Chapter 300: How far did you research? (4)
My curiosity grew just as rapidly as Bedler’s intense gaze continued. If he was going to bring up heresies out of nowhere to pique my interest, then he should take responsibility instead of clamming up like that. Wasn’t it just cruel to leave me hanging? One of the two most frustrating ways to talk to someone was to start a conversation and then abruptly stop, and the second was—
“Ah, I apologize.”
Luckily, Bedler seemed to realize his rudeness and hastily broke the silence. Fine, I’ll let it slide since he spoke up before I had to push him.
“As I mentioned earlier, I sensed the presence of heresy in you, brother. However, I can’t quite pinpoint which god’s influence it is.”
Still, my curiosity wasn’t fully satisfied, so I subtly glanced at Tannian. From the way Bedler was talking, there really seemed to be some heretical aura I wasn’t aware of. But how could Tannian, who I’d spent almost a year with, fail to notice an aura strong enough for a stranger to detect immediately?
I might have brushed it off as a lack of experience if Tannian were a novice priest. However, Tannian was the next in line to become a saint. If anyone would have missed it, it should’ve been Bedler—not Tannian.
“I’m not skilled at detecting heresy.”
Sensing my gaze, Tannian quickly defended himself, saying that this wasn’t his area of expertise.
That sounded odd. Just last summer, I watched Tannian use his holy tracking spell to utterly dismantle the Twilight Cult. It was like having a god’s-eye view of everything. And now he was telling me that he was weak at detecting heresy? If that was the case, then only someone like Enen would count as strong.
“Couldn’t you just use your tracking spell to find out?”
“Haha, the tracking spell only works on heretics who have received direct power from a god. Traces left behind are a different matter entirely.”
That didn’t make sense. Wasn’t it still heretical energy whether it was a heretic or just a trace?
“If I go into more detail, I’d have to delve into theology... Do you really need me to?”
“No.”
Sensing an incoming overload of unnecessary information, I shook my head firmly. I didn’t need to know that much.
“We heresy archivists are especially sensitive to heretical energies. In this field, at least, I’m more of an expert than Tannian.”
Bedler’s additional explanation seemed reasonable, so I decided to let it go. I didn’t know much about holy spells or priests in the first place, so it would be ridiculous for me to argue. If the experts say so, then I’ll just trust them. There was no point in overthinking it.
Besides, it made sense that different priests would specialize in different areas. Knights and mages had specialized skill trees, so it only made sense that priests would, too.
“Brother, if it’s not too much trouble...”
Apparently still unable to figure out the source of the trace, Bedler tilted his head in thought before speaking cautiously.
“Could you remove your clothes?”
?
My mind went blank for a moment.
***
Naturally, he wasn’t asking me to strip for some inappropriate reason.
“It’s just that relying solely on intuition has its limits. I think I’ll need to confirm things more directly by looking at the trace.”
It was like asking someone to remove their mask to see their face because just hearing their voice wasn’t enough. Well, that was true. Looking directly would be more reliable than relying on the aura he felt under my clothes.
“Of course, this is purely my personal curiosity, so please feel free to refuse. I’m actually sorry for even asking such a thing...”
“It’s fine. Taking off my shirt isn’t a problem.”@@novelbin@@
Although Bedler stepped back a little, perhaps noticing how strange his request was, backing out was a crime since he’d piqued my curiosity this much. Now that he’d caught my interest, I was curious myself.
And I realized something after he asked me to remove my clothes. I should’ve known earlier when Bedler was staring at my upper body.
It’s the scar.
A scar ran from my left shoulder down to near my right hip, like a long highway. It was a parting gift from Kagan, who gave me a final strike before he died. No matter how I looked at it, it could only be that. He had muttered something about ‘the Eternal Blue Sky’ when he cut me, so it must be connected.
“Ah, this is it.”
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