May Your Soul Rest in Magdala - BestLightNovel.com
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The Cladius Knights. They were known by all across the land; they held unparalleled authority. It was an organization of great wealth and military strength. In the past, The Church organized an army to launch a crusade and reclaim the holy land which laid in the East. This was the birth of the Knights. The promised land recorded in the scriptures, Kuldaros, had long been occupied and trampled upon by pagans. The Pope, Franjeans IV, could not accept this and took action against the pagans, making use of the theological theory presented by the distinguished theologian - Amelia’s Saint Jubel. He dubbed the act of reclaiming the land a crusade; this signified that, even if they were to invade, they would receive G.o.d’s forgiveness. Twenty-two years had pa.s.sed since the crusade began, and it had not yet come to an end. Countless men wore armor engraved with the emblem of The Church, and some even engraved the emblem upon their own skin with ink - these men traveled to the East, their weapons in hand. Swordsmen and staff-wielding believers on pilgrimages alike wished to be buried in the promised land recorded in the holy scriptures. The Cladius Knights’ former ident.i.ty, the Cladius Brotherhood, was an organization which provided services similar to a hospital’s - namely housing and medical treatment - for those traveling to the holy land, be they a soldier who was soon to step on the battlefield, or believers on a pilgrimage. However, there were quite a few people who died of wounds or disease before reaching the holy land. They left wills leaving all of their inheritance to the Cladius Brotherhood, and departed from this world. The Cladius Brotherhood obtained this fortune, and their wealth acc.u.mulated. It was necessary for them to strengthen their independent fighting force to maintain their fortune, but in the end, the gentle monks became greedy knights. They could not be satisfied with the final requests of pious believers, and in their greed, became an organization with a voracious appet.i.te for wealth. At this point, their wealth and the number of their followers had exceeded the head of The Church, the Pope’s own faction. There was not a man on Earth with the power to rival the Cladius Knights who held such overwhelming military might. Although the rumors surrounding Kusla were exaggerated, he had been sentenced to death by The Church four times, and had managed to narrowly escape each time. This was proof that, for as long as the Knights, who were adept at measuring outcome against cost, felt that Kusla was still of value, even The Church would have difficulty sentencing him to death at the stake. The same held true for Kusla. If there was profit in it, he could accept selling his life to the Knights as an alchemist. This was because Kusla wished to, at any cost, reach The Land of Magdala. To this end, he had no choice other than to take the path of an alchemist and focus on research. The research, however, required a vast sum of money, and abundance of materials, a great deal of time, and the authority with which to protect himself from danger. If he were to lose the protection of the Knights, it would become impossible. Thus, Kusla was supposed to work for the Knights like an obedient sheep. His act of throwing the bones of a saint into the furnace in order to see the results of the smelting was essentially suicide; it would not be odd for him to be abandoned. After his release from prison, he departed for the northern town of Gulbetty during the freezing winter. He recalled the conversation he had with the old knight in the carriage, Friche’s death, and that old knight’s face. "Heh." Kusla gave a wry laugh. Unfortunately for him, he failed. Kusla had thought there was a possibility of it working. Even after dumping the saint’s bones into the furnace in an attempt to refine metal of a higher quality, he could have been saved, but he panicked because Friche was killed. As he was overly sad, he did not know what he was doing. These reasons, coupled with what he had already accomplished at this point, could have protected him from the death penalty. Were this not true, he could not have chosen such a treacherous path. "...I really missed out on a golden opportunity." Kusla muttered with a faint sigh. It was entirely true that, when refining metal, burning bones could alter the outcome. At times, ash could be used in place of bones. Yet the old knight’s words were more or less correct. Friche was a good girl, and even after he had vaguely realized she may have been a spy, he might have been mesmerized by her innocent smile. It had been a while since last he met someone with whom he was happy to be together with. Even so, when asked about the extent of his melancholy, Kusla hadn’t any confidence with which to answer the question. Alchemists originally believed in vicissitudes - that everything on this Earth was ever-changing. People died, the state of nature was always unique, and the old became anew in all things - and because of this, he believed that lead could become gold, and that foolhardy dreams could turn into realities. But change waits for no man. He continued to believe in and pursue change as he refined his metal; this was the essence of alchemy. And so, the journey finally came to an end. Kusla’s haunches had become stiff from sitting, and the carriage finally stopped. The driver, who had been silent for the entire trek, finally spoke. “We’re here.” "..." Kusla stepped outside of the carriage, and the first thing he did was stretch. For ten days he had been inside that carriage to avoid being sighted by pa.s.serby.
