āI truly lament having to send you off like this.ā
Princess Eustia gazed at me with sorrowful eyes.
But what could I do?
By direct order of Prince Peilly III, she was now forbidden from leaving the country.
Traveling with an unrelated man would only fuel even worse rumors.
Oh, Prince Peilly III! Thank you for saving me!
It had to be a gift in return for the cordyceps pillsā miraculous effects.
Her skill āOne Followed by Heavenly Fortuneā was certainly a waste.
Thanks to her, the cordyceps experiment had succeeded spectacularly.
But if I thought about it for even a second, the answer was obvious.
Imagine a woman casually slinging a warhammer over her shoulder and looking down with a pout.
Didnāt she get kidnapped on purpose, hoping a prince would come rescue her like in a fairy tale?
If things had gone south, she probably wouldāve broken out on her own.
Of course, rationally speaking, she wouldnāt have done that⦠probably.
āThe Princeās command cannot be disobeyed. Then please stay healthy.ā
And please marry that Izkaya guy or whoever he was.
Naturally, I swallowed the second half.
Soon I set off with a long caravan.
The Crawford Principality and the Western Nations Alliance were relatively prosperous.
Exporting this much goods wouldnāt even make them flinch.
Besides, they were buying it with the money earned here.
Markets were booming, so the rulers of each nation welcomed the situation.
I received so many marriage proposals it was ridiculous.
Just how much higher is this popularity going to climb?
I sank deep into my chair, smugly praising myself.
Time flowed endlessly, and finally we arrived.
āUgh! I was bored to death.ā
The trip from the Empire to Delriat had at least a few incidents.
With a small group, we ran into monsters or bandits.
But now? Not even a tiny event.
We were moving in a scale that could practically be called an army.
Only a lunatic would attack us.
Thanks to that, even the hired mercenaries were lounging around.
Playing dagger-throwing games and such.
Whirrātak!
āDang, lost again.ā
āKekeke! Pay up. One silon each.ā
The game looked dead simple.
Just nail a plank to a tree and see who hits it more.
It seemed childish, yet everyone was oddly lively.
Put money on the line and people get excitedāthatās just how it works.
Thatās why gambling is fun.
But Iām not interested.
Would winning a few coins from that really make me happy?
Me, with assets well over millions of goldens?
Obviously not.
This is why nobles throw themselves into polo or hunting.
Because they feel the same crushing boredom I do right now.
āIf only there were board games or something, the boredom would be less⦠huh?ā
A single muttered word sparked a massive realization.
Iām not the only one bored in this world, right?
Men, women, young, oldāeveryone feels the same.
(Wait, āoldā might be pushing it?)
Nonsenseāeven animals love to play.
The next business venture is decided.
***
The money earned from cordyceps pills was reinvested into the governor-generalās office.
Not all of itāmastersā shares and workersā wages had to be paid first.
Even after all expenses, the profit was astronomical.
Enough to repay the Crawford loan in one lump sum.
Cordyceps pills were the very definition of a high-value business.
The margin was simply insane.
āThis should be more than enough for a while, right?ā
āMore than enough! Weāve never handled this much money recently.ā
Hozeinās eyes widened at the mountain of gold coins.
Delriat was roughly the size of Crawford.
Territory, population, economyāeverything matched except the natural environment.
The only real difference was their attitude toward the Empire.
Acting tough and getting annihilated for itā¦
Well, thatās not important right now.
Anyway, it was a mid-sized nation a little bigger than the western minor countries.
Normally, a few hundred thousand goldens would be plenty to manage.
But during Hozeinās rule, the country had always been broke.
So even as administrator, he couldnāt help being shocked.
āUse this to start large-scale civil engineering projects. All the plans you drew up but couldnāt executeāgo ahead. Zero-interest loan.ā
āIs that really all right?ā
āYou wouldnāt be able to pay interest for a while anyway.ā
āThatās true, but the terms are so generousā¦ā
āItās fine. My goals are completely different from the previous governors.ā
Creating positive change in the world raises my abilities.
Even if it looks like Iām just giving money away, Iām earning my own benefits.
And the monetary profit will be massive tooāthe more Delriat develops.
After all, I own the pill factory, and I plan to expand business domains like crazy.
No obstacles, so I can grab interests exactly as I please.
My insides were pitch black, but Hozein was already shedding tears.
āKuhuk! Youāre the first person to care for us this much. Thank you, truly, Your Excellency!ā
He was already on his knees.
I helped him up, a little flustered.
Whoa, calm down with the dramatics.
Itās really not that big a deal.
āHey, hey! People are watching. Stop crying and stand up.ā
āI will use every coin frugally and precisely where itās needed. Not a single one will leak!ā
āGood. But thereās one principle you must never break.ā
āSpeak, and I will obey with all my heart.ā
āNo matter the project, pay the workers properly. From this day forward, forced labor is forbidden.ā
āOf course⦠huh?ā
Hozein blinked in confusion.
