Escape from an Ancient Civilization Ch 121
by berryChapter 121
âIf one knows in advance who will come and what may happen, itâs easier to prepare.â
âThey wonât come. Donât expect them.â
â…?â
What expectation? Donât tell me⊠he thinks Iâm waiting for the princess.
Medeus was scrunching his brow like a sulking child.
âHeh.â
A short laugh slipped from Nataekâs lips.
âMedeus.â
Like a thoroughly peeved child, Medeus glared at Nataek.
âIâm notâabout the princessââ
âLion! General! The banquet is ready. The Ensi has commanded that both of you must attend.â
An interloper cut in before the conversation could be tied off. Always at times like this⊠Is this the systemâs planted spoiler?
âPlease, this way.â
As the attendant led the way, a system prompt rose up behind his back.
[Main] The story âBanquet of Promiseâ begins.
The system announced the start of a new main story. It had to be part of the Umma conquest. Even so, something in Nataekâs chest sat uncomfortably. Medeus seemed⊠sulky, somehow. And now they had to enter the banquet hall without having soothed that feeling at all.
Many nobles had already arrived when they entered, led by the attendant. The one who stood out most by far⊠was the diviner.
The diviner sat beside his lord. His face looked on the verge of an automatic nod toward Nataek, but he barely restrained himselfâjust barelyâand that alone was enough to drive Nataek to distraction.
âPlease, sit here.â
The seat indicated by the attendant was not far from Samuagonâand directly opposite the diviner.
This is killing me⊠Hey⊠twitching your face like that while only looking at me, and think it wonât be obvious? Just donât look at me at all!
âIt seems Delamâs ships have met a squall, so we shall begin the banquet first while wishing for their safe arrival.â
When Samuagon raised his cup of geshtin toward the air, the other nobles lifted the cups before them high as well.
âUnder Inannaâs blessing many have gatheredâtruly, a joyous day. In commemoration of the glory brought by Inannaâs favor, may the name of Kish be engraved firmly upon this land!â
After the flowery toast ended, all took a sip of geshtin. Nataek, who only pretended to drink, let barely a drop touch his tongue. As he rolled the droplet over his tongueâ
âMessenger of Inanna.â
Cough.
Startled by the sudden summons, air caught in his throat. Nataek quickly sipped water and answered.
âYes, Ensi.â
âAre you acquainted with Ummaâs sukkal?â
For an instant, Nataekâs eyes met the divinerâs. The divinerâs pupils trembled.
Gah! What do I do?! Deny it flat-out?
His eyes said exactly that.
Calm down. Stay still. Donât babble and make a mess.
Before the diviner could say something foolish, Nataek spoke quickly.
âThat could be said, or not said.â
âWhat do you mean by that?â
Nataek had only realized upon entering this ancient world that he was a virtuoso of lies. With life at stake or in sudden crisis, he became a silver tongue.
âThere is no personal familiarity; we met briefly when I went to Ummaâto receive Inannaâs revelation.â
The diviner nodded vigorously. It couldnât have looked more awkward if he tried.
Sigh⊠Donât make it obvious. Please. Do nothingâŠ
Now it seemed the factor raising the difficulty of Ummaâs conquest was none other than the diviner himself. If heâd known this would happen, he wouldnât have told the man to bring his lord to Kish; he would have told him to send the lord alone.
âOh? Then let Ummaâs sukkal tell us what you discussed.â
âMâme, my lord?â
Seeing the diviner stumble in a way so unlike him, Nataek was certain: the hidden hazard in the Umma conquest was this very diviner. And was Samuagon suspicious of himself and the diviner? Or merely curious? He couldnât tell, and the cold sweat flowed all the more.
âIn Umma, weâno. The priest and Iââ
Nataek lifted the red cup of geshtin, eyes on the diviner. He took a quick gulp and used the cup to cover his lipsâso Samuagon wouldnât catch on. Then he moved his mouth slightly.
Pray. Pray. Pray.
Say you prayed.
Catching the hint, the diviner quickly spoke.
âWe prayed. That a unified state would be established upon this landâupon Kishâs land.â
It sounded odd, but at least the time bomb didnât go off.
PhewâŠ
Swallowing, Nataek set the cup back on the table. Samuagon looked surprised by the divinerâs words.
âOh? Ummaâs sukkal prayed for Kishâs prosperity?â
The divinerâs eyes flashed. Yes! At last, the story is proceeding according to our plan!
