Deep Sea Embers-Chapter 124
Chapter 124 βProjection Of The Fragmentβ
In the prayer room, where theyβre being watched by the goddessβs statue, the two longtime friends fell into silence after the shocking scene.
βWhat exactly is that I saw?β Heidi asks after being the first to come out of that shock. fπΏπ²eπeπο½ΰ«¦πππ.com
Vanna hesitated briefly before speaking softly: βPerhapsβ¦ that was exactly what the sun heretics had been looking for.β
βWhat the sun heretics have been looking for?β Heidi froze for a moment, βYou meanβ¦β
βSun fragment, a shard from their godβ¦β Vanna nodded lightly without waiting for Heidi to finish, βPerhaps only the sun fragment is worthy of the power in your vision.β
While saying this, Vanna slowly raised her head and stared at the icon of the storm goddess: βAfter allβ¦ the heretics claimed that the fragments came from their real sunβ¦β
Heidi was stunned, and her expression suddenly changed for the worse: βIf something like that really appeared in the real world, then Pland would be in immense danger. Thereβs no way it can be as it is nowβ¦β
βMy theory is that itβs been sealed,β Vanna nodded in agreement, βintel from the church indicates the sun fragment appeared eleven years ago. But now, it appears the event back then is nothing more than a leak from the real thing. The actual relic is still slumbering somewhere inside the cityβ¦β
βAnd now those sun heretics want to wake that thing up?!β Heidi looked horrified, βAre they trying to destroy Pland entirely?!β
βThis is not the first day youβve dealt with those crazy nutcases,β Vanna shot a sideway glance at her friend, βyou should know about their mental state better than anyone. For those suntists, anything is worth it to resurrect their black sun. What are a few city-states in their eye? If they can use the entire world as timber to fuel their godβs revival, Iβm sure they would do it!β
Heidi gawked her mouth for the longest time before gurgling out an incoherent mess as the frustration gripped the doctorβs mind.
βThe most crucial question now is what happened when you saw that vision. What happened to you, what happened to those around you, and what happened to the museum itself. Only by understanding this will we understand where the sun fragment is sleeping.β
ββ¦β¦ No, I canβt remember the details,β Heidi tapped her forehead lightly, βbut now Iβm sure I saw its projection when I was unconscious. Thatβs when I performed the emergency hypnosis on myself to preserve important cluesβ¦ Let me think about it. At that time, I was rescued and temporarily placed in a certain room on the museumβs first floorβ¦ According to what they told me after coming out, that room is close to the main exhibition areaβ¦β
Heidi struggled to remember, so she turned to her friend for help: βCanβt you conclude that the clue is in the museum based on this?β
βItβs difficult. Merely from the occult perspective, what you saw isnβt the main body, so we have no way of knowing where the main body is. For all we know, the museum is merely an exhaust valve that happened by accident. Whatβs more, a humanβs consciousness is fragile when not in control. You couldβve crossed paths with it by accident, and now the connection has already moved somewhere else.β
Vanna explained patiently and then suddenly shook her head: βOf course, we will still conduct a search of the museum at the highest level and maintain monitoring afterward. After all, anomalies and visions are always irregular. Maybe the fragment will really remain in the museum in another sealed form. Even if not, we may still be able to find some clues in the fire to explain why the βriftβ happened to appear in the museumβ¦β
βBut the follow-up search has nothing to do with you. From a security point of view, youβd better stay away from that museum for the next month.β
βOf course, I canβt wait to keep my distance from this,β Heidi nodded vehemently, βIβve had enough bad luck!β
Vanna silently looked at her friend, who had been unlucky since she was a child, with a face of wanting to add something, but in the end, she kept it inside. Then out of nowhere, the inquisitor remembered something else on her mind: βBy the way, who were you rescued by?β
