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Chapter 2 - Vol6.1

Chapter 1:

Treachery

THE UNITED KINGDOM OF OXYS made its move. When news of this

reached the Capital Planet, it sent everyone into a frenzy. The Empire was

used to the occasional border skirmish, but a real invasion was an entirely

different story. The coming conflict would involve clashes of not just

thousands of ships, but millions, and the United Kingdom had already

made it clear they were dead serious in their intentions.

"Three million ships?" I asked.

"Y-yes! The United Kingdom has formed a massive fleet centered

around the nations that started the internal unrest to atone for their

misdeeds. Lord Liam, this is very bad!!!"

In worst-case scenarios, true conflicts between intergalactic nations

could go on for hundreds of years.

I sat in my hotel room and casually sipped my coffee. "I see."

"Y-you see? Lord Liam, are you taking this seriously?"

The one who brought me this news was my personal merchant,

Thomas Henfrey, who was also serving as my contact in the United

Kingdom. It seemed that arrangement was already proving to be useful

since he was immediately able to provide me with this intel.

"It's got nothing to do with me," I replied. "This is a job for the

military. Right now, I'm nothing more than a civil servant."

A pale-faced Thomas had rushed into my hotel room while I was

enjoying a morning beverage before going into work. Right now, he

looked at me as if he couldn't believe his ears.

"Th-that may be so, but I don't think the military alone will be able

to deal with this! The Empire's nobility will surely be called on to fight."

So they were gonna come to us with "Nobles of the Empire, rise up

with us in the face of this crisis!" or something like that? I couldn't say I

was too keen on the idea.

"Well, if they call, I'm not answering. I'm still in my training

period, and in the military, I'm only in the reserves."

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According to Thomas, three million enemies were closing in on us.

True, this was a crisis, but the Empire was a vast intergalactic nation. If it

wanted to, it could send out twice that number of Imperial Army ships to

fight them off, but it was still bound to drag its allies into danger as well.

There would be plenty of nobles like me who'd be content to watch

from the sidelines without taking part in the fight themselves. After all,

evil lords never got into trouble that they didn't have to. The Empire could

likely win the war, but it was still up against three million enemies and

therefore bound to suffer serious losses. Could I be confident that I

wouldn't be affected by those losses?

"We'll limit our involvement and only provide funding and

supplies."

"That...may be wise." Thomas calmed down when he heard my

reasonable compromise. Did he really think I was actually going to fight in

the war myself or something?

As I continued sipping my coffee, I received a communication from

Claus on my tablet.

"Lord Liam, I apologize for the interruption, but I have an urgent

message for you."

On the screen, Claus looked anxious, and if Claus was anxious, then

something really serious must be going on.

"What is it?"

If this had been a message from one of my more aggravating

subordinates—like Tia or Marie—I would have hung up on them

immediately. Of course, those two would probably find a way to get

excited about me treating them coldly. I always felt like they were getting

the better of me somehow, so I was tired of dealing with them. In that

respect, Claus was exactly what I wanted in a subordinate right now.

"We've received a request from the palace. They want us to join the

fight in the war with the United Kingdom."

"We refuse. I'm busy."

"The problem is that Prince Cleo's been chosen as the conflict's

supreme commander."

"What?!"

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***

In the United Kingdom, there was a noble by the name of Count

Pershing who received aid from Liam via Thomas. This connection of

Liam's was a count who ruled over a planet, but the king he served was

one of those supporting the rebellion. Because of that, Pershing was being

forced to participate in the invasion of the Empire as atonement.

Pershing had benefited greatly from Liam's support. From the very

beginning, he had never intended to do anything for the United Kingdom's

sake...but he didn't intend to do anything for Liam's sake either.

Everything he did, he did for himself.

"So you want me to help you lure Liam onto the battlefield?"

Pershing said.

It was an Imperial merchant who came to meet Pershing this time,

not Thomas. They nodded, grinning. "There are some nobles making a big

scene in the Empire right now, you see. They'll be the ones fending off the

Kingdom's forces."

When he heard what the Imperial merchant had to say, Pershing

realized there were people in the Empire who planned to make use of this

war in their own power struggle. "Imperial nobles are pretty scary, hoping

the United Kingdom will take out their opposing factions for them."

"In exchange, we'll make sure you always have information on the

fleet Prince Cleo commands."

Count Pershing smiled. That's good, he thought. If I have constant

updates on the enemy's position, there should be plenty of opportunities

for me to make a name for myself in battle.

