01x04 - Forests and Clay Tablets
Posted: 06/30/23 08:54
M: {ED}
F: Main began crafting paper as the first step in her book-making process,
F: but her attempt to make pseudo-papyrus ended in failure.
F: "I'll go to the forest and make clay tablets in the spring."
F: Main now had her sights set on a new goal.
Title Card: Ascendance of a Bookworm
Title ,Title Card: Ascendance of a Bookworm
Ep Ep Title: Chapter Four Forests and Clay Tablets
T: Wow, what a feast!
G: Did you cook all of this, Main?
M: Yeah, since it was my turn to cook today.
M: Well, eat up before the food goes cold.
E: I don't know... I'd never seen anyone cook like that.
Flashback,E: What are you doing with the water we used to boil the veggies?
Flashback,M: Don't worry about it.
T: Let's eat.
GT: Delicious!
T: This pome soup is really great!
M: "Pome" being the unholy lovechild of paprika and tomato.
E: You're right. This is delicious.
M: In this world, it's standard practice to dump the water used to boil veggies.
M: Isn't it? The veggie flavors really pack a punch, right?
G: This wine-steamed chicken is great, too.
T: You must have a talent for cooking. The paruecake was just as good, too.
G: Maybe you could become a chef when you grow up.
E: We'll have to find a place that'll take her as apprentice.
conveyor-right,SignR: Apprentice Chef
conveyor-left,SignL: Making Books
M: Crap! I won't get to make my books!
M: I need to go to the forest and make clay tablets already!
conveyor-right,SignR: Apprentice Chef
M: B-But I already have a goal in mind!
G: And what is it, Main?
M: I want to go to the forest.
T: "Go to the forest," she says!
E: Main, we're talking about work right now.
M: I'm serious!
M: I wanna make clay tablets! That's why I need to go to the forest!
G: Clay tablets?
M: Yep! I'll write on them and make a book!
G: Write...
T: You, going to the forest? No way.
M: Yes way! I haven't fallen sick lately!
T: But you can't walk as far or as fast as the rest of us.
M: I'll be fine! I can go all the way to the well without being out of breath now!
T: And what if you're only able to walk part of the way?
T: You'll be a burden to everyone.
M: Well...
E: Tuuli goes to the forest all the time. She knows best.
E: You should listen to her.
M: What can I do to get your permission?
M: Build up your stamina and strength. No forest until then.
M: Got it.
M: With no means of going to the forest,
M: my desire for books could only simmer inside.
M: But then, one day...
M: Mister Otto's assistant? Who, me?!
G: He wants your help with files that need lots of calculations.
T: Can she even handle that job?
G: Yeah. She has worked with him once before, apparently.
G: He said she was a huge help.
T: She did?
G: But it's against the law to employ an unbaptized child,
G: so officially, you'll be going there to learn how to read and write.
M: What? Really?
G: Yeah.
G: He has to teach the apprentice soldiers, and he'll teach you with them.
G: You should learn everything you can from him.
G: You're a frail girl, Main.
G: But Otto said you were really smart,
G: and that you could make a good scrivener.
M: Scrivener?
G: Someone who helps people with paperwork to send to nobility or public officials.
G: The work pays well and isn't too demanding physically.
M: Dad!
G: Otto was in the traveling trade before he became a soldier,
G: and he still has connections with merchants.
G: The jobs your mother and I can refer you to wouldn't suit you.
G: So try to maintain a good relationship with Otto.
M: Thank you, Dad.
G: Oh, before I forget, these are the terms of employment.
G: You'll be paid in slate pencils and be allowed to take time off when sick.
G: Otto was stressing how favorable these terms were for him, budget-wise.
G: How can he be so petty with a kid?
M: He'll reap all the benefits of an assistant without burning a hole in the pocket.
M: Once a businessman, always a businessman.
G: Anyway, walk to the gate for a while,
G: and once you're able to keep up with the other kids, you may go to the forest.
G: Does that sound good to you?
M: Yep! I'll do my best!
G: Don't force yourself, okay? Take your time.
M: Yeah, I know.
M: Ultimately, Dad had to carry me to the gate from midway.
O: Let me introduce your new classmate.
O: This is Main, the chief's daughter.
O: Don't you boys dare mess with her.
All: Yes, sir!
O: Okay, let's begin.