He clearly couldnāt comprehend it.
And no wonderāwage theft was everyday life in this world.
Even the supposedly advanced Empire did it; a frontier backwater would be far worse.
Total mess.
Even after I became governor-general, forced labor had continued.
Back then the country was too broke; there was no choice.
Without it, reconstruction wouldnāt move at all.
But now we had sufficient funds.
No need to keep the evil practice.
āYou just said youād obey with all your heart.ā
āO-of course!ā
āAlso, make sure everyone remembers itās by the governor-generalās order.ā
āWill that really be enough?ā
āYes. What I need isnāt money.ā
Overwhelming influence.
I skipped the second half.
Then I issued the next order.
āFrom now on, all ledgers will use double-entry bookkeeping.ā
Hozein had no reason to doubt me.
He was genuinely committed to normalizing Delriat.
But people are unpredictable.
There was always a chance some official would get greedy and skim.
I explained double-entry bookkeeping.
It wasnāt difficultājust recording each transaction under two categories.
Think of a scale: write from both sides and youāre done.
āThis makes forgery or omission hard. Errors are easy to catch. The only downside is itās a bit tedious.ā
āWeāll adapt as fast as possible.ā
āGood. If you need more staff, post recruitment notices. Iāll handle the interviews.ā
āYouāre so busyāthereās no need for you to do thatā¦ā
āEvery single official must be hired through me. Oh, and there are site supervisors named Colmer and Dretin, right?ā
āYes, probably.ā
āFire them both. Their reputation is terrible.ā
āAh, yes sir.ā
Hozein just nodded blankly.
He probably couldnāt understand why I was doing all this.
Because the journey back was so boring I kept checking the Employee Management Window.
The governor-generalās office was under me too, so I could see every officialās info clearly.
Everyone else was fine, but those two were outright scum.
They took plenty of bribes and quietly siphoned materials.
Honestly, the office didnāt have much room to talkāwages had been delayed over half a year.
So I was letting them off lightly with just dismissal.
āI know it feels like too much interference, but itās necessary. Bear with it a little.ā
āNot at all. Iāll keep it in mind.ā
āRequest construction engineers from the Empire. Offer good wages and some will come.ā
āYes sir.ā
āThen keep up the good work.ā
āI take my leave, Your Excellency!ā
Hozein answered vigorously and dashed off somewhere.
Probably to investigate what the hell Colmer and Dretin had done to earn such a trash reputation.
āPhew! Guess I should get moving too.ā
First sale was a huge successāI had to deliver the good news to the pill factory.
And start making board games to sell.
Something odd was happening in the Carius Duchy, but the pill factory was running perfectly.
You couldnāt find a better workplace anywhere.
Every worker was burning with enthusiasm.
āAh, Your Excellency the Governor-General! Youāve finally returned.ā
As soon as I entered, the masters greeted me.
They had clearly prepared a welcome; word had already spread.
Well, it was obvious.
We had rolled in with a mountain of goods.
āHow have you been? Howās production?ā
āItās increasing every day. Everyoneās getting the hang of it.ā
āDefect rate?ā
āAround 3%.ā
That was excellent for mostly manual work.
I inspected the factory to see if anything was lacking.
But as expected, my division-of-labor system was flawless.
As long as the workers stayed healthy.
āDonāt overwork yourselvesāyou might get injured or exhausted. Strictly follow shift rotations.ā
āOf course.ā
āWeāll expand the factory on the adjacent plot soon. Iāll send people, so prepare.ā
Quaytun and Laglas nodded immediately.
Having built a factory once already, they knew exactly what to do.
Then I called Elector.
āElector.ā
āYes, Your Excellency!ā
āCan you make this?ā
I slid over a blueprint.
Much thinner than the pill boxes and covered in illustrations, but Elector didnāt flinch.
āOf course. Itās small, but the shape itself is simple.ā
āThen start right away. When itās done, Iāll promote you to factory manager.ā
āHuh?ā
He had been unfazed by the blueprint, but the promotion shocked him.
I nodded with a smile.
āIām simply giving you the treatment your skill deserves. Keep performing well and youāll be rewarded generously.ā
āI-Iāll do my absolute best!ā
āGood.ā
Just as I turned to leave, Elector spoke again.
This wasnāt like himāwhatās up?
āUm⦠Your Excellency?ā
āWhat is it?ā
āCould I⦠make one extra?ā
āWhat for?ā
āI want to give it to my younger siblings. It looks really fun.ā
He figured out what it was just from two dice and a board?
Smarter than I thought.
āIāll give you a finished one.ā
āT-thank you!ā
I watched Electorās beaming back for a moment.
I need to pour fuel on this kid so he can run full throttle.
You have to row when the tide comes in.
By the way, once the finished product is readyā¦
Who am I going to play with?
Well, anyoneās fine.
As long as itās not the Emperorā¦
Ugh, donāt even think such unlucky thoughts.