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By noon, Viscount Sleet’s villa had been robbed clean. Scarface, following the "employer’s" request, led the starving masses mightily towards Baron Abella’s house.

...

anwhile, in the center of Montpellier, a spy sent by the Duke of Orleans was also leading dozens of gang mbers, robbing food with a large group of citizens.

As the leading gang mber was rallying the starving people to raid a noble’s house to the south of the city, a famished citizen loudly suggested:

"Why don’t we go to Count Seyrelier’s house? His estate is so large, it must have plenty of food..."

Before he could finish, soone secretly kicked him, and two gang mbers squeezed him to the ground as if by accident.

Count Seyrelier was an ally of the Duke of Orleans, and it was crucial to keep the flas from reaching his doorstep. In fact, the Moncalm Legion commanded by Marquis de Saint-Veran was currently stationed at his estate, numbering over 17,000 n. Even if the starving masses went there, they would surely be kept out.

The brief incident was quickly over, and the crowd began to surge towards the south of the city, shouting.

In just a few days’ ti, hungry mobs had swept through more than half of Montpellier, while Marquis de Saint-Veran, responsible for the city’s security, rely watched coldly from the sidelines, allowing the riots to spread...

Strategic reserves of grain had been maliciously mishandled, leading to the depletion of reserve granaries in the central and southern provinces of France.

After Nice and Montpellier, the phenonon of food shortages began to appear in other regions gradually, and spies dispatched by the Duke of Orleans started to stir as well.

However, limited by the poor information transmission capabilities of the era, the news had not yet reached the Palace of Versailles.

...

Paris.

Soleil slipped into the second-floor western corridor of the Royal Palace from behind two guards who were bending down to light their cigarettes at that instant.

She backed against a statue, took a deep breath, and looked towards the door of the archive room not far away, silently rejoicing in her heart, Finally, I’ve made it inside!

After the "jailbreak" day, she and her companions from The Brotherhood divided the work, each responsible for investigating a suspect Duke. She had set her sights on the Duke of Orleans.

She had heard that the Duke of Orleans had recently gone on a trip to the south and thought it was a golden opportunity, that it should be very easy to find so useful evidence. Who could have expected that the security at the Royal Palace was exceptionally strict, even surpassing the Bastille!

She had co a few tis, only able to circle the periter, and it was only today that she finally took advantage of a mont when the guards were lax to reach the archive room.

After a patrol of guards passed, she silently approached the door of the archive room. Taking out an earpiece, she placed it against the door to listen for a mont, ensuring there was no movent inside. Then, skillfully, she picked the lock with a wire.

While muttering to herself, "This lock is much easier to pick than the Bastille’s," she carefully pushed the door open, then turned back and gently closed it.

However, when she cast her eyes upon the rows of bookshelves, she stood frozen in place—there was nothing on them!

And before, these shelves had been packed with files neatly arranged by ti and type.

She cautiously drew out the Swift Sword and circled the room, ensuring no one was lying in wait, before she breathed a sigh of relief.

Perplexed, Soleil left the archive room. It took her imnse effort to slip into the Duke of Orleans’s study, only to find that although the furnishings were as usual, not a single paper remained, even the safe’s door stood open, completely empty inside.

Afterward, she searched the Duke of Orleans’s bedroom, conference room, and other places, likewise finding no docunts or archives of any kind.

She was greatly astonished. The Duke of Orleans went traveling without his guards but took all his docunts with him?

Suddenly, her pupils constricted, and a thought flashed through her mind: The Duke of Orleans has fled in fear of the cris! The Duke ntioned by the Maletude Brothers might well be him!

The more she thought about it, the more she was convinced that her conjecture was correct, so she imdiately slipped out of the Royal Palace and hurried to the Crown Prince’s office overnight.

On the second floor of the Tuileries Palace, Eman sleepily glanced at the clock on the desk—it was 10 past midnight.

He intended to send away this girl who had no sense of ti, telling her to co back the next day, but then he suddenly rembered the last ti His Royal Highness the Crown Prince had directly summoned her to his office.

