Feeling dazed for a while, he took a deep breath and saluted Prince Sorrenberg:
"Your Highness, it's been a long time."
Only when he spoke did he suddenly realize.
Before, while he was Byron's mentor, Byron's most noble title was as the grandson of Henry V, the nephew of Henry VI, and son of Prince Sorrenberg.
He agreed to be this problematic child's teacher due to the entreaties of such elders.
Normally, he would be strict with him, sometimes even punish him physically, though he would give the King some face and not humiliate Byron publicly.
But now, upon seeing Edmund Lancaster, the first title that came to mind was: King and God, Father of the [King of the Wild Hunt].
Involuntarily, he regarded him as an equal, no longer exhibiting any arrogance of a [Kingdom's Guardian].
This is the classic "For the first thirty years, people respect the son because of the father, and for the next thirty years, they respect the father because of the son".
