âGive me back my divinity~!!â
With a face full of grievance, as if carrying all the worldâs injustices, Alon swallowed his surprise and asked, âWhat are you talking about?â
âDonât pretend you donât know! You took all my divinity!â
ââŠâŠI took all your divinity?â
The girl looked even more aggrieved at Alonâs response.
âWhat is she talking about?â
Alon decided to stay calm and think.
Why was the girl in front of him demanding the return of her divinity?
Thenâ
âAh.â
Alon let out a quiet exclamation.
The Thunder Serpent quest.
The NPC.
The girl who always appeared.
His thoughts linked one after anotherâ and ultimately, he reached a single conclusion.
ââŠâŠKalannon?â
An uncertain, yet at this moment, the most logical guess.
At that nameâ
âWhy are you pretending not to know when you do!?â
The girlâno, Kalannonâclenched her fists and shouted again.
Alon realized his deduction was correct.
But what he still couldnât understand wasâ
âI took your divinity?â
That he had supposedly stolen the divinity of Kalannon, the lightning receiver.
Alon couldnât agree with that claim.
Never once had heâ
Let alone tried to steal someone elseâs divinityâ
Even attempted to become a god of his own volition.
Yet, in response to Alonâs protestâ
âHuh?â
Kalannon placed both hands on her hips and shouted as if dumbfounded.
âYou didnât just take it! You completely turned me into a forgotten relic!â
âMe?â
âYes! You! Canât you see this?!â
Kalannon spread her hands wide toward the sky.
Then, in what had once been a night sky filled with the Milky Way, familiar statues began appearing one after another.
âHere, there, over there, at the very end, and even here!!â
Everywhere stood statues erected by the Thunder Serpent tribe.
Showing them furiously, the girl fumed,
âTheyâre all you, not me! Because of you! Youâve taken all the faith that should have come to me!â
She spat out her resentment.
Alon quickly grasped the situation.
âHmm, I get the gist of it. But as ridiculous as this sounds, I never acted with the intent to steal your divinity.â
âHow does that even make sense?â
âI also think it doesnât make much sense, butâŠâ
âThen are you saying the believers who should have worshipped me suddenly started following you for no reason? The faith that should have been mineâwhy is it going to you?!â
As if daring him to deny it, Kalannon glared at him with eyes full of disbelief.
Yet, Alon stood firm.
âI feel bad saying this, but Iâm innocent.â
Truly.
âI have never once said or done anything to manipulate this situation.â
âŠOr so he thought.
ââŠâŠâ
Alon stopped speaking.
Because suddenly, a hypothesis flashed through his mind.
Something so obvious, he had overlooked it completely.
A fact he had ignored all this time.
âCould it be⊠because of that phrase?â
Alon had never once claimed to be Kalannon, the lightning receiver.
He had never acted as such.
Furthermore,
He had done nothing that could have made people suspect him of being Kalannon.
That isâuntil he learned the girl in front of him was Kalannon.
Up until then, he had believed himself innocent.
[Under the low sky, I shall find my way to you. Rejoice, for you who greet the dawn shall welcome me.]
Alon recalled the phrase.
The words he had spoken in front of the Thunder Serpent tribe.
It was the very phraseâ
That the girl had mentioned, the one that had made the Thunder Serpent tribe revere him.
That one moment of repeating those words.
That was undoubtedly what had led to the misunderstanding that he was Kalannon.
âAh.â
At last, the pieces of the puzzle that had baffled him began to fit together.
The coherence built up.
Scattered doubts started to resolveâ
âYou did, didnât you?â
However.
âSee! You did!!â
Kalannon stomped her feet in frustration.
ââŠâŠâ
Alon could only avert his gaze slightly.
***
Alon had spoken that phrase, and though he didnât fully understand the process by which faith had gathered around him, the conclusion remained the same.
He had been mistaken for Kalannonâ and in the process, had stolen the divinity meant for her.
That was the truth of the matter.
Alon looked at the girl.
The girl, in turn, staredâno, glaredâat Alon.
Her teary eyes pricked at his conscience.
Clearing his throat needlessly, he finally apologized.
âI didnât mean for this to happen, but⊠Iâm sorry.â
A simple, straightforward apology.
To which Kalannon, still full of resentment, opened her mouthâ
âGive it baââ
But thenâ
âHuh?â
â?â
Her pupils suddenly dilated, and she shut her mouth.
ââŠâŠHey?â
âSomething wrong?â
Like a paused screen, Kalannon froze in place.
As Alon tilted his head in confusionâ
ââŠâŠAh, no.â
As if a rusty machine groaning into motion, Kalannon awkwardly responded.
Then, wiping the frustration from her face, she forced a smile.
âNo, actually⊠I should be the one apologizingâŠThinking about it, I donât really have the right to blame you.â
ââŠâŠSuddenly?â
And now she was even apologizing?
Alon was taken aback by Kalannonâs abrupt change in attitude.
But despite her stiff, awkward smile, she pressed on.
âYesâeither way, I wouldnât have been able to help my believers, and, well⊠I guess I would have been forgotten naturally.â
Alon easily understood what she meant.
After all, in the game, the NPC Kalannon didnât appear in the early stages but only after some progress had been made.
Sorting out his thoughts, Alon got to the point.
âSo, what do you want me to do? Do you want me to return your divinityââ
âNo, no, no, no!â
Before he could even finish his sentence, Kalannon shook her head vehemently.
âAbsolutely not. No way, no how⊠I mean, I thought I asked for my divinity back at first, but after thinking about it, I realized thatâs impossible.â
âWhy not?â
Finally stopping her frantic head-shaking, Kalannon awkwardly clasped her hands together.