This would mean that in addition to the attacks from the United

Kingdom, Cleo's fleet would be undermined by his own Imperial allies.

The fleet would make the perfect prey on the battlefield, and the Empire

wanted this fleet to lose.

Pershing didn't take the deal right away, however. "Of course, Lord

Liam has been very kind to me, you know. It's not easy for me to betray

his trust."

Count Pershing demanded more compensation, and the Imperial

merchant grinned again. "Of course. In the event of your success, we shall

provide whatever you desire as a reward. This is just the advance

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payment."

The merchant offered him a vast sum of cash and a long list of

resources. Count Pershing could hardly contain his glee.

It seems you've made too many enemies inside the Empire, Count

Banfield. I'm afraid you'll have to give your life for my benefit now.

***

Prince Cleo's residence in the palace had been in an uproar since the

first thing that morning.

"Command a fleet of millions? You haven't even received military

education, Cleo!"

Cleo's sister Lysithea couldn't hide her frustration. While she was

royalty herself, she had become a knight in order to protect her younger-

sister-turned-younger-brother Cleo.

Cleo watched his furious sister serenely. "Calm down, Lysithea. I've

learned the basics in an education capsule."

"Education capsules are impressive, I know, but they only install

knowledge in you. If you don't make use of it through practical

experience, that knowledge is meaningless. If capsules were all it took,

then we'd have no need for military schools!"

Education capsules could impart whatever raw knowledge they were

programmed with into a person's head, but that person then had to apply

the knowledge in the real world to master it.

Cleo turned his head from his exasperated sister, pouting slightly.

"I'm sure it'll be Count Banfield commanding the fleet and not me,

anyway."

"Count Banfield can only command 100,000 ships at most,"

Lysithea corrected her brother.

"Huh?"

"His personal ability won't prepare him for commanding a fleet in

the millions. Those kinds of numbers can only be mobilized by someone

with the requisite rank. Do you think Count Banfield has someone of that

rank working for him?"

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Even when he went to war with the pirate nobles of House Berkeley,

Liam commanded a combined fleet of fewer than 200,000 ships. The count

was talented, but this battle would be on a scale he was not capable of

handling.

"N-no..."

Lysithea held her head in her hands. "I'm telling you, the count is

too inexperienced. Talent isn't the only thing required to command a fleet

of millions of ships. Experience is vital. Plus, you'd also need thousands of

subordinates to carry out your orders."

And those thousands of people—hundreds of thousands, really—

would have to be educated officers themselves. They needed not just

soldiers for this operation, but skilled commanders. A mere count had no

hope of providing such numbers.

"If we had years to prepare, things would be different, but we don't

have the time. We can't win a war with an unorganized army."

Cleo resigned himself to Lysithea's logic. It seems this is as far as

we go, Count Banfield.

A grand role such as this would normally fall upon the shoulders of

the emperor or the crown prince. Success could make a real difference in

one's right to ascend to the throne, so this should have been Calvin's

moment to shine, and yet he personally recommended Cleo for the position

instead.

Tears came to Lysithea's eyes. She knew that what Calvin desired

here was to see his brother fail. "This is just awful. If you step down as

supreme commander in the middle of the Empire's big crisis, you'll lose

the support of all the nobles currently on your side. If you accept the

position, we have no chance of victory in the long run."

Even if they successfully repelled the invasion, they would have no

way to continue their feud with Calvin's faction afterward due to the

damage it would surely do to their forces.

"Calvin truly is a troublesome foe," Cleo muttered.

Lysithea agreed wholeheartedly. "I'd expect nothing less from the

man who defended his position as crown prince for so many years. His

title's not just for show."

The throne seemed just within reach, but at the same time, much too

far away for Cleo to ever attain. This situation caused Cleo to reflect on

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Liam himself.

Count Banfield isn't omnipotent, but just a young man without much

experience in the world. I guess in that way, he's just like me.

When he realized that Liam, a man he previously thought of as

practically flawless, actually had weaknesses after all, Cleo felt a little

relieved...perhaps even happy, though he didn't understand these feelings

himself.

***

What awaited nobles upon graduating from college was a sort of

two-year internship, similar to the two-year military service period they

were required to complete after graduating from the military academy.

After college, nobles were expected to gain some hands-on experience by

serving in a minor government position.

My position was in a building in a remote area far from the palace.

