Chapter 584: Chapter 584 - Miracle
A week passed.
Lucien went to Ironhaven’s chapel to meet Clara.
The chapel here felt different from the main territory’s chapel and Grand Confluence’s central sanctuary.
The main territory’s chapel felt like home.
Grand Confluence’s chapel felt like a meeting point between civilizations.
Ironhaven’s chapel felt like a hearth built against the end of winter.
Above the central altar, no statue stood.
Lucien had abolished that already.
That decision still gave him relief.
The people could revere the path, the shelter, the miracles, the church, the divine system, or whatever meaning they found in Lootwell.
They did not need to kneel before his face.
Especially when Clara was involved.
Still, as he entered the chapel, divine energy moved toward him.
Inside Lucien’s Divine Energy Core, the Tree of Creation stirred. The fruits hanging from it glowed brighter.
Lucien’s eyes narrowed slightly.
The fruits were growing well.
But not fast enough.
That dissatisfaction made him feel a little guilty.
Then he decided guilt could wait.
The fruits mattered.
He had a feeling the fruits would benefit him.
Perhaps more than he could currently understand.
So he came to Clara.
Because if anyone understood faith, devotion, miracles, and how to make people sincerely believe without turning the whole matter into obvious coercion, it was Clara.
Clara appeared almost immediately.
"My Lord."
Her eyes brightened the moment she saw him.
Lucien paused.
"You look excited."
"I always look forward to your visits."
She guided him to a private chamber behind the chapel hall.
They sat across from each other.
Then Clara folded her hands and asked with complete seriousness, "What are your instructions, My Lord?"
Lucien gave her a smile.
"I want to discuss a miracle."
Clara’s eyes changed.
Lucien immediately regretted phrasing it that way.
•••
Lucien explained carefully.
He spoke of the need to increase faith without forcing belief, without deception, without fear, and without turning worship into a transaction.
He also spoke of his new experiment.
System Creation.
A channel through which the chapel could help the faithful see their own efforts, receive guidance, accept quests, understand contribution, and connect more deeply to Lootwell’s growing divine and civic structure.
As Clara listened, her expression shifted.
First, attentive.
Then thoughtful.
Then bright.
Then reverent.
Then dangerously reverent.
Then fanatically illuminated in a way that made Lucien stop speaking.
"Clara."
"Yes, my lord?"
"Stabilize."
"I am stable."
"Your eyes are glowing."
"That is because I am enlightened."
Clara inhaled slowly.
Then exhaled.
Lucien sighed then continued.
Then stopped again three minutes later because Clara had begun smiling at the wall as if it had personally received revelation.
Lucien rubbed his forehead.
This was why he had not given this idea to her immediately.
Finally, he stood.
Clara looked up.
"My Lord?"
Lucien walked to her side.
Then he placed his hand gently on her head.
Clara froze.
Her posture became perfectly still.
Her face lowered slightly, and a faint blush appeared on her cheeks.
Just then...
Lucien’s authority flared.
The Origin Core’s authority surged within him. His Eternal Law of Creation stirred. The Tree of Creation answered from above his Divine Energy Core, and a thin thread of living gold passed through Lucien’s hand.
Clauses flowed from him into Clara.
Then, the clauses entered Clara’s spirit and formed a stable interface around her soul without binding her will.
The structure completed.
Clara shivered, then her eyes widened.
A translucent panel opened before her vision.
[Welcome, Devoted Saint.]
Clara stopped breathing.
Lucien removed his hand.
For several breaths, she did not move.
Then she whispered, "My Lord."
Lucien stepped back.
"Yes?"
Her voice trembled slightly.
"I can see it."
Lucien’s eyes sharpened.
"What can you see?"
Clara slowly lifted her hand.
Her gaze moved across invisible panels only she could see.
"Chapel resonance. Faith currents. Relief quest completion. Prayer sincerity density. Divine energy conversion flow. Devotional fatigue risk. Community trust index. Healing distribution imbalance. Unanswered requests. Unassigned volunteers."
Lucien blinked.
"That is... a lot."
Clara’s eyes grew brighter.
"I can see which regions need more relief support before dissatisfaction becomes despair."
Lucien’s expression changed.
Clara continued, "I can see where faith is sincere but unsupported. I can see which chapel workers are overburdened. I can see where people pray for help but do not know which department to approach. I can see which relief quests should be merged, which should be separated, and which are being abused."
Lucien slowly sat back down.
Clara’s voice became steadier.
"I can create chapel quests and classify them by urgency, sincerity, public benefit, spiritual impact, and administrative burden. I can assign trusted volunteers. I can prevent repeated exploitation. I can measure whether aid produces gratitude, dependency, resentment, or genuine recovery."