There were plenty of books he had to read along the way, so boredom was kept at bay despite his bodily aches. He felt as though it would be fine if they were to continue traveling. It was a cold but clear day outside. The clarity of the air was unique to wintertime as he knew it. The morning market seemed to have died down, and the farmers, who were probably from the surrounding villages, leisurely lead their cattle home for the day. All was seemingly still to Kusla, and in the ordinary lives of these town-goers, the only change came with the change of seasons; they would have a family to come home to each day. The girl who had expressed such interest in him in the past was, inevitably, a spy. He realized he had fallen for her, but she had already been slain the moment he turned away from her. Kusla did not think of this as something worth pity or sorrow. He considered the possibility of having much more regressed emotions than others thinking about it. Though Friche’s fate was pitiful, and for her to be revived would be best, Kusla remained sane even after witnessing her death. All he was left with now was questioning as to how her death could be used for his alchemy. Kusla wondered if this was why he felt a pang in his chest thinking of her. There was no long-lasting sorrow, and he wasn’t burdened with anxiety. His apparent distance of emotions pained him perhaps even more than Friche’s own death. This is quite an excessive wish. Kusla sighed as he left the city’s checkpoint. His ident.i.ty was only confirmed by a single guard, and his bags remained untouched; such were just a few of the special privileges of the Knights had. Most of the council members in this small town were forcefully taken under the jurisdiction of the Knights, and to this upstart town’s citizenry, it was far from amusing. It for this reason that they normally looked upon the Knights with disapproval, but the real reason Kusla got through so remarkably unscathed was due to his status as an alchemist too. The people of this town with common sense would rather conspire with heretics than involve themselves with an alchemist. Kusla’s back ached from the ten days he spent riding in a carriage; he walked with methodical care to avoid worsening his injuries. The city’s walls were thick, and near the gates there were numerous facilities offering hospitality to the guards. The guards patrolled through some vestibule, presumably inside of the city’s walls, with bows and catapults in stacks. Their armor was not covered in paint, but in oil - or perhaps blood that had yet to dry completely. Alchemists were only summoned for matters of the utmost urgency. Most notably among the reasons for summoning his ilk: Issues concerning money. Were it simply a case of monetary issues, the solution would be quite simple and direct - like chopping someone’s head off with a sharp axe. Kusla whistled glibly as he entered through the gates, put at ease by the town’s picturesque scenery behind those fat walls. In terms of scale, Gulbetty was of another caliber than what Kusla was accustomed to. There was ample river water flowing through the portway, and four arched bridges stretching across it. After pa.s.sing the gates, what he found was there precisely as had been described to him. The freight carriages and mule carts were gathered in a group to the side of the road. Wagons laden with chicken cages pa.s.sed him. Some hooded foot travelers, their eyes tanned, each carried a cargo larger than themselves. They were, most likely, part of a trading company that pa.s.sed through the snow-capped mountains at the end of the year, and the cargo they carried likely consisted of pelts obtained from hunting or other items like amber and beeswax. The seasonal journey they made to turn a profit was known to be arduous. The road was covered with the dung of horses and mules. A h.o.a.rd of domesticated pigs and escaped chickens emerged from the throngs to the side of the road, trotting about insouciantly. Of course, not everything was so trivial: There were treacherous people who leaned against the wall, observing the townspeople; robbers, bandits, prost.i.tutes, and even hunters who were present trying to, on behalf of their respective leaders, find a chance to bag the escaped farm animals. Preoccupied with fondling their coin, the only dangerous wallflowers not interested in the loose livestock were the money exchangers of the black market - and in a sense, theirs was a form bred from luck and chance. The reason these black market dealers could be in daylight was because they were necessary to so many people. Kusla was not the type to relish such calm. If he could choose, he would be in a more noisy and bustling atmosphere the interior gates. Also, there was a port in this city; that’s where its heart should be. Seeing as the area around the gate was boisterous, there should be even greater a clamor near the port. The Cladius Knights had absolute control over the town. So long as he