Escape from an Ancient Civilization Ch 126
by berryChapter 126
âThe Lion of Inanna, speak.â
âThe aftermath of the Uruk campaign has not yet fully subsided. Furthermore, we will need time to properly receive Inannaâs new revelation. Might it not be best to determine the expedition to Ur after that? With the goddessâs protection, the path to Ur shall open more smoothly.â
âYou mean the Lion of Inanna will also march in this campaign to Ur?!â Samuagon exclaimed in surprise.
Yes⊠Because if I donât go personally, Iâll never see the True Ending. And I definitely cannot send Medeus alone. Like it or not, I have no choice but to go.
Once again, Nataek invoked Inannaâs name to restrain Samuagonâs warlike eagerness. Yet, within Sununki, after countless failed attempts, Ur remained the one city he had never managed to conquer.
Prepare, prepare, then prepare againâit never seemed to be enough. As Nataek curbed Samuagonâs fervor, the Soothsayer swallowed nervously, trying to hide his tension, while Medeusâhis expression still seethingârefused even to glance at Nataek. One man anxious, another simmering with anger, others all eager to push forward⊠and Nataek caught in the middle, trying to soothe one, argue with another, and keep peaceâall while drenched in cold sweat.
Gods⊠I just want to throw it all away.
He bit back the words boiling to his throat and forced the discussion to its tenuous conclusion.
When at last the long debate ended and the chamber doors opened, Medeus swept past Nataek without a glance.
âMedeus.â
But he did not turn, striding onward. Until now, Medeus might rage, but he had never ignored him entirely. Something was different this time.
Seriously? I was only trying to save someoneâs life with a mouthâtoâmouth act. Itâs not like our lips even touched! Itâs not as if I even wanted to do it.
For the first time, irritation stirred in Nataek toward Medeusâs stubborn silence.
âMedeus!â he called again, but Medeus still walked ahead, unyielding. Nataek halted abruptly where he stood.
Fine, letâs see how far youâll go without me.
He remained still, watching. Surely Medeus wouldnât leave him entirely?
And indeed, he didnât. When the sound of pursuit failed to follow, Medeusâs long strides halted too. He didnât turn back, but neither did he move farther awayâkeeping exactly the distance of someone sulking, like a dog on a tooâlong leash during a walk.
Imagining Medeus with floppy ears and a tail, Nataekâs anger dulled to mere exasperation. Narrowing his eyes, he snapped, âAre you really planning to keep walking on without me like that?â
At last, Medeus turned. Step by step, his long legs carried him swiftly back toward Nataek.
âWho said I left you behind?â
âYou didnât answer me and went off on your own.â
ââŠYou should have followed properly.â
But even now, his eyes avoided Nataekâs, fixed on the air beside him.
Sulking. Definitely sulking. Or is it still outright anger?
Nataek suspected the reason, but still struggled to see why it mattered so much. Yet deep down, he knew the truth: his own acceptance was irrelevant. What mattered was Medeusâs feelingsâand finding a way to ease them.
So again, he bent his pride.
ââŠI was wrong.â
Medeusâs gaze met his.
âWrong? Wrong about what?â
âAbout all of it. Everything that made you angry.â
âAnd what was that, exactly?â
ââŠ.â
Silence.
I have to choose my words carefully now. A single misstep, and heâll explode further. But I donât know the exact point of his fury either. Should I risk provoking him with a guessâor speak plainly?
At last Nataek decided.
âThere is something I think it might be. I donât know if thatâs really a reason to be this angry. But if my suspicion is right, then I swear Medeus will never have reason to feel this way from me again. So pleaseâcan we let this go now?â
ââŠAnd what exactly do you suspect?â
âAbout when I tried to feed that Ur noble water. Was that it?â
ââŠâ
So it was.
âThen let me be perfectly clear: that really was nothing but a medical act. A treatment. I had no other intention at all.â
Odd. It sounded like the kind of reassurance one gave a lover. How in the world had it come to this?
