Volume 7, Chapter 3: The Shadow is Creeping Near â Part?2
December 6th, 1926
There was nothing good about staying at Past God Island, so Yanku decided to leave it. In any case he was on a vacation. He had only one place to go to. He went back to his hometown, the archipelago at the southern frontier.
He still hadnât learned to pilot an airplane yet, so Yanku bought a ticket for an ocean liner headed for the island. After a weekâs journey, he arrived at the port of the southern island.
From there he took a boat and headed for his village.
ââ¦?â
Yanku saw a small fast boat approaching him from the horizon. It was directly opposite to Yankuâs boat. It was going in a straight line to the port connecting his village with the town.
âDid they come from my village?â
Yanku passed a glance with the person boarding the speedboat. It was a woman about thirty years old boarding it alone. He had never seen her.
She also looked at Yanku. Upon meeting her gaze, Yanku had a bad premonition.
He came to know the meaning of that premonition a short while later.
He arrived near his village. He walked on the road leading to it.
Suddenly he saw a human figure. He became relieved as he did so. It was a small figure, barely able to reach his chest. She was a girl who wore a red linen cloth on her head. Her name was Mani Rikker. She was Yankuâs younger sister.
âYou came back, big brother? Is that really you?â
âYeah, itâs me, your brother!â
Yanku closed his mouth and spread his lips to show his teeth.
âEee.â
âEee.â
Mani answered with the same action. It was their greeting. They didnât even remember when they started using it.
Yanku raised Maniâs body high in the air and gently swung her around. In the past she had enjoyed it but now she shrieked. Without paying this any heed, Yanku kept spinning her around.
âItâs scary, big brother.â
âYouâve gotten heavier, Mani. And also taller.â
He patted her head. Iâm glad I came back, he thought frankly. The anger stuck in his mind vanished as if it was but a dream.
Mani was six years younger than Yanku. This year she turned nine years old. They werenât blood-related, but referred to each other as siblings without any problem whatsoever.
âDid you bring anything, big brother?â
âSelf-interested as always⦠so only your exterior changed huh?â
Saying this, he brought out the usual nuts snack. You could buy it everywhere by walking around town, but this village had no way to get it.
âTake this in return.â
What Mani took out of her pocket was a small stuffed doll. It was a spherical doll made of folded paper. The kids of the southern frontier played by making their own dolls.
Originally it was made with pretty colorful papers, but the one given by Mani was a crude one made from cutting the paper bags used to wrap wheat. However, Yanku didnât mind at all. After all, Mani made it by herself using her own time and effort.
âThanks.â
He had several of these dolls in his dormitory at Bantorra Library. However, he didnât think they would burden him no matter how many more he gets.
âIs this fine as the only souvenir? Since your big brother is about to get a salary heâll be able to buy many things from now on.â
âI can play with this enough so I donât need anything else.â
She didnât say this out of consideration. She truly thought so.
âYouâre a good kid.â
Said Yanku. Iâm glad I came back and met with Mani, he thought. The anger stirring his heart without ever stopping vanished away by him simply looking at her face.
Yeah. My duty is to protect this village. I need to fulfill this mission I inherited from Noloty. My pent-up anger has no meaning. I only need to think about becoming an Armed Librarian and supporting Mani.
After calming down Mani who wanted to play with him, Yanku returned to his parentsâ home.
âIâm home, mom. Here you are.â
Inside, his mother was weaving linen by herself. Just like with Mani, she wasnât blood-related to him. However, she still raised him as his foster parent.
âYeah. Welcome back. Weâve waited for you. Have you met Mani?â
âYes, a bit earlier. Iâm glad she looks healthy.â
âOnly that kidâs always in high spirits.â
She handed Yanku a tea brewed with fried beans. It was the nostalgic taste of the drink he had in this village since long ago. He spoke to his mother while drinking.
âSeems like Iâll become a trainee soon. I think Iâll be able to have some extra money.â
âSorry for causing all of you trouble.â
Noloty continuously sent the villagers her allowance during the year that she worked as a trainee. The village was supported using that money. Iâm glad I have talent, he thought from the bottom of his heart. If he had become a trainee but a year later, the village would have probably become bankrupt.
âBut Iâm worried. Donât become like Noloty.â
ââ¦Itâs fine. The fightâs already over. I will also probably be stronger than her.â
âThatâs exactly why Iâm worried.â
There was something he knew from reading Nolotyâs Book a year ago: this person had tried culling off Mani who was a baby at the time. Noloty had acted violent due to this and it ended with her leaving the village.
However, due to Nolotyâs actions, that person had changed. She became resolute on raising Mani even through difficulties. Nolotyâs existence certainly was leading the village.
Yanku also had to keep it going.
âBy the way mom, what about working away from home?â
He recalled the present state he had been informed about by a letter several months ago. In-between raising Mani her mom worked in the mines.
