Vikir and Aiyen approached through the foul odor and heat of the corpses.
âIs this âŠâŠ?â
Aiyenâs eyes narrowed.
Rococoâs hunters were talkative, even in death.
They were screaming with every fiber of their being why they were dead.
There were signs of vomit and diarrhea everywhere, signs that they had tried to warm their chilled bodies with bonfires and fallen leaves, and, crucially, red spots on their skin.
Aiyen swallowed hard.
âSo this is what warriors look like when they come out to hunt.â
Only the relatively healthy would have gone hunting.
He had no idea what the condition of those left behind in the village would be.
âLetâs go.â
Vikir led the way.
Vikir and Aiyen walked straight through the channel and into Rococoâs territory.
Normally, they claim a large radius as their territory and leave markers along the way.
They usually hang skulls or corpses to warn trespassers, but strangely, the markers hadnât been updated.
They had been left up for a long time and were already covered in moss and mold, making them hard to recognize.
It was uncharacteristic of the Rococo, who were usually diligent about warning off intruders.
âSomething must have happened to the village.â
Aiyen pushed through the Rokokoâs boundaries and headed for the low-lying hills that were their home.
There was no sign of life inside the village.
Nor was there any smoke, despite the fact that it was past mealtime.
At the entrance to the village, Vikir and Aiyen stopped in their tracks.
It wasnât the lack of guards. There were no people wandering around inside the village at all.
The haphazardly constructed barracks were empty, their floors overgrown with weeds.
Crude household items lay abandoned on the ground everywhere.
âWhere did they all move to?â
Aiyen frowned and walked into the barracks, pulling on his insignia.
The moment.
Yue Yue Yue-.
A huge swarm of flies burst out of the barracks.
The stench of filth and rotting meat was overpowering.
Inside the tent lay three small children and a woman.
They all looked as if they had died not long ago.
Vikir walked past the insignia of the other barracks next door.
âThe others are similar.â
The natives of Rococo had been exterminated before they could even get out of their barracks.
Most of the bodies were rotting and unrecognizable, but the skin of the few that were still in relatively good shape after their deaths was invariably marked with red spots.
âWhat is this, a plague?â
Aiyen said, shaking off the chills that ran down his spine.
Jungle warriors are particularly sensitive to poisonous plagues. No wonder Aiyen was so frightened.
ââŠâŠ.â
Vikirâs mouth fell open, speechless.
Now that he thought about it, he had heard of this event before his regression.
ââŠâŠThe Red Death.â
The memory became clearer the more he stuttered.
A dreaded plague called the Red Death had certainly been circulating around this time.
A class one plague that killed nearly every barbarian and similar in the jungle.
It was so widespread that it even reached the borders of the Empire.
Once infected, the victims were crippled, lying helpless and slowly dying.
Their metabolism is extremely slow, and it takes a long time to die.
Red spots would appear all over the body, vomiting and diarrhea would occur, lethargy and pain would overwhelm them, and they would finally collapse and die.
The contagion was so rapid that the savages feared that mere eye contact with a sick person was contagious.
âHow did they cure it?â
Bikir searched his memory a bit more. It was so long ago that it seemed to take a moment to recall.
Then.
âNo, slave!â
A hand tugged at Vikirâs collar.
He turned to see Aiyen shouting urgently.
âQuickly, we must get out of here!â
âWhy?â
âWhy? Itâs a curse! Itâs a curse from the gods!â
For once, she was actually scared.
Bikir grinned and grabbed her wrist.
âDonât worry. Itâs a plague.â
âWhat!? Thatâs even worse! We have to get out of here! This place is cursed! You Rococo bastards, every time you practice your unholy commands, you end up like thisâŠâŠ!â
âCalm down, itâs not that easily transmitted.â
Vikir glanced back at Rokokoâs village.
Aiyen jumped in surprise, but she didnât run off on her own.
She merely shivered, clinging to Vikirâs collar and following closely behind.
âUghâŠâŠ ugh. Arenât we really being cursed?â
âIf youâre so scared, go back first.â
âAnd if you die because youâre cursed?â
âIf you die, you die.â
Vikir answered nonchalantly, and Aiyen, who had been trotting along behind him, shouted.
âWho cares!â
ââŠâŠ?â
âOf course itâs me,â Vikir thought, but didnât bother to say it out loud.
Well, whatever.
After a quick walk around their village, Vikir realized that the Rococo werenât wiped out.
They just seemed to have moved on, leaving their dead and sick behind.
âHmm, well. If there were carriers among the survivors, the outcome would be similar no matter where they fled.