To describe it in Japanese terms from my previous life, I was stationed in

something like a town hall out in the countryside. It frustrated me that I

was pulled from the fast track I should have been on and dumped in some

backwater place. Normally, a count like me would be working a cushy

palace job, but instead, I was sent to the sticks. I was so far out that they

should have prepared a place for me to stay near where I was working, but

I was commuting every day from my hotel. On the other hand, cars in this

reality were incredible, exceeding the capabilities of small jet planes from

my past life. In a quality car, you could easily commute to the other side of

the planet if you wanted to.

So anyway, here I was, working in a town hall out in the boonies...

and my superior was just infuriating. While I was at my desk, getting

ready to go home, he called out to me with a disgusting grin on his face.

"Saaaaay, Liam. You commute all the way out here from the capital,

don't you? I'm sure you have the money, so why don't you rent a place

nearby?"

This superior, the thirtieth or something son of a large noble house,

was my instructor during my training. Luckily for him, he was born into an

important family, but that family was so huge that all he'd amounted to

was a small-time backwater bureaucrat. With a bit more skill, I'm sure he

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could have ended up with a decent position in the palace, so the fact that

he was here said volumes about his abilities. He had an overabundance of

pride in his meager abilities despite the fact that he never did any work

himself, and he spent his time on the clock messing around or playing

games. Everyone here seemed to have given up on him, and his superiors

never said anything when they saw him fooling around.

Normally I would have ignored him, but today he sent me more

work to do right as I was supposed to be leaving.

"Oh, and please finish with these files today. We'll need them

tomorrow, after all."

A huge mass of holographic documents opened in the air all around

me. I glanced at the clock; I was supposed to be gone in a few minutes. I

could tell at a glance that it was too much work for me to finish in that

time. He was obviously trying to bully me.

My superior set his hand on my shoulder. "You'll have to do as I

say during your training here. I'm not gonna go easy on you just because

you're a count."

How dare he speak to me like that? I smacked his hand off my

shoulder, grabbed his head, and slammed it onto my desk.

"Ow!"

My superior was bewildered, like his pathetic brain couldn't keep up

with my actions. I held him down with one arm and pressed his head into

my desk. The wood cracked under the force, but I didn't care; I could

afford a replacement.

"Who do you think you are, ordering me around?" I told him. "I'm

not listening to a word you say, whether you're my instructor or not."

This was no way for a trainee to speak, but I was a count. No small-

town official was going to boss me around.

"H-how dare you speak to your superior that way? I'm reducing

your score for this!"

Instructors graded their trainees, but I didn't care how low my score

was. I wasn't staying in this job for long, so I didn't care how I was

evaluated. Besides, I could easily bury whatever evaluation this peon gave

me.

"It's inexcusable that someone like you is even my superior in the

first place. Do you understand the position you're in at all?" I asked,

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pressing down on the man's head even harder. There was a nasty creaking

sound beneath him, but I wasn't the one in pain, so I paid it no mind.

For the record, I had nothing against undisciplined superiors. As an

evil lord, I was a prime example of one myself. I just couldn't take that

there was someone like that above me. I knew I was being hypocritical, but

I was a villain. I could get away with it.

"Why are you giving me work to do at the end of the day? Aren't

you supposed to be a manager? Managing the work is your job. The

question is, how the hell do you still have work to hand out at a time like

this?"

"Nnggh..."

My desk's surface snapped from the force, and my superior's face

was driven half into it. I figured he couldn't talk like that.

"This is your mistake," I went on. "You deal with it."

I let him go and he trembled.

"Y-you bastard! You think you can get away with—"

I didn't think that; I just didn't intend to let him get away with this. I

pressed down on my incompetent superior's head again and it creaked

unpleasantly. Everyone else around us looked on in fear, but I didn't care

about that.

"You finish the work," I said. "It's your mistake, so that makes

sense, doesn't it?"

It was clear I was willing to crush his head outright if he defied me,

and I guess he wasn't so stupid that he didn't realize it.

He went quiet, and all the blood drained from his face. "Y-yes, sir,"

my nominal superior squeaked.

I smiled at him. "You said it needed to be done by tomorrow, so it

must be possible. That means you can do it, right?"

It was obviously not an amount of work that one person could

complete, even if they went at it all night. My superior was trembling. "I-I

can't..."