âNothing. I quit.â
âWhy?!â
Mom isnât the type of person to throw away something in the middle. Something must have happened.
ââ¦Our men stole some money from the mineâs people. They said that I was also an accomplice.â
âBut you didnât do it, right mom? So go to the mines. Iâm acquainted with the Armed Librarians, so if I find someone reasonableâ¦â
âItâs fine. Donât do it. The Armed Librarian Kalne understood me. However, none of the other miners or normal librarians believed me.
If he covers up for me, Kalneâs position would also worsen.â
ââ¦Iâm going out for a bit.â
He got out of the house and Mani pestered him to play with her. Keeping her waiting, he walked to the edge of the village.
He went to the shack that wasnât used by goats anymore. Several men sat in a circle and drank alcohol inside. Maniâs dad was among them. Even the current chief was there.
âWhat do you want?â
He said while spreading the stink of alcohol.
âReturn what youâve stolen.â
âAh, that?â
Instead of money, one of the men threw an empty bottle at Yankuâs feet. Yanku furiously crushed it underneath his foot.
âWeâre feeling good with liquor after a good while, try some too, will ya Yanku?â
Maniâs father raised the bottle.
ââ¦People like mom and aunty Lig are working.â
âAh?â
âArenât you all ashamed?â
A bottle of liquor flew at him. Before it hit his face, Yankuâs mud knocked it off to the ground.
âThis is our choice of what to do so shut up you damn brat!!!â
The men were being gnawed at by their inferiority complex and despair. That also had consequences for the women and children. If Yanku hadnât come there, who knows what they would have made the women of the village do? If it comes to money, they would do anything.
âDo you have any complaints?â
âI do. Go and work. Stop drinking.â
Yanku took one step closer to them. The men provoked him while laughing.
âIf you have any complaints come kill us. Câmon, do it.â
âWe have no regrets about our life. Câmon, are you gonna do it?â
Each and every time Yanku came back to the village they repeated this very same exchange. They said this because they knew Yanku wouldnât kill them.
Did they know anything? Did they have any idea how desperate Yanku was for their sake? Did they have any idea how much of an effort it took for him to not kill them?
ââ¦Shit!â
Yanku spat out this single word and got out.
He wished to protect the village. He sacrificed his daily life for it. Then why did the very thing he tried to protect crumble?
He wished to become an Armed Librarian for his village. If it didnât exist anymore, he would probably lose his desire to work at Bantorra Library. If that happens, he wonât be there anymore.
What will happen to him afterwards?
ââ¦Whatâs wrong, big brother?â
As he returned to the village, Mani snuggled up close to him. Donât worry, Yanku said and smiled at the uneasy-looking girl. He spent the rest of day until night playing with her.
As the night grew late, Yanku spoke with his mother while in bed.
âSay, Yanku, are you fine being like that?â
âWith what?â
âI believe you donât need to think about this village anymore. Letting you shoulder all of this makes you miserable.â
âThen whatâll happen to the village?â
ââ¦Those who can work outside will go there. They will work at the town, send their kids to school and live. Thatâs it.â
That was what Noloty had once said. She once told them that if they couldnât live at the village, they just had to go to the outside world and work there. She aimed to become an Armed Librarian to prove them it was possible.
ââ¦I donât like it.â
Yanku said. This was the only aspect in which his opinion differed from Nolotyâs.
âI will protect this village. If I become an Armed Librarian I will also bring money. Iâll also cover up the expenses for migrating. I donât want you to fall apart until then.â
ââ¦Yanku.â
âI donât want Mani to go outside. Donât you want to stay in the village as well, mom? Besides, I donât want to have no place to return to.â
âYanku, are you planning to shoulder all of this alone? Can you do that all by your own? Give it up already. You canât do anything about it.â
Yanku knew perfectly well that his motherâs words were realistic. Becoming an Armed Librarian and accumulating money will take a long time. Besides he had no guarantee that he could do that.
Also, the hearts of the villagers have decayed to the extent they were unrecoverable.
âI donât think that I canât do anything. I decided that I would definitely protect this village no matter what.â
ââ¦Butâ¦â
âThatâs enough for this talk.â
Yanku said and forcibly cut off the conversation. A breathtaking silence followed. He looked for another topic.
âBy the way, didnât you have a visitor today?â
He recalled the boat that he saw at sea earlier.
âNo, none came.â
âWeird, I passed by one.â
âWas it Laty-san perhaps? It was probably a rich-looking woman with glasses, right?â
He recalled the figure of the woman he glanced at.
âYeah, probably that one.â
His mother rose up from bed.
âPerhaps I also need to talk to you about it soon. For the last while, a rich person from the outside came to this village saying that they want to help us.â
This was the first time heâs heard of it. Yanku also rose up without thinking.
