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Husband Thief

#2 The Man Who Isn't a Bad Person
The Man Who Isn't a Bad Person

“Count Albert.”

Claisey informed him with a tone of resignation and turned away.

‘You won again today. You can have that man too, Merran.’

Florence, who had been watching the scene unfold, signaled from afar: “Hang in there. Don’t leave.”

But what was the point of holding her ground when she knew it was futile?

From the moment Merran had approached, calling out “Auntie!”, the Count hadn’t been able to take his eyes off her.

It was a scenario she had experienced countless times, so Claisey knew the script by heart.

Men would show interest in Claisey at first, but the moment Merran approached—tossing her beautiful golden hair and calling out, “Auntie!”—half of them would lose interest in Claisey entirely, becoming completely enamored with Merran instead.

The other half would try to keep their focus on Claisey, ignoring Merran, but even then, if Merran called out “Auntie” a few times, the game was over.

Young men like Albert, who were around Merran’s age, would melt at the sound of the title “Auntie,” naturally pigeonholing Claisey as someone from an older generation.

Even if Claisey tried to explain, “I’m only five years older than you! I may be Merran’s aunt, but I’m of the same generation as you!”, it was useless.

If anything, the atmosphere would only grow more awkward; the young men would begin to stare at Claisey as if they were looking at an elder of the household desperately trying to cling to her youth.

Because Merran was as beautiful as an angel descended by a lakeside, that first impression of being “Merran’s aunt” was impossible to shake.

Claisey finally gave up and walked unsteadily toward Florence’s side.

“I’m going to head back.”

Florence’s husband, well aware of the situation, offered a sheepish farewell and stepped aside.

As her husband moved away, Florence jabbed Claisey with a small pudding spoon and asked bitingly, “Merran is at it again. When on earth did she get here? I specifically told you to leave that girl behind, didn’t I?”

“I didn’t bring her. She followed me on her own.”

“I told you not to let her know where you were going.”

“I didn’t tell her. She figured it out herself. I didn’t even know she had come; she must have arrived just now.”

Florence clicked her tongue and glared at Merran.

Claisey turned her head as well, only to see that Merran was already leading Count Albert away to dance.

Count Albert wore an expression that suggested he had completely forgotten Claisey existed.

Florence gnashed her teeth and cursed.

“Why is your niece like that? Why does she interfere every time you get involved with a man? She’s pretty enough; she shouldn’t have to do that, right? Doesn’t she have some kind of weird obsession?”

“She says she hates the idea of me getting married.”

“Why?”

“She says she’s basically my daughter, so she doesn’t want me marrying another man. If I really must, she says I should do it after she does.”

“Is she insane? Since when are you her mother? How many years are there between you two? She’s even older than my younger brother.”

Claisey sighed.

“I’ve acted as her guardian since she was eleven, so that’s why. At that age, a five-year difference feels quite large.”

Florence started to say something more—likely another insult aimed at Merran—but Claisey didn’t want to badmouth her niece in front of others.

Unless it was someone like Florence who knew the whole story, others would only see Claisey as malicious for speaking ill of her niece. Complaining about Merran here would be like spitting into the wind.

Feeling completely drained, Claisey shook her head.

“Thank you for today. See you later.”

Before Florence could hold her back, Claisey quickly slipped out of the mansion and headed to where her carriage was waiting.

The coachman, who had been enjoying a chat with his fellow drivers, grabbed the whip and climbed onto the driver’s seat the moment Claisey appeared.

“You’re back early, Miss?”

“It wasn’t fun.”

“Miss Merran just went in, didn’t she? Wouldn’t you like to stay and play with her?”

“That’s exactly why it stopped being fun.”

The coachman burst into laughter, assuming Claisey’s sincere remark was a joke.

As Claisey climbed into the carriage, the coachman slowly pulled away. She sighed, watching the scenery of the streets drift slowly past the window.

Claisey had originally been quite popular back in her hometown. Not only the boys and girls of her own age, but even the adults had taken a great liking to her.

That was, of course, before her eldest sister, Marie, who was much older than her, passed away, leaving her in charge of her five-year-younger niece, Merran.

Claisey was the only person by Marie’s side when she died. To be precise, she was the only survivor of the accident that took Marie’s life.

The guard and the coachman who were with them had both died in that “carriage accident,” and Marie had perished as well.

The only one who survived was Claisey.

This dramatic survival saddled Claisey with a terrible rumor. People found it suspicious that Claisey had returned home alive and alone at the tender age of sixteen.

The gossip grew even sharper when investigators contradicted Claisey’s statement that her sister died in a carriage accident.

The officials claimed that while the guard and coachman had indeed died in a carriage accident, Claisey’s sister had actually died from a fall.

