After training, when he bathed and changed, they often hid his clothes and left a skirt instead. When he protested in tears, they laughed, saying he looked like a girl and even spoke with a girlish voice.
It wasnât until much later that he understood this was their way of challenging the youngest sibling with the greatest talent. As he grew taller than his brothers and surpassed them in swordsmanship, the teasing naturally stopped.
But no matter how much his body grew, his delicate, refined features didnât change. A knight couldnât hide his face, but he could control his voice. So El spoke as little as possible, believing that was the way to appear knightly.
Then Ibria said something unexpected.
ââYour voice is really nice.â
He had been startled by her words. No one had ever said that to him. Was Ibria teasing him like his brothers did? Considering her usual behavior, that seemed likely.
âWhy do you live without speaking when you have such a nice voice? If it were me, Iâd be talking all day.â
But the tone that followed seemed sincere. Her words and sharp expression were typical of Ibria, but there was no pretense in her tone.
Noble and proud, Ibria Oberon usually spoke with carefully chosen words, indirect and refined. Direct speech was considered crude, so she always circled around her point.
But lately, Ibria had changed. Whatever she said, it was direct.
âEven the conversation with Ridon was like that.â
As El blankly replayed the conversation in his mind, the lodging became noisy. The knights who had gone to scout the Black Forest returned. Originally, Baron Insectia had planned to provide Ridon and El with private rooms. But El insisted on staying with the others, saying he shouldnât have a better room than the knights.
âCommander?â
One of the returning knights called out to El, who was standing still. As Elâs blurry eyes slowly focused on him, the knight quickly bowed.
âAll returned safely. Should we tell everyone to go inside and rest?â
The knight had a simple trick for talking to the taciturn El: ask questions he could answer with a âyesâ or âno.â El would then nod or shake his head.
But this time was different.
âMy voiceâŠâ
âYes?â
El spoke for the rarest of times, and the knight, startled, repeated himself. Seeing the knightâs wide eyes, El pressed his lips shut and shook his headâindicating it was nothing.
âThen shall we tell everyone to go inside and rest?â
This time El nodded. The knightâs face brightened at the confirmation.
âEveryone, go inside and rest!â
As the knights busily moved, El remained standing as if nailed to the spot.
âYour voice is really nice.
Ibriaâs words kept echoing in his mind.
âToday Iâm sleeping in, so donât bother me in the morning. Got it?â
I warned Harry, who had returned to his human form and sprawled across my bed. Having gotten used to taking up space even as a dog, he now claimed the bed in human form as well.
At first, I tried to push him away. But neither words nor strength could persuade him. Demons were strong and stubbornly persuasive. Once Harry decided to insist, I could only surrender. I could force him with magic, but constantly doing so was exhausting.
âThe bedâs wide anyway.â
With a resigned sigh, I let Harry have one side of the bed. Since then, he often claimed the bed before I even lay down.
âHas he actually become a dog when he transforms? Heâs that loyal to his owner.â
Harry always slept beside me like a young puppy.
âAs long as he sleeps on the same bed, most of his whining is gone.â
Thinking about it, he really was like a dog.
But today, even without stopping him from sleeping in the same bed, he seemed grumpy. True enough, he sulked and rolled on the bed with a pouty face.
âWell, today your ownerâs dog is in a terrible mood. Might accidentally bite me while Iâm sleeping.â
âWhat? Why are you so eager to get me? I even let you hunt wyvernsâ50 of them!â
âNow you canât do that anymore!â
âOf course heâs angry about that.â
I had sided with the wyvern leader, preventing Harry from enjoying the hunt he loved. Without properly appeasing him, he would be troublesome for a while.
I approached the sulking Harry and met his gaze. He quickly turned his head away. But I wasnât giving up. I moved around the bed and met his eyes again. He turned away once more.
So what did I do? Naturally, I followed him again.
Harry avoided, I pursued.
âHarry, going back and forth like this is dizzying. How long do we have to do this?â
He muttered quietly after thinking.
ââŠJust once more. If I stop immediately after you say youâre dizzy, itâll feel like I lost.â
âAlright, one more time.â
As soon as I said yes, Harry turned his head once more. I quickly approached and met his eyes. As promised, he didnât look away.
âFeeling like talking now?â
Harry clicked his tongue.
âYou were probably a fox in your past life.â
âNo way. I was human back then too.â
Before becoming Ibria, I was definitely human. Harry snorted at my certainty.
âThen a fox-like human, I suppose.â
âUhâŠâ
âThat assessmentâs not wrong, though.â
Because of that, I often handled all the troubles. Every contract dispute or complaint was my responsibility.
âThe problem is that it happens daily.â
Normally, accidents happen rarely. But in trade, incidents occurred every day.
âMiscommunications leading to contract mistakes, miscalculations causing huge losses, offending someone due to ignorance of their cultureâŠâ
Just thinking of them, I couldnât count on my fingers.
âThen what kind of conversation is our fox-like owner planning?â
Harry narrowed his eyes. I wracked my brain to calm him, but how could a normal human understand a demonâs mind? I decided to ask Harry directly.
