Chapter 69: Of Jatu, Mahakurma, and Prana Swarms
While Vir had learned from Param that Daha was divided into three districts, it was one thing to hear about it, and another entirely to experience the city in person.
Daha was <emrge</em>.
Vir could scarcely believe this many people could coexist, all somehow living in harmony. Well, mostly. Vir had visited the seedier parts of the city, and while not as bad as the warrens, the situation there left much to be desired. It wasnt so much the crime, but the grime and filth that made Brij look like a wondend.
In fact, that seemed to be the trend for most of the city. He could count on one hand the number of neighborhoods that were clean and safe-looking.
As for the District of Internal Affairs, he had no clue; it was where the Sawai ristos lived, and it was strictly off limits. The walls that separated the Commons from that district were even taller and thicker than the exterior walls, a fact that boggled Virs mind.
It was as if they feared the Commoners more than an invasion by an outside nation. The walls were so thick not even <em>Dance </em>could get through them, and the double portcullis gates remained highly guarded at all hours of the day. ess was restricted to royalty, Sawai, and those with invitations.
The castle district was even worse, towering over the rest of the city atop <em>Royal Hill</em> with walls that soared fifty paces high. The only path there led through the District of Internal Affairs.
Hed also learned that the Commons dwarfed both the castle and Internal Affair districts in both size and poption. For most Dahans, the other districts existed as a fictional ce, as theyd never even been there.
While getting there seemed untenable, that didnt mean mapping out his surroundings had been a wasted effort. Far from it.
Vir slowly opened his eyes, having justpleted another meditation session. His blood pathways grewrger with each passing day, but it still wasnt enough. To learn <em>Empower, </em>he needed more blood flow. It was slow going, but he was steadily making progress. It wouldnt be long before he could start doing some trials. For now, keeping a roof over his head was a bigger concern.
The fact was, Vir was more broke than a Brijer, without a single copper to his name. To stay even one more night at the inn, hed had to improvise, and fast.
It just so happened he already possessed a useful skill. A skill few others boasted. <em>Cartography.</em>
Mapping out the city took the better part of the day, but once done, copying his work took little effort. Luckily, hed brought along a few pieces of parchment from Riyans ce. After cutting them up and miniaturizing his map, hed set down at the Central za,id out his wares, and let the buyerse.
No one in their right mind would shell out silvers for a rudimentary charcoal sketch scribed on parchment, but the basic map hed seen at the shop meant Vir needed little to attract buyers.
It started slow; in the first hour after he opened up, he made only a single sale earning him fifteen coppers.
But then word began to spread, and within hours, hed sold out of the five copies he had.
He immediately spent it all on paper and ink, and refined the copies a bit, cutting palm-size square pieces with his katar to get more usage out of his sheets.
Finishing right as the sun grew long, he kept his shop open right until dusk, charging fifty coppers per. Soon, he had two hundred coppers, or two silvers worth, in his pocket.
His buyers warned that his little hustle was illegalthat the Merchants Guild would shut him down forcking a permit. That didnt stop them from buying his maps, though.
Courtesy of the inns precharged <em>Magic Candle</em>, he worked through the night to produce more. Heeding their advice, hed migrated the next day to the Upper West Side, where the citizens coin purses weighed just a tad heavier.
He made another three silvers that day.
With five silvers, hed stopped his little operation, fearful of attracting too much attention.
With only one day left, he turned his attention to the Brotherhoods trial.
His days selling maps gave him time to think long and hard about the task. <em>Bring back the eyes of that which sees without eyes.</em>
Unless the riddle was especially crypticand he doubted it would be, given the number of mercenaries out thereit likely referred to an animal of some sort. He wasnt an expert on that subject, but figured he could learn what he needed at a ce that everyone talked about: <em>the grand Dahan library. </em>The citys jewel.
From his mapping exploits, hed learned that the repository of knowledge was actually within the Commons District. Because few were allowed into the upper districts, theyd ced the building in the location that would bring in the most money. A rare bit of foresight from Dahas government, or so Param had said when Vir visited his shop to ask.