O: The basic alphabet consists of letters.
O: Let's start with practicing how to write them.
O: You really do learn these letters quick.
M: I much prefer this to physical activities.
M: That aside, Mister Otto,
M: I think it's time to move on from the alphabet.
O: What? Already?
M: Look, they're starting to fidget.
M: It shows that they've lost focus.
M: You should switch to a different subject.
O: Oh, but...
M: That does it for the alphabet.
M: Next up is numbers.
M: That's all for today.
M: Be sure to memorize all the letters and numbers you've learned today by next time.
M: If you come unprepared, you won't be going home until you get everything down pat.
All: Okay!
M: They got out of here fast. Boys will be boys, I guess.
O: Main, they won't learn anything if I make it easy for them.
M: Oh, it's not that easy.
M: If they don't do their homework, they won't get to go home at all.
O: Yeah, but...
M: Mister Otto, you shouldn't compare them to me.
O: That's right.
O: Guess I'll do things your way for a while and see how it goes.
M: Thank you.
O: Now, it's your turn.
O: You should learn how the alphabet works in practice.
M: Yahoo! Letra!
M: So many new things to learn!
M: New words!
M: I meet up with Tuuli and g*ng on the way back from the forest and head home with them.
L: What are you even doing at the gate?
M: Paperwo... I mean, learning how to read and write.
L: What? You can write?!
M: Only my own name so far, but yeah.
L: You're awesome! You can write your own name!
M: You think?
L: There are so many letters, right?
M: In this world, just knowing how to write is a big deal.
L: Must've been hard to figure out how "Main" is spelled!
M: Of course Otto would want me for an assistant.
L: Do you know how to write "Lutz," too?
M: You guys... walk too fast.
L: You can take your time.
M: But...
L: Your father and Tuuli asked me to take care of you.
L: I'll walk you all the way home, so don't worry.
M: Thanks.
M: Why am I so tired when I've only come this far?
L: I'm here with you.
M: Lutz...
L: Hang in there.
M: 'Kay.
M: And so, my days of commuting to the gate began.
M: At first, I would go one day and spend the next three in bed,
M: but later, I could go three days and only take one day off.
M: And finally...
M: I went to the gate on five straight days this week!
M: Dad, may I go to the forest now?
G: Yeah.
M: Yay!
E: She's on cloud nine.
T: Well, she deserves it for her efforts.
F: Found some over here!
K: Same here!
K: What? Where?
K: You're right!
K: We found a lot!
M: I wanna go... to the forest...
E: You won't get any better if you don't sleep.
E: Let me tell you a bedtime story.
E: A long, long time ago, there lived some little stars in the sky.
E: Those little stars...
M: I remember this.
M: Mom told me this story soon after I became Main.
E: They liked coming down to the earth.
E: On land, they met all kinds of people.
M: When I finally got to go the forest, it was the end of the spring:
M: three months after I started commuting to the gate.
Eyecatch: Ascendance of a Bookworm
Eyecatch: Ascendance of a Bookworm
M: It's the forest!
L: We're gonna gather firewood. You rest up here.
M: Got it.
M: I finally made it.
clay,Sign: Clay Tablets
M: I can finally make clay tablets now!
M: Yahoo!
M: As if I'd come all this way to go home empty-handed.
M: Show yourself, clay soil!
M: Rock hard!
M: I'm not giving up!
M: I'm not finding anything.
L: What do you think you're doing, Main?!
L: Did you forget the promise you made your father?
Flashback,G: The only goal today is to make it to the forest and back.
Flashback,G: When you get there, rest up and aim to come back with the others.
Flashback,G: Got that?
Flashback,M: Yeah!
Flashback,M: My goal for today will be to go to the forest, rest up, and come home.
M: I-I know, but uh...
L: Bringing that thing means you never had any intention of keeping your word, did you?
M: You see, I finally got to the come to the forest, so I just...
L: You just?
M: ...planned this.
L: So you lied, then?
L: Mister Gunther said that out of concern for your health!
L: But look at you.
L: I never knew you could be so untrustworthy.
M: Sorry...
L: So what were you trying to do, anyway?
M: When I told Lutz I wanted clay soil,
M: he took me to a spot with very little vegetation or drainage.
M: Why are you helping me out?
L: You made me those paruecakes when I was starving, remember?
L: I made up my mind to help you then.
