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33 Confirmation

Lumian gazed into Aurore’s eyes for a mont before slowly asking, “How many days until Lent?”

He suspected his sister was trying to prank him, but he had never known her to be flippant about important matters. This was a crucial mont that would impact the whole village, and possibly even their survival.

Aurore sized him up and quipped,”Did you not take an afternoon nap? Are you still not fully awake? It’s March 29, 1358. We still have a few days before Lent.”

March 29… Lumian ruminated the date for a mont and wondered if he was dreaming.

He had vividly experienced Lent—a period of rrint that ended in a bloodbath. He had witnessed Shepherd Pierre Berry hack off Ava’s head with an axe and blood spurt everywhere…

Was he dreaming now, or had his past experience been a dream? Regardless of which one it was, they both seed too real. Lumian couldn’t detect any signs of deceit on his sister’s face.

Sure, Aurore could be an excellent actress, but Lumian believed she was not that kind of person.

They had spent five years together, and he knew every detail of her personality. There was no way she could have fooled him!

Lumian was perplexed as he considered the possibilities of his sister Aurore lying to him about the date.

Either she was being controlled by the padre or so secret entity or everything had been resolved and she was just ssing with him.

If neither of these options was true, then it was likely that Aurore was telling the truth.

Ti had rewound to March 29th, a few days before Lent.

With Lumian’s understanding of the world, this was clearly impossible and shouldn’t have happened. However, his sister’s attitude left him at a loss.

I have to think of a way to confirm it… Lumian tried to recall everything that had happened during that ti period and realized he could easily rember most of the details—Aurore was wearing a light-blue dress on that day on the 29th March corresponding to the “successful” celebration of Lent. He also rembered eting Leah, Ryan, and Valentine that night before taking them to the cathedral to catch the padre in the act.

“What’s wrong?” Aurore stretched out her right hand and waved it in front of her stunned brother.

Lumian quickly gathered his thoughts and said, “Aurore, I just rembered sothing. I need to go out for a while. I’ll be back soon!”

Lumian realized that the only way to confirm if ti had really returned to March 29th was to find Ava.

If she was still alive, he would have to co to terms with this unbelievable change.

He didn’t wait for Aurore’s response and hurried to the door, bypassing her.

“Call Grande Soeur! Don’t be late for dinner!” Aurore shouted after him.

As he ran towards Ava Lizier’s house, Lumian feared that if he were even a second slower, he would be caught in an indescribable nightmare and completely devoured.

Along the way, many villagers noticed him, but they were afraid it was a prank directed by him and didn’t stop to ask for a reason.

Finally, Lumian reached his destination.

Guillau Lizier, Ava’s father, was a famous shoemaker in the village of Cordu and the surrounding mountains. Although they weren’t particularly rich, they weren’t too bad either. They lived in a subterranean grayish-blue two-story building with an empty space at the back where grass and firewood were piled up, and a goose house was repaired.

It was almost dinner ti when Lumian arrived, and several figures were busy in the kitchen of the Liziers’ household.

Lumian walked through the open door and imdiately saw Ava.

This brown-haired girl with aqua-blue eyes was wearing a gray-white dress and preparing dinner for her mother. Her hands and feet were nimble, and her eyes were lively. Lumian could tell just by looking at her that she was alive.

She’s really not dead… Lumian thought to himself as he looked at Ava’s neck, trying to find signs of stitches.

In one of Aurore’s horror novels, there was a scene where a corpse was stitched up to act as a living person.

But Ava’s neck was long and smooth, without a single scar.

Guillau Lizier, the shoemaker, noticed Lumian standing in the doorway and asked, “Lumian, what’s the matter?”

He stood up from his kitchen chair and faced Lumian, his brown hair disheveled, and a slightly greasy brownish-white apron hanging in front of him.

Ava, who had been busy in the kitchen, turned around in surprise and looked at Lumian.

She saw Lumian standing there in a daze.

“What’s the matter?” she asked.

Lumian was montarily stunned but quickly regained his composure and planned to make up a random reason to explain his visit.

However, Guillau Lizier inspired him with a question.

He deliberated for a mont and asked, “Monsieur, did Pierre of Berry order a pair of leather shoes from you?”

He rembered that he and Reimund were supposed to et Shepherd Pierre Berry the next morning and were surprised when he had abandoned his flock to rush back to participate in the Lenten celebration despite the dangers of the long and difficult journey.

By that ti, Pierre Berry had already put on a new pair of soft leather shoes.

Unless he went to a shoe shop in Dariège that sold finished products, it would take ti to make a pair of leather shoes. This ant that Pierre Berry had been back in the village for at least two or three days!

Guillau Lizier was surprised by Lumian’s question and said, “Pierre Berry ca back a few days ago, but not many people in the village know about it. He also told not to tell anyone else.”

As expected… Lumian made up a reason and said, “I saw soone who looked very much like him and thought I was hallucinating.

“Because the man was wearing new leather shoes, I ca to confirm it with you.”

