The Doormat Villainess - Adrianne (Otome Villainess)

The Doormat Villainess - Adrianne (Otome Villainess)
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Villainess.

Such an obscure yet recently popularized term... A villainess is a character who has always been diametrically opposed to the heroine of a romance drama.

What makes a person a good villainess?

The fact that she's unabashedly beautiful and charismatic, yet also rotten inside?

The fact that she's incredibly loathsome, greedy, and selfish?

That she's reasonably strong enough to be a hurdle, yet ultimately powerless in the face of a determined heroine?

That despite all these character flaws, a Villainess's greatest virtue is unwilling to give up until the last of their breath, in pursuit of her personal desire?

If those are the hallmark of a successful Villainess. Then, I might be the wrong person to play that role.
Chapter 01 - The Doormat Villainess

ZeroXSEED

Economic Authoritarian Muslim Leftist
Location
In the name of orange!
Pronouns
He
Proofread by @Chandagnac

"Can you hear..."

I'm sorry.


"Kuro-san!"

The girl jolted awake, greeted by immense dampness and heat on her skin. She wanted to scream, but her throat was incredibly hoarse.

It was nowhere as bad as the moment she was dying... but it was close enough. Her body was hurting all over, leaving her completely helpless.

It was a severe fever.

"Dying?"

It was a weird dream that kept coming to her every once in a while. And, surprisingly, the thought of death became increasingly less terrifying.

It was sad.

It was because the dream kept expanding, retelling the story of someone... a girl, a maid. Was it her, in her previous life or something? That might be very well the case.

Even so... the world in the maid's memory was different to her own. It was much more advanced and society was far more complicated.

When she tried to explain it to herself, the phrase 'future world' came to mind. However, because she had been led to believe that reincarnation would involve being reborn in the future, it didn't make any sense that she had been reincarnated in the past. Both from a philosophical and religious viewpoint, it seemed irrational: not even death and rebirth can defy the flow of time, or so she had always been told.

Weird.

It took three days for the young Lady to recover. But when she recovered, she felt a sudden rush of excess energy which she should put into something productive.

But what?

Little by little, she began to take notice of the situation around her. Something that she brushed off before began to bother her. But the most important part is she grew increasingly uncomfortable with the attention given to her.

Was it always like this?

"Remind me, did I always have this many attendants?" she asked the Head Maid of the household.

"It was your request, Milady," the Head Maid respectfully yet firmly answered.

"Right, I remember. However, I cannot in conscience waste the maidservants' time on meaningless tasks beyond what's necessary. Please cut their numbers by three fifths."

"Three fifths?" The confusion became more apparent. That was actually less than what the young Lady had had before she'd started making somewhat excessive requests. "Not half?"

"Three fifths. And take note, I only need one person assisting with my bath," the Lady repeated.

As she said this, the young Lady unrolled her hair. Four drill-shaped curls fell on her back while smooth long bangs draped over her cheeks.

After all this time, the young Lady finally became healthy enough to bring back her signature – perhaps even ridiculous – hairstyle. Of course, in this day and age, signature hairstyles became something as a status symbol: if you had an elaborate hairstyle, it was because you could afford to have one.

"I'll see to that." The Head Maid bowed her head and retreated from the room.

It's was a pretty ridiculous change of tune, considering the Lady's bath staff was the group that had been beefed up the most. It was superfluous, even.

Little did the Head Maid know... the young Lady had, indeed, seen a future. A future of her own undoing...

The young Lady was destined to be a villainess. This fact slowly revealed itself to her as she began to process the dream she'd had over the past two years.

If that was the case, then she should start to change...

Things only get weirder after this conversation happened. The young Lady was known to be selfish and stubborn. Though, with her intelligence and talent, there was no reason not to grant her a bit of leeway.

But most striking of all was when the chambermaids found the young Lady actually trying to clean her own room with a broom and a feather duster – and doing it splendidly, leaving them nothing to do and at a complete loss of words.

The news of young Lady's odd behavior didn't take long until it reached the ears of the household matriarch, the Marchioness of Lustre: that is, none other than the young Lady's mother.

"She cleaned her own room?!" The Marchioness's voice was a mixture of astonishment and disappointment. "What was she thinking?"

"Milady, my apologies... the young Mistress is sweeping the training field..." One young Maid reported, her voice full of terror. "We tried to dissuade her, but..."

The air turned cold as the Marchioness gritted her teeth. Her anger was palpable, and the tension lingering in the manor's corridor was thick enough you couls cut it with the proverbial knife.

"I always give her some lenience and follow her whims... but this time, she has crossed the line."

The Marchioness hurried outside to the training field at the back of the Manor. There, she saw her daughter wearing her training attire with a shovel in her hand. She wasn't alone, as their manservants were helping her.

"Just what in tarnation are you doing, young Lady?" The Marchioness barked her reproach as she approached her daughter. "I didn't give birth to a maidservant! Nor did I raise one as my daughter!"

"You're mistaken, Mother." Her daughter assumed a respectful position and bowed. "I was simply cleaning up the mess I made."

"Mess?"

"The young Miss was a little harsh on her training recently, Milady." The Head Maid reported truthfully. "The field was so roughed up that it looked almost like a battlefield a few hours ago."

"Even so, we have people for that." The Marchioness felt conflicted. She saw the terrified manservants. They were all expecting punishment for their failure to stop the young Lady. "I won't punish them, but consider this a warning. If you keep doing menial things like this, they will be held responsible."

The young Lady opened her mouth and closed it again. It was as if she wanted to argue but decided not to... and the Marchioness found it unsettling. Her daughter used to be very outspoken, even against her parents. And only the Marchioness was both strong and stubborn enough to keep her in line.

Her father had already given up.

"I understand. I won't do it again," the young Lady said, "because I don't want them to be punished for my wrongdoing."

Regardless, the young Lady was never this docile in front of her mother. And furthermore, her reasoning was absurd: she did this for the maids' and servants' sake? The young Lady was never, ever this altruistic.

"Who are you and what have you done to my daughter?" The Marchioness pulled her sword out and pointed it at the young Lady.

"Milady, perhaps you need to calm down." The Head Maid panicked and tried to dissuade her Mistress. "It's not as if the young Mistress become like this overnight..."

"You're right. Perhaps I have spent so long out of the house that I have lost sight of my own daughter's growth." The Marchioness took a deep breath. "But if she has really grown up, I would like to see it with my own eyes." She gazed at her daughter for a moment. "Pick any weapon and come at me like you want to kill me."

The young Lady was agape. "Is that... an order?"

"Yes. It was an order," the Marchioness affirmed. "Don't expect me to hold back, either."

"Please, get me a short lance."

The short lance is a peculiar weapon, roughly as long as a sword but with a conical body. It is an anti-armor thrusting weapon, not general-purpose armament. It has no bladed edge. Therefore, its primary attack method is predictable. It is also hefty, heavier than swords of the same length. Its primary feature is the hardened tip that is both strong enough to pierce thin metal armor and smooth enough not to get stuck. It seems strange, perhaps even counterintuitive, yet it is ultimately a weapon with insidious and brutal nature: it is a weapon designed solely to slay armored demons.

And indeed, it was the favored weapon of the prideful young Lady. She boasted strength beyond her peers. She could wield a short lance as fast as many warriors did a longsword.

What made the Marchioness suspicious was her battle stance. Her daughter had always been the aggressive... perhaps even reckless sort. She always took an offensive stance. As if she was a predator cornering her prey, unwilling to let go.

However, this time, she put on a relaxed guard. 'The fool' or 'iron door' was a position where the warrior took a seemingly loose stance with a slightly higher center of gravity, less bent on the knee, with their weapon lowered towards the ground. It was a sword stance focused on making fast responses and counters. It was a reactive position designed to bait an unsuspecting enemy into charging.

However, the young Lady should know that the Marchioness was anything but unsuspecting. She grew up and inherited her position, not through genes alone, but had been fighting in the name of the Kingdom for decades.

This stance shows how cautious the young Lady is, without showing any weakness.

So the Marchioness pretended she took the bait and made an amateurish overhead strike to test the waters. However, before they could clash, the Marchioness switched her movement and changed it to a rightward slash.

The young Lady raised her short lance and deflected it with ease, her eyes unblinking. Her face showed no expression at all. She twisted her lance, tried to dislodge the sword, and then thrust straight toward her mother's throat.

It was well hidden, but the Marchioness could feel her intent to kill. She dodged the lance with just a few inches to spare and struck her daughter with the pommel of her sword.

However, it was nothing but a graze.

The maids and manservants watched the exchange with a mixture of terror and awe. They hadn't seen the two of them going all out like this for a long time, especially since the young Lady often took their sparring lightly and rarely committed to it at all.

Yet, for some reason, the young Lady smiled.

The exchange continued and the newly repaired training field began to show damage once again, from heavy footsteps as well as missing strikes... these superhuman feats left visible scars on the terrain.

"You've vastly improved," the Marchioness praised her daughter with a dry tone. "You've incorporated a more defensive technique to shore up your weaknesses compared to three months ago."

"Thank you, Mother."

Despite her prodigious skill, she knew that she was not yet a match for her mother. Thus, when her short lance flew out her hands, the young Lady didn't bother to resist anymore. She stood still, the tip of her mother's blade touching her cheek.

Yet, the young Lady still smiled happily. She was strangely excited, even. The familiar, even disgustingly bloodthirsty face she wore told the Marchioness and the rest of the Mansion staff that yes, this was the genuine article, not an impostor. Neither a spy nor another noble girl would show such a carnal thirst for a good fight. Not that it was a problem since covert genetic testing was done regularly to her...

"Please forgive me. I showed you an ugly side of mine again, Mother." The young Lady rubbed the drool off her lips, slightly flushed with embarrassment, and calmed herself down.

"No matter how you fought against it, it's in your nature." The Marchioness's face softened slightly. "Get yourself cleaned up. We'll have lunch together today. As for everyone else, clean the field. But there's no need to hurry."

The young Lady bowed gracefully and left while the manservants began fixing the damage caused by the Marchioness and her daughter.

The young Lady had indeed started to change, even if there were a lot of things that remained the same: her lust for battle, for example.

The change was not sudden at all. It was a gradual process. But the Marchioness noticed the changes were the most apparent in the last three months. It happened since her departure for an extended campaign. Though largely positive, the Marchioness found it unsettling.

In the dining room, the Marchioness waited for her daughter to come in.

"Sit down, Adrianne," she said.

The young Lady sat down on the opposite side of the dining table. She was physically refreshed, but her expression remained as composed as before.

"I see that you grew up splendidly as a squire..." The mother didn't spare any courtesy as they began eating. "What of your studies?"

"If my tutor is to be believed, it's satisfactory at least."

Usually, she would say such modest words with a tone of thinly-veiled arrogance. But today she was being honest. As if there was not a shred of pride in her...

"I've heard from the Head Maid of your behavior recently. Not only did you clean your own room, but you also started bothering the servants by doing their jobs for them."

"I apologize. I haven't behaved in a manner befitting the name of Lyster."

"Indeed, you haven't."

The Marchioness expected her daughter to at least gave a token attempt to defend her actions or some sort of justification. No matter how thin, she would accept it. Because, for all her harsh treatment of her, she still loved her daughter very much.

As a daughter of high nobility, Adrianne could do so much worse and get away with it.

Yet, the explanation never came. Adrianne took the blame without doing anything to mitigate it.

For some reason, Adrianne Valiant Lyster seemed to have grown increasingly docile... no, she might even have become submissive enough to be called a doormat. The Marchioness's husband had always been a pushover. Yet even by his standards, Adrianne's dutiful, accommodating and obedient behaviour seemed excessive.

Her husband apologized that he couldn't in conscience dictate everything that Adrianne did. Hence, no one in the Mansion had sufficient authority to stop Adrianne's penchant for doing domestic chores.

Even the Head Maid could only give strong suggestions, and Adrianne ignored them. Because Adrianne always asked the same question.

"Is that an order?"

To which the Head Maid would say, no, it was not an order. No matter if it was for her own good, Head Maid was unwilling to overstep her bounds.

While still exercising her own position in the mansion, Adrianne behaved like a maid. Not a daughter of the Marchioness.

"He might not show it, but your father is concerned for your well-being. Tell me, what's the reason for your actions as of late? Why did you start doing chores?"

Adrianne widened her eyes strangely but stayed quiet. "..."

"Tell me the reason," the Marchioness said firmly. "That's an order."

"Because it made me relaxed and focus," Adrianne replied, "Among other inconsequential things."

"What inconsequential things?"

"It gave me a new perspective on things that I took for granted before. This mansion and its household cannot function without everyone fulfilling their assigned roles," Adrianne said. "Of course, I didn't do it to help them or anything. It was all for my own satisfaction. And that's why, if I made you ashamed, I won't do it again."

"You actually did it of your own volition?"

"Yes."

"Alright." The Marchioness decided to let it go. "Starting today, you take care of your own room and your equipment. However, you're not allowed to clean anywhere else, neither the rest of the mansion nor the training field. Understood?"

Marchioness Marianne could detect very unsubtle signs of happiness from her daughter. She really likes cleaning that much?

"Is there anything else you want to do? Cooking? Embroidery?"

"I believe I'm a complete disaster in the Kitchen. My very existence would be an insult to the culinary arts." Adrianne cringed hard, which probably about as much emotion she could show outside combat. "If embroidery would benefit my future as a noblewoman, then I'd like to learn it as well."

The Marchioness thought of having her learn embroidery to begin with. Adrianne in the past had lacked elegance to soften her rough edges. The current Adrianne didn't need it, but it might serve as a good hobby regardless.

"If nothing else, it will be a great exercise of diligence and self-control. This is not an order, however. So feel free to think about it."

"I understand, Mother."

"Oh, and another thing." The Marchioness raised her voice again. "I don't like your forced modesty. It's as if you're dissatisfied with the name of Lyster. So show at least some pride."

"..."

"Was I wrong?" the mother asked.

"...You're mistaken, Mother," Adrianne corrected her. "I couldn't be more proud of the name Lyster. Anyone who dares to disrespect the name, they shall pay, immediately or in the future."

"However... as for my personal pride... it will just end with my own tragic demise," Adrianne explained. "Since two years ago, I keep experiencing the same dream, or perhaps you'd call it a nightmare."

"A nightmare?"

"A nightmare of a bad future for the House of Lyster, but especially for myself."

"What kind of nightmare?"

"Less than two years from now, you suffer from a crippling condition... I'm not sure if it's because of battle injuries, poison, or an illness, but you end up retiring from the frontline. I learn the wrong lesson from this and become increasingly spoiled and arrogant. Years later, I die a war hero, but also in loneliness and despair." Adrianne's face turned grim. "It is still unclear to me exactly how that happened – or will happen – but I know that my personal pride is the main cause."

"How... often do you get it? That nightmare?"

"At least once every week. It's become increasingly longer and more vivid. Perhaps in time, I might actually learn the full story and how to avoid this catastrophe."

A single nightmare is nothing. Getting it twice might be a coincidence.

But to get the same nightmare again and again... for two years? Even the Marchioness could not dismiss it offhand.

The future that Adrianne had to suffer in her recurring nightmare... it was her dying as a war hero, but alone and heartbroken.

The Marchioness wasn't heartless enough to let that pass. Never.

"I understand. In that case, I will remain vigilant." The Marchioness sighed. "However, just like there's a thin line between vigilance and paranoia, there's a thin line between pride and arrogance."

"What are you afraid of is getting too arrogant for your own good," the Marchioness emphasized. "As a future noblewoman, you have to know where to draw that line. If you can't even feel proud of yourself, how will you get the respect of your subjects and your peers?"

"...I understand."

"Take your time and keep pondering about it. Only you can find the solution to your problem."

Little did the Marchioness know that Adrianne had only told her half of the story. As Adrianne stood up, she prepared for her departure.

"Just in case..."

Her goal on this short trip is to find a certain someone...

Someone who will leave a long-lasting impact on the Kingdom...

The only person who had the power to save the Marchioness. Previously a wet nurse of the Second Prince.

Madam Ruby Pucheria.

CHAPTER 01 - THE DOORMAT VILLAINESS

One year later...

The prophetic nightmare turned out to be accurate, with the Marchioness getting attacked just outside the country's border. She also came back with a strange disease, with crawling black spots all over her body.

The news hadn't yet broken out to the public. But, if Adrianne remembered clearly, it would take only five or six days to leak out, despite the efforts of the mansion staff to hide the fact.

"Adrianne, are you..." Her father gasped when he saw Adrianne walking out with knight armor.

The so-called knight armor is a semi-magical advanced mechanical suit. It possesses strength and resilence beyond superhumanly skilled knights themselves. The secret of its power is the loop circuitry in the back section of the knight armor: a device which absorbs and multiplies the inner strength of the wearer. In other words, a knight's armor is worthless without a trained person inside.

This particular knight armor was actually something owned and worn by the Marchioness. In the bad future scenario where she got cured too late and had to retire from battlefield duty, Adrianne inherited it and used it as her own.

"I'll make sure, this time around, I'm just borrowing you, so please help me, Royal Blade!"

"I'm going to bring someone who can save Mother." Adrianne was worried, but she made sure to stay focused and did not panic. "Everything went as expected. Father doesn't have to worry."

Then she closed the face visor.

"Don't go without an escort!"

"[Soldier frames are going to hold me back and we can't afford to expose this incident to the Royal Knights. Mother's reputation is at stake.]" Adrianne's voice boomed from the voice enhancer. "[Father, please take care of everything. I won't be long.]"

"At least bring your Mother's protege along, then!"

"[...Right.]"

Dame Sola Linker was a young, recently graduated knight. However, she was raised under the direct supervision of the Marchioness. With how much favor she had racked up, her loyalty to the Marchioness was unquestionable. It didn't take too long for the husband to find his wife's prized pupil and convince her to come along.

"[Is... is that true that you know the way to save Lady Marianne?!]" Dame Sola asked from inside her own armor.

"[I know someone who can save her,]" Adrianne answered. "[However, she lives in the neighboring barony, so it would help to be cautious.]"

"[Right. I'll protect you, and I won't fail again.]"

Even though her face was hidden, Adriane could feel Sola's grief from her voice alone.

"[We're departing, Father.]"

"Be careful!"

The two knight armors started running. Their protective waxed cloaks fluttered with the rush of wind. These cloaks served both as obscuration of identity and weather protection, especially from mud and rain.

They only opened their hoods when they reached the border checkpoint separating the March of Lustre and Barony of Kingston.

"[Milady!]" The guarding armored soldiers were a little startled but immediately gave way. On the other side of the checkpoint, the Baron's soldiers also did the same.

"[Just in case you're mistaken, I'm Adrianne.]" Adrianne told them as she opened her face visor. "I came here to find a herbalist who lives in Sir Pieter's territory, so be at ease."

"[Is that so? Then you may pass.]" The Baron's border guards welcomed them warmly. "[Please be careful on your way, Lady Adrianne.]"

No one was suspicious about the border crossing because Adrianne came with only one escort and without heavy armaments anywhere in sight.

Nevertheless, the guard captain would note this and report to the Baron himself later. It would be prudent to do so. Because, no matter the reason, nobles visiting another's territory is a noteworthy occasion.

"[I suggest not involving Sir Pieter in this. That man is too crafty for his own good,]" Sola remarked quietly. "[And let's not forget his lecherous son. His fame transcends several counties, I reckon.]"

"[I completely agree. That's why we're departing as quickly as possible.]" Adrianne nodded. "[Knight armor may be conspicuous, but we can't go faster than wearing this.]"

No one would dare to mess with two armored knights unless they started making problems for themselves. It was almost guaranteed that Baron Pieter would start probing into their business in the coming days... but by that point, they would be more or less done.

"No, please, let us go!"

"[You'd make a good prize, hah! Too bad, we don't trade slaves.]"

"[Hurry! Before a patrol can spot us!]"

A couple of armored brigands had ambushed a caravan group, ransacking them of high-value cargo. Aside from that, there were also a few soldier armors scattered around. They were heavily damaged and it was likely that the people inside them were dead.

"[It's an ambush,]" Sola remarked with contempt. "[These brigands are experienced soldiers. Perhaps deserters or former mercenaries.]"

Even with numerical superiority, it would have been difficult for the bandits to get overwhelming victory in a short timeframe. They must be skilled warriors, Adrianne thought to herself.

"[I don't like this,]" Adrianne furiously muttered. "[But what should I do, Dame Sola?]"

She had to save her mother as quickly as possible...

And there's another part of her, a part that made her felt uncomfortable: she was itching for a bloody fight. The bloodlust rising from the depths of her heart was like a stoked fire in a furnace.

She was desperately holding her excitement back, trying to judge things rationally. And failing.

"[Milady...?]"

Sola had heard the Marchioness complaining about it before, of how the constant nightmares and visions began to haunt Adrianne. It had begun to ruin her ability to make swift decisions.

If this continued, how could Adrianne survive the kingdom's politics in the future?

Not-too-distant sounds of detonation startled them. It sounded like a thunderclap from nearby lightning strikes, despite it being clear daylight. One of the brigands got knocked on the head and fell to the ground after a high-velocity impact.

"A cannonball?!"

"[Che! It's still too unstable,]" a voice rumbled as someone came out of the woods beside the road. "[But it still works way better than expected!]"

The one that came out was wearing a knight armor of a different model than their own. It carried a rifle at least six feet long, with two inches bore on its barrel, spewing a thin amount of gray smoke.

"A gun?!"

The brigand that got knocked quickly regained his footing only to get shot once again.

"[Dare to mess in my father's territory – are you all tired of living?]" the gunner Knight asked as he cocked the side lever on the flank of his gun, throwing out a cylindrical cartridge made of paper.

Shotgun shell? Wait, why would I know that? Adrianne wondered. Was it something from the Maid's memories?

Nevermind.


Adrianne decided that, since she got involved anyway, she would help however she could. So, she charged in the direction of the bandits, taking the initiative in their shock and confusion.

"WHAT?!"

Adrianne opened with a merciless knee strike to one of the brigand's armor. A sickening clang could be heard along with a faint creaking. However, she didn't stop there, as she pulled out a rondel dagger and stabbed the back of the brigand twice.

Even though she hit the gaps in the armor, it wasn't going to be a fatal strike, but it didn't need to be one either. The scream from the brigand caught in this way was as good distraction as any. And she had directly attacked the loop unit, which would significantly reduce the armor's performance.

She threw the crippled brigand to his companion and then kicked another aside. It happened in the span of a few seconds, so fast that they barely had enough time to blink.

"[As expected, she can use the full capabilities of Royal Blade!]" Sola muttered in admiration. But, it didn't last long as she decided to join the melee.

The Marchioness's Royal Blade was a unique custom work with the finest internal parts. It was commissioned by the Queen for Marchioness Marianne due to her contribution to the previous war.

A big axe swung toward Adrianne and she dodged inches away before countering with her dagger again. Her waxed cloak was shredded to reveal the armor inside. In exchange, she managed to stab through the gap in the brigand's inner elbow.

"[AHH!!]"

"[Could it be... that armor is... the Lioness of Lustre?!]"

