145 Count Faisal
The author has something to say:
Recently, I have read some comments saying that my writing is rude and contemptuous of the ancients and flaunts superiority.
There are two feelings, one, the classmates sprayed Wang Jingwei traitor sprayed the Ukrainian government to make fun of the hurry, after two hundred years, people are ancients, and they can't be ridiculed, they must put themselves in the shoes of how they understand the righteousness and have to endure humiliation......
Second, Tao Lixue, Mu Guan Bao Bao Auntie Lin Uncle Le Lao'er, Funing Eldest Princess, Han Meijing, etc., these brave, kind, intelligent, industrious, and loveful of the country and the nation, ordinary people who were insulted and damaged to a desperate situation by the old system and the old elites are not considered ancients, praise and sympathy for them is not praise and sympathy for the ancients, and describe how they helped and saved the heroine again and again based on sympathy, use, and unavoidable love, and finally completed the great cause that the heroine could not complete, nor is it a description of the ability of the ancients, It is necessary to praise and sympathize with those who embezzle national resources and are busy with infighting, which makes China sink - I insist that it is the comic that can bury the country with the absolute majority of the scientific and technological population.
Below is the text
The Earl of Faisal had three sons and a daughter, the eldest son Otto, the second son John, and the youngest son Henry, and the daughter was Marilyn, who was married to Baron Brad.
All three sons were born to Helena of Rioud, and only the eldest daughter, Marilyn, was born to his long-deceased ex-wife, Alvena of Caesarea.
At first, after the birth of an heir in the stepfamily, Count Faisal thought of sending his eldest daughter to the convent, but the abbot wanted more daughters than the Count Faisal was going to give away, so this plan was cancelled, and the Count ordered his daughter to marry Baron Brad.
As his sons grew older, the Count was ready to arrange a future for them.
The eldest son, who was sure to inherit his position, and the second and younger sons, according to the custom of the time, were also given land, and on the recommendation of the earl, they were given a position in the royal court.
After following the king to Tournest to see the Divine Judgment, Count Faisal had a new plan - to send his second son John to the church of Tournest.
He had a wonderful idea, his daughter was the protector of the current bishop of Tournest, and his son would surely be protected by his sister.
Countess Helena vehemently opposed this plan, and she did not want her son to shave his head and become a monk, but she would not say so.
"Why didn't you send him to St. Gonde's Cathedral? There is also a bishop there, and it is adjacent to your domain, and I beg you to send my son to a convent, so that I may see him often. With that, she threw herself at the Count's feet.
When Count Faisal saw that his wife, out of motherhood, did not agree with his plans for his son, he became angry: "Woman, what do you know? Even if we don't say the difference between these two bishops in the eyes of the Queen Mother and the King, the young bishop's subordinates are all young people from poor backgrounds, and even if he doesn't look in front of my daughter, who in the Tournest Church can compete for the position of bishop after him? ”
"I am an ignorant woman, but if you had listened to her and had not recommended your brother Odo to sit in that position, but had allowed him to enter St. Gonde, then our son would not have had to compete with a crowd for the bishopric position. There is a precedent for a bishop to shave his head immediately before he returns to heaven, and to take over the bishop as a bishop without being a priest, a Bible reader, or an adjutor. Now he wants to start from the priesthood because you did not listen to my advice and let the doomed Odo serve in the navy. ”
The defeat of Earl's brother Odo was also the defeat of Count Faisal.
He was unhappy with this answer, and had not spoken to the Countess since.
Therefore, the countess held a grudge against her stepdaughter and Bishop Turnest.
It seemed to her that before going to the diocese of Tournest, Count Faisal had never expressed the idea of sending his son to the church, but afterwards it did, and it was so strong that she could not stop it, and it must have something to do with her stepdaughter, and it was her stepdaughter's conspiracy!
People always like to use their own psychology to push others, and Countess Helena persuaded her husband to deprive her daughter of her inheritance in disguise, and now she can't help but suspect that this is her stepdaughter's revenge.
Did her stepdaughter, as she had done at the beginning, persuade the Count with her son's future and prospects?
She thinks so.
What a clever revenge! She had expelled her stepdaughter from Faisal's domain, but now her stepdaughter was using her relationship with Bishop Turnest to persuade her husband to send her son out of Faisal's domain!
And how vicious is this revenge! Bishop Turnest is still so young, even if the count's dream comes true, she probably won't see her own son sit on the throne of Bishop Tournest until the day she goes to the grave! Moreover, in the meantime, it is likely that all sorts of major events will occur, and her son may well have left the house in vain, and in the end he will have to be content only to be an abbot.
On the day of the divine judgment, her stepdaughter ignored Count Faisal in public, such a strange behavior must have been a cover-up by her stepdaughter.
When she heard that the Count was already preparing for her son's home, she became even more resentful.
"My son is leaving my arms because the girl left behind by the Caesarea witch coaxed my husband." This is what she said to her servant.
"Let that girl taste the pain of losing her son as I did." She swore again.
The servants and priests who heard these words were so frightened that no one dared to tell the count these things.
The Count, out of his anger, never spoke to Madame, and the Countess was immersed day after day in the painful illusion that she had lost her son because of her stepdaughter's troubles, and she cursed her again and again: "I wish I were Queen Elena!" She killed or burned the witches who had used witchcraft to kill her young son, and never sank again—even if Bishop Ruhrhof said they didn't! I will teach her to be punished for the evil she has done, and I will not be afraid even if Bishop Turnest is on her side! ”
She hated the possible separation of mother and son caused by her stepdaughter, and had no idea how she had prepared to concave the orphan girl in the convent, and finally to marry her to a man old enough to be her father.
Nor did she think of condemning Count Fisher, who made the decision.
The stepdaughter was weak and inferior to her in her mind, but the Count was clearly superior to her, and his fist was ready to summon her face.
Therefore, day by day, she deepens her resentment towards her stepdaughter in her heart without once blaming her husband.
She was thus immersed in pain and resentment, which deepened with each passing day than the day before.
Eventually, she found a strong and powerful villain who would do the terrible things she wanted.
She promised him a lot of money, shaved his head, disguised him as a priest, and sent him to the diocese of Tournest.