AliNovel

Font: Big Medium Small
Dark Eye-protection
AliNovel > Ashborn Primordial > Chapter 193: Divine Mausoleum

Chapter 193: Divine Mausoleum

    Chapter 193: Divine Mausoleum


    Vir and his wolf guides <em>Leaped </em>along Mahdis empty streets in silence. The oppressive weight of death always hung over the dead city, but now, without Ashani to apany him, Vir felt it more acutely than ever.


    Trying to keep his mind off such dark thoughts, he focused on his power gains instead. It wasn''t tough to do, with the world appearing in slow motion when he activated <em>Haste. </em>Previously, it''d sped him up to just over twice his normal speed. Now, it was closer to five times faster.


    So fast, in fact, he actually had to keep it off most of the time, or the world simply became frustrating to interact with. Forget speech, <em>any </em>interactions with other creatures were tedious. Luckily, if he wanted less of a boost, he could always reduce <em>Prana Current. </em>


    The ability did, however, allow Vir plenty of time to admire the Imperium city. While the streets had their fair share of unique toucheslike the ck material of the road and the marks that bordered it glowing blueVir found them analogous to roads hed traversed in the Human Realm.


    The highway system, however, was unlike anything he had ever seen. Fifty paces wide, tall walls stretched on either side, and above them, even taller buildings soared into the sky. Imperium engineers had excavated into the ground to submerge the thoroughfare that wound through the city like a snakes body. Sometimes passing through dark tunnels miles long, the road seemed to run forever.


    Vir could scarcely imagine the amount of traffic the highway had supported in its glory days. When added to the Imperiums aerial modes of travel, it hinted at how truly gargantuan Mahdis poption had been. Sonam was quaint inparison.


    While Vir had initially worried that the Ashfire wolves would be blinded by the tunnels total darkness, if they had any issues, they certainly didnt show it. The beasts navigated the tunnels with ease, dexterously bounding over obstacles and slinking under others. Vir wondered if they possessed sight simr to <em>Prana Vision.</em>


    Of the dozen wolves Ashani kept as herpanions, seven had stayed behind to guard her home, leaving five to guide Vir to the vault. The runt of the litter was among them, serving as leader. It came as a surprise to Vir. Hed have thought itsrger brothers would have taken that role, but the pack seemed to respect this particr wolf.


    <em>Runt </em>was a rtive term in this case; the beast was a good dealrger than thergest wolf hed ever seen in the Human Realm.


    They guided him expertly, leaving the thoroughfare to avoid roving Ash Beasts along the way. In the tunnels, they would sometimes duck into maintenance passages that ran parallel to the main one, both to bypass copses and to avoid beasts that lurked within its depths.


    The serpentine corridors were both cramped and full of blind turns, but the wolves navigated through it all without hesitation or fear, and the journey proceeded uneventfully.


    Vir admired their intelligenceand was also thankful that the prana in this realm drove most beasts insane. If <em>all </em>Ash Beasts kept their minds, Mahdi would be even more dangerous than it already was.


    The prana grew denser by the minute as they pressed on, forcing him to reactivate <em>Barrier </em>to keep the prana at bay, though he intentionally kept it weak. Every moment he spent in these prana-densends would strengthen him. Vir only wished he could spend another few weeks here to limate, but the danger was too great. He''d have to take what he could.


    Vir breathed in relief when they finally emerged from the dark tunnels. There was something about dark, dangerous ces that still scared Vir; the trauma from his experience under Daha still haunted him to this day. Ironic, given that he relied on the power of shadows extensively in fights.


    The wolves guided him up and out of the highway, and Vir began hungrily scanning the terrain. When hed first set out, he had hoped to find <em>something </em>useful in the rubble that dotted the streets. Even Imperium junk was bound to be a treasure in its own right, after all.


    Sadly, he found nothing. It was to be expected, Vir supposed. The city had been blown away in the explosion Ashani had shown himobliterated. Preservation inscriptions had rebuilt the buildings and the roads, but as Ashani had said, not all inscriptions were created equal.


    The result was a bizarre skeleton of a city. The buildings were there, but the outerments of life were not. No dposing furniture, no debris, no signs that this city had ever supported life.


    Vir had stopped at a handful of the tall buildings on the way to check. For Artifacts, and also to map his progress through the city. Navigation wasplicated by the jungle of spires, so hed been forced to ascend to the buildings rooftops to orient himself and jot down his route.


    Something told Vir hed return to Mahdi one day, and having a map of the ce coulde in handy when he did. It might also be a valuablemodity in both the Human and Demon Realms.


    Climbing was easier said than donesome towers boasted a hundred floors or more, all nearly identical, differing only slightly in their floor n. Some rooms were small. Others gargantuan. All were bare.


    Unauthorized usage: this tale is on Amazon without the author''s consent. Report any sightings.


    Hed given up after a handful of such fruitless experiences, opting to just climb the central elevator shafts to the roof for cartography. Even with his speed, searching took considerable time, and he had a mission to aplish.


    The vault would be where hed find any treasure But making it there safely and back was another matter entirely, even with the wolves guiding him. The voice of fear crept into his thoughts.


    Ashanis warning of the Yaksha warrior rang in his head as he bounded through the streets.


    Hed need every edge he could get. An Artifact weapon or armor would have been nice, but Ashani had none. Based on how casually the vendor in the memory vision had hawked his Artifact chakrams, Vir had hoped to find some lying around.


    That hope had been dashed. Even the buildings material would aid him, if he could only break off a piece. But even that had proven impossible.


