Chapter 58 - 54: God... Where Are You?
For the long-lived Logos people, a hundred years passed in the blink of an eye between day and night.
The Kingdom finally welcomed prosperity once again, after having endured the hardships of early land reclamation and animal domestication.
The wheat, once limited to a small corner, expanded across every inch of fertile soil after the Logos people began slash-and-burn agriculture. The wild boars, numbering a mere seventeen decades ago, bred and multiplied under domestication, growing to several hundred in number. Besides wild boars, the Logos people also tamed mouflons and bison.
Although these animals were often temperamental, the Logos people, relying on their strong bodies and keen senses, would subdue them with bare hands when they went berserk, disciplining them with punches and kicks. Over time, the mouflons and bison gradually grew docile under the fists and feet of the Logos people and eventually submitted.
Even though the Kingdom was never short of Hunters, many Logos people no longer lived by hunting and gathering but relied on agriculture and animal husbandry instead, resulting in a continuous increase in population amidst the abundance.
Because of this, a greater division of labor slowly emerged within Logos civilization, with occupations such as leather craftsmen, farmers, grinding artisans, and millers progressively coming into existence over the century.
It could be said that everything within the Logos Kingdom was thriving.
King Yarlessto watched the development of the Kingdom and felt a deep pride and satisfaction for these great achievements.
After settling down, King Yarlessto, who had not forgotten his identity as a Priest, would often return to the Pattern Garden to tirelessly repeat the prophecies of the past to the fellow Priests.
According to the rules once established by Prophet Al, only Priests were allowed to depict anything related to God.
Therefore, in order to spread the stories of God to everyone, the Priests bore the important mission of proclaiming the divine prophecies through paintings.
