"Yeah," Adom said, turning away. "I''m coming."
The campus grounds were unusually empty - most students had gathered around the Krozball field for team tryouts. The distant cheers and shouts echoed across the academy walls, a familiar sound that marked the beginning of every season.
"They''re really going at it this year," Sam remarked, watching a player execute a particularly aggressive maneuver that sent their opponent tumbling through the air. "Word is they''ve got a new coach. Someone from the pro leagues."
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"Yeah..."
"You know what I need right now?" Sam said, stretching his arms over his head.
"A frosty from the Weird Stuff Store?"
"How did you-" Sam blinked at him.
Adom smiled, a distant look in his eyes. The taste of the drink lingered in his memory, along with summer afternoons just like this one, conversations that hadn''t happened yet, jokes that hadn''t been told. "Just do."
They both checked their pocket watches - it was barely past eleven.
"We''ve got plenty of time," Sam said, already heading toward the path that led to the city. "Could even grab lunch at Martha''s if you want. Next class isn''t until three anyway. Coming?"
Adom felt the familiar warmth of d¨¦j¨¤ vu wash over him as he followed his friend. "No time like the present."
*****
The bell above the door chimed as they stepped into the Weird Stuff Store.
A sign hung crookedly by the entrance: "WE''RE HIRING!" and beneath it in smaller text: "Just kidding, we found someone. Try Madame Mildred''s Mystical Miscellany if you''re looking for work."
Sam and Adom exchanged glances. The former''s mouth twitched, ready to comment.
"Let''s not start," Adom said quickly.
"Yeah, probably best," Sam agreed with a resigned sigh as they stepped inside.
True to its reputation for knowing exactly what customers wanted, an ancient frosties machine - one Adom had never seen in the store before - stood right in front of the entrance.
The machine was a bizarre contraption, more artwork than appliance, with its twisting tubes and glowing crystals that pulsed with a soft blue light. Steam hissed from its valves in rhythmic bursts, and two pristine glasses had already materialized in its dispensing tray, filled with swirling, color-shifting liquid that looked like captured aurora borealis.
"Now that''s service," Sam whispered, eyeing the drinks with unconcealed desire. "I swear this place gets weirder every time we come here."
The rest of the store stretched behind the machine, some were moving by themselves, and it seems some new candies had arrived too.
Sam grabbed both glasses from the dispensing tray, each filled with the same swirling mixture of Cloud Nine and Summer Sunset - their signature combination.
"Thanks," Adom said as they made their way to the wooden counter that served as the cashier''s desk, their footsteps echoing against the creaking floorboards.
Adom tapped the small brass bell on the counter once, then twice. The gentle ''ding'' seemed to be swallowed by the shop''s strange acoustics. They waited, but Mr. Biggins was nowhere to be seen.
"Maybe we could just leave the money on the counter?" Sam suggested, already fishing in his pocket for coins. "I mean, the machine did serve us, so..."
Before Adom could answer, the shop''s doorbell chimed. Heavy footsteps and grumbling filled the entrance as someone walked in.
"Useless, the lot of them," the newcomer muttered, his voice rough with frustration. "Can''t even follow basic formations. What do they teach these little shits nowadays? Back in my day, you''d get benched for a month for that kind of sloppy footwork. Don''t even get me started on their defensive stances..."
The man continued his tirade, seemingly unaware of Adom and Sam''s presence as he paced near the entrance, running a hand through his graying hair.
Sam''s eyes went wide as saucers. "That''s him!" he whispered urgently, elbowing Adom. "That''s Bart Thrasher - the new coach!"
Adom nodded slightly, having recognized the man instantly. The coach continued his frustrated monologue, something about "complete disregard for basic positioning" when he finally noticed them. His eyes fell on their uniforms, and he let out a heavy sigh.
"Oh for fuck''s sake..." he muttered, shaking his head. Just as Sam''s face lit up, mouth opening to ask for an autograph, Thrasher cut him off with a sharp wave of his hand. "Don''t bother. I don''t do autographs."
Sam''s expression crumpled like a deflated balloon.
"Jerk," Adom muttered under his breath, taking another sip of his drink.
Thrasher''s head snapped toward him, eyes narrowing. "What did you just say?!"
"If you''ve got something to say about my attitude, kid, say it to my face," Thrasher growled, taking a step closer. The temperature in the shop seemed to drop a few degrees. "Not mumbling like some coward who can''t probably even form a proper Fluid cover during basic drills."
Adom kept his gaze steady on his drink, deliberately taking another sip of the swirling mixture. It was harder to tell if his apparent calmness was infuriating Thrasher more or less.
"I said," Adom finally spoke, his voice clear and even, "that for someone who''s supposed to be leading Xerkes'' Krozball team back to glory, you''ve got a pretty bad attitude toward its students."
"Hey, uh, let''s all just enjoy our frosties, right?" Sam stepped forward, hands raised placatingly, but the tension in the air only thickened.
