âI donât know. It was gone before I knew it. Our species donât interact with humans at all, after all. We were considered monsters, so.â
It would take them two days to reach their destination, which meant that they needed to camp for a night.
Of course, Loren and Lapis was prepared for it, so when the sun set and the sky started turning red, they stopped travelling and started setting up camp.
Loren, who had literally been swung round and round by Dia and lost consciousness, had woken up on Lapisâ back, and was currently untying their stuff from the donkey, and was starting to pitch the tent.
Lapis, who dug a small hole and put dried grass and wood and started a fire, set up a stand using metal bars, put a pot on top of the fire, cut salted meat and vegetables and threw them in there, and let it simmer as she adjust the fire, was in the middle of asking question after question to Dia, who was sitting near the fire.
âWhy are Elders treated as vampires? From what Iâve heard, classifying them as undead itself sounds quite strange.â
âYou would have to ask whoever made the classification, but itâs most likely because of our inescapable characteristic, our blood impulse.â
Beings called Elders werenât affected by the weaknesses of normal vampires, which set them apart from them.
So, Lapis couldnât understand why they would be classified as vampires.
After all, they couldnât be stopped by running water, killed by silver, and they walked under the sun like it was nothing.
But Dia concluded that it was because of their blood impulses.
âOther than that, we are also relatively weak to Divine Arts, but the biggest reason is our blood impulse. Vampires suck blood, after all.â
Dia herself didnât know the reason why either.
But even Elders, who didnât need any food, couldnât escape from the impulse of wanting to suck blood.
âWe canât do anything about it. We canât substitute it with animal blood, and blood from cultivated humans donât last long. Once the thirst comes, even the will of an Elder canât resist it.â
âSo that means youâve done it quite a few times.â
Although Lapis asked it easily, her words had a heavy meaning to them.
Having blood sucked by a vampire meant that the person would either turn into a low rank undead or become a normal vampire, and either way, it would mean death for that individual.
âWell, yes. For us, one person a year is enough, so we wonât make much of a mess as other vampires.â
âThat would still be five hundred people. Thatâs quite the number.â
According to Dia, she was over five hundred years old.
Since Dia wasnât a vampire that was born after having her blood sucked, that meant that there was a time when she was young, so although the number of people may not equal her age, it meant that it was at least that many people.
âIâll leave it to you to think if five hundred people in five hundred years is many or few.â
The number five hundred made it seem like a lot, but when seen as over the course of five hundred years, it seemed small.
When considering the number of lives lost in battle over five hundred years, its number would be hundreds of times more, so compared to that, it seemed like a very small number.
âIf you think about the race as a whole, wouldnât it be quite a bit?â
As Loren said as he hammered in the nail to keep the ropes down, Lapis came back to her senses.
If it were Dia alone, it would be five hundred people during five hundred years, but with number of all the Elders combined, the number would be many times higher.
âThereâs a bit more than a dozen of us.â
Dia said it like it was nothing, but it meant that there were over a dozen victims each year.
It was way smaller compared to deaths in battle.
But Lapis thought that if there were more than a dozen people going missing everywhere, people would find out about it and would become a problem.
âWe have villages of humans that supply us blood, after all.â
âYou mean you are keeping humans?â
It was an unsettling thought.
Noticing that Lapisâ tone got harder, Dia shook her head.
âRegardless of how it looks, we donât have such intentions. As lords of the land, we require one person to be given to us each year, and in return we give the villages many blessings. Itâs a deal.â
âSo, youâre keeping them, right?â
âI told you, regardless of how it looks. I believe itâs better than kidnapping people and killing them. The villages usually select the oldest person.â
âIâve never heard of such village.â
If there were any sort of interactions with other people, through supplies or information, there was no way such villages could be hidden from the age of the gods.
The information would slip out from somewhere, and nations would gather their forces to put an end to it.
âWe hide them, we protect them, and we isolate them.â
Dia explained that by making sure the village only interacted within itself and by making it so that outsiders could never find it, and on top of that, making sure that its existence was kept secret, the Elders had maintained these villages that supplied blood for many years.
âWas it okay for us to hear that? Donât try to kill us later or something like that.â
Loren was worried since Dia was telling them things that had been kept secret until now.
Telling them about things they shouldnât know could mean that she wasnât going to let them go alive, but Dia denied such thoughts in a light tone.
âItâs fine. Even if you tell others about this, they would just laugh it off.â
âThe fact that we heard it from an Elder herself would erase the credibility.â
Adventurers usually dealt with normal vampires.
It wasnât something a copper rank adventurer could handle, and even for iron ranks, they would have to expect large casualties.
Trues were beings that heroes, whole nations, or large organizations would have to move to try to subdue.
Either of them still seemed realistic.
But when it came to Elders, the credibility of the story would thin out.
