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Now reading: Chapter 4 — A Business Called Faith from GOD OF DECEPTION, a Fantasy novel by MortalSoul.

Chapter 4 — A Business Called Faith

Elena did not trust .

That beca obvious almost imdiately.

The villagers continued celebrating my "miracle" while she stood slightly apart from everyone else, silently observing with sharp blue eyes.

Honestly?

I respected it.

If a random man appeared one night claiming to be a forgotten god while blasting music from a glowing rectangle, I’d be suspicious too.

Unfortunately for her...

suspicion didn’t change results.

The villagers believed in now.

And belief had power in this world.

Real power.

Chief Rowan raised both hands toward the villagers.

"Prepare the feast hall! Tonight we honor Lord Kaiser, the God of Technology!"

The villagers cheered loudly.

More warm energy flowed into my chest.

At this point I could actually feel the divine power circulating inside my body.

It moved like invisible electricity beneath my skin.

Weak.

Tiny.

But growing.

Dangerously fast.

I glanced toward Elena.

The silver symbol on her hand flickered again.

Her expression tightened slightly.

Interesting.

Was my growing faith affecting her goddess sohow?

Or was Lady Seraphine already close to collapse?

Either way...

I needed information.

Fast.

The villagers guided us toward the largest building near the center of Erald.

Apparently it served as both gathering hall and ergency shelter.

Inside, long wooden tables filled the room while candles illuminated the walls.

The atmosphere slowly shifted from panic to celebration.

Children stared at excitedly.

Adults whispered prayers under their breath.

Every few seconds soone bowed.

Honestly, this was becoming awkward.

I sat near the center table while villagers hurried around preparing food.

Elena sat across from silently.

Watching.

Always watching.

Chief Rowan smiled nervously.

"Our village has not hosted a divine being in many years."

"How common are gods?" I asked carefully.

The chief blinked.

"Not rare... but most minor villages only receive blessings through priests or shrine maidens."

He glanced respectfully toward Elena.

"Direct appearances are uncommon."

Makes sense.

If gods existed openly, they probably couldn’t waste ti visiting random villages constantly.

Especially weaker gods.

Interesting.

That ant divine status had hierarchy.

Larger churches probably controlled more territory and believers.

Which ant more power.

Basically corporations.

Except the CEOs were literal gods.

I almost laughed.

This world had accidentally turned religion into a business model.

And apparently...

I had just started my own company.

A small wooden cup was placed before .

Wine.

I stared at it briefly.

Then took a careful sip.

Not terrible.

A little too strong though.

A young girl suddenly approached nervously.

She couldn’t have been older than ten.

"D-Divine Lord..."

I looked toward her.

"Yes?"

She held out a small flower awkwardly.

"For protecting the village."

The room beca quiet.

The girl looked terrified.

Probably worried she might offend .

Sothing twisted slightly inside my chest.

I gently accepted the flower.

"Thank you."

Her face imdiately brightened.

The villagers smiled warmly.

More faith flowed toward .

Interesting.

Positive emotional interactions increased belief more efficiently.

Noted.

Very noted.

Elena suddenly spoke for the first ti since entering the hall.

"You adapt surprisingly quickly."

Straight attack.

Nice.

I looked toward her calmly.

"And what exactly am I adapting to?"

"This world."

Sharp answer.

She leaned slightly forward.

"Most divine beings view mortals with indifference."

Ah.

So gods here usually acted arrogant.

Good information.

"I find humans interesting," I answered honestly.

Earth lost its gods long ago.

But this world?

Religion here was alive.

Visible.

Powerful.

Every person inside this hall genuinely believed gods watched them.

Honestly...

that kind of faith was terrifying.

Elena studied carefully.

"You speak unlike other gods."

"That sounds more like a complint than suspicion."

"It wasn’t intended as either."

Smart girl.

Very smart girl.

Chief Rowan quickly interrupted before the conversation beca uncomfortable.

"Lady Elena serves Lady Seraphine faithfully," he explained nervously.

"She worries deeply for the village."

Elena’s expression softened slightly at the ntion of her goddess.

Interesting.

Very loyal.

That could beco dangerous later.

Or useful.

Depends on timing.

I leaned back slightly.

"Tell about Lady Seraphine."

The room quieted imdiately.

Even Elena seed surprised by the question.

After a mont, Rowan answered respectfully.

"She is a minor goddess of protection and healing."

Minor goddess.

Again that term.

"How are gods ranked?" I asked.

The villagers exchanged nervous glances.

Apparently discussing divine matters casually wasn’t normal.

Elena finally answered.

"Lesser gods rule small domains. Greater gods control nations."

Her eyes narrowed slightly.

"Supre gods influence entire continents."

Continents.

Not planets.

Interesting.

So even powerful gods had limits.

"What determines rank?" I asked.

"Faith," Elena answered imdiately.

"Believers. Territory. Divine authority."

Exactly what I expected.

This world’s entire power structure revolved around worship.

Honestly?

That made religion far more terrifying than on Earth.

A god here could literally invade another territory and steal believers.

Divine warfare was basically market competition with miracles.

