Things would be different if it were Oliverâs blade but handling a childâs sword like this was childâs play. As expected, he was able to snatch the sword out of the childâs hands.
âOof!â
The youngster who had been swaying his sword in his hands hesitantly took a few steps back. Maybe he thought it was a blow in revenge, considering he took a few steps back.
âHuh.. a skilled assassin has been sent to challenge me! Of course! They have, after all, once succeeded in killing off the greatest genius in the land. You are quite skilled1â
âBut Iâm not..â
âSilence! An assassin is an assassin! You will die in my hands!â
The youngsterâs attacks didnât end there. He pulled out a dagger from his inner clothes and went in for a second attack. Of course, Ian didnât feel threatened at all.
âWhere is this place?â
Ian casually avoided the stab and took in his surroundings.
He had been thinking of coming to the far west of the Low Dukedom, since his destination, FIltin Territory, was on the west of the dukedom. It was late in the night when Ian had left the imperial city of Greenriver, but this place was late in the morning, and the sun was out. Considering the time difference, Ian was positive this was the Low Dukedom territory.
âHave I been to a village like this before?â
There was a small village. Ian could spot the what seemed like an entrance to a village. He certainly hadnât been here recently, but if he could teleport here, it meant he had been here in his previous life.
âYou beast! You assassin! He-yah! Ha-yah!â
Even in the midst of Ianâs confusion, this strange child wouldnât stop attacking. Ian didnât feel threatened at all, but he was starting get annoyed. He decided to put him to a stop.
âSl..â Ian started, attempting to put the Sleep Charm on the boy.
âCleven!â A man shouted.
Some of the villagers had heard the commotion and were making their way over.
Perhaps this boyâs name was Cleven.
âWonât you stop it this instant!â
AÂ bulky, middle-aged man ran over and got ahold of the boy. Could he be the parent?
Ianâs question was soon answered.
âChief! Youâre here right on time. Itâs an assassin! Iâm sure of it! He was sent to kill me! He suddenly appeared in front of me!â
At the childâs words, the chief looked over at Ian. Of course, he didnât seem to believe Ian was an assassin. After all, he had taken the dagger away and resisted the boy.
âOuch! Ch..Chief! Why are youâŚâ The boy protested.
âYou little brat, until when are you going to go on with this about your assassin?!â
âItâs true! He IS out to get me! He stopped my blade with his bare hand! Iâm sure he is a well-trainedâŚâ
âI thought things had calmed down a bit but it appears not! Who let this boy get his hands on a weapon? Eh?! Take him home immediately! And donât let him leave the house!â
At his words, a few villagers stepped up to take Cleven by the arms and dragged him home. The boy didnât stop yelling about Ian being an assassin, but the villagers didnât seem to be paying attention to his words. They seemed to be used to this.
âWhew⌠pardon us. As you can see, that boy has some problems. He is slightlyâŚflawed in his mind. He always makes a commotion, claiming he feels threatened. We sincerely apologize again.â The chief said, apologetically.
Ian replied back in the language of the Low Dukedom.
âThatâs quite alright. And Iâm not a hired assassin, just to let you know.â
âHaha, Iâm sure youâre not. Iâm thinking youâre not from here, so are you a traveler from afar?â The chief suggested. Judging from Ianâs accent, looks, and clothing, the chief had come to the conclusion that Ian was a traveler.
âYes, indeed. I saw a village so I thought Iâd take a look around.â
âAnd you happened to get Clevenâs attention.â
âI suppose so.â Ian mumbled at the chiefâs questioning, but Ian figured that was good enough. Ian didnât want to reveal his identity if possible. Strictly speaking, he was in a foreign land, a country that rarely had conflict with Greenriver. There was no reason for him to start a commotion.
âTraveling around the world at such a young age. Amazing.â
âItâs possible since Iâm young.â
âThatâs what youth is all about.â
The conversation went on smoothly, just like it would between any local and traveler. Of course, Ian wasnât a normal traveler, and wanted to get out of there quickly, but he couldnât simply walk away.
âWhat is the name of this village?â Ian asked. He might as well know where he was. It was a village that wasnât in his memory, but he had succeeded in teleporting. It meant he had been here before.
âOh, dear. Iâm late introducing myself. My name is Jackson, and Iâm the village chief. âBordonâ is our village name, and weâre in the Filtin lands.â
âDid you just say weâre in the Filtin lands?â
âI did. Is there a problem?â
ââŚNothing. Iâm Lian.â Ian said, deciding to introduce himself with a different name. The wires in his brain started working at full speed. He was certain the dukedom had surrendered in the middle of the unification war. Therefore, there had been no reason for him to come this far. Even when he was busy hunting down Artifacts in his previous life, the FIltin territory had been out of the question.
Then how was he able to remember and teleport all the way here?
âHold onâŚâ
Ian thought carefully.
Then, he was able to remember.
All the old memories he had forgotten.
Even the ones that he didnât need to remember.
âThe Order of the False Dragon.â
The FIltin Territory was at the western region of the Low Dukedom.
He had been in the area before.
Ian had once been in search of the Dragon cult group when he was helping to research Dragon Language. Those swindlers had been active in the western part of the dukedom. In his previous life, it was the far west of the unified Greenriver Empire, but now it was part of the Low Dukedom.
âI forgot.â
Once his memories lit up, they spread like wildfire. His past memories were revived and he remembered the reason the village was there.
âTheir headquarters.â
When he had visited in his previous life, that is, twenty years from now, this village of Bordon had not been what it was now today.
