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The original was posted on /r/hfy by /u/kayenano on 2026-03-26 03:36:20+00:00.
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Synopsis:
Juliette Contzen is a lazy, good-for-nothing princess. Overshadowed by her siblings, she's left with little to do but nap, read … and occasionally cut the falling raindrops with her sword. Spotted one day by an astonished adventurer, he insists on grading Juliette's swordsmanship, then promptly has a mental breakdown at the result.
Soon after, Juliette is given the news that her kingdom is on the brink of bankruptcy. At threat of being married off, the lazy princess vows to do whatever it takes to maintain her current lifestyle, and taking matters into her own hands, escapes in the middle of the night in order to restore her kingdom's finances.
Tags: Comedy, Adventure, Action, Fantasy, Copious Ohohohohos.
Chapter 505: Lotuses In The Moonlight
I gazed up at the glittering pile.
A moment later, an ogre offered me a wooden stool.
Even that wasn’t enough.
As I craned my neck, what blocked the view of the stars above The Gentle Princess was a mountain of hats rivalling the night sky in sparkles.
Whether it was a tiara embedded with rubies or a farmer’s hat still decorated with specks of mud, each item still managed to gleam … along with the remainder of the toiletries.
Yes.
Before me was all that the hells had to offer in compensation, requisitioned from the shelves and various cabinets beneath the bathroom sinks.
“Pwaaah~”
There was also Coppelia.
Taking a deep breath as she emerged from the top of the pile, she crawled her way out, causing a minor avalanche before sliding down the pile of glittering and cursed headwear.
Her smile made it clear she wished to do it again.
Instead, she diligently lounged upon the base of the mountain and nodded.
“Okay!” she said confidently. “I’ve calculated the total value of every item here!”
I clapped my hands in delight.
“Wonderful! How much is it?”
“A lot.”
“Truly? That’s excellent news! What kind of a lot?”
“The kind where you could offer it to dwarves to build a new castle and instead of haggling they offer to add an additional tower for free.”
I gasped.
“My, that’s … that’s unprecedented! This must truly be a vast … no, a ludicrous sum!”
“Mmh~! It’ll be really handy. When I told your overworked stewards how many basement floors my legitimate tower needed, I was worried they were going to fill up the hole with sweat.”
“I’m afraid that’s still a problem you need to solve. Preferably before it becomes a public hazard. Why, with this sum, there shall be no room for dawdling! In addition to your tower, I’ll be able to complete the princess bastion. My bedroom door will be the most secure in the world.”
Coppelia nodded with enthusiasm, knowing she’d be able to test my impenetrable defences.
“That’s great! … Except there might be a problem.”
“Well, I’ll also have my magical bed blocking it.”
“Not that. I mean you’re going to have to find people willing to accept cursed hats as legal tender.”
“Oh? In that case, there won’t be any issue. I intend to convert all of this into easily portable gold crowns first.”
“Eh? Is there a spell for that?”
“Yes, it’s called [Princess Entrepreneurship].”
“Uwah~ the people buying from you won’t have any idea what to expect.”
“Indeed, it’ll be hopelessly unfair, but also necessary. The Royal Villa has quite enough cursed artifacts already. Much better to be rid of everything while still in a semi-tidy pile.”
I smiled with confidence, then gave a shake of my bottomless pouch.
“... Ohohoho! Fortunately for all, I’m willing to offer a bulk discount. And there just so happens to be merchants loitering in my royal capital with no lack of finances when it comes to buying suspicious objects.”
Coppelia raised her arms and beamed.
“Trolls~!”
“Trolls.”
Ohohohohohoho!
Indeed, as expert curators, trolls could appraise in moments what a host of mages would need years to accomplish. And when they were done, I’d offer everything as a single discounted pile costing exactly everything they possessed–both here and in Troll Country.
… That’s right!
I would not only enrich myself, but do it at the expense of the locusts of the continent!
Rather than just arduously selling my hat mountain piecemeal, I would take the opportunity to bankrupt Troll Country, earning back all the taxes they’ve forgotten to pay … and that meant all my marriage concerns disappearing!
