Gerald Crawford:The Secretly Rich Man (Invisible or Poorest) Chapter 1121
“A stone tablet?”
“Indeed. An ancient event of some sort had been painted onto it. Even after studying the stone tablet for quite
some time, however, Xyion was only able to tell that it had something to do with a burial scene. He wasn’t able to
understand the wording on the table at all, and after many years passed, he eventually lost interest in it. As a
result, the tablet is now kept as an ancient art piece within my private room!” explained Master Ghost.
Another mural…?
Whenever Gerald heard about murals now, it always prompted his mind to recall what he had seen inside the
ancient tomb.
As one would expect, ancient murals were usually filled with historic tales that reflected the people of the time’s
social, political, economic, literary, artistic, and technological capabilities. Such murals could end up being vastly
different according to the artists’ beliefs, customs, and also their aesthetic concepts.
These murals—that were usually drawn as long as rivers—were viewed extremely highly due to all the vivid and
informative ancient scenes that the people of old drew with their descendants in mind. The fact that their heartfelt
stories were told in such a different way only served to make the murals even more valuable.
Gerald had already seen how detailed these murals could get back when he was in the ancient tomb of the general
god. He could still clearly remember all the drawings on the tomb that described things from the day the people
Follow on NovᴇlEnglish.nᴇthad found the general god up till the day he was buried.
“Speaking of which, I later asked one of my old friends to come over and have a look at the tablet. From what he
could tell, the burial method depicted on it was some sort of ocean burial!” added Ghost.
“Ocean burial?”
Upon hearing that, Gerald had a feeling that it could be related to the king of the ocean’s tomb. Due to that, he
added, “Could I have a look at it?”
“If it’s piqued your interest, then by all means!” replied Master Ghost as he gestured for Gerald to follow him.
Following that, Master Ghost led Gerald to a small hill that was located behind the church’s backyard. On it, lay what
seemed to be a private room where Master Ghost usually meditated in.
The private room itself was about five meters tall and three meters wide. Its walls were made of marble and the
room was mostly dark and empty save for a table in the middle with a dimly-lit oil lamp on it, the sole source of
light within the private room.
However, upon closer inspection, six mossy and ancient-looking stone tablets could be seen arranged neatly within
the room as well. Those were definitely the murals Master Ghost had been talking about.
Lifting the lamp—that the master had offered to him—once Gerald stood right before the murals, he instantly
began investigating them.
It wasn’t long before he noticed that the wording used on these tablets were similar to the ones he had seen back
in the ancient tomb. Putting two and two together, he deduced that these murals were as old as the tomb itself.
After looking at the first mural for a while, Gerald suddenly froze. Shockingly, one of the scenes on the tablet
seemed to detail what seemed to be the lady in white’s burial!
Not wanting to miss out on any key details, Gerald kept his eyes peeled as he continued trying to decipher the
tablet.
From what he could understand, the story—that the mural was trying to tell—began by showing that Halimark City
used to only be a tiny fishing village that was inhabited by rather isolated fishermen.
Reading on, it was shown that a group of people—led by an old man dressed in long robes—one day appeared at
the village while carrying a huge coffin.
Gerald was all too familiar now with the robed old man. That old man was undoubtedly the same old beggar he had
first seen on the ancient tomb’s murals!
To think that Gerald would see him even here!
Shaking the thought off, Gerald then continued reading on. Based on what he could see, Gerald guessed that the
old beggar had carried the lady in white’s coffin all the way here after letting her and the general god bid each
other farewell.
By this point, Gerald was completely certain that the one in the coffin was the lady in white. So his hunch was
correct. She truly had been brought here…
Returning to the story of the fishermen, when they came back after fishing on that day, they were surprised to see
the old man and his men carrying a coffin.
Follow on Novᴇl-Onlinᴇ.cᴏmWhen the village’s patriarch stepped forward to ask who was in the coffin, the old beggar had apparently told them
that it contained the body of a goddess who had fallen from the sky!
Hearing that, the villagers immediately bowed to the coffin. Following that, the patriarch seemed to ask why she
had been moved here.
Seeing the beggar hand the patriarch quite a bit of gold, Gerald felt that it was safe to assume that the beggar
simply replied that she was to be buried here. The next image suggested that the patriarch was also told to get his
men to build an underwater tomb in the nearby ocean.
Due to the fact that the coffin contained a goddess and they were given a lot of gold, the patriarch simply obeyed.
Everyone in the village was involved in the construction of the tomb, and all of them seemed to be equally
determined to get the job done.
Within a short amount of time, the patriarch managed to gather around eight thousand people—both young and
old—to sail out to sea and begin building a tomb for the goddess.
Surprisingly, the structure wasn’t called the king of the ocean’s palace. Rather, it was named the palace of the
goddess.
Under the old beggar’s command, the palace was completed within half a year. On the mural, everyone involved
appeared to be impressed by their grand underwater project. Soon enough, the lady in white’s burial would take
place.