To protect their sixteen-year-old daughter, her parents fabricated an excuse that Claisey had sustained injuries so severe she couldn’t move, forcing her to remain housebound for three months.

Thanks to that, Claisey wasn’t interrogated further, but she also lost the chance to suppress the rumors.

The fact that Claisey still hadn’t found a fiancé despite having capable, diplomat parents, a vast inheritance, the status of a Count’s youngest daughter, and striking beauty was all due to that rumor from nine years ago.

‘Damn the Imperial law…’

In truth, Claisey had no desire to get married or start a family, nor did she feel the need to share “true love” with anyone.

However, as an aristocrat, marriage was mandatory. The wretched Imperial law dictated that only children who were married could inherit their parents’ property and titles.

Eventually, when she turned twenty-five, Claisey decided to move to escape the rumors.

Just then, her best friend Florence’s husband found a job at the royal court and moved to the Capital, so Claisey followed them.

Florence, who detested Merran, was so excited inside the carriage that she made all sorts of promises to Claisey.

“Neither of us are natives, so we don’t know many people in the Capital. But it’s okay. Once my husband starts working at the palace, he’ll have many colleagues and superiors. I’ll have to get along with their families, too. Once I build connections with the noblewomen of the Capital, I’ll take you to parties. Let’s find a suitable person there. Since the Capital is crawling with aristocrats, there are bound to be some decent unmarried men left. Men like you who have their own circumstances and can’t get married.”

Claisey was easily swept up by Florence’s high spirits.

Breathing in the air, damp from the rain, Claisey pressed down on her pounding heart.

Claisey had never once left her hometown since her first and only trip to the Capital ten years ago.

Florence bought a white, pristine mansion.

Claisey rented the pink mansion next to Florence’s for five years.

It wasn’t as large as Florence’s new home, which required a carriage ride just to get from the gate to the front door, but it was the perfect size for Claisey and her small staff.

How excited she had been while the workers unloaded her suitcases and the maids scurried about cleaning.

The house had become neat and tidy quickly because she had started the process a month before moving.

Claisey entered the largest bedroom on the second floor, threw open the windows, and cheered.

Not too far away, the grand palace and tall spires were clearly visible.

Further out, sharp-pointed towers shrouded in legends and the pillars of temples stood in luxurious rows.

Beyond the white roof of the temple, the sun was spreading its reddish hue.

Claisey was happy that, for the first time in nine years, she would be living apart from Merran. She felt guilty for considering poor Merran a nuisance, but on the other hand, she was undeniably happy.

Merran was already twenty, wasn’t she?

After taking a leisurely bath in the large bathroom, Claisey tucked herself into bedding that smelled of laundry soap.

However, the next day, Claisey—who had woken up feeling happy—was…

I threw on my coat and walked into the living room, only to freeze.

Merran was sitting on the sofa in front of the fireplace, drinking coffee. Behind him, Karen, the maid who had been Merran’s nanny, was wearing an awkward smile.

“Auntie, I’ve decided to stay here too.”

Merran set down his coffee cup, shrugged, and gave a bashful smile.

“I got permission from Auntie Lize, so don’t worry. Karen came with me, too.”

This was three months ago.

Claisey shuddered.

‘My second sister just sent Merran my way because she couldn’t be bothered to take care of him herself.’

Claisey thought of her second sister, who was nine months pregnant and already had two-year-old twins.

Claisey sighed and shifted her gaze back beyond the carriage.

But at that moment, with a screeching sound, the carriage shook violently and came to a halt.

Claisey was thrown forward, slamming her forehead against the front of the carriage before bouncing backward.

“What’s going on?”

Claisey pressed her throbbing forehead and called out toward the driver’s seat. It was rare, but these things happened occasionally when one traveled by carriage often.

“…….”

But there was no answer.

“Ledon?”

Claisey looked toward the driver’s seat and raised her voice.

The carriage had jolted hard, but a person wouldn’t die from an impact like this. She knew this because she had experienced it before.

Besides, there hadn’t been a sound of the coachman being thrown to the side. So why wasn’t the coachman answering?

“Ledon?”

Claisey called out again and opened the partition window between the driver’s seat and the cabin.

Claisey almost screamed in shock.

The coachman was knocked out, his head hanging limp, and a blood-covered man was sitting in the driver’s seat, holding the whip.

Terrified, Claisey grabbed her umbrella and struck it toward the driver’s seat window.

“!”

The man, sensing her presence, glanced back, his eyes widening. He hastily ducked to avoid the umbrella and snatched it from Claisey. Even then, he didn’t let go of the whip with his other hand, continuing to drive the carriage.

He kept glancing back at Claisey as if she were an annoyance.

By then, Claisey had quickly abandoned the umbrella and was pulling a hard perfume bottle out of her handbag.