wore their crest, no man would dare to wrong him. "Not bad." Kusla took a deep breath, perhaps in an attempt to cleanse his lungs, inhaled the dust-filled air, and smiled. The youths inviting customers into their shops, the prost.i.tutes, and the black market dealers dared not approach Kusla, as an unusual air was about him they saw best to avoid. "Where to?" The driver asked Kusla, but did not look to his face. "Who knows? I heard someone's here to meet us." The driver held his silence. His left finger, which held the reins, was halved, and there was a large scar from a blade across the side of his face, which he concealed fairly well with a hat and beard extending behind his ears; he was likely a retired veteran who had long served the Knights. It was probable that he was chosen to kill Kusla, should he try escaping, rather than guard him. "..." The driver suddenly lifted his head. He sensed the gazes upon them in an instant, like a wild hare. He snapped the reins and turned the carriage toward a corner of the intersection. A scrawny man stood there, a grin on his face. "You're safe, hmmn?" He placed particular emphasis on the vowels at the end of the question. His ruffled blond hair was tied back in a bundle, and one had to wonder whether he wished to trim his unkempt beard or leave it as it was. Even so, he was the only man in the world who would welcome Kusla with a grin. Kusla reflexively curled his lips, returning the smile, and spoke. "You're one to talk. Why are you still alive?" "I guess G.o.d was protecting me!" Again, he spoke with that peculiar quality of drawn vowels for emphasis, and it was all too familiar to Kusla. Be it on purpose or not, poisoning an Archimandrite to death would certainly result in punishment with the death sentence, and yet there stood Wayland before him, very much alive. Alchemists were, just as that old knight had said, magicians. "And how did you survive? I heard you dumped the bones of a saint into a furnace and burned them?" "The fire wasn't lit, and the key was that I gave an excuse. Divine Retribution spared me, for I was innocent and thought the saint was cold." Wayland kept walking, looked at his fingernails, and shrugged. "What about you?" "Me? I didn't poison him." "...What do you mean?" "In other words, while that fat man was guzzling down his food, I appeared in front of his table, smiled in front of him, and shook a little bottle in front of him. He then turned pale and dropped dead." This was the trick Kusla had alluded to when he was teasing the guards, but such methods were very real. Because the tactic killed a man, however, it seemed Wayland had planned it well in advance. "But why would you do that?" "He was. .h.i.tting on my girls." Wayland’s expression seemed to ask, “What other reason could there be?” To which Kusla had no choice but to nod in acceptance. "Wasn’t he a Monastery Archimandrite?" "I said he was flirting around with the nuns. The Archimandrite of a female monastery need not be female.” Kusla could only shrug at Wayland’s ability to manage such an amazing feat. Even with the decadence of clergymen, Wayland romantically involved himself with the nuns, who might as well have been caged birds. "That fatty did a lot of bad things people don't normally see, and, in the people’s eyes, I was getting rid of a plague. The nuns of the monastery were begging for me to save them, so I got off scot-free. I'm wors.h.i.+pped as a hero at the monastery." "You've always been good at this type of thing." "It's just that you're not good at it, Kusla." Kusla had once fallen for a spy’s sweet words; he fell in love, hook, line, and sinker, only for her to be killed. He shrugged and kicked aside a chicken as it flew by. "But it's really shocking..." Kusla sauntered forward and listened calmly. "I never thought I would be working in the same workshop as you again, Kusla." "That's my line." "How many times have we met in the Knights' prison?" Kusla had been in and out several times, and Wayland himself was no slouch in this department, so the two of them would frequently meet behind bars. "But when was the last time we were together in the workshop?" Wayland paused to answer. "Hm...that was five years ago, right? I really miss those days." Whenever they recalled what happened five years ago, they felt they had been nothing but immature fools - a thought one could only grimace upon. The two of them were constantly quarrelling, and, after learning a little, would steal poison from the workshop for use in the other’s food. However, their master was a devil far worse than they, so on the day of their graduation, Kusla and Wayland planned to poison him. After their master had finished half of his mercury-laced food, they were apprehended. When the two of them parted ways, Kusla bid Wayland farewell, and they both exchanged genuine smiles. The scene was still fresh in Kusla’s mind. "You were easily moved to tears back then, Kusla." “You’re one to talk. Aren’t you pretty well acquainted to teariness?” Wayland shrugged, abruptly stretched his shoulders with audible relief, and turned back to face Kusla. "Anyway, let’s hurry to greet the one who’ll be hanging us, and head to the workshop. I'm looking forward to it." The executioner he referred to was the one in charge of alchemical operations with the Knights who owned a workshop in the city. He