Chapter 573: The Divine Army (1)
“Where would you find anyone else crazy enough to put a threat into their speech like you just did?” Anise angrily demanded.
“When did I threaten anyone?” Eugene protested.
Anise had scolded Eugene immediately after they had left the rooftop, but Eugene felt genuinely wronged. He would have humbly accepted the scolding if Anise had pointed out a problem with the actual contents of his speech, but Eugene didn’t believe that there had been any threat in his words.
Anise frowned, “You told them that if they didn’t want to take up the sword, they needed to pray for your victory. What was that if not a threat?”
“You only heard that as a threat because you’re way too negative,” Eugene accused. “I didn’t have the slightest intention of threatening them. And what’s so wrong about asking them to pray for my victory?”
“Your attitude was so rude,” Sienna reproached as she clicked her tongue and shook her head. She had been listening quietly from the side. “What’s with telling them to ‘pray that I will be victorious’? You should have at least added a ‘please’ before that.”
Eugene sniffed, “What would be the difference?”
“It’s not just a difference of a single word. It’s a sign of your sincerity. In fact, even if you had to get on your knees and beg, it still wouldn’t have been enough,” Sienna claimed.
Eugene protested, “What have I done that’s so wrong or offensive that I need to kneel and beg, huh? Do you really want me to kneel in front of so many of my believers, start crying big fat tears, and shout, ‘Please! Please pray for me!’”
“I wasn’t trying to go that far, but after hearing you describe it like that, I kind of want to see you acting like that at least once before I die,” Sienna confessed.
“That will definitely never happen,” Eugene promised as he untied the red cape hanging off his shoulders. “Divinity isn’t something that you can grow by begging for it. As you naturally accomplish various feats, myths, legends, and other such things... just hearing about them will naturally inspire your believers into thinking about you, and the feelings that they associate with you will immediately feed into your divinity—”
“Even if that’s the case, you still directly told them to pray for your victory, didn’t you?” Sienna pointed out.
Eugene impatiently retorted, “So what should I have told them to pray for? My defeat? In the coming war, once the fighting starts, of course, we need to win!”
Eugene rolled up the cape he had pulled off his shoulders and tossed it at Sienna’s face, but Sienna naturally wouldn’t allow the cape to just fall on her. She clicked her tongue once more as she waved her finger at the cloak, stopping it midair.
“Too slow,” Sienna teased.
“You really make me want to teach you a lesson,” Eugene growled.
“Let me just tell you, during the three months that you were fast asleep, I have only perfected my magic even further,” Sienna bragged.
“Just how long are you going to keep harping on about those damn three months,” Eugene sighed in frustration.
Sienna pouted, “It’s not like me not bringing them up will erase the fact that you were asleep for three whole months, now will it? Because really, even thinking about it still makes me feel sick to the stomach.”
She wasn’t just joking when she said this. Those three months that Eugene had spent in a coma had been painful for everyone, as they couldn’t help but feel a mounting sense of anxiety and tension with each day he failed to wake up. Eugene hadn’t heard each of their individual stories of what they had experienced while he was in a coma, but after being subjected to their constant care and attention since he had woken up, Eugene was left with no other choice but to shrug his shoulders and accept the blame.
“Since this might even be your final speech, it would have been nice if it had been a bit more elegant and impressive...,” Anise sighed regretfully. “Could it be that you’re just incapable of such a speech?”
“What do you mean, my final speech? Why would you say something so unlucky? If you’re truly my Saint, shouldn’t you be happy to show unconditional trust in me?” Eugene complained.
Anise scoffed, “There are plenty of people who will nod their heads no matter what you decide while praising and flattering you. As your Saint, that means I need to be able to provide you with a calmer perspective than anyone else.”
“But still... in any case, the reaction to my speech was good, wasn’t it?” Eugene argued.
In fact, there was no need to question it because Eugene himself could already feel the rapid rise of his faith and his divinity.
It was a different sensation from forcibly expanding his capacity for divine power by using Ignition. The divinity inherent to Eugene’s very being was constantly growing stronger. All of the faith that had been accumulated by the Light since the very start of this world was slowly fusing with Eugene.
However, even this growth had its limits. Compared to three hundred years ago, the common sense of the world had drastically shifted.
In today’s world, the demonfolk, Demon Kings, and Helmuth itself were no longer seen as pure evil. Unlike Eugene, who had experienced the era of the war, the people of today’s era didn’t hold such great hostility and hatred towards the demonfolk.
This was all due to how, from three hundred years ago until now, the demonfolk had shown great kindness to humanity under the Demon King of Incarceration’s reign. So much so that, even though a state of war had just been declared, barely any of Helmuth’s immigrants had fled the country.
In fact, among the humans living on the continent, there were quite a few who hoped that Helmuth would be the one to win the war. They truly wished for Helmuth to conquer the entire continent so that all of humanity would fall under the rule of the Demon King of Incarceration. These people, ignorant of what the end of the Oath truly meant or of the circumstances behind the Demon King of Destruction, wanted to enjoy the same level of livelihood that the humans in Helmuth enjoyed, which was rumored to be no different than a Utopia.
‘There’s not much time left,’ Eugene thought to himself.
The alliance and the Divine Army had been able to muster up so quickly, not just because Eugene Lionheart was serving as the focal point of their efforts. It was because Helmuth had been the first to declare a state of war, and then Pandemonium and Babel as a whole had been flown to the border to establish a frontline. Just like three hundred years ago, the Demon King of Incarceration had transformed into an invader, so the continent, which had no desire to be invaded once more, was forced to form an alliance.
The longer tensions were allowed to simmer on the frontline, the more likely it became that cracks would form in the hastily created alliance. Regardless of how the general staff held absolute trust in Eugene and would resolutely follow his orders, the common people would still grow anxious the longer they had to wait.
Currently, the alliance and the Divine Army were ignoring the spread of anti-war sentiment among the public, but if the anti-war sentiment was given time to spread from country to country, the Divine Army’s strength would be weakened before the war could even fully break out.
‘I might fall into a coma again,’ Eugene thought in concern.
In the coming battle against the Demon King of Incarceration, he would need to make use of all the means he had available. If necessary, he might have to use Ignition multiple times.
The problem with that was what would happen afterward. Even if he barely managed to eke out a victory by using Ignition, like he had with Noir, if he ended up losing consciousness for several months — then the Demon King of Destruction might just wake up before he could even open his eyes.
“It can’t be helped,” Eugene let out a sigh as he turned his head.
Through the window, the Demon King’s Castle, Babel, could be seen floating in the distant sky.
***
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