The Royal Blade was highly elaborate, with ornate gold parts engraved on some of its armor. At first glance, it resembled that of a scaled dragon due to the engraving patterns. Its armor was a flashy white, which didn't come from paintwork but the insanely high carbon content in its steel hull.

"[DIE!]" One of the brigands retaliated with a short lance, which managed to stuck Adrianne on the chest. However, it only managed to cause a small ding due to the low strength and shallow angle of the attack.

The Royal Blade's armor was hardened and tempered to such a masterful degree that it had twice the durability of ordinary, low-carbon forged steel.

She disarmed him quickly and took the short lance for herself. She stabbed the brigand in the chest and caved in his armor slightly. Even with heavy padding, that would leave at least a broken bone.

Against a properly used short lance, the cheap iron plating of soldier grade armor simply couldn't survive.

"[What the...?!]"

"[Monster, she's a monster!]"

Adrianne didn't clarify her own identity, as her mother's nickname was a potent psychological weapon on its own. As long as they were convinced that the Marchioness was inside the armor, the bandits would be in a constant state of terror and worry.

"[Morons! Why would a Marchioness walk with just a single escort in broad daylight?! It's an impostor!]" The brigand commander clashed with Sola. "[Attack together at once!]"

"[This old bastard is a skilled one!]" Sola growled. Despite her vastly superior Starfall Crusader armor, the brigand commander managed to stall her even while she was going all out.

The bandit's leader was monstrously difficult opponent, probably a veteran: an experienced soldier with a decade or two of active service. Someone like him wasn't an easy match for a newly graduated knight, even though her equipment was of a much greater quality.

"And he's wearing a refurbished Knight armor!" Sola clenched her teeth as the brigand commander slammed into her shoulder with a spiked mace. Thankfully, she had moved her body slightly to reduce the impact. "I can't spare anything to help Lady Adrianne!"

Regardless of equipment, someone young and inexperienced like Adrianne simply could not deal with multiple skilled enemies at once. Realising that she was losing this engagement, Adrianne began to retreat. She got hit multiple times, including one direct hit to her leg from a polearm. She could feel numbness spreading and rolled over in pain.

"[Curse me!]"

Of course, the brigands themselves were surprised when the third knight armor attacked them from the side, with a rondel dagger mounted under the barrel of his gun.

Bayonet?!

He smacked down the same brigand with the gun's stock, dinged the helmet after three strikes to the same spot. The gunstock itself was visibly chipped but otherwise intact.

"[You bastards keep ignoring me, huh?]"

The knight frame he was wearing was called Indigo, a strongly simplified version of Southern Bluebird. Though the overall silhouette was the same, Indigo had a less glamorous appearance, lesser quality parts, and gray low carbon steel armor. Indigo was a choice model for a lesser noble's squires, among a few others.

Adrianne saw an opening and joined him in fighting the now distracted group again. While together, they could easily wipe the floor with her, but she could easily crush them individually.

It didn't take long for the two of them to rout the entire brigand groups. Some ran away to escape, while a few fell down with crippling injuries or damaged armor.

"[Let's help Dame Sola,]" Adrianne told her gun-wielding savior.

"[Right.]" The Indigo knight nodded.

"[Useless trash!]" The brigand commander panicked and decided to run away. Maybe if he could get to the woods, he could–

Another gunshot rang out, which hit his head and destabilized his footing. He didn't even suffer a minor concussion, but tripped and fell on the grass.

Sola subdued him with ease afterwards.

"[Blah, the power's still not good enough,]" the gunner Knight spat. "[I need to double the muzzle velocity.]"

"[That's a strange gun you have,]" Sola commented as she forcibly ejected the brigand commander from his refurbished knight armor and then tied up the angry middle-aged man. "[It's small yet shockingly powerful.]"

"[It's not firing iron balls,]" the gunner Knight responded. "[It's firing lead encased in iron.]"

Lead is 1.67 times as dense as iron. At equal velocity, lead rounds would strike with 1.67 times the kinetic force. Of course, some of that energy would bleed off because lead is softer and would flatten or shatter when hitting a hard target, such as an armor plate.

Adrianne didn't know much about guns and metallurgy. Some of the knowledge came to her in lessons. And some of it came from her dream, as well. But, logically, an iron-encased lead cannonball would be a great compromise option between the rigid-but-lighter iron and heavier-but-softer lead balls.

"[So the rumor is true, that the son of Baron Pieter has become reclusive despite the fact that he used to be a renowned stud?]" Sola chuckled. "[You're doing this for the sake of weapon research?]"

"[Have we met before?]" The man asked.

Sola opened her helmet visor, revealing her face to him.

He returned the sentiment in kind, revealing a sharp-jawed boy in his late teens. His face was very handsome. No wonder he had such a reputation.

"Long time no see, Dame Sola." He bashfully nodded. "Of course I remember."

"I'm glad I'm worthy enough to remember." Sola laughed awkwardly. "Let bygones be bygones. Our meeting today is a coincidence and nothing more."

"These bandits have been terrorizing this barony for quite a while. We owe you a favor," he said politely. "If you need any help..."

"We're on an important trip and we shouldn't impose on each other too much," Adrianne opened her visor and told him. "I would prefer it if you don't make a big deal out of it."

"You are..."

"Adrianne Valiant Lyster, daughter of Marchioness Marianne Lyster."

"Reinhard Kingston, son of Baron Pieter Kingston," he politely introduced himself. "At your service, Lady Adrianne."

It was almost guaranteed that the news of this battle would reach the ears of Baron Pieter. Adrianne hoped she could get out of his territory before he could take action.

Not because he was particularly heinous and untrustworthy, but he was a talented political craftsman. Baron Pieter was quite influential despite being part of the lower nobility. He would see her presence here as an opportunity.

It would be problematic to reject him outright while dealing with him would be bothersome.

Even so... Adrianne wondered if she could even afford to completely disassociate herself from him. Reinhard was a somewhat peculiar person...

Maybe he's also...

"Dame Sola, could I take a few moments to speak with Sir Reinhard in private?" Adrianne asked.

"As you wish, Milady." Sola nodded.

Adrianne and Reinhard took some distance away as Sola secured the other prisoners while treating their injuries. Somewhat crudely, but at least enough to prevent them from dying.

"This might sound a little weird, but... does the phrase 'Modern Earth' ring a bell or two?"

The stunned face of Reinhard said it all. Like Adrianne, Reinhard must have had some sort of vision or have been a reincarnation of a person from another world called 'Modern Earth'.

"What you're using is some kind of shotgun with preloaded shell. It's several centuries more advanced than guns in this world. Not to mention, mounting a Rondel dagger as a bayonet..."

"Correct," Reinhard affirmed. "The first complete cartridge was invented in 1808 shortly after the invention of cap-based primer, the early paper shells introduced in the 1860s. Compared to that, the gun technology of this world corresponds to the year 1500 of the Earth calendar. They're still using a slow match for priming..."

Adrianne was honestly at a loss as to what he was talking about, but those were definitely the ramblings of someone not from this world.

"Lady Adrianne, perhaps you're also a reincarnation of someone from Earth?"

"I might be, though my memories are unclear." Adrianne smiled slightly. Finding someone who shared a similar fate made her a bit relieved. "It seems as if you have a stronger connection to your old self, Sir Reinhard."

"That might be the case." Reinhard rubbed his armored chin. "Perhaps we can talk about this more..."

"Thank you for the courtesy, Sir Reinhard." Adrianne closed her visor again. "[I hope you don't mind us going separately today. However, you are welcome to visit me in my family mansion in Lustre.]"

"If that's the case, then let me not get in your way." He nodded and closed his visor as well. "[If I don't come to visit in the upcoming months, let's meet again in the Knights Academy.]"

"[I'll hold onto your words.]" Adrianne turned to leave. "[Let's go, Dame Sola.]"

"[Yes, Milady.]"

They continued on their way as quickly as possible, heading for a small village in a mountainous region not too far from the border.

"[Are you curious about him, Milady? His object of interest might change, but people don't change their nature easily.]"

Well, not usually. Adrianne's change in personality was notable enough that it had been a concern for everyone in the Mansion.

"[You're mistaken. I'm just interested in Sir Reinhard's unique weapon and its origin. What about you, Dame Sola? You seemed to be on good terms with him.]"

"[...I'd prefer not to talk about it, Milady.]"

Ah, so she fell to his seduction too! No wonder she could recognize his voice... Adrianne knew this short and odd meeting would be pivotal if she was going to change her grim future.

After managing to find the pharmacy and herb garden, they immediately jumped out of their armor and hurriedly entered the building.

"Welcome to Robin's Pharmacy!"

"Is Madam Ruby here?"

"Yes?" A middle-aged woman came in. Despite her age showing, her beauty still shone.

It was especially true with her green eyes, which matched her red hair perfectly. "Forgive me for looking a bit unkempt. I've just finished making a few medicinal blends and making a mess."

She wore a medical apron and was wearing clean gloves, with a few spots from a herbal splatter.

"My name is Adrianne Valiant of the House of Lyster." Despite being highborn, Adrianne was courteous and gave a head nod. "I came here to ask for your help."

"Lady Adrianne, from the neighboring March?" The woman expressed a mild surprise. "Pardon me for asking, but why are you looking for this humble pharmacist?"

"I need a songstress, and you're the only one I can find..." Adrianne told her frankly. "I need you to save my mother."

Ruby's mild surprise turned into complete shock and disbelief.

"You know... but how?"

"It doesn't really matter." Adrianne dropped on her knees, desperately begging. "The future of the House of Lyster is in your hands."

It was incredibly unbecoming for a Marchioness's daughter to kneel in front of an ordinary person like her...

That was when Ruby was shaken out of her daze and immediately approached the kneeling Lady.

"Please, forgive me for my disrespect." Ruby lifted her up. "...And tell me the details, Lady Adrianne."

"I'm not sure if it's some kind of disease or a curse. Our Doctor was unable to diagnose her properly but... I believe you're the only one who can cure her."

"...Alright. Let us depart post haste."

Ruby didn't take much time to change her clothes and give a token semblance of respect to them by putting on her best-looking dress, something she would not do when doing her job as a doctor and a pharmacist facing everyday patients and customers.

She didn't know how Adrianne knew, but... she didn't feel any ill intent from her.

Renting the fastest horse and cart they could find, the three immediately departed toward the direction of Lustre once again. The two knight armors protected it from each flank.

After they had ditched their cloaks, the two elite Knight armors could be identified as soon as they appeared. The border guards stepped away hastily and saluted in welcome.

"[Between our entrance and our actions, we're attracting too much attention.]"

"[That's fine!]" Adrianne responded. "[As soon as Mother recovers and shows up again in public, things will calm down.]"

"[Your confidence in Madam Ruby really is boundless,]" Sola commented.

"[...It's scary to rely on dreams to get what you want to know, sometimes,]" Adrianne grimly muttered. "[Imagine betting your entire future on recurring nightmares.]"

Forget getting better... Adrianne's state of mind had been getting worse. Because she had lucid dream at least once every week, it had made a mess of her resting schedule.

Without some makeup, faint dark rings could be seen around her eyes.

She had no choice but to believe that the content of those invading memories was reliable. Adrianne just wished she could find a way to sort things out.

That's why her meeting with Reinhard felt like seeing a small light in complete darkness. She hoped that he could help her fill in the holes and sort out the inconsistencies in her memory.

"I owe an apology to the second Prince, too."

"They're back!"

"Don't get in the way!"

The maids and manservants assembled at the entrance of the Mansion gate. With concern on their face, they bowed at the arrival of their young Lady.

Ruby looked around, feeling a little bit nostalgic. It had been over a decade since she left her old life in the castle, after all.

Of course, back then, she wasn't really one to receive such a reception: she was one of the people who would welcome the arrival of the nobles.

"Follow us, Madam." Adrianne didn't spare her much courtesy this time around. "Did you bring what I told you to bring?"

"Yes."

A crate worth of medicine, in fact.

"Thank you, and I'm truly sorry for imposing such an important task on you."

And Adrianne just remembered something really, really important: perhaps, one of the most important facts that she learned from her dreams, the fact surrounding Madam Ruby.

"Madam, if I may ask you a question," Adrianne asked the woman with a stiff, scared expression. "Do you happen to have a daughter named Garnet? She managed to win a scholarship in the Knights Academy enrollment, correct?"

"That's correct. Had Garnet become so famous that you have heard about her?" Ruby looked weirded out.

"I just heard of it in passing. What a coincidence," Adrianne lied.

Ah, it all makes sense now... This story... no, this world was not in any way centered around her. The daughter of Madam Ruby was the centerpiece of everything.

And, as a matter of fact, Adrianne's dark future began with her hostile confrontation with Garnet. This is the story of Garnet Pucheria the Heroine, and Adrianne Lyster the Vilainess.

Her destined enemy.
 
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Chapter 02 - A stubborn Heroine
Proofread by @Chandagnac

"You returned safely, thank God." The Marchioness's husband, Adrianne's father, sighed a long breath of relief when he saw his daughter and his wife's favorite pupil coming back safely.

"We got into a few scuffles with brigands," Adrianne explained, "but we're unharmed for the most part."

"In the Baron's territory? Unbelievable."

"Deserters: they were skilled enough to push the two of us back. We owe it to Baron Pieter's eldest son, Sir Reinhard, that we managed to rout the brigands and catch their leader."

Sola looked at Adrianne weirdly. Adrianne was for some reason pushing the image of the former casanova as a savior knight in shining armor to make him sound good to the ears of her father...

"I see. I've heard unsavory things about Sir Reinhard... so color me surprised."

"I took the liberty of inviting him to our mansion. I sincerely hope this won't inconvenience you and Mother." Adrianne bowed apologetically.

Her father still felt weirded out by her excessive politeness... and he was something of a pushover himself.

Still, at the same time, it was a bold move on Adrianne's part.

"Well... I sincerely hope things won't be as complicated with the Second Prince."

"It's already complicated as it is." Adrianne's expression turned grim as she remembered the details of her nightmares again. "If I were to become Mother's successor, marrying the Second Prince would be quite a pickle, especially if he intends to become a Duke."

"It will be a different story if Elder Brother is willing to succeed mother, but he wanted to pursue the path to become a member of the Clergy."

She knew for a fact that, even discounting Adrianne's awful personality and political baggage, the spirited Second Prince would be one of Garnet's suitors.

No, not just him either. Even Adrianne's calm and soothing older brother, too, would become one of Garnet's suitors.

Aside from them, Adrianne believed that the other suitors of Garnet would be the cold and calculating son of the Kingdom's top general and a cheery son of the Royal Exchequer -or in modern terms, the Minister of the taxation or the Minister of finance. Both of them could be considered top class burghers.

From the perspective of other women, especially noble ones, Garnet's very existence seems like a blight on the sanctity of social order.

And bad future Adrianne wasn't an exception. Her hatred of Garnet started with a very valid point: the fact that she wasn't born from the nobility and yet gathered so much attention from high-profile young men with status.

But that still doesn't excuse Adrianne's descent into madness, setting her own stage of humiliation.

"Perhaps if Brother is willing to take the mantle, I might consider the idea of our engagement validated." Adrianne gave her father a fake, reassuring smile. "But I don't want to be a burden to either of them."

To entertain the idea that Adrianne wasn't fond of the Second Prince would be wrong. She was very fond of him. Their friendships could be traced to their experience as the page of a legendary knight, Sir Agravain, who had been a duke and the King's uncle.

Unfortunately, Sir Agravain died when the Second Prince and Adrianne were only thirteen years old, six years into their training and before they could be appointed as squires. Adrianne and the Prince went on separate paths after this, learning and training directly under the direct guidance of their respective houses.

Perhaps, the death of Sir Agravain and their separation was one of the many causes of why Adrianne became very spoiled during her teenhood, while the Second Prince was the opposite: he used to be a total brat and slightly matured when he lost an irreplaceable mentor.

Perhaps that was why they were not meant to be.

"I see. You have a good point." Her father sighed heavily. He felt he should disapprove of such a point of view; yet, it would be hypocritical to push Adrianne to follow her desire.

He was married to the Marchioness and adopted the Lyster family name due to a marriage of convenience. He had been the one-term elected mayor of a big city when he was not yet thirty years old: quite an achievement from someone considered personally timid. As a Mayor, he was politically unambitious due to his upbringing and family background (the second son of a bourgeois family). Still, he excelled in administrative work, introducing multiple improvements in managing the city's infrastructure. As such, he stepped down after five years reign with a moderately positive reputation. That's when the as-yet-single Marianne Lyster approached him, boldly proposing a politically motivated marriage.

Marianne knew he had what it would take to ensure the prosperity of Lustre, yet was also too timid to seize everything for himself. While he took care of their estate, Marianne could focus on protecting the March of Lustre from martial threats. Affection and care only grew between them after the birth of their eldest son, Adrianne's older brother, Avan.

From his own experiences, he understood that if Adrianne had the interest of Lustre in mind, and the House of Lyster in particular, she had to search for a less politically powerful and enthusiastic husband. And Reinhard, the son of Baron Pieter, fulfilled that criteria. Of course, Baron Pieter himself was known to be aggressive in building his connections. There was a non-zero chance of Pieter using his son to worm into Lustre's hierarchy.

Oh well, his wife would know... once she recovered. And he, her pushover husband, would pray for her swift recovery.

"Finally!" Dame Sola muttered in a hurry when she saw Madam Ruby open the door to the Marchioness' bedroom.

"How was it, my wife?" the only man in the vicinity asked, his voice wavering.

"It's been taken care of. But..."

"It's fine, Madam!" Adrianne told her. "Just as I told you before..."

"Right." Ruby steeled herself and smiled. "Thanks to Lady Adrianne bringing me as early as possible, the Marchioness will recover swiftly. However..."

The door behind them crumbled apart courtesy of the now-recovered Marchioness, her steely eyes full of vigor.

"I'd like to hear it myself, however grave," the Marchioness said, "Madam Ruby."

"Why would you do that?" Adrianne looked at her mother in disbelief. Seriously! Destroying a door just to test her recovered physical strength?

"I'd like to tell you, but telling you in private might be no longer an option," Ruby sardonically responded. For a seemingly ordinary doctor and pharmacist, she had the guts to face even the Lioness of Lustre. "I suggest removing all the non-essential personnel from our vicinity."

"You heard her." The Marchioness's husband mustered whatever sense of authority he had. "Everyone except the Head Maid shall leave at once."

The Marchioness called her prized pupil before she could leave: "Sola, you stay here."

The maids and manservants hurriedly evacuated the general area to make sure nothing leaked out. The Head Maid obediently and silently stood slightly behind, while Sola stood beside Adrianne.

The Marchioness called them to her room: "Come in!"

As the Marchioness sat at her bedside with everyone else surrounding her, Ruby started explaining the situation.

"What ravaged the Marchioness's body wasn't poison or disease, but an ancient sound curse." Ruby's face darkened. "It is a type of magic which has been forgotten. Even the memory of it has only survived in bits of folklore and piecemeal fragments of ancient history."

"Sound curse?" Sola gaped.

"You can find information on them in the Church's historical archives," Ruby told her. "Unfortunately, some of them are classified."

"I was exploring the newly unburied ruins due to the earthquake causing a major landslide on the bordering mountain," the Marchioness explained. "Indeed, it seems that we got cursed because we trespassed into something important. The people who were affected beside me died shortly. They were both civilians."

"Indeed, the Marchioness' body, mind, and magic circuit resilience are exemplary. Most people would've died in hours. Many couldn't have survived three days."

"Ah, so it was..." The Marchioness muttered in horror, "Adrianne, thank you."

"It's fine, Mother." Adrianne closed her eyes tight so that tears would not come out. She couldn't bear to look weak, not when her mother showed a borderline insane level of the will to live.

"So, three people fell victim." The Marchioness's husband knelt down and gently held his wife's hand as he cried. "I'm glad you survived."

"A curse trap had only so much strength without self-sustaining magic system backing them. Spending much of its power just trying to get the Marchioness under its influence, it didn't have much left and targeted the weakest people."

"Unfortunately, it was by no means weak – and that's why the damage on the Marchioness' loop circuity is permanent."

"How bad it is?"

"Five hundredths... no, perhaps you lost a tenth of your inner force."

"Only a tenth," the Marchioness spat. "I've still got a lot in me to keep fighting."

"Mother," Adrianne scolded her, which was about the only time Adrianne had objected to anything she did in the last two years. "Please stop being childish."

"Ah, yes. My apologies." The Marchioness uncharacteristically mellowed. "I should be more vigilant. This is my fault for ignoring your warning. And I owe you for saving me this time, Adrianne."

Adrianne shook her head. "It's the duty of a daughter... to help her parents."

"Be that as it may, you're the one who kept suffering those nightmares of a bad future." The Marchioness looked at her and then to Ruby. "I assume she also appeared in your dream somehow."

Adrianne explained, "I'm still unclear how it leads into that, actually."

"A dream?" Ruby raised her eyebrows in confusion. "Doesn't that sounds more like a prophecy?"

"Well... an apocalyptic prophecy, perhaps." Adrianne hesitated but then nodded. "I have the vaguest of memory of the former nurse of the Second Prince coming to help. In fact, I've been searching for your existence for almost an entire year. A puzzle can only be complete with all the pieces gathered."

One year... one year of hard work JUST for this moment. It's not like Adrianne can nab just about everything with ease. She even failed to draw the connection between Ruby and her future archnemesis, Garnet.

Of course, in Adrianne's case, her hatred of Garnet might be unfounded. She didn't plan to follow that scenario, not at all. She will even let go of her feelings for the Second Prince if that's what necessary.

"I see. You only know me as a former wet nurse." Ruby laughed. "Interesting."

"In any case, we owe it to Madam Ruby." Adrianne steeled herself.

"Right. We will surely reward Madam Ruby handsomely." Her father rubbed his chin as he stood up, having stopped crying at last. "Right, my dear?"

"Of course. Anything you want, if I can afford it, I will give it," the Marchioness agreed.

"All I can ask is to continue living in peace, so it would make me happy if you keep a lid on this incident." Ruby bowed politely. "That is my request."

The Marchioness understood well: someone with not only complete knowledge of an ancient curse but who also knew how to seamlessly remove it... how many still existed in this world?

Knowledge is power, for the pen is mightier than the sword.

And power invites trouble, especially interested parties with bad intentions. Just the information alone would put Ruby under the curious eyes of the Church since they were the largest institution in the country with a vested interest in rediscovering and preserving the knowledge of the ancients.

"I understand." The Marchioness nodded. "I swear in the name of Lyster, we will protect you, Madam Ruby."

"Thank you."

"But I could not in good conscience have you leave empty-handed."

"Pardon my insolence, but I'm a doctor, and you're a patient, with all that implies." Ruby smiled calmly. "Milady."

"Well, that means three days of full service, transport fee, and also the cost of the medication for the purpose of physical recovery too," Adrianne countered with a bored face, now that the tensions were gone.

The Marchioness burst out laughing in response. So Ruby fully intends to bill her with the standard rate, after all!

"Three days?" her husband asked.