M: That's it?
L: Yeah. I said I'd be there for you, didn't I?
L: But you need to tell me what you're trying to do.
L: Just trust me.
M: Okay. Thanks.
L: Here. Is this what you wanted?
M: Yeah, this is it!
M: Amazing, Lutz. This would've taken me days.
L: No boy could ever be weaker than you.
L: So, what will you do with all this?
M: Make a book.
L: A book?
M: Watch this.
L: Are these letters?
M: That's right.
M: When you write things down,
M: you can turn moments—words, thoughts,
M: and events that you'd forget— into permanent ones,
M: and read them over all you want.
L: Huh...
L: A book is something that's full of writing like that.
L: Books, huh...
M: Yeah.
M: With books, you can learn what people in the past were thinking,
M: and experience so much more than you normally could in an average lifespan.
M: Aren't books amazing?
L: Well, I gotta get back to firewood.
M: Okay. Thank you so much, Lutz.
L: Sure!
M: I did it.
M: Long live Mesopotamia!
M: I made more than I thought. Wonder if they've dried yet.
K: Hurry up!
F: Hold up!
F: Whoa, what are these?
M: Oh, they're...
F: Hup!
K: Me, too!
M: No...
M: Stop!
F: What's wrong, Main?
M: My clay tablets...
M: Fey and him ruined them.
F: What? Those were important?
K: Hey, something's up with her.
M: Do you have any idea what it took me to get here?
M: I went to the gate so many times, had Lutz and Tuuli help me...
M: And yet... How could you do this, Fey?!
F: I'm sorry. I didn't know.
M: I'll never forgive you!
L: Calm down, Main.
T: You know they didn't do it on purpose.
L: I can see why you're upset.
L: You worked so hard to get here.
L: Main...
L: Let's dig up the soil and make these again.
All: O-Okay...
All: Do the rest tomorrow and finish it off.
M: Yeah...
M: However, I was bedridden with another fever,
M: and it continued to rain for a few days straight.
F: Th-The rain did this, all right?
M: I know that.
F: If you have the time to cry, you have the time to give it another try.
M: Yeah.
M: The rest of them went to gather firewood,
M: but Lutz stayed behind to help the whole way.
L: Say, Main, is this what you wanna do in life?
M: Well, what I really want is to live a life surrounded by books.
L: Surrounded by this stuff?
M: Wrong.
M: Real books are too expensive to buy, so I'm using these as a substitute.
M: What do you want to do in life, Lutz?
L: Me?
M: Yeah. I'm sure you have a goal in mind, too.
L: I...
L: I...
L: I want to travel to other cities.
M: Other cities?
L: I wanna become a traveling trader and see the world for myself.
M: A journey sounds good.
L: What? Do you really think so?
L: It'd mean leaving the city, y'know?
M: Yeah. It sounds fun.
M: You see, my dream at one point was to visit libraries across the world.
L: Libraries?
M: Yeah. Places with lots of books.
M: That dream can never come true now, though.
L: Whatever it is, I'm sure you'll do what you want to.
M: You should just do that, too.
M: All done.
M: It's a book.
M: At first, I thought I wasn't meant to live in a world without books.
M: But... I've found things I hold dear here, too.
M: Now if I have my books, I'll be fine.
M: I feel like I've finally found a path of life for myself in this world.
T: Main, what did you write?
T: It's the story about the little stars.
T: The story Mom told me on the first night.
F: The first night?
M: Yeah. The earliest story I can remember.
M: Unable to accept that I was now Main,
M: I found Mom's affection all too oppressive.
M: Even then, when I decided to make a book,
M: this story was the first thing to came to mind.
M: I wanna turn all of Mom's stories into books so I never forget.
M: That way, I'll be able to read them whenever I want.
M: I feel like this is the first time I've been able to smile genuinely as Main.
M: Now if I bake and harden them, they'll be done!
white,Sign: {\fad( , )}Clay Tablets expl*si*n
E: Main?!
M: No!
Next_Chapter,Title: Next Chapter Baptisms and Strange Fevers
M: Clay tablets were a dead end, too, but that's not enough to make me give up!
T: What will you do next?
M: Next? Next...
M: O-Oh, right. Next up is your baptism.
F: If we're speaking of baptism, it's my time to shine.
M: Sorry, Head Priest. No screen time for you.
