Early morning in Limassol.
People have yet to recover from the scars of war.
Bodies covered in white linen are carried by stretcher to the square for family members to identify and bury.
Enemies' bodies were hastily carted outside the city, thrown into a large pit, doused with flammable materials and burned, then buried to prevent possible plague.
This is one of Losa's post-war concerns.
Whether it is the Justinian Great Plague that cut off the revival of the Eastern Empire, or the Black Death that should ravage Europe more than a century later according to the original historical trajectory.
Both plagues halved the European population, regarded as apocalyptic natural disasters.
However, for quite a long time the people of Limassol wouldn't want to eat fish, because last night, too many enemies' bodies were buried in fish bellies.