Lucien stared.
That was better than expected.
Clara looked almost breathless.
"The system can also identify people whose devotion is deep enough to receive minor chapel miracles without corrupting the meaning of faith."
Lucien nodded slowly.
"That part is important."
Clara’s eyes moved again.
"It can also recommend sermons based on community needs."
Lucien paused.
Clara looked at him.
He looked at Clara.
"No sermons about me."
Clara’s smile was gentle.
"Of course, my lord."
"That smile is dangerous."
"I am merely happy."
Clara’s smile widened.
Lucien felt the familiar sensation of having created a very useful problem.
•••
The system Lucien had granted Clara was not a normal system.
He called it an administrative miracle system.
It’s an authority rooted in Lucien, the Origin Core, the chapel network, and Clara’s own role.
Its uses were broader than Lucien had first designed.
Clara could now see faith flow as measurable movement.
But the greatest function was the one Lucien had planned most carefully.
Through Clara, Lucien could grant lesser systems to others.
If Clara judged that a follower was truly devoted, stable, sincere, and had met the conditions, she could request a miracle through her administrative system.
Lucien’s authority would review it.
The Origin Core would verify the structure.
The system would examine sincerity and contribution.
Then, if approved, the person could receive a lesser system suited to them.
A farmer’s system would not look like a guard’s system.
A healer’s system would not look like a scholar’s system.
A priest’s system would not look like a merchant’s system.
Each would fit their personality, work, faith, and growth direction.
With this, their lives would change.
Their efforts would be seen.
Their growth would become clearer.
Their service would connect to something larger.
And, yes...
Their faith would deepen.
Lucien did not pretend otherwise.
He wanted that faith.
The divine energy fed the Tree of Creation.
The Tree of Creation ripened fruits.
The fruits could transform his people.
A clean cycle of faith, service, growth, and miracle could benefit everyone if handled properly.
The danger was corruption.
The solution was Clara.
Possibly.
Probably.
Lucien looked at Clara’s increasingly radiant expression.
He revised that.
Hopefully.
•••
Clara slowly rose from her chair.
Her eyes still glowed faintly.
She looked at Lucien as if he had placed an entire cathedral inside her soul.
Lucien became worried.
"Clara."
She straightened.
"Yes, my lord."
"You know what to do, right?"
Clara placed one hand over her heart.
Then, with absolute seriousness, saluted.
Lucien stared.
"Please leave it to me, my lord. I will make sure everyone worthy can hear the Voice of God."
Lucien smacked his own face.
She was already deep into role-play.
"It is the voice of the system, not the Voice of God."
Clara nodded solemnly.
"I understand, my lord. You are the system, and God."
"Hold up."
Clara’s lips twitched.
Lucien paused.
Then narrowed his eyes.
She was amused.
Lucien lowered his hand.
"You are teasing me."
Clara’s expression remained perfectly reverent.
"I would never."
"You absolutely would now."
"My lord has granted me enlightenment. Perhaps humor came with it."
Lucien reached out and knocked her lightly on the head.
Clara immediately showed an aggrieved expression.
"My lord struck his saint."
"I corrected a dangerous saint."
"History will remember this."
"History will be edited by sister Eirene."
Clara paused.
Then nodded.
"That is true."
Lucien sat back down with a sigh.
"You finally learned how to tease your lord."
Clara smiled softly.
"I learned from watching everyone else do it."
"That is unfortunate."
•••
After the teasing faded, Lucien became serious again.
"I will leave this to you."
Clara’s expression changed at once.
All humor softened into focus.
Lucien continued, "You know more about the chapel than I do. You understand faith better than I do. You understand people who come here seeking help better than I do. I am giving you authority because I trust your judgment."
Clara lowered her head.
For once, she did not answer immediately.
Lucien’s voice softened.
"But do not let devotion become pressure. Do not make people feel that they need to love me to receive help. Do not let miracles become payment. Do not let the chapel compete with kindness."
Clara looked up.
Her eyes were clear now.
"My lord, I understand."
Lucien nodded.
"The lesser systems should be rare at first. Carefully chosen. I want people who would use them to help others, not people who only want status."
"Then I will begin with chapel workers, healers, teachers, and those who have served consistently without asking to be seen."
"That sounds right."
Clara hesitated.
"Should I also grant your subjects the same authority?"
Lucien paused.
Then shook his head.
"I will handle them myself."
Clara nodded.
"Then I will focus on outsiders and chapel personnel first."
"Good."
Clara bowed deeply.
"Then I will not betray your trust."
Lucien stood.
"I know."
Clara smiled.
This time, there was no fanaticism in it.
Only happiness, and responsibility.