The library itself was situated off of the main thoroughfare in the Upper West Side neighborhood, where the homes were rtivelyrger, and the streets cleaner.
Vir entered the three-story stone structure to find a spacious interior lined wall to wall with shelves. The ceiling reached up all the way to the third story, with walkways on the two higher floors ringing the perimeter. Those were also filled with bookshelves, though their density decreased with each floor up.
Can I help you? a young woman d in a ck robe called out from her semicircr librarians desk that stood at the entrance. Her confident and educated demeanor made her look more like a guardian than a mere employee.
Im looking for some books on animals. Specifically ones I can find here in Daha.
The librarian thought for a moment. Yes, we have several tomes on this topic. Admission is ten coppers an hour, and must be paid upfront.
<em>Good thing Param warned me about this, </em>Vir thought, handing the woman thirty coppers.
This tale has been uwfully lifted from Royal Road. If you spot it on Amazon, please report it.
She led him past a myriad of racks, and Vir found it difficult not to gape in awe.
<em>Theres an ocean of books here! How does anyone find anything?</em>
He could scarcely imagine the amount of knowledge packed within this great hall.
Whats on the upper floors? Vir asked. Looks like there arent as many books up there?
Correct, the librarian responded. The upper floors are reserved for the citys more privileged tomes. They are essible only to the Sawai, and some even need a royal seal of approval. Though the citys most precious books are kept deep within the castle.
What kind of informations in those books? Vir asked, his curiosity peaked. Who <em>wouldnt </em>be excited by such hidden secrets?
Ancient tomes. Whatever records we have from the Age of Gods. Among other things. Ive never been up there myself. A separate Sawai librarian handles those floors. Besides, several of those books are written in the Imperium tongue, unreadable to most.
A differentnguage? Vir asked.
No, schrs believe the gods spoke the samenguage as we do, she said, picking up adder and hooking it onto a bookshelf, but it has been four millennia since they left this realm. Speech andnguage have drifted far enough apart to make thenguages nearly distinct.
Here you are, she said, handing Vir an oversized leather-bound book. Its thick pages had yellowed with time, and the book was heavy with the weight of the information it possessed.
Anything else? she asked.
Actually, Vir said, having a sudden thought.
<em>Im already here. Might as well learn everything I can.</em> Do you have a bestiary of the Ashen Realm?
You wish to learn of Ash Beasts? the librarian asked, raising her brows. A rare request, but we do have a few tomes on that subject. Though, most of our moreplete books live on the higher floors. I can give you a book that contains mostlymon knowledge, if that is alright?
Sure, that works, Vir replied. It may have beenmon knowledge for most, but hed had almost no exposure to this in Brij apart from the asional campfire story or myth. Shardul the Vicious had told him to journey to the Ashen Realm. It couldnt hurt to know a bit more, even if the prospect seemed suicidal.
Vir took his two books and settled down at a table. There were few others in the library at this hour, and Vir quickly lost himself in the tomes, learning far more about the world than hed ever expected.
He learned that Prana beasts had nearly nothing inmon with their Ash Beast brethren. Not only did they look different, Ash Beast Br Ranks were universally higher. A lot higher; much of what he read horrified him.
Ash Wolves boasted glowing blue eyes and hides as dark as the Ash itself, whose prana was so potent that it manifested as ck mes that burned off of their hides. The book said that their Br scale ranged from twenty to forty <em>individually.</em> But wolves were pack animals, and in a pack of five, their Br Rank jumped to 200 to 400.
It was worse; the book said these wolves swarmed in the <em>hundreds of thousands</em> within the Ashen Realm.
As much as the Ash Wolves shocked Vir, the subsequent ones made him reelto the point where he wondered whether the author had exaggerated the words foredic effect.
