Milan smiled. He had just become the last Gilmodar.
He traveled to the Studenica monastery. Behind the 31st stone of the western wall, wrapped in a leather pouch, was not a copper sheet — but a modern USB drive. On it, one sentence:
Milan, a retired history professor from Belgrade, found the file on a corrupted hard drive bought at a flea market in Novi Sad. The file was labeled: Istorija_Srpskog_Naroda_Grupa_Autora_Pdf_31_gilmodari.pdf .