For one thing, Berta left her with the offer from Nina, including telling her not to take any extra action.

"... the tea cooled. I'll re-brew it, then I'll write you a letter."

All the servants have indescribable faces.

They seemed too poisoned to be instantly angry about Nina's insane behavior.

"Yes, sir."

"... it was like a storm."

"I'll have you look into Nina right away."

Berta herself was surprised by what happened now, but there was no room to get lost in how to deal with her.

"To whom will you send your letter?

"Your Majesty."

Berta answers as she dips the tip of the used pen in the ink. The response seemed surprising to the samurai.

"... are you taking Nina's offer now and telling Her Majesty as it is?

"You mean tell them as they are? For once, she is also a candidate for His Majesty's side chamber. You'll need to report it."

"Is that what it is?

Honestly, Berta has never been put in a situation like this either, so if it's confirmed, I'm not sure.

"... come on"

This is the rear palace, the space for him. It was the perception that prompt reporting, communication and consultation was Berta's role as administrator.

Anyway, Berta had it delivered directly to Harold at the Royal Palace on the table, writing briefly down the whole story of how a woman named Nina had come to claim it.

He would come to Berta's Palace again if he waited a few days anyway, but it did not seem to me that the contents of this hand deserved to be discussed in the bedroom at night.

The reply from Harold was quick and terminal.

"It is troublesome to know that Count Jimeno's daughter has taken such words and actions, so shut me up appropriately"

Berta cannot hide her perplexity in a handwriting where the main points are so concentrated that it is difficult to perceive intent.

With that said, I realize it was almost the first time I had exchanged letters with him.

"Did Your Majesty give you any instructions?

No. Well, instructions?

(I don't know what this means... Which one?)

"For once, it's like I want Nina to be quiet."

Not sure if I'd show them the contents, Berta stopped.

"Then how about being cautious about your disrespect to Her Highness?"

"The atmosphere that floated in the rear palace has been spreading lately, and you'd better get out tough to show it."

The samurai seemed to be able to swing in a more radical direction when the contents of the letter were communicated as they stood.

"Your Majesty must be busy too, and even now, outside in the morning, things are tough for the emerging aristocrats of the North to put out. I'm sure you don't want to get into trouble at the Palace launch."

While listening to the prophecy, Berta subtly turns the subject away.

"... you're in trouble. I wonder if the conservatives in the rear palace have mastered it crudely, next time again."

"I see you do. Rather, the aftermath of the weakened influence of a hostile faction called the Conservatives."

The samurai turned no consciousness to Berta's deception and nodded with a strange face.

It's a rivalry between factions traditionally spoken of in the contrast between conservative and emerging, but in fact emerging factions are far from a single rock. If conservative authority were to be relatively weak, the focus would now be on another issue.

Other than the royal nobility, the Petra, a people who make up the majority of the people, originally lived clearly divided between the south and the north.

It may be said that ethnicity and descent are exactly the same, with little difference in appearance characteristics.

Traditionally, however, identity as an ethnic group was weak because of the geographical element of bisecting across the great rivers lying heavily on the national territory.

"- But even we don't like it. The Petra of the emerging aristocracy of the North."

Berta is naturally a raw southern Petra. A princess of the Kasha clan, the largest lord of the south, who enjoyed her own prosperity in a land far from the king's capital.

In contrast, many of the emerging aristocrats who are widening themselves as emergents in the outer morning were northern Petra. I'm from the south and my entry is still delayed.

The most troublesome thing about this issue is that even Berta's brilliant samurai cannot contain their emotional elements.

"In the Second Lady's time, they were hiding behind the princess and barking with the authority of the South and Kasha. I don't know if the Conservative threat leaves, but now they're pointing their attack spearhead to the south."

"What unproductive people. Anyway, they are crude and not very aristocratic. I guess that's what it means to be."

The samurai are many from prestigious southern lineages. They were badly depressed beside the northern Petra in recent times.

- Regardless of what Berta is still unable to get out strongly against the outside morning, the women who came in later can't possibly understand the Petra lady who should be familiar with the political situation in the south.

It's hard to do because they're purely outraged despite it.

"Fair enough. I don't know what you're talking about, but it's a jade stone mix among the factions of emerging aristocrats. Some houses have risen up with strength."

"Some households produce powerful and beneficial practitioners, but as a whole, they're not too much."

"The daughters of factions who can't even beat the least courtesy into serving as female officers in the rear palace know the extent of what they're saying."

(I can't stop talking ill at all...)

Berta gave up her objections and sneaked up on Emma, her own belly samurai.

But unfortunately, Emma wasn't indoors. If she had been the oldest and calmer of Berta's samurai, she would have done well to cheer up her exuberant colleagues, but these days Emma has cut to the care of her prince.

(It may not be a good idea for the inner circle to harden too much)

To date, no woman from the emerging factions of the North has served in the Palace of Berta.

Until now it has been ignored, but given the situation today yesterday, it will be time for Berta to cut into the problems around it.

"Shall I hire a new woman from the North?"

Even though they did not proclaim it aloud, the women who were indoors closed their mouths simultaneously and turned their faces to Berta.

"... the heart of it"

"I want you to get along quite well with the ladies over there. It's pointless to just imagine the back."

Now I'm busy with an example, a case about transitional capital. Berta herself has been in the rear palace for a long time, and she has not been able to hold down her men. Not to mention the situation where Emma and Johanna, who are going to be your guide instead, are all over Louis.

"Sorry"

"I'm not blaming you. Besides, I was just looking at the fold to get more personnel. Louis is getting harder and harder."

I don't even know how the samurai feel, but I guess we're going to subdivide them into extra subdivisions because we can't see the individual specific faces.

I want to keep my hands on it while I'm at it.

"Which area do you have in mind for a newly hired female official?

"Do you take it from the old lady of His Majesty's side chamber candidate, who is already in the rear palace? Or we could hire a whole new one from outside the palace."

It's pretty hard for this candidate to be honest. The opposition of the servants on the part of Berta accelerates no matter what they think if it comes to putting in a bad woman and that person does not perform the duties expected.

"Well. Given the circumstances, I wonder if Nina can get in"

Berta illustrated an earlier woman by name.

"Eh."

"Are you serious?"

The samurai react in such a subtle way that they can't even joke. But if I tried Berta, it would have been a reasonable proposition.

"I mean it. It's easier to keep those who are likely to cause problems close by and monitor them. Besides, I don't think she's compatible with you guys."

"Eh."

Rather, it even seems preferable to the other side-room candidate women, who rub against their real wives halfway, selling their feminine and expecting something in return.

Approximately the Samurais who remained confused, Berta just wrote a reply to Harold.

"Would you mind if I took Nina as a lady in the service of my house? Even if the rear palace is turned around in the absence, there will be problems, so I will also accompany you on your next visit '.

The response from Harold was even more concise, just one word 'helpful'.

(I mean, this is... Which one?

Is Harold simply not interested in her?

Or is it an attitude of wanting to avoid a situation that stands out, even if you have a hand in the play?