Volume 3, Chapter 5: Queenâs Move â Part?2
He heard about Mokkania from various people. But he always heard more about his mother than about him.
Renas Fleur was a normal girl who grew up in that town. The fact that she gave birth to a child of the feudal lord was nothing more than a whim of his one day.
She probably faced many hardships while raising a child by herself.
Winkeny tried imagining the life of this woman who was bound to the lordâs selfishness.
She probably hated weak people being bullied because she herself was weak. That personality would have also affected Mokkania. Mokkaniaâs kindness and hatred for oppression of the weak probably came from that.
âThen why did Mokkania become an Armed Librarian?â
What was Mokkaniaâs mother to him? And what did her death mean to him?
Winkeny thought about it. However, he had no idea.
He visited the house Mokkania was born in. There were only ruins left. He couldnât feel any signs of the life mother and child used to have in there.
âI am Mokkania. One day, as I return to my house, it is no longer my home.â
Walking through the abandoned place, Winkeny thought about Mokkaniaâs feelings. He stroked the floor and murmured.
âAs I come home, I greet âIâm homeâ. However, at that instant I notice that mom is on the floor, dead.â
He touched the floor, thinking about the figure of the mother who was there.
âThereâs no reply. âIâm homeâ â I say this once again. But there is no reply.â
Winkeny kept muttering.
âIâm home⦠Iâm home⦠Iâm home.â
At that instant, Winkeny received a message inside of his head in the form of Thought Sharing.
âWhat are you doing, Winkeny? Return at once.â
Just when I got to the critical part? Winkeny gritted his teeth. But he could not go against the instructions of his superior.
Winkeny left Mokkaniaâs hometown, and went back to the Cultâs base.
Upon return to the ship, Winkeny took out the black queen from his pocket. It was the same one the Overseer of Paradise gave him during that day. He clenched it in his hand.
Winkeny was a failed piece, raised in order to kill the black queen. However, the piece that had been discarded by the player was now going to move outside the playerâs intentions.
No, he wasnât a piece anymore. By freely manipulating the black queen, he will become a player himself.
Winkeny investigated Mokkaniaâs heart so that he could control the black queen.
When he throws certain words at Mokkania, what will he think? When Mokkania faces certain circumstances, what will he think? When Mokkania has a certain goal in mind, how will he act?
Winkeny wanted to understand Mokkania completely just like a wife who was close to her husband knew everything about him after forty years together.
When Mokkania would act that way, he will become Winkenyâs puppet. While acting under his own will, even that very will would be controlled by Winkeny.
Each time a chess master moved his hand, he could envision and predict the actions of hundreds of pawns. An outstanding warrior could predict a battleâs outcome before it even began.
Winkeny aimed for that level. He tried to become an expert on the single man known as Mokkania.
ââ¦Youâre late. What were you doing?â
Winkenyâs immediate superior welcomed him as he returned from Rona Kingdom. As always, he rebuked Winkenyâs negligence of duty.
He worked as a contact that would convey orders from the higher-ups to their subordinates. He knew nothing about the encrypted information or the orders themselves. He was doing a job that only consisted of following the instructions of those above him and flying around the world. No-one remembered his role as a trump card against Mokkania. The fact that he secluded himself in the Labyrinth and was no longer a useful warrior was already well-known within the Indulging God Cult. A trump card aimed to defeat a useless piece was good for nothing.
ââ¦I visited Mokkaniaâs hometown.â
âWhat for?â
His superior asked. Winkeny tried to explain, but his superior shook his hand as if telling him it was too annoying.
âJust go away.â
The superior said.
Nobody could understand Winkenyâs actions. Everyone told him it was useless, and many of them laughed at him. He was accustomed to humiliation, so he didnât feel anything.
He clutched the black queen inside his pocket.
Winkeny returned to his hideout.
On his desk and floor were piles of documents that were all about Mokkania â his background; his evaluation from when he was a trainee, as well a report card from when he was a student; his interviews for newspapers; and the notes pertaining to his personality from what Winkeny heard from people who knew him.
There were also large quantities of Books that belonged to people whoâve met Mokkania placed on his shelves.
Many pictures of Mokkania were adhered to the walls. One valuable photo of him as a boy; pictures of him as a trainee, as an Armed Librarian, of him during the war, and pictures of him activating his ability.
Furthermore, there were investigation notes written by Winkeny hanging on the walls.
âDissension with Hamyutsâ âLonelinessâ âKind to his core->will he quit being an Armed Librarian?â âGuilt->where will he go?â âHe might be considering suicideâ âHe parted with his lover. Was he really good with women?â âI definitely need Minth Chezineâs opinion->should I go and meet with him? Or is that unreasonable?â
Everything he knew about Mokkania was collected there. He even stole Mokkaniaâs psychological and psychiatric records from the Science Agency and read them over and over again until their seams were torn.
But despite all this, there were still many things he didnât understand about Mokkaniaâs heart.
He could understand his surface feelings, but that was far from enough. In order to truly see through him, he had to become Mokkania himself. If Winkeny wouldnât be able to reach that domain, thereâs no way he could manipulate Mokkania.
âShit!â
Winkeny hit the desk with his fist.
He didnât want to admit that such a thing was impossible. If he will, it would be one and the same as admitting his whole life was meaningless. He couldnât stand it. He feared that far more than dying or not ascending to Heaven.
Winkeny held his head and kept worrying.
One day, the Overseer of Paradise called for him. He hadnât met him for who knows how many years. For him, who was doing only odd jobs for a long time, it was like meeting a god-like existence.
He went to the same hotel he was in before. That hotel wasnât under the Cultâs control. How and by which means could he stay here? Winkeny couldnât even imagine.
He was reading a newspaper placed on the table by the window. It seemed to be just an ordinary newspaper sold everywhere.
