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AliNovel > A Record of Ash & Ruin: The Grieving Lands > Book 3: Chapter 35: The Accord

Book 3: Chapter 35: The Accord

    Book 3: Chapter 35: The ord


    <em>Alchemy revolves around extracting and enhancing the natural properties of materials to achieve a specific oue. This process is fundamentally powered by the alchemist''s own Mana, which dictates the final characteristics of the concoction. Materials with a stronger innate magic are more malleable and responsive in this process. However, the quality of the end product relies more on the Alchemist''s skill and belief in his process than on the materials themselves. Instead of relying on chants and rituals, alchemy uses precise recipes and measurements, though the essence of the practice with its use of Mana remains deeply rooted in spellcraft. The act of creating a magical potion is simply a spell construct in a liquid form.</em>


    <em>Therefore, hypothetically, a true master can achieve wonders, such as creating a healing potion from mere water, provided they possess sufficient talent, enormous Mana reserves, and an unwavering belief in their method. A highly unlikely proposition, as the whole art is steeped in esoteric nonsense.</em>


    <em>- A Study of Alchemics by Vincenzio Barbierri. </em>


    In my arrogance, I had made a grave error in judgment. Whips of segmented bone flowed like liquid lightning from the Necromancer without warning, striking at me with fierce suddenness. The Mimic within formed a shield almost as swiftly, a thin barrier of false wood and iron against the storm. Where sharp white bone met flesh, a dull cold blossomed, eating away at my Health as they drew fresh blood.


    In response to the cold, a familiar emotion grew in the pit of my belly. Sparked twice already in a single day, it was not hard to stoke the remaining embers of anger into a new me. In answer to that anger, the dark part of my magic begged… no, demanded, for release. A release I willingly granted.


    Entropic Aura burst from me in a seething pulse, an echo of the final death knell. Ivory bone began to turn gray as the waves of raw entropy crashed against bone whips that shed at me. Seven were their number, heads of a relentless hydra made of engraved bone. Mystic sigils red briefly about the tendrils of bone, tiny motes of ck eroding its arcane nature. What attacks that struck through my automatic guard now bruised instead of drawing blood.


    “You must be quite powerful for a Visitor,” snarled Vincenzio the Necromancer.


    I took in his words as I stepped away, trying to get some distance as I drew the dagger at my waist.


    “You are indeed powerful, but you will find one to be no easy prey,” he continued in a t clinical tone, the barrage of bone tentacles on my person unceasing.Game theory dictated that the correct response to an attack was to initiate an overwhelming counter-attack of one’s own. It was the only logical choice. However, my need toplete my new quest stayed my hand from following this obvious course.


    “I have no quarrel with you,” I shouted as I dodged a snake-like length of bone. A crashing tinkle of ss soon followed as it smashed into a row of beakers, vials, and alembics behind me. Liquid spilled from them, and an acrid stench filled the room like rotten fruit plucked toote from the vine.


    This was definitely not how I expected a Necromancer to fight. But then again, outside of video games and fantasy, what did I know of Necromancers?


    “But one has quarrel with you, feckless servant of the hated gods. The stench of their blessings is upon you. The reason for youring can be no other than one’s demise. One is not so feeble of mind to believe in coincidence,” he answered, blind hatred staining his words with passion, and twisting his expression.


    Another whip of segmented bone came down, as if in thunderous judgment. “Do you know not of the hundreds that are caught up in the wake of your kind?” he spat as I barely dodged his attack. “The suffering that you people bring to this world!?”


    "All of youck free will, no more free than the pitiful zombies one mastered in youth. You''re merely another puppet in their grand, foolish game. Ignorance being, perhaps, your only defense. Exterminating your sort has ever been a most mundane and odious task. Like weeds in the garden, you sprout where you are not wee. One will pluck you out, as one has ended the others."


    He began chanting in a t, mechanical monotone, each syble echoing softly. A glowing circle materialized, expanding into a series of concentric and intertwining rings. These rings spun slowly, with archaic and mystical symbols shing and revolving around the center. A sickly green hue, the mystical spell construct, seemed to bleed unnatural magic.