"I believe that for all intent and purposes, Lady Marianne had recovered. However, to keep the pretense of mundanity, Lady Adrianne proposed so that I should stay here for three days."

After all, there's no such thing as a magical cure in the world. Not for diseases or poison, at least. Now, curses are a different story... a story that Ruby doesn't want to tell.

"We shall arrange for your accommodation for the next three days." The Marchioness's husband nodded and then turned to the Head Maid. "The third guest room, have it prepared."

"Yes, sir." The Head Maid bowed and left.

The first guest room in the mansion is reserved for when the King or the Duke may visit, while the second is reserved for Marchioness' peers: the counts.

Lending those rooms for Ruby to stay will invite suspicion and hassle, but the rest should be fine. They were all available for Barons and other high-profile guests that were nonetheless still beneath the Marchioness in the hierarchy.

They have to strike a natural balance so that Ruby's presence won't raise too much suspicion. However, both of her parents realized that Adrianne had everything laid down perfectly.

"You have a plan on your own, Adrianne?" her father asked as soon as there were only three of them left in the room.

"I didn't, but I have a... suggestion," Adrianne muttered. "Her daughter will also attend the Knights Academy, but she not only didn't come from the nobility, her family also wasn't exceptionally wealthy either."

"Hmm."

Even among those who were not originally part of the nobility, these youngsters usually came from richer-than-average backgrounds, such as trades and crafts.

"Are you saying we should sponsor them?" the Marchioness asked.

"No, we have something else that we can give inconspicuously." Adrianne smiled. "At least by the House of Lyster's standards."

CHAPTER 02 - A STUBBORN HEROINE

Three days passed with very little fanfare. The truth of the Marchioness suffering from an ancient curse was replaced with the fake official statement of her suffering from a disease. And three days later, she already made a public appearance.

Regardless of that, the ruins were sealed temporarily, citing potential biohazards as the primary reason. Only the most foolhardy of adventurers and looters would dare to trespass.

After coming out of the Lyster Mansion, surely people will notice Madam Ruby, the humble pharmacist from the neighboring barony. Regardless, the true nature of her actions was well hidden. Only four people knew about them, including the Marchioness herself.

"Are you sure you don't want to stay?" the Marchioness asked Ruby, and it wasn't a courtesy either.

"The best defense is to hide in plain sight. Peace would not last forever, but I want to savor it as much as I can," Ruby politely refused. "It's an honor for me to have the experience of taking care of you, Milady."

"Well, just in case something happens, we're sending out a light escort to go along with you," the Marchioness's husband chuckled. "I hope you're not bothered by this."

The light escort was actually Sola and six armored soldiers. So not light at all, not by peasant metric. Not even by a low noble metric.

"I don't deserve it, but from the bottom of my heart, I appreciate it. Sir."

Ruby had no reason to refuse: the better her chances of getting back home safely, the better. She had a good alibi regarding her method anyway.

"Dame Sola, pass this letter to Sir Reinhard for me, will you?" Adrianne asked, oddly serious. "Don't let anyone else receive it, even on his behalf."

"Milady, you couldn't possibly–"

"It's NOT a letter of courtship, Sola." Adrianne cringed in response. Seriously, why did people always think that she had romance in mind?

"I'm surprised you can express so much disgust with the idea, to be honest." Sola laughed inwardly. Not that she had the right to say anything. She fell for Reinhard's seduction a while back, despite being five years his senior...

Just remembering that, Sola wanted to kill herself.

The group departed at a modest and steady pace. Behind the horse cart that Ruby had rented, a larger carriage with four horses could be seen. The carriage was escorted by six armored soldiers.

Sola's Starfall Crusader could be seen walking ahead of the group, instead. Of course, she was wearing a new cloak for weather protection.

Honestly, Ruby felt a little bit anxious. She felt that Marchioness's family, but especially Adrianne, was being honest with their promise. However, they also had a hidden objective: that large cart was suspicious.

What are they carrying?

Still, there was no doubt that she felt safer on the road with such a powerful group to escort her. She reached her home in half a day without encountering any problems.

"I'd like to offer you a humble welcome. You must be tired from such a journey!" Ruby said in earnest.

"Thank you, Madam. But I still have to try and meet Sir Reinhard. Also..."

"Welcome back, Mother!" A young girl stormed out of the Pharmacy.

"I'm back." Ruby ruffled the girl's hair affectionately. "Please introduce yourself."

"Whoa?! A real knight?!" The girl's eyes widened, with her rounded cheeks framed perfectly by her shoulder-length bobbed hair.

Other than her shorter hair, she looked the spitting image of her mother, only much, much younger. So young-looking that Sola was hard-pressed to believe she was the same age as Lady Adrianne.

The girl assumed a courteous bow and introduced herself: "My name is Garnet Pucheria. It's an honor to meet you."

Sola opened her visor and smiled. "My name is Sola Linker, a knight in service of the House of Lyster."

Sola would have believed it if she'd been told that Garnet was fifteen or sixteen years old, not nineteen.

Sola gave a hand signal, then the six armored soldiers pulled away the cloth that covered the big horse cart. It revealed a freshly restored Starfall with the Lyster heraldry removed and the armor painted with deep red lacquer.

"The original type?!"

"That's correct." Sola nodded. "Lady Adrianne wished for Garnet to use it in her debut as a student of the Knights Academy."

Garnet's jaw dropped so hard her eyes almost turned white from shock. Madam Ruby, on the other hand, frowned. Did the Marchioness purposely do this to make sure that she and Garnet felt indebted to the Lysters?

"With due respect, Dame Linker," Ruby said firmly. "I cannot in conscience accept such an expensive gift."

"Before you refuse, please read this letter together." Sola handed an envelope to Ruby, which the young woman immediately opened and read aloud.

Dear Garnet

You might not know me, and we haven't met before, but I know you. Or at least, I think I know you well. Your potential didn't lose to the nobles. Your hard work and determination earned you a scholarship enrollment in the Elite Knights Academy.

But that's precisely the problem. You're both too bright for a commoner and too ordinary for the nobles. You will face so many difficulties fitting in and gaining allies.

It does not mean that it will be impossible for you to find comrades you can trust. But you will have to stay honest and vigilant to get to that point.

And even after you find yourself a company of loyal brothers and sisters in arms, you will still find that many have closed their hearts and minds and see you as nothing but a blight in their lives.

If nothing else, I hope you can use this old machine as your sword and shield. You will need all the help you can get. That way, you can achieve your dreams.

But I cannot associate with you personally without jeopardizing my own future. For that reason, I shall apologize in advance, just in case we meet in the future in the worst possible circumstances and I might give you unfriendly treatment.

Signed: Adrianne Valiant Lyster


What a strange letter, Ruby thought to herself. Adrianne flat out said she would not associate herself with Garnet? Furthermore, her attitude was clearly the opposite of her mother.

The Marchioness clearly wanted Ruby to be her associate in exchange for support and protection. But Ruby just wanted to spend the rest of her life in peace and rejected the deal.

Of course, Garnet is a different story. Her dreams of becoming a knight put her directly in harm's way... but Ruby isn't willing to stop her. Garnet spent her last ten years of life unofficially serving a local knight just so that she could study and learn what it takes. She wasn't even acknowledged as the knight's disciple.

Garnet couldn't become a knight without graduating from the academy since she wasn't officially a squire. But Garnet persevered, nonetheless. That's why Ruby had no heart to stop her stubborn and foolish daughter.

"Lady Adrianne is such a generous person." Ruby closed her eyes, somewhat miffed.

The way Adrianne did it was exactly the same way Garnet's 'mentor' did. They wouldn't acknowledge Garnet openly yet also provided her what it would take to pursue her dream to become a knight in shining armor.

"I assure you, Lady Adrianne asked for nothing in return," Sola told her.

"What do you think, Garnet?"

"...I think what Lady Adrianne said was the truth." Garnet gravely nodded. "I know very well that I'm not welcomed in this society... but the world of chivalry only respects those who strive and carve their place with courage and honor. It would be foolish for me to reject this, Mother."

Indeed, Garnet already started with disadvantage, twice over for that matter. She was a commoner who had studied under the shadow of a sour knight who wouldn't acknowledge her. If she could get leverage on something, it would be stupid for Garnet not to take it in a heartbeat.

"I understand. You're old enough to make such life-changing decisions anyway." Ruby gave up and then excused herself with a bow. "Please excuse me, and send my regards to Lady Adrianne."

"Great, let's sign the official transfer paper and proof of ownership." Sola smiled happily. The lion's share of her mission today was a success.

Garnet did not skimp on reading the fine prints of both papers, making sure there were absolutely no strings attached. Part of her scholarship requirement was to pass the written exams with near-perfect scores, including national law and legal contracts.

Those who had official sponsorship of a knight or a noble house could skimp the requirement.

Garnet put her legal stamp and signatures on both documents. "I don't know if I can promise anything in particular, but I'd be happy to tell Lady Adrianne how much I appreciate this. And that I owe her a favor I might not be able to return."

"Lady Adrianne said that you can pay her back by making sure to maintain your grade." Sola laughed.

Garnet wrily smiled in response. Poor grades would mean the end of her scholarship. As she could not afford to pay, she would have to drop out of the academy, which would mean giving up her dream.

"I'll be sure to keep that in mind," Garnet replied. "Dame Linker."
 
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Chapter 03 - The Villainess and her white flag
Proofread by @Chandagnac

Deep inside the armory, an old suit of armor stood alone due to lack of use and care. This armor was called Starfall, the predecessor to the Starfall Crusader series used extensively by the Church.

"Starfall? I haven't seen one in the last five or six years," Sola remarked. Which was telling, considering how young she was. "Definitely not the original model like this."

"Most Starfall in the Kingdom have been updated to current performance standards and otherwise customized. This might very well be the last original model without alteration." Adrianne's father rubbed his chin thoughtfully. "This would make a good gift, certainly better than leaving it here gathering dust, not even as a showpiece."

He couldn't even say they kept it for nostalgia value. If that had been the case, then it wouldn't be here sitting unseen in the corner of the armory.

Ten years ago, this knight armor required three thousand hours of skilled labor to make. The cost of the raw materials itself were only a tenth of the labor cost. But that much money wasn't a concern for them.

"It's maintained at least once a year, so at least it shouldn't take much work internally. But what should we do with the armor?" The Marchioness's husband rubbed the dusty surface of the armor, which looked much dirtier than it actually was.

That was because the armor was covered in beeswax, which served as rust protection for the long-term storage of metal weapons and armor. Dust on beeswax was more noticeable than on bare metal.

"We can just skimp on the polish and paint it to save labor and money," Adrianne proposed. "I'm sure they wouldn't mind."

The mirror-like polish of hardened steel wasn't something that came naturally. It had to be done by hand, and had to be constantly maintained. Sometimes, gold engraving was added for extra glamour. The shimmering appearance of the Marchioness's Royal Blade was an example of such.

Slapping on a coat of lacquer paint was cheaper. Even cheaper than that? Torching an armor pitch black after covering it with linseed oil. The difference in cost between a mirror-polished and a blackened suit of armor of the same model was staggering.

An armored suit with gold engraving and mirror polish might cost five times as much as the same armor suit with a rough, untreated surface.

Thus, mirror polish on armor came with a certain prestige. It was a show of excess wealth and craftsmanship. Blackened suits of armor are usually associated with poverty: they are widespread among landless knights, brigands, and mercenaries.

Painting the old armor would be the perfect compromise option. It would not exactly be dirt cheap, but it would still be affordable and more than good enough for its intended purpose.

So, in the three days between Ruby's arrival and departure, the machine was restored to working condition and painted with crimson red color. The same color as Garnet's hair.

Adrianne could hardly remember what Garnet looked like, despite the fact that she was the keystone of her future. Adrianne did recall Garnet was shorter than an average woman of her age. Short, crimson-red hair adorned her head.

Yet Adrianne couldn't remember what color Garnet's eyes were. Adrianne couldn't recall ever seeing Garnet's eyes, period. It was as if the upper half of Garnet's face was always covered by shadow.

And other than that... Adrianne also could not recall her own emotions during the whole ordeal. It was as if Adrianne watched her own future from an outsider's perspective...


CHAPTER 03 - THE VILLAINESS AND HER WHITE FLAG

"His Highness Theodore is here, Milady," a maid reported to Adrianne while the young Lady prepared a set of tea and confectionaries on the table.

The Second Prince of the Kingdom, Theodore, was none other than Adrianne's childhood friend and also a fellow page of the late Sir Agravain.

Adrianne, in the past, used to mock him for being short and feeble. That was indeed still the case when they separated from each other five years ago.

So it was breathtaking when she saw a handsome man approach her in the mansion's garden. He had grown tall – a good quarter of a head taller than Adrianne – quite an impressive growth spurt since she herself was a bit taller than the average women.

His brilliant blue eyes still looked innocent as always, but the rest of his face had matured.

Adrianne gave a polite bow and a curtsy. "Long time no see, your Highness."

"Long time no see, Adrianne." Theodore gently hugged Adrianne without warning, which made her stiffen up.

Adrianne's face flushed in response. "A-anyway, this is improper so..."

It was not that unmarried men and women hugging each other was taboo. Public hugging was something that commoners, the military, and the clergy were expected to do.

Furthermore, there was a clear gap in terms of social status between Theodore and Adrianne. He was the son of a king, and she was the daughter of a marchioness.

"Ah, I'm sorry." Theodore let her go. "I keep thinking of our days learning under Sir Agravain. I'm sorry if it made you uncomfortable."

"It is not that I'm uncomfortable, but..." Adrianne held his hand and smiled. "We are no longer children. There are things we must adhere to, including social etiquette."

"Indeed, that's true." The Prince laughed. "Except it's just two of us here, so who cares about social decorum?"

Adrianne looked away in panic. In actuality, she was conflicted about this whole meeting. Having the maids around would keep both of them in line, but it wouldn't feel right if she suddenly gave him the cold shoulder.

"Ah well, let's not sweat over the details." Adrianne forced laughter to cover her nervousness. "Would you like to enjoy some tea? We have a lot of things to talk about."

"Yes, there are a lot of things that mere letters cannot cover."

It has been one month since the incident. Things began to click together as Adrianne was lost in deep thought. The memories she had were actually those of a maid named Kuro, who lived on Modern Earth. And it was only recently that Kuro's memories had merged perfectly with Adrianne's own.

To make sure she didn't forget anything, she had immediately written down as much as she could remember. Human memories were fragile, prone to holes and corruption. Sometimes things didn't really happen as you remembered them at all.

That's why Adrianne got herself a tiny pocketbook, her personal reminder of the things that may come. And even then, there was the possibility that the pocketbook's contents might be wrong in the end.

Adrianne felt a rush of emotion as she and Theodore began to exchange their stories: things they had left unwritten in the periodic letters that they had sent each other in the last five years.

"And so I was cornered by eight deserters and got my leg bruised by a polearm." Adrianne laughed as she recalled her last battle of life and death. "I didn't even realize how much it hurt until the night came, and by then it was swollen."

Of course, Adrianne forgot to account for how much she walked after that battle. That might have been a factor in why the swelling got so bad.

Adrianne actually limped on her way the day after. Thankfully, Ruby had little to do anyway. The humble pharmacist ended up taking care of Adrianne's leg during her time at the mansion.

"Ouch. But even for a knight, eight skilled soldiers would have been too much." Theodore winced. "You ARE lucky to have got away with only a bruised leg."

"The brigand commander was wearing a stolen knight armor too, likely from his previous hostage or kill. Sola drew the short end of the stick at the time, fighting him."

If they were some random brigands wearing suits they were not accustomed to, there would have been good odds on Adrianne winning. Alas, that wasn't the case.

"So, a squire helped you in the end: do I know him?"

"I'm not sure if you would. It was Reinhard, the son of Baron Pieter."

"Can't say I recall that name myself, but I've been living a reclusive life over the last five years, so... I've heard of Baron Pieter at least."

Reinhard was quite the charmer, but perhaps his fame had never extended far past the border of his home province. That made sense to Adrianne. It would have been suicidal of him to try and pull his usual tricks on higher-ranked nobles.

"Speaking of which, did anyone of particularly high rank come to visit you recently?"

"No, just you. Why?"

"Erm. Well, how do I bring this..." Theodore twiddled his fingers. "Some people really want to push the idea of us being engaged."

Adrianne choked on her confectionary and, in her panic, immediately took a big sip of tea.

"I've heard the suggestion in passing, but no one ever approached me directly like that," Adrianne said, her voice wavering.

"It was the Prime Minister who brought up the idea." Theodore's tone turned serious as he continued to speak. "I figured you'd like it better when people are honest with their intentions."

Oh, absolutely. Subtlety had a place in politics, but Adrianne still preferred it better if people said things to her face. Theodore knew very well what Adrianne wanted.

"You know me well."

"And I'm glad that is the case, but I wanted to know what you think about the idea."

"Lord Gareth's hope lies on your shoulders and my mother has only me to rely on as her heir. So I think it's a difficult prospect for us to marry. There would be far too many obstacles in the way."

It didn't mean the marriage itself wouldn't be appropriate, legally and socially. Politically, however, that would be a different story. The combined economic and military strength of the Dukedom and the March would shift the power balance away from the throne.

That was why too many people wanted the engagement to fail, including some of the royal family members themselves.

Of course, some nobles thought this engagement was actually better for national unity. This belief was even more widespread among militaristic houses, lusting to expand the Kingdom's territory and influence.

But those opinions weren't the majority.

Speaking of which, the current reigning Duke of Caliburn, Lord Gareth, was the younger brother of Adrianne and the Second Prince's old mentor, Sir Agravain. Lord Gareth was very fond of the Second Prince, especially after losing his wife and children to a freak disaster.

It was the reason why Lord Gareth was trying hard to make the Second Prince his successor, a sentiment that the Second Prince returned in kind. Adrianne didn't think the King objected to it. Not openly, at least. And the First Prince was the same.

"I understand that well. I'm not talking about that, though." Theodore squirmed slightly. "I want to ask how do you feel about it, personally."

Adriane looked at her childhood friend strangely, wondering he meant by that. Was he trying to send her mixed signals or something?

"I think it would be a wonderful idea... for us as individual people, that is." Adrianne smiled sadly. "But we cannot avoid taking responsibility and should be aware of the consequences since we're part of the nobility."

Theodore blinked.

It was not that Theodore didn't understand what Adrianne was saying. But Sir Agravain could have attested to how much the idea of noble obligation mattered to Adrianne. As in, not at all.

Theodore could tell that Adrianne's personality had changed from the content of her letters over the last three years. However, he still couldn't wrap his head around the fact that the changes might be even more drastic than he had thought...

Theodore would like to say she had matured... but it only left him uneasy instead.

"Since you already asked what I feel about it, what about you, Theo?" Adrianne asked him. "What do you feel about the idea?"

"Personally, I can't think about something like marriage anytime soon. I'd like to think if it's the two of us, it might turn out okay. But I'd be lying to myself if I said I didn't have any concerns about it." Theodore had steeled himself and, instead of beating around the bush, told Adrianne how he felt about it.

"We can't really run away from what we are." Adrianne smiled... or attempted to. Her face was tense and she looked a little angry. "And you haven't met that many girls in your life; your frame of reference is too narrow. And you might meet someone you love so much that you're willing to leave my side to be with her."

"What?" Theodore was stunned by Adrianne's sudden if low-key outburst.

From Kuro's perspective, she had watched Adrianne's life unfold as an outsider. As it was as if she was a watching historical reenactment or theatrical performance.

The terms that came to mind were visual novel and Otome game.

A visual novel (VN) is a novel told through a series of highly detailed and stylized pictures, sometimes with voices, music and various other sounds.

Otome game – shortened otomege – is a bit complicated. But, essentially, they are narrative-based fantasy games for young girls. They're essentially fairy tales that the female players project themselves into.

Most Otomeges are VNs, but not all VNs are otomege.

Modern Earth is truly so advanced as to have these sophisticated forms of entertainment media. While the Kingdom has similar technologies such as crystal screen displays, they are not widespread, let alone available to the lower classes.


In Kuro's memory, she saw her young mistress playing an otomege, which told the story from Garnet's view as the player's personification in the game.

That was the reason why Garnet herself rarely showed up physically. She was supposed to be a generic, almost featureless girl representing tens of thousands of players.

But Adrianne was there. She was there as Garnet's rival, and throughout the story, descended down the path of villainy out of jealousy. Furthermore, Adrianne's fate changed considerably depending on which route Garnet took.

Or rather, which man she decided to have an affair with. Since most otomege have multiple story branches, this particular game wasn't an exception.

Kuro's memory was a bit fuzzy, but the one that Adrianne kept seeing in her nightmare was the 'Second Prince' route. In the Second Prince's path, Adrianne was driven mad because the Second Prince seemed to choose Garnet over Adrianne.

It culminated in a moment where Adrianne revealed a piece of sensitive information that put Garnet's life in great danger.

However, after things were cleared up, Adrianne was horrified by what she had done. Especially after it was revealed that Garnet's mother was the one who had saved Adrianne's mother's life.

As penance, Adrianne decided to quit the academy and went to the frontier to protect the Kingdom. A few years later, she died in battle, as a war hero, and her name was sung throughout the Kingdom. However, it didn't change the fact that Adrianne died alone and heartbroken.

It left a strong impression on Kuro because of how tragic and ironic it was. Compared to that, Kuro's recollection of other routes and endings was lackluster.

But they all had the same conclusion: Adrianne never got together with the Second Prince, even if he wasn't the chosen love interest for Garnet. Undoubtedly, it was because he wanted to become a duke, and Adrianne herself wanted to become a marchioness.

In the end, Adrianne's hatred and envy for Garnet had nothing to do with the fact that her speculative engagement with the Second Prince had always been destined to fail.

With that knowledge, Adrianne slowly began to loosen up. She had managed to avert a major catastrophe – and she deserved a break.

Her mother had recovered swiftly, and the curse left behind a minor impediment at worst. The Marchioness resumed her duty in the frontline, with her husband supporting her from behind his desk. The House of Lyster remained unshaken.

Adrianne had to start moving away from her personal feelings and start taking her duty seriously.

"There may be a time in the future where you meet someone that you find far more charming and appealing than I am. When that time comes, you will have to put effort into making things work out. Not just for your own sake – and hers – but also for the future of this kingdom and its people."

Theodore widened his eyes in shock. What in the hell was Adrianne talking about?

"I love you, Theodore." Adrianne held his hand. "But I want to see you happy, more than I desire anything else in the world."

While she had decided not to pursue the Second Prince romantically, she had also decided to support his future endeavors. If for no other reason than because of their shared childhood and irreplaceable experience as Sir Agravain's page.

"Adrianne..."

That sudden confession from Adrianne stung Theodore more than it should have. Theodore felt that Adrianne had told him her feelings as a way to drive him away, and he could not accept that.

She cared about his happiness, but what about her happiness? She wanted Theodore to pursue his personal interests, yet Adrianne herself strives to focus on her obligations?

"Then what about you?" Theodore asked her angrily. "I'd be unhappy if you put my happiness over your own. That's not the Adrianne I know at all."

