Although the battle had crippled and terrified the surrounding Wilderness Natives who coveted the iron mine, the Feder Tribe had also paid a terrible price. After the war, like a wounded lone wolf, the tribe began to lick its wounds in solitude.
Although summers in the Wilderness tended to be cool, the midday sun was still scorching. To prevent a plague from the piles of corpses, everyone worked without stopping, gathering the bodies of the Wilderness People to be burned.
The bodies of the Feder Warriors, on the other hand, were collected for their families to claim. They would be given a collective burial at a later time.
In this regard, the culture of Debei was not so different from his past life. They believed that burial with an intact body showed respect for the dead, while also giving the living a place to focus their grief.