âYou had no other intentâŠ?â Medeus muttered. âNone at all?â
âNone. Truly.â
So⊠the misunderstanding is over?
As Nataek leaned his head gently, trying to read Medeusâs expressionâ
ââŠNo other intent. Then I had no reason to be angry. Yes. I see. I wasnât angry. I wonât be. Donât concern yourself.â
Biting his lip, Medeus whispered the words as though to himself.
Relieved, Nataek exhaled.
âThenââ
But before he could finish, Medeus suddenly spun and strode off, faster than before.
âMedeus?!â
Even as Nataek called out, Medeus gave him not even the chance of a backward glance. Within moments, he vanished completely from sight, leaving Nataek stranded in the middle of the courtyard.
âSo⊠was that forgiveness⊠or not?â
The answer awaited him back at the residence.
When Nataek returned, Medeus was with the physician, listening intently.
âThe treatment is finished, and all the external wounds are cleaned. None were seriousâmostly scrapes and bruises from falling. With some herbs brewed and taken, he should likely recover consciousness by tonight or tomorrow. How shall we proceed? Shall I remain to attend him, or bring in a stretcher and move him elsewhere?â
âKeep him here. Weâll use another chamber. Stay with him until he wakes, and guard him closely. Iâll post guards as wellâso take no chances.â
âYes, General.â
Medeus displayed his usual calculated caution.
âThatâs a relief. No grave wounds then,â Nataek said.
But yet again, Medeus offered no response.
So he still was not appeased. Even after explaining that it hadnât been what it looked likeâŠ
How do I fix this? Where did I go wrong? Did I misjudge from the very beginning?
Arms folded, Nataek replayed the earlier conversation word for word, frowning deeply. He did not see Medeus glance at him, and the look in his commanderâs eyes only darkened further at Nataekâs furrowed brow.
Clenching his lips, Medeus abruptly turned and left the chamber. His trailing lashes reddenedâunseen by Nataek.
Bang.
The door shut with a force that made the physician jump. âMyâ! Must be the wind!â he muttered nervously, hand to his chest.
Nataek only sighed, heavy with frustration.
With nowhere else to go, he remained in the chamber, watching over the noble alongside the physicianâbut without touching him at all.
Better not give Medeus any reason to misinterpret.
The physician wrung out a wet cloth at the bedside and laid it across the nobleâs forehead. Rising, he said, âIâll fetch fresh water, and brew more herbal medicine. Please watch him until I return.â
âYes. Donât worry.â
Switching places, Nataek pulled up a chair and sat beside the bed. But even then, he deliberately kept distance, arms folded tightly over his chest.
No misunderstandings this time.
He stared at the sleeping noble, mind working furiously.
Ur. The last city-state left to conquerâŠ
As heâd already said at Agade, there was no chance of victory through open battle in their present state. Not even with Medeus, Kish, Delam, and Ummaâs united might did Nataek feel confident.
And even if they poured everything into conquering Ur, what then? After unification, the next threat would be from the Hittitesâarmed with iron weapons. To pit his exhausted troops against them would be disastrous. He needed reserves, saved for later.
Was there no other way? Perhaps infiltration again, as they had in Uruk? âŠInfiltration?
Suddenly, Nataek straightened.
âYes⊠If I could slip into Ur and glean their secretsâfind their weaknessesâmaybe then we could win with only a minimum of forces…â
But it was no ordinary placeâit was Gutiâoccupied territory. Entering their stronghold would be unimaginably dangerous.
âBut is there any alternativeâŠ? HmmmâŠâ
He brooded over it. And then, alongside his murmurs, came another sound.
âUghhâŠâ
Whipping his head around, Nataek saw the noble on the bed grimacing, eyes struggling halfâopen, locking directly onto him.
âWâwhere⊠am IâŠ?â
Footnotes:
- Hittites â historical Anatolian people, noted in both history and lore for their early mastery of iron weaponry, posing immense threat in the narrativeâs future arc.