Chapter 284: Journey to the Lost City (Two)
The Overseers body split not at his waist, but rather vertically, down the very center of his body.
Vir stared in stunned disbelief as the wreckage of the kothis body tumbled to the ground. He continued staring a long moment after, as did all whod gathered around.
Fearing this exact situation, Vir had reduced the prana in his katar. Rather, he feared the oppositethat his attack would be trivially brushed away. Hed expected the Overseer to at least block his well-telegraphed strike. Hed wanted to get the Overseer to back off, not to <em>kill </em>him.
Yes, there wouldve been consequences. Hed likely have to feign pain as the Overseer buzzed his cor and made an example of him. Bgras life was more important than any of that.
Now, though?
<em>Now What?</em>
It was a hacking cough that broke Vir out of his reverie.
H-Hese to! Malik said. Hed been squatting beside the downed naga ever since hed applied the tourniquet, applying pressure on Bgras stump to further reduce the blood flow. You better not turn back to your naga form, he muttered.
Why? Vir asked, joining Malik in applying pressure. What happens if he does?
Nothing good.
Bgra looked up dazedly at Vir, trying to form words. Only a wheeze escaped his lips, however.
Dont talk. Can you heal yourself? Vir asked, applying pressure on his wound with both hands. Bgra grunted, but it significantly lessened the bleeding. Even so, Bgra had lost too much blood.
By now, the other Chitran guards had encircled the group, their talwars and spears pointed inward. Though, whether out of caution or fear, they did not attack.
The naga nodded almost imperceptibly, raising a weakened hand. Unsure of what else to do, Vir took Bgras hand in his own, but the demon shook it off. He brought his hand to the cor.
<em>The cors restricting his prana. If I can break it</em>
Vir hesitated. Ever since theyd pped one around his neck, hed been studying the cors in great detail. Unlike human Artifact cors, they didnt consume prana from the environment. Rather, they stored prana within them, releasing them whenmanded. Vir was almost certain an overload into its storage mechanism would cripple the device. He just didnt know if it would harm Bgra as well. After all, injecting prana into his enemies had proven an incredibly deadly attack in the past.
Then again, if he did nothing, Bgra would die.
Halt! a guard barked, just as Vir rested his hand on the cor. Break it up. All of you!
Vir ignored him, attempting to concentrate on the task at hand, but when Malik squeezed Virs shoulder, he begrudgingly stole a nce behind him.
In the Chitrans hand was a tablet.
Stay back! the guard said. While he didnt quite stutter, his fluster was obvious. He waved the tablet in front of him, as if it were an orb capable of warding off the demons who slowly encircled him.
And why would we do that? a gruff voice said from the crowd.
Fool! This is the control tablet for your cors. Do as I say! Ill use it! S-stop!
The guards voice grew increasingly more desperate as the demonic noose tightened.
In desperation, Bgra clutched Virs arm. His wheezing had grown suddenly worse, and Vir knew he didnt have much longer to live.
<em>Its now or never, </em>Vir thought, silencing the ruckus brewing around him.
Vir gripped the cor, pushing the tiniest trickle of prana he could into its inscription. Under other circumstances, hed never dare attempt something this dangerous. Now?He simply uttered a prayer to Badrak for good luck.
Nothing happened, so Vir upped the prana. Then, to his horror, he saw the inscription light up. It wasnt <em>his</em> prana, however. It was abination of every other affinity.
<em>Theyve activated the cors.</em>
Vir immediately surged prana into the cor, gripping the metal with as much force as he could muster.
<em>Crack</em>!
Bgras body jolted in pain. His body seized once, then went limp as the cor surrounding his neck crumbled into pieces.
Malik, who had been diligently pressing against Bgras wound, screamed out in pain. He fell to the ground, clutching his head, writhing.
Simr screams erupted from all around Vir, though he spared them only the briefest nce.
Vir searched Bgras prana signature for any trace of Ash prana. He couldnt find any, though that didnt mean
Bgra heaved, his eyes flying wide open. His silver Panav tattoo glowed, and the blood ceased pouring from the demons body within moments.
<em>Well, at least he wont die, </em>Vir thought sadly. Though he wanted to watch over the naga, the crisis unfolding around him denied him that luxury.
Vir stood and swept a nce across the field, quickly taking stock of the situation.
It was as hed fearedthe prisoners writhed on the ground, while the Kothis watched over them with a range of expressions ranging from smug to sadistic.
<em>Not for long.</em>
Vir didnt bother physically striking the kothi who held the tablet. A <em>Talwar Launch </em>bisected the object, much in the same way it had with the Overseer, taking the kothis hand with it.
The prana link shut off instantly, as Vir had hoped. But when the demons cries didnt immediately cease, Vir worried hed made a terrible mistake.