âWinkeny. Are you aware that just the other day there was an assault on the Meatsâ ship at Allow bay?ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
He said while folding the newspaper. Winkeny nodded.
âThere seems to have been a leak from the inside. Our intelligence will have to work with maximum vigilance, but it is a pity. Naturally, the more people we have, the more they will be harder to supervise.â
It didnât seem like he suspected Winkeny. The Overseer of Paradise kept talking.
âWinkeny. Do you not think that we allowed just a little too many people inside?â
âI donât really know.â
âFrom now on, weâre going to be a bit more selective. Not only in terms of ability but also in loyalty.â
Saying so, the Overseer of Paradise tossed the folded newspaper unto the rack. Winkeny only then noticed it was the newspaper that he was officially employed for.
âWhat does this mean?â
The Overseer of Paradise took a cup placed on the table to his hand. He slid it towards Winkeny.
âWinkeny. If you drink this water, you will be able to live as a simple newspaper reporter from now on.â
Without him saying anything, he could understand. The cup contained the water of Argax.
âOverseer of Paradise, Iâmâ¦â
âThe article youâve written the other day â it was just an editorial about the contradictions between Ronaâs diplomacy and its political philosophy, but it was very interesting. Why donât you sit down and write a proper continuation?â
Winkeny took the cup with trembling hands.
He recalled everything until now â his everyday life where he was referred to as useless. No matter how much thought about it, he wasnât able to reach inside Mokkaniaâs mind.
His heart was inclined to give up. He brought the cupâs edge to his mouth while still trembling.
However, he returned it to the table while spilling some water.
âIâm not planning to become a journalist.â
âI see.â
Without any hesitation, the Overseer of Paradise spilled the water out of the window.
Drinking the water or not was probably some kind of test. Winkeny didnât know what would happen if he drank it. Would he have been sent to the Meatsâ ship? Or would he really and unexpectedly become a normal journalist?
The Overseer of Paradise rose from his chair and leaned his back on the windowâs edge. There was no longer the air of tension from before.
âI have one question.â
âYes sir?â
âWhy didnât you drink it? â¦I was sure that you were going to drink.â
Winkeny thought for a while. When he wanted to give up, a nostalgic face surfaced in his memory.
âI was reminded of my mother, the one I entered the Cult together with.â
The Overseer of Paradise smiled.
âI see now. Family ties are important.â
The Overseer of Paradise tore a portion of the newspaper and drew a map there. He then showed it to Winkeny.
âTo reward your loyalty, Iâll allow you to meet her. Your mother should be following Cigal right now.â
After receiving the map, Winkeny headed for Toatt Mining Town in Ismo Republic. His mother was supposedly there.
He was now reminded of her. Winkeny was surprised of the changes to his own mind. He made such an effort to understand Mokkania but couldnât even understand himself.
He hadnât met his mother in more than ten years. He thought he forgot everything, but now that he was allowed to meet her, it all felt incredibly nostalgic.
âMokkania will never enjoy these feelings again.â
Winkeny murmured. No matter how much Mokkania wants to, he couldnât ever meet his mother again. He felt a bit of pity for him.
His mother stayed at an inn in Toatt Mining Town. She was working undercover there from a while back.
After walking under the ash-clouded sky, as he set foot inside the dirty inn, Winkeny muttered in a low voice.
âIâm home.â
It was strange. He called this home despite being far away from his house. However, no matter the location, as long as he had some family there, it would become his home.
ââ¦Oh, a customer.â
âIâm Winkeny.â
âReally, are you going to lodge here? Are you by yourself?â
His mother spoke as the innkeeper. When Winkeny used the Indulging God Cultâs watchword, she led him to his room. She was terribly aged. She looked like more than twenty years have passed.
Several pictures were spread on the table inside the room. Winkeny took them to his hand. He saw Meat-looking people there.
âWhat is this?â
âThese are the photos of Bombs who will soon come here. I had to memorize their faces and names⦠Itâs already been a year.â
Their names were written on the backside. His mother seemed to be recalling their names as she looked at the photos.
âUmm, thatâs Milly. Sheâs useless so I put her in the abandoned house. This is Relia. This is Hyoue⦠no no, itâs actually Colio.â
Saying so, Winkenyâs mother flipped through the photos. She didnât seem to care about him at all.
Winkeny was troubled. He wanted to talk to her not as fellow Cult members, but as mother and child. He should start by talking to her then. Should he start with âhow are youâ? Or perhaps âhow nostalgicâ? He considered his opening words.
But, before Winkeny got to say something, his mother talked to him.
âBy the way, what are you doing here? You probably have some orders from the Indulging God Cult, right?â
She said. Winkeny was a bit surprised. Doesnât she realize heâs her son?
ââ¦Umm, itâs me, Winkeny.â
âSo, what are you here for, Winkeny-san?â
âItâs me, Winkeny!â
His mother placed her hand on her check as if trying to recall something. Winkeny almost burst out laughing.
If her memories were erased by the water of Argax, there was still salvation.
She didnât look like she could remember. She truly forgot it all. She forgot everything about her one and only child, Winkeny. Even his face and name. No, she forgot his very existence.
Winkeny turned his back to her.
ââ¦Uh, where are you going? What do you need?â
Staying silent, Winkeny left the inn.
He walked around the mining town alone. Laughter welled up inside him and leaked out. And he couldnât stop. He laughed so much tears came out. He couldnât stop crying. Even after he stopped laughing, his tears still wouldnât stop for some reason.
Ah, I see. He felt like he finally understood.
This is what it means to lose your mother.
so much tears came out. He couldnât stop crying. Even after he stopped laughing, his tears still wouldnât stop for some reason.
Ah, I see. He felt like he finally understood.
This is what it means to lose your mother.