Westminster Bank
Chapter 98 - 80: The Blood Loss Knight and the Lost Horse
Even before reaching the camp, Baron had already learned the identities of the refugees from the chatter between the coachman and the groom. šš«šš²šØšššššÆšš¹.ššØšŗ
They were a mix of wretched souls: families who couldnāt afford the āfog-clearing feeā and had their homes destroyed by Beasts, the sick who were cast out of their villages, and villagers who had fled after their homes were overrun by Beasts or the Immortal Church.
The Immortal Church: a cult that worshiped the Immortal, one of the Ancient Gods.
It was also through this conversation that Baron finally identified the god whose scentāa mix of blood and decayāhe had caught earlier that evening.
The Immortal Goddess. She was one of the Ancient Gods, the master of the Immortal Law, who had been slain by the Great Lord during the Second War of Law and buried in the Land of the Forsaken.
The Church that worships her is the Immortal Church, and its followers are called the Undead.
āSounds like a villain just from the name.ā
Baron heard the Wandering Knight let out a low, cold chuckle. "Refugees arenāt necessarily as easy to deal with as those Demon Hunters."
Sure enough, as if on cue, the refugeesā expressions changed the moment they clearly saw the nunās habit Olivia was wearing. A spark of interest ignited in their eyes.
One of them, a middle-aged refugee of about thirty, glanced over at Baronāwho was washing down a piece of bread with mareās milkābefore slowly shuffling toward Olivia.
After mumbling for a long moment, he slowly reached out his hand to the Little Nun and said,
"Sister, Iāve been hungry for so long. Can you share a bit of your food with me?"
Olivia took in the manās appearance: his clothes were shabby, his skin was sallow, and his eyes were devoid of light.
Her heart swelled with pity, and she picked up her bowl, which held mareās milk and a piece of bread.
Baron glanced over sideways but didnāt intervene. He figured that, true to form, the Little Nun would offer a prayer to that poor bastard the Blood God, and then hand out her mareās milk and bread.
She was a Nun from the Church, after all. And no matter which Church a Nun belonged to, their doctrine was bound to include something about loving all mankind, sacrificing for the greater good, and all that.
āOtherwise, there wouldnāt have been so many of those comics about Nuns and Demons back in his previous life.ā
The other refugees clearly thought the same. Seeing what was happening, they began to stir, one after another, and shuffle closer.
An old woman held out her hand. "Sister... have mercy..."
A child pleaded, "Sister... Iām so hungry..."
Baron and the Wandering Knight watched in silence. The other Demon Hunters were watching too, smirks of cynical amusement playing on their faces.
āWould the Nun give her own food to these refugees?ā
At their words, an expression of sorrow, like that of a wounded fawn, appeared on Oliviaās face. She clasped her hands together and prayed piously,
"Oh God, please, save these people."
The moment she spoke, the Wandering Knight let out an unreadable, cold laugh, and Baron sighed in resignation. One of the Demon Hunters, recognizing Olivia as the Little Nun from earlier in the day, yelled out mockingly,
"So itās the Nun who lost her two bay horses! Hey, Sister, Iām feeling awful lonely over here. How about you āgiveā me a little āalmsā with your body, huh? Just a little will do."
Amidst the jeers, the refugees mumbled thanks for the Little Nunās ābenevolenceā as they surged forward to snatch the bowl of mareās milk and bread from her.
Someone grabbed the bowl first. The refugees began to curse, their anger flaring, only to see it was the very Nun they had just been praising.
Olivia met the refugeesā bewildered stares, offered another pious prayer, and then, to everyoneās utter disbelief, drank the mareās milk with the bread soaked in it.
When she was finished, she elegantly wiped the porcelain bowl with a handkerchief and handed it back to Baron.
After a moment of stunned silence, the refugees erupted in anger. "Why? Why, Sister? Why wouldnāt you help us?"
The Little Nun looked sorrowful and said apologetically, "God says that if you cannot give to everyone, then giving to no one is the truest form of charity."
Baron raised an eyebrow.
āWell now, this Blood God fellow has some interesting ideas. If you could just ignore the deranged cultists from the Mad Blood and Blue Blood factions... right, canāt ignore them.ā
The refugees started cursing. They clearly didnāt dare direct their anger at the Little Nun, having recognized Baron as a Demon Hunter. Instead, they turned on each other, blaming one another for coming over and trying to get a piece of the action.
The old woman spat curses, the child wailed in frustration, and the middle-aged man who had first approached now muttered bitter curses against heaven and earth.
This time, the Wandering Knight didnāt sneer. He just let out a short, unexpected grunt. He then pulled a piece of bread from his coatāone that looked less like it was from last week and more like it was from the last millenniumābroke off a piece, and washed it down with some water.
But this time, when the surrounding refugees saw the black bread in his hands, they merely snorted in disdain, as if disgusted by how dirty it looked.
Baron found the scene fascinating. āThe starving looking down on someone who had food. Just another one of this worldās strange phenomena.ā
The Little Nun leaned in and explained in a low voice, "Mr. L, do you see the dark cape beneath that Knightās pauldron?"
Baron looked. A long, crimson-black cape flowed from under the Wandering Knightās right pauldron, marked with several deep, rich streaks of red.
It made him instinctively think of a blood-soaked battle standard on a chaotic field, leading a tide of armored cavalry in a howling windāa magnificent, exhilarating sight.
And yet, the way the surrounding refugees looked at the Knight was deeply unsettling to Baron.
Their gazes held none of the respect or awe one might show a Law Enforcer, nor any of the sympathy one might have for a fellow unfortunate. They simply stared with a numb mixture of fear and disgust.
As if they were looking at a skeleton draped in human skin.
"That blood-red cape and the Blood Pattern on his face are the marks of a Blood Loss Knight. It signifies a Knight who has no faith, no followers, and no chivalry. They are unacknowledged by the gods, and have even been abandoned by their own Contractor."
"Legend says that wherever a Blood Loss Knight appears, that place incurs the wrath of the gods and is struck by disaster. That is why people fear them."