He nced at Malik, still clutching his cor in agony.
<em>Destroying the table doesnt turn them off!?</em>
Desperately, Vir wracked his mind. A minute more of this torture, and theyd be unconscious. One more after that, and theyd be dead.
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There was but one answer. Only a single option that had a chance of working.
An ability Vir had theorized about and ruminated on, yet had never tested.
<em>This had better work</em>
Vir activated <em>Haste,</em> summoned every ounce of prana within his body and <em>exploded.</em><hr>
When Vir came to, it was not to a field of dead demons, or even to a gag and shackles, as hed expected. Hed beenin down on no less than three cushionsif stinky unwashed robes could be considered cushions.
<em>What happened? </em>Vir thought groggily before turning to his side. He came face to face with a serpentrger than any hed ever seen. Vir panicked, thinking some foul Ash Beast hade to finish him in his sleep, but the ill-fitting cuirass it woreridiculous on a snakeand the spear nearbymade him reconsider.
<em>Bgra?</em>
Vir had never once seen the naga in his full serpent form, and he wondered why. For it was <em>magnificent. </em>Twin bright white lines traced down the length of Bgras otherwise jet-ck scales. In all, he had to have been twelve paces long, though coiled up as he was, it was difficult to estimate.
The snakes body neither rose nor fell, so Vir couldnt tell if it<em>he</em>was breathing, but then again, Vir knew little of serpent anatomy. The most hed ever seen were the small snakes that always slithered away before he could reach them in the Godshollow.
Still, while his eyes failed him here, the prana in the nagas body told Vir all was well.
Youre up! a voice said. Good.
Vir looked up to find Malik handing him a bowl of hot soup.
Whatever you did made the cors cease functioning. Some of us have <em>Aspect of the zing Forest, </em>so we were able to rustle up some hot rations. Figured youd want some when you awoke.
Vir sat up, rubbing his temples. <em>Prana Burst Right. </em>The initial idea for the ability involved a spherical burst of prana in all directions. Like <em>Prana Dart</em>, just multiplied. It was supposed to be ast-ditch defense against multiple foes.
Here, hed needed something a bit more discerning. Instead of a globe, hed fired a half-dozen darts at every nearby demon. Of course, six wasnt nearly enough, so hed <em>Blinked </em>around, stopping barely long enough to fire off handfuls more.
The entire process had taken less than a minute, draining him , and leaving him little more than a desated husk.
As abat ability, it wasnt nearly ready. Though, judging from the soundsing from outside the tent, it sounded like its trial run hadnt failed, either.
<em>How did I ever manage to live like this? </em>Vir wondered, thinking back to his life at Brij. He felt gutted, and even the slightest movement seemed to require inordinate effort.
Thanks, he muttered, cycling <em>Prana Current </em>as he slurped the soup with gratitude. It wasnt prana, but it did fill him with an inner warmth. <em>Prana Current </em>would have to slowly rebuild the rest. Itd be a day or more before he was full again, but, well, it could be worse. At least he wasnt dead.
Bgra? Vir asked.
Alive, Malik reported. Albeit barely. Had his cor snapped a momentter, Im afraid wed be cremating a corpse instead.
Vir winced. To think hed cut it so close Vir needed Bgra. He was talented, had military experience. More than that, though, Vir didnt want the naga to die. Whatever deeds hed done in the past Vir knew there was a good soul lurking beneath that rough exterior. Hed eventuallye around to Virs cause. Perhaps not soon, but someday. Maybe theyd even be fast friends.
Thank you, Vir said. For looking after him. If you hadnt applied that tourniquet
Malik waved Virs sentiment away. It was the least I could do.
Vir took a look around the infirmary, finding countless demons, most lying down, but a few up and milling about.
Everyones safe, then?
Better than safe, Malik replied. Do you understand what youve done? he asked. Youve <em>liberated </em>them. Us! Were no longer prisoners!
Virs eyes widened in panic. What about the other guards? Did they
Kill them? Malikpleted. No. We stripped them of their weapons and armor and ced the spare cors they were carrying around their necks. Symbolic, mind you, since the tablet was destroyed, but we have them under <em>heavy </em>guard. Im hoping Bgra can concoct something when he awakens to put them under. With their Chakras and bloodline arts, they could wreak a lot of havoc before we brought them down. Best to keep them unconscious.
Sounds like a good n, Vir agreed. He couldnt understand how demonic jails worked when everyone was this powerful.
I have to tell you, Neel. That moment? When we snapped those cors on our captors? I havent felt that good in a <em>long </em>while. I only wish you were conscious to see it.