    It was in to see that if he finished whatever spell he was casting, my immediate future would not be a bright one. Greater Drain, my only offensive magical option, whispered seductively in my ear. Too long had it been, it whispered sibnt and sure. Still, I was hesitant to attack. There had to be another way.


    Even as I was weighing up my options, my shield blocked two more, almost simultaneous, blows of hard bone. My unnatural shield provided an impressive defense, but it was not perfect. Each sessive blow against the Mimic shield chipped away at its Health. A few more blows snaked through its guard, bruising and cutting where they impacted against my flesh.


    The Necromancer''s voice surged, rising to a tumultuous mor with echoes from beyond the veil of death. Oddly, I heard the faint tinkling of bells and shuddered as the air grew unnaturally cold and a chill crept over me.


    “I am free. My freedom bought with agony and suffering. Damn the gods and their ilk! Who are you to judge me so? What do you know of me?” I dered in defiance, my cries almost feeling cathartic in their expression.


    A flicker of hesitation passed over his face, and in his corpse-wax features I saw something hinting at a burgeoning seed of doubt. His relentless assault halted, the whirling ils of sharpened bone freezing in ce.


    "You dare to speak against the gods... Such defiance would be unthinkable for one in their power. Do you not fear the punishment of heaven?" He regarded me with a mix of suspicion and wonder, as if I had suddenly sprouted wings and horns. "Or is this a ruse? Yes, it must be a trick!"


    I felt I was close. This encounter, this story event, could be solved with something other than violence. Just a little more, one final push.


    “Vincenzo! I have offered you no harm, and have only defended myself. A Visitor you say, what is this? I fear there is a hidden meaning in such a word. I offer you this; I am not of this world, if that is your meaning, but I swear upon my mother’s grave that I am no friend of the gods,” I confessed as sincerely as I could.


    My mother, to the best of my knowledge, was probably still very much alive but the lie came easily to my lips for the added dramatic effect.


    Stretched across a few agonizing seconds, silence reigned supreme here, in their of the Necromancer. However, it was soon shattered by the growing heavy thud of many boots descending the stairs.


    The bone growths disappeared, slinking back into the Necromancer’s voluminous robes. Hastily, I sheathed my knife, my shield bing a tangle of wormy threads, then disappearing into my arm.


    A good thing too, for a group of well-armed men burst into the basement room, scant secondster. Armored in ensorcelled heavy te and chain, they could have been mistaken for automata golems. With weapons drawn, they scanned the scene before them through the grills of their helmets.


    "What is the meaning of this?" demanded one of them, his voice deep and strong, yet somewhat muffled by his heavy helmet. His presence exuded a menace, like that of a faceless and uncaring machine.


    Vincenzio stood motionless, like a statue. "One was being assisted by a Copper in one of one’s experiments, Es. Unfortunately, an ident urred," he replied slowly, his eyes not quite meeting those of his questioner. It seemed to me that his gaze was fixed on a point just beyond Es'' head.


    "And if I were to go upstairs to verify, would I find that such a request was indeed made? That your <em>experiment</em> has received the necessary approval?" Es''s voice rose sharply in rm, his tone verging on the edge of irritation.


    “One has never been one to just go along with epted societal norms,” The Necromancer shrugged nonchntly, a gesture that seemed out of ce with my image of him. He let out a raspy sigh and shook his head, subtly dismissing the question.


    The armored man approached Vincenzio with heavy, metal-d steps, towering over him. Yet, despite his imposing stature, he did not seem to overshadow the Necromancer.


    Removing his great helm and tucking it under his arm, he revealed his features. Beneath, a padded mail coif struggled to contain the curls that peeked out from its edges. Yet, it was his face that was of note, dispelling much of the dread and mystery. With homely, rounded features, he resembled perhaps a benign vige baker. A face far from menacing, but strikingly ordinary and harmless.


    "You intellectuals all think alike, believing you''re governed by a different set of rules. No respect for the established order. You''re supposed to make your requests through official channels, without trying to bypass the Guild. Am I making myself clear?" he insisted, his deep voice sounding much clearer now.