âWho are they?â
âI donât know if itâs a person or an organization. But itâs someone from the outside.â
âHow strange. Arenât they just trying to trick us?â
âI donât know. But they are strange people. I also havenât heard about it in detail butâ¦
Perhaps theyâre trying to help Mani rather than the village itself.â
âMani?â
The entire thing was becoming increasingly confusing. He had no idea what kind of person from the outside would have business with Mani. Some philanthropist might have wanted to become her foster parent, but helping the entire village was strange.
âMani talked about this plenty of times but I havenât asked her anything. So ask her.â
However, Mani was currently sleeping with drool coming out of her mouth. So asking her would have to come the next day.
âSo what did that Laty-san came here for today?â
âShe probably went to the new island. That was probably where she returned from.â
ââ¦Iâll try going there for a bit.â
Yanku rose up. He could also do it tomorrow, but he was terribly bothered. He left the village and ran to the harbor where his boat was anchored.
The new island, meaning the island once bought by Bantorra Library for the sake of their village. Originally the villagers were supposed to move there and start their new lives.
However, they wasted all of the expenses meant for migrating and for developing the island. Right now, it should be a deserted island with no one living on it.
Yankuâs boat reached the island. Getting off the boat and lowering the lantern, he entered the dark island.
The barbed wire surrounding the island had been removed. Yanku entered inside.
He used the lantern to illuminate the ground. He then raised his voice in surprise. The islandâs ground that been covered in weeds was made smooth. Rocks and pebbles have been removed such that the land was in a condition it could be used for farming.
âWho did this?â
Only part of the island had been cultivated. However, it wasnât a small area. Yanku surveyed the island.
He could see a shack. Tools for construction were stored inside.
He found a well next to it. Trying to drink some water from it, he found out they were of good quality.
âImpossibleâ¦â
Yanku muttered. Who did all this? This wasnât the sort of construction work that could be done by a half-assed investment.
He wondered if it was made by Bantorra Library. But he immediately denied it.
Several months ago, a proposal to once again raise funds for allowing the people of Nolotyâs village to relocate was issued. Besides Mirepoc, it was made by a few Armed Librarians who were close to Noloty. But it was immediately rejected.
The Armed Librarians issuing this were punished by Yukizona.
Armed Librarians had to treat everyone that werenât their enemies equally. Giving special treatment for a certain area or people was a crime equivalent to homicide. Allowing that would turn the Armed Librarians into a profit-seeking organization.
It couldnât be the Armed Librarians. So who did this?
People who, without revealing their identities, moved large quantities of money in secret⦠Just like the Indulging God Cult, thought Yanku.
ââ¦â
The face of the woman he met in the road of hesitation rose to his mind. No way, that canât be, Yanku denied.
The following morning, Yanku took Mani out of the village. They crossed the hill next to the village and stopped in front of a forest. He took her out to ask her something.
âWhy are we here?â
Mani asked. He was slightly troubled with answering. He came there to prevent them from being overheard, but even Yanku didnât know if this was something that shouldnât be heard.
He just had a weird premonition.
âSo, about Laty-sanâ¦â
At the moment he said this, Mani interjected with a loud voice.
âI donât know any Laty-san.â
ââ¦â
Yanku stared at Mani with his eyes widened. He could see on her face that she was lying. He couldnât understand why she did so.
âWhy are you hiding it?â
ââ¦Umm, they said to keep it a secret from you, big brother.â
âLaty-san did?â
Mani nodded. It went beyond suspicion and doubt and into fear. That mysterious person Laty crept up beside him in secret. Who was she?
âWho is that Laty?â
âUmm, sheâs a good person, a really good person. She said they want to support the village.â
âIf sheâs a good person why didnât you tell me?â
âBecause Laty-san said it would be better not telling you yetâ¦â
What the heck, thought Yanku. Was she just a swindler or something more terrible?
He first wanted to get rid of the worst case scenario. It was absolutely impossible, but the 1-in-10,000 chance rose into his mind. He recalled the words of the woman at the road of hesitation.
âIt canât be that those people are the Indulging God Cult⦠right?â
This time it was Mani who was surprised.
âHow do you know that?â
He felt as if the ground beneath his feet disappeared. Becoming paralyzed for a second, he put a hand to the ground behind him.
âDid they say they were the Indulging God Cult?â
âYeah. Only once though.ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
Mani nodded in assurance.
âThey said they wanted to make this the Indulging God Cultâs village. Oops, I canât say thatâ¦â
He watched Mani hurriedly covered her mouth, stunned.
Mani and the rest, who were normal citizens, havenât heard about the Cult. Naturally they didnât know that they were the ones who tried destroying the world a year ago and were responsible for other incidents. They couldnât be told that.
More importantly, Mani completely believed that person known as Laty. He couldnât speak to her about the Indulging God Cult.