Vir gave Malik a pained smile. He didnt hate the Kothis. Not truly. He hated Asuman, yes, and Raja Matiman, as well as anyone actively suppressing the Gargans. But Vir wasnt nave enough to believe that every kothi was evil. It was akin to iming that all humansor all demonswere nothing but monsters. How was that any different from Tia? Hadnt he argued exactly that point to get her to see reason?
No, Vir had lived through too much to pretend that the world was ck and white. There was no such thing. No convenient good or evil. Only shades of ash Which only made it so much harder to reconcile the turmoil raging within his chest.
Take me to them, he said.<hr>
The bound kothis looked up at Vir with a mixture of spite and fear. Gagged as they were, none uttered a word. The fifty-odd angry demons who thronged around them mightve also had something to do with it.
Rx, Vir said. I wont harm you. And I wont let the others either.
The prisoners expressions shifted. Some to confusion, others to relief.
Not while Im in control. And I <em>am </em>in control, am I not, Malik?
The gray demon nodded. Some prisoners ran off on their own. Those were the dumb ones. The smarter among us understand your power, Neel. The smarter of us understand that our chances of surviving go up drastically with er
With what?
Well, with you. Whawhoever you are, Malik hastily corrected. Hed been about to say whatever.
I see, Vir replied. Fear and rumormongering werent Virs preferred tools for gaining obedience, but given the circumstances, it was about the best he couldve hoped for.
Well, you heard him, Vir said. <em>Im </em>the leader now. So, can I expect you to behave?<hr>
The guards, as it turned out, did behave. Even without the implicit threat of getting cored. That was better than Vir had hoped for.
What was <em>not </em>what hed hoped for, however, were the incessant questions and looks of fear, respect, and hope on his charges faces. And to Virs chagrin, on a select fewanger. Betrayal. Hatred.
<em>Those may be a problem, eventually</em>
Not all the demons were Gargan, though most did hail from his n. Even so, Vir wasnt ready to reveal who he was. They were thankful to the one whod rescued them, yes. Thankful enough to ignore that his existence had caused their lifetime of suffering? Likely not.
No, Virs Akh Nara reveal would have toeter. Once he could trust his troops with his life. Both implicitly and explicitly.
He could, however, divulge his <em>other </em>secret identity. Layers uponyers had their uses, after all. The Endless hours of effort cultivating his identity were spent precisely for moments like these. And it was all about toe to fruition.
Long have we been oppressed. Downtrodden and trampled. But hear me now! The rebellion ising, Vir said, impersonating the best smug grin he could musterwhich was to say, <em>masterful</em>. Be sure youre on the right side when it happens.
He could almost hear the kothis gulp. The stronger among them looked away in shame, while the weaker, less experienced guards nervously exchanged nced with one another.
<em>They wont be a problem, </em>Vir thought as he walked away. <em>Just</em><em>wish I could say the same for the others.</em><hr>
Alright, look, Vir announced, his voice amplified by the same tablet the Overseer used. Bgra had charged it, and if hed had any reservations about why hed been asked to charge it, he kept them to himself. Having his life saved had had a profound impact on the nagas attitude to Vir.
I wont im to have all the answers. Who am I? Gargan rebellion. Yes, I said it. No, Im not afraid. Yes, Id be a grakking chal to think we could rebel and flee right now. Where would we go? To the Ash? Wed die. Across the border? Wed be fugitives. And I doubt <em>any </em>of you harbor delusions that wed be let back into Chitran-controlled territory.
So what should we do? someone asked.
For starters, we head to a secure location. By those mountains, Vir said, pointing to the jagged peaks that were bisected by the Ash Boundary.
The prisoners shuffled anxiously, and some uttered prayers, though not one spoke up against him.
I know its dangerous, Vir said. But its the best shot we have. The mountains will protect us from Ash Beasts. The Kothis arent expecting us back for a week or more. Well use that time, though not in the way they intended. Well train. <em>Ill </em>train <em>you</em>. Youve all seen what I can do. When were done, youll wield those weapons of yours as well as you move your own arms. I cant say youll win one-on-one against Ash Beasts, but three-on-one? Doable.
Excited whispers sounded through the crowd. They were hesitant, but onboard. Vir could work with that.
For those of youcking weapons well, I n to raid Praya Parul. On my own. And Ill bring back better gear than you could ever have dreamed of.
What about after? someone asked. What do we do then?
Then we return to Garrison Atnu. Well be wearing our cors, but well no longer be ves. No longer prisoners. Well be <em>rebels. </em>And when the timees, we <em>will </em>destroy them.
A cheer unlike Vir had ever expected burst forth, deafening the ears of all those present.
And, to Vir, Malik, and Bgras immense satisfaction, more than one Chitran guard pissed their pants.
Vir looked over his future troops with feigned pride. <em>If only it works out that way</em>