    Watching the scene unfold, I realized what Vincenzio was doing. He was masking a greater sin with a lesser one. It was an impressive performance, worthy of a prize. Had I not known better, I would have believed him as well.


    Suddenly and without warning, the armored man Es turned, the full force of his gaze bearing down upon me. I had to stopper a grin, suppressing it deep within. The whole situation bordered on theical and absurd.


    Still obviously irked, he demanded, almost hissing, “Your name…” he paused for a moment as if unsure. “Copper ranker? I have not seen your face before.”


    Before I could give an answer, a wave of entropy brushed against the armored brute, causing runes on his armor to re in warning before dying down.


    “And this? What is the meaning of this, pray tell?” he asked sarcastically, turning to the Necromancer. He had found his spoor again.


    This novel''s true home is a different tform. Support the author by finding it there.


    “As one has said, a minor ident has urred. One would advise you and your men leave us, for one can not guarantee their safety, Should you choose to interfere more. Rest assured, one will see to dealing with any lingering magical effects in good time,” he stated calmly, shooting me a look, heavy with meaning.


    “And what exactly were you working on?” he continued stubbornly. A hint of worry threaded his voice as he cast nces at various points across the room.


    The dark master of magic looked at Es with reserved contempt. “A magister’s secret is his own, one is under no obligation to tell you the steps of one’s path. You know full well that one has been given a broad remit to do as one likes here. One dares add, it is thanks to one’s research that many of your brothers and sisters have been saved from crossing the River too soon,” Vincenzio replied haughtily.


    With a mocking smile, Es raised a hand,manding his men to begin a search. Initially undaunted by Vincenzio’s warning, the group spread out to investigate. However, mere meters in, they entered my Entropic Aura and, much like what had happened with Es, the arcane sigils on their armor red. rmed by this unexpected reaction, they stopped in their tracks muttering with one another. Annoyed, their leader ordered them back and they quickly retreated to the entrance, wisely opting not to venture further into the Necromancer''s den.


    With an almost foolish slowness, I pulled the energy of my Entropic Aura inward, ending the spell and feeling an odd hollow feeling of regret. Why hadn''t I done this sooner? It struck me then. Casting the spell had be as natural, a reflexive action barely noticed. Like drawing breath, maintaining it, doubly so.


    Just as I was wrestling with this dread proposition, a notification shed across my sight distracting me.


    <em>You have learned Entropic Aura (lvl.4)</em>


    “Little Vince, you will write a report and submit it before the day’s end. Be sure to clear this mess up, this ce stinks enough as it is,” he almost spat in response. An admission of defeat. I pushed aside thest notification as he looked at me, almost as if imploring me to add something else.


    Vincenzio gave them all a stiff formal bow, a hair’s breadth away from what would be considered to be polite. It was as good as an order of dismissal.


    Es of the Guild shot us both onest suspicious look before he left, nking back up the stairs with his men. Vincenzio and I remained in almost contemtive silence until we heard the final echo of their departure.


    Without realizing it, I had held my breath in the grip of tension, and only upon their departure did I let it go. It felt as if a heavy destiny or fate was bncing on the edge, teetering between one path and another. This day had been eventful indeed, a day that was still not over.


    The Necromancer drew himself up proudly to his full height. “You know that one is a practitioner of the forbidden, and not just a simple purveyor of potions. You could have told them of one’s secret there and then, one would have done so in your ce. Tell me why you chose otherwise,” he insisted.


    It made sense, at least, that ying about with the dead was taboo. I paused, closing my eyes for a moment before replying, "That would not serve my purpose."


    "Your purpose?" he said hollowly.


    "Perhaps the purpose of all men who have tasted the first fruit. What the gods call sin, but men such as us call enlightenment and knowledge. You asked me earlier if I feared the punishment of the heavens. No, I do not, because I am to be that very punishment upon the heavens," I dered, my words fueled by a heated, seething passion. A sense of divine purpose vibrated within me, infusing my heart with correct meaning and direction. All was right with the universe.


