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The next morning arrived with a weight that pressed on the Holy Capital like a storm waiting to break.

The Great Cathedral was already alive.

From the back chamber behind the main hall — a high, vaulted room lined with carved mana-stone pillars — Noel could hear the echo of footsteps, voices, and the distant roaring bells that had begun ringing at dawn.

Dong.

Dong.

Dong.

Each strike resonated like an announcent to the world:

The Saint has returned.

Charlotte stood near one of the tall stained-glass windows, the soft colors painting her hair in hues of gold and rose. She wore her formal Saint robes — white with silver lining, embroidered with soft pastel pink threads that glowed faintly with holy mana. They were symbolic, regal... and heavy.

Noel watched her adjust the sleeves with quiet focus.

"You okay?" he asked softly.

Charlotte exhaled, her breath slightly shaky. "I don’t know if okay is the right word."

She turned to him with a small smile — nervous, but genuine.

"Yesterday we changed doctrine in a basent room... and today I’m announcing my return to the entire world."

Noel chuckled faintly. "Welco to politics."

Charlotte puffed her cheeks in a tiny pout. "I prefer healing children."

Noel stepped closer, adjusting the small ribbon behind her collar. "You’ll do fine."

A knock echoed at the door.

A young cleric peeked in, breathless.

"Saint Charlotte — the main hall is filling quickly. People from every district arrived as soon as they heard the bells."

Charlotte blinked. "Already?"

"Already," the cleric confird. "There are crowds reaching the outer courtyard. So are crying. So brought offerings. And the choir is warming up."

Noel raised a brow. "That’s... fast."

Orthran entered the chamber behind the cleric, robes flowing with authority. His expression was serious, but his eyes softened when he saw Charlotte.

"The city has waited for a Saint who leads with compassion," he said gently. "They will listen to you."

Charlotte drew a deep breath, steadying herself. "I hope so."

Orthran stepped forward, placing a hand on her shoulder.

"Today, we announce your return. But rember — you set the tone for every belief that follows. Speak with honesty, Charlotte. With conviction. You chose a difficult road... now walk it without fear."

Noel watched her shoulders straighten, her golden eyes focusing with new determination.

Outside, the bells hit another wave of resonance — louder, deeper, shaking the stained glass.

Charlotte whispered, "They’re waiting."

Noel nodded, offering his hand without hesitation.

She took it.

Together, they walked toward the double doors leading into the cathedral’s main hall — where thousands waited, and history was about to change.

When the heavy double doors opened, the sound that greeted them was not chaotic — but reverent.

Robes sweeping against marble.

Quiet gasps.

Whispers echoing beneath vaulted ceilings.

And then... deep, unified silence.

The Great Cathedral was full to capacity.

Rows of priests in white and gold stood aligned on each side of the hall.

Sisters in pale robes knelt with hands clasped in prayer.

Young acolytes filled the front rows, their wide eyes shining with awe.

Several groups of orphans — neatly dressed and guided by caretakers — sat quietly, excitent barely contained.

This was the heart of the Church. Holy ground. No rchants. No citizens. No passing travelers. Only the faithful and the devoted.

Charlotte entered slowly, with Noel to her right and Orthran to her left.

The choir cut off mid-hymn. A thousand heads bowed at once.

"Saint Charlotte..." soone whispered with trembling reverence.

"She has returned..."

The space felt different with her in it — brighter, almost warr.

Sunlight from the stained-glass do cast streaks of color across the floor, catching Charlotte’s robes and scattering pink and silver around her like gentle flas.

Noel could tell she was nervous by the slight tightening of her fingers... but she didn’t show it on her face.

She walked to the central pulpit — a raised altar of ancient stone — and rested both hands on its edge. Her gaze swept across the hall:

At the priests standing stiffly.

The sisters holding their breath.

The acolytes leaning forward with shining admiration.

The children staring at her as if she were a story co to life.

And Noel, watching from the side, pride tightening in his chest.

Charlotte’s voice rose into the sacred space:

"Thank you... for gathering here today."

Everything stilled.

"I return not only as the Saint... but as soone who believes deeply in this Church and in the people who serve it."

The hall listened as though spellbound.

"Our world changes. Mana changes. The way people live changes. And our faith... must change as well."

A ripple of shock.

Whispers.

Even a few raised brows.

Charlotte didn’t pause.

"The Church has followed traditions for centuries. Many are precious. Many must be protected. But so no longer reflect the world we guide."

She breathed, steady.

"And I intend to change that."