There were very few stories of people meeting Elders.
Although their existence was known, to ordinary people, they were beings within stories, so it lacked realism.
âItâs not like we arenât outgoing, but we donât reveal our identities either. People wonât realize we are Elders unless we tell them, anyways. This time is a special case.â
Dia had revealed her identity because Shayna, who was within Loren, realized that she was, and if Loren didnât say the word âElderâ out loud, Dia would not have told them.
âSince we are on the topic, the point of this job is related to those villages.â
Loren, who finished pitching the tent, walked over to the fire and sat on the ground.
Although Lapis didnât let Dia out of her sight, her hand stirred the contents of the pot, making sure they didnât burn onto it, and threw in some salt and other spices every now and then to adjust the taste.
âActually, I am the youngest among the Elders.â
âAt five hundred years old?â
âThe others are older, and Elders themselves occur naturally, so thereâs no way of knowing when a new one will appear.â
Elders did not have biological parents.
That was why it was impossible to know when another would appear, and it was possible that no other had appeared for the past five hundred years.
As a result, the youngest Elder was over five hundred years old.
âYoung Elders live under the protection of another Elder, and until that guardian decides you are ready to be on your own, you receive education, building up knowledge and power.â
âWhich means that you are under the wing of someone else. Oh Loren, could you taste this?â
Lapis took a small scoop of what she was stirring, poured it into a bowl, and handed it to Loren.
Loren wondered if it was something to do during such a serious conversation, but Dia didnât take any notice and just nodded.
âEven now, I am under the protection of another Elder. Oh, thereâs nothing I could tell you about the other Elders. I donât have the right to tell information about others, after all.â
âNot interested anyway. Lapis, I think this needs more salt. Itâs bland.â
Loren had no intention of having any sort of interactions with beings that humans couldnât handle.
Information on other Elders would be useless for him, and to him, the taste of the stew Lapis was making was more important to him.
âI think you should get used to light tasteâŠbut okay. Oh, you can keep going.â
Even as she exhorted at Lorenâs thought, she threw in extra salt into the pot.
âThis feels sort of unsatisfactory, but whatever. When an Elder leaves the protection of his or her guardian, they are given land to use as a base, as well as the villages of humans within that land.â
âSo, you meanâŠâ
They had heard from Dia that their destination was a ruin.
7
From the flow of the conversation, Lapis guessed that it was the land that she was given to use as a base, but Dia shrugged.
âI was just told by my guardian to go there, so I donât know if that is the land that will be given to me. It might be, or it might be where there is information of a different land.â
âSo, itâs like a test to see if youâre ready to be on your own?â
âYou could say that.â
âIs it alright to ask for help?â
From what Loren had heard, it was a test to see if a young Elder could be on her own, so he wondered if it was okay to ask others for assistance.
Dia nodded at his question.
âUsing others to reach your goal is a type of skill, after all.â
âIf itâs just reaching where your guardian told you to go, it doesnât seem that dangerous.â
âIf so, I wouldnât be asking for help.â
At Lapisâ optimistic guess, Dia looked up at the sky and sighed.
âFirst, the guardian will ready some obstacles. On top of that, there should be some interference from other Elders, so it wonât be that easy.â
âWhy would other Elders interfere?â
Lapis cocked her head slightly in wonder.
Loren snorted quietly, as if he had heard something boring, and told her as he handed the bowl back.
âThere are factions among Elders as well, I bet.â
âItâs as you say. Two beings with will start an argument, while three will start a power struggle, and that goes for Elders as well.â
âIt seems like weâre in the middle of something very troublesome, donât you think? Should we have gotten a better down payment?â
Being able to be on her own meant that she was being recognized as an adult, a proper Elder.
While under someone elseâs protection, she wouldnât have a say in matters, and the others wouldnât count her when making decisions and such, but once she became an adult, she would be included in all those things.
Loren and Lapis didnât know what kind of factions there were among slightly over a dozen Elders, but for this case, it meant that Dia would join the faction that her guardian was in, and it would be a nuisance to the other Elders, therefore they would try to interfere.
âIf you manage to become an adult, would you join your guardian?â
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âMost likely. I owe it to my guardian for protecting me until now, as well as sharing land and people with me. I wonât turn as soon as I become an adult.â
Dia smiled after saying that, and then said to Loren and Lapis, whose expressions were clouded with the thoughts of the troubles yet to come.
âSo that is why I ask you two to help me become an adult. Donât make such faces. If I succeed, Iâll think of extra payment, and on the way there, Iâll answer as many questions that my knowledge allows me to.â
âThen I guess we should make the most out of it.â
Scooping the finished stew into a bowl, Lapis immediately started asking Dia questions, and Loren, who wasnât that interested, received the bowl from Lapis and started eating, while telling himself that since it was a job that he had accepted, he must see it to the end.