Such a creation came at great cost to the kingdom. Maintaining it drained Osita heavily, which was why it was never meant to be permanent. The scans would last only for the duration of the event and the season, no more than a week.
Even so, the burden was immense.
Now the question turns to why all of this was done for only a single week. What meaning could such a brief span possibly hold?
The answer lies in the peculiar and deeply symbolic relationship between the royal family and the people of the Osita Kingdom.
Osita was a kingdom unlike any other. On the surface, it appeared ruled by a king, yet in truth, the people governed much of their own lives. Customs, trade, and even local disputes were often settled without royal decree. This was not born from rebellion or neglect, but from understanding. The people had long realized that their king, Osita, held little interest in ruling them at all.