âRegardless of how unfair this feels to me, the faith is already directed toward you. You know the basic principles of divinity, donât you?â
âYou mean, when faith accumulates, one can become a god?â
âExactly. And since youâre already receiving faith as Kalannon, the lightning receiver, thereâs no way for me to take it back.â
âWouldnât it be enough if I simply told them myself?â
âNo matter how much you tell them youâre not Kalannon, that faith wonât break so easily. Faith inherently travels through belief and anchors itself in a symbol to manifest its results.â
After a brief pause, Kalannon added,
âEven if you correct their belief and redirect the faith back to me, my divinity would have already weakened significantly.â
âWhy?â
âIf it were a gradual shift over a long period, it might work. But if the object of faith suddenly changes, faith doesnât accumulate as easily.â
After a moment of consideration, Kalannon offered an example.
âIf I told you I was the primordial god, would you believe me?â
ââŠI wouldnât believe it easily.â
âExactly. Faith builds up through absolute belief. If the object of faith changes abruptly, belief itself inevitably weakens. And on top of that, I donât have the power to manifest myself anymore.â
âIn other words, I have no way to restore your divinity.â
Her voice dispersed with an oddly lonely tone.
ââŠâŠThen what happens to you?â
âA forgotten god disappears.â
âBut arenât you the real Kalannon?â
âI already told you, there is no ârealâ Kalannon. Gods are ultimately beings created by their followers, unless they are primordial gods.â
âSo gods are defined by those who believe in them.â
âExactly.â
Behind his blank expression, Alon felt slightly awkward.
Even though it wasnât intentional, the fact remained that he had inadvertently obtained Kalannonâs divinity, placing her at the brink of erasure.
And through their conversation, he also realized why merely being âmistakenâ for someone allowed him to wield the divinity of the Primordial Elf.
As this new understanding settled inâalongside a lingering awkwardnessâ
âSo, I wanted to ask⊠could you do me a favor?â
âA favor?â
Kalannon cautiously inquired.
âYes. I know that disappearing is a natural rule, but⊠I still donât want to vanish. Could you help me?â
âYou know a way to avoid being erased?â
âItâs not as difficult as you might think. In fact, it could even be beneficial for you.â
ââŠWhatâs the method?â
âYou just have to learn how to wield Kalannonâs divinity.â
A surprisingly simple method.
âThat will keep you from disappearing?â
âHmmâyes. Though to be precise, thereâs a bit more âworkâ involved. But if you can fully control Kalannonâs power, I can avoid erasure. I have my own means of managing that.â
âItâs not exactly an offer I have a reason to refuse.â
Indeed, the proposal actually worked in his favor.
As Alon nodded, Kalannon clapped her hands together.
âThen, please find the symbol.â
ââŠâŠThe symbol? Wait, wasnât that monument in the kingdom the symbol?â
âThat was just a stone infused with Kalannonâs power. The real symbol is somewhere else.â
Just as Alon was about to ask for more detailsâ
Rumble!
â!?â
Suddenly, the world began collapsing inward, as if it were being crushed.
Alon turned to Kalannon in alarm, and she, too, hurriedly spoke.
âUh, Alon? Please, I really need you to do this. You have to reach the symbol within a week, okay?â
âA week?â
âYes. Right now, thereâs⊠something weird lurking near the symbol, but please, Iâm counting on you.â
âIâll try my best.â
âDonât just try, you absolutely muââ
Before she could finish her sentenceâ
âAh.â
ââŠWhatâs wrong?â
âNothing. Never mind.â
Alon had returned to his original location.
He was back in the palace where he had entered.
Scanning his surroundings, he let out a quiet sigh.
âI guess I should get going.â
***
Upon arriving at the audience chamber, Alon faced the King of Luxibl.
ââŠâŠâ
Exuding the majesty of a ruler surpassing even that of a mere duchy,
King Pamilono of Luxibl looked down at Alon.
And beside himâ
There was a very familiar face.
âJenira?â
The quick-witted younger sister of Syrkal, the woman who had sought him out during the previous ball.
She now stood beside King Pamilono, as if serving as his strategist.
Alon blinked at the sight for a moment before stepping forward toward Pamilono.
âAre you Marquis Palatio?â
A deep, resonant voice rang out.
Haâ
Alon, accustomed to such situations, prepared to bow politely in greetingâ
Clang!
âOnly to be interrupted.
â?â
As he lifted his head again, he saw Pamilono looking at Jenira with a bewildered expression.
More precisely, at the shattered remains of a wine bottle in her hand.
âOops, my mistake. I accidentally broke the bottle.â
Holding the broken neck of the wine bottle like a makeshift weapon, Jenira apologized in a tone that lacked any sincerity.
DripâDripâ
â???â
Like drops of blood, red liquid trickled down from the broken glass.
Alonâs face twisted in confusionâ
âBe careful.â
âYes.â
âHmmââ
Pamilono cleared his throat once again.
âWelcome to Luxibl, Marquis Palatio.â
Exuding his regal authority once more,
Clang~!
Yet another wine bottle shattered.
âOh my, Iâm really sorry. I keep making âmistakes.ââ
Hadnât she just smashed that against the wall on purpose?
Alon thought as much but dared not say it aloud.
Meanwhile, Jenira, still holding a broken bottle, stared intently at Pamilono.
Alon was just about to tilt his head in confusion whenâ
ââŠâŠMarquis Palatio, welcome.â
Unlike before, King Pamilonoâs tone now carried an unmistakable formality.
And as Alon saw Jenira nod in satisfactionâ
ââŠâŠAh.â
He finally understood.
He now had a clear grasp of exactly what kind of situation this kingdom was in.