Audible gasps broke the silence.

"I will revise the rules a Saint must follow. I will revise the traditions that no longer serve the faithful. And I will update parts of our doctrine to guide this era — not the past one."

Acolytes exchanged excited looks.

Several sisters nodded softly with approval.

Older priests stiffened, eyes narrowing.

Charlotte went on, unwavering:

"I do not intend to lead through fear or habit. I will lead with truth, compassion, and resolve. Our Church must not be a relic... it must be a light."

The hall felt electric — charged between hope and tension.

Noel exhaled slowly.

For a mont, the Cathedral held its breath.

Then—

a sharp, scraping sound cut through the silence.

A chair pushed back.

An older priest — tall, gaunt, with deep-set eyes and a silver-trimd robe — stepped out of his row. His expression was not angry... but wounded. As if Charlotte’s words had struck sothing holy inside him.

"Saint Charlotte," he said, voice echoing through the vaulted space, "what you propose... borders on heresy."

Charlotte’s gaze didn’t waver. "Father Rhedon, nothing I said contradicts the heart of our faith."

"That," he said sharply, "is exactly what worries ."

Two more priests stepped behind him.

Then four.

A small faction forming in real ti.

Rhedon pointed toward the pulpit with a trembling hand.

"Our doctrine has stood for centuries. We have guided nations. We have outlived wars and calamities. And now you ask us to change it all in a single morning?"

His voice rose, heavy with disbelief:

"To change the rules of sanctity? To change the scriptures themselves?"

Charlotte opened her mouth—

but Noel stepped forward instead, his voice calm and firm.

"Father Rhedon. No one is destroying anything. All she’s asking is that we listen—"

Rhedon cut him off imdiately.

"You are not clergy, boy."

The word landed like a slap in the Cathedral.

Noel didn’t flinch. He simply straightened.

"I know. But I am soone who has seen what lies beyond these walls. Soone who has fought for this Church more than most of the people in this room." He paused just long enough for the echo to settle. "You don’t have to listen to . But at least listen to her."

So priests glanced away, uncomfortable. The orphans watched with wide, uncertain eyes. Charlotte’s lips parted softly — surprised, touched.

But Rhedon rely shook his head.

"No. I will not allow the foundation of our faith to be reshaped by a Saint who has barely lived through her own decade of service."

A murmur of agreent rippled across the older clergy.

Charlotte stepped forward, voice gentler than anyone expected:

"I’m not asking you to follow blindly, Father. I’m asking you to think. To see the world as it is now. To help guide it."

But Rhedon bowed — stiff, cold, formal.

"I cannot."

Without waiting for permission, he turned away. Five priests followed him. Then two more. Their robes swept across the marble floor with harsh finality as they headed for the exit.

Noel felt sothing sink in his stomach.

’It couldn’t be this easy... of course not.’

Charlotte watched them leave, expression steady but shadowed. Not angry or afraid. Just... saddened.

Orthran lowered his gaze, the weight of leadership heavy on his shoulders.

And the Cathedral, once unified, now felt split straight down the middle.

The first fracture... of many to co.

The heavy doors slamd shut behind the departing priests, and the Cathedral fell into a strained, echoing quiet.

Charlotte exhaled softly, more tired than she wanted to admit.

Orthran placed a hand over his heart, as if steadying himself. "The first ones to leave," he murmured, "were always going to be those most rigid in tradition."

Noel nodded—but his eyes were already scanning the hall.

The air felt... heavier.

A low vibration passed along his boot.

Noir.

She slipped out from beneath his cloak, her fur bristling slightly as she lifted her head and sniffed the air.

Her voice brushed against his mind:

’Dad... I sll sothing bad.’

Noel’s posture tensed instantly.

He knelt half a step, pretending to adjust his boot to hide the way he whispered back:

’Are you sure? Orthran’s monthly blessing should keep anything dangerous away for miles.’

Noir’s tail flicked with unease.

’I’m sure. But... it’s strange. I don’t sll an enemy.’

Noel narrowed his eyes slightly.

’Not a person?’

’Not even a presence.’ A pause — then a small, troubled rumble. ’It’s like... a bad on. A wrongness. Sothing is off in this place, Dad.’

Noel’s stomach tightened.

Of course. Because why would the system give him a 30-day mission to save the Church if the only threat was political?

Orthran approached the two of them quietly, concern etched in the wrinkles around his eyes.

"Noel?" He glanced at Noir. "Is sothing wrong?"