T: Main! You shouldn't talk to weird strangers!
F: Main began crafting paper as the first step in her book-making process,
F: but her attempt to make pseudo-papyrus ended in failure.
F: "I'll go to the forest and make clay tablets in the spring."
F: Main now had her sights set on a new goal.
Title Card: Ascendance of a Bookworm
Title ,Title Card: Ascendance of a Bookworm
Ep Ep Title: Chapter Four Forests and Clay Tablets
T: Wow, what a feast!
G: Did you cook all of this, Main?
M: Yeah, since it was my turn to cook today.
M: Well, eat up before the food goes cold.
E: I don't know... I'd never seen anyone cook like that.
Flashback,E: What are you doing with the water we used to boil the veggies?
Flashback,M: Don't worry about it.
T: Let's eat.
GT: Delicious!
T: This pome soup is really great!
M: "Pome" being the unholy lovechild of paprika and tomato.
E: You're right. This is delicious.
M: In this world, it's standard practice to dump the water used to boil veggies.
M: Isn't it? The veggie flavors really pack a punch, right?
G: This wine-steamed chicken is great, too.
T: You must have a talent for cooking. The paruecake was just as good, too.
G: Maybe you could become a chef when you grow up.
E: We'll have to find a place that'll take her as apprentice.
conveyor-right,SignR: Apprentice Chef
conveyor-left,SignL: Making Books
M: Crap! I won't get to make my books!
M: I need to go to the forest and make clay tablets already!
conveyor-right,SignR: Apprentice Chef
M: B-But I already have a goal in mind!
G: And what is it, Main?
M: I want to go to the forest.
T: "Go to the forest," she says!
E: Main, we're talking about work right now.
M: I'm serious!
M: I wanna make clay tablets! That's why I need to go to the forest!
G: Clay tablets?
M: Yep! I'll write on them and make a book!
G: Write...
T: You, going to the forest? No way.
M: Yes way! I haven't fallen sick lately!
T: But you can't walk as far or as fast as the rest of us.
M: I'll be fine! I can go all the way to the well without being out of breath now!
T: And what if you're only able to walk part of the way?
T: You'll be a burden to everyone.
M: Well...
E: Tuuli goes to the forest all the time. She knows best.
E: You should listen to her.
M: What can I do to get your permission?
M: Build up your stamina and strength. No forest until then.
M: Got it.
M: With no means of going to the forest,
M: my desire for books could only simmer inside.
M: But then, one day...
M: Mister Otto's assistant? Who, me?!
G: He wants your help with files that need lots of calculations.
T: Can she even handle that job?
G: Yeah. She has worked with him once before, apparently.
G: He said she was a huge help.
T: She did?
G: But it's against the law to employ an unbaptized child,
G: so officially, you'll be going there to learn how to read and write.
M: What? Really?
G: Yeah.
G: He has to teach the apprentice soldiers, and he'll teach you with them.
G: You should learn everything you can from him.
G: You're a frail girl, Main.
G: But Otto said you were really smart,
G: and that you could make a good scrivener.
M: Scrivener?
G: Someone who helps people with paperwork to send to nobility or public officials.
G: The work pays well and isn't too demanding physically.
M: Dad!
G: Otto was in the traveling trade before he became a soldier,
G: and he still has connections with merchants.
G: The jobs your mother and I can refer you to wouldn't suit you.
G: So try to maintain a good relationship with Otto.
M: Thank you, Dad.
G: Oh, before I forget, these are the terms of employment.
G: You'll be paid in slate pencils and be allowed to take time off when sick.
G: Otto was stressing how favorable these terms were for him, budget-wise.
G: How can he be so petty with a kid?
M: He'll reap all the benefits of an assistant without burning a hole in the pocket.
M: Once a businessman, always a businessman.
G: Anyway, walk to the gate for a while,
G: and once you're able to keep up with the other kids, you may go to the forest.
G: Does that sound good to you?
M: Yep! I'll do my best!
G: Don't force yourself, okay? Take your time.
M: Yeah, I know.
M: Ultimately, Dad had to carry me to the gate from midway.
O: Let me introduce your new classmate.
O: This is Main, the chief's daughter.
O: Don't you boys dare mess with her.
All: Yes, sir!
O: Okay, let's begin.
O: The basic alphabet consists of letters.
O: Let's start with practicing how to write them.