"You're right. I may no longer be the Adrianne that you know." Adrianne put on a stone-cold expression and stood up. "Which is all the more reason you should leave."

It made Theodore feel a bit mad; but when he looked at Adrianne's expression, his anger disappeared. H brushed her cheek gently with his thumb. "You said that so coldly, so why are you crying?"

Adrianne couldn't muster any words in response as he let her cry on his shoulder.

...

"I understand things have been hectic recently, and that's why we should let things cool down naturally," Theodore told Adrianne once she calmed down. "I cannot in good faith promise to return your feelings, but I don't want you to throw them away. I'm sorry for being selfish and I can understand if you start hating me for it."

"No." Adrianne shook her head. "That part of you is the reason why I fell for you in the first place."

Prince Theodore had always been a sensitive man, someone driven by emotion than logic. It was a huge character flaw for a nobleman, yet it was also what made him charming in the eyes of many, including the ordinary people of the Kingdom.

And it was also what had made Adrianne fell for him in the first place. Because Theodore was different from other noble children she had met before. They were all selfish yet kept up a pretense of dignity, but Theodore had always been honest to a fault.

"Still, I want you to think about it deeply," Adrianne kept trying to convince him. "And don't be narrow-minded about your options."

He scoffed. "Look who's talking."

She averted her gaze. "Guilty as charged."

Adrianne herself wasn't open-minded about the whole ordeal. She was so scared of the 'prophecy' that she couldn't rationally think of a better course of action than immediately giving up.

"You're right, but for the wrong reason. I was too preoccupied with pursuing my dream to succeed Lord Gareth, something that other people have pushed on me." Theodore sighed. "I will have to think about that: both my life goal and the nature of our relationship. I can't promise I will come to a decision anytime soon, and I wouldn't ask you to wait."

"Take your time. We both need it." She shook her head.

It wasn't as if Adrianne herself didn't have any problems, and they both have obligations to fulfill. Adrianne had plenty of things to sort out, and that was going to take a lot of time.

"See you again in the Academy, Theodore."

"Yes, let's meet again in the Academy."

Adrianne was very much looking forward to it
 
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Chapter 04 - The Villainess, the Heroine, and the first event flag
Proofread by @Chandagnac

While she was reviewing Kuro's memories, Adrianne thought about the old saying, "There's no such thing as a free lunch" and realized that it was true. Every action had consequences and she would have to pay a price for saving her mother's life.

Admittedly, she wasn't the only one who would have to pay the price. Her actions would send ripples throughout all of society. The more powerful and influential someone was, the more significant the consequences of their actions would be.

When her mother offhandedly said something to that effect, Adrianne immediately answered her, "Since you decided to retreat to a desk job, father had very little to do and ended up being appointed as the new Prime Minister. It was a politically sounds decision, but the actual reason for it was that your relationship became incredibly strained. Because you hate paperwork and it made him nervous."

"Sadly, I can't deny that," the Marchioness said. "Your father had been the real backbone of Lustre's administration for twenty years at that point."

The Marchioness made no attempt to deny the fact that she hated paperwork. Her husband has been doing her share of office work. The Marchioness had a habit of using field deployment as an excuse to dodge her responsibilities in that regard.

In a sense, she lacked the common sense of the average noble, who would enjoy military duty if it brought them political or financial benefits and would avoid it otherwise. Some counts would daringly accuse Marianne Lyster of being someone who lacked femininity and grace, resembling the archetypical mercenary or barbarian warrior than a high-ranked noblewoman.

The Marchioness rarely spared her tongue in response to them. She had almost sparked an actual feud with other lords in the past. At the time, Sir Agravain was the one who defused the situation by taking both Theodore and Adrianne as his pages, strengthening the informal ties between the Crown and the March. This forced the lesser lords to back down and make concessions.

"Still, your father as the Prime Minister rings beautifully."

By saving her mother from being forced into early retirement, Adrianne also preserved the relatively harmonious relationship between her parents. The cost of doing that was Adrianne's father's career advancement.

"I don't know what consequences that will bring to our family or our nation..." Adrianne sighed.

"Are you regretting it now? Saving me early, that is," Marianne asked her daughter.

"Not in the slightest, only... was it cowardly for me to be afraid of what's to come? Not just for me, but for our family and this nation."

Adrianne used to think those nightmares of a grim future were scary. But now? She was actually far more afraid of the changes she had made personally and the unpredictable effects they would bring.

"Because now that the future is no longer set in stone, the nightmares can no longer be my guide."

What would be consequences of the House of Lyster maintaining its militaristic image and someone else being chosen as the Prime Minister of the Kingdom? Adrianne had been hard-pressed to think about that over the past few weeks...

"Being afraid is not the same as cowardice." Marianne smiled slightly. "Why do you think the Knight's academies were established?"

"Formally speaking, it was to standardize and raise the qualities of what makes someone a knight," Adrianne replied with a somewhat monotonous voice. "In the past, there were quite a few wealthy individuals who bought the title without actually deserving it."

"Correct, the Knight's academies serve as a pool to standardize what it takes to be His Majesty's knights. In other words, your background doesn't matter, but whether you're qualified or not matters a lot more." Marianne's smile disappeared. "But that was only on the surface."

"I'm well aware." Adrianne sighed. "There will always be stratification among the student ranks."

Adrianne in the otome game was one of the most privileged students and Garnet was at the bottom even by the standards of non-nobility. It was all part of the reason why Garnet was the heroine: she represented the hopes and dreams of untold millions of young girls and women trapped in their uneventful lives. Which was all the more reason why Adrianne would oppose her: Garnet was a threat to the sanctity of the social order.

But Adrianne no longer thought that was the case. She knew that Garnet's existence would be pivotal to save the future of Adrianne and the people surrounding her, if not the Kingdom as a whole.

However, for that reason alone, Adrianne couldn't and shouldn't make things easy for Garnet. Part of her trial was to undergo sufferings and oppression and come out a better person in the end.

Adrianne decided that minimum intervention would be for the best. She would make sure to neither actively antagonize or help Garnet while at the same time watching so that things would not get out of hand.

"Well, there's that. But, if you think about it, there's another facet to this situation." Marianne took a sip of her tea. "The academies have students coming from every corner of the nation. Each of those students represents the place they came from. In other words, they are the collective face of the country and represent the Kingdom's future. By getting to know these people, not only will it be politically convenient for your future, but it will also broaden your horizon and understanding. This is an opportunity to learn. Use it well."

"I understand, Mother."

"Anyway, it seemed that from what Sola said, you are able to use Royal Blade's full strength... is that true?"

"Only on a pure technicality, Mother," Adrianne demurred. "I think I could only reliably use eight tenths of its power at the moment, maybe nine tenths for a short while. Otherwise, I'll end up losing control."

"That's good enough. I have recently commissioned a copy of Royal Blade. It should be finished just in time for your enrollment."

Adrianne's jaw dropped because the cost of Royal Blade was more than the cost of an entire church or a large manor building!

"I was afraid you'd have that exact reaction, so I made sure the armor pieces would be simplified and unpolished. However, its performance should be the exact same as the original."

Well, that would cut three quarters of the cost easily! In fact, that would put it at roughly twice the cost of an old Starfall. Expensive, but not outrageously so.

The design of the Royal Blade was considered a state secret. For Marianne to order a copy of it would take significant political pull. Although it shared a lot of parts with Starfall and its successor, the Starfall Crusader, the reason why its workings were kept secret was because of its its loop circuit.

This loop circuit took more than a thousand man-hours of work from the Royal Engineers to craft. It also required expensive and rare materials compared to other loop circuits available in the market. Therefore, it was protected against tampering both technically and legally. If anything else broke, even ordinary armor technicians would be able to fix it. But if the loop circuit broke, then only the Royal Engineers could fix it.

Also, the Royal Blade's loop circuit was pretty temperamental. Forget average academy squires... even full-fledged knights would be hard-pressed to stay in control of it. That's why the royal family unironically used one with a limiter installed, operating at eighty-eight hundredth power unless in an emergency.

Only Marianne could use the full power of the loop circuit for an extended amount of time. Well, at least that had been the case in the past...

"Well, thanks to that thrice-damned curse, my inner force was broken too. I'll have to ask them to put a limiter on my Royal Blade while they're at it." Marianne smiled.

CHAPTER 04 - THE VILLAINESS, THE HEROINE, AND THE FIRST EVENT FLAG

Two months later, the spring season arrived. Along with it, many schools and universities started their academic curriculum. And the Knight's academy of the Marble Valley wasn't an exception to the rule.

Adrianne didn't usually think much about it. She was too preoccupied with the calamity that loomed over her family. But now that her memories had merged with that of Kuro, she noticed the details.

Although this Kingdom was more in line with the Earth's Middle Ages Europe, certain elements seemed to have crept in from a modern Japanese perspective.

Adrianne didn't know what it was like in medieval Europe. However, she knew that most countries in modern Europe started the school curriculum after the summer season. In Japan, this was not the case: schools and universities started opening up after the winter season instead.

She could think of good reasons for why this should be the case. For instance, in this era, room heating was at a premium, and schools could not afford to operate during a prolonged period of bad weather. However, she couldn't come up with a reason to explain the existence of pink cherry blossom trees, otherwise known as Sakura trees. Ornamental cherry trees did not exist in medieval Europe!

At the beginning of the new academic year, Knight's academies had a special event to welcome new students, giving them a chance to form their first impressions of each other and to show off their wealth and status.

One of the easiest ways to gauge someone's wealth and status was by looking at the horse they rode on: their breed, or rather, their type, signified just how much wealth they were willing to spend and the image they were trying to project. Specifically, the horse types that could be identified usually could be divided into destriers, coursers, palfreys, and rounceys.

Destriers were the prized and most expensive type of warhorse in the past. They tended to be solidly built and with top-of-the-line training to ensure balanced handling and temperament. Often, they were equipped with a heavy plate or mail armor called barding.

Chargers were a subtype of destriers. They usually had a more fierce temperament and were more willing to slam into, trample and bite enemies in front of them.

Destriers were the foundation of the shock cavalry tactics of the past. However, just like knights in plate armor, armored horses were rendered obsolete with the introduction of powered armor suits. Even a low-ranked soldier had little to fear against a barded horse as long as they wore their powered armor suit.

Destriers these days existed as novelty pets. Their primary use was for sport jousting, a remnant of the old knightly traditions. The Knight's academy did have horsemanship classes, but jousting was purely an optional activity.

While the equally outdated plate armor was a required uniform, barded destriers were pretty much supplementary. Riding a destrier showed that the student in question was bold and not afraid of showing off their wealth and thirst for challenges and competition.

Not unexpectedly, Theodore could be seen wearing his polished and gilded plate armor on top of a barded destrier, which also wore polished and gilded armor. The cost of Theodore's armor and his barded horse was probably similar to the cost of an actual knight's armor suit (such as a Southern Bluebird). So much money for something of little practical value!

Adrianne herself also rode a barded destrier. Only hers was much more practical. The spirited mare "Red Apple" wore semi-polished armor without gilding. Adrianne's plate armor was similarly nondescript since she wore her family heraldry in the form of a surcoat. She could't really be bothered to bring a war banner as Theo had done.

The slightly more common coursers remained relevant even in the present day, signified by their athletic but slim build and immense running speed, thanks to their unique gait. Coursers were part of the light cavalry in the past and were still used today for jobs that require fast travel, such as messenger services or forward scouts and forest rangers.

Those who rode a courser to the academy are often the free-spirited type that liked adventuring around their family territories or their master's fiefdom.

Among the students who were seen riding a courser, Adrianne finally spotted him: Reinhard of the Kingston family. The other person supposedly reincarnated from Modern Earth.

They hadn't really talked much with each other, and had only exchanged a single letter so far. Adrianne was looking forward to exchanging words with him.

Reinhard waved his hand to her, which was unusual if not downright disrespectful. Only a higher noble was permitted to wave their hand, but it signified one thing. The way he waved his hand was not parallel to the shoulder but high in the air. That wasn't a greeting form fit for this world: it was a form of casual greetings from Modern Earth. It was a signal only two of them could understand the meaning of.

Adrianne waved back at him with her arm raised high, which made some people look at them strangely but otherwise brush it off.

Anyway, on the subject of horses...

There were the palfreys, a rare and expensive type of horse with short legs and a long body, well known for their mild temperament and smooth ride. Palfreys were very popular with the nobles and burghers who just want a comfortable ride everywhere they go. They were even more expensive than destriers.

Adrianne could only think of anyone using palfrey at the academy as absolutely quaint. Spoiled, even. What was the Modern Earth word for it again?

Sissies.

Adrianne remembered her two supposed friends from the otome game. They were two noblewomen who indirectly caused Adrianne's toxic behavior to fester by feeding her rumors and generally showing signs of sycophancy.

Fittingly, those two rode their palfreys elegantly to the school entrance. What are they here even for?

Adrianne decided she would absolutely avoid associating with them this time. Not just for her own sake but also for the House of Lyster.

If Adrianne wasn't wrong, this should be when Garnet showed up: the so-called event flag. In a Visual Novel or otome game, an event flag is a point where a significant event or conversation takes place.

The sequence of the event was as such: Garnet would show up riding a sumpter, not even a rouncey.

Rounceys were general-purpose horses used by poor squires who couldn't afford anything better as well as by hunters and farmers.

Sumpters were the lowest caste of horses. The word "sumpter" roughly translates to "pack animal". They were analogous to the draft horses of Modern Earth. They were primarily used for slow but demanding tasks, such as hauling bulk goods or plowing farms. Sumpters were cheap enough that most citizens in the Kingdom would have one.

Garnet's sumpter horse was rather peculiar, however. It was gigantic, standing at seventeen hands whereas the average destriers were fifteen to sixteen and both coursers and rounceys usually fourteen to fifteen.

A single hand as a measurement corresponded to ten point two centimeters in the metric scale or four inches in the imperials. Horse height was measured from the top of the back to the ground.

Garnet's gigantic sumpter would easily weigh two thousand pounds. It was so big that some stallions were nervous. This was what triggered the event.

It was Theodore's proud stallion that had picked a fight with it! Not to the point of having an actual clash, but there was a lot of visible aggression, which almost caused Garnet to be thrown off the saddle.

Theodore, feeling guilty and being a generally empathetic person, offered a sincere apology to Garnet. Adrianne, in jealousy, insulted Garnet for daring to bring a sumpter to the sacred Knight's academy grounds.

Right, that had been the start of Adrianne's hostilities with the heroine. Adrianne only got pettier after that, even in the route where Garnet did not pursue the Second Prince.

Of course, the current Adrianne wasn't that petty. That didn't mean she didn't feel jealous about...

But Adrianne couldn't see Garnet anywhere, at all. Was she late or...?

"Are you waiting for someone, Adrianne?" Theodore approached her. Their horses stood side by side.

"Ah, well, technically..."

Heavy footsteps interrupted them as Garnet finally made her entrance... except things were different.

Very, very different.

Garnet in the otome game wore junk plate armor which had presumably been rusting somewhere in her unofficial master's closet. She wore the same armor this time, but the armor was painted crimson.

And not only that... her gigantic sumpter wore barding! Theodore and Adrianne's eyes almost popped out. Garnet's horse wore barding of unknown material and quality, but it was at least made in the right shape and size. It was also painted crimson.

It really changed most of the other pupils' first impression of Garnet, from a short plebeian without money or taste to an incredibly unsettling, perhaps superficially terrifying figure. No one would be able to tell it was a sumpter that Garnet was riding.

Heck, even Theodore's prized stallion decided to scurry off a bit instead of picking a fight.

"Eesh, calm down, my friend. Size isn't everything." Theodore gently stroked his horse and then asked Adrianne, "You know that person?"

"Well..." Adrianne couldn't decide whether to answer honestly or not. Instead, she decided to change the topic, "Doesn't she look eye-catching to you?"

"I don't follow." Theodore raised his eyebrows. "Huh, look at that man over there..."

Reinhard and Garnet seemed to exchange a greeting and, from Garnet's expression, she was happy about something. Could it be that... the source of the barding was Reinhard?!

"That man is Reinhard, the son of Baron Pieter."

"I see." Theodore nodded. "So they're acquainted with each other. Do you want to greet them?"

"Maybe next time."

Adrianne felt that she'd rather avoid needless interaction with Garnet. She also didn't feel like being seen talking to another young man in front of Theodore.

Deep down, Adrianne felt conflicted that she felt nervous that things had changed beyond her control, yet at the same time glad that Garnet had failed to trigger her first event flag.

Adrianne might say that she was ready to move on and let him go, but her heart could not lie.

"If anything, you should try to greet them." Adrianne smiled at Theo. "A Prince should be acquainted with all of his subjects, no?"

"Heh, you're right. Thanks, Adrianne." Theo nodded confidently and decided to join the conversation in front of him.

Both Garnet and Reinhard were startled by the Second Prince's arrival and sudden greeting. They bowed politely at him in response and introduced themselves.

After a short conversation, Theodore looked back and called Adrianne to join them. She had forgotten how meddlesome he could be, especially when it came to making friends...

Oh well.

"Long time no see, Lady Adrianne." Reinhard bowed slightly. "It's been three months, hasn't it?"

"Yes, I'm thankful for your assistance back then." Adrianne nodded at him with a faint smile. She hid her nervousness well.

"No, no! The Barony of Kingston is indebted to you for helping me to subdue a dangerous criminal and his well-trained band of deserters."

"I wouldn't have been able to take action if you hadn't taken the first shot, Reinhard," Adrianne assured him. "It takes quite a bit of courage to do what you think is right."

It was the truth. Adrianne could not decide whether to ignore the robbers or to intervene. She had only taken action after Reinhard fired at the robbers with his handheld cannon, which was really a modern-ish bolt action shotgun but much more massive.

"I've heard about the battle. You're so kind and brave, Lady Adrianne," Garnet excitedly told the villainess. "Well, not only that, but I also owe you for..."

"Let us not speak of that junk, Garnet." Adrianne was so scared that she sounded a bit colder and harsher than she intended to. "I simply returned a favor to your mother. Nothing more."

Garnet froze for a moment and took a deep breath. "Yes, my apologies."

Garnet remembered very well the content of Adrianne's letter that came with the freshly restored Starfall. Adrianne flat out said she could not afford to be seen being close to Garnet and might give her an 'unfriendly treatment'...

For a moment, Garnet was so excited that she made a simple mistake, which had caused Adrianne to rebuff her. No matter what Adrianne's reasoning was, it was within her right to do so.

Garnet knew that Adrianne couldn't be an evil person, not just because she had gifted her an expensive armor suit. No, it was because she had heard about Adrianne fighting dangerous, skilled brigands roaming the Barony of Kingston to save a couple of peasants, despite being heavily outnumbered at the time.

Even Garnet would hesitate before doing that. Yet Adrianne managed to rough them up until their former veteran commander had the time to reorganize his troops and push Adrianne back. Even a fully-fledged knight would have had a hard time facing highly skilled and highly organized troops on their own.

Garnet would reflect on it.

Theodore and Reinhard noticed something was amiss, but before Theo could say anything, the tower bell of the academy rang loudly, and the gate opened.

"[Welcome to the Knight's Academy of Marble Valley]," A woman's voice resounded throughout the area. "[You shall form a rank of three and enter carefully]."

Most of the students already learned formations to a degree. It didn't take too long for the ninety-six squires on horseback to form a column thirty-two horses long and three horses wide.

This amount of horsemanship was by no means negligible. Everything that transpired took a degree of skill and discipline.

Most of the students had been trained since they were seven years old regardless of their talent or background. To instill the value of learning and hard work for over a decade as preparation, that's what was required to enter the Knight's academy.

Adrianne took this chance to split from Theo, Garnet, and Reinhard. Unfortunately, she had projected an unfriendly image right on the first day. Not only doing that to innocent Garnet but in front of Theo too...

Honestly, other than irrational fear and potential jealousy, what reason was there for Adrianne to try and avoid Garnet to this extent? At least Adrianne hadn't repeated her game-self's mistake by acting like a clingy maiden entitled to Theodore's love.

Adrianne would reflect on it.
 
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Chapter 05 - The stubborn Heroine and the second event flag
Proofread by @Chandagnac

The horse-mounted students in armor formed a neat column in the first training field area where everyone had gathered. Thanks to the size of the field, it afforded much more comfortable spaces between the horses, so even the slightly rebellious stallions could be reined properly.

In the past, most horses in military service were gelded. Stallions were known to have quite a temperament, while mares were needed for constant breeding. Nowadays, though, it was really up to personal preference. Gelded horses still remained favorites due to their high level of general obedience. However, mares didn't have much difference in performance or temperament, and stallions becoming more widespread than before.

Having a stallion as a personal ride meant you had the wealth, charisma, and patience to deal with one. It was unacceptable for a member of the Royal Family to ride anything else but a prized stallion, either a destrier or a palfrey.

And Theodore wasn't an exception to this.

Anyway, now that Adrianne had separated herself from the familiar crowd, she decided to take a gander at the people by her side. Adrianne noticed the possible love interests of Garnet: the son of the Kingdom's top military general and the son of the Royal Exchequer.

From what Adrianne remembered, the General's son was apparently Kuro's favorite character, aesthetically speaking. His personality, on the other hand... was quite unpleasant to people he disliked.

That was why he gave Adrianne a dismissive gaze and a scoff as their eyes met. The old Adrianne would have called him out right there for his insolent behavior. But the current Adrianne couldn't be bothered.

In the academy, the students were implicitly divided by their social status: the nobles, the burghers, and the commoners. The nobles and the burghers didn't get along all that often. This reflected the situation outside the academy, highlighting the constant friction between the urban burghers and the rural nobles.

As for the commoners, they could only back away or seek protection from one of the factions. That was part of school politics.

In fact, Garnet stood out in the game for being different, perhaps even uncaring of this social stratification, and trying to befriend everyone regardless of their status.

However, the in-game Garnet lacked the necessary courtesy needed for her to do that. The Adrianne in the game and many nobles thought that it was impertinent of Garnet to behave as if everyone was her equal.

From the standpoint of the Modern Earth audience, but especially the average player base, Garnet was absolutely in the right to do so. That was supposed to be what made her charming.

But even the current Adrianne would think the in-game Garnet was out of place considering the setting as a whole. She was much too innocent, bold, and lacking self-control. The entire game was viewed through the eyes of female players raised in Modern Earth, incompatible with the reality of a feudal world such as this one.

Adrianne tried to remember what was supposed to happen before the gate opened. The first event flag of the game was...

It was a scene that could only be described as breathtaking. Sakura petals fell gently at the rate of a few inches per second by the roadside, dancing along with the gentle wind of the spring season.

The new students of the Knight Academy and their mounts trailed along the smooth road of the Marble Valley town, showing off their wealth through their precious partners and how they were armored and adorned.

A seventeen-hands-tall horse calmly walked alongside the others, almost naked except for the saddle, bridle, and stirrups. Its hind was wide, indicating its nature as a workhorse rather than a riding horse. A relative short rider sat on its back, dressed in plate armor that had seen better days.

"Is that a sumpter? Why so big?"

