âItâs all your fault!
âItâs all your fault!
âDamn it!
âSon of a bitch!â
Guillaume BĂ©netâs fists continued to hit the air, his rage boiling over at a seemingly invisible creature.
His expression was twisted with hatred, and he didnât bother to suppress his emotions.
Aurore narrowed her eyes and gestured for White Paper to investigate the area.
But there was nothing there, just empty air.
Lumian clicked his tongue in annoyance. âHeâs been itching for a fight for a while now. Whoâs he blaming?â
Aurore shook her head and casually replied, âMaybe itâs a bishop holding him back, stopping him from rising in rank and gaining extraordinary abilities. Or perhaps someone lured him into secretly worshiping a hidden entity, hoping to receive blessings and grow strongerâŠâ
She considered that, as the sub-deacon of the Eternal Blazing Sun Church, a priest overseeing a rural cathedral, establishing contact with a concealed being wouldnât be easy on his own.
When it came to matters of supernatural power, heâd undoubtedly turn to the DariĂšge regionâs Church. The associated occult artifacts and sorcery grimoires would be handed over to the Inquisition for safekeeping or even sealing. They wouldnât be left at Corduâs cathedral. More importantly, it was impressive enough that he could command ancient Feysac. Languages capable of summoning supernatural forces like Hermes and Elvish werenât something a sub-deacon like him would encounter. And Aurore, through the Eye of Mystery Prying, had long determined he wasnât someone with innate spiritual prowess who could unintentionally attract malevolence.
Thus, without a certain someoneâs âguidance,â how could the padre come into contact with a hidden existence?
Aurore considered the possibility that Guillaume Bénet had come into possession of a mysterious item without turning it over.
Lumian laughed at the idea.
âCanât the padre gripe over that hidden existence? He even dared to make Saint Sith feel aggrieved. Itâs not impossible for him to blame that hidden existence for enticing him.â
After mocking Guillaume BĂ©net, Lumian analyzed seriously, âIâve been thinking about why the padre suddenly fell into corruption. There are two suspects. The first is Madame Pualis. Sheâs obviously very powerful. Whether itâs Louis Lund, who gave birth in the castle, or the woman suspected to be her in the wilderness surrounded by the undead, it shows that sheâs not simple. Sheâs involved with abnormal pathways and hidden existences. Itâs possible that she enticed the padre.â
âBy the wayâŠâ
Lumian smacked his head.
âWhatâs wrong?â Aurore didnât know what her brother had realized.
Lumian replied solemnly, âDo you think the padre has ever given birth to Madame Pualisâ child?â
ââŠâ Aurore was filled with regret for believing her brother was on the brink of an important discovery.
She snapped, âWho told you that Louis Lundâs child is Madame Pualisâs?
âWhat if itâs Administrator BĂ©ostâs or a hidden existenceâs? No, no. If it was, you would have exploded and turned into a monster when you saw that scene.â
âI just find Madame Pualis to be more dominant in her relationship with the administrator.â Before the loop began, Lumian felt that the administrator, BĂ©ost, was a little weak. He couldnât keep the butler in check and couldnât keep an eye on his wife. When he appeared with Madame Pualis, he always tried to please the latter.
Lumian originally thought that the administrator loved his wife very much, but now, he had a new guess.
âDo you think the administrator is another fertility tool for Madame Pualis?â
âPerhaps.â Aurore held her forehead. âThe world of mysticism has really broadened my horizons. Many scenes that only exist in novels and imaginations have been realized⊠in some warped mannerâŠâ
After sighing, she muttered to herself, âThere seem to be more than one or two children born in the castle. Where are they?â
Lumian thought for a moment and expressed that he had no idea.
Infiltrating the castle and conducting a search was out of the question. Not after what happened to Louis Lund and the events in the wilderness. Whatever it took, he wasnât about to cross paths with Madame Pualis again.
Aurore felt the same. After their run-in with Madame Pualis, the siblings wanted nothing more than to avoid her at all costs.
The padre grunted in frustration, downing a glass of red wine to take the edge off.
He let out a long breath, put down the tall glass, and walked to the bed.
