[The princess was abused by her vicious stepmother and was put to death many times. Finally, under the guidance of the oracle, she overcame many difficulties and established a kingdom of theocracy. ]

[A little girl was selling matches on a cold holiday night. Indifferent people did not help her. When she was about to freeze to death, the poor girl lit a match. The tiny flame was surprisingly warm. The great gods would not let the weak suffer. ]

Fontaine, the stronghold of the Hearth House.

Linette flipped through the fairy tales that she had read countless times and knew all the plots by heart.

These storybooks accompanied the children of the Hearth House as they grew up. They were older than Linette herself, at least dating back to the previous generation of [servants] - or even earlier.

The beautiful princess, the poor little girl, and even the saint who destroyed the evil spirits when the monsters were rampant, all stories are inseparable from the word "God", and whenever the gods appear, the dark and depressing tone of the story will immediately become bright.

Not all fairy tales can have a good ending, but as long as they involve gods, justice will definitely defeat evil, and good people will definitely be protected. No matter how sad it was before, there will definitely be a turning point later.

So, before reading fairy tales in childhood, Linnet could ask her friends in the Hearth House whether the book mentioned gods. If so, the final ending must be good, and if not, it would be doubtful.

This is a technique that can directly guess the tone of the ending without spoilers. Linnet doesn't like tragedies that make people cry, and she has never liked it.

Most members of the Hearth House have similar psychology. In the environment of the Fatui organization, children need to be more mature and stronger than ordinary peers, but how many people can be steadfast?

The more suffering you endure, the more you desire light.

The Hearth House managed by the current [servant] Alechino is not so dark and depressing, but the children here have indeed suffered more than their peers outside.

A beautiful fairy tale is a kind of adjustment, which can make children persist and grow up healthily, instead of becoming distorted and closed under pressure.

Now that Linnet has grown up, she can find details that she didn't notice when she was a child in the simple fairy tale book.

The gods in the story have countless noble prefixes, but no specific names have ever appeared.

For example, the Seven Rulings of the Earth.

The girl used to think that the Hearth House was loyal to the Kingdom of Winter, and the gods praised in the collection of books should be Her Majesty the Queen, but some descriptions are really unlike the Ice Queen known to the Fatui.

However, no one believes that the fairy tale book is promoting heresy, including the previous [servant] Kugavina, who never destroyed it.

Now Linnet can read some intelligence materials and know that the Hearth House was far more cruel and bloody than it is now. Kugavina appears to be a kind mother, but in fact she ignores everyone's life just to train a king.

The fairy tales she tells are all bloody.The nature of competition is constantly training the children of Hearth House in a ruthless direction.

Without the seven emotions and six desires of ordinary people, there will be no emotional weaknesses.

But why did Hearth House at that time never destroy these classic fairy tales?

The beautiful tone of the story should violate Kugavina's philosophy.

After all, Linnet is not an executive, and the information she knows is very limited. She can't get the answer to the question, and she doesn't intend to entangle too much.

After sorting out the food, drinking water and daily necessities bought from Fontaine, the girl deliberately avoided the purchase channels of Hearth House because she didn't want people to know what she did.

She quietly slipped out of the base and came to a temporary camp in the wild.

"I'm here."

The magician kept changing directions along the way to make sure that no one was following her. After arriving at the destination, she carefully observed the surrounding environment and then spoke in a low voice.

"Krevy, are you there?"

"Yes, welcome back!"

The little girl with long pink hair and a white dress jumped up and down, her face full of sunshine and smile.

Seeing that her little friend was still full of energy, Linnet breathed a sigh of relief.

"As promised, I brought you food."

"Thank you!"

Krevy thanked her politely, and the magician lady who usually seemed to be three-faced also smiled slightly, but quickly restrained herself.

"... I checked the list of the Hearth House again, and your name is not on it."

"List? It seems that you don't know enough about this place. The people who rule here are not as kind as they seem. The so-called list is not complete. Many people were not on the list from the beginning."

"!"

Hearing this, Linnet was shocked at first, and then felt something was wrong.

Is "father" the type that can be described as looking kind?

Although she is a bit strict and full of majesty, she never punishes people when they have not made any mistakes.

The so-called mistakes are not small things like breaking cups and tearing clothes, but revealing whereabouts during the mission, or even betraying the Hearth House.

The little girl in front of her is so young, far from the age of carrying out missions, let alone the ability to betray the organization.

But ordinary children should not know the existence of the Hearth House.

"Those people are not regarded as family members, but just experimental subjects. Their names will not appear on the companion list, but they may appear on the execution list."

Something is wrong, and it is getting more and more wrong.

Linette raised her eyebrows.

"Do you have evidence? Or witnesses."

Krevy lowered her head and thought for a while.

"Pepe, she is my best friend, I only trust her."

Another name that is not on the list.

"Fill your stomach first."

Putting down the food she brought, Linnet fell into thought, and Krevy's next move made her halfOpen mouth.

Chew, chew, chew.

The food was not moved. The girl was grasping the air. In fact, there was nothing in her palm, not even the slightest elemental force fluctuation.

However, she made chewing movements, as if she was eating in small bites.

The scene was a bit weird, but Krewe was a cute and likable girl, so Linnett was not too nervous.

In the Opikle Opera House, the girl had seen the world.

The space that was torn apart at will, the giant whale that swallowed the world, and the mysterious Si Ke Ke. (To read the exciting novels, go to Faloo Novel Network!)

The amazing experience made Linnett stay calm.

"What are you eating?"

"Cake, very delicious cake."

There was no cake in the food Linnett brought. The soft snacks were easy to deform and collapse during the carrying process. .

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