Gawain had once guessed that Wales did not covet the throne, but to be honest, he did not expect the other party to be so thorough or to go to such extremes.
He not only overthrew himself but also destroyed the seven-hundred-year-old noble rules of Anzu—where the king is the leader of the leaders, and the leader is an extension of the king.
As the one who broke this rule, he guided the furious nobles to overthrow him, and after he stepped down, Anzu's king-noble structure would crack with an irreparable rift, making this system easy to destroy and hard to restore.
Some saw this but chose silence, some did not see it and indulged in the strange passion of overthrowing a king, and some sharper people noticed the undercurrents at the scene and the iron chariots of the Cecil Clan not far away.
The new era has arrived—the conservatives had once rejected this new era, but it still came.
It rolled over them.