It … It was perfect!
The trolls would be my first and last customers! And once my personal finances were secure, nobody could afford to harass me! After all, I could simply bribe the worst of my suitors away!
Ohohoho!
Yes, there were few problems that being outrageously wealthy couldn’t fix.
Quack, quack.
… But if I had to name one of them, it would be the corner of the ship everyone was ignoring.
Not even the gulls would approach.
Possibly since they could sense that at least one of the ducks was indestructible, but also because it was currently occupied by a pair of elves in deep conversation.
Somehow finding the shadowiest spot even amidst the night, the Snow Dancer and the elven lady from before, who I now knew to be her mother, both wore serious expressions as they paid no heed to the world around them.
Seeing them together, the resemblance was almost uncanny.
After all ... they shared the same feeling of being completely up to no good.
Despite the elven lady having kindly opened a portal for me, she had neither requested nor provided any opportunity for me to offer a smile as gratitude. She’d immediately abducted her daughter and now they were doing what elves only did.
Plotting.
I watched, mildly horrified, as the elven lady nodded, her brows creased in seriousness, all the while mimicking an explosion. The Snow Dancer responded by raising her hand, before pretending to stab the air with an invisible knife.
Whether they were arguing or agreeing was a mystery.
I pursed my lips as I listened to the doomsday clock ticking down.
“... Coppelia?”
“Mmh~?”
“Did you know that there’s a popular saying regarding elves–that two’s a pair and three’s a conspiracy?”
“It kinda looks like you only need two for a conspiracy.”
“Yes, I think so too.”
For several moments, I fought against my better instincts to ask Coppelia what they were discussing, which princess it involved and when the murder was going to happen.
Instead, I witnessed them exchanging nods, before both turned in my direction.
The Snow Dancer offered a maidenly smile and a wave. She pointed to the ground several times, then cupped her hands to either side of her lips and mouthed something.
The elven lady beside her offered a kindly smile far different from how she appeared when I might have hired her familiar. She then offered a bow, before reaching out to her daughter.
A small glimmer of magic appeared. The Snow Dancer reached down to scoop up her ducks.
Snap.
And then they were gone in a brief haze of magic.
I turned to Coppelia.
“... What did the Snow Dancer say at the end there?”
“I think it was, ‘I’ll be right back. No dying yet.’”
I sighed into my palms.
Normally, the Snow Dancer skipping away before she could admit to any more crimes was useful. Except that if I knew anything about how that woman worked, it was that she was about to do something more inconvenient than what any devil could accomplish.
And now there were two of them.
Neither of whom were fishing for whatever treasure was rusting in the bottom of the lake.
A problem.
… And one that was now a mid-level underling’s.
“Guhh … ungh …”
The sound of rehabilitation came from the side.
Overseen by the ogres as they gleefully pointed, laughed and poked at someone officially lower ranked than them, the latest hoodlum that Reitzlake’s sewers had to offer was busy scrubbing away with a bar of soap.
Sweat dripped down his face, falling onto a smudge.
More would be needed.
Black as infernal flames, it was where the hat merchant’s soles had been as he lounged against the mast. And that meant the person responsible for summoning him needed to clean it up.
“I think you missed a spot,” said Coppelia, pointing helpfully at the large smudge.
“Yes, I missed the blackness upon all of your souls,” he said wearily. “This is not how someone of my stature should be treated. Had most of my peers not died in mysterious circumstances, they’d be advocating for my better treatment.”
“If you want, I can advocate for better soap. This one looks like it’s about to run out.”
“The quantity is irrelevant. This smudge was caused by the shadow of something so evil that it causes darkness itself to flee. It cannot be cleaned.”
“That’s just pragmatism and the principles of solubility talking. If you really put your heart into it, you can achieve anything. That’s my favourite lie.”
“Heart has little to do with achievement. Ample preparation does. Something I see has increasingly little bearing these days. I wonder why I even bother preparing a stage.”
The ogres parted to make room for me. I chose to remain where I was.
“My, it seems you need to work on your improvisation skills,” I said. “All the world’s a stage, and it has ever been harsh towards poor ...
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