O: You really do learn these letters quick.
M: I much prefer this to physical activities.
M: That aside, Mister Otto,
M: I think it's time to move on from the alphabet.
O: What? Already?
M: Look, they're starting to fidget.
M: It shows that they've lost focus.
M: You should switch to a different subject.
O: Oh, but...
M: That does it for the alphabet.
M: Next up is numbers.
M: That's all for today.
M: Be sure to memorize all the letters and numbers you've learned today by next time.
M: If you come unprepared, you won't be going home until you get everything down pat.
All: Okay!
M: They got out of here fast. Boys will be boys, I guess.
O: Main, they won't learn anything if I make it easy for them.
M: Oh, it's not that easy.
M: If they don't do their homework, they won't get to go home at all.
O: Yeah, but...
M: Mister Otto, you shouldn't compare them to me.
O: That's right.
O: Guess I'll do things your way for a while and see how it goes.
M: Thank you.
O: Now, it's your turn.
O: You should learn how the alphabet works in practice.
M: Yahoo! Letra!
M: So many new things to learn!
M: New words!
M: I meet up with Tuuli and g*ng on the way back from the forest and head home with them.
L: What are you even doing at the gate?
M: Paperwo... I mean, learning how to read and write.
L: What? You can write?!
M: Only my own name so far, but yeah.
L: You're awesome! You can write your own name!
M: You think?
L: There are so many letters, right?
M: In this world, just knowing how to write is a big deal.
L: Must've been hard to figure out how "Main" is spelled!
M: Of course Otto would want me for an assistant.
L: Do you know how to write "Lutz," too?
M: You guys... walk too fast.
L: You can take your time.
M: But...
L: Your father and Tuuli asked me to take care of you.
L: I'll walk you all the way home, so don't worry.
M: Thanks.
M: Why am I so tired when I've only come this far?
L: I'm here with you.
M: Lutz...
L: Hang in there.
M: 'Kay.
M: And so, my days of commuting to the gate began.
M: At first, I would go one day and spend the next three in bed,
M: but later, I could go three days and only take one day off.
M: And finally...
M: I went to the gate on five straight days this week!
M: Dad, may I go to the forest now?
G: Yeah.
M: Yay!
E: She's on cloud nine.
T: Well, she deserves it for her efforts.
F: Found some over here!
K: Same here!
K: What? Where?
K: You're right!
K: We found a lot!
M: I wanna go... to the forest...
E: You won't get any better if you don't sleep.
E: Let me tell you a bedtime story.
E: A long, long time ago, there lived some little stars in the sky.
E: Those little stars...
M: I remember this.
M: Mom told me this story soon after I became Main.
E: They liked coming down to the earth.
E: On land, they met all kinds of people.
M: When I finally got to go the forest, it was the end of the spring:
M: three months after I started commuting to the gate.
Eyecatch: Ascendance of a Bookworm
Eyecatch: Ascendance of a Bookworm
M: It's the forest!
L: We're gonna gather firewood. You rest up here.
M: Got it.
M: I finally made it.
clay,Sign: Clay Tablets
M: I can finally make clay tablets now!
M: Yahoo!
M: As if I'd come all this way to go home empty-handed.
M: Show yourself, clay soil!
M: Rock hard!
M: I'm not giving up!
M: I'm not finding anything.
L: What do you think you're doing, Main?!
L: Did you forget the promise you made your father?
Flashback,G: The only goal today is to make it to the forest and back.
Flashback,G: When you get there, rest up and aim to come back with the others.
Flashback,G: Got that?
Flashback,M: Yeah!
Flashback,M: My goal for today will be to go to the forest, rest up, and come home.
M: I-I know, but uh...
L: Bringing that thing means you never had any intention of keeping your word, did you?
M: You see, I finally got to the come to the forest, so I just...
L: You just?
M: ...planned this.
L: So you lied, then?
L: Mister Gunther said that out of concern for your health!
L: But look at you.
L: I never knew you could be so untrustworthy.
M: Sorry...
L: So what were you trying to do, anyway?
M: When I told Lutz I wanted clay soil,
M: he took me to a spot with very little vegetation or drainage.
M: Why are you helping me out?
L: You made me those paruecakes when I was starving, remember?
L: I made up my mind to help you then.
M: That's it?
L: Yeah. I said I'd be there for you, didn't I?
