Chapter 1830: Truths and Secrets (Part 2)
âMy dear citizen, I bring you good news.â The hologram of King Meron and Queen Sylpha materialized, making the entire Kingdom sigh in relief.
âThe last time you heard my voice it was to announce the beginning of the war against the Mad Queen, Thrud Griffon, yet even though l bring you important news, thereâs nothing to be scared about.â
King Meron unrolled a parchment and started to read out loud.
âWith the following Royal Decree, the Crov\m, the Mage Association,
and the Army unanimously absolve Archmage Lith Verhen from all the charges related to the thieving Divine Beast Tiamat, and the traitor Meln Narchat, the Dead King.
âIt has been presented to the Royal Court irrefutable evidence that Meln Narchat alone conspired with the Undead Courts. He built his strength beyond our borders, in the Gorgon Empire, without ever having contact with the rest of his family.â
He presented the scans of several documents that Kamila recognized as those that Vladion had procured at the risk of his eternal life.
âAfter Archmage Verhenâs parents disowned his mad brother, he did all he could to warn the Kingdom about the threat Narchat posed to us, but we didnât listen to him. Itâs only our fault if good people like Count Lark, Marchioness Distar, and Archmage Manohar are dead.
âDespite our many shortcomings, Archmage Verhen has never ceased to protect the Kingdom to the best of his abilities. ltâs thanks to him that many cities have been recaptured. ltâs thanks to him that two Lost Cities have been destroyed.
âltâs thanks to him that the plague of Kandria was eradicated. To Archmage Verhen goes our gratitude. This message will be repeated at noon and hung on the plazas of our cities for everyone to read.
âUngrateful bastard!â Zinya said with a snarl, leaving Kamila ďŹabbergasted. âPlease, Kami, tell me that all that lip service was just because Meron is afraid that Lith might run off to the Desert and not because heâs really engaged with that stupid Princess.â
âCalm down, Zin. As far as I know, itâs the Royalsâ way to apologize for Morn charging Lith with treason.â Kamila said. âWhy are you so angry?
They were good news, like the King promised.â
âlâm angry because heâs all nice with people like Lith, yet didnât say a word about those like Zogar who risk their lives as well every day,
dirtying their hands so that the Royal Family can keep their own clean.â Zinya replied, pacing around the room with fury.
âWhat are you talking about, Zin? Is this the reason why you and Vastor argue?â Kamila asked.
âAmong many, yes.â She nodded. â1 didnât notice it at ďŹrst because we slept in different rooms, but after we got married, l couldnât miss how Zogar never gets away from his staff.
âThere are nights when he wakes up screaming and tries to clean his hands from blood that only he can see. I asked him many times what was wrong, but he never answers.
âThat was the ďŹrst crack in our happiness that only got worse when one night he was so shaken that he told me some of the things he did for this Kingdom. Terrible things no one knows about but that still haunt him.
âI told Zogar to stop being a Highmaster, that we could have moved anywhere and that I donât care for a big house or a noble title. Yet he refused, saying something stupid about honor and the promise he made to Manohar.â
A maid knocked on the door but Zinya sent her away and brought the cart inside herself.
âItâs easy to say such nonsense when you are not the one that stays at home, spending every second afraid to receive the condolence call.
When itâs not you who have to witness the man you love being incapable of having a good nightâs sleep because of how guilty he feels.â
âThatâs something that every man or woman married to a soldier has to experience during a war.â Kamila replied.
âThatâs not true. All the missions that Lith performs bring him glory,
honors, and medals. Those the Royals assign Zogar, instead, remain hidden to the public and give him nightmares.â
Zinya set up the table for them and served her sister a tasty soup.
They ate in silence for a while, before Kamila found the strength to ask:
âYou said you also argue for other reasons. Whatâs the matter?â
âKami, despite what everyone seems to think, Iâm not stupid.â Zinya put her spoon down before answering. âZogarâs nieces and nephews are not his relatives at all. Iâve seen the portraits of his children and exâwife.
âHow do you think it makes me feel being surrounded by women younger, smarter, wiser, and way more beautiful than me? Women who also spend lots of time with my husband, doing the gods know what, and that call him Dad?â
Kamila froze, realizing that Zinya had come to believe that the female hybrids had to be either Vastorâs bastard daughters or his lovers.
âAt ďŹrst, l thought he had one or more mistresses, but after living with Fallmug for so long, it wasnât hard understanding that it wasnât the case. Vastor never has the smell of another woman on him, never neglects me, nor does he give me gifts out of guilt.
âYet the fact that he still feels emotionally distant from me itâs unbearable. I know what Tezka is and Iâm pretty sure that the rest of the âfamilyâ is no different. I hate it that Zogar refuses to explain to me how they met and what they do together in that secret lab of theirs.â
âWhat if he is doing it to protect you?â Kamila said, incapable of raising her eyes from the ďŹoor. âWhat if he is just afraid that you would divorce him if you knew the truth and wants to protect your happiness?â
âls this why you broke up with Lith?â Zinya asked after lifting her sisterâs chin and forcing Kamila to look her in the eyes.
âYes.â Kamila couldnât help but draw a comparison between them.
She was the one who knew the truth, yet it had cost her the man she loved, the family she dreamed to have, and the parents she had never had. Kamila often wished that Lith had never come clean with her.
âDid he cheat on you?â Zinya said.
âDid he do something you would be ashamed of or that would break the trust you have in him?â
âYes. No. sort of. He did some stuffââ
âThen you made a mistake.â Zinya cut her short. âEver since I started living with Zogar, seeing what this country demands from him, and the scars he bears in his soul, l understood how cruel the life of a mage is.
âThey have the power of the gods and everyone expects them to use it wisely and to be infallible. But in the end, they are just people like you and me. They make mistakes like everyone else but theirs have terrible consequences.
âThe same powers that make them great when they do good, make them monsters when they do evil. With the same effort that takes me to slap a rude man Zogar can wipe out a city.
âI canât even imagine the burden and the temptation that having such power implies. I know very little about Zogarâs past mistakes, but itâs enough to admit that I canât judge him as if he was just a farmer or a merchant.â
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