âHow can I calm you down?â
âContractor, I want only one thingâpleasure. Thatâs why demons exist. If I canât get it, I might go berserk at any time.â
Harryâs eyes sparkled threateningly. It wasnât just a threatâsuch a strong demon could easily tear my neck out.
âIâll find a way. If we explore the continent, we might find something you can hunt.â
There were many other beasts besides wyverns. While wyverns were the main problem, trolls, goblins, and orcs also existed.
The issue was territory. Wyverns lived in the Black Forest, the dukeâs domain. Other beasts belonged to other noble estates.
âIf an accident happens hunting thereâŠâ
The Duke of Oberon wouldnât stay idle. Within his domain, the dukeâs authority was like a kingâs. Ibria could handle accidents, but outside, even the duke had limits. That was the law.
âEven if the duke could manage it, better not risk it.â
Having already been exiled to the countryside, another accident could ruin me completely.
âThen all the Oberon wealthâmy rich futureâwould fly away like a mountain bird.â
âI canât let that happen.â
âThen until you find a solution, what should I do?â
âHow long do you think you can hold out?â
âIf I donât use my strength, a few months. ButâŠâ
Harry had to stay transformed, using his energy constantly.
âHow long did he last this time?â
I called Harry out to estimate how long until he would go berserk.
âNot even a month, probably.â
Filling a demonâs need for pleasure was like satisfying human hunger. Lasting that long was a small miracle.
âIâll find a solution within a month.â
âAnd if you donât?â
âIf notâŠâ
My mind went blank. I sighed.
âDo we really need to think that badly already?â
âJust preparing for the worst.â
âIf we think positively, weâll find an answer. I donât want to be killed by Harry, so no worst-case thoughts.â
I shivered, and Harryâs eyes went wide.
âWhy would I kill you?â
âIf you go berserk, wonât that happen?â
âYou said not to think of the worst, but your imagination is scarier. What I imagined was justâŠâ
He trailed off, staring at me.
âJust what?â
I urged him. He silently got up from the bed.
âAnyway, me tearing your neck out would be the absolute last worst-case scenario. Donât worry too much.â
âThanks for protecting my neckâŠ.â
I wondered what he imagined as the worst. But he avoided my gaze and changed the subject.
âForget that. Tell me about the achievement you were talking to that prince about. What do you plan with the wyverns?â
âOh, that.â
I was about to ask for Harryâs opinion, since he knew this world well. I had concluded it was possible, but I wanted someone elseâs certainty too.
âHave you heard of Dragon Knights?â
Not in Lady Catherine, but I had seen them in another story.
âDragon Knights?â
âYes. Knights who ride dragons into battle.â
âYou mean humans riding dragonsâor wyvernsâinto battle?â
Harry frowned, skeptical.
âHowâs that possible? Wyverns wonât calmly let anyone ride them.â
âBut I rode one back.â
âThatâs because you have the leaderâs scales.â
âWhat if I asked to have knights ride and fight with me?â
Harry fell silent. The wyvern leader had promised heâd do anything if Harry stopped the slaughter. Riding knights into battle would be feasible.
âIf humans donât want to kill wyverns, we need to show that they can coexist. If wyverns become members of the knights, thatâs proof.â
âDo you really need to go that far? The promise with the leader was just to stop killing wyverns. You werenât promising everyone else wouldnât kill them.â
âThatâs trueâŠ.â
Humans and wyverns could communicate. Couldnât they negotiate mutually beneficial coexistence?
Wyverns lost eggs annually. Humans were injured or killed annually. Both suffered.
âUgh. This obsession with mediating dealsâŠâ
Humans donât change overnight.
âAnd if wyverns and humans get along, Erel wonât need royal aid.â
Tying up annoying capital connections nicely. Not a bad deal.
âSo the achievement for the prince is the Dragon Knights? Wyverns loyal to the knights?â
âThatâs too extravagant. Riding wyverns is for our Frost Knights.â
Why give the royal knights more power? Becoming Dragon Knights strengthens our Frost Knights.
âThe Frost Knights? Then what does the prince get?â
âThe right to take the bones and claws of wyverns who die naturally.â
Wyverns have lifespans. Once dead, they wouldnât care about their bones or claws.
âThatâs very valuable to humans, though.â
âIn exchange, he must promise to stop wyvern hunts.â
The hunts were because wyverns harmed humans. If the wyverns joined the Frost Knights, the hunts would no longer be justified. Plus, he gets the rare resources. The crown couldnât refuse.
âNormally, resources from killing beasts go to the crown, but that only works if wyverns can be killed. Smuggling happens often. Peaceful resource acquisition is a good thing for the crown.â
The only concern would be the balance of power.
âThe Frost Knights under Oberon having Dragon Knightsâisnât that too strong? But would the crown doubt Oberonâs loyalty? Probably not.â
Harry listened calmly, then looked skeptical.
âWhy? Does it seem impossible?â
âNo, the royal family will accept it. But if Frost Knights in Erel ride wyvernsâŠâ
âRight. Why?â
âThe Frost Knights have âthat one.ââ
âAh.â
Harry didnât name him, but I immediately knew who âthat oneâ was.
Lionel Dilph. Him riding a wyvern into battle.
ââŠI really canât imagine it.â
âRight?â
Harry nodded, and I started genuinely worrying about the plan.