My business theory was becoming more accurate by the minute.

Elena continued quietly.

"Lady Seraphine once protected seven villages."

Once.

Past tense.

I noticed the sadness in her voice imdiately.

"Now only Erald remains faithful."

Ouch.

That explained everything.

Her goddess was dying.

Not physically perhaps...

but spiritually.

Losing believers ant losing power.

And eventually...

disappearing completely.

I glanced toward the silver shrine visible through the hall window.

So that was the future awaiting weak gods.

Forgotten.

Abandoned.

Dead.

For so reason, the thought made uncomfortable.

Maybe because Earth’s gods suffered the sa fate.

Chief Rowan sighed heavily.

"Without stronger blessings, many villagers may eventually join other churches."

Elena lowered her gaze silently.

The atmosphere beca heavy.

Then I realized sothing.

This entire village desperately needed hope.

Not necessarily truth.

Just hope.

And hope...

was sothing I could manufacture.

Very easily.

An idea ford in my mind.

Risky.

But potentially profitable.

Spiritually profitable.

I looked toward Rowan.

"What problems does Erald face besides the wolves?"

The chief looked surprised by the question.

"Well... our crops have struggled recently. Illness spreads more often. And trade routes have beco dangerous."

Basic dieval problems.

Honestly, Earth technology could solve half of these instantly.

Clean water alone would probably look divine.

Interesting.

Very interesting.

I leaned forward slightly.

"Tomorrow," I said calmly, "I will inspect your village."

The villagers looked stunned.

Chief Rowan nearly stood up from excitent.

"A divine inspection?!"

More faith energy flooded into .

At this rate I was going to overdose on religion.

Elena, however, remained cautious.

"Why?" she asked.

Direct as always.

I looked toward her.

"Because if I am to understand this era..."

I smiled faintly.

"...then I must understand its people."

The villagers looked emotional again.

Seriously, these people were too easy.

But Elena’s expression beca thoughtful.

Not convinced.

Yet not dismissive either.

Good.

Slow trust was more reliable.

Suddenly the hall doors burst open.

A young hunter rushed inside breathing heavily.

"Chief Rowan!"

Everyone turned imdiately.

"The wolves are gathering near the eastern forest again!"

Fear spread through the room instantly.

The hunter swallowed nervously.

"And... there’s sothing else."

"What?" Rowan demanded.

The hunter looked pale.

"There’s a corrupted beast with them."

Silence.

Even Elena’s expression changed.

"What kind of beast?" she asked sharply.

"I-I don’t know... but the forest itself is dying around it."

The room beca tense.

The villagers whispered fearfully.

Corrupted beast.

That sounded significantly worse than normal wolves.

Elena stood imdiately.

"I need to see it."

Her silver blessing flickered weakly again.

Honestly?

She looked exhausted already.

Yet she still intended to fight.

Stubborn.

I respected that too.

Unfortunately...

I also noticed sothing else.

She was afraid.

Not for herself.

For the village.

Interesting girl.

Very dangerous for my ntal stability.

Chief Rowan looked toward desperately.

"Lord Kaiser..."

Right.

Of course.

The fake god was expected to solve everything.

Naturally.

I slowly stood.

"Take there."

Elena imdiately frowned.

"This is not a ga."

Ah.

There it was.

The first real hostility.

I t her gaze calmly.

"Did I say it was?"

The hall beca quiet.

For a mont, neither of us moved.

Then Elena spoke quietly.

"Corrupted beasts are dangerous even for trained divine servants."

Translation:

You don’t know what you’re doing.

Fair point honestly.

Because I absolutely didn’t.

But backing down now would damage belief.

And faith...

was currently my only weapon.

I stepped toward the doorway.

"Then it’s fortunate," I said calmly, "that I am not rely a divine servant."

Several villagers gasped softly.

Elena stared at silently.

Then finally turned away.

"...Fine."

Victory.

Small victory.

As we exited the hall together, cold night wind swept through the village.

The three moons glowed above us while distant howls echoed from the forest.

Elena walked beside quietly for several monts before speaking again.

"You’re strange."

I glanced toward her.

"That’s the second ti you’ve said that."

"You hide things."

Sharp.

Very sharp.

I smiled slightly.

"So do you."

She looked genuinely surprised for a second.

Nice.

Finally scored a point against the suspicious saintess.

After a mont, she sighed softly.

"The villagers need hope."

Her voice beca quieter.

"I don’t care who gives it to them anymore."

Ah.

There it was.

The truth.

She was desperate.

Not weak.

Not naive.

Desperate.

And desperate people were willing to believe impossible things.

Which ant...

this entire world might already be prepared for soone like .

Soone who understood sothing most gods probably didn’t.

Faith was not just religion.

It was psychology.

Emotion.

Storytelling.

Perception.

And Earth had mastered those things better than any world in history.

Advertising.

dia.

Propaganda.

Branding.

If belief created gods...

then modern humanity had unknowingly spent centuries perfecting divinity itself.

For the first ti since arriving here...

I truly began to understand how terrifying the God of Technology must have been.

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