His eyes flicked to Soleil’s shapely waist and her straight, slender legs clothed in a black night suit. He suddenly understood sothing; no wonder she ca so late—it must be their appointed ti.

Joseph was woken from his sleep, looking at Eman with dissatisfaction, frowned, and said:

"Soleil? What ti is it now?"

But since he was already awake, he waved her over with bleary eyes:

"Since she says it’s an urgent matter... sigh, ask her to go to the drawing room."

A mont later, Joseph, wearing a robe, gestured for Soleil to sit down opposite him on the sofa and yawned:

"You have co so late, what urgent matter brings you here?"

Soleil nodded vigorously, saying earnestly:

"Your Highness, I have found the mastermind behind the Maletude Brothers!"

"Oh?" Joseph instantly beca alert, "Please, tell in detail."

Soleil imdiately recounted how The Brotherhood had gone to the Bastille to extract confessions and how the Maletude Brothers had let slip that their boss was a Duke.

"A Duke?" Joseph was now fully awake, he pointed at Soleil, and said sternly, "You’ve got so nerve, daring to storm a prison. Aren’t you afraid I might lock you up as well?"

"It’s all in the na of justice..." Soleil puffed out her chest, then stealthily glanced at Joseph’s stern face, swallowed, and said quietly, "Your Highness, you wouldn’t really have arrested, would you?"

Joseph waved a hand: "Continue with your findings."

"Oh, right." Soleil hurriedly continued, "I searched the Duke of Orleans’s residence and discovered that all the files in the Royal Palace were missing..."

By the ti she finished, Joseph’s expression was grave.

At this ti of the year, the nobles indeed liked to travel south to escape the cold; no one would pay attention if the Duke of Orleans said he was going. But taking all the important docunts with him was certainly not as simple as traveling.

However, he would not believe that the Duke of Orleans was ’fleeing from cri’—it was just the death of a minor noble, and not by his own hands; with his status, he would not care at all.

There must be sothing significant happening!

Soon, Fouche was dragged out of his bed and rushed with the Crown Prince to the Bastille for an overnight interrogation of the Maletude Brothers.

The experienced interrogators at the Police Affairs Departnt didn’t have much trouble getting a confession out of the two brothers after getting the important lead about the Duke of Orleans.

Joseph frowned as he listened to Fouche’s report, his brows furrowing:

"But why would the Duke of Orleans go to such lengths to sche against Mono?"

He looked at the flickering candlelight on the wall, musing:

"If the Duke of Orleans is plotting sothing, and Mono is an essential part of it, then it all makes sense..."

He suddenly turned to Fouche and said:

"Quick! Send soone to the Monroe Family!"

However, by the ti the Police Affairs Departnt arrived at Mono’s residence in the Palace of Versailles, there was already no trace of him.

According to Mono’s servants, he had taken his son to the south for so ’sunbathing’ on the very day Soleil stord the prison.

"Another one traveling South?" Joseph instructed Fouche with a cold face, "Check imdiately who else has gone for a trip recently."

"Yes, Your Highness!"

Joseph, analyzing what the Duke of Orleans could be planning but not coming to a conclusion, decided to work from the only breakthrough he had.

He summoned all the main officials of the internal administration to wake up and compile all orders recently issued by Mono.

Fortunately, the nobility mostly resided in the Palace of Versailles, and since these officials were primarily nobles, it was quite simple to gather them.

As the first rays of dawn light entered the Palace of Versailles, a thick stack of docunts had been organized and was placed before Joseph.

"Focus on the main points," Joseph said to the assistant Minister of the Interior with panda eyes.

The latter hesitated: "Your Highness, Count Mono hasn’t done much of importance in the past two months, except... he seems to have taken a keen interest in the movent of grain."

The transportation and allocation of grain are indeed part of the work of the internal administration, but these are usually handled by lower officials. It was sowhat strange for the Minister of the Interior to personally interfere with such trivial matters.

Discover hidden stories at empire

Joseph narrowed his eyes and asked him to bring out all the allocation docunts issued by Mono.

But when Joseph saw the dozens of chaotic, mixed-up transportation orders, rage instantly surged to his head.

The damned Orleans, he was pushing all of France into the abyss!

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