“It’s him.” Guillau Lizier gave an affirmative answer. “He was still herding three or four sheep that he claid his employer had given him.”

Don’t they only let the sheep return to the village in early May to shear and milk them? How are they to be grazed if a few sheep are brought back now? Grazing in the highland pastures is still prohibited… The more Lumian thought about it, the more he felt that Shepherd Pierre Berry’s behavior was extrely abnormal.

And his performance at the end of the celebration proved Lumian’s judgnt.

However, he had no idea what he, the padre, and the others wanted to do, or what they had already done.

Lumian smiled at Guillau Lizier and Ava and said, “I’m relieved that it’s really him. I thought I was having problems with my brain and eyes because I drink too much.”

He then waved at the Liziers and said, “Goodbye.”

As Lumian left the Liziers’ house, the smile on his face disappeared quickly.

He was now very confident that today was really March 29th.

Did I go back in ti, or did I have a precognitive dream? Dreams can’t be that real. They’re so real that every detail is there… Lumian thought hard as he walked.

Either way, it was sothing he had only read about in Aurore’s novels and never imagined would happen in reality.

...

On his way ho, Lumian circled the square and ca to the side of the Eternal Blazing Sun cathedral.

The stained-glass window, which should have been completely shattered, was perfectly embedded in the wall, and the Saint Sith missionary illustration on the surface shone brightly under the sunset.

Lumian watched this scene with mixed feelings. Many thoughts threatened to emit smoke from all the friction against each other in his mind.

On his way back to the square, Lumian saw a familiar figure walk out of the cathedral’s main entrance.

It was the padre, Guillau Bénet, who had a slightly hooked nose and a dignified aura, and he was wearing a white robe with golden threads.

Lumian’s heart tightened, and he arched his body slightly, preparing himself for an attack or to flee.

Guillau Bénet glanced at him and nodded expressionlessly.

“Co again tomorrow for prayers.”

Uh… That’s right. He hasn’t been caught red-handed by during the early evening of March 29th. He hasn’t fallen out with , nor is there any worry that his secret plot is about to be exposed… With this in mind, Lumian instinctively reacted.

He stood up straight and spread his arms.

“Praise the Sun!”

...

“Praise the Sun!” Guillau Bénet replied with the sa pose.

After leaving the village square, Lumian habitually recalled what had just happened.

Suddenly, he discovered a point that he had neglected previously because he was shocked by “ti reversal.”

He still had his superpowers!

He was still a Hunter!

He had not needed to catch his breath from running all the way to the Liziers, and he had imdiately put on the best posture when facing the padre. This ant that his physique and corresponding condition far exceeded the ti before he consud the potion.

From this, Lumian made a judgnt that the previous experience was not a precognitive dream, and he was already a Sequence 9 Beyonder!

I’ll try entering that special dream at night to see if I can still enter and if there are any changes… Lumian quickly ca up with the next step of his plan.

After returning ho, Lumian pretended as if nothing had happened and had dinner with his sister, Aurore.

As he often acted this way because he didn’t want her to help clean up the ss every ti he got into trouble, Aurore didn’t ask any further despite sensing that sothing was off.

After washing the cutlery and cleaning the kitchen, Lumian inford his sister and went straight to Ol’ Tavern.

He wanted to confirm if the foreigners who didn’t hail from Cordu would appear.

After entering Ol’ Tavern, Lumian sat at the bar counter and greeted the boss and bartender, Maurice Bénet, and the thin middle-aged man, Pierre Guillau.

“A glass of Whiskey Sour,” he said with great familiarity.

Whiskey Sour referred to low-quality alcohol brewed from apples. It was only more expensive than so beer in taverns. People often hawked it on the streets of the city.

Maurice Bénet nagged, “Stingy brat, don’t you like the pain of absinthe?”

Lumian said the familiar words, “Is it on the house?”

This made his mind feel a little adrift.

Maurice Bénet imdiately stopped talking and poured a glass of Whiskey Sour for Lumian.

Lumian sipped his drink as he waited.

Not long after, he heard tinkling sounds.

He turned around to see Ryan wearing a rough dark bowler hat, a drab duffel coat, and pale yellow strides.

Leah attracted the attention of almost all the n in Ol’ Tavern with her white pleated cashre dress, off-white coat, Marseillan boots, and small silver bells tied to her boots and veil.

Similarly, Valentine wore a white vest, a blue tweed jacket, and black trousers, with his blond hair covered in a little powder.

The three of them walked to the bar counter under everyone’s gazes and sat down beside Lumian.

Lumian didn’t look up as he thought to himself, A glass of Dariège red wine, a glass of rye beer, and a glass of C?ur épicé…

Ryan took off his top hat and put it aside. Then, he said to Maurice Bénet, “A glass of Dariège red wine, a glass of rye beer, and a glass of C?ur épicé.”

Lumian let out a long sigh, and Ryan asked, “What’s wrong?”

Lumian took a sip of his Whiskey Sour and said in a deep voice, “I’m a nobody, with no ti to notice the brightness of the sun…”

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