    "To achieve this, I am on a quest for knowledge. For knowledge is power, and it is with this power that I intend to tear down the heavens themselves," I stated loftily, my words ringing as if they were fresh-forged gospel.


    Wryly, I smiled at the sallow man. “And I would have you know that I am considered somewhat of a schr in my homnd. I feel that there is much we can learn from one another.” The words held an echo of repetition for me.


    “Arrogance and such hubris, though one can not say that one is not guilty of the same sin. Your lofty goals and weak attempts at poetic verse and philosophizing aside, why would one do so?”


    “Is not the purpose of knowledge to be spread for the betterment of all?” was my musing response.


    “Please spare me rote aphorisms and titudes… let us speak in.”


    I smiled, feeling more confident. I was close, I could almost smell it. He had gone from enemies to somewhat cooperative. How quickly things could change. With an internal shrug, I also registered that I had recently grown a rather devil-may-care attitude that surprised even me.


    “Yes, indeed. Lets. Have I not proven to not be your enemy? I seek a bargain with you. Knowledge for knowledge. And, I am in the belief that the scales at the moment are ever so slightly weighted in my favor. I am in the belief that we are not so different, you and I. Still, I would have you tell me why you call me a Visitor. I believe there is more meaning behind such a word,” I offered with aplomb.


    He looked at me in the way one would look at a roach that suddenly learned speech. Disgust and interest in equal measure.“Such florid speech for a Visitor. Like a child with a new toy, you y withnguage thus. Strangers, not of this world, that wear the flesh of men like one wears clothes. Bound to the will of the gods, they bring only torment and suffering to this world, ”.


    “Forgive me then. It is how I spoke in my own world. But then again, it is said that one thinks and acts differently in any givennguage. Bound to the will of the gods you say, that sounds like a very tragic fate indeed,” was my response, in all seriousness.


    His expression remained the same as he offered a newment, “And a Visitor you are. You have that look and feel about you. But, unlike the others, there is something different.”


    “You would make a young maiden blush with such words. Different you say? You have encountered others?” I answered, attempting to lighten the mood.


    “Your attempts at weak humor are not necessary. Indeed, encountered and ended, one has offered more than a few Visitors swift passage across the Shallow River,” was the pale man’s boorish response. By his negative reaction, I must have failed an invisible check against my Charisma of sorts. Oh well, it was my lowest attribute so it was to be expected.


    More seriously now I asked him, “Why? For what ends?”


    “By what obligation does one have to exin my reasons to a stranger?” he rasped.


    The man was like a woman. Hot and cold, my patience was being worn away slowly but surely. “Are we not to speak inly? I am indeed, as you say, a stranger, but one you know you can trust. Perhaps a Visitor as you call it. As another offering of trust, I will tell you of myself. I am from a different world, a world called the Earth.”


    “A rather nd name for a world. Too nd to be anything but the truth. Then, yes you are a Visitor. A being summoned from another world for the Divines’ inscrutable purpose. But not you. You are not, or it seems, themon sort of Visitor. What is different about you is that you seem to be in fullmand of your faculties. No thrall are you, and one would be able to detect the heavy mark of their yoke upon you. Perhaps, it is as you say, that you are free?” There was a hint of something else in his voice. Was that eagerness?


    “A moment,” he ordered, a tentacle of bone flowing out of his robes to grasp an old tome from a shelf. The appendage plopped the hidebound text on a research counter in a small explosion of dust. “One must not let hope undo caution. This is a holy text of Kaes-Loka, the god of hearth and herd of the steppe savages. Read from it and make a mock of it.”


    I frowned, his meaning escaping me for a moment. “You wish for me to read a little from this text, and ridicule it? Just to make sure, of course,” I said, caught off-guard.


    “Has one not stated it as such?” he replied tly, nodding at the old text. “Go on.”


    “Very well, then,” I eded. It was a small thing to humor the man.


    Little did I know that it would be the first request of many. He produced many more texts of various gods, making me mock their names and ridicule the <em>wisdom</em> upon the pages. Religion in this world, as it was in mine, was an institution built upon silly lies draped in the garment of fairy tales.