"Look at her armor... so dirty."

"Is that even a student? She looks too young."

Many negative opinions echoed around her, yet the girl ignored them all, even though she felt saddened. She had to graduate from this academy to achieve her dream and change her mother's views, so this was only the beginning of her struggle.

Her name was Garnet Pucheria, daughter of a retired Royal Pharmacist.

"Starting today, we'll attend this school, Gray!" She smiled, full of optimism. Her gelded sumpter replied with a snort.

However, their excitement didn't last long before the Second Prince made an appearance with his barded stallion of a destrier. Not because of lack of proper training, the proud horse clapped and stomped the ground: it was the natural behavior of a stallion when they encountered potential threats or rivals.

The grey sumpter ignored the stallion at first. But the situation escalated slightly when the stallion walked closer and startled the giant. Its rider wobbled a bit but was caught by the Second Prince before she could fall.

"Are you alright, Miss?" he asked. His bright smile could be seen thanks to his open visor. "I'm sorry for my friend's behavior. We're all excited for this moment, aren't we?"

The Second Prince didn't speak in a manner befitting a man of his status. Even though he was known to be lax by the standards of noblemen, for him to be conversing informally with a stranger was unexpected. And, in the eyes of many of the noblewomen who were watching, unacceptable.

Still, he managed to calm down his stallion in but a second, showcasing his skill and the bond they shared.

"Aren't you... His Highness Theodore?" she murmured.

"Yes, I'm Theodore. May I know your name?"

"Umm, my name is Garnet, Garnet Pucheria."

"Ahem. It's not proper for you to converse so openly in a public road, your Highness," a woman said, interrupting them both.

The woman was tall and imposing, wearing gilded and decorated plate armor while riding a similarly well-off mare of a destrier. Her piercing eyes glared at Garnet, full of hate and jealousy.

"And you, how dare you to speak to him eye-to-eye like that?" she asked Garnet harshly. "Not to mention... did you steal your armor or what? Someone who can't even take care of her uniform doesn't deserve to come here! Besides, what's with the huge sumpter? It's going to eat so much for so little work. It doesn't belong here, either!"

"I think you have said too much, Adrianne. Remember, everyone comes to this academy from all sort of social backgrounds," Theodore rebuked her. "People don't get to choose where they are born."

"It's alright. It's true that I might be the poorest student in this academy right now. I can only pray and try my best." Garnet wrily smiled at the two nobles and hurriedly excused herself as the gate opened.


Right, that was what should have happened. The in-game Garnet didn't have many outstanding personality traits, but the two that stuck out the most were her unlimited optimism and patience.

No matter how many times Adrianne harassed her, Garnet would not budge nor be provoked into a needless fight. At the same time, Garnet was a determined person who would try to tackle challenges even if she was full of doubt inwardly.

Adrianne's stream of thought was interrupted when the Principal of the Knight's Academy made an appearance. He was wearing an old armor suit called Chevalier. It was so old that in battle it might be surpassed by the current iron soldier frame, but it didn't really matter because it was largely ceremonial in nature: the Chevalier had been passed from one Principal to another for many years. It was one hundred and thirty years old but relatively well-maintained considering its age.

"My name is Rudolph Bergman. I'm currently serving as the Principal of Marble Valley's Knight's Academy. I humbly welcome you, ladies and gentlemen, in your pursuit for higher education and refinement in the path of chivalry. The Knight's academies were established to improve the training of aspiring goals, to broaden their horizons and to drive them towards a clearly defined goal..."

The Principal continued his speech with a short history of the academy's establishment. The Marble Valley academy, in particular, was established 130 years ago, during the dawn of the armor suits era. The Principal's Chevalier was proof of that.

"Make no mistake. This academy cannot guarantee you a knighthood at the end of your time here. However, we will strive to prepare you as much as possible in the face of an uncertain future. The road of chivalry is an arduous one. Remember to carry on with courage and honor." The Principal finished his opening speech by crying out, "DEUS VULT!"

"DEUS VULT!" The students repeated the battle cry and assumed a salute.

CHAPTER 05 - THE STUBBORN HEROINE AND THE SECOND EVENT FLAG

The first thing the students had to deal with was to secure boarding for their horses. Technically left outside the Academy grounds, the pastures and paddocks were an enormous complex with acres upon acres of newly rejuvenated grassland.

Another show of wealth discrepancy could be seen by the horse's accommodations. The stallions got huge six-hundred-square-foot paddocks for themselves because it was hard to keep them from making trouble with others. Such premium space cost a lot of money. But, for many nobles, this was a feature and not a flaw.

The lesser nobles, burghers, and commoners could rent shared pasture space and stables. This was where mares and geldings shone. They didn't have the same fiery temperament as stallions.

Garnet wasn't an exception to this, as she brought her giant sumpter to the shared stables. The true nature of the horse was revealed once he was stripped of his bardings. Not unexpectedly, some people were amused.

The contrast between the shorter-than-average girl with her big horse couldn't be more obvious.

"Get along with everyone, Gray." Garnet happily rubbed the face of her partner and smiled. The pasture employee took over and guided Gray out so he could be put in a pen.

Rather than have them mix with each other immediately, the horses would be kept in individual pens for a few days, so that they would be able to see and smell each other but unable to make physical contact.

Satisfied with this arrangement, Garnet decided to leave and head back for orientation.

"Did that really happen?"

"Yes, I'm sure of it."

"How can she bear to show her face here?"

Garnet did notice that some people were having the time of their life talking behind her back. She had learned to filter out these noises a long time before.

"Is it really alright, letting them speak so freely?" Reinhard asked her, somewhat annoyed.

"Sir Reinhard doesn't have to worry. It's not as if what they said was wrong." Garnet smiled. "I don't have the time to pay attention to a bunch of loiter-sacks who can't even muster the courage to insult me to my face."

Adrianne and few other students grimaced when they heard Garnet's outlandishly provocative statement. Loiter-sack was an insult that meant 'scrounger'. So, it was as if Garnet had outright said that those who had insulted her were nothing but a family burden.

Upon hearing that, Reinhard burst into a fit of laughter. Understandably, it made some people furiously angry.

"Such a foul mouth, but what else you can expect from a hedge-born woman?" One of the gossiping nobles stomped up to Garnet and asked "So, is it true that you were born out of wedlock?"

"Yes, I have no father, so to speak," Garnet answered. There was not a shred of shame in her voice, nor did her expression shows any sign of such a negative feeling. "What of it?"

"Look at that, she admitted it so proudly!"

A few people laughed in response.

Garnet raised her voice. "Children don't get to choose the circumstances of their birth. However, my mother gave birth to me and raised me with her own hands. I couldn't be more proud of her."

"Yeah, like you're proud of your master? Oh wait, you're not even acknowledged by her. I wonder why that is?"

Another noblewoman stepped forth and pointed. "Whether you are qualified or not, it doesn't speak well of her that she denies your very existence like that."

Garnet's fists clenched and her face was furious.

Adrianne knew that this should be around the time that the second event got triggered. Evidently, even without Adrianne as an instigator, there were enough people who hated Garnet that the second event flag was unavoidable.

However, unlike the game's Garnet, she was enraged. And Adrianne couldn't say that she blamed her for it. Insulting a knight was a grave offense. In fact, it was highly unrealistic that the game's Garnet had stayed calm in such a situation.

"Dame Alcott is a respected knight in the service of this kingdom and shed her sweat and blood defending its people! You can insult me. You can even insult my mother. But it's improper for you to attack the credibility of Dame Alcott just to get a rise from me!" Garnet barked. "Your lack of chivalry is astounding!"

"How dare you!" the two noblewomen screamed back at her.

Adrianne wondered just how toxic those two would become. In the original game, they were much more subtle because they could simply let Adrianne be their avatar of wrath and stoke the fire of hatred in her. She had mixed feelings about that.

"I have to agree with Miss Pucheria here." An older student stepped forward with the intent to mediate between them. "If you have that much of a problem with her, then settle it through a martial contest."

"My brother, Avan!" Adrianne smiled. He had shown up at last.

Avan Lyster was a tall young man with a calm demeanour to match his bright and sharp appearance. Just like Adrianne, he had reddish-blond hair with purple eyes. Indeed, he looked very much like her, but his sturdy physique and chiselled jawline made him look a lot more masculine than she did.

Just like in the game, Avan was part of the academy's orientation committee, which was composed of second and third-year students. Their primary task was to guide the freshly enrolled underclassmen and ensure the orientation event went smoothly.

"It's Lord Avan!"

"The son of the Marchioness? The one called the brightest acolyte of the Grand Church?!"

"Long time no see, Adrianne." Avan waved at her but, unlike Reinhard, gave the proper noble greeting. "Anyway, an incident like this happens every year, and it's up to us upperclassman to deal with it. So, in my humble opinion, nothing else is enough to settle this dispute but a duel of honor."

A duel of honor was similar to trial by combat but of a lesser degree and importance. Nevertheless, the core component was the same: it was meant to prove which of the combatants was the righteous one based on their martial supremacy.

"Pfft. I doubt Miss Pucheria has an armor suit. Would dueling in plates be acceptable?" one of the noblewomen scoffed.

"I have an armor suit with me!" Garnet said defiantly.

This was yet another alteration to the game scenario: this time, it was Adrianne's doing.

Garnet could choose whether to borrow a knight suit or fight in plate armor. The reaction from the various love interests would be different, though the result of both choices would be generally positive.

However, since the House of Lyster gave her a knight suit, it was unknown how this would affect the young men's perception of Garnet. It was unusual for an unaffiliated student to have a personal knight suit before their enrollment, so most people would naturally be suspicious.

All Adrianne knew was that Garnet should perform even better than she did in the game since she'd had more time to get accustomed to the suit. If Garnet was anywhere near as good as her game counterpart, this duel of honor should be a cakewalk.

This was not the time for Adrianne to simply watch everything unfold, however. She still had a role to fill...

In the arena, the spectator seats were filled to the brim with curious and excited students. No one was shocked that something like this could happen on the first day of school. Still, no one expected that it would involve the rumored scholarship star, Garnet Pucheria. On the opposite side of the arena were Serena Darlington and Lina Denver, both of whom were the daughters of barons.

Adrianne thought that now it made sense how they latched onto her in the original game. They abused Garnet because, as far as the nobility was concerned, those two were nothing but the bottom rung of the noble caste, barely above a knight's descendants.

Garnet and her crimson Starfall entered the arena, which sparked quite a fanfare in response. When the spectators heard Garnet had a suit on her own, most of them had thought she was merely boasting.

But the Starfall didn't have any heraldry, also known as a coat of arms. They were emblems that represent the house or organization the suit served.

The lack of heraldry showed that it was indeed the private property of an unaffiliated commoner family. It was difficult for an unaffiliated commoner to survive the Knight's academy without support. They usually became part of a guild, each of which had their own coat of arms.

In the game, Garnet's lack of affiliation represented her freedom of association. Because of the heavily developed setting, Garnet actually narrated everything to the players in a monologue. So, even though she was naive, in-game Garnet was not at all ignorant.

Avan stepped forth in his own armor suit, acting as a referee. The Starfall Crusader was an improved version of the armor Garnet wore. While there were differences in many places, both have the same torso. The core unit, including the loop circuit, was pretty much identical.

"[We're going to use behourd rules: no attacking the back of the head, back of the knees, the neck or groin. No stabbing the gaps as well. The first to fall the ground will be the loser]." Avan explained the rules and then shouted. "[DEUS VULT]!"

"[DEUS VULT]!"

Behourd, also called buhurt, both of which meant wallop, was a system of full-contact sports that flourished on Modern Earth for more than six centuries. In behourd, participants wore full armor plates and hit each other with blunted weapons such as swords, axes, and so on.

In this other world, the rules of buhurt may also be used in a battle between two mechanized armor suits.

"[Are you going to fight us with that outdated piece of junk]?"

"[Starfall and Starfall Crusader's performance gap is insignificant. I see no problem with that]." Garnet crossed her arms.

Everyone could tell she was being smug even with her face fully covered. While hardly insurmountable, the one-tenth difference in strength and reaction speed was significant.

"[You ingrate]!" Lina's purple Southern Bluebird went ahead, swinging her halberd toward Garnet's Starfall. However, the long-shafted weapon missed by inches, as Garnet swiftly and precisely dodged it...

Before responding with a brutal head grab and knee-strike to Lina's helmet. A resounding clang echoed throughout the arena and made the audience quiet from shock. It wasn't enough as Garnet pulled out an iron stick and slammed the knob-shaped tip into Lina's back several times, each time sending her closer and closer to the ground.

The knobbed stick was practically a lightweight mace, trading impact momentum for range and speed. It was the same weapon that Garnet used in the game.

Only ten seconds had passed since the match began, and it was already clear who was going to win this bout. Lina was saved from imminent defeat thanks to Serena attacking Garnet, forcing her to disengage.

"[You're too reckless]!" Serena scolded Lina. "[This is two against one: we can win easily together]!"

People had thought Garnet would fight them sequentially. However, two against one was much too unfair.

"[I don't like the odds]." Garnet pulled out another knobbed stick with her left hand. "[But you're welcome to try]."

Needless to say, she wouldn't go down without a fight.
 
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Chapter 06 - The misunderstood Villainess
Proofread by @Chandagnac

"Sticks?"

"Maces. They're maces."

"No, they're sticks. I mean, they are walking sticks!"

"They have heads: therefore, they are maces."

This hilarious and pedantic conversation took place among the audience, most of which had trained in the art of fighting since their early teens or were at least familiar with most common weapons.

Just like everything else in their possession, someone's weapon tells a lot of things about them. Garnet's unique set of weapons looked really eccentric.

"Practically speaking, they're maces, but – whether it was requested by Garnet or not – the smith went out of their way to make them look like walking sticks," said Reinhard, analyzing them carefully.

"Oh? Do tell." Theodore listened eagerly to what he had to say.

"Garnet's sticks are about seventy-six centimeters long. If we use generic infantry maces as a reference, that means a three centimeter shaft with a two-point-five centimeter hollow core."

"What is this 'centimeter' you speak of?" asked Theodore.

Reinhard realised too late: Ah crap, they don't use Metrics, do they? Ignoring Theodore's bafflement, he continued his explanation. "The knob is of unknown density and weight and roughly one-tenth of the weapon in length. If we assume it's made of iron or steel, the weight of the shaft alone should be just over two and a half pounds."

"That's a surprising amount of heft for something look so thin," Theodore mumbled. "It really is designed for an armor suit, huh?"

To take advantage of the increased size and strength of armor suits, weapons designed for them tended to be slightly longer and heavier than the equivalent weapons of the previous era: the era in which horses and plate armor had reigned supreme. For example, a generic one-handed mace of two and a half pounds would be scaled up to somewhere between three to four pounds. Scaling up by a factor of two, as in doubling the weight, would usually be considered excessive.

"The knob should either be hollow or made of a lighter alloy. If it was made of solid iron or steel, it would be hard for Miss Pucheria to make quick and rapid strikes like that," someone commented from the side. "Still, the knob has a tapered rim, which would concentrate a lot of energy on impact regardless of low mass. I reckon the whole stick would be around three pounds."

Reinhard snorted. "Having the weight of a mace while giving it the reach, speed, and appearance of a walking stick. The smith who forged it was either a gentle person of refined taste or a devious mad bastard."

Everyone came to a conclusion: "So, it's a stick."

Meanwhile, in the arena, Garnet adopted a defensive stance as she faced two opponents. Both were skilled and more than willing to gang up on her.

"Why so quiet, Addie?" Theodore asked the quiet young woman who was sitting beside him all along.

"I'm shocked no one seems to want to talk about the actual fighting," Adrianne scoffed, "but it's not as if I don't get it."

"Oh? Share it."

"There are three schools of thought running now: the first group thinks Lady Denver and Lady Darlington are delivering righteous punishment on Miss Pucheria for her impudence. The second group considers them shameful for ganging on a peasant girl. And the third group either have no opinion or are conflicted."

"But no one here expected her to win, did they? That's why no one is talking about the actual fight," Reinhard guessed. "That's what is bothering you, Milady?"

"You think she could win?" Theo blinked.

Adrianne smirked quietly and another student approached her: a young woman with back-length hazel hair tied near the end. Theo and Reinhard noticed a few streaks and stains on her hands and skin.

Oil. That's machine oil, Reinhard realized.

"It's been prepared, Milady."

"Thank you for the help, Luna." Adrianne stood up. "Would you like to watch from here?"

"I wouldn't dare."

"Suit yourself." Adrianne turned and left in haste.

"You're Luna Linker, right? From engineering class. Your family served the Lysters for generations." Theo laughed. "I don't know where Addie is going, but her seat is free now."

"I'm a bit dirty at the moment, your Highness." Luna bowed apologetically. "Sitting here wouldn't be appropriate."

Reinhard offered her a handkerchief with a friendly smile. Luna blushed hard and her heart almost stopped. Then she remembered this seemingly harmless low noble managed to score with her elder sister...

Dodge!

"Thank you, but I should take my leave," she said quickly.

"Wait, Luna." Theo stopped her for a moment. "I know I shouldn't be prying too hard, but at least give me a clue as to what Adrianne is up to."

"His Highness might not be aware, but Lady Adrianne is a genius engineer." Luna grinned wickedly, almost salivating even.

Before the two young men could inquire any further, the audience stopped murmuring and the entire arena resounded with gasps and cheers. Theodore and Reinhard looked back to the field. They saw Garnet's Starfall practically dancing around the flurry of strikes from Lina and Serena.

Wielding two sticks with no handguard put Garnet at a disadvantage when it came to defense, the same as with anyone wielding a pair of maces, hammers, or axes. In battle, those weapons were usually paired with a shield for a good reason.

That was among the reason why everyone in the audience, including some instructors, were pessimistic about Garnet's odds of winning. Her weapons were flashy but ultimately disadvantaged.

But after Garnet went on the offensive, all bets were off.

Garnet braced her arms to her cuirass to cushion the blow from Lina's halberd strike and then pushed it outward to destabilize Lina's footing.

That was quite a risky move. However, anyone who ever fought polearms with a shorter weapon would understand that if she wanted to win she had to close the distance.

If nothing else, it was a clear display of Garnet's boldness and fighting resolve. She was more than willing to bet everything on a single risky move.

By the time the audience focused, Garnet was already inside Lina's vulnerable zone and smacking her right on the helm with her elbow.

As if that wasn't enough, Garnet also tackled Lina's legs. The combined weight of an armor suit and its wearer could easily reach four hundred and fifty pounds: it fell with a loud thud.

Lina Denver was eliminated from battle!

Garnet twisted her body and then leaped in the direction of Serena, who was frozen in shock. Serena was supposed to cover Lina's weak areas because she was armed with a hammer and a shield. But she hadn't expected Garnet to defeat her partner so quickly.

Garnet's two sticks impacted on the shield with enough energy to shatter a thick wooden door. But it held well thanks to being reinforced by Serena's inner force.

"[You impudent woman]!" Serena roared and swung her hammer toward her, but Garnet dodged with such precision that it was breathtaking to see. Serena's hammer barely glanced on Garnet's chest piece, scratching the paint and nothing more.

...

"She can switch from such a reckless charge to elegant footwork in a second." Reinhard clicked his tongue. "What monster of a mare are we seeing here?"

"Scary," Theodore said it out loud. "This is why you should never overlook a scholarship student. Lady Denver might never recover from this humiliation."

Scholarship students were accepted to set an example for other, more fortunate students, demonstrating that their wealth would mean nothing if they didn't train and study seriously. Knights weren't born instantaneously into existence: they were created through the arduous, fourteen-years-long tutelage of their mentors. Garnet might not have been acknowledged by her master. But she had gone through same experience as other knights, and she took those harsh but rewarding lessons seriously.

This one-sided beatdown didn't mean she excelled beyond all of her classmates, merely that Lina Denver was a poor example of an aspiring knight.

Serena knew what not to learn from her fallen partner, so she paid more attention to her guard.

"[Behourd isn't a life and death battle. If you fall, you lose]." Garnet twirled her sticks and put them back in the belt behind her armor suit.

"What's she's doing?"

Serena didn't waste any time and attacked Garnet while putting her shield at a correct angle to avoid a possible hidden countermove. What she didn't expect was for Garnet to keep dodging until she couldn't and get hammered on the chest and thrown backward.

"[Serves you right]!"

"No, wait." Theodore's eyes widened.

Garnet used the energy from the hammer to travel backward to where Lina's armor suit was and pick up her halberd.

"[Oh no]!"

Garnet charged again, halberd in hand. With her newfound range advantage, she kept striking and smashing at Serena without mercy.

She kept attacking until the reinforced wooden shield broke apart from the accumulated blunt force. Garnet lunged toward Serena and threw her to the ground with a straight thrust.

Avan, still in his Starfall Crusader, stepped forward and announced, "[The winner of this duel of honor is Miss Garnet Pucheria]!"

"[God bless me with this victory]!" Garnet raised the halberd in her hand high and then threw it to the ground, point first. The halberd got stuck in, its head buried. "[If you two have anything to say, it better be an apology to Dame Alcott]."

Lina and Serena both stood up and supported each other, clearly at a loss for words. Garnet had trashed them so hard that they had no face to show anymore. But they were still too prideful to apologize for their behavior and words.

So they decided to leave in a hurry.

"[Interesting show of chivalry, Garnet]." a familiar voice rang from the dark entrance to the arena. "[I see you put that old machine to good use. However, I would like to put my Regal Wasp to the test, I sincerely hope you didn't mind helping]."

A knight armor suit walked in with quiet steps, belying its weight. The relatively minor whine of its movements signified that its joints had been adjusted to perfect precision and fit. Some people recognized the frame as having been based on the famous Royal Blade of the Marchioness of Lustre. However, it lacked the mirror polish and gilding the original had. It was painted dark yellow, for the most part, but with black stripes around it. Its chest bore the heraldry of the Lyster family: the picture of a queen bee with red, blue, green, and white flowers around it.

"[Of course, Lady Adrianne]," Garnet replied. "[But I don't want to overstep my bounds, so you should ask the referee about it]."

Avan, of course, knew that it was his little sister the moment it stepped out. Still, he was a little taken aback by Adrianne's surprising politeness. She had changed over the last three years, and he was happy about it.

"[I'll ask the teachers shortly]."

Avan approached the Headmaster, who had been watching from the side closely with his old Chevalier. They didn't exchange many words and the Headmaster simply replied with a nod. So, Avan went back and announced, "[This will be a friendly demonstration battle, but we're using the same rules as before]."

Theodore just laughed. Even though she seemed to have calmed down to the point of melancholy, good old Adrianne couldn't miss a competition when she saw one. She probably went ahead and prepared her machine with Luna's help to challenge Garnet right away.

"Figures she will be itching to fight." Theodore shook his head. "Never change, Adrianne."

"Today is such a feast for sore eyes!" Reinhard commented. "The two most outstanding female students among the freshmen fight right on the first day of orientation. What a legend!"

CHAPTER 06 - THE MISUNDERSTOOD VILLAINESS

Indeed, inside her armor suit, Adrianne was breathing hard and drooling. This was well outside the game scenario, but Adrianne had given it deep thought long before the entrance ceremony began.

