I Revived My Maid, Now She Hungers for My Blood
Chapter 106: The Hand of Faye
In the procession, the kids stared at each other, shell-shocked. Whispers started, slithering through the group. đđđđđŹđđđˇđđżđđĄ.đđ¸đ
What could a Warden have done to get a bounty put on his head like that? To be executed, right there on the spot?
They could barely cobble together a theory. Most of them barely knew what had happened back in the Orchard.
Only Pandora was quiet, her mind racing.
Dulles... heâd been brought back by Faye, she was sure of it. The resurrected Dulles had been doing his Warden duties, loyal as a dog. But he knew nothing of his own crazed advancement plan, or of Pandora, the enemy whoâd killed him.
Faye must have wiped his memory.
If that was the case... the sudden appearance of the Discipline Hall, this whole scene with Dulles⌠was it possible that this was also Fayeâs handiwork?
From the perspective of the ultimate beneficiary⌠wasnât it⌠her?
This terrifying thought surfaced in Pandoraâs mind. She flipped it over and over, examining it from every angle. Dullesâs death, in front of everyoneâit conveniently buried everything that had happened in the Orchard. From now on, for those events, dead men tell no tales.
This⌠wasnât this immensely beneficial to her?
Before, sheâd been worried that the commotion at the Wardenâs base might be discovered by the Demon Hunter Academy, earning her a one-way ticket to a punishment cell.
Now⌠that wasnât such a big concern anymore.
She was almost amazed by her own audacious, almost insane, conjecture. But on second thought, there was nothing unreasonable about it. In fact⌠it was perfectly logical.
âŚâŚâŚâŚâŚâŚ
Not long after the man from the Discipline Hall left, the procession, in a heavy and strange silence, set off once more.
Along the way, they saw no one else like the grim, cold apprentice from before. It was even difficult to spot any of the older, more serious-looking senior apprentices.
The hushed whispers, born from witnessing the brutal execution, continued to spread until Poppyâs emotionless voice cut through them again.
âActually, itâs rare to see senior apprentices on the campus grounds themselves.â
Poppy led from the front, her tone matter-of-fact, like she was reading a report.
The narrative has been illicitly obtained; should you discover it on Amazon, report the violation.
âThatâs because the time any batch of freshmen can spend here is limited.â
She paused, letting that little bombshell sink in.
âThe time limit is three months.â
âFor those three months, youâre on campus. Youâll learn the fundamentals. Youâll master how to fight with your body, with tools.â
âAfter that⌠youâre out.â
Her gaze swept over the new faces that had clearly grown tense upon hearing this.
ââOutsideâ⌠in that city of ruins⌠is where your much, much longer apprenticeship truly begins.â
âOn campus, itâs relatively safe. The learning process is tense and exhausting, yeah, but at least there are basic guarantees. Itâs safe.â
âYouâll have a much deeper understanding of this once you get âoutsideâ.â
Poppy reminded them, her tone as calm and chilling as falling icicles.
In truth, she didnât need to say a word. They already understood what that deadline meant. Theyâd seen it on the walk over. Theyâd seen a group get jumped, their supplies hard-won from a derelict store snatched away. Theyâd seen people curled up in corners, clothes in tatters, their eyes unnervingly numb. Theyâd even seen the desiccated corpses of the ones whoâd starved on the roadside, left where they fell.
Life out here was a zero-sum game.
Therefore, they had to spend these three months desperately mastering everything they could. Otherwise, once they left the Academyâs protection, they would⌠be unable to take a single step.
Perhaps because everyone felt that immense pressure, the kind that could crush them, the procession, moving through the vast industrial zone, fell silent.
Everyone tried their best to memorize every place name, every rule that Poppy introduced.
Poppy offered no words of comfort. She merely, coldly, led everyone through the main areas of the campus, mentioning some unwritten, yet universally observed, hidden rules.
Among them, the teaching district, the dorms, and the mess hall were naturally the most important, the places theyâd frequent the most in the coming months.
However, what interested Pandora the most was the library.
It was an enormous, uniquely shaped, triangular building. Apprentices came and went through its heavy iron doors in a constant stream. It seemed many people shared her line of thought.
But that was normal. The theoretical instruction for Demon Hunter apprentices was scarce, to the point where it could be described as âlacking.â So, to master the necessary knowledge, apprentices had to learn to study on their own, learning to find what they needed in a sea of materials, and to read, understand, and digest it on their own. And the library, naturally, was an indispensable part of that.
In the afternoon, Poppy had given them a cursory tour of most of the locations.
But there were still some areas she didnât take them to, didnât even mention, because they werenât generally accessible to apprentices like them. Only by obtaining permission from the person in charge of those areasâusually, a powerful Demon Hunter mentorâcould they be granted entry. Therefore, to a certain extent, these areas became forbidden zones for apprentices. Trespass without permission, and you might be killed on the spotâand the Academy wouldnât be held responsible!
âThat one, for example, is the Discipline Hall⌠if you can help it, itâs best not to have any dealings with the Discipline Hall.â
Poppy raised a hand, pointing to a distance, at a somber, oppressive black structure built entirely from some kind of black rock. Its style was completely at odds with the industrial feel of the surrounding buildings.
âThe Discipline Hall is responsible for maintaining order within the Academy.â
Her voice dropped a few notes.
âTheir methods of punishment are cruel and filled with torment... they are feared by many apprentices.â
âHowever, the Academy doesnâs have many rules. So as long as you donât do anything stupid, itâs not that easy to run into someone from the Discipline Hall.â
Having just witnessed the bloody and efficient methods of the Discipline Hall with their own eyes, their understanding of Poppyâs warning was, naturally, visceral.