Chapter 1728 – Discussing the Divine
byThere was something sacred to standing in the Dungeon. It was a place of infinite possibility, of rich mana and unending gifts. What purpose did it serve, for what reason did it put forward such bounty, if it wasn’t for the benefit of the Old Races who had lived upon Pangera before the Dungeon had made itself known to them?
War Bishop Graham Pearson rose to his feet, having completed his hour of prayer, feelings of praise and gratitude still resounding in his heart. After a lifetime as part of the Church, exposed to both the light and dark sides of it, he still felt, deep in his bones, the certainty of his faith.
The Dungeon existed to serve the worthy.
Every monster that spawned within it was an offering for those strong enough to claim it.
“I don’t need to be here,” Grand Priest Vinting stated from nearby, not for the first time.
Unbothered, Graham turned to the other man, his eyes as cold and blue as mana-infused ice.
“Your steps along the Path have led you to this place, to this moment,” the War Bishop chided him patiently. “You are where you are meant to be. It isn’t for you to refute or deny, but to pray and meditate on why.”
Alir’s face tightened with anger, but the War Bishop had no fear of him. If they were to be compared in the crude metric of Levels, Graham outstripped his contemporary several times over. In terms of experience and skill, the gap was significantly wider than that. Between the two men, the only way in which Alir could be considered superior was rank within the Church.
Not that Graham cared for such things.
“Are you at least willing to meet with the delegates from Green Mountain?” Alir asked acidly.
He was hoping to find a way to get himself out of the Dungeon, Graham could see that. If it wasn’t possible by demanding the War Bishop let him go, perhaps he could influence others to make it happen. The man was as slippery as a snake, and unworthy of the elevated position he held within the faith.
“Of course I am,” Graham replied. “You understand that prayer must come before other tasks, do you not?”
“Naturally,” Alir replied with a scowl.
“Then I fail to see the problem.”
Stolen story; please report.
Not far away from the two men, Graham could see the delegation waiting. Strong-looking soldiers, experienced professionals with decades of service in the Dungeon, fighting waves and purging monsters. People Graham could respect.
They understood the trade of what took place in the Dungeon, even if they didn’t grasp its purpose.
He pitied them for their ignorance. What satisfaction could they find in their work without fully grasping the divine meaning behind it? Blindly walking the Path was no different than not walking on it at all.




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