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Chapter 896: Dust-laden Secrets

In the darkness, two hands seized Roland at once.

“What’s happening?” Nightingale asked, sharp and alert.

“The illusion projected by this sigil reaches directly into the mind,” Agatha explained. “It will seem as though you have been transported to another world entirely alone — but reality is unaffected. We are still standing in the grand hall.”

“If you do not wish to watch,” Isabella added, “you can simply step outside the sigil’s effective range.”

The darkness bled away in stages. The transparent glass dome materialized first, then the marble floor, then the wide roundtable with its ring of witches in Union-style copes — among them the unmistakable Queen of Starfall City, her hair burning red as a forge. Though this was a scene from four centuries past, every detail of the phantom felt immediate: the grain of the stone, the curl of steam rising from the tea on the table, a moment long buried resurrected into startling presence.

If such technology had existed in the world Roland came from, the historians who had spent careers sifting dirt for text fragments would have wept.

One hand released him. The other did not — it shifted, found his fingers, and laced them tightly together.

He knew at once who that was.

He smiled and returned the quiet pressure before turning his attention back to the center of the phantom.

Isabella activated the magic stones one by one. The locations shifted — from the witches’ escape route to Taquila, then to Starfall City. As Alice grew younger and younger, the faces around her kept changing. By the end, only a handful of familiar ones remained. The arithmetic of it was grim: across the prolonged brutality of the war, the Union had suffered tremendous losses, and very few senior witches had lived long enough to reach the escape.

This was the systemic flaw of the witch empire — the more powerful the witch, the higher her rank, and the higher her rank, the closer she stood to the front lines. It sounded logical until war arrived, at which point it became a catastrophe. The high-ranking witches had to fight on the front lines themselves rather than commanding from safety. Roland had heard from Agatha that Alice had become a Transcendent during an especially dangerous battle — and that during her reign, she had endured several more just like it. A single mistake by her, at any one of those moments, would have changed not merely the Union’s history but perhaps the whole of humanity’s.

Such was the cost of leadership for the Head of the Three Chairs. For the other high-ranking witches, it was no different.

The system, in truth, had never built a proper place for leaders to develop. A raw recruit needed only to survive one or two battles, to taste blood, before becoming a veteran; a commanding officer needed to survive dozens of battles, to watch thousands die, before genuinely maturing. Having a leader charge personally at the vanguard was a powerful thing for morale — but it belonged among last resorts. When things went well, good troops held their line without the general needing to appear at all.

Leaders and common soldiers did not carry equivalent value. In any large-scale war where mass casualties were already certain, spending leaders like infantry was recklessness dressed as courage.

Roland had not expected to uncover anything remarkable through these sigils. The past Popes must have reviewed the same phantoms countless times; if anything here had touched on the origins of the Divine Will or the nature of the relics of gods, the church would not have collapsed into the sorry ruin it now occupied. His purpose in coming was simpler — curiosity, and the accumulation of experience.

What unfolded confirmed what he had imagined. The group observed primarily ceremonies: important conferences, festivals, military mobilizations. It was natural that the Sigils of Magic Stones would only have been used on such occasions. According to Agatha, maintaining a sigil for this length of time was extraordinarily expensive.

Then came the final phantom.

Alice and the other two Chairs were absent. In their place: a crowd of senior witches in disheveled clothing, the image quality visibly rougher than anything that had preceded it.

“Are those people—” Agatha began.

“The founders of the early Union?” Phyllis asked.

Roland lifted an eyebrow. “Who are they?”

“The Extraordinaries who survived the first Battle of Divine Will. It was they who founded the Union. Look at the documents on the table — could this be…” Phyllis’s voice had gone bright with surprise.

“Yes.” Joy filled Agatha’s voice. “I never imagined I would see the vow of the three queens with my own eyes.”

Roland looked again at the table, found only text scribed in magical power — legible only to witches — and said, “Can someone explain what the vow contained?”

“Allow me.” Agatha stepped forward in the phantom’s glow. “In the history of the Union, this event is considered the moment a loose organization became a centralized power. Every awakened witch learned of it. After the first Battle of Divine Will, the Union — still entirely under witch governance — was newly founded and torn by competing visions: how to rule ordinary people, how to prosecute the war against the demons. These debates lasted years. Three major factions eventually emerged and grew until they had surpassed all the lesser lords and city-states, leaving the Union with the oligarchic structure we know.”

“The three powers — were they Starfall City, Taquila, and Arrieta?” Nightingale asked.

“Exactly,” Agatha said. “Because of the exceptional positions of those three Holy Cities, their rulers were typically crowned as queens. The Three Chiefs of the Union’s final tenure were the Queen of Starfall City, Alice; the Queen of Sunchaser, Natalia; and the Queen of Moonradiance, Eleanor.”

No wonder, Roland thought. To witches of that era, the vow of the three queens held much the same place as founding constitutional amendments held in the nations he knew — the moment an informal alliance resolved into a unified political body. No wonder Agatha and Phyllis had reacted with such emotion. It was historically decisive. However wretched the Union’s final chapter had been, without the Three Chiefs system, it would have collapsed far sooner in the second Battle of Divine Will — and it would never have produced the witches who had carried resisting demons, recovering Taquila as a lifelong calling.

But such things did not especially move Roland. His attention drifted to the minor textures of the scene: the cut of the witches’ clothing, the shape of the cups and stationery, the furniture and decoration of the hall. Alice’s age was evident in the shabbiness of her surroundings — in the wake of the first Battle of Divine Will, the witches’ domain had been left in an underdeveloped state from which they were only beginning to recover.

On the walls of the conference hall, Roland counted over ten portraits. Two of them depicted men. He guessed they were significant figures from the war — heroes of some kind.

Evidently, at that time, the Union had not yet come to view ordinary people as lesser beings. Men could still attend councils of this importance.

He was about to ask Agatha whether she recognized them when every trace of warmth left him.

It came from the floor and climbed his spine — an indescribable cold, sudden and total. The panic was so complete that his arms rose with goosebumps and the tips of his fingers began to tremble.

“What’s wrong?” Anna’s voice was close and urgent.

“That — that painting—” He swallowed. The words came with effort. “The person in that painting. I’ve seen her before.”

“Painting?”

The phantom was not as crisp as the earlier ones, but the silhouette in the second-to-last portrait was unmistakable. A middle-aged woman. Nothing remarkable in her features. Black hair coiled at the crown of her head. One eye hidden behind a patch. Seated in a high-backed chair, both hands folded over one another in her lap.

She was exactly Lan — Garcia’s master from Roland’s Dream World.

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