The situation surrounding Myon is fraught with tension.

Information that Mion had secured the identity of Chancellor Mars-Barr, who was on the run through the country, jumped into Gandia on December 21 of the continental calendar five hundred and one. The King of Gandhia, Leongando Ray-Gandhia, reaps the reward and decides to conquer Mion.

It was on December 17th that Mion secured Mars-Barr, and the fact that Mion had not made any reports against Gandhia while securing Mars-Barr's identity moved Leongando.

If only the life of Chancellor Mars-Barr were to be given, this maneuver would come from a side such as Mion passing to Kruselk and watering down the fact that he plotted the assassination of the Leongands. There was no need for Leongando to be exaggerated.

Mion took the life of the Chancellor more than Mion's peace of mind than the continuation of his alliance with Gandia. It's hard to understand, but I guess that's more than Mion not leaning over Mars-Barr's neck.

Leongand opened a military debate and instructed him to concentrate some of his forces on the Mion side. With the showdown with Kruselk withheld, we cannot turn our great power over to Myon. It can't be like putting all the troops in, and if we do that, there's a chance that Kruselk's separate squad will fall into an avalanche on the vacant Zalwarn side.

Mion, maybe he's after it.

The concerns of the warriors and generals were there.

Haven't we discerned Gandia because Mion is still connected to Kruselk and we can expect reinforcements from Kruselk? The total strength of Krüselk was, as it stands, strongly oriented to see it well above Gandia, and there was no basis for denying that view. Looks like Kruselk has plenty of room in his power to send reinforcements to Myon while he settles his battle against the Alliance of Antidemonic Kings.

Nevertheless, there were no reports from intelligence agents infiltrating Mion that the Imperial Demon of the Kruselk army was lurking within Mion, and there were voices saying that the connection with Kruselk might not be strong. But Isius' decision would have been puzzling and extreme had it not been for his collaborators, such as Kruselk, behind him.

With the power of one Mion country, you can't beat Gandhia. You can't win. It may be possible to win in local battles, but it is more obvious than to see fire that Gandhia will eventually win. The force difference is overwhelming, and even the quality of the force, Gandhia greatly outweighs it.

King Isius was so mad that he also raised his voice.

It was an unlikely decision, such as turning Gandhia against his enemies, for the sake of one individual, Mars-Barr. Indeed, Mars-Barr is a man committed to rebuilding Mion, whose arms are enough that Leongand wants his hands out of his throat. Even Nares-Ragnahorn, who rarely praises others, was so detached from Mars' renaissance of Myon.

And Mars is also the one who pushed Isius Ray-Mion up to the throne of the king. It was also the biggest factor that Isius relied on him and left the national government to him alone. Isius may have thought that Mars was an essential part of Myon. So couldn't you have killed it to kill it?

But when Mion perishes as a result, it is nothing but the end of the fall.

"Whatever it is, you just have to give Mars-Barr his neck. Only then will I not have to shake up the spear"

Leongand is sending out a messenger to Mion shortly after he talks to Halberg. To Halberg, although it went like something that was not enough to take, such as Myon, it was not a good idea to wage war under this circumstance, either, as Gandia. Moreover, if the opponent becomes an ally that has spared no help in Gandhia for many years, it does not sound good to the neighbouring countries.

I am refraining from a major showdown with Kruselk.

Gandia is the leader of the anti-Kruselk coalition. If its allies were to be destroyed, it would never have a good influence on the countries participating in the coalition. Even if you knew the fact that Mion betrayed Gandhia.

Hopefully, I don't want to wage war with Mion.

No, with any country, I didn't want to go to war or anything.

If we could win without fighting, we'd never have crossed that. I've put Berel under control without Nares bleeding, but that was the best, and there was no more victory than that. Whether it's the Zalwarn War, the Logner War, there's a lot of blood.

Not the best victory.

"I hope nothing happens."

Nage's sad face was nothing more than because she liked Isius. If it becomes war with Myon, Isius may have to kill him.

If you surrender, as Logner did, would you still surrender to your own life-saving, something that would not even offer Mars-Barr?

Nage's wishes are also vain, and Gandhia and Mion will push towards war.

On December 24th, Leongando's envoy met Isius Ray-Mion in Mion's capital, Mion Lion. It tells them that Leongand wants the Mars-Barr pattern. If Isius can't kill him, I told him in the dark that I would dispose of him on Gandia's side, but Isius overtook this.

Mars-Barr was the treasure of the country (Mion), and he said that the treasure of the country could not be given to other nations, even though they were allies, and that if Mars-Barr wanted his life, he would come and fetch it with his own hands.

"I don't think it's the word of His Majesty Isius... or something?

Leongand frowned on the messenger's report. While recognizing that wrinkles are engraved between the eyebrows, you can't stop it.

December 27th.

"Yes, word for word, and we hear it with these ears, so"

"... ok. You can back off."

Leongand, as he lowered the messenger, bit his teeth and held his anger in. Isius' youth and therefore his rampage were not as hairy as cuteness. I guess it's stirring up and provoking Leongando. Is it his sincerity to say that he is waiting to fight Gandhia?

Isius thinks he's a brighter man.

"He's smart, but he's still young"

"Youthfulness,"

"You must not destroy your country at an early age."

I guess Nares' assessment is plausible. Of course, that's what Leongand understood. Isius is not even a teenager yet. Though he became king at an early age, it was he who entrusted the role to the Chancellor. Speaking of years since the throne, although Isius is longer than Leongand, the number and quality of the training grounds that have crept through will be higher in Leongand.

"Mars-Barr should have lost his life if he thought of his country."

Leongand also knows that it's cruel to ask a man who was fleeing the country for cleanliness until he was foolish. Even though I know it, I guess I have to think so because I think Isius is pathetic.

If Isius had a fallacy, it was that he trusted Mars too much, that he had let Myon take power, but that was not the fault of one Isius either. It was those who assisted him who had to stop Mars-Barr's dictatorship. But the situation in which a country called Mion was placed could be opened up because Mars-Barr was entrusted with everything in national politics, and such a precedent accelerated Mars' dictatorship.

Gandhia pretended not to look, knowing Mion's inner affairs. Rather than that, it was also a lesson in the world not to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries. Myon, in particular, is an ally. There was no way I could do something like break up a friendly relationship.

"Perhaps the thought of the country and the thought of His Majesty Isius makes it pinched"

"If Marus had chosen death, Isius would have woken up."

In the first place, if Mars-Barr hadn't betrayed Gandhia, if he hadn't tied hands with Rhine, this wouldn't have happened. I can only imagine why Mars-Barr went on a no-win bet, but in any case, Isius can only be described as a victim. It is Malus, not Isius, who should die.

(but I'm no longer lost)

Leongand rose from the throne with a glimpse of the soldier's coolness.

"Discuss Mion. Is there a problem?

"No."

Nares just nodded with few words.