Dinner With Family Hiroyuki Morioka (a court of thorns and roses ebook free txt) đ
- Author: Hiroyuki Morioka
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âI donât blame you, but I can tell you Martinhâs administration would have no qualms staying isolated from interstellar economics.â
âIf thatâs the case, then why donât we leave them be?â asked Lafier. âI donât think thereâs any need to lose our heads over it.â
âWe havenât.â
âOh?â
âDo I look that flustered to you?â
âIt seems to me like your landworld citizens can take care of themselves; why donât we just bide our time until they come to the Empire of their own accord?â
âBy that time, my debt willâve reached astronomical proportions,â pointed out Jint.
âThat wonât be a problem if we install antimatter fuel factories and itymh (refueling stations). We donât particularly need the administrationâs assistance for that.â
âWhat, so youâre not gonna say âtake however many loans you needâ?â
âIt isnât my money.â
âBut youâre the inheritor, arenât you?â
âThat is a long way off, and my brother might be the one who ends up inheriting, anyway.â
Yestesh cleared his throat. âYour Highness, Iâm afraid that plan might not necessarily fly. So long as the landworld Martinh is near the Hyde Portal, its administrationâs stability is indispensable. Ships canât afford to expend time and effort to fly out to Hydeâs sun or to a gas planet further out from the sun than Martinh in order to refuel.â
I dunno, looks pretty stable to me, thought Jint. He did know what Yestesh meant, of course, so he refrained from picking him apart. To Yestesh, a âstableâ landworld administration was one that wasnât ostensibly hostile to the Empire. It was understandable why he might not deem a world where the term âterritory-nation â and the truth of the matter were so estranged as âstable.â That being said, seeing as it was the Empire that dubbed Hyde a âterritory-nation,â Martinhâs government felt quite stable, and they probably ought to be viewed as such. (Incidentally, if they ever came to know they were being called a âterritory,â theyâd doubtless have a fit.)
...Before he knew it, Jintâs train of thought was running in circles.
âThen itâs just as I thought. We should save recruiting vassals for after weâve gotten a grasp of the landworld administration,â said Lafier. âOr no?â
It seemed this conversation was running in circles, too. Jint chose to make a decision here and now. âMr. Yestesh, I hereby formally request that you go to the Countdom of Hyde ahead of me. In the meantime, I will stay in the Countdom of Vorlash, and gather some vassals if possible.â
âI accept your request, Lonh-Dreur,â nodded Yestesh.
âItâs your territory-nation, so I have no objections,â said Lafier.
âThen itâs settled. Whatâll you do, Lafier?â
âDo about what?â
âYou gonna stay in Vorlash with me, or go see my home planet ahead of me?â
âIâm here to keep you company,â said Lafier. âBesides, I couldnât stand to let you just take it easy without me.â
âAll right then.â
âAbout that, Lonh-Dreur,â said Yestesh. âWhere will you stay in Vorlash?â
âI intend to put up at a hotel in the spaceport, at least to start with.â
âTo start with?â Yestesh raised an eyebrow.
âIâd like to try my luck staying on the surface if I can.â
âLonh-Dreur, donât tell me you wish to stay at an inn run by a landworld citizen?â he asked, a measure of distress ruddying his brow.
âYouâre saying I canât?â he said, somewhat confrontationally.
âYour Excellency is an imperial noble,â he explained, as one might to a child.
Ugh... will the day ever come when people stop getting a kick out of telling me Iâm a noble? Needless to say, he knew he was in the wrong. It was all because he lacked a certain active self-consciousness â he didnât really see himself as a noble. Whether that was ultimately a good or a bad thing, he didnât know, but it did trip him up when it came time to conduct himself as an imperial noble.
âI think even just the spaceport is rather unsafe. I can post some of my subordinates as your guards, but none of them are dedicated bodyguards. Also, I brought them here in order to investigate Your Excellencyâs territory, and so theyâd end up in a place far removed from where theyâre meant to be working.â
âThe spaceportâs unsafe, you say?â
The Bidautec Delctur (Delktu Spaceport) belonged to the Dreughéc Bhorlacr (House of Vorlash), but there was a Star Forces administrative zone as well, with soldiers on duty at all times.
âYes,â nodded Yestesh. âLandworld citizens are allowed there, and there might be people formerly of UH military rank among them. And even if thatâs not the case, there are many out there with wild ideas.â
With those words, Jint grew more and more worried. Now he wanted to collect as much info as possible on the current situation over at the Delktu Spaceport using his wristgear...
Soon, he learned the bĆrĂ©lach bidauter (spaceport guard garrison) that the House of Vorlash set up was in shambles. âWell, thatâs not very good.â
âBesides...â Yestesh flashed a glance at Lafier.
Jint knew what he was getting at. It was painfully obvious. A young grandee jumping into danger at his own risk was one thing, but he could not be allowed to involve a royal princess of the Empire. After all, Lafier would be in a whole different level of danger compared to Jint.
Jint was just a grandee, and one that looked like a normal Lander at that. Lafier, on the other hand, was a member of the Imperial Family, and a candidate for Empress. She was a much more attractive target for agents with an axe to grind against the Abh half of the galaxy. And there was no end to people intent on ransoming her life to make demands of the throne. In truth, it made no difference whether the Empress or a random imperial citizen was taken hostage. The Empire did not negotiate with kidnappers, and that was a known quantity throughout the Milky Way, but endless scores refused to believe that was anything but subterfuge. In fact, the title of âFirst Person to Successfully Extort the Empireâ
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