There was no particular reason Iâd said that.
The more shocking the declaration, the easier it was to disrupt the opponentsâ breathing and seize the initiative.
As expected, the atmosphere quieted down like everyone had been doused with cold water.
It wasnât an uncomfortable silence for me.
As I stood there innocently, one of the Council of Elders spoke up.
âWhat are you trying to sayââ
But Iâd been waiting for that, and I quickly interrupted with my reply.
âEvery single one of them was an assassin.â
Before these old fogies could even point out my rudeness, I continued talking.
âI donât know how it happened. Did they kill the original knight order and impersonate them? Did they join House Bednicker while hiding their impure motives? Maybe they changed in the course of their duties for some reason? Regardless, they were the worst kind of assassins.â
â...Do you have proof of this?â
âProof...â
Their question amused me.
If they could truly see through all truths and lies, they wouldnât need something like âproof.â
Meaning...
âThere was no need for you to be scared about going to the Trial Room! Itâs not like they could actually see through all truths and lies.
âAnd thereâs a restriction.
âThat room only works on the blood of Bednicker, and they canât use it often.
The words my bigmouth brother had spoken in my past life were true.
He always exaggerated and bluffed so much that I hadnât really trusted him at first...
âOf course,â I said.
âDo you have it on you?â
âYes.â
âShow us.â
Whatâs with their tone?
I grumbled inwardly as I followed their command.
I pulled the dagger and note from my inner pocket and laid them out on the table before me.
A ray of light came down from the ceiling and brightened the table.
âThat symbol...!â
âThe mark of Hadenaihar...â
A small commotion occurred within the Council of Elders.
âHow could this be?â
âYou mean to say the servants of the Six Demon Lords infiltrated Bednicker?â
âSince when did the agents of the cultââ
The demon lords and the gods of disaster were one and the same.
The cultists called them gods, whereas the Great Houses called them demon lords.
There wasnât a big reason for this difference.
The more conservative groups felt it was too much to call those horrifying beings âgods.ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
That was the extent of my knowledge...
I honestly didnât know much about the gods of disaster.
Iâd never had any contact with them, nor did I care to.
From the start, I hadnât even known there were six of them. I knew them as the Five Demon Lords.
âDid you truly obtain that dagger from the Fang Knight Order?â
âYes.â
â...â
The Council of Elders fell silent.
What did this silence mean?
Unlike what Iâd expected, they didnât seem to be too surprised by the betrayal.
But they werenât completely calm either.
Which means...
Theyâd known of the existence of a traitor, but they hadnât known the traitorâs backing... That was the most natural explanation.
â...Is that all?â
âThe objects you recovered from the assassins.â
Iâd known they would ask this as well.
âNo,â I replied. âThere was a note and a map as well. The map had information about most of their activities in the mountain range.â
âA map?â
âShow us.â
Huh?
Look at these bastards.
I wasnât that much of a pushover.
âWhy should I?â
âWhat?â
âThese are mine. As a descendant of the Great Houses, I killed the members of the Church of Darkness and obtained these trophies in return. I gave up the dagger as proof, but thereâs no need for me to share the map as well.â
Information on the cult was precious. I wasnât going to let them have it for free.
Even if I didnât know the specifics, if I put this up for auction for the heroes of the Great Houses, I would be able to gain quite a pretty penny.
Those guys who called themselves heroes were all a little crazy.
âYou dare.â
âSay that to us?â
âWhere do you think this is?â
âA place to explain myself. And I am explaining myself,â I said with a smirk. âAnd now Iâve finished explaining myself. Was there anything else?â
â...â
The room became silent once more.
This part was unexpected.
It wouldnât be odd for them to go mad with rage at the sight of such a little kid acting so rude.
I guess theyâre not that easy.
The Council of Elders...
They were the old monsters of Bednicker who led the house in place of the Lord of Blood and Iron whenever he was busy in the outside world.
