If you'd like to have a private meeting with the Adjudicator, this is where you should go! The Adjudicator is available at almost all hours of the day; just knock and he'll answer.
Comments are screened for privacy; no eavesdropping, that's rude.
He'll listen to all of that, though; it actually doesn't take him long at all to reply, though - his response is prompt, though possibly not for the reason she might think.]
My thoughts on it are different than the outcome required by the rules of the game.
According to the game, the princess is responsible for her death, using the mercenaries as a weapon.
According to my personal thoughts on it, though, the king is.
[That... is not actually what she was expecting? Shoutout to Juri with the thoughts and opinions and shit. Just a second here, let her just... go back to not looking surprised.]
From the sound of it, the king's the one that drove her to do it in the first place.
[He tips his head slightly after that's out there, his brow furrowing a little as he does so.]
Obviously, I can't know everything about the situation based only on what I've been given here. I'm sure the king has his own version of events detailing what happened and why.
But he's the one that put her in that situation. Happy people don't call on mercenaries to come murder her by proxy. So the one who caused the princess' misery is responsible.
no subject
He'll listen to all of that, though; it actually doesn't take him long at all to reply, though - his response is prompt, though possibly not for the reason she might think.]
My thoughts on it are different than the outcome required by the rules of the game.
According to the game, the princess is responsible for her death, using the mercenaries as a weapon.
According to my personal thoughts on it, though, the king is.
no subject
Why the king?
no subject
[He tips his head slightly after that's out there, his brow furrowing a little as he does so.]
Obviously, I can't know everything about the situation based only on what I've been given here. I'm sure the king has his own version of events detailing what happened and why.
But he's the one that put her in that situation. Happy people don't call on mercenaries to come murder her by proxy. So the one who caused the princess' misery is responsible.