Chapter 1039 (1/2)

Chapter 1039: 323. St. Dillan Fire_3

“You’re saying that the ‘Fire of St. Dillan’ is here?” Noland Lee asked.

“Yes, it’s right here, as if it’s somewhere very, very deep underground,” Omar Goddard said,

“Once I’ve mastered the sub-dimensional plane, I will go find it. Perhaps, I could meet my clansmen there.”

Noland Lee raised his hand to his head and asked a seemingly unrelated question:

“Wait, I have a doubt. You should know that only scenes from the natural world can be extracted for mana, right? So do you think your homestead can produce mana?”

Omar Goddard pondered for a moment:

“I’ve considered this question, kindhearted wizard. Just as you surmised, ‘homestead’ and the sub-dimensional planes are the same thing, and neither can produce mana. Only the universe illuminated by the Fire of St. Dillan can become a source of mana extraction. In fact, when we giants practice our breathing methods, we must rely on the radiance of the Fire of St. Dillan. Even if we create a ‘sun’ in our homestead, we cannot use it to practice the breathing method.”

Case solved.

It must be the Fire of St. Dillan that Omar Goddard mentioned, which made the natural world a source of mana.

In the era of Omar Goddard, the giants created their homestead using the extraordinary power provided by the Fire of St. Dillan.

In the present era, the wizards repeated this operation, just without knowing about the existence of the Fire of St. Dillan.

Does that mean wherever the Fire of St. Dillan is present in a space, that space can produce mana? Is that the idea?

Well, doesn’t that mean only the space where the Fire of St. Dillan exists is the natural world, and the space without the Fire of St. Dillan is a sub-dimensional plane?

What if the Fire of St. Dillan were to leave the world that Noland Lee is in now, what would happen?

Noland Lee racked his brains but couldn’t foresee what kind of future that would be.

But then again, who could find and take away the Fire of St. Dillan?

Perhaps Omar Goddard could, he seemed quite familiar with the Fire of St. Dillan.

Noland Lee snapped back to reality and continued to listen to the other party’s words.

Omar Goddard said,

The ‘Patriarchal Giant’ divided the giant clans into five categories.

Dusk Giants govern the birth and death of flesh and blood, that is, they are responsible for reproduction and burying the giants who fall in battle.

Storm Giants govern the planet’s weather, cultivate plants, raise animals, and domesticate monsters.

Iron Giants are in charge of minerals, forge materials, make weapons and armor for the giant army, and build cosmic fortresses.

Dawn Giants are overseers, the personal guards of the ‘Patriarchal Giant’, responsible for supervising the other giants.

Scroll Giants are scholars, historians, and strategists, the scribes at the side of the ‘Patriarchal Giant’.

This straightforward classification method allowed all kinds of giants to coexist harmoniously until the day of the doomsday disaster that destroyed their clan and their inhabitable planet.

Omar Goddard was clueless about the disaster that devastated the giant clans and their livable planet.

All he remembered was being knocked unconscious by the explosion of the planet.

By the time he awoke, he was already drifting in space, severely injured.

After that, Noland Lee knew what had happened.

Omar Goddard, guided by the Fire of St. Dillan, approached the planet he is on now, only to be ambushed by Shubick hiding in the shadows, and together they fell into the Inner Cosmos.

There were no ‘Patriarchal Giants’ in the Inner Cosmos, nor any trace of the Storm, Iron, Dawn, Dusk, or Scroll Giants.

If it weren’t for still being able to sense the presence of the Fire of St. Dillan, Omar Goddard frankly said he would have fallen into complete despair and pessimism.

Seeing the Fire of St. Dillan had become the belief that sustained him.

“I have told you all the history I know, kindhearted wizard,” he said.