Chapter 158
I’ll Be The Warrior’s Mother
Last night, the very first thing that came to Yelenaâs mind after listening to the entirety of Sidrionâs story was none other than the donations she had made to the temple. They werenât directly donated by Yelena, but they were under her name.
âI refuse to watch the temple enjoy the money given under my name.â
Yelena had been donating to the temple from birth, praying for the safety of Count Sorteâs child.
Yelena flipped through 20 yearsâ worth of accounts page-by-page. The final sum of the donations made every year without fail for almost 20 years was an unimaginable amount.
âThe donation details and amounts are all recorded in this ledger, so bring out everything thatâs written in it.â
âEven if you suddenly say such a thingâ¦â
A young priest alternated his gaze between Yelena and the ledger with an incredulous look. Then, he peeked at the sum written in the ledger and subsequently let out an ugly shriek.
ââ¦Please wait a moment.â
Perhaps the young priest felt as though this issue wasnât for him to resolve after seeing the number. He hastily left his post.
Sidrion watched the priestâs every move as he stood next to Yelena, guarding her side. Then he asked, ââ¦Is this what you came here for?â
âYep.â
âJust whyâ¦â
âWhat do you mean, why? If I donât do at least this, I might faint from anger.â
Yelena was being sincere. She couldnât find any other way to put the anger burning inside of her to rest.
A few moments later, the door of the reception hall reopened.
âPriest Bekah, Priest Dele. Itâs this lady over here. This ladyâ¦â
Two elderly priests entered with the young priest. Yelena recognized one of them. It was the priest she had encountered yesterday on the road.
The elder priest Bekah also saw Yelena and briefly hesitated where he stood. Then, he saw Sidrion and instantly scowled. He sat down on a chair and forced a smile.
âI was wondering who it was. Youâre the young lady I ran into yesterday.â
âDuchess.â
ââ¦Youâre the duchess, I see.â
âAre you the overseer of this temple?â
How Yelena addressed and spoke to Bekah had changed dramatically in a day, which flustered the latter. He made an effort to conceal that emotion and answered calmly.
âI wouldnât call myself the overseer, but I do hold some authority over the templeâs affairs.â
âThen Iâll have to repeat myself to you. I came to retrieve my donations. Down to the last penny.â
âHaha. The donationsâ¦â
Bekah was already holding the ledger, as if the young priest had given it to him. Bekah glanced down at the ledger and spoke.
âCan I ask the reason for this? If it isnât a valid reason, we cannot return what has already been donated to the temple.â
âA valid reason, you sayâ¦â
âTo tell you in advance, any personal or emotional reasons are not considered valid.â
Bekah looked at Sidrion.
âEspecially if you only listened to the words of one person and lost your faith in God and the temple⦠Then we cannot accept such a reason all the more.â
âLet me ask you something before I give you my reason. What do you think about what happened 7 years ago?â
âI beg your pardon?â
âIâm talking about how the temple attempted to disgrace my husband by fabricating evidence for your own profit. Have you self-reflected in the slightest?â
Perhaps it was then that Bekah realized who Yelena was. His expression changed.
But it was only a brief moment in which he wavered.
ââ¦There appears to be a misunderstanding.â
âMisunderstanding?â
âAttempted to disgrace your husband, you say. There was no such incident.â
âAre you trying to get out of this?ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âHowever, there was such an incident in which we sought evidence of the truth.â
Bekah smiled unwaveringly as he stared at Yelena.
âIt is unfortunate, but isnât it true that your husband was cursed by the devil? The temple merely tried to reveal that fact.â
âKeep talking.â
âThough of course, I acknowledge that we used a method that was more or less off kilter.â
ââ¦â
âWe made a slight error out of our overzealous sense of duty and ambition to alert the ignorant, but good-natured public of the devilâs curse that was still prevalent in this world.â
ââ¦â
âAnd the revenge we suffered from was too severe for the price of a small mistake. You mentioned self-reflecting, but Iâm not quite sure that weâre the ones who need to self-reflectâ¦â
âYou keep claiming that my husband was cursed by the devil.â