Regina Lena – To the Unforgiven - Chapter 66
Sin and Karma
Translated by Wook
Edited by Wook
Young Rena was lying on the grass in full bloom, reading a book.
[T/N: Grass… blooms? I’m sorry, let’s carry on]
Rena, who was so immersed in turning the book pages, suddenly raised her head and asked.
“Is this true?”
At Rena’s question, Regina, who was floating in the air, floated down. Then she looked at the book Rena had been reading and muttered as if she found it ridiculous.
— I was wondering what you were reading…
The book Rena was reading was none other than the biography of Emperor Nihil. It is also the part where Nihil first descends to the Tomb and meets the five kings.
“Is this true? Did you really say that?”
Rena asked again with sparkling eyes, and Regina smiled as if she were sighing at those innocent eyes. It was a relief smile.
Rena Ruber, who was abandoned by her father and reached death over and over again.
The 12-year-old girl was left alone in a cruel world, but she was determined to live nonetheless. She shouted that she would live as well as her father, who betrayed her.
But the strong pretense didn’t last long. This was because a new uninvited guest disturbed the difficult daily life.
The King with Many Hearts secretly sought Rena, and thanks to this, Rena was dragged to the Tomb again without knowing why.
When she had just fallen into the Tomb, Rena was shocked and couldn’t even speak properly.
Dozens of hours later, Regina brought her to this field and opened her bookshelf, and the child soon came to her senses as if her shock before had been a lie.
It was commendable and pitiful, and Regina gently accommodated Rena’s curiosity.
— ‘I will go back and rule over you. The living cannot bear the dead.’ Do you mean this?
[T/N: Chapter 19]
Rena nodded her head excitedly as Regina read her own lines from the biography.
The little girl was more curious about whether Regina really recited these novel-like lines than the fact that a short piece of history was in front of her.
Regina humbly replied to the explicit expectation.
— I did.
“Wow…”
— You’re being very rude.