would be involved in not only providing the alchemists’ necessary resources for work, but also in a.s.sisting the alchemists, were they to be etched with a certain brand from some Church faction or sentenced to be burned at the stake. On the other hand, if an alchemist could no longer serve the Knights, or was deemed worthless, they would normally either sell the alchemist to The Church or a.s.sa.s.sinate them. As unusual as it seemed, the Knights truly did reserve the right to kill on their own whims. That was why these individuals were called ‘Hangmen’. They were not known as executioners because an alchemist didn’t have the right to accept a swift punishment like decapitation, which was used on the common folk. Burning at the stake killed too quickly, so it could be considered too easy as well. Basically, they would hang an alchemist with the dogs, and the alchemist would be scratched and gnawed upon by these agitated dogs for three or four days before they could die. Kusla had to remind himself not to smirk internally as he questioned Wayland. "So you haven't been to the workshop yet?" "Nope. I just sent the goods there. I only arrived this morning with the Knights' Freight Unit." "So you just arrived?" "Right." "Couldn't you have gone first?" "How could you expect that of me?" Wayland dragged his voice out mockingly. "Part-ner?" "I'm s.h.i.+vering." "You're cruel!" Wayland enjoyed imitating a dog’s whimper, just as Kusla enjoyed teasing the prison guards. The town of Gulbetty was located near the frontlines, and the citizens, who were accustomed to seeing both mercenaries and knights no differently from thieves, would panic and hurry away from them. Alchemists. Those despicables who strayed from the path. When he was young, Kusla would reply to spiteful remarks with a cold sneer. However, he lacked motivation anymore, and, at most, teased the guards. Wayland, on the other hand, seemed no different from his days as an apprentice, and would commit murder without so much as blinking. "But I agree with going to the workshop. I wish to melt this cold air within me - like smelted metal,” Kusla mused. "Given its exterior, I think it's in rather good condition. As expected of a facility on the frontlines." This Northern land was where the Cladius Knights concentrated both its finances and military might; they made use of Gulbetty as a base. It was only natural that the northernmost land belonged to the Knights - and there was no one who dared to mock the Knights, as their power was well understood. Many avaricious alchemists wished for and dreamt of a workshop situated near the frontlines; with such a position, they could strike while the iron was hot. People would do anything for the sake of winning. There was an infinite supply of funds, they could have books given to them with priority, and they had the coveted right to do business with the local craftsmen and mines. There were also many benefits for them, like being able to leaf through secret and forbidden books. Kusla would probably be delighted were it not for the condition by which he had arrived to the front lines: He had to be with Wayland. “But what about the man who made use of the Gubletty workshop before us? He’s truly a fool to hand over such a nice workshop to us.” Kusla stepped around a pile of horse dung while speaking, and Wayland replied in a manner not unlike how one might describe yesterday’s weather (in his characteristically drawn voice). "I heard he died." "Oh? Did he die of an accident?" The two pa.s.sed a dog leashed to a door, its mouth stained with fresh, red blood. It was likely that it had gone hunting early that morning - the prey was, naturally, some living thing roaming about town. "No, I heard he was killed by someone in town." Kusla evaded the horse dung which lined the roads, offering no response. Although he understood such things were common, something still concerned him. The Knights were the ones to a.s.sign them this time; clearly they considered it some form of punishment. "Don't tell me we're working as a pair because of this." "Hm...that's what I think. They're sending we unscrupulous folks to such a good place, there's certainly something they're hiding." Wayland scratched his head as he walked, feigning concern. He was the type to scoop up rocks from the roadside, then cut, grind, and observe and play with them to entertain himself. If he were to look disinterested, it meant he was displeased. "We might be killed if we're alone, so two people will make it comforting, huh?" The two of them walked in silence. Kusla turned to Wayland, and Wayland kicked a pebble. "Belittled alchemists are doomed." "Haha. That waste of a master taught us that!" The two of them stood before the hangman’s house. Kusla recalled that scene from five years ago, and his shoulders stiffened. "You scared?" "That's my line." It had been five years since Kusla had bickered with someone in this way. He wanted to suppress the nostalgia, but was unable to, his mouth curled at the ends. The pedestrians nearby were terrified, so they parted, leaving a path for the two.