Vikir sympathized with the survivors, who had been forced to make a desperate choice.
But there was no guarantee that they would be safe from the Red Death.
Still, this was a chance to learn more about the mysterious life of the Rococo tribe.
Vikir searched the Rococoâs barracks, grabbing a few books and other items that seemed important and stuffing them into a sack.
They would one day make a great scholarly contribution to the study of the enemy and the barbarian tribes of the Black Mountains.
Just then.
I heard Aiyenâs screams from outside the barracks.
âKaaaaaah!â
It was an urgent scream, and Vikir quickly ran out of the barracks.
Then Aiyenâs terrified screams became more pronounced.
âThe curse! Cursed child!â
A terrible fear of the plague is characteristic of all the natives of depths.
Vikir silently shifts his gaze to look in the direction Aiyen is looking.
He saw the child standing on the outskirts of the village, next to the smallest and most shabby barracks.
ââŠâŠImperial?
Vikir squinted.
The child did not appear to be from the Rococo.
Could he have just turned five?
She had black hair, red eyes, and skin as white as snow.
She was standing barefoot next to a crumbling, shabby barracks, and she didnât seem to want to leave.
Behind the barracks rose a crude stone cairn that looked like it hadnât been built for long.
A few purple flowers, apparently freshly plucked, lay haphazardly in front of it.
âAaahhhh! It must be a ghost, a cursed child of the forest god! We must flee, Vikir! You go first, Iâll be right behind you! Awww, my legs are weakâŠâŠ!â
Aiyen was shaking and sobbing.
Vikir smiled wryly at the sight of the child he hadnât seen in the past two years of living together.
But aside from that, she felt like she needed to know who this child was.
âI can recognize the last of the Rococo tribe.â
Vikir walked forward and sat down in front of the child, bringing them to eye level.
The girl flinched as if frightened, but she didnât avoid Bikirâs hand on her head.
âWho are you?â
ââŠâŠ.?â
Vikir asked, but the girl didnât answer, just shook her head.
Vikir asked a few more times, but the child didnât answer.
Instead, it listed a few words in a stuttering tone.
âRococo. Slave. Kitchen slave.â
The words were a clumsy mix of rococo and imperial.
Vikir couldnât help but think of context in the string of words.
âSo you were a slave in the Rococo. Whatâs your name?â
ââŠâŠPomerian.â
Bikir nodded at the girlâs answer.
âYour mother must have given you an imperial name.
Pomerian wasnât a very common name, but it wasnât a very difficult one either.
Either way, it was clear that the girl was from the Empire.
Without further delay, Vikir moved on to the next topic.
He was just about to ask what had happened to the Rococo tribe.
The next words out of the girlâs mouth stiffened Vikirâs body.
ââŠâŠ la Baskerville.â
The moment. Bikirâs body froze as if struck by lightning.
The Baskervillesâ last name, the middle name âLa,â which is only given to direct female relatives.
Not many people in the family have been given the middle names Les or La.
Bikirâs eyes widened, and the girl tried to hide behind the barracksâ pillars as if frightened.
No sound escaped her throat for a moment.
Thatâs what happens when a person is too surprised.
Unable to hide his disbelief, Vikir raised his hand and wiped his face a few times.
After drying his face, he regained his composure.
âChild, come here.â
ââŠâŠ.â
The girl hid behind a pillar, only peeking her head out.
Vikir wondered what he could do to calm her down.
Just then, Aiyen, who had been in and out of the barracks, threw something at Vikir.
âHey. Thereâs this inside. Ew, itâs not cursed, is it?â
Vikir took what Aiyen tossed him.
It was a small pendant made of gold.
The front of the brooch was embossed with the tooth-like symbol of the Baskervilles.
Aiyen remembered the Baskervillesâ emblem from the vial of potion Vikir had given her once.
âIsnât that your familyâs symbol?â
ââŠâŠ.â
That lent a little more credence to what the girl had said.
Vikir traced his finger across the Baskerville crest on the pendant.
The pendant was made in a style that was quite old, an accessory that could only have been fashionable thirty years ago.
âŠClick!
Vikir opened the pendant.
Inside was a small portrait drawn with extreme precision.
âThis?â
Vikir squinted at the portrait.
It depicted a nameless young woman, a young man, and a girl who appeared to be in her early teens.
The young woman had beautiful blonde hair and blue eyes, the young man had the dark hair and red eyes characteristic of the Baskervilles, and the girl in between had dark hair and red eyes as well.
Vikir recognized the young man in the portrait at a glance.