This was her contingency plan if the second event flag still happened even though the first one got altered. In the second event flag and the subsequent battle afterward, it was impossible for players to win the fighting minigame and come out unscathed. It was only possible for Garnet to win that duel without cost if the player was cheating or it was a new game plus. New game plus meant that the player had finished the game at least once and was replaying it with some additional perks at the start.

But real life wasn't a game. If it really was a new game plus, then Garnet could be an actual reincarnation that had gone back in time, rather than someone from a different world. If that was indeed the case, Garnet would be far, far more skilled.

Adrianne was so paranoid that she had accounted for this very scenario, based on Kuro's shallow recollection of the game and her own honed knowledge of this world. Nothing was impossible. After all, Reinhard was also a reincarnation of someone from Modern Earth.

No one truly understood heaven's way. Adrianne could only make educated guesses about what was going to happen.

No, it totally wasn't because Adrianne wanted to personally fight Garnet to satisfy her lust for battle!

Okay, maybe just a little...

Adrianne's purpose here was to gauge just how powerful Garnet was at the moment. If Garnet turned out to be strong enough to beat Adrianne, it would be a real surprise. And everything Adrianne planned would be for nothing, though she probably would be less worried overall.

So Adrianne pulled a pair of cleavers from the back of her armor suit. Their dark gray finish showed little reflection on their square blades.

...

"Falchion?"

"No, those are meat cleavers." Reinhard twitched a bit. "From the market, wrought iron, five pence apiece."

"Meat... cleavers? You mean, those things butchers use?" Theodore couldn't say anything worthwhile either. Garnet wasn't a slouch in the art of blade fighting. But her current weapon of choice was far too questionable!

They weren't the only ones dumbfounded.

"Lend me your strength, Kuro." Adrianne thought. She hadn't realized it until their memories merged perfectly, but Kuro was not just some maid from Modern Earth. And in the three months since her mother's illness and recovery, Adrianne had been trying to find a way to utilize what Kuro gave her through her inherited memories.

These iron cleavers weren't just Adrianne playing around. And as she pushed the loop circuitry to more than half power, the armor suit began to emit buzzing noises.

"With due respect, are you two seriously that ignorant?" someone annoyedly commented. "Think about what she's doing at the moment and think harder why she would choose them."

"You are?"

"My name is Lewis Carter," the bespectacled man said curtly, "your Highness."

"Ah, you're the son of General Carter." Theodore nodded. "It's an honor to finally meet you."

Lewis wasn't really the type to attend high-class parties. Although General Carter was famous, Theodore hadn't met Lewis before.

"The honor is mine, your Highness."

Reinhard couldn't help but notice the underlying sarcasm in his words. Did this man hate nobles or something? It wasn't that surprising, though: he was one of the burghers, the wealthy commoners with the strongest political influence. General Carter only owed his loyalty to His Majesty, King Eugene II.

"So, what's your opinion, Lewis?" Theodore asked curiously with a smile.

"Lady Lyster picked these knives because iron cleavers wouldn't do as much chipping damage as steel falchions, even if they massed the same." Lewis rubbed his chin. "The handling might be a bit weird, but if Lady Lyster is as good as people say she is... it wouldn't hold her back."

"She is that good." Theodore nodded, remembering the strange conversation the two young women had had. Could it be that those two had a relationship? "Adrianne is holding back because she doesn't want to damage the Starfall too much."

However, it would not stop Adrianne from fighting roughly. Theodore knew her temperament too well. A good spar was a good spar.

"I understand that you're close to her from before, but for me, Lady Lyster isn't giving a good vibe at all," Lewis said. "No offense."

Theodore smiled. "She isn't as selfish as you thought she was."

...

Adrianne wasn't being courteous and launched herself toward Garnet aggressively, to which Garnet replied in kind as the red-painted knight swung her signature stick diagonally.

What was unexpected was that Adrianne managed to dodge the attack by ducking slightly to the right. However, Garnet predicted it, pulled the other stick and jabbed the slim end toward Adrianne.

Garnet gripped it just above the knob, almost the opposite to before.

Gripping above the head was a technique used to change the center of balance in a fighting stick. By sacrificing impact strength, the user gained more control over it. And the weapon would behave like a sword instead of a mace.

Adrianne somehow managed to spin out of the way to dodge again. And smacked Garnet in the back with her cleaver with enough force to budge the Starfall.

Garnet clenched her teeth from the impact and desperately twisted to swing her left-hand stick at Adrianne, but she jumped back without hesitation.

A backwards jump for any aspiring knight was not an easy feat. This was because most knight armor suits were back heavy, thanks to the loop circuitry installed. The issue wasn't terribly problematic, but in a battle between knights, a single blink could decide victory and defeat.

Yet Adrianne didn't seem bothered as she landed gracefully, without opening herself up to counterattack. It couldn't possibly be only the issue of machine difference.

...Or was it?

Sudden buzzing interrupted Garnet's train of thought.

Regal Wasp dashed again in her direction with a strange movement as if sliding on the ground. Garnet's eyes widened as she immediately tried to block and deflect but barely succeeded.

This speed is plain abnormal!

There was absolutely no doubt that Regal Wasp was a powerful machine, but was the difference really that big?! A high-performance suit required a skilled and powerful knight to operate, too.

This was the difference in raw strength and skill between her and Adrianne!

"Miss Pucheria got cornered! As expected, Lady Adrianne is on a whole different level!"

"Still, that she could last this long... Miss Pucheria really isn't one to take lightly."

Their weapons clashed several times, with booming impact and screeching every time they met. Both the sticks and the cleavers showed visible damage, though nothing major. The brutality of the match was such that some of the teachers began to sweat profusely.

CLANG!

One of Garnet's sticks was thrown away when she lost her grip. Garnet did not panic and instead used the remaining stick with both hands and whacked Adrianne with it.

One of Adrianne's cleavers also flew. However, Adrianne couldn't do the same as Garnet did with her other weapon. Due to the short grip of the cleaver, a two-handed grip was impossible.

Instead, she put a palm on the back of the cleaver to push it. Garnet's iron stick buckled slightly, and this allowed Adrianne to smash it away in a flash.

As the strange buzzing sound returned, Garnet finally realized what had happened. Garnet's world turned upside down, quite literally, as Adrianne kicked her left leg.

The red Starfall dropped on its back.

"[The winner of this fight is Lady Adrianne Valiant Lyster]!" Avan announced. His voice was neutral but without hesitation. No one would doubt the result if they were actually paying attention to the fight at all.

"Find a person named Luna Linker in the engineering class," Adrianne opened her helmet visor and told Garnet aloud. "Get that Starfall checked, especially the left knee joints."

Garnet opened her visor and responded, "I understand, and thank you, Lady Adrianne!"

Garnet felt slightly embarrassed that Adrianne managed to find that the left leg joints of her Starfall were slightly worn out. The difference was marginal enough that most people would not notice.

But that was where Adrianne attacked in their last exchange, a leg sweep that had brought Garnet down because she couldn't muster a firm enough footing. If the Starfall had been in optimal condition, that tackle wouldn't have literally flipped her over like that.

Since this is behourd, falling down is falling down, which means defeat. But the position of a fall mattered a lot on the actual battlefield. The faster you got up, the less likely you were to get killed.

Theodore finally understood as he left the seat: the reason why Adrianne would challenge Garnet like that...

So he left his seat with a smile.

"Are you staying, Reinhard?"

"Eh? Me?" Reinhard pointed at himself. "Well, not exactly, your Highness."

He didn't know what else to do except to follow Theodore on his way out, it seemed like a good idea at the time.

...

In the preparation area, Theodore found Avan and Adrianne, who were talking happily. Their respective armor suits were behind them.

"It really is based on mother's Royal Blade, huh?" Avan affectionately rubbed his sister's head. "Your display of skill was magnificent."

"Yes, I could only use eight-tenth of its power, though." Adrianne blushed slightly. "You probably could use it better."

"High-speed fighting isn't really my forte, sadly. It would be wasted on me."

Avan's Starfall Crusader might appear ordinary from the outside. But it had heavily reinforced armor and joints, which made it slower, possibly comparable to Garnet's older Starfall, but more durable than the standard model.

In online multiplayer game terms, Avan was the usual tank archetype: not exceptionally fast, but a determined and strong protector. Not that Kuro was particularly familiar with the details of such roles: she didn't really have much time or willingness to play online games by herself.

Most of these game terms and elements were things she had learned from her young mistress, who was quite sickly and spent most of the time at home.

Adrianne was glad that her paranoia had turned out to be unfounded: Garnet was indeed more skilled than the average trainee, but still beneath her at present. In any case, the reason why Garnet had managed to win her first match was that she had her own machine. She'd had three months to get accustomed to it, so it made sense that she'd outperformed her game self.

In the game itself, she'd had to choose between borrowed armor suits or fighting in plate armor. Garnet was short for a woman, which put her at a disadvantage in plate armor fighting. And using a borrowed suit would mean she was fighting in a machine she was barely familiar with.

"Addie!" Theodore called her. "Sorry, did we intrude on your reunion, Avan?"

"Haha, no, your Highness. Feel free to take her with you," Avan laughed. While he was being polite, there was an air of familiarity in his voice.

For little Theodore, Avan was like his own big brother. They drifted apart more or less the same time Theodore and Adrianne had separated.

"I see." Theodore looked at the somewhat confused and embarrassed Adrianne. "I don't know you can be so nice."

"Uhh, pardon?" Adrianne gagged. She wondered if Theodore had misunderstood something...

"You defeated Miss Pucheria for two reasons, right? The first was that you want to protect her from unnecessary attention because if she appeared too strong, the other students would be cautious and jealous of her."

Uhuh, not at all.

"Secondly, you're trying to save the collective face of your fellow nobles. While no one would doubt that Garnet Pucheria was strong, they can accept someone like you as better than her."

No. Theodore had completely misunderstood her.

"It wasn't like that at all." Adrianne awkwardly denied. "I was just trying out my new suit against a suitable opponent, and Garnet Pucheria was a very convenient target."

"Well, I know you were probably fidgeting at the thought of fighting a strong opponent... but was that it?" Theodore raised his eyebrows.

"Well, that part is true, but it's not as if I especially pay attention to her!" Adrianne told him desperately.

Well, that was a bald-faced lie. But Adrianne was too embarrassed to say that she challenged Garnet to test whether her paranoia was actually feverish imagination.

"She's actually better than I expected, though," Adrianne said truthfully.

"So you DO pay attention to her," Reinhard snorted.

"What are you insinuating, Reinhard?" Adrianne's face darkened. He'd better not leak the secret, or else...

"Tsk, what a Tsundere," Reinhard jibed. "Your Highness should be careful, or else Miss Garnet will steal her from you."

Avan just wordlessly laughed while Theodore tilted his head in confusion. Meanwhile, Adrianne turned so red that she looked like a burning tea kettle.

"What is a Tsundere?" Theodore asked.
 
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Chapter 07 - A moment of silence, Part 1
A/N: Polytheism ho!
Proofread by @Chandagnac

...

After the hectic first day, the academy orientation period went without problems. After her shocking display of martial skill through behourd, Garnet's name soared through the sky, spoken with both awe and contempt.

Whether because of her entrance exam grades or her combat skill, there was no doubt that Garnet was among the best and deserved her full scholarship. That didn't mean that no one saw her as a parasite, but fewer people were willing to openly speak of it.

However, Garnet herself only grew more prudent and cautious. The gap between her and Adrianne was enormous. There was no doubt that Adrianne not only had raw talent, but she also utilized her family's wealth and knowledge as well as she possibly could.

Her Regal Wasp being painted instead of polished reflected what kind of person Adrianne truly was. She did't waste money just because she had it by the boatloads, nor did she care that people thought she was a penny-pincher.

Adrianne was a cold woman of few words, but she did not act as if Garnet's entire existence as a blight. When this was combined with her excessive generosity, Garnet began to wonder... if Adrianne was actually being too nice, to the extent that she felt uncomfortably bothered by it.

Still, Garnet wasn't an ingrate. She didn't want to harbor ill and suspicious feelings toward such a generous benefactor. Furthermore, Adrianne had an actual reason to treat Garnet nicely: because Ruby had saved her mother.

Garnet saw no reason to be suspicious of Adrianne at all.

But being the center of attention was bothersome. Like the fact that Garnet had been 'proposed' several times in this week alone!

Garnet wanted to cry because romance was the last thing she wanted this early in the school year, in the so-called season of love.

Garnet wasn't dumb. She was more than aware that many of those young, handsome, rich, and influential men proposed to her not out of love, but because they saw her as the perfect material for a political wife, to be groomed and shaped as they saw fit.

Ha, as if I would want to be with any of those snobs.

Still, not everyone came to her with such intent drawn on their faces.

Some of her so-called admirers came to her after being charmed by her martial prowess and because they felt a strong sense of chivalry. Garnet could feel their sincerity. Still, she rejected them anyway.

She was too grounded to believe in love at first sight and, if she was being romanced by rich men, she was aware that there would be a great many pitfalls ahead. If she made the wrong move, her life could be in danger. Still, that didn't mean she didn't believe in the power of love.

Love alone could be enough to overcome all hardships. Garnet knew that well, considering how she had been raised without a father. Despite being a single mother in an age where unmarried mothers were considered tainted, Ruby had carved out a respectable place for herself and raised her daughter alone.

And, much as Dame Alcott was unwilling to admit it, she had also taken care of Garnet in her own way. She had given Garnet free reign to enter her manor as she wished, read all the books she wanted to learn from, and use any of the tools she needed to train. Dame Alcott had spared no mercy in chastising Garnet whenever she made any mistake, but was even more willing to actually correct her.

Dame Alcott had been her mentor in all but name. For that reason, Garnet loved and respected her. Garnet knew that Dame Alcott had a good reason why she wouldn't accept any disciple.

Just like martial skill, wealth, and influence, love was a form of strength. Therefore, a loveless marriage was a marriage with a glaring weak point. Garnet had no intention of marrying someone she didn't love.

Before she knew it, the orientation week had passed and it was Saturday.

"Excuse me." Garnet entered the classroom politely and bowed. "Is there anyone here named Luna Linker?"

"That's me," a young woman her long hair tied back in a messy half-braid answered with a smile. "What's the occasion, Miss Pucheria?"

"Well, I was told to meet you by certain someone," Garnet bashfully responded. "And I figured that bothering you during the orientation period would be a hassle."

"Hmm, how thoughtful you are. I thought you were simply being prideful or had forgotten."

What, does this mean she waited for me for almost a week straight?

"I'm sorry." Garnet twitched.

"Never mind. Since tomorrow is recess period, it's a good time for me to do that it." Luna smiled widely and rubbed her hands in excitement, relishing the thought of working on Garnet's armor. "I can't wait!"

Garnet was really creeped out by her. She felt like Luna would gobble her up if she turned her back on her...

"I... I see..."

Garnet wasn't accustomed to anyone being nice to her, at least not unless they had been equally kind and respectful to her mother. Those people weren't especially numerous.

However, since Luna had been recommended by Adrianne, Garnet steeled her resolve and tried to ignore how uncomfortable the other woman made her feel.

"Then, let's meet tomorrow after the morning mass!" Luna said to her.

"Alright." Garnet nodded.

During the morning mass, teachers and students would gather in the Academy's church for morning prayers and sermons. Specifically, anyone who considered themselves a worshipper of the benevolent God of Light would go there on a Sunday morning.

The Church of Light was the largest religious institute in the Kingdom, with significant political pull and wealth amassed in its name. In fact, the Church of Light maintained its own paramilitary force, the Crusaders.

The Crusader-affiliated engineers had been the designer of the upgraded Starfall Crusader armor roughly fifteen years ago. During that time, many knights and nobles had switched away to the elusive Southern Bluebird and the fierce Crimson Meteor, or even imported armor suits from neighboring countries. Some of these nobles donated their Starfalls to the Church's service.

Faced with a surplus of usable but underpowered machines, the Church funded research toward performance improvement and life extension.

This upgrade package gave life to the old frame, bringing its performance much closer to its modern counterparts. The original Starfall guild who had made those suits were absorbed into the Church and become their primary supplier of military armaments.

Some Starfall Crusaders would end up in the service of unaffiliated knights such as Sola Linker, the Marchioness Marianne's prized pupil and most trusted attendant.

"What about you, Miss Pucheria?"

"I'm going to visit the Church of the Three Goddesses and pray for a bountiful spring," she said.

"Right, this is the spring season after all!" Luna nodded in approval. "Are you participating in the gospel?"

"Absolutely."

While the Church of Light was the largest religion in the Kingdom, it wasn't the only one.

It was said that the origin of all the gods was universal. The God of Creation made the universe. He appointed the God of Light and Goddess of Shadow as King and Queen of the universe. With them came the four lesser gods: the Earth God, the Flame God, the Water Goddess, and the Wind Goddess.

The Church of Three Goddesses was devoted to the worship of the Goddess of Shadow, the Goddess of Water, and the Goddess of Wind. The three Goddesses were said to govern everything related to weather, climate, the night sky, and the tides.

The Church of Fire and Earth did not survive the chaos if history. Many of their original scriptures had been lost in time. Countless wars, schisms, and the rise and fall of empires over the past few thousand years had been the cause.

A few surviving artifacts and scriptures had been preserved by the Church of Light. In cathedrals around the Kingdom, replicas had been made available for the public to see and revere.

The Church of the Three Goddesses had been born as consolidated remnants of three branches of the same religion. The Church of Light had sworn an oath of brotherhood to protect its existence and to ensure that it would survive a turbulent future.

The historical reason for this oath of protection was unknown to everyone except the highest-ranked of the clergy. However, most people accepted the official explanation: that members of the Church of the Three Goddess also indirectly worshipped the God of Light.

This interpretation was supported by the holy book, The Chronicle of Three Goddess, which mentioned the God of Light as an equal entity to the Goddess of Shadow.

Among the oldest scriptures in the Church of Light's possession was The Testament of Baal, a three-thousand-years-old book explaining the creation of the universe, the Lumen (light), the Tenebrae (darkness), as well as the four holy spirits (the four elements).

Ultimately, both Churches also worshipped the God amongst Gods, the God of Creation. Both religious and intellectual philosophers agreed that the two Churches were simply facets of the same faith.

Members of the Church of Three Goddesses often participated in the Sunny Spring Festival, a holiday marking the distinct change of seasons, while plants grew, animals thrived, and people celebrated under the grace of the sun.

In exchange, members of the Church of Light also participated in the Fall of Redemption, a solemn holiday period in which people prayed for a safe and peaceful winter to come, a season in which the nights were longer than the days and calm snow often turned into fierce storms.

During the Sunny Spring, the clergy of the Church of Light conducted a ceremony of reverence. Accompanied by representatives of the Church of the Three Goddesses, they sang a collaborative gospel song comprised of the Church of Light's choruses and Church of the Three Goddesses' hymns.

Garnet planned to participate in the hymn, which would take place at the end of the next two weeks. Until then, there were practice sessions twice a week, followed by a final rehearsal on the Saturday before the festival.

"I wonder if Lady Adrianne will participate?"

"Probably not. Lord Avan will assuredly represent the Lyster Family instead of her. More so since he's part of the Church's minor order, as an acolyte."

"I see."

Garnet realised that she would probably see Avan many times over the next two weeks. She wondered what kind of person he was really, since they only meet and interact directly during the first day of the orientation.

CHAPTER 07 - A MOMENT OF SILENCE, PART 1

"...We're in a game world?" Reinhard balked when Adrianne finally dropped the bomb and explained to him her own situation: she had been a maid named Kuro, whose young mistress had played the otome game in front of her on a regular basis.

"More correctly, it is a real world that resembles a game setting." Adrianne took a sip of her ale. "The world is the same, the characters are the same, but in this world... how do I put it, we're not the same two-dimensional caricatures."

"I see..." Reinhard said. "I'd have thought it was some kind of tabletop game setting, but to think it was actually a reverse harem game..."

"Chronicles of Steel Maidens was known for its deep world-building, apparently," Adrianne said. "At least, by the standards of otome games. In this particular case, Miss Garnet is the protagonist character."

"She does have that intense charisma in her, I admit." Reinhard rubbed his chin and smiled. "Can't say I see the womanly appeal in her, however."

Adrianne did not bother to hide a look of disgust.

"Hey, I'm saying what Reinhard would actually have thought!"

"Does that mean you're not Reinhard?"

"In a sense, perhaps I am. But, just as you consider Kuro as a distant memory of the past, I consider Reinhard a distant memory of the past." Reinhard bitterly smiled. "It's probably not much of a stretch to say that Reinhard died and I took his place before his soul could disperse completely."

"...What?"

"Reinhard... well, he was kidnapped and tortured." Reinhard's voice slightly grim, yet there were no sign of trauma in his tone. "I think they were trying to teach him a lesson, for being a depraved man, bedding girls left and right without care. But they went too far and panicked..."

"I think, at some point in his deathbed, Reinhard was begging for a second chance. And the moment I gained consciousness, I woke up in a dehydrated and battered body, with Reinhard's memories in the back of my head."

"I see." Adrianne clasped her hands together, thinking. "So, who were you in Modern Earth? No, wait, for that matter, what year did you come from?"

"My name was Kazuya Elson Brown. I was an American-born half-Japanese, born from a long line of gunsmiths. Around the time of my death, I was nineteen or twenty, in the year two thousand and eight. Traffic accident, I think..."

"Two thousand and eight?" Adrianne looked even more shocked than before.

The gap of knowledge was simply enormous. Two thousand and eight predated the era of the smartphone, as well as Japanese media proliferation in the US. This was still a period when someone watching Japanese animation would be considered a big nerd and prosecuted as such.

"What about you, Kuro... I mean, Lady Adrianne?"

"December 2019, Kuro died of gunshot wounds," Adrianne recalled, to her horror. "She was protecting her mistress from a kidnapping attempt and managed to disable some of the attackers, but the last one got desperate and pulled out a gun before escaping."

"So... they don't use the gun from the start?" Reinhard asked confusedly. "I mean, I know Japan was pretty strict, but what the heck?"

"It was Japan, after all. Using guns in a criminal act would be like using a tactical nuke on a battlefield. The moment you shoot, you're fair game for everyone. Law enforcement, private investigators, and organized criminals will dogpile on you like rabid beasts," Adrianne scoffed. "Speaking of nuclear weapons..."

"Don't even think about it," Reinhard cut her off.

"Right. So, the first thing you did after arriving here..."

"I did what I can do. I forged the most advanced gun I can make in this world. For that reason, I had to do research on percussion caps to make unitary cartridges. And, with the bolt action system, it took two years for me to make my current smoothbore gun."

Reinhard looked like he wanted to cry as he said, "I do it to remember my family back on earth."

Adrianne couldn't say that she could relate, but that didn't mean she thought Kazuya was wrong for reminiscing. If Adrianne were to die right now and be reborn on Modern Earth, she would probably try to forge something too.

"It has a lot of potential for refinement," Adrianne remarked. "The bolt action allowed it to shoot rapidly, but the power..."