âIt was in complete ruins back then.â
At the same time, it had been the headquarters of a dragon cult as well. Even Crude, the head of the thief guild, whom Ian had secretly met to know the whereabouts of the Dragonian, was aware of the active cult groups. Putting that to consideration, the cults were still active.
âChief.â
AÂ few villagers, being aware of Ian, walked over to the chief and whispered in his ear, making sure to be steps away from Ian. There was no point in doing so, for Ian was able to make his hearing better if he wanted.
âItâs time for morning service. What shall we do?â
âJust go ahead with the prayers as planned.â
âAnd the strangerâŚ?â
âHeâs a prey that has come with his own two feet. See him through.â
The chief made a big false smile, completely unaware that Ian, his âpreyâ had been listening in, and spoke.
âHow rude we are to our guest. A lot of our villagers are shy of strangers, so please understand.â
âThatâs completely alright.â
âLetâs see⌠even this encounter is meant to be, so why donât you stay and have a meal with us? There isnât anything for us to show off about of town, but we are not that heartless to turn a blind eye to a stranger we have caused trouble.â Jackson said, getting to work as he always did as chief.
If he was really the chief.
âThen Iâll excuse myself and receive a meal from you gladly.â Ian replied, with this suspicion in mind.
âDonât be sorry at all. Come, right this way.â
Ian followed Chief Jackson far into the village. It was a quiet town. Ian couldnât even hear that noisy Cleven, so he wondered where the boy had been dragged off to.
âAnd those people gathered over there..?â Ian pointed to a group of people gathered around a shoddy looking stone statue. They were on their knees, lifting up prayers. It seemed like the service the chief and villager had been whispering about earlier.
âAh, our villagers gather for morning prayers every day. Itâs an old tradition of the town.â
âWhat a unique looking statue they are praying to. Is it a lizard with wings?â Ian asked, pretending to be clueless. Anyone would be able to tell it was a dragon, but Ian acted as if he didnât know anything.
âNot a lizard, but a dragon.â
âA dragon! Lifting prayers to dragons?â
âUnlike the gods, they answer prayers.â
âThey answer?â
At that moment, there was a commotion among the gathered villagers, and Ian couldnât blame them.
A stream of light blasted from the dragon statue, as if it were actually listening to the prayers.
âOoooh!â
âOh, Great Dragon! Great Dragon!â
âHeal my mother!â
âLet us not go hungry again tomorrow!â
The villagers became more hyped with their prayers. It may have seemed like a miracle in the villagersâ eyes, but Ian knew better.
âItâs magic.â
The statue was blasting out a perfect stream of light.
A spell was being cast from the statue.
It was a slight change of the Light Spell.
This made Ian more suspicious.
âThat statue isnât good enough to be made from magical engineering.â
AÂ magical engineering device couldnât conjure up magic on its own. There were only two things that could make miracles in the name of magic.
âA magician and an Artifact.â
The statue was conjuring magic just like an Artifact would.
âBut itâs different.â Ian thought to himself.
The statue was different from any other Artifact Ian had seen so far. It felt different. How was he supposed to describe this difference?
âIt seems it was made carelessly, as if someone simply wanted to test it outâŚâ Ian thought.
All the Artifacts Ian had seen so far, such as the Mogrian Ring, the Queenâs Amulet, Mitchell Greenriverâs robe, and the Cane of the Great Fields had a different figure. They may look simple, but none of them were shoddy like this statue.
Ian would have believed it if someone were to say a skilled child had made it with mud.
âToo shoddy to be an ArtifactâŚâ
Ian was growing more suspicious by the second.
âCome on in. Although itâs a little shabby. Iâll prepare a meal for you soon.â The chief said, breaking into his thoughts.
They had arrived at the chiefâs house, which was not far from the statue. Being the chiefâs house, it was different from the other houses in the village. It was the biggest and very clean inside.
âNot as shabby as I expected.â
âI did build this house with my own hands. Not comparable to the ones in the city, but I did put effort into building it.â
Soon, the meal was prepared and set on the dining table. It was actually a potato stew and a piece of crumbly bread. It was also a traditional meal of the people.
âMay I eat with you?â Chief Jackson asked.
Ian nodded, and they ate in awkward silence.
Ian didnât have a problem with the meal, since he had been hungry.
âIf you donât mind me asking, may I ask where you are from? You seem to be fluent in our language, but you do have a unique accent.â
âIâm from Greenriver.â
âOh! Isnât it quite chaotic there nowadays?â Jackson asked. He then started pouring Ian with questions.
Only in the beginning, though.
He started to get quiet.
ââŚâ The chief started to be busy looking Ian over and continued to steal glances.
âWhy are you looking at me like that?â Ian asked.
âWha-? Ah, itâs nothing! I am simply worried the food may not be good for you, but you seem to be enjoying it more than I expected. Would you like another serving?â
âYes, please.â
Chief Jackson headed to the kitchen with Ianâs bowl. Once he was in the kitchen, the chief couldnât hide his perplexed expression anymore. Ian didnât see the confusion on his face.
âWhat is going on? Why isnât anything happening?â he thought.
The stew Jackson had served the guest wasnât just any kind of stew. He had mixed on sleeping pills. But the stranger hadnât even fallen asleep. Heck, he was asking for more.
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âDid I put in too little?â
Yes. That was probably it. He thought the stew would taste strange if he put in too little. Jackson simply thought of putting in more. He poured in more sleeping medicine into the stew once more. A lot more than he did before.
âThis time for sureâŚâ
However, Jackson had no idea.
It wasnât the amount of sleeping medicine that was the problem, and that he was making a big mistake right now.