    However, enough was enough. After going through a veritable pantheon of gods, I decided that I had only endured enough. I had only put up with this as much as I had because I wanted answers.


    “What more would you have me do? How many other gods must I curse?” I asked in a strained voice. “What more must I prove?”


    The sallow and pale man rubbed his chin in thought. He bent down to rummage through a battered chest in the corner of the room. It creaked with the squeal that set my teeth on edge. After a few moments, his questing hand emerged, clutching a rough stone. Cracks ran across it and it held a sick and weak glow of stained yellow.


    “ce your hand on this, it is a Binding Stone. Blessed Zajasite. Simr to what the Guild uses. Swear upon that you will not speak of our conversations,” he offered, holding out the stone in front of him.


    Shrugging and wanting to get this over with, I quickly took the stone… no, snatched it really, in haste. “I do swear to keep the confidence of Vincenzio Barbierri. Good enough?” I dered.


    There was a quiet pause, pregnant with the heavy air portent. Vincenzio looked as if he was shouting something at me, but he seemed so distant as if he was speaking through several panes of ss. Suddenly there was a shift, and a sense of vertigo overcame me. I felt as if I was lying down instead of standing. I could see nothing save for an inky ckness. Was I blind? In panic, I drew a heavy breath. There was something around my mouth, a pressure like a mask. Distantly I heard odd beeping noises and rhythmic mechanical hissing that grew and lessened in cycles.


    Then a cracking sound, like ice breaking under a heavy foot. Disorientated, I was standing again. More importantly, I was free from the ustrophobic dark. I could see once again, and before me was Vincenzio, looking to be muttering and nodding to himself.


    Incredulously, I took an involuntary step back. Yellow sand was siftingzily through my fingers. Sound slowly returned as I came back to the here and now.


    Disorientated, I could only croak stupidly, “What happened?”


    “One does believe you are responsible for breaking an almost priceless artifact,” he replied, pointing with a bony digit at thest of the sand falling from my fingers.


    “What the… that was no fault of mine,” I stated in immediate denial.


    The man looked at me as if I represented a profound quandary. “Indeed, perhaps it is so. It seems, within you, you possess the innate ability to defy the goddess of the twin des herself. That was, as one stated before, a Binding Stone. It ces a <em>geas</em> of sorts on a person who gives an oath freely. It seems that you are free of even divine constraints. Both a worrying and hopeful prospect,” he stated calmly. “It gives weight to your im of being free from divine meddling.”


    “Then do we have an ord?”


    “Andpensation for the Stone?


    “That was no fault of mine. The fault lies with you.”


    “One had to try. Indeed it does, one grants you that. A small price to pay. Yes, we have an ord. For the <em>Isurru Sutu, </em>one means Beron’s Dream, and other things. Consider this a downpayment of sorts,” he eded, producing some dog-eared and well-worn notes from within his robes.


    “Your scroll?”


    The man almost seemed to bristle. “We will discuss that another time. A magister’s <em>Manzaza </em>is a personal thing<em>.</em> A heavy matter.<em></em>Unclouded by recent events and emotion<em>, </em>one must think and reflect for a time.”


    “Very well then… another time. But when exactly?” was my reluctant reply. I wanted more information. And sooner, rather thanter.


    “Word will be sent in good time. Where can one find you?”


    I pursed my lips, before giving my answer, “The Begonia’s Shade. Do you know of it?”


    “Yes, one knows of it. We will speak soon and one will send for you. Now, it is best that you be off now. Es will likely return with hisckeys soon. It''s best if he finds only the straightforward truth that his simple mind can grasp," he exined.


    After a brief pause, the odd man offered me a suggestion in an almost conspiratorial tone, "It would be wise for you to continue ying the part of a humble adventurer. One will post some requests for some… some odds and ends. It''ll provide us with a bit of cover for any future meetings."


    I nodded in agreement. “So be it. Stay true to your word, and I will stay true to mine, Vincenzio.”
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