Chapter 303.2
Living As the Villainess Queen
But Aldrit wasnât even listening anymore. He didnât care that much about the scales, but he did start to think about something else.
When he had asked Mara about Mahar and all he had said about him was that Mahar was his enemy.
Sang-je is Mahar, Aldrit realized. I need to let the queen know.
He looked back at the mouse and glared. He was determined to let the queen know about Mahar, but would it be okay to bring the mouse along with him?
âOnly I know how to deal with Mahar,â Mara had told him.
Aldrit didnât know if he could believe Maraâs claim enough to bring him to the queen.
âIâll let you meet her if and only if,â Aldrit stopped to take a breath as the mouseâs ears twitched, âyou promise not to harm the queen. If you do, I will do everything in my power to make you pay.â
Fine. I canât harm an Anika anyway.
âIâm not just talking about directly harming herâân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
I said fine! Why do you have to take things so seriously? Now, when are we leaving? Itâll take a while to get to the castle so we should hurry.
Aldrit frowned at the mouse. When he spoke to Mara, it felt a lot like speaking to an old man.
He remembered how his ancestors werenât very fond of humor, even after they had lived in the dark basement for as long as they had. It made sense that a lark who had spent most of his time with them would share the same qualities. Though it was because of a deal, the tribe still owed a lot to the lark. If it wasnât for their home in the caves, they wouldnât have survived.
Eventually, he decided to go to the Hashi kingdom. He needed to meet with the queen, but he wasnât sure when he would be able to do that. He also considered searching for other factions of the tribe while he was there. He didnât know how long all his tasks would take.
He wasnât worried about leaving. The wise ones and the young ones could be trusted to take care of the tribe. He planned on leaving quietly after assigning a few tasks to members of the tribe, but he knew that, despite wanting to leave in peace, the next dawn, they would be waiting for him at the entrance of the lake to see him off.
All the while, the mouse wouldnât stop talking.
So, I told those old people, why not make a deal that will benefit us all?
His stories seemed to be on a loop.
How noisy, Aldrit couldnât help but think to himself. He missed the days when he traveled alone in the desert. Now that he had a companion to worry about, the desert seemed too wide and their journey seemed too long.
***
It was a wise decision for Eugene to ask Alber for more time. She knew that she would have regretted ending the dream early if she had known there was a possibility for more time together. She made sure to try and get as much information as she could.
âMara is a lark,â Alber told her.
Eugene nodded, trying to put the pieces together.
There wasnât a single thing that Alber couldnât answer. The younger woman felt like she had been given the answers to an incredibly difficult exam.
Mara is a lark. She couldnât help but be angered to learn that so many of these people had been monsters all along.
âWhat is Mara planning?â
Alber shrugged. âI donât know,â she said. âThe monster thinks that all larks are monsters, but it didnât tell me anything specific. From what Iâve understood, Sang-je had plans against Mara, but they didnât seem to work. He had made a mistake or something like it.â
Alber had known about Maraâs existence for a few hundred years already. Mara acted as the head of a religion just as Sang-je had, and his following was steadily growing in size. Sang-je had told her about how another lark was acting similar to him and he had asked her to search for his whereabouts. Alber, however, didnât want to help. She believed the enemy of her enemy to be her friend and she hoped that the other lar would annoy Sang-je and inconvenience his plans.
But he was so insistent on her finding it that she was forced to look anyway. Surprisingly though, she couldnât find it. It was as if something was blocking her.
âThat monster was definitely bothered by the other larkâs presence,â Alber said. â20 years ago, he swore that he would kill all of Maraâs followers. But what sins do humans have to be used by a lark in that way? So, I told that monster that I had looked into the future and found that, if he killed those followers, the Anika he was looking for would never be born.â
âDid you really look into the future?â
Alber chuckled. âThe future is limitless. No one knows.â
She lied, Eugene thought. She had noticed that Alberâs personality was quite strong. Though she had been persecuted by that monster for all those years, she only resented it, she never feared it.
She remembered what Dana had told her.
âA follower of Mara was rumored to have kidnapped you and disappeared soon after,â Dana had said. âPeople thought that, because one of Maraâs followers was involved, everyone tied to it would be jailed and kicked out of the Holy City. But Sang-je seemed to let it go.â
Eugene looked across the table at Alber. It was all thanks to her, she thought. If she didnât step up or if Sang-je hadnât listened to her, those followers might not have survived. They wouldnât have just been kicked out, they would have been brutally murdered⦠just like in the book I wrote.
Suddenly, a vision flashed through her head: Maraâs followers, all oppressed.
She had written that in her novel.