"Yeah, it has the power of an ordinary two-pounder cannon, albeit much more accurate and man-portable."

In this case, the word 'pounder' referred to the projectile weight. A one-pounder cannon fired a one pound ball made of solid iron.

However, Reinhard's gun was far more advanced. It had a long, high-precision barrel made of solid iron, which saved a lot of weight. The cannons of this era usually constructed of rolled iron barrel with solid iron bands or bracers for structural reinforcements. Despite having the power of a two-pounder cannon, it was smaller than a one-pounder falconet, a type of obsolete small cannon that was popular a century ago.

Adrianne knew that artillery pieces in the House of Lyster's arsenal included the eight-pounder falcons and fifteen-pounder culverins. A falcon shot could easily kill an armored soldier with a shot to the head. A culverin could accomplish that with a torso shot, even where the armor was thickest.

While a knight's steel armor could be anywhere between one and a half (low-quality steel) to two and a half (highest quality steel) times as strong as iron armor, they still didn't want to be in the receiving end of a cannonball.

However, the mobility of armor suits was high enough that, in an open field battle, it was difficult for cannons to hit them.

Because of that, defensive cannons were often loaded with a bundle of grapeshots, smaller projectiles fired in a cone or cloud pattern, which basically turned them into giant shotguns, trading stopping power for a greater chance of hitting a fast-moving target.

A single grapeshot was often made to be one or two pounds of weight. A single grapeshot was unlikely to kill an armored soldier, but more than enough to impede their movements and cause minor to moderate damage.

"A steel barrel would be flat out impossible. The tools of this world are neither precise nor durable enough. I can make a high-precision iron barrel... but the pressure limit is less than ideal, which restricts the projectile speed."

"Is there any material you could use other than iron?" Adrianne asked curiously. She wondered if perhaps she should help Reinhard in some way.

Reinhard grinned.

"There is. I can use gunmetal, or what people here call red brass. Until Earth started to manufacture steel precision barrels in the eighteenth century, gunmetal was used in their place."

"What about the chemical composition?"

"Eighty-eight percent copper, eight to ten percent zinc, and two to four percent tin."

"That's considerably cheaper than bronze."

The most expensive component in bronze was ironically the tin. A single pound of pure tin cost as much as a thousand pounds of wrought iron or a hundred pounds of steel ingot.

Bronze typically consisted of ninety percent copper and ten percent tin, although this varied by region. Since copper and zinc weren't tremendously expensive, gunmetal would cost considerably lower than bronze by cutting the tin percentage in half. But it would still cost a considerable amount of money.

"It's way beyond my reach as the son of a baron." He shook his head. "It's already hard enough for Father to provide me with something better than an Indigo."

Adrianne was quiet for a moment. Even for her, funding such an expensive project was beyond her reach.

"I wish I could help, but it's not like I have much wealth to spare either." Adrianne finally gave up. "I don't think it's plausible unless you're willing to seek a wealthy sponsor."

"...What about the Marchioness?"

"Her husband, rather," Adrianne corrected him. "My father is a proponent of artillery combat, especially in a defensive role. He might be a pushover, but he would be ecstatic if he saw your bolt action gun."

"Is that an indirect marriage proposal?" Reinhard teased her. "I should prepare a gun as a betrothal gift, in that case."

Adrianne looked seriously irritated, but didn't say anything. Reinhard knew that Adrianne could be rather passive outside of the battlefield, but he didn't want to push his luck...

For that reason, he switched to a different topic. "So, about Reinhard Kingston, does he have a role in the game?" he asked.

"Yeah..." Adrianne smirked. "A recurring comic relief character. As a matter of fact, your game counterpart slept with both Lady Serena and Lady Lina on separate occasions. I was supposed to be the one who beat you up as punishment."

At least, that how it went in Theodore and Avan's route. The subplot was different in Lewis's route, but Adrianne couldn't remember many of the details.

Reinhard was visibly hurt by that statement, and he wasn't even the dominant personality in that body. "I mean, I saw that coming. But by God's almighty toe, Reinhard sucks balls!"

Suck balls? Is that some American swear words? Also, his taste in women was questionable. Adrianne thought.

"Reinhard was there as a vapid contrast to the serious and mostly chaste love interests of Garnet. He was a bad caricature of a nobleman, and I honestly wonder how in-game Reinhard could get away with his stunts."

"Well, the actual Reinhard didn't..." Reinhard sighed. "And here we are."

Adrianne realized how blunt she had sounded before, but it wasn't really worthy of an apology.

"Did you... resent them? Your kidnappers, I mean," Adrianne hesitantly asked him. It was an awkward change of subject after the humorous exchange they'd just had.

"I'm honestly conflicted. On the one hand, those bastards went overboard. On the other hand, the old Reinhard should have seen it coming. He made more enemies every time he bedded a woman without commitment."

Adrianne couldn't agree more.

Even among the respected nobles, not everyone could remain celibate. However, sleeping around was contemptible behavior.

"Without their actions, I might have ended up like Kuro, a mere fragment of a soul and pile of old memories in someone else's body." Reinhard shook his head. "I'm well aware how selfish that sounds... That's why I'm determined to live as Reinhard Kingston, a proper nobleman. The old me died on Earth, and I have no intention of pretending otherwise."

There was a moment's hesitation.

"Of course, I did exact my revenge," Reinhard said. "But I did it through legal means, with no hard feelings involved."

That explains why he stopped throwing himself at anything with a skirt. Adrianne could honestly respect that.

"You're a good man, Kazuya!" Adrianne told him earnestly. "And I pray for success in your endeavor."

"Likewise, my dear Lady Villainess." Reinhard winked. "Don't call me that name in public, though!"
 
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Chapter 08 - A moment of silence, Part 2
Proofread by @Chandagnac

Goddesses above, hear us all.
Goddesses above, hear us all.
In the darkness, there is peace.
In the darkness, there is peace.

Nothing in the world is eternal.
With the cycle, blessed us all.
After the long dark came the sun.
Where a Goddess laid to rest.

The Goddess of Darkness laid to rest.
The God of Light gave us welcome.
The sun rose, and the snow began to melt.
The flowers bloomed and borne fruits.

Chimed with the Goddess of Wind.
The Goddess of Water danced along the river.
Two spirits blessed the spring season.
Two spirits blessed the spring season.

With their blessings, the world sprung alive.
The three Goddesses blessed us all.
With wealth untold and fertility.
With wealth untold and fertility.

And the people shall celebrate.
And the people shall celebrate.

CELEBRATE!
CELEBRATE!
CELEBRATE!

God of Light, Oh God of Light.
Grace us with the light, light, light.
The sunlight, the starlight, the moonlight, your light!
Light, light, light, light, light.

As the Goddess laid to sleep, here, He comes with the light.
The people and the lamb, the woods and the grain...
God of Light, oh God of Light.
God of Light, oh God of Light.

BY YOUR GRACE! GRACE! GRACE!


...

Garnet stretched her arms as soon as she left the Church vicinity. Because her preparations for entering the academy had been quite hectic, it had been a long time since she had prayed with any peace of mind.

For the same reason, the joints of her Starfall had been ruined. She had pushed that particular suit very, very hard. Despite her efforts to maintain it, she could only do so much with her limited resources.

And she didn't want to rely on Dame Alcott's generosity, not after what she had given her.

Dame Alcott was the person who had ordered barding equipment for her prized sumpter and also repaired and painted Garnet's junk plate armor, all without her realizing it.

Dame Alcott had warned her that it would be suspicious and embarrassing if she had a knight armor suit but wore rusting plate and rode a naked draft horse. She wouldn't just humiliate herself, but her mother and the Alcotts' fief too.

Even though Dame Alcott had refused to admit Garnet as a squire, she still acknowledged her as part of her household. Her family.

"Let's go, Gray!" Garnet skilfully climbed her giant horse and gently patted him.

And the pair traveled through the road, occasionally getting a glance from pedestrians. Garnet's gray school uniform made her instantly recognizable as a student of the highly respectable Knights Academy, thankfully.

"Garnet!" a voice called from just behind her.

There were the jangling sounds of bells followed by the clip-clop of a horse closing in. Garnet looked to one side and saw a hazel-haired woman riding a black courser. She wore a similar uniform to Garnet, though with some differences in the details.

Namely, the brooch they wore and the cape materials were different: it was one of the unspoken social codes in the Knights Academy of Marble Valley.

The origin of this social code was the sumptuary laws. Sumptuary laws were made to restrain luxury or extravagance. Particularly against inordinate expenditures for apparel, food, furniture, and so on. In practice, it was used to enforce the gaps in social hierarchies and was thus a form of social discrimination supported by the law.

Due to the rise of the burghers and middle-class urbanites, there was a heavy pushback against the enforcement of sumptuary laws. Even so, the majority of people still abided by them. The outdated legal codes had simply become the expected norm. Anyone who dressed outside this norm would be ridiculed.

Those who came from the nobility wore light purple silk capes, often embroidered with gold threads, with a small gold brooch tying them together, signifying wealth spent on an otherwise mundane item. In extreme cases, the brooch could even be decorated with gemstones.

The light purple colour being associated with the nobility was because dyes from the pre-chemistry era had required an enormous amount of a specific type of ground snailshell.

And then there were the ordinary citizens. While they were considered a minority among the students, they often wore capes that had been dyed in a variety of cheap-looking colors. Garnet herself wore a cape that was the color of a brick, the same crimson red color as her armor, paired with a bronze cross-shaped brooch.

Thus, even at first glance, these two people side by side made a stark contrast.

"Good afternoon, Lady Olive." Garnet respectfully bowed.

"Oh, don't give me that." She dismissively waved. "There's no need for formalities since we're friends and all."

"That will have to wait until I graduated and become part of the nobility, Milady," Garnet half-joked.

Olive Evelyn was a young noblewoman who had just happened to meet with Garnet during the orientation. They had been paired together quite often in various activities during that period. As a result, she had become the closest person to what Garnet could call a female friend.

Garnet was still being cautious about her, unfortunately.

Still, Garnet was no more cautious of Olive than she was of Reinhard. She made sure to recognize her position as a person of lesser social strata while nevertheless respecting and appreciating Olive's fair treatment of her.

Even something simple as friendships were complicated once politics and money were brought into the equation. Still, Garnet believed that nobles were just like ordinary people: they could be good or bad.

"What are you doing today, Lady Olive?"

"Since I just finished my business in the city, I have nothing important left to do." Olive shrugged. Her gray eyes aimlessly wandered as she asked in return, "What about you, Garnet?"

"I need to meet someone in the engineering department," Garnet said. "I ruined the left knee joints of my Starfall, long before that duel of honor. I planned to fix it at some point, but the timing was awful."

"Really? I didn't know that. You fought so well too," Olive mumbled with a hint of amazement in her voice. "There's no way I could be half that good with a ruined joint."

"You're underselling yourself, Lady Olive." Garnet shook her head. "Lady Denver and Lady Darlington let their pride and arrogance get in their way."

She had been lucky that both Serena and Lina looked down on her and had underestimated her. She would have had precisely zero chance of winning against two people with skill and composure comparable to Olive's.

But if it was Lady Adrianne...

"Oh, right. Since I have nothing to do, do you mind if I tag along?" Olive asked. "I haven't seen an original Starfall before."

"Sure thing!"

It's not as if Garnet had anything to lose by showing her. At this point, the secret of her outdated armor suit had become universal knowledge.

CHAPTER 08 - A MOMENT OF SILENCE, PART 2

In all honesty, the original Starfall was so old that Garnet had a particular issue finding spare parts for it. The suit hadn't been in production for almost twelve years!

The parts were no longer in market circulation, meaning she would have to make a custom order for replacement. And, at that point, she might as well order parts from Starfall Crusader to slowly replace them piece by piece.

It wasn't that Garnet didn't have the money. What she didn't have was the time. Garnet didn't have someone she could rely on for help maintaining and repairing her armor, whereas the wealthy squires would have a servant to do it. Usually, the same servant would also be enrolled in the engineering class.

In other words, Garnet was supremely confident that Luna Linker was Lady Adrianne's personal aide or at least one of them. Even the highest-ranked noble kids wouldn't have more than two servants enrolled with them.

"Good afternoon, Lady Evelyn," Luna politely greeted her when they arrived in the Knight stable, where all the student's armor suits were kept and maintained. "And good afternoon, Miss Pucheria."

"Forgive me if I'm presumptuous, but you're Lady Adrianne's servant, aren't you?" Olive asked.

"My name is Luna Linker. My family served the House of Lyster for generations, yes." Luna nodded proudly. "Though my sister became a knight of her own merit."

Figures.

Garnet went to the place where she stored her Starfall. While tampering was not impossible, the knight stable had always been guarded heavily by the school staff for security purposes. It just happened to be near two of her classmates.

"What even the point of armor suits you can't use?" one of them jeered.

"Yeah, you should go back to the capital and start studying accounting instead!"

"Are you even old enough to enroll here to begin with?"

Rambunctious laughter not befitting of noblemen echoed in their vicinity, which made Garnet even more annoyed. She saw a bunch of nobles were harassing a short boy near her Starfall.

That boy was Timothy Hill, one of her classmates and the son of the Royal Exchequer. Timothy often got mocked for his short stature and youthful face, which made him seem four years younger than he really was.

Garnet was about to help him, but someone else was ahead of her.

"Big talk from a bunch of crook-nosed knaves who relied on their parent's money to enroll." Lewis came in, his spectacles glowing with an unearthly light. "Well, what should I expect? You brutes can only be brave with superior numbers behind you. Perhaps you should enlist in the military. We know the best way to gang on someone."

Lewis raised a forge hammer with a wicked grin. "We can hammer the knowledge into you... thoroughly and carefully."

"Tch, bespectacled bastard."

"Let's go! He's not fun to deal with."

The bunch of noblemen left, trying hard to hide their fear. However, anyone else would have known that it was pointless.

"I'm sorry, Lewis." Timothy bit his lips. "If only I was a bit more mature..."

"People don't make fun of you for being short or childish, Timmy," Lewis coldly cut him off. "They made fun of you because you're a crybaby."

"Ah... ahh..." Timothy gasped. He was on the verge of tears just now and had unconsciously been about to let them fall until Lewis reminded him. "Sorry."

"You should apologize to yourself." Lewis sighed as he turned and faced Garnet. "And you should find a better role model, like Miss Pucheria here."

"Ah, good afternoon, Miss Garnet." Timothy grimaced and then wiped away his tears. "Sorry for showing you something ugly this early in the day."

"You don't need to apologize to me." Garnet cringed. "Those rascals always compensate for things they lack by punching down."

"Right, if it was you, you would punch back." Lewis sighed and put on a strange smile. "I still remember that first orientation day, what a magnificent arse-beating you did. You put those cocky noblewomen in their place."

"Nobles or not, I'll beat their arse just fine, Master Carter." Garnet smiled back, but hers had more genuine humour.

Unlike Lewis, Garnet didn't harbor a preexisting bias against nobles. Even if they were burghers or peasants, it didn't matter. No one was allowed to insult Dame Alcott.

"Be that as it may, it was still a memorable occasion to me." Lewis took Garnet's hand and kissed it lightly. "Consider this a token of my appreciation."

Ordinarily, people saw him as overbearing, but Garnet felt no ill intent from him, at least none directed at her. And it made her wonder... just how deep-seated was his hatred for the nobility, really?

"I might appreciate it better if you stopped being a passive-aggressive churl," Garnet outright told him.

"Funny hearing that from a miscreant like you. No offense." Lewis laughed and left. This time though, it was clear that he was mocking her.

Indeed, it has been ironic and hypocritical for Garnet to say that since she wasn't a soft-spoken woman either...

"Sorry, I don't get offended by facts!" she shouted after him.

"She didn't bother denying it."

That was what Luna and Olive thought. Still, they had felt a strange vibe in that conversation. Almost as if Garnet and Lewis had been hitting it off rather well.

Evidently, they weren't the only ones who noticed. "You're pretty amazing, Miss Garnet!" Timothy said in pure, unabashed admiration. "I haven't seen Lewis smile to a woman for a long time."

"Really?"

"Yes!" Timothy declared. "Lewis might be harsh at times, but he has a heart as soft as a ball of cotton! I know it's hard to believe, but..."

"It's alright. I believe in you, Master Hill," Garnet stopped him. "As you can tell, I'm kind of dense sometimes."

"Young Master Carter is really an enigmatic person,," Olive remarked. "People said Lady Adrianne could be the most skilled chevalier among the first-year students. But, in my opinion, Master Lewis Carter could be a strong contender."

"What, really?" Garnet's eyes widened in curiosity. Someone even more skilled than Lady Adrianne?

"Yes, Master Carter has been active in the military since he was fifteen," Olive told her. "And if rumors are to be believed, he even beat a newly graduated knight with a Black Knife."

"No way! A Black Knife?!"

Black Knife is the most common soldier armor suit in this Kingdom. The fifty-year-old armor had been updated continuously as the technology progressed, and it was both cheap and reliable. With the amount of money needed to buy a bare-bones knight frame, you could buy five or six Black Knife armors ready for battle.

However, even the newest Black Knife fell short compared to a knight armor. No, even a squire armor like the Indigo would leave it in the dust.

"That wasn't a rumor, actually." Timothy carelessly approached one of the covered armor suits and pulled back the cloth to reveal that, under the tarp, there was a soldier munition armor suit standing in menacing readiness.

Still, it seemed to be heavily customized. Garnet noticed additional plate armors on its chest, shoulder, head, and hips.

"It seemed to be quite heavily armored, but it's still made of iron, right?" Garnet knocked the additional plates lightly. "They're of different hardness too."

"How can you tell?" Luna narrowed her eyes in suspicion.

"Well, I just can." Garnet shrugged.

Garnet had exactly one special power that made her different to others. That is to say, she had selectively sharper hearing than other people. Just from the knocking sound alone, she could tell the structural difference in the different armor plates.

It could be helpful in battle too, but came nowhere close to being a decisive factor.

"Yes, I believe it's armored with cast iron." Timothy nodded.

Cast iron isn't actually pure iron. Instead, cast iron is an iron alloy with high carbon content, more than two parts out of a hundred.

"Isn't cast iron quite brittle? You can't use it for weapons or armor," Olive mumbled. "Right, Garnet?"

"Theoretically, as far as we know," Garnet said. "But I'm not a metallurgy specialist, so..."

"It's called duplex armor." Adrianne suddenly appeared with Reinhard by her side. "The relative brittle cast iron was put outside so it would shatter from heavy impact, especially when hit by a cannonball. However, the softer and tougher wrought iron armor would receive less damage."

"Huh? Yeah, that's right." Even if you shoot this one with a culverin, it won't be crushed instantly." Timothy pointed. "Sure, the person inside might get injured, but better than being pulped to death."

"Oho, so it was a medieval ablative armor. Very clever!" Reinhard remarked with a high-pitched voice. He remembered that even Modern Earth had similar concepts. "On tanks, the hard ceramics would be backed by structural steel hull instead."

"What is a tank?" Garnet tilted her head.

"This armor is very much ahead of its time." Adrianne closed her eyes. "Perhaps it will be the norm in a few decades."

"Why is that?" Olive asked.

"Because of the invention of cast-iron cannon, duh." Reinhard winked. "As you know, the cast cannons we have are made of expensive bronze. However, in fifty years, this Kingdom will be able to mass-produce culverins using iron casting."

"Whoever made this custom armor suit knew this for a fact." Adrianne opened her eyes again. "A genius ten years ahead of their contemporaries."

Reinhard wondered if Adrianne was being honest or if she was trying to imply something else.

The other people in the vicinity didn't notice the implication. What they did see was the potential for a massive cost-saving through the use of iron casting.

"A cast-iron cannon... if we extrapolate from hunting guns, it might cost two-third... no..." Olive gasped. "It might cost half of the current generation wrought iron cannon! Perhaps even less!"

"Amazing. How could Lady Adrianne and Sir Reinhard know so much about it?!" Timothy's jaw dropped in shock. As far as he knew, he was the only one who had been told by Lewis why this armor suit was different than others.

Adrianne replied with an ambivalent smile and left again without saying anything.

"Mysterious as always." Garnet gave up trying to comprehend her.

"That's because Lady Adrianne is an engineering genius!" Luna shouted with all her might. "She can see the future, I tell you!"

Her words were more true than she realised: Adrianne truly knew the future, the future of the Kingdom as a whole.

...

"So, anything else you know that you haven't told me?" Reinhard asked Adrianne.

"Five years from now, someone will invent a safe way to construct six-pounders, cast-iron cannons. From there, the Sutherland rearmament plan will begin under the reign of Theodore's Brother, Eugene III. And two years later, almost one-third of artillery in this country will be cast-iron cannons."

"You know, even modern world weapon acquisition programs aren't that fast." Reinhard jibed.

"Because our Kingdom of Sutherland wants to expand its territory. When it comes to that, we only have two choices. Invade our neighbor in the north, or expand into the southern wilderness and fight powerful demon beasts."

"With that kind of massive rearmament program, aren't you sure our neighbor won't attack first?" Reinhard raised his eyebrows. "Seriously."

"You're not too far off," Adrianne said. "Eight years from now, I'm supposed to die in the climactic battle of the war with our Nordland neighborhood. Well, at least that WAS what happened in Theodore's route at least."

"Yikes."

"I don't plan to die. So it's best to uproot the problem before it can grow and fester." Adrianne said. "Beyond saving myself, I want to find a way to avoid the war altogether if possible."

For Adrianne to do that, she had to climb her way through the Kingdom's politics.

"Meaning..."

"I told Theodore about it. However, I dressed it up as a vision of the future rather than memories of Kuro..." Adrianne said to Reinhard. "My parents and Avan are also aware of it."

"Oh."

Outside the knight stable, Theodore was waiting for them with a smile.

"Let's go," the Prince called them.

It Looked like Reinhard was in for a wild ride.
 
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Chapter 09 - A moment of silence, Part 3
Proofread by @Chandagnac

It was well past afternoon, but Garnet was still hanging out in the knight stables. The Armor of her Starfall was pried open except for the small pieces and structural reinforcement, exposing the internal parts for everyone to see.

Garnet examined the shiny new joints that had been installed. Specifically, the new joints that replaced the shoulders, elbows, knees, and ankles.

Those joints had originally come from Avan's Starfall Crusader, but they had been removed because of the alterations he had made. His customized armor suit had very little commonality with the base model: it was heavy due to its thicker front plating and thus required slightly redesigned joints.

If Garnet kept up the same pace as before, which was unlikely since she would be busy with school, these new joints should last at least another three months if they were properly maintained. She hoped that they would last for a full semester before she had to replace them again.

"Anyway, do you mind if we replace the power distributor too?" Luna held up a boxy object. "You won't be able to use the full strength of the new joints if you keep the old Starfall version."

The new Crusader-type joints could potentially be faster and stronger than the old ones, but the old power distributor couldn't supply enough force to move the joint with the necessary torque.

"Is that a new type of power distributor?" Garnet asked. "That's different from the Starfall Crusader's..."

