I, Fay Hanse Diestburg, quietly whispered to myself and stopped walking.
Before my eyes, a relatively wide animal trail continued into the forestâŠor at least *it gave the impression that it did*. I wasnât as careless as to keep walking on the path just because it was there though.
I had come to this âForest of Nightfallâ to repay my debt to the merchant Dvorg Tsarrich, but Feli, who joined me in this expedition, explicitly told me not to go off on my own.
I really should just do some recon today.
So I said to myself as I slowly extended a hand towards the forest.
As I did, the scenery in a 50 cm range ahead changed completely.
âIllusion arts.â
Just like ripples forming on a water surface, the scenery waved and trembled around my palm.
As I was told, the forest truly swayed its visitors, tried to make them lose their way.
âWell, how should I put itâŠâ
What purpose did that illusion serve?
My reaction was sort of vague, but touching the illusion let me know the answer, so I frowned.
âThis is a bizarre way to use illusions, thatâs for sure.â
This illusion did not prevent people from entering. It did try, however, to make them lose their way inside.
In other words, there was something important inside the forest, but the creator of the illusions wasnât trying to keep people away from it. They hid it to a certain degree but wished for people to find it too.
I could understand the creatorâs intention and called it âbizarreâ.
âTroublesome illusions are better off gone though, if possible.â
I was told that this âForest of Nightfallâ existed a long time ago. Thus, the possibility that the illusion had to be cast continuously is extremely slim.
There was only one possible conclusion: a magic tool was at work here.
So I thought and started walking again.
I did not proceed straight ahead, however, but to the side. Walking along the edges of the forest.
In order to keep an illusion of this scale active without human intervention, usually, there were items set up in the four corners of the area affected by the illusion, functioning as its core. As long as the creator wasnât one of those prodigies born once every century or so.
I started walking, looking for those cores.
Something still bothered me, however.
I wasnât an illusion specialist by any means, but even I knew that much. And this illusion has surely troubled many people over the years. Yet, this forest still existed, undisturbed.
Could it be a coincidence?
Or was there a proper reason?
ââŠthis might not go easily.â
Did no one ever find the cores?
Or did the cores not exist in the first place?
âŠor maybe they couldnât be destroyed.
I continued walking around the silent forest, while analyzing the possibilities and how to deal with them in my head.
I could not detect the presence of any creature, nor did I hear a single leaf rustling. Impressed by the detail of the illusion, I walked for a few more minutes. Then, a spartan stone structure entered my field of sight.
âHm?â
A stone slab was setup in the middle of a small clearing, as if it had been abandoned or thrown away.
âI might as well take a look.â
If Feli or Ratifah were close, the small, bell-shaped magic tools we carried to let each other know of our positions, would be ringing incessantly.
I could act as I pleased until they found me.
So I said to myself as I approached the stone slab.
It was probably fairly old, as moss grew on it in places. It didnât look weathered by the years, however: I couldnât spot the slightest crack on its surface.
I quickly understood that it had been crafted in a special manner.
âThe writingâŠno good, I canât read this.â
The stone slab was inscribed with faint characters, but, at first, they looked like scribbles to me.
Their shape was simple and blocky, but each character was engraved clearly.
âThis stone slab is probably one of the cores that create the illusion. I could destroy it, butâŠâ
I thought that I should either wait for Feli and the others, or look for characters I could read, and changed my mind.
I looked more closely at the slab and saw that the same string of characters was engraved on its four sides, but a certain part stuck out especially so. I recognized the writing.
âThis isâŠa name?â
I rubbed away the moss with my hands, revealing the characters under it.
âIt readsâŠRudolâŠf?â
For some reason, I felt a chill pervade my whole body.
I could read those characters, for whatever reason. That in itself was not a problem.
The issue was thatâŠwhy did the name âRudolfâ sound like something I should knowâŠ?
ââŠâŠâŠâŠâ
My throat felt suddenly parched.
.
â Failure is the mother of successâŠyouâve heard the words before, right?
.
âŠ.!!!
I swallowed my breath.
I knew that I wasnât going to see the owner of the voice anywhere, yet couldnât help but turn around.
âŠthere was no one behind me, of course.
âNo, it canât be.â
I looked again at the stone slab and expressed firm denial.
âThereâs just no way. How the hell could it be possibleâŠâ
I continued to talk, to convince myself, but my confidence rapidly vanished.
ââŠitâs a coincidence. Just a random coincidence.â
After seeing the name Rudolf, however, I began to feel that I knew this place, I knew the âForest of Nightfallâ already.
Fay Hanse Diestburg, however, has never been here before. Without a doubt.
ââŠitâs a coincidence.â
I pushed up my front bangs, scratched through my hair. The feelings deep in my heart poured out.
I didnât actually know this place.
But I knew the person that tried building this forestâŠor rather, this stone slab. It was hidden behind the sheer magnitude of the memories of my mentor and the others, but I remembered it.
My heart pounded.
Together with the intense heartbeat, I felt a sort of heat come over me.
.
â I want to engrave it, here and now!!! I donât want it to be forgotten!!! The fact that we lived in this damned hell on earth together!!! Let it be remembered forever!!!
.
It was a desperate scream, accompanied by spitting blood.
The words of a man who couldnât achieve the simplest form of happiness.
That scene, those words, broken by sobbing and wailing, were etched deep in my memories.
My fingers trembled.
My body felt burning hot from the core, as if I had been doused in boiling water. A sharp, static noise broke through my thoughts and erased them.
The rippling static noise took over my body â then took away my breath.
~
â This cannot be forgotten. No matter what. So many despaired, unable to achieve deaths as human beingsâŠthis infernal history cannot be allowed to repeat!! Thus I wish to leave itâŠI leave my legacy of misfortune for the future. I leave it for these mistakes never to be repeated. It might be nothing but humiliating for youâŠbut if we leave this history, one day, the world we have wished for will comeâŠ! An age when people are not forced to pick up a sword to survive!!
So many were hurt.
So many wept in sadness.
So many suffered.
There had to be a reason.
It had to happen.
It was a history necessary for the future.
To give birth to a bright, positive future.
The peace we longed for so much was going to come.
A world where every day was a day lived fearing death. Horrible, isnât it? So weâve got to change it.
The gods will save us?
âŠwe donât have time to waste spewing bullshit like that. We fight desperately every day to survive in this world filled with regret. We might believe sweet lies sometimes, but we donât have the luxury of prayer.
We can only trust what we see with our own eyesâŠthatâs what we decided. No matter how small it might beâŠ
So, hey â want to bet on the biggest idealist fools of the century?
~
A flood of memories, pouring and vanishing in an instant.
But that instant was more than enough for me.
âAahâŠyeah. I knowâŠI know the guy who wanted to leave thisâŠâ
âAncient Ruinsâ
The words crossed my mind and a piece of the puzzle fit perfectly in. A piece that shouldnât be placed.
I just couldnât accept it.
If I did, I would also accept the fact that this world wasâŠthis world was that worldâsâŠ
I just couldnât bring myself to accept it.
Even if I knew the person called Rudolf.
No matter how much I tried to pretend, the suspicions born in my mind werenât going to disappear.
ââŠfirst the âAbominationsâ, now thisâŠyou canât be seriousâŠâ
A sticky, nauseating kind of sweat started dripping down my back.