MPNS Ch 72
by berryChapter 72
âWhatâs going on?â
Finding the Princeâs Palace unusually busy from early morning, Nikiel called Paul to ask. He had started the day with light cardio, then taken a thorough bathâmere showering or quick rinses hadnât cleared body odor. After jogging, heâd idly lifted a copper bar for weights; metal smell and bluish rust stained his hands, and seeing a page struggle to clean it later made him feel guilty. Next time heâd wrap the bar in a towel before lifting. Quitting workouts was never an option.
After Bendiâs breakfast, he sat on his sofa paging through a book, but hallway clamor bled into his room. The palace wasnât usually so noisy. He craned his neckâtoo organized for simple ball prep.
Paul answered plainly:
âConsecrated iron furnishings arrived today from the Temple. We must handle them carefully.â
Consecrating ironâwhat did that even mean? Did they âbless itâ so it wouldnât rust? Such pointless fuss. âHolyâ iron? To a modern mind, nonsense. Sanctified iron didnât change Fe, atomic number 26, electron configuration [Ar] 3d6 4s2. Blessings couldnât turn iron into titanium. Even if consecration reduced rust, oxidized iron could be cleaned with mild acidic agentsâredox chemistry 101. Instead, medieval minds poured coin into temples and performed empty rituals.
But he couldnât say that aloud. He remembered Lucienâs warning: meddling with blastâfurnace practice bordered on treason.
Raised in a democratic land of candlelight protests against corruption, âtreasonâ didnât come instinctively to him; yet he knew that in a medieval order, treason meant annihilation of oneâs whole clan.
He reviewed what Lucien had saidâTempleâCrown entanglementâand reached a conclusion:
People werenât ignorant of blastâfurnace metallurgy; rather, the Temple held production rights over everything from weapons to household goods, and the king permitted it.
He had known something was off since being ordered to âmarry offâ a discharged army sergeantâdotard logic from the start. He mused, then asked Paul carefully:
âSo Temple people are here now?â
âYes. The clergy have come. Each year, they arrive with consecrated weapons for the Tournament and attend the ball.â
Paul added, face alight:
âThis year the Grand Master of the Temple Knights himself has come!â
Nikiel stared blanklyâno idea who that even was. Paul, sheepish, added:
âAt the feast two years ago, Your Highness praised his striking looks and showed interest. You may not recall now, but heâs a splendid, manly figureâyou will like him again.â
Nikiel, whose interest in men was near zero, simply turned away. He flipped pages feigning indifference to holy iron. Before Paul could drag him for the fortyâfourth fitting, Nikiel slipped from the palace againâhis escapes now as easy as breathing.
He guessed where to find the clergy: the royal Solius temple within the palace, or the attached lodging hall. He headed there without hesitation.
âThe Temple Grand Master is here?â
A furrow carved deep between Yullanâs brows. Benedict nodded heavily.
âYes. Unlike other years.â
It was odd indeed. The Temple Knights, sworn to wield steel only under Soliusâs grace, focused on proselytizing through war against infidels. They had no interest in monsterâhunts; they declared that the peasantsâ suffering under beasts and the yearly toll had nothing to do with Solius. The Four Lords had never once hunted alongside Temple reinforcements. Yet now the Grand Master himself?
Ordinarily, a bishop or auxiliary bishop brought consecrated arms and wares, attended the ball, and returned. The Grand Master outranked such envoysâno man for menial errands.
The Templeâs reason for visiting at Tournament time was simple: to make money.
Twentyâone years ago, an earthquake struck the eastern district of Ulukin. Remote and no nobleâs fief, it caused no casualtiesâbut a mountain collapsed, revealing a small cave once used as a private vault by a noble house annihilated early in the kingdomâs history.
The cave held luxuries; silks disintegrated on air, but much else shone intact. The Marquis Griffoux, lord of Ulukin, gifted the cave wholesale to the new king, who had just inherited the throne upon his fatherâs sudden death. Inside was a scripture: the testament of Brother Ikaim, a monk who evacuated about 300 villagers during the fall of the Black Dragon and died in the effort.
A scripture in Saint Ikaimâs own handâa religious treasure. The young king sent it straight to the Temple. It contained this passage:
âWhen darkness arose, poison crept upon all iron. The Sun, in pity, commanded it to depart; and the taint that enshrouded metal fled.â
On the pretext of this line, the Temple monopolized the blastâfurnace. Not freelyâconsecration âdonationsâ were budgeted; a portion was quietly kicked back to the king. State taxes thus became the kingâs private purse. Under âholy authority,â Temple domination of iron was a royalâTemple joint venture.
In consequence, extant blastâfurnace practice was dismantled, hundreds of smiths died. Other nations, wary of Ossinis, appeared to abolish the method too; some still produced iron, but dared not defend smiths openly lest crusade follow.
Another royal motive: fear of the Lordsâ might. The king knew his own weakness, so he gripped arms indirectly through the Temple to limit the Lordsâ force outside monsterâhunts.
The hardships this imposed on the people didnât concern him. Consecrated iron was so costly that farmers plowed with bronze tools, labor doubled.
ââŠPerhaps the oracle prompted this visit,â Yullan said. He recalled the oracle announced shortly after Nikiel lost his memory. He had intended to bar Nikiel from the Tournamentâuntil the oracle came.
He considered oracles a political tool. Born cursed and hypersensitive to holy power, he felt each year the Pontiffâs sanctity thinningâfrom river to stream. If even the Pontiff waned, lesser clergy were worse. The Templeâs divine current seemed drying out.
Thus the âoracleâ was a stage device to test, via Nikiel, whether such sanctity yet existed. The Grand Masterâs personal visit fit that agenda.
Benedict nodded slowly, then added:
âBut⊠Duke Boltwick has shut himself in for daysâno one to greet the Grand Masterâs party. It seems Your Grace must go yourself.â
Yullanâs brow arched. Boltwick, reclusive? The active âstagâ rarely stayed home. He usually handled external matters while the serpent burrowed for months and the bird vanished to skiesâRaymon was adept at politics.
For him to hole up now⊠had the recent frenzy driven him to smash his head into a tree and lose his wits?