Just as she was about to hurl it, the man said urgently:

“Lady. Don’t throw it. I only took the carriage because I was in a desperate hurry. I am not a bad person.”

Reading progress
256
Side Story. Kishin of the Original World (3)
255
Side Story. Kishin of the Original World (2)
254
Side Story: Kishin of the Original World (1)
253
Side Story: Dernic of the Original World (5)
252
Side Story. Dernic in the Original World (4)
251
Side Story. Dernic of the Original World (3)
250
Side Story. Dernic of the Original World (2)
249
Side Story: Dernic of the Original World (1)
248
Each on Their Own Path (9)
247
Each on Their Own Path (8)
246
Path of Each (7)
245
On Their Own Paths (6)
244
To Each Their Own Path (5)
243
Each to Their Own Path (4)
242
Walking Their Separate Ways (3)
241
Each on Their Own Path (2)
240
Toward Their Own Paths (1)
239
The Time of Choice
238
On the Spot
237
September 22nd
236
Reckless Assumption or Realization
235
The Declining Marquis Omal Estate
234
Claisey Awakens
233
What Merran Regrets
232
Assassination
231
Another Way to Endure Time
230
It Has to Be This Way
229
The Promise
228
Why Today of All Days
227
The Person Who Heals Wounds
226
The Carriage Accident of That Day (2)
225
The Carriage Accident of That Day (1)
224
Answer Me First!
223
May I Stay By Your Side?
222
Am I Not Me?
221
The Wife's First Husband
220
The Person Waiting for an Opportunity
219
Merran Trying to Prevent the Divorce
218
Denied Entry
217
The One the Emperor Feels More Sorry For
216
That Would Mean Taking Her Along
215
Let’s Get a Divorce
214
The Man Holding a Dog
213
Finally Met
212
Kishin’s Birthday
211
You Must Not Have Known This Either
210
The Troubling Dernic
209
Do you want to go back?
208
I’ve Definitely Scored Some Points
207
Prohibition Order
206
Clearing Her Name
205
I Will Be Honest With You
204
Princess Sage’s Plea
203
A Request
202
Walter’s Letter
201
We Are Not Getting Divorced
200
Malia Explodes
199
Ahead of the Birthday
198
Claisey, Taken Away
197
Dernic Does Not Believe
196
An Unsettling Conversation
195
It’s Not That I’m Soft-Hearted
194
Varying Degrees of Affection
193
Swear It to Me
192
Faith is Shaken
191
Merran Cornered
190
The Changed Dernic
189
Can’t You Just Act Like You Usually Do?
188
Past - Dernic and Marie
187
Whether by Mistake or by Intent
186
Past - Claisey and Dernic
185
The Letters of Two People
184
Kishin’s Confession
183
Sage's Request
182
Something About a Deal
181
It Seems I Have Fallen for You
180
The Lady's Terms of Trade
179
Confused Claisey
178
New Year’s Festival
177
Merran Plays Her Hand
176
Malia's Threat
175
Things That Weigh on My Mind
174
Why on Earth Did You Marry Him?
173
The Marchioness's Regret
172
Jealousy
171
Merran Is Convinced
170
Reunion and Misunderstanding
169
Not What I Expected
168
Say Something
167
The Person Who Entered Back Then
166
Twelve Letters
165
I Never Wait
164
You Can’t Answer Either
163
The Person Staring
162
A Sort of Souvenir
161
Five O'Clock in the Morning
160
Merran's Second Wedding
159
How could I not know?
158
Hard Words to Say
157
Two Men
156
So What If He Gets Tired of Me?
155
Second Marriage
154
I Saw You
153
People Who Changed
152
Living in a Place I Once Loathed
151
Claisey, Who Never Refuses
150
I’ll Give It to Claisey
149
Always Suspicious Claisey
148
The Hospitality of Discrimination
147
Dernic, Disappointed
146
Merran, Disappointed
145
Merran is Shocked
144
Opposite Sons-in-Law
143
The Taciturn Kishin and the Vibrant Dernic
142
The Count and Countess Arrive, and Calling the Two Men
141
Upset in the Middle
140
Only One Person Says Otherwise
139
The Marchioness of Gosville is Flustered
138
Merran, Knowing Nothing Yet
137
Small but Annoying
136
It’s Not the Time to Brag
135
A Tea Party in the Interrogation Room
134
Is Dating All That Matters?
133
Kishin of the Gosville Marquisate
132
The Former Lovers in the Worst Place
131
Why Is My Aunt Tagging Along?
130
The Day Kishin First Saw Merran
129
Unknowable Goodwill
128
I’ve Done It Before
127
The Second Proposal
126
Then Change It.
125
Two People Crying
124
An Unexpected Person Steps In
123
The Name the Emperor Knows
122
Setting Off to Different Places
121