    Vir spotted a pile of rubble and diverted, <em>Leaping </em>to it. The wolves stopped and followed. Theyd been confused the first few times he took detours like this, but had soon learned to expect it.


    The rubble was piled high in the street. The mound of wreckage was so tall, Vir had to <em>Leap </em>to climb atop it.


    <em>Another fallen spire, </em>he thought, rummaging around the wreckage. More rust than metal, this wasnt the first hede across. As Ashani had mentioned, the preservation scripts had failed over time, leading to more copses.


    <em>Just more rubble, </em>Vir thought, punching his katar into a te of metal that was slightly less rusted than the others. His <em>Prana de </em>passed right through.


    It was almost as if the preservation scripts prevented the building from aging, but when they failed, all those years of decay came rushing back.


    To be useful to Vir, the preservation script would have had to have failed very recently. Vir looked up, wondering if a skyscraper would oblige ande crashing down.


    s, it was about as likely as Janak appearing to aid him, so Vir returned to the road and followed the wolves deeper into the city.


    Hed lost count of the number of Ash Beasts theyd avoided when he finally understood his folly.


    <em>There </em>is <em>a building that copsed recently! </em>Vir thought with excitement, entering the nearest skyscraper and bounding up its central elevator shaftto the annoyance of his guides.


    Most buildings lifts were no longer functional, but the shafts that ran up their spine made for easy ascents.


    He kept an eye out for anything valuable, though like the others, the floors were empty.


    Reaching the roof, Vir found the horizon, attempting to situate himself. The jungle of towers made it difficult, but his rose higher than most, affording him amanding vantage.


    The map hed constructed also helped.


    <em>Were actually pretty close</em>


    Burningndmarks into his memory, Vir jumped off the roof, descending faster and faster as he fell, feet first.


    He didnt <em>have </em>to fall this way, of course. Descending the elevator shaft wouldnt have taken all that long, and was arguably safer.


    Previously, Vir might have agreed. Now, though, he didnt need to rely on ground prana to break his fall. Besides, it was <em>fun.</em>


    Pulling airborne Ash prana into his legs, Vir focused his will on absorbing the fall, priming the Talent before his boots struck the ground.


    The instant he did, prana red, dampening his fall. His knees bent, but he stayed upright.


    The Talent depleted the <em>Prana Armor </em>on the soles of his boots, but Vir had already decided hed keep that area unprotectedhe needed a gap in the armor to suck prana in from, and the bottom of his boots were as good of a ce as any. It was an unlikely target for his enemies.


    Vir could almost feel the Ashfire wolves around him rolling their eyes.


    Were gonna take a quick detour.<hr>


    Vir led the wolves to the copsed structure, pausing only to add to his map, or to allow the Ashfire wolves to guide him around any enemies that happened to be in the way. They were still far enough from the core of the city where the truly world-ending beasts lurked, but that didnt mean the ones that prowled here were lightweights.


    Vir suspected most of the beasts roaming around here boasted Br Ranks easily over five hundred.


    Like the Phantomde he was currently eyeing, standing on the rubble of the recently copsed spire.


    It was a foe hed prevailed against, once. In the mine under Avi. When Cirayus had asked him to defeat one in the Ash, hed refusedthe beast had posed too great of a threat at the time.


    Vir hade a long way since then. Like the Ashfire wolves, though, this Phantomde wasrger than its Ashen Realm brothers.


    Larger, and with tens of thousands of tiny spikes, along with severalrge ones.


    <em>The small ones will be hard to avoid, </em>Vir thought.


    Its prana density was also higher than Virs body since it lived closer to Mahdis central spire.


    Vir wouldnt dare fight it, normally. But it was sitting on the rubble he was after. Rubble that might actually have a piece of Imperium steel that hadnt rusted through.


    It was just a guess, but judging from its prana density and what Vir knew of its lesser siblings Br rank, Vir estimated it somewhere between four hundred and six hundred.


    He wouldnt be fighting alone, though. Vir nced at the Ashfire wolves around him. While hed only seen them fight once, he thought they might individually rank around one hundred. Certainly not low, but Ash Wolves danger came with their pack coordination. Thebined strength of this group of five could easily exceed five hundred.


    Then there was Virs own strength to consider. Thest time hed been tested, he ranked sixty. Since then, Vir had learned <em>Prana de, de Launch, Prana Channeling, Prana Barrier, </em>and had multiplied his prana capacity at least twenty-fold.


    As he was now, here in the Mhadi Realm, Vir didnt think hed rank much lower than five hundred himself. Itd be a different story in the Demon Realm, where hed lose the infinite reserve of Ash prana, but for now? He rivaled the strongest Talent wielders in the Human Realm. He rivaled Mejai of Ash.


    Or so he thought. It was time to put the theory to the test. If there <em>was </em>something useful in that pile of rubble, Vir would be making a mistake leaving it there.


    You guys up for a fight? he asked.


    The wolves regarded him quizzically, but understood his intent when he brandished his katar in one hand and a chakram in the other.


    The leader made a series of whining, wheezing sounds, and the other Ashfire wolves tensed, moving away.


    See if you can distract it. Get it to attack, Vir said, unsure if the wolf understood his meaning.


    Four wolves scaled the nearby buildings, climbing onto perches surrounding the Phantomde. The leader stuck next to Vir.


    Alright then, Vir said, cracking his neck as he sunk into his shadow. Lets take this thing out.
『Add To Library for easy reading』
Popular recommendations
Shadow Slave Beyond the Divorce My Substitute CEO Bride Disregard Fantasy, Acquire Currency The Untouchable Ex-Wife Mirrored Soul