"You can do it, right?" I urged. I kicked him, and he rolled away

from me across the floor, eventually striking the wall. He remained there,

shaking, so I repeated myself again for good measure. "Get it done by

tomorrow. You said it could be done, so you'll take responsibility,

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won't you?"

I walked over to my incompetent superior and peered down at his

face. It was covered in tears and snot. I took on a quieter tone, sounding

like a supervisor myself. "You better finish it all by tomorrow, without any

assistance. I'll squash your head flat if you don't."

"Y-yes, sir."

The end-of-day bell rang, so I tidied up my things and prepared to

leave. Overtime? That was something for people who weren't evil lords. I

wouldn't be caught dead doing it myself.

"Be seeing you," I called on my way out. "Hope you get all that

done by tomorrow."

My attitude toward my supposed superior was the very height of

rudeness, but I was a count. In the Empire, nobility wielded absolute

power. A man who couldn't even succeed by using his family's

established name had no right to be arrogant with me. I was the real deal,

and not just on the inside. I was the only one with real influence in society.

Noblesse oblige—the idea of a noble's duty—was simply an illusion.

This incompetent superior of mine was really stressing me out

though... Maybe it was time to make some improvements to my

workplace.

***

The next day, I was summoned before the superior of my

incompetent superior. He was a blood relative of my immediate superior,

meaning he was also a member of that large noble family.

From his tone, my boss' boss clearly looked down on me.

"Apparently you did as you liked in the military, but this is a government

office. I expect you not to act like those savages in the army."

My trembling, incompetent superior hid behind his boss, and the

bastard was giving me a smug look.

Seated on a couch, I ignored the two of them and looked over some

holographic documents.

I guess the big boss didn't like my attitude because he started yelling

at me. "Do you think everyone will simply bow down to you? My family

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is part of Prince Calvin's faction! I'm not afraid of you!"

Nobles were beyond help, myself included. When you lived life

completely spoiled because of your position, even good people could rot

into villains. There were plenty of intelligent nobles though; not all of

them were as useless as these two.

Still looking at the documents, I asked the boss, "Do you feel better

now that you've chewed me out?"

He didn't answer, so I looked up at him.

He snorted. "You're awfully confident, aren't you? I know you're

off to the battlefield soon. I bet you're regretting pissing off Prince

Calvin!"

If there was one point I empathized with Calvin about, it was the

fact that our factions were so big that we had to expect incompetents like

this to be in the ranks. Well, I could always lessen the burden some for the

crown prince.

"I admit, I am feeling irritated about that," I said. "By the way, why

don't you take a look at these documents? They're evidence of your

corruption."

I made the documents larger for them to see, and my two superiors

initially showed some surprise, but that quickly gave way to smiles. They

weren't even scared about having proof of their corruption thrust before

them.

"What of it? This is nothing special. Every—"

"Everyone's doing it? I don't care," I said. "I have material here to

remove you, which I intend to do to make myself feel better. I was just

lamenting about the state of my workplace, but with you two gone it

should be a lot more comfortable around here."

It was proof of just how incompetent they were that I was able to

uncover evidence of their misdeeds so easily. There would be no issues

getting rid of both of them.

I snapped my fingers, and armed soldiers marched into the room.

My two superiors were shocked at the appearance of these hulking soldiers

in their powered suits.

"Don't move!" the soldiers shouted at them. "Put your hands behind

your head and get down on the floor!"

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"Wh-who are you?!"

The soldiers kicked my superior and his superior to the floor and

promptly apprehended them. Once they dragged the two useless men

away, their commander came to me and saluted.

"Thank you for the tip," he said.

"You work fast." I reported these men's wrongdoings as soon as I

discovered them. I was always good at rooting out corruption like this,

ever since my early days working with Amagi—and I was good at cleanup

too.

"We have a message for you from the prime minister. He says,

'Thanks for the quick work.'"

It was so funny, I burst into laughter. "What, you guys work directly

for the prime minister?"

"Yes, sir!"

"I owe that guy. Guess I should thank him too."

Later, I'd have these fast-working soldiers send the prime minister a

bribe—a gift, rather. I never forgot to reward the people who helped me

out.

I was really weirdly unlucky lately though... I got sent off to the

boonies with an incompetent boss at a workplace full of corruption, and I

was being dragged into a stupid war to boot. Nothing but trouble was

coming my way these days.

The war I was being dragged into was between intergalactic nations,

so it was going to be on a grand scale. To be honest, it was a lot more than

I could handle. Really, what the heck was going on?

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