Noel straightened. "Hard to say yet."

Noir hopped onto Noel’s shoulder, settling there like a watchful shadow.

She whispered in his mind again. ’We should look tonight. Please? Like we used to.’

Noel’s chest ward slightly at the familiar request.

Out loud, he said softly, "Yeah. We’ll search tonight."

Noir’s tail curled happily. ’Just like the old days, Dad.’

Noel allowed himself the smallest smile. ’Yeah... just like the old days.’

But then his thoughts darkened.

’Blessings or not... sothing managed to slip through.’

’Or sothing is already here.’

Across the hall, Charlotte finished addressing a group of younger sisters, her expression calm — but Noel knew her well enough to see the tension beneath.

Orthran moved to her side, placing a reassuring hand on her shoulder.

Charlotte offered Orthran a small, reassuring smile, but her fingers tightened subtly around the fabric of her robe. She was holding steady for everyone else’s sake — but Noel could see the strain beneath the surface.

A bell chid softly sowhere deeper in the Cathedral, signaling the end of the gathering. Acolytes and sisters began dispersing in hushed murmurs, so glancing at Charlotte with admiration... others with suspicion.

Noel moved toward her, Noir perched on his shoulder like a vigilant guardian.

Charlotte’s eyes softened the mont they t his.

"You handled that well," Noel said quietly.

She exhaled, letting the façade slip for just a second. "I didn’t expect resistance so quickly."

Orthran joined them, his hands clasped behind his back, shoulders heavy yet steady.

"Resistance was inevitable," he said gently. "But you stood firm, Charlotte. They will follow, even if so don’t realize it yet."

Charlotte nodded, but her thoughts were clearly racing. "I knew this path would be difficult. But seeing them walk out like that..." She swallowed. "It hurts more than I thought it would."

Noel reached out and touched her arm — just briefly, but enough to ground her.

"Changing the world always hurts before it helps."

She t his eyes with a small, grateful smile.

Orthran looked between the two, his expression warm but weighed. "We will need ti. Days, perhaps weeks. ssages must be sent. Support must be secured. And Rhedon and those who followed him will not remain silent." His gaze darkened. "They will spread doubt."

"A counter-movent," Noel murmured.

"Exactly." Orthran paused, then added, "But we have what they don’t." He placed a hand over Charlotte’s shoulder. "Truth. And the will to protect the faithful, not the institution."

Charlotte’s eyes brightened just slightly — hope flickering back to life.

But Noir... Noir didn’t relax.

She pressed her head lightly against Noel’s jaw, whispering in his mind:

’Dad... the sll is getting stronger.’

Noel’s pulse tightened.

Charlotte noticed imdiately. "Noel? What is it?"

He didn’t lie. "Noir senses sothing wrong."

Orthran straightened instantly, alert.

Charlotte’s expression sharpened — not fearful, but focused. "Inside the Cathedral?"

"Hard to say yet," Noel answered. "But whatever it is... it’s close."

Orthran spoke with a lower tone. "Then tonight, after lights-out, we begin our own investigation."

Charlotte nodded without hesitation. "So be it."

But Noel shook his head softly.

"No," he said. "You two should rest tonight."

Charlotte blinked, surprised. "Rest? Noel, this concerns all of us—"

"That’s exactly why," Noel interrupted gently. "You’ve both carried enough today. And pushing yourselves after sothing this heavy... it’ll only cloud your judgnt."

Orthran frowned slightly. "Noel—"

"Let handle tonight," Noel said firmly, yet with quiet warmth. "If anything happens, if I find anything, I’ll co straight to you. I promise."

Charlotte hesitated, worry flickering in her eyes.

Noel stepped closer, lowering his voice just for her.

"Rest is important. You did sothing huge today. Bigger than anyone else could have. You need ti to breathe."

Her shoulders relaxed.

Orthran let out a long, tired exhale. "You speak as if you’ve already decided."

"I have," Noel said. "Tonight, leave it to . All of it."

Noir nodded proudly from his shoulder, tail flicking. ’Dad’s right. They’re exhausted.’

Noel glanced at both of them.

"Get so sleep. If sothing’s wrong, I’ll find it. And I’ll look for you the mont I do."

Charlotte’s expression softened into sothing warm and grateful.

"...Alright," she whispered. "We trust you."

Orthran gave a slow nod. "Very well. But be cautious."

Noel managed a faint smile.

"Always."

You are reading The Extra is a Genius!? Chapter 443: A Saint Returns, A Faith Divides on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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