"I know you two specialize in poisoning and a.s.sa.s.sinations." The man held down the parchment with a paperweight made of pure gold, and proceeded to roll his pen fluidly on the table as he spoke. His elegant handwriting was a treat to the eyes. It was a mystery as to how such a thick, pudgy hand could write so fluidly. He was the Gulbetty Freight Corps Leader belonging to the Cladius Knights, Alan Post. It was the Corps' job to provide food and wine to the soldiers, or to transport certain necessities. It was also the case that most of the Freight Corps were very active on the battlefield. However, the higher ups among the Knights differed in role. The Knights promote themselves boldly, claiming their actions are sanctified by Divine Will, and they would use this excuse to collude together with the guilds for trading. The marketplace was essentially hostage to what they do, namely with finances and information brokering, and the same was true for making a profit. That was because merchants naturally sought profits where they do business, especially places in which war was prevalent, and the Knights saw benefit in being the instigators of war. Alan Post, who sat in front of them, had absolute control over the bloodstream known as finance flowing around Gulbetty. He made lots of profit with his manipulation, and his plump body was similarly enriched as his coffers were. His belly pressed against the hollowed office table as he continued his work. "Why would I a.s.sa.s.sinate? My love suffered the same fate." "There's no way I would poison someone! I won't use poison." Kusla and Wayland still in the middle of the room, answering their own questions as their eyes wandered. "Well, I'm not trying to blame you - just to give my opinion." Neither of the two knew quite how to express their delight properly. Wayland responded by stretching his back, while Kusla started to pick at his fingernails. "Such actions aren't bad, however. When you enter a room for the first time, you can only give someone else a first impression once. If you look down on your superiors right at the beginning, it'll come back to haunt you." Kusla darted his glance aside to Wayland, and Wayland did the same to Kusla. Both of them sighed and adjusted their postures erect as they eyed ahead. "And when you sense that your secrets are revealed, you pretend to obey, huh? Well, you pa.s.sed." Post handed the parchment to the butler waiting beside him, continued to blink his small and fiery eyes, and went on to rub them. "Shower the opponent in flowers to make them careless, and then remove their footing. That's good." "You want to show that you're not an easy superior to deal with, and stop us from spouting anything?" Kusla spoke as he looked up at the ceiling, and Post’s rotund build quaked in laughter. "You certainly are smart. These are indeed the two I requested from the Knights." Kusla felt something that didn’t fit in what he said. "...What do you mean?" "I have to protect my own body." "With poison and a.s.sa.s.sination?" Post smirked, but his eyes were bereft of any benevolence they had before. "The best defense is a good offense. This is the only rule I taught myself in the military." This time, Kusla honestly looked for Wayland’s expression, instead of it being a mere act. Looks like we got ourselves into a troublesome situation. "Your predecessor's a man named Thomas Blanket. He was an outstanding man, probably reaching his forties, but who is now dead." His manner of speech was so blunt and pensive that it was somehow indicative of how one might speak to a wilted flower with dignity. Kusla spoke up. "Your Excellency Post, was he murdered under your nose or something?" The leader of this town - to be in such a state. Kusla’s curled lip betrayed the thoughts running through his head. Of course, if he were someone too easily agitated by such taunting, he would not be sitting in this seat. "To be honest, that is the case, and we still have not caught the culprit." "Not caught?" "Surprising, isn't it? The people of The Church, who want to win back authority over this town, are trying their best, but still can't find out. The death of an alchemist is normally attributed to some conflict of faith. As long as they can get proof of heretics, they can immediately seize the chance to pull me down." The Knights honor G.o.d, and not the Pope, who governed The Church. Hence the explicit need for an independent army, finances, and doctrine all at once. No matter which town it was, there would be a conflict over the jurisdiction between The Church and the Knights. "So I say, we have no idea of the kind of people who killed Thomas, and we don’t know why. We don't know if it was an accident, a slug fest between drunkards, a robbery, or a test of a new sword. Maybe some sort of witch hunt with a bias against alchemists, or maybe The Church wanted to get Thomas' alchemy results and was refused by him. Maybe he defected and was killed to shut up.” He paused before continuing. “Well, we don't know the enemy, and we can't establish a plan, but we can't seal the town up like this either.” "There's still a method of protection for people like us known as imprisonment." "That's for people who're higher-ranked than me. Besides, I hate those who slack around and breathe in the same stale air for all their lives." Kusla shrugged, raising his hand to acknowledge that he should not have interrupted. "Right now, the metal equipment in the town is in a most dire state.The war north of Gulbetty is still alright, but most of the mining hills in the north are still in the pagans’ hands. Even