"You can adjust the joint performance on demand with just a single thought." Luna smiled. "So the performance can switch from the old Starfall specification to something indistinguishable from the new Starfall Crusaders."

"Hmm, it was designed to be toggled on and off? How practical." Garnet hmmed. "But..."

"Lady Adrianne designed this herself. This power distribution unit doesn't use a rotating switch, but a strong alloyed spring lever."

Most squires, even the most exceptionally skilled, rarely used adjustable power distributors. Not only were they complicated to use, but they were also more fragile than fixed power distributors. However, for seasoned veterans, the wider performance spectrum offered by adjustable power distributors was more than worth the drawbacks.

"Lady Adrianne's Regal Wasp also uses a similar switch, but it has a three-dials selector instead of two." Luna smiled proudly. "The only other person who has this power distributor unit is Lord Avan."

"Eh? There's no way I can pay for that," Garnet balked in response, finally managing to gather her thoughts. "I don't think I can afford it with my budget."

Though Garnet paid the price of the joints with market price, she didn't have money to waste frivolously.

"Lady Adrianne plans to mass-produce it at some point." Luna waved her hand dismissively. "So think of it as doing a favor for us by testing it for field use."

"Ah... I see." Garnet calmed down slightly. "You want me to share the performance report? I can do that."

"Right. If you agree, we can install this right away."

"Alright, let's put it on." Garnet finally let go of her hesitation, rolled back her sleeves, and grabbed the tools.

There was another secret to the power distributor that Luna was unwilling to share. If anything, this secret was the most vital piece of information that Adrianne had entrusted to her.

"Excuse me, Miss Pucheria."

"Ah?"

A young woman dressed in an engineering-class uniform approached them with a food basket in her hand. Her hair was jet black and tied in a neat bun. Her glasses were so thick that they reflected the low light within the knight stable like a mirror.

"Lady Misty, good afternoon," Garnet greeted her politely. "Oh, have you two met before?"

"I believe we're from a different class," Luna said. "My name is Luna Linker. My family serves the House of Lyster."

"My name is Mistletoe Evelyn. I'm an adopted daughter of Marquis Evelyn. I'm here to support my sister, Lady Olive. You can call me Misty."

Luna froze for a second and then bowed to her wordlessly. There was a strange sense of awkwardness due to Misty's social position. Even though she was adopted, she was nominally still a noblewoman. And there were few if any nobles ever enrolled in the engineering class. They had always been an oddity.

"Lady Olive said that you might skip lunch again, so she ordered this made for you." Misty handed the food basket to Garnet. "Be sure to wash your hands properly before eating."

"Thank you, Lady Misty. You have my sincerest gratitude."

"You can say that to Lady Olive later." Misty coldly left.

"Scary," Luna mumbled as soon as the strange noblewoman was well out of earshot.

"I think Lady Misty dislikes me, but can't say that outright because she cares about lady Olive's feelings," Garnet said. "To be honest, I feel bothered by her generosity. I know Lady Adrianne feels indebted to my mother, but there's no reason why Lady Olive needs to be so nice to me."

"Sometimes, favor and moral debt come from the smallest things." Luna pointed at the dismantled Starfall. "What you brush off as meaningless trash might be something that other people consider an irreplaceable treasure."

Garnet twitched. "...Seriously?"

"This Starfall had been sitting unused for at least ten years in the armory. Cleaned once a year during spring cleaning and barely maintained," Luna said. "That's why no one in the Lyster family cared about it until Lady Adrianne proposed to send it to you as a gift."

So that's why Adrianne said it was junk when they first met at the school entrance: it was not a big deal for her, but it meant so much to Garnet.

...

Luna remembered the first time Adrianne had approached her directly, over a year ago. Adrianne behaved oddly back then and was scolded by her mother for acting like a servant rather than a noblewoman.

Adrianne had asked Luna for help with pet projects, many of which were still unfinished as of today. Adrianne was a genius but also shockingly unambitious. She preferred to put her duty as the Marchioness' daughter over her goals and interests.

But that didn't mean Lady Adrianne had abandoned them. On the contrary, she made good use of her spare time. Her ability to manage her private time and resources was almost scary, which reminded Luna of her mother, the Head Maid of the House of Lyster.

Luna could barely keep up with her demands. The fact that she could do that much was because their interests aligned perfectly, which was why she had decided she would serve Adrianne as well as she possibly could.

She had thought that Lady Adrianne's interest in Garnet was a bit peculiar, but when she saw the condition of the Starfall, she began to see Garnet's real virtues.

"It's done!" Garnet wiped the sweat off her brow. Not only had she replaced the power distributor by herself, but she had also assembled the armor pieces without Luna's help. Luna had only helped to dismantle the armor and replace the joints, and that was about it.

"You always do this alone?" Luna asked.

"Well, I helped to maintain Lady Alcott's armor suits for quite a while, so I'm pretty familiar with the basics." Garnet slapped the Starfall's brick red plating and sighed. "I even got paid wages for it. Lady Alcott was that adamant about not recognizing me as a disciple, but let me in the Manor anyway."

It had been pushed hard, likely in constant operation for weeks if not months since Garnet had received it. Yet, at the same time, it was well maintained. If not for the operational log that she had read from the loop circuit's central processor, Luna wouldn't have been aware of how Garnet had pushed the armor suit to its limit in the last three months.

And, unlike the nobles or burghers, Garnet could only rely on her skill and a limited amount of wealth.

A stubborn heroine, rejected by society as a whole but who kept moving on. That was why a select few individuals with gentle hearts had decided to support her through direct and indirect means. Perhaps Lady Adrianne was one of them.

"Pretty amazing!" Luna said earnestly.

"It's not like I was alone in this." Garnet looked aside.

Lewis finished maintaining his armor himself, and it wasn't as if Luna hadn't noticed it. If anything, she thought Lewis's work was excessive and obsessively meticulous.

"Everyone in the military personally maintained their armor." Lewis said it as a cold, hard fact rather than in an attempt to be humble. "Black Knives aren't as complicated as knight suits when it comes to construction, but the problem is the parts manufactured with looser tolerances."

The three of them walked out of the knight stable. Garnet carried the food basket with her.

"So, you have to be more thorough to maintain full performance, huh?" Garnet nodded in approval. "Even I'm not confident enough to bring one to the academy. You're so brave."

"Is that sarcasm?" Lewis scoffed. He got more than a few stink-eyes for daring to use a soldier armor suit in the academy. Even the poorest nobles and burghers could afford a squire armor suit, at least.

"I was praising you." Garnet gave him a thumbs-up.

"Speaking of which, you haven't eaten anything either, haven't you?" Garnet dropped the basket on the table outside the knight stable. This area was where students might take a short rest before or after working with their armor suits. It was covered by a simple-looking roof structures that protected anyone sitting beneath it from sunlight and rainwater, and there was also a water hand pump nearby.

"There's no way I can eat all this on my own."

"Maybe you need to eat more so you can grow up properly," Lewis snarked.

"I'm almost twenty. There's no way I can grow much taller than this." Garnet shrugged, deflecting Lewis's attempt to insult her again. As she finished, she began to operate the hand pump, bringing in some water out of the faucet.

Garnet brought out a pot of ash from her tool bag and rubbed her wet, greasy hands with the white combustion byproduct. After rubbing them thoroughly, she poured out more water onto her hands, which resulted in murky and foamy water flowing into the drain.

What caught Luna and Lewis off guard was Garnet's courageous use of potash to clean her hands. Not many people used ash so liberally ever since the invention of cheap soap. Not on their skin, at least, since many people still used potash to clean dishes.

While potash had powerful degreasing properties, thanks to its alkaline nature, it could be a skin irritant when used carelessly. Forget noblewomen, even working-class urban young women wouldn't want to use ash to clean their hands.

"You... aren't you afraid of ruining your hands?" Lewis was at a complete loss. "Are you that much of a miser?"

"And you call yourself a military man? Pfftt." Garnet snorted.

Lewis popped a vein in anger, feeling that his pride as both a man and a former soldier was being slighted. He took the pot and rubbed his hands with two pinches of ash before pouring water on them and got pristine clean hands in the end. It wasn't as if this method of cleaning was anything new to him.

"Oh, so you DO know the old ways."

"You don't get many luxuries in a military campaign," Lewis told her. "Especially in the wilderness, so don't you dare to belittle-"

Lewis got his ramblings stopped by a piece of bread that Garnet shoved into his mouth.

"Good, so don't be picky about food while you're at it." Garnet laughed at his repressed anger and embarrassment.

The little miscreant girl always kept getting on his nerves, indeed. And the worst part of it, Lewis couldn't prank her back without looking like a big churl.

From Luna's point of view, though, it was almost like Garnet was flirting with him. She might be being a little annoying, but she was also trying to be helpful.

"Miss Luna, why don't you join us?" Garnet asked her.

And become a third wheel? No way.

"Ah, I dropped my soap, and wood ash is scary to use, so I'll just go back and wash my hands outside." Luna made an OK sign and pursed her lips at them. "See you again, sweethearts!"

Of course, this made Garnet choke with laughter while Lewis blinked in confusion. In this medieval age and the older classical period of the past, the OK sign was meant to show one's love and sense of endearment, whether towards people or gods. It was not a sign to take lightly.

Garnet could never be accustomed to people expressing affection to her, especially in a joking manner the way Luna did it. Doubly so since they had only met for the first time yesterday.

That's why she couldn't take Lewis kissing her hand seriously either, knowing their dog-cat relationship since they had first entered the school. Garnet knew he was a good guy inside, but couldn't help ribbing him from time to time.

"Was she always like that?" Lewis asked weirdly.

"How should I know? We just met yesterday." Garnet shrugged.

And so they continued to talk and bicker throughout late lunchtime. Meanwhile, Timothy peeked from around a corner with a basket of food in his hand, looking regretful.

CHAPTER 09 - A MOMENT OF SILENCE, PART 3

With their blessings, the world sprung alive.
The three Goddesses blessed us all.
With wealth untold and fertility.
With wealth untold and fertility.

And the people shall celebrate.
And the people shall celebrate.


A few days had passed since the end of the orientation week, and busy times had begun for Garnet. Most importantly, she had participated in the collaboration choral mass for the Sunny Spring Festival.

Thankfully, she had finished the repair and maintenance of her Starfall last week. She could scrape together enough time for her studies and routine training without fail.

And today, Garnet was one of the students who was participating in choral practice. She listened intently as the instructor gave corrections and suggestions to the students involved. Among the chorus members was Lady Adrianne's older brother, Lord Avan.

"Good evening." Garnet bowed to him.

"Good evening, Miss Pucheria." Avan gave a friendly smile. "How was it, the first few days in the academy?"

"I'm shocked that it's very different than what I imagined!" Garnet said. "I went to grammar school before, but other than that I never experienced any formal education."

A grammar school was a school usually built close to or adjacent to the church. The children there got taught the basics of reading, religion, and arithmetic. Usually, they only spent two years there before returning to their family and learning the family trades.

"Certainly, the knight's academy focuses on the refinement of preexisting knowledge and sorting out differences in training and philosophy. In that case, we're closer to a university than a school."

The academy assumed that the students had the necessary knowledge for advanced education. That's why the academy has an entrance exam, and one prerequisite for someone to get a scholarship was to be part of the top six ranks in both written and practical exams.

Garnet wasn't aware if anyone else other than her took the scholarship, though.

"You went to other schools before?"

"Of course." Avan smiled. "I went to Monastic School in the hopes of joining the ranks of the clergy, but somehow it led to my being recruited to the rank of the Military Order."

"And that's how you ended up in the knight's academy."

"Correct." Avan nodded sagely. "I believe that fate was what led me here, so I don't regret it one bit. God gave us free will, but He would not let a true believer go astray."

"God bless." Garnet made a triangle sign with her fingers in agreement. "I was expecting people to make fun of me in this gown."

Both of them were dressed in their respective church garb, and in that state, Garnet looked way more gentle and feminine than she usually was. The veil especially was a nice touch, exposing her crimson red hair slightly while drawing attention away from how short it was compared to the average women's.

She also looked younger than she was, despite Garnet being closer to Avan than she was to Adrianne in terms of age.

Weird realization, he knew. Still, Avan was aware that Garnet did not have any shortage of suitors. Her strength and courage were dazzling, and it wasn't as if she was lacking in the beauty department, despite her modest use of cosmetics. Some people probably considered her natural youthful look to be part of her unique charm.

"It looks charming on you, Miss Pucheria. And I'm sure many gentlemen here would agree with me."

Avan's voice was calm and soothing, and any other woman might melt right there hearing it from him.

"Thank you, Lord Avan. But I think everyone else pulled it off better," Garnet responded.

Avan could tell that Garnet outright brushed off his honest praise without thinking about it. Not that he had intended to flirt with her or anything, but sometimes he was ashamed at how everyone pointed how he often accidentally seduced women left and right, even if he didn't mean to.

In the unforgiving world of chivalry, romance was both an ideal to pursue and a tool to use. Someone as socially vulnerable as Garnet would likely always be on guard. Anyone thinking she would be easy prey was foolish.

"Speaking of which, our instructors haven't announced it, but next week, the first year will have their first deployment," Avan told her. "Or perhaps you have heard about it?"

"Of course, we're supposed to thin out the monster population outside the city and harvest their meat in preparation for the spring festival." Garnet clenched her fists.

"Indeed. Hunting skill is important for a knight, both for survival and prestige," Avan pointed out. "Although, since most of us were squires, that shouldn't be a problem. But we should be careful."

"I lived in the countryside and worked as a mercenary before, so I have a lot of experience with monster hunting." Garnet nodded. "Unforeseen circumstances can always happen."

Avan froze for a second but then relaxed again. "I'm glad to hear that."

"Well then, I shall excuse myself." Garnet bowed.

"Well, looks like SOMEONE is getting rejected for once," Avan's friends teased him as Garnet left to fetch her horse.

"It's not like that." Avan bashfully denied. "It's just that my little sister paid special attention to her, so I'm a little curious."

Not long after, a giant draft horse passed across the road in front of the cathedral with a steady trot, with a small-statured woman riding it. Despite wearing a long dress, Garnet wasn't afraid of riding her horse astride.

Avan heard the story from Adrianne of how Garnet will be pivotal in saving their family and the future of the Kingdom of Sutherland. Adrianne refused to elaborate on the details yet, but after her prophetic nightmare about their mother turned out to be real, Avan decided that he could trust her foresight.

With that in mind, Avan wouls also pay attention to Garnet without directly interfering with her growth as a chevalier. Avan knew that the path to true heroism was full of challenges. Challenges that Garnet would have to overcome by her own hands.

But at the very least, he knew Adrianne would try to support her from a distance.

...

"[As per the tradition of this academy, this week we will conduct an extermination campaign against the demon beasts around the town's vicinity]." The Principal announced during the morning assembly in the opening Monday of the second week.

The students were all geared up with their plate armor, their helmet visors opened. Unlike during the entrance ceremony, they weren't wearing their family or guild's coat of arms, but instead wore the heraldry of the knight's academy of Marble Valley. This was comprised of four colored marbles with a lump of black coal in the center. This symbol represented the history of Marble Valley as the location of many of the Sutherland's Kingdom's coal mines, which had kickstarted a small industrial revolution that made the construction of armor suit possible a hundred and thirty years ago.

During the age of plate armor, iron and steel processing used the costly but potent wood charcoal as a fuel. However, after someone invented the necessary process, coal was purified into coke, almost as powerful as charcoal but cheaper and more abundant.

"[I am well aware that you ladies and gentlemen of the first year are more than qualified to do this task. However, we should always remain vigilant and remember, no one is invincible. Not me, not your instructors, and not you. We will support you with the preparation, but we fully expect the students of this academy to fulfill their assigned mission independently]."

"[DEUS VULT!]"

"DEUS VULT!" The students repeated.

Much like the college groupings in Modern Earth, the first year's students were expected to make their team independently. Specifically, each class of thirty students was split into ten groups of three students.

Even without game foreknowledge, Adrianne could easily guess the composition of the group she was most interested in. Grouping with people you were most acquainted with, personally or politically, was beneficial. Still, according to her notes, this should be another divergence point.

It was logical to assume that Garnet would form a group with Lady Olive, but that was not necessarily the case in the game. If Garnet decided to split with her, she was most likely to team up with Lewis and Timothy instead. If certain prerequisites were met, Garnet had the option to ask Theodore to join her group. Also, Reinhard was an option for players who hadn't yet committed to any of the potential love interests.

Unfortunately, in the game, Reinhard was a joke character. Not only there was no romantic progression because of his nature as a casanova, but the subsequent battle was harder without having Theodore or Lewis around. However, this would allow Garnet to build a better relationship with Olive.

But real life was not a game, and with gun nut Kazuya at the helm, Reinhard was nowhere as incompetent nor unreliable. Furthermore, spending time together didn't necessarily meant that there was growing attraction.

Adrianne had to think of her own situation, and it was unexpectedly hard. Early on, she had decided to avoid associating herself with Serena and Lina, the two toxic groupies who were hostile to Garnet from the beginning.

Yet it was hard for her to refuse when the two of them immediately approached her.

"Why me?" Adrianne asked them.

"We have seen how you performed before. We admire you from the bottom of our hearts," Lina begged. "So please grant us the honor to be part of your team."

In actuality, it wasn't as if Adrianne couldn't see the real reason why they had latched on to her. Ever since their embarrassing defeat on the first day of the orientation, they had become the designated pariah among the nobles. In-game, Adrianne covered for them, which mitigated the issue early on. However, since she never associated with them during the orientation week, no one else can or wants to elevate their position and shield them from criticism and ostracization.

No one would want to team with them willingly, and it was their fault and no one else's. Adrianne had no obligation to save them.

"That..."

Yet, why was it so hard to say no? Adrianne felt like she was back at the beginning of her awakening, easily buckling to the pressure asserted by her family members.

Adrianne didn't like it, knowing that it was one of Kuro's virtues as a maid that had become one of her flaws as a noblewoman once their memories merged. Absolute loyalty, obedience, and unwillingness to spark unnecessary conflict or argument. That was what signified Kuro as a person, and while Adrianne was the dominant identity, that didn't mean she that Kuro's personality wasn't part of her as well.

"It doesn't have to be me." Adrianne looked away, hiding away her doubts with a steely, uncaring expression. "Find someone else."

"Excuse me," Someone asked. "Can I join the two of you?"

Lina and Serena turned back so fast they almost got whiplash, only to be disappointed as they saw none other than Timothy Hill, the class's designated bully target.

"Really? Of all people who want to join us, it has to be Master Hill?" Serena eyed him suspiciously, clearly disappointed.

"Our future sure is dim," Lina cried.

Adrianne sighed heavily. This kind of reaction is why these people would remain losers to the end. They took everything they have for granted and yearned for things they could not obtain. It was human nature, yet it was not pleasant to behold.

"Like you people have the luxury to choose!" Lewis scoffed at them. "If not for him being so insistent about it, I wouldn't let him go with you in the first place. Be thankful."

Indeed, Timothy was shaken but determined. "I can't always rely on Lewis for everything... so please, the least I can do, is not to be a burden."

"Pfft, like these two can be relied upon for anything." Garnet peeked from behind Lewis and commented snarkily before running away.

Serena and Lina seethed so hotly that Adrianne couldn't help but wipe away a bead of sweat with her handkerchief. However, since Garnet was the person who said it, they had no room to retort back and could only stay quiet.

"How about this then." Adrianne proposed. "If you're willing to work together with him, then I'll help you to prepare yourselves better for this deployment."

"Really?!" Lina and Serena lightened up immediately.

"In exchange, you get to listen to everything I say... no, you should listen to what Young Master Carter says." Adrianne smiled at them. "Among all of us, he's the only one with real military experience."

Lewis didn't see that coming and wondering why Adrianne had said that. He was proud of his five-year service in the kingdom's military, but he didn't expect a noblewoman, especially someone as high status as Adrianne, would acknowledge it so openly.

"Strange, what's the occasion, Milady?" Lewis asked her suspiciously.

"I meant what I said," Adrianne told him firmly. "The death of my mentor, Sir Agravain, put a halt to my progression as a knight's disciple. Ever since I separated myself from Prince Theodore, I spent most of my time cooped up within the confines of my family's mansion and territory. I am confident with my skill, but combat experience is something I lack."

"Lady Darlington and Lady Denver's home territories were close to the Capital and didn't see as many monster attacks. And, forgive me saying this bluntly, but I doubt Young Master Hill has that much combat experience either." Adrianne frankly told them with a cold voice. "We need help."

"That's... that's right! Lewis, you should help us!" Timothy shouted in agreement.

"Who was it again who wanted to do things without my help, you little ingrate?" Lewis smacked Timothy by the back of his head angrily. Timothy did not lack skill, but what he lacked was the conviction to carry himself.

"Sorry!"

Little Timmy needed to stop being wishy-washy like that.

Lina and Serena looked at each other dejectedly and gave up. There was no way they could miss the chance of getting direct support from Lady Adrianne, even if it meant that they had to work with two pesky burghers.

"We'll follow your directions, Master Carter." Lina and Serena bowed stiffly.

"Sounds interesting. Can I join?" Theodore barged in.

"Theo?" Adrianne jumped a bit and blushed. "What... what about Gar-"

Adrianne looked around and found Garnet, Olive, and Reinhard talking together. It seemed that Garnet decided to pick Reinhard after all.

Well, it made sense. Garnet did several jobs issued by Baron Kingston. That was one of the reasons for the ruined leg joints of her Starfall. She had worked together with Reinhard a few times in the past three months.

"So, how about it?" Theodore asked Lewis.

Lewis rubbed his temple in regret, realising that he had been dragged into nobility shenanigans during his first deployment.

"Not like I have any room to refuse, your Highness."
 
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Temportary character list
Sorry Adrianne I think you're in wrong genre. This is still romance story, not political thriller.

Also, Garnet pls have mercy. They already dead.🔥🔥🔥🔥

Can I get a summary of every character as a refresher? It is hard to remember too many characters
Main characters:
Adrianne: Game Villainess, daughter of Marchioness Marianne. Got the soul of a modern earth's maid in her. Appear cold and decisive but actually a pushover.

Garnet: Game Heroine, independent and spirited, a little bit savage, and she admired Adrianne in the story.

Harem:
Theodore: Second Prince, childhood friend and love interest of Adrianne. Nice guy who is not dense.

Avan: Older brother of Adrianne, religious and calm.

Lewis: Harsh and savage, disciplined, former soldier and a son of top general. Hates nobility.

Timothy: Crybaby and look childish, son of tax minister.

Supportive students:
Reinhard: Former playboy, reincarnated gun nut from earth, could be a main character later.

Olive: Garnet's friend, a seemingly normal noble girl who took a liking to Garnet.

Luna: Adrianne's servant, a maniac engineer, somewhat perverted? Daughter of head maid.

Lina and Serena: Minor antagonists, supposed to be Adrianne's followers in the game.

Misty: Olive's adopted sister and attendance, fill the same role as Luna. Dislike Garnet.

Other than these, there are like 4-5 adults but they're called by titles so I don't think they need explanation.
 
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