Where are you running off to?
120
Claisey Suspects Merran
119
The Unexpected Visitor
118
Are We Still Friends?
117
Angrier by Her Side
116
What kind of relationship do you have with those two?
115
The Wall Meran is Building
114
Everything is Starting to Work Out Now
113
Criticizing to One's Face
112
The Three Months That Changed
111
Different Targets
110
Kishin Reads the Letters
109
Please keep your distance from Merran
108
Sometimes It's Better to Think Simply
107
No, Where Are You Going?
106
A Misbuttoned Button
105
Why is he crying?
104
Crossed Paths
103
Claisey’s Letters
102
Sit back down, Lady
101
You Lied to Me Again!
100
I Liked Him First
99
She’s Not the Type to Do That
98
Seeing from Afar is Accurate
97
That Man Is Truly Handsome
96
I Should Change My Perfume
95
Merran, Enraged at Her Ex-Husband Once Again
94
The Fragrance Between Iron Walls
93
That Man's Solid Iron Wall
92
Crying at a Strange Gaze
91
The Two Don't Know
90
Returning to the Past
89
Merran Decides to Turn Back Time
88
The World of Merran and Dernic Collapses
87
Divorce Her
86
It’s True, So It Irritates You, Right?
85
I Regret Giving My Permission for the Marriage
84
The Niece Who Left to Marry Wants to Return
83
Three People Running Together
82
I Like It When You're Jealous
81
When a Husband Insults One’s Parental Home
80
Merran's First Wedding
79
Dernic, Who Is Not Ungrateful
78
Claisey Succeeds in Her Scheme
77
The Favor of the Powerful
76
My Husband’s Younger Sister Becomes an Ally
75
Not mine, but I will yield it to you.
74
The Husband’s Younger Sister Picks a Fight
73
It Doesn't Look Good
72
Even at a Time Like This
71
Aunt, You Have to Help Me
70
Bringing My Husband to the Grave
69
My Love Is So Pure
68
Our cute youngest son-in-law
67
Reliable Allies
66
When the Ex-Wife’s Daughter and the Second Wife Clash
65
Merran Sees Kishin Again
64
The Cold Romantic and the Affectionate Calculationist
63
The Wife Hugs the Safe Key and Cries
62
When You Get Curious About Your Husband’s Past Lover
61
Merran Starts Keeping an Eye on Kishin
60
Is this a proposal?
59
The First Night
58
Ahead of the First Night
57
The Happy Groom and the Surprised Guests
56
First Wedding
55
The Day Before the Wedding, the Most Nervous Person
54
The Person Who Is Always On My Side
53
Everyone is Curious About My Wedding
52
Did You Kill Her?
51
The Fiancé’s Friend Has Changed His Attitude
50
When you start to like someone, you start to dislike someone else
49
Meeting the Fiancé's Parents
48
What on earth did you say about me?
47
When the Niece Opposed to Marriage Meets the Fiancé’s Mother
46
It’s Not the Time to Laugh
45
The Son-in-law is More Impressive Than Expected
44
Confessing the Past to My Fiancé
43
Why Must I Give My Permission for You to Marry?
42
The Son Announces His Marriage
41
Her Name Is Claisey, and She Has Bad Rumors
40
The Fiancé’s Mother Found Out the Secret
39
Kishin’s Proposal
38
You do it too, so why can’t others?
37
There Is No One Who Did the Dumping, Only Those Who Were Dumped
36
Crying Alone, Calming Down Alone
35
Suddenly?
34
Jealous Kishin
33
Excited Claisey, Angry Merran
32
If You Get in My Way, I’ll Get in Yours
31
People Who Witnessed the Romance
30
At the Center of Every Misunderstanding is This Man
29
Dernic's Identity
28
Coming or Not
27
Kicking Away a Friend’s Consideration
26
A Show-Window Marriage, You Say?
25
Why is someone uninterested showing interest?
24
A Relationship Built on Carrying Shoes
23
A Woman Like Me?
22
Isn't It Too Early?
21
Is It a Problem If My Unrequited Love Is Short?
20
Kishin, Shocked
19
An Unintended Love Triangle
18
Speak of the Devil
17
Enjoyable When It’s My Turn
16
Opposite Evaluations of a Person
15
Should I count this as a date too?
14
The Second Courtship
13
Getting Angry Is My Job
12
Insults and Bouquets
11
The First and Last Date
10
Why Did He Call Me Instead of Her?
9
The Wandering Flower Basket
8
The Appointment, The One Who Slipped Out
7
Three Letters
6
The Man Who Catches and the Man Who Helps Put Them On
5
Misidentified
4
Bring That Woman To Me
3
Find That Woman
2
The Man Who Isn't a Bad Person
1
I Will Hinder You

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