βTwo girls who are still in school and a man who looks to be in his forties.β Heidi thought for a moment, βAnd coincidentally, one of those two girls happened to be my fatherβs student whom he made a home visit the other day. The man is her uncleβ¦ didnβt I mention it to you? His name is Duncan, and heβs the owner and manager of an antique store.β
ββ¦β¦ Iβm a little allergic to the name βDuncanβ right now,β the corner of Vannaβs mouth visibly twitched, βalthough I know itβs definitely not the same personβ¦β
βI had the same reaction as you when I heard this name from my father for the first time.β Heidi spread her hands out, βSpeaking of which, I also promised that gentleman I would go to his house tomorrow for a mental session with his niece. I intend to use the visit to give a formal thanks for saving me tomorrowβ¦. Today is such a mess, and me leaving in such a hurry is improper and bad manners.β
βStrictly speaking, itβs not just the βnieceβ who needs to do a psychological assessment.β Vannaβs expression suddenly became serious, and her eyes stared straight at Heidi, βAll three of those people need it.β
βWhyβ¦β Heidi subconsciously spoke but then reacted, βAh!β
βYes, they were all around you, and you saw the sun fragments in your coma.β Vanna stared into Heidiβs eyes to pass on her meaning, βIf it was really the remains of an ancient god, the pollution might have spread to them along your consciousness. Perhaps the scale of this spreading pollution is small, but it can also be fatal for ordinary people.β
β¦β¦
Inside the antique shop in the lower city, Duncan had closed the door early and was sitting in a relaxed position behind the counter. Meanwhile, Nina and Shirley sat opposite of him after they finished showering and changing into new clothes. However, Shirley still wore her black gothic dress since she refused Ninaβs clothes due to the size difference. It couldnβt be helped; both girls were too different in stature.
Of course, itβs not known if there are other reasons for the refusal. For all they knew, Shirley only refused because she didnβt want to accept a gift from an evil godβs family.
In the middle of the counter was the Ai the dove, who was pacing leisurely around the table happily while enjoying her dish full of fries β Duncan promised, and so shall it be done!
Ai got her precious fries, and Nina returned home safely, what more could Duncan ask for today aside from further mastering of his flame? Oh wait, he did learn something new, so he got everything he wanted!
The only one thatβs not happy was Shirley though. The gothic girl was about to cry again, thatβs several times in one day.
βSoβ¦ Shirley, youβre not actually my classmateβ¦ Youβre just using some kind ofβ¦ βdetective skillsβ to sneak into the school to investigate something.β Nina looked at her hard-earned friend with a complicated expression, βYou donβt like steam and machinery eitherβ¦β
βI canβt even read those textbooksβ¦β Shirley spoke cautiously, answering Ninaβs question while making sure to sneak a glance at Duncan for his reaction, βIβm sorry, Iβ¦ Iβm sorry.β
Nina didnβt seem to notice Shirleyβs apology and continued to frown in confusion: βBut how did you do it? Iβ¦ looking back now, you always did appear in my classroom out of the blue, and then often next to me without anyone noticing youβ¦β
Shirley quickly glanced at Duncan again. After confirming that the other partyβs expression was still calm, she muttered in a low voice: βItβs actually a little supernatural ability of mineβ¦β
βAbility?β Ninaβs eyes widened in surprise, βCould it be that you are an investigator for the church?β
βNo, no, Iβm not from the church, Iβ¦β Shirley glanced at Duncan again for the third time already, recalling what those priests like to call people like herself: βIβm what you would call a wild transcendentβ¦β
Nina looked surprised: ββ¦ Transcendents in the wild?!β
βIf weβre not registeredβ¦β Shirley spoke as if sheβs given up on something and lashed out when the topic was brought up, βThose dogs from the church are always acting so high and mighty. Just because people like me donβt want to be monitored, they give us these derogatory titles.β
Nina listened to Shirleyβs explanation with an astonished face and eyed the gothic girl repeatedly. Finally, the gesture left the more petite girl uncomfortable: βWhy are you looking at me like that?β
βYouβre amazing!β Nina suddenly exclaims.
Shirley was immediately overwhelmed by that remark: ββ¦ Thatβs all you have to say?β
βYes!β