if we tried to manufacture and refine weapons in the south, the labor cost would be too high, and there would be too much tax taken along the journey. Also, there are things we have to transport like wheat, rye, barley, grape wine, alum...even the oat those Knights’ military horses consume. If we don't supply them, there'll be short supply." "In other words..." People dwelled upon their limited past experiences through life, and may lose foothold over their lives forever. It often took people some time before they realized the time they’d wasted - and some never do. However, an alchemist's life too short to encourage idleness. Post paused for a moment after being interrupted by Kusla, and seemed to take some delight in picking up from his interjection as Kusla pondered. "In other words, this town needs alchemists with exceptional skill in metallurgy to increase the production of metals, but since we're unable to explain the death of the last guy, we can't find acceptable successors." "In other words, we're the sacrificial p.a.w.ns." "Even on the battlefield, such people are unnecessary for the sake of an ultimate victory." Alright, so we're sent to our deaths. Post showed the composure only a man who had given so many other such commands could give. His face was a chilling calm. Neither Kusla nor Wayland had any intentions of protest. However, it wasn’t because they lacked the upper hand. More appropriately, an alchemist wouldn’t care after being this deeply ensnared. "So you mean we can stay here as long as we don't die?" "You said it. Besides, warriors who come back from the brink of peril will certainly become heroes. I don't think the collateral will be very negligible." The workshops near the battlefield have what could be considered an unlimited budget. Normally, it was not a place they would send young and barbaric alchemists like Kusla and company to operate. If they stuck with the plan, the risk involved would also be on their shoulders. "The good thing is that the town is under my control. I certainly won't allow such violence to happen again, and I'll clean up this area as much as I can. Do your best." Post narrowed his eyes. His expression was grave, the expression of a person in authority, where everyone other than him were mere p.a.w.ns to be used. Kusla did not like it, but the reasons guiding Post's actions were understandable enough. In this sense, he felt there was a certain level of trust between them. Kusla and Wayland followed the Knights' style in salute, "Yes, sir." It was a weak attempt to poke fun at the Knights’ formality, which Post heartily laughed off. His perspicuity was more than it seemed at first. "Ah, yes." Just when Kusla and Wayland were about to step through the door, Post called them to stop. "I do have to apologize to you regarding something." "Hmn?" "I did try my very best, but there are some things that can't be helped." "What is it?" He answered the inquisitive Kusla. "You'll understand when you reach the workshop. Well, if you're good at poison and a.s.sa.s.sination, there's often a way." The two shrugged their shoulders. "...Please excuse us." Wayland opened the door for them both to exit. The subordinates carrying books along the corridor were lined up, their faces tense. There was nothing to be hidden from a ruler who personally wrote his own papers. Leaders.h.i.+p often fell from glory because they of subordinates’ betrayal. Such rulers weren’t able to hide from their secretaries anything they wanted to keep secret. On the other hand, Post could hide all his secrets and fabricate reports as he needed. It seemed the land near the battlefield was not a place knights could calmly cleave their way through. This building seemed to store all the things taken from the guilds in this town - perhaps even the building itself was taken just the same. Upon coming outside, they found the Knights' flag cast high in the sky, declaring their authority unashamedly. In the plaza outside of the building there was a bronze statue of a soldier clasping onto a magnificent sword, symbolizing the city’s independence, but it really held little more than ornamental qualities. Whoever could swing the metaphorical sword to slay sinners was governor of this town. However, the Knights wielded their authority to summon alchemists and the authorities at the town wall who wouldn’t check their bags. So, since authority made the natural order of things in this town, Kusla and Wayland's fates were all decided by Post. The authority was wide in scope, and at the same time, heavy. Kusla and Wayland went by the flag and the guards, narrowed their eyes in the midday sun, and stared into the bustling streets. "What do you think?" Kusla asked this to Wayland, who was speechless as they stood at Post’s desk. Wayland was the type who hardly talked to Post’s ilk, though not because Post was someone he was unacquainted with. Instead, he was thinking of how to kill the other party. This was something Kusla heard of 5 years ago when they were still wet behind the ears. "I can't tell with just that." "That's true." "But it's like mining. No matter the metal, G.o.d never gave it in its purest form.” "In other words?" Wayland gave a subtle grin. "In other words, we continue work as usual." After finis.h.i.