Watching him, Nataek clenched a damp fist beneath the table. Medeus, who knew the plan completely, merely kept quietly sipping his geshtin. The diviner looked solemnly at Samuagon.
âIn Umma as well, the word of the gods has come down. That we must now join forces for the fertile land and achieve unification.â
âAchieve unification?â
The diviner fixed Nataek with a long look, then turned to his timorous lord. The Ensi of Umma, who had done nothing yet, was already turning white as paperâfar frailer in the flesh than any scene Nataek had watched during a playthrough.
âThe Ensi of Umma desires peace for this land more than anyone. And he has long wished to punish the cruel, barbaric Gutians and drive them out. If the Ensi of Kish holds the same will as we do, then Umma will pledge eternal fealty to Kish.â
In short, promise to crush the Gutians in Ur, and I will become your vassal. It was a negotiation that aimed for the conquest of Ur and Umma at once. Nataek clasped both hands together under the table now.
Please⊠Please accept it. Please. Theyâre offering to bow their heads on their own. Where will such windfall come again?
Just then something warm pressed atop his tense hands. A large hand covered his clenched fists and gently patted them. With one hand Medeus drank his geshtin, and with the other, lowered beneath the table, he soothed Nataek.
Stroking his beard, Samuagon hummed thoughtfully. Then he asked Nataek,
âMessenger of Inanna, what do you think of this proposal?â
It felt like a game of shuttlecock. The diviner had sent the ball; now it was Nataekâs turn to return it. With proper decorum, he answered,
âInanna wills to grant unification of this land to Kish. Since Ummaâs will and Inannaâs will are thus aligned, it is only right to accept with joy.â
Samuagon now turned to Ummaâs lord.
âEnsi of Umma. Is this your heart as well?â
âThâthat is precisely why I came in person. Pray accept Ummaâs loyalty.â
âHa ha ha ha!â
Samuagonâs booming laughter rang through the hall.
âInannaâs favor opens the smooth road so swiftly! I accept Ummaâs fealty!â
The system prompt appeared as the words left his mouth, and Nataek exulted.
âUmmaâs fealtyâ is absorbed by Samuagon.
Conquest of âUmmaâ succeeded.
Only then did a joyous cheer break from the nobles as well.
[Main] The story âBanquet of Promiseâ has been completed.
Sitting amid the suddenly noisy hall, Nataek thought quietly.
After Delam, then Uruk⊠and now Umma is the third city. Can it really proceed this easily? Shouldnât the difficulty be higher? This isnât climbing in difficulty at allâitâs unfolding like a tutorial-level sequence even in story modeâŠ
His gaze, following his thoughts, fixed on the delighted diviner.
No wayâŠ
When you got down to it, the conquest of Umma had been accomplished not by Nataek but by the diviner. Alone, he had gone to Umma, posed as a prophet with glib words, ensnared the lord with false power, and dragged him here.
If this story belonged not to Nataek but to the diviner⊠then a tutorial-level progression made sense. Umma was the first city the diviner would âconquer.â
To think it would tangle together like thisâŠ
This game certainly had a knack for blindsiding. With a wry laugh, Nataek took another sip of geshtin. With the situation clear, his unease washed away.
So only Ur remains?
After a grueling path, they had come this far. He was gladâbut the way it all fell into his lap left him rather dazed.
Dazed? The heat flooding his face felt strange; Nataek pressed his palm to his cheek. But his face was burning like a brazier.
What is this. Why⊠suddenlyâŠ
He gulped down a cold drink to cool offâwhen a white hand darted in.
âThatâs enough.â
Looking at the seized wrist, Nataek glanced down at what he held. The cup of geshtin, filled to overflowing before, was now empty. Only then did he realize what he had been drinking.
AhâŠ
A bell rang in his head with a clang. The world tilted left, then right. Medeus drew close and murmured,
âTeresi. Are you all right?â
Just that one whisper at his ear sent a shiver skittering up his thigh.
âŠRuined.
Footnotes:
- âGeshtinâ is a Sumerian term for wine or grape-products; here it functions as the ceremonial drink at the banquet.
- âSukkalâ refers to a high-ranking official or vizier-like court functionary in Mesopotamian contexts; the diviner is presented under this title.
- âGutiansâ were an ancient people from the Zagros region; in Mesopotamian sources they often appear as invaders or destabilizing forces, fitting their narrative role here.