It wasnât until the padreâs breathing eased and he seemed to be asleep that Lumian mocked, âLook at him, crashing early. What, no late night rendezvous with his mistress? Oh, he doesnât smoke in private, either.â
This was inferred from the absence of cigar cases, pipe, and other items in the bedroom.
Aurore chuckled and said, âHe doesnât drink much alcohol either. Everyone says heâs a pillar of propriety.â
She dispatched White Paper to scout the bedroom. Finding nothing, it returned as instructed. Aurore turned to Lumian.
âYou only mentioned one suspect. What about the other?â
âThat sneaky owl. Always watching, never acting.â Lumian voiced his guess. âIt might have led the padre to the legendary Warlockâs legacy.â
âMmm.â Aurore felt that the possibility was quite high.
Lumian then suggested, âIf that owl pays me another visit, we capture it and interrogate it.â
âYou sure you can take down an owl that has lived for centuries?â Aurore smirked.
âIâve got you, havenât I?â Lumian flattered his sister.
Aurore scoffed. âOur chances arenât great, even with both of us.â
âBut we canât just sit around and do nothing. We need to find out whatâs going on before itâs too late. As long as we donât interfere with the advent of the twelfth night, weâll be fine.â
Lumian nodded heavily.
Aurore noticed his exhaustion and reached for White Paper, who had returned.
âYouâve been using your Spirit Vision too much today. Get some rest. Weâll continue tomorrow.â
She paused for a moment before continuing, âIn the morning, Iâll teach you the basics of the Hermes language. Then, in the afternoon, go see Pierre Berry and have a drink. Iâll sneak into his sheep pen and see if I can get any useful information from his three sheep.â
She thought this was the easiest route to investigate.
âIsnât that too risky?â Lumian asked, already on his feet.
Aurore reassured him with a smile.
âDonât worry, I wonât pick a fight. I just need to talk to them in Highlander. It shouldnât raise any alarms. They might know something useful.â
Lumian nodded.
...
âIâll head to Olâ Tavern tomorrow afternoon. Iâll try to get to know the three foreigners. They could be valuable allies.â
Of course, he had to be careful not to reveal their identities as Beyonders.
âOkay,â Aurore agreed with her brotherâs plan.
...
Lumian woke up in his dream bedroom, shrouded in a faint gray fog.
As he expected, all the gold, silver, and copper coins, as well as the axe and pitchfork he had collected, were gone.
The cycle had reset the dream.
I have to gather them againâŠ
?Lumian muttered to himself as he left the bedroom and headed to the study.
He picked up the?
livre bleu
?from the table and flipped through it idly. Many of the words had been cut out.
Indeed, I was the one to send the request for helpâŠ
?He no longer felt anything about being the one who had sent the request for help.
He suspected that Aurore had guided him in sending the request. After all, he had no knowledge of mysticism back then, so he would have relied on a reliable messenger or a postman.
...
Speaking of which, Lumian realized that the postman who came once a week wasnât in the loop.
He figured that the officials probably prevented ordinary people from entering Cordu after receiving the letter.
Lumian looked around for a box to store the letter, but he couldnât remember how many similar items Aurore had in her collection, so he gave up.
He got dressed in a way that didnât affect his movements, grabbed his iron-black axe, and headed out into the wilderness filled with crevices. He walked towards the ruins surrounding the dark red mountain peak.
Lumian easily dispatched the two familiar monsters. He slung the shotgun, cloth bag of lead rounds, and assortment of coins.
He moved forward cautiously, deliberately avoiding the path he had taken before, knowing that he was not prepared to face the three-faced monster.
As he made his way through the collapsed buildings and thin gray fog, the constantly alert him took a sniff.
He caught a whiff of blood.
After some thought, Lumian sneaked into the shadows and hid in a hidden space on the top of a half-collapsed house, peering through a gap between a few rocks.
In the distance, amidst the barren, rubble-filled wasteland, he saw a lump of flesh slowly wriggling towards a building.
The flesh was mixed with yellow fat, as if a creature had been crushed by a falling boulder.
Lumian pondered how to deal with such a monster.?
Should I behead it? But it doesnât even have a head.
Suddenly, several dark-black, fleshy ropes appeared out of nowhere and bound the blob of flesh tightly.