Maybe their presence as the supreme authority figures in this house is also just a mask?
â...You have not fully explained yourself.â
âLuan Bednicker. You havenât explained the most suspicious parts.â
âWhat are they?â I asked.
âHow did you kill the servants of Hadenaihar?â
âIt could not have been possible with your skills.â
The most uncomfortable question finally came.
Of course, I had been expecting it for quite a while.
The Trial Room.
A place to discern truths from lies.
If that was the case...
âI had an advancement during my training. The result of that training allowed me to defeat them.â
I wasnât lying.
Of course, the training I was talking about was the training Iâd received on Spirit Mountain... but regardless, that training was what had allowed me to kill Osel.
â...â
There was another moment of silence.
However, I could tell that the Council of Elders was oddly bewildered.
Just like I wanted.
If this room really had the ability to discern the truth, they would know that my words were also true.
If I had just said all this without any confidence, no matter how concrete the evidence I presented was, these old fogies wouldnât have accepted it easily.
âInteresting.â
At that moment, a new voice joined in.
It was a relatively younger voice.
âAmong the insects of the cult, the assassins of Hadenaihar are some of the most annoying. Even one of the current heroes could lose their life in vain depending on the place and situation. However, you killed many of them by yourself?â
âYes.â
A slight chuckle could be heard.
âWhat happened to the rest? You said all members of the Fang Knight Order were killed.â
I furrowed my brow.
âMy ally who was with me at the time killed them.â
âSo you had an accomplice. Who was it?â
âIt was Arzan.â
âArzan.â
It wouldnât be odd for the Council of Elders to know about Arzan.
They likely knew more about her than about me.
Who is this person?
This person who had suddenly interjected had a different feeling from the rest of the Council of Elders.
It wouldnât be wrong for me to say he was annoying.
âI can see the general flow of what happened. Quite clever, Luan Bednicker.â
â...â
âNo, beyond that, you are wicked, Luan Bednicker.â
âWhy is that?â
âDo you know why you were suddenly summoned the day before the Blessing Ceremony?â
There were probably a lot of reasons, but by bringing it up now...
âTo verify my claims ahead of the Blessing Ceremony?â
âThatâs right. And that is also why you are embellishing your actions.â
âEmbellishing?â
âThe lie of having killed the servants of Hadenaihar.â
â...â
The Council of Elders continued to talk.
âWe understand what happened in the mountain range.â
âYou did suffer a grave danger.â
âHowever, you speak as if you evaded the danger with your own strength.â
âAlthough I didnât do everything, I still think I did my part.â
âNo. You just avoided losing your life.â
âArzan must have been the one to solve the situation.â
Look at these assholes.
âIf you are that doubtful of me, why donât you ask Arzan?â
âDonât make us laugh.â
âAlthough she worked for the main house in the past, that is not the case anymore.â
âFor you, it is not unlikely that she would lie to us.â
â...â
The situation would be different if the Trial Room could be used on Arzan as well...
But the roomâs effects only worked on the Bednicker bloodline.
They had no method of figuring out whether Arzanâs words were true.
âThe most disgusting part of all this is that you truly believe that you were helpful.â
âThe blessingless dreg of Bednicker.â
* * * * *
* * * * *
I see.
I had a decent idea of how this room detected the truth.
It wasnât absolute.
Even if one didnât speak the truth, if that person truly believed what they were saying, perhaps the system couldnât differentiate?
That was why the Council of Elders thought I was a delusional lunatic.
I understand where theyâre coming from.
At this point in my life, it wasnât odd for Luan to be treated like this.
I wouldnât have believed me either.
Yeah, I can understand them...
But as I heard them continue to claw away at my heart, I ran out of patience.
Honestly, at times like this, I couldnât help but laugh.
âSo, what are you saying?â
âProve yourself.â
âProve myself?â
âProve that you indeed fought against the assassins of Hadenaihar.â
âAnd how am I supposed to do that?â
âYou can prove yourself in a fight.â
âHmm.â
I scratched my head.