<em>Prana Swarms are beingsprised entirely of living prana. They are incorporeal, having no physical body, making them impossible to perceive. They seem tock a will of any kind, mindlessly consuming anything that contains even the barest modicum of prana, growing ever more powerful with each assimtion.</em>
<em>Prana Swarms are invisible, invincible, and once encountered, utterly impossible to avoid. A great number of powerful mejai perished to bring back this information.</em>
<em>Br Rank estimated to vary from 3,500 to 20,000. Threat ssification: Cataclysmic. Avoid at all costs.</em>
And then there was the Mahakurmaa four-legged animal resembling a tortoise, also known as the Colossus.
<em>Records of Mahakurma are few, but we do know that theypare in size to small inds. These mythical creatures stand hundreds of paces tall and thousands long, and entire forests and mountain ecosystems are said to grow upon their backs.</em>
<em>Br Rank estimated to vary between 15,000 to 30,000. Threat ssification: Cataclysmic. Avoid at all costs.</em>
Vir found the avoid at all costs disimer somewhat amusing. It was as if the tome was written for plucky adventurers seeking fame and fortune in the Ashen Realm.
No one in their right mind would set foot in such a ce.
When Vir remembered these were only the well-documented beaststhat the more exotic ones were restrictedhe shelved all thoughts of venturing into that terrifying ce.
The Ashen Realm was a ne of nightmares where neither days nor nights existed. A ce of eternal twilight, where Ash fell unendingly from the sky, burying all in soot, and where no intelligent life existed.
Even if the animals didnt kill him, it seemed that the prana was so dense within the Ashen Realm that it killed most living organisms in a matter of minutes. <em>Including</em> humans. The ones that somehow escaped that cruel fate suffered an even worse demisetheir minds slowly broke until they were driven insane, corrupted into mindless animals doomed to rove the realm until a more powerful predator ended their suffering.
Most terrifying was that all the wording had disimers: it is believed, we presume that. Nothing factual. Because precious few who ever entered that realm ever returned to report their findings. The ones that did had lucked upon an Ash Tear that threw them back into the human realm before they sumbed to the prana poisoning.
Vir closed the tome, ssifying that horrifying ce as and of myth rather than anything real. Despite Shardul and Ekanais wishes, Vir wasnt suicidal.
He opened the other bookthankfully full of creatures that had no Br Rank at and flipped through its pages, looking at the ck and white images of each animal.
Rats, Bandies, Ashva, Most didnt evene close to the description of what the Brotherhood riddle asked for Except for one. His eyes lingered upon a certain creature. A <em>Jatu.</em>
<em>The red-eyed Jatu is a winged creature that lives only in dark ces. As nocturnal creatures, they sleep hanging upside down from their perches, feeding on blood at night. Individually harmless, but they often swarm in the hundreds, and their Br Rank can range between one to ten.</em>
<em>Be wary when venturing into sewers, undercrofts, and other dark open spaces. The Jatu are highly territorial creatures and will attack all who enter their domain.</em>
All of this would have led Vir to pass the Jatu over, but it was thest line that stuck out to him:
<em>As they live in dark ces, they have developed a means to see even without the use of their eyes. The exact mechanism is unknown and is often a topic of study for researchers.</em>
A being that sees without eyes
Something moved at the edge of Vir''s vision, prompting him to look up. A scan of the area showed no one. Just him and the books.
<em>Odd </em>he thought. He felt as if he was being watched, but <em>Prana Vision</em> showed only ambient pranic signatures. <em>Guess it was nothing.</em>
Vir realized hed lingered at the library longer than hed thought, and his eyes were growing weary from scanning the handwritten text.
Packing up his books, he carried them to the receptionistthe same young woman from earlier.
Where can I find the nearest sewer entrance? he asked.
The receptionist wrinkled her nose. Why would someone as, erm, <em>fashionable </em>as yourself want to visit such a ce? she said, looking him up and down, a trace of blush on her cheeks.
<em>Ah right, my current disguise is rather attractive, </em>Vir reflected. <em>Looks like that has some surprising uses</em>
Brotherhood business, Vir said.
Theres one not far from here but I rmend you bring a change of clothes. Ideally one you never want to wear again. And salves. Disinfectants too. Are you <em>sure </em>you want to go there?
No. No, I''m really not.
With a deep breath, he left the library, bracing himself for the distasteful experience that was toe.