+ng their lunch in the middle of the town market, Kusla and Wayland were off to this new workshop. Since the city was so bustling where they stood, there had to be a quieter place elsewhere. They strolled along a stretch of empty houses, and their field of vision burst open after pa.s.sing through. An expansive urban landscape was right before their eyes, and the frothy sea stretched from afar and into the horizon. It was beautiful. They wondered about why the area around them was so devoid of noisy strollers, and realized thereupon that it was probably because they were at the face of the cliff. Some architectural beauty of an alchemist’s workshop probably lied here. "That's quite the extravagant workshop." "That Thomas guy sure is something." A battle was meaningless if final victory was never won. Kusla and Wayland would probably have to use unscrupulous methods to win their battles just the same, and only once they won would the costs be considered. If the production of one alchemist alone was effective enough to overturn the entire battle situation, operating in plain site from a workshop among the citizenry (complete with this resplendent landscape) was a necessary evil. Wayland grinned as he waved to Kusla from a distance. They went to the side of the workshop, looked down to the civilization below, and even Kusla was shocked. "A waterwheel too?" "And the water's flowing through the ravine we pa.s.sed. I think there's a culvert dug deliberately under here, but it doesn't seem that we have all the water to ourselves after all." Kusla followed Wayland's stare and looked down to the bottom of the cliff, scanning below and catching glimpse of the harbor. There were several water wheels spinning, and various buildings gathered around them; it was difficult to tell if they were for flour mills, thres.h.i.+ng, or some other craft though. The strength of the waterwheel was decided by the water current, and the current was decided by the height from which it fell. The workshop was built at the bridge. The place where Kusla and Wayland stood was the first level, the workshop took up two levels below, and the waterwheel was at the bottom. This meant that the full force of the water was down below. Before now, Kusla had to cooperate with craftsmen to share facilities like the waterwheel. Considering his past, this was a luxury worthy of appreciation. "The furnace is up to snuff. They actually built such a large furnace here, huh. Well, I guess they allowed it begrudgingly because it's next to a waterwheel." "We can wash it off with the water if there's a fire.” Wayland turned to Kusla with a look of curiosity. "Then the people below will be affected." Though, even if it actually happened, he would remain unfazed. For an alchemist, he fit the stereotype pretty well. He would not care about the trivialities of others’ lives, and he still would not have much concern even if major events occurred to them. Kusla, who had realized Wayland’s removal from virtually everything else in the world, would sometimes think this way too, or rather, he was only concerned about these things out some nebulous sense of obligation. "But what's the thing that fat uncle wanted to apologize about?" "Hm...what was it...I can't think of it." They lifted their eyes away from the waterwheel and appreciated the beautiful scenery. Brightened by sunlight, the atmosphere allayed any sense of apprehension they might have felt about the situation. "Maybe he's just bluffing us. Let's hurry in, it's cold." "Right, let's go on in." Kusla felt a little reluctant as he looked away from the cliff - not that it would be his last, but its unparalleled quality was alluring. He came to Wayland, who was anxiously unlocking the workshop with the bra.s.s key they’d been given. The door opened, and Kusla walked right into Wayland, who had stopped abruptly, from behind. "Hey, what's with you?" Kusla chided Wayland in frustration, looking past him to catch of glimpse of the inside. The stone wall was lined with wood against the floor, and the walls were crammed with a seemingly endless collection of sundries - as though some psychotic inhabitant did the decorating. The room was certainly not dirty, but the amount of effort to maintain it all seemed questionable. Kusla found himself more surprised that this would cause Wayland to freeze up. The moment he’d thought this, a foreign voice spoke from the room. "I see you've finally arrived?" Past Wayland, the source of this voice resounded like an avalanche against the building’s thick walls, echoing with clarity. The inflection of a voice often carried surprisingly more information than its content. An accent could betray an accurate impression of the physique or facial features of a person, and their elocution roughly betrayed the person's status. A speaker’s disposition was most evident in their tone, as people’s emotions invariably carried with speech. All things considered about the voice he heard, Kusla was able to deduce that the person in front of him was to be expected as an overseer for the two. Until he shouldered past Wayland in the doorway. Kusla rubbed his eyes again - the sight too unbelievable. What is this person doing in an alchemist's workshop? There was a pet.i.te nun fully dressed in a robe that went to her toes. Her robe had patterns belonging to a Knights-affiliated monastery along the edges. She did not come in mistakenly. Probably. "W