As I thought, this was the most certain method...
âWe will prepare your opponent.â
âYou have no need to worry. They wonât be stronger than the assassins of the cult.â
âI donât really mind, but my current condition isnât that good.â
âYour condition...â
I thought I heard a snicker.
âThen when do you want to fight?â
â...In about three days?â
I said this because that was when I expected to fully recover from the aftereffects of Flaming White.
As I said that, an obvious laugh was heard.
Naturally, I looked at the Council of Elders. I had never joked with them.
âSo you continue to harbor nonsensical thoughts.â
âYou are gambling with time after having already given up.â
Gambling?
âIn three days? That is not the case.â
âYou are aiming for the Blessing Ceremony tomorrow.â
âYour intention is obvious.â
âIf you can receive a new blessing, you will be able to defeat the opponent we will prepare to fight you.â
Their rudeness slipped my mind as I couldnât help but let out an exclamation.
âHeh.â
They were just arranging the situation as they pleased.
âYou will not be able to attend the Blessing Ceremony.â
âAnd you will be punished for your contempt against House Bednicker.â
âWhen did I act with contempt against Bednicker?â
âYou confessed to a false truth.â
âAs a descendant of Bednicker, you lied about something you must never lie about.â
I lied?
âKeep this in mind.â
âThe subjugation of the Church of Darkness is not a light matter.â
âYou are lucky you stand here as a Bednicker. If you had said something like that outside, the honor of our family head wouldâve been damaged.â
I smirked.
âIs the family headâs honor so useless that a few words from me can damage it?â
âLuan Bednicker, did you just insult theââ
I cut off the Council of Eldersâ growling.
ââIâm trying to use the Blessing Ceremony to gain an upper hand in this situation.â Thatâs an interesting assumption. Then canât you just get me an opponent that can flip that advantage?â
âWhat do you mean?â
âPrepare a difficult opponent that I will have a hard time defeating even if I receive a good blessing.â In a sarcastic tone, I added, âOr... one of the members of the Council of Elders could fight me.â
â...â
The room immediately became quiet.
Naturally, this wasnât because they thought âThatâs a great idea!â
Bzzt, bzzt.
I could feel my skin becoming numb.
These old men didnât even think to hide their killing intent.
â...So you finally crossed the line.â
âItâs done. You have nothing to prove.â
âAs you stand there, you will need to pay the price.â
âAre you going to punish me? Without the permission of the family head, youâre going to punish a direct descendent of the Lord of Blood and Iron?â
âThatâs right. While the family head isnât here, we areââ
âThatâs a funny lie,â I said with a smile. âIsnât the family head at the main house right now?â
â...â
Although I couldnât see any of their faces, I could tell the Council of Elders had frozen like stone at my words.
â...What do you mean?â
âThe family head is currently away.â
âItâs the opposite,â I said.
I knew of the Lord of Blood and Ironâs authority.
For example, the end of some random hallway, the inside of an empty guest room, the bustling dining room, the main hall opened for the Exchange, the rose garden Iâd seen on my way here...
No...
Where I was looking in the middle of the Council of Elders, and even beyond that.
A thought Iâd had from the beginning...
âFamily head.â
Was it really the Council of Elders that had summoned me?
âYouâre here, right?â
â....â
Silence.
And then...
âImpressive.â
For the first time in a while, I felt goosebumps from just hearing a voice.
The Council of Elders flinched before parting to the sides. Between them was a warping darkness.
It wasnât like someone had revealed themself from an unseen position...
It was more like someone surrounded by darkness was moving that darkness away.
And then, I witnessed him.
They were completely different from mine, his black hair and dark-red eyes.
âItâs been a while.â
â...â
The Bednicker family head and the Lord of Blood and Iron.
My father.
Dellark C. Bednicker.