CHAPTER 41……………………………
In the painting he pointed to, humans of similar size were facing each other.
âDo you think the blue group and the red group are different tribes?â
âYes. Is the concept of âtribeâ strange for Liorsa, since itâs one nation?â
I nodded.
âAn empire is a country made up of various desert tribes. Each has its own symbolâeagle, wolf, scorpionâbut thereâs one thing they have in common.â
âThe sun and fire.â
âExactly. The desert believes in the sun and fire, just like your kingdom believes in water.â
âThenâŚâ
I looked at the notebookâs drawing again.
âSo, the blue humans would be the kingdom, and the red humans could be seen as ancient humans of the empire.â
It seemed the kingdom and empire had a bad relationship even in the past.
I pointed to another drawing.
âWhat about this large circle enclosing people above?â
The people inside the circle werenât facing off, nor were they in attack stances. On the contrary, their mingling seemed peaceful.
Red humans turning their backs to the grasslands. Rain falling on vegetation. Blue humans joyfully receiving the rain. Waterdrop tattoos appearing across their bodies.
The drawing itself was simple, but its meaning was not easy to understand.
Silence filled the room, as no one spoke.
âThis is strange.â
It wasnât until quite some time later that Giovanni tilted his head.
âWhatâs strange?â
âThe royal family of Liorsa calls the desert a cursed land.â
A land where life cannot take root.
That the desert was cursed was a widely accepted fact in Liorsa.
It wasnât without reason that they looked down on the empireâs people as barbarians.
âBecause survival is difficult.â
âThatâs not the only reason.â
âPardon?â
âThey say itâs because itâs a place where sinners reside.â
âSinners?â
âThe desert wasnât always so barren. Long ago, there were vast grasslands.â
âA theologian from the kingdom said something similar. Even if not as vast as the kingdomâs lands, the desert was once green too.â
âYes. Shamans said we suffer trials because we are sinners. They didnât specify what sin exactly.â
He gazed at the painting, his eyes heavy with thought.
âWhat if they were punished by water for the sin of harming a god?â
Giovanniâs low words sent chills down my spine. I reflexively looked at the drawing.
A clear scene of cannibalism.
âCould it be that this painting meansâŚâ
Giovanni chuckled lightly, a trace of emptiness in his expression.
âCould it be that our land really was cursed?â
Back in my room, I opened the notebook, putting off other tasks.
âThis drawing could mean that?â
The red human in the painting caught my eye. The more I looked, the stranger it felt.
âThe mythic age was over a thousand years ago. No one remembers that era, so everything is speculation.â
No one knew the truth. Perhaps only the emotions persisted, unforgotten.
I shivered at the thought of kingdom people despising the empire as barbarians.
âHonestly, itâs terrifying.â
A people who devoured a godâŚ
Still, I didnât regret working with Giovanni. Then or now, this was my best choice.
I tried to calm myself and turned the pages of the notebook. My hand froze on the last drawing.
A man stood in the rain with his hand raised. It seemed he was summoning rain like the current priests of Liorsa.
Giovanni passed over it without comment, but I was stunned.
A human who could call the rainâbut looking closely, the rainâs flow was strange.
The raindrops curved unnaturally.
âHeâs not summoning rain. Heâs absorbing it.â
Saying it aloud made me certain.
Someone with abilities like mine existed in the mythic age.
I had heard that the blessings over Liorsa were not lost, but inherited eternally.
Even now, the priests of Liorsa had inherited that power.
âThat power came from the gods.â
Then what happened to the god devoured by the desert people?
Was it gone after blessing the people of water?
âSomethingâs off. It doesnât add up.â
I felt the same unease I had during my conversation with Giovanni.
âWhy donât the theologians reveal this?â
The murals visible to ordinary people today show only peaceful mythic-era scenes.
From the reactions of Hubert and other theologians, they didnât seem to consider these newly discovered murals special.
âAfraid it will confuse people?â
I couldnât find the answer, but one thing was clear.
The mythology taught to kingdom children, and the history I remembered, never mentioned a god being devoured.
<In ancient times, when humans lived alongside gods,
ordinary people could speak to gods and request rain directly.