L: But you need to tell me what you're trying to do.
L: Just trust me.
M: Okay. Thanks.
L: Here. Is this what you wanted?
M: Yeah, this is it!
M: Amazing, Lutz. This would've taken me days.
L: No boy could ever be weaker than you.
L: So, what will you do with all this?
M: Make a book.
L: A book?
M: Watch this.
L: Are these letters?
M: That's right.
M: When you write things down,
M: you can turn moments—words, thoughts,
M: and events that you'd forget— into permanent ones,
M: and read them over all you want.
L: Huh...
L: A book is something that's full of writing like that.
L: Books, huh...
M: Yeah.
M: With books, you can learn what people in the past were thinking,
M: and experience so much more than you normally could in an average lifespan.
M: Aren't books amazing?
L: Well, I gotta get back to firewood.
M: Okay. Thank you so much, Lutz.
L: Sure!
M: I did it.
M: Long live Mesopotamia!
M: I made more than I thought. Wonder if they've dried yet.
K: Hurry up!
F: Hold up!
F: Whoa, what are these?
M: Oh, they're...
F: Hup!
K: Me, too!
M: No...
M: Stop!
F: What's wrong, Main?
M: My clay tablets...
M: Fey and him ruined them.
F: What? Those were important?
K: Hey, something's up with her.
M: Do you have any idea what it took me to get here?
M: I went to the gate so many times, had Lutz and Tuuli help me...
M: And yet... How could you do this, Fey?!
F: I'm sorry. I didn't know.
M: I'll never forgive you!
L: Calm down, Main.
T: You know they didn't do it on purpose.
L: I can see why you're upset.
L: You worked so hard to get here.
L: Main...
L: Let's dig up the soil and make these again.
All: O-Okay...
All: Do the rest tomorrow and finish it off.
M: Yeah...
M: However, I was bedridden with another fever,
M: and it continued to rain for a few days straight.
F: Th-The rain did this, all right?
M: I know that.
F: If you have the time to cry, you have the time to give it another try.
M: Yeah.
M: The rest of them went to gather firewood,
M: but Lutz stayed behind to help the whole way.
L: Say, Main, is this what you wanna do in life?
M: Well, what I really want is to live a life surrounded by books.
L: Surrounded by this stuff?
M: Wrong.
M: Real books are too expensive to buy, so I'm using these as a substitute.
M: What do you want to do in life, Lutz?
L: Me?
M: Yeah. I'm sure you have a goal in mind, too.
L: I...
L: I...
L: I want to travel to other cities.
M: Other cities?
L: I wanna become a traveling trader and see the world for myself.
M: A journey sounds good.
L: What? Do you really think so?
L: It'd mean leaving the city, y'know?
M: Yeah. It sounds fun.
M: You see, my dream at one point was to visit libraries across the world.
L: Libraries?
M: Yeah. Places with lots of books.
M: That dream can never come true now, though.
L: Whatever it is, I'm sure you'll do what you want to.
M: You should just do that, too.
M: All done.
M: It's a book.
M: At first, I thought I wasn't meant to live in a world without books.
M: But... I've found things I hold dear here, too.
M: Now if I have my books, I'll be fine.
M: I feel like I've finally found a path of life for myself in this world.
T: Main, what did you write?
T: It's the story about the little stars.
T: The story Mom told me on the first night.
F: The first night?
M: Yeah. The earliest story I can remember.
M: Unable to accept that I was now Main,
M: I found Mom's affection all too oppressive.
M: Even then, when I decided to make a book,
M: this story was the first thing to came to mind.
M: I wanna turn all of Mom's stories into books so I never forget.
M: That way, I'll be able to read them whenever I want.
M: I feel like this is the first time I've been able to smile genuinely as Main.
M: Now if I bake and harden them, they'll be done!
white,Sign: {\fad( , )}Clay Tablets expl*si*n
E: Main?!
M: No!
Next_Chapter,Title: Next Chapter Baptisms and Strange Fevers
M: Clay tablets were a dead end, too, but that's not enough to make me give up!
T: What will you do next?
M: Next? Next...
M: O-Oh, right. Next up is your baptism.
F: If we're speaking of baptism, it's my time to shine.
M: Sorry, Head Priest. No screen time for you.
T: Main! You shouldn't talk to weird strangers!