The gods, pleased by humansâ closeness and devotion, generously bestowed water. As a result, the land became moist, and the seeds of life sprouted.
In time, the gods returned to their own realm, leaving humans with the gift of a fertile land blessed by the godsâŚ
ăLearning Kingdom History Through Picturesă Chapter 7: Mythic Age>
Soon, the temple excavation was completed, and Hubert returned. Seeing him relieved, I felt, for some reason, that the temple now held no murals.
It was the day Hubert would report on the Western Temple to the palace.
I watched the waiting carriage and tried to gather my thoughts.
Just before Hubert boarded, Aris approached him freely and kissed his cheek.
âHave a safe trip, Hubert.â
Her cheeks flushed like a fairy.
When Hubert gently stroked her head, her blush deepened slightly.
Even seeing that, I had no particular thoughts.
Then I felt eyes on me and blinked. Hubert was watching.
âTake care.â
âI will, Ig. Keep the house well while Iâm gone.â
He kissed my cheek.
Aris immediately pouted. Normally, I might tease her by pretending to be close to Hubert, but today, my mind was too tangled to bother.
Soon, the carriage with Hubert began to roll down the road.
In the kingâs private office, Hubert met the king alone as a representative of the theologians involved in the excavation.
âWell done, Count. Was there any trouble during the work? Any rebels causing problems again?â
In Liorsa, where gods are closely tied to daily life, religious matters were sensitive, so Hubert often met the king privately.
Noticing the kingâs irritation at the mention of rebels, Hubert chose his words carefully.
âNone, Your Majesty.â
âGood. Any requests?â
âThere was a request to open another previously unopened temple.â
âAbsolutely not. People spout heretical claims like âthere is no true godâ or âthe history books must be corrected.â And theologians say heretical things too, tsk tsk.â
The king clicked his tongue sharply.
âWhat if they make trouble after seeing the murals? Nothing inside has been leaked, right?â
Hubert nodded at the sharp gaze.
âAll those who entered this temple were our people. The murals were already copied and then destroyed.â
âGood. Finish it cleanly. Move anything sensitive to the records archive.â
The royal records archive stored sacred objects and sensitive documents found in temples, and no one could enter without the kingâs permission.
âUnderstood.â
Hubert Lorens was one of the few who could access the archive.
Clack, clack.
Even servants were barred from entry, so his footsteps echoed in the dusty, dark archive.
The Lorens family, with neither vast estates nor many businesses, was recognized in society due to the kingâs favor.
Most believed it was the royal familyâs reward for advancing and preserving the kingdomâs history and theology. They werenât wrong.
Hubertâs noble title was now accompanied by the additional role of archive custodian.
He inspected the archive to ensure the records were well preserved.
Some had theologiansâ annotations, but many were just stored, their meaning unknown. Even the interpreted ones couldnât be verified.
These were tales from over a thousand years ago, from the mythic age. Even if misinterpreted, who could claim otherwise?
âThe empire is cursed. And the ancient humans who once lived with them were divided; that curse has not ended.â
His gaze landed on a wall to the right. A painting showed people screaming on land where water had dried and fish had died.
The suffering was vivid and chilling.
Though they had no marks or colors to indicate rank, Hubert and the other theologians were sure they were desert people.
His eyes moved to the bottom of the painting. Ancient characters were scrawled.
<The descendants of sun and fire will break the strong magic!>
The meaning of this phrase sparked debate among theologians. Most agreed that the âstrong magicâ referred to Liorsaâs water blessing, and the âdescendants of sun and fireâ were the empireâs people.
At one time, the fear that an imperial invasion would destroy everything dominated academia.
Fortunatelyâor unfortunatelyâimperial people had never caused problems in the kingdom. But they could not be completely trusted.
This was the first visit of a pure-blooded royal from the empire.
Cold contempt appeared in Hubertâs green eyes.
âBarbarians expelled from the temple of water.â
Meanwhile, in the kingdom, some had inherited the godsâ power.
Priests.
Their presence was proof that the kingdom was a blessed land.
âOur family has Aris. She isnât officially on the family registry yet, but thatâs not a big deal.â