Thrasher let out a laugh that held no warmth. "Listen to me, you little sh-"
CUCKOO! CUCKOO!
A mechanical bird burst from a clock none of them had noticed before, its wooden wings flapping wildly as it circled their heads. The bird looked suspiciously real for something made of carved wood, especially when it landed on Thrasher''s head and pecked at his hair before zooming back into its clock.
A low, wheezing laugh echoed through the shop, seeming to come from everywhere and nowhere at once. The shelves appeared to shift and twist, making way for a tall, thin figure who stepped out of what had appeared to be a solid wall moments ago.
Mr. Biggins stood there in his perpetually stained purple coat, bits of chocolate smeared around his mouth, his silver hair sticking up in impossible angles.
"Chocolate?" he offered, extending a box of assorted treats while simultaneously popping another into his mouth. His expression remained completely deadpan as he chewed, eyes moving between his customers with an unsettling intensity. "They''re quite fresh. Made them this morning. Or was it last week? Time is such a peculiar thing in here, wouldn''t you agree?"
Thrasher stood there, mouth still open from his interrupted threat, looking completely thrown off balance by the sudden appearance of the shopkeeper.
His face cycled through several emotions - confusion, annoyance, disbelief - before settling on a mix of bewilderment and irritation as Mr. Biggins shoved the box of chocolates practically under his nose.
A muscle twitched in his jaw as he stared at the treats, some of which appeared to be moving slightly. One chocolate in particular seemed to be changing colors in sync with his rising blood pressure.
His earlier intimidating presence deflated somewhat as he took an unconscious step backward, eyeing Mr. Biggins as if the shopkeeper might be contagious.
"I... what... no," he managed to sputter, his previous anger temporarily forgotten in the face of such bizarre behavior. "I don''t want any damn chocolates."
Mr. Biggins shrugged, popping another chocolate in his mouth. "Your loss. They''re quite good," he said, seemingly unbothered by Thrasher''s reaction. A small puff of purple smoke escaped his mouth as he spoke.
Suddenly, his eyes widened. "Oh! Young Adom and young Sam! How absolutely marvelous to see you two here!"
"...But you literally looked at us when you arrived," Adom pointed out, gesturing with his frosty.
"Did I?" Mr. Biggins tilted his head. "Must have forgotten. Memory''s a bit like a sock drawer, you know. Things get mixed up, go missing, sometimes you find things you don''t remember putting there in the first place." He stopped, looking thoughtful.
Was he always this weird? Adom couldn''t remember. It didn''t seem right that they''d let him work in this state.
Adom placed the coins on the counter. "We just took some frosties, Mr. Biggins."
"Hope they were to your liking?" Mr. Biggins asked, his eyes suddenly sharp and focused.
"As always," they replied in unison, turning to leave.
"Young Adom!" Mr. Biggins called out.
"Yes?"
A chocolate sailed through the air in a perfect arc. Adom caught it reflexively.
"They''re very good. Do try one before heading out."
Without insisting, Adom popped the chocolate in his mouth. The flavor bloomed on his tongue - rich, complex, with hints of something he couldn''t quite place. Orange? "Thanks, these are really good indeed."
"Of course, of course," Mr. Biggins nodded, tossing another chocolate to Sam.
"Oh, uh, I''ll have mine later," Sam said, pocketing it.
"I''d very much like your opinion on the texture though," Mr. Biggins said, his smile unchanging but his eyes suddenly intense.
Sam shifted uncomfortably before unwrapping the chocolate and taking a bite. "It''s... smooth, but also kind of... crystalline? Like it dissolves in layers?"
"Good!" Mr. Biggins clapped his hands together. He made shooing motions toward the door. "Now off you go! Have adventures! And do be careful on the road."
The boys stood outside the store, backs against the warm stone wall, slurping their frosties thoughtfully.
"Well. That was weird," Sam finally said.
"Was thinking the same thing."
"Was he always that weird?"
"Was wondering that too."
"Hmm," they both went, taking another sip.
"Adom." Sam said slowly. "Maybe we should call the Imperial Services for Retired Practitioners? You know how they usually handle aging mages and stuff. I mean, ever since that incident with that old Mage turning his entire neighborhood into ashes, they''ve been pretty strict about getting potentially unstable magic users into proper care before anything... happens."
"...Yeah, maybe we should talk to Mr. Biggins first," Adom said thoughtfully, stirring his frosty with the straw. "Just... politely ask him if everything''s okay?"
"Definitely. Super politely," Sam agreed as they ambled down the cobblestone street. "Hey, want to grab some cheese sticks and crepes at Martha''s? You know, to shake off all that weird-"
A faint shimmer rippled through Adom''s mana field, followed by a soft chime in his mind:
[Enchantment canceled: [Track-and-Trace]]
[Source: Unknown]
[Duration: Unknown]
[Status: Terminated]
Adom frowned. A tracking spell? When did I even weave a track-
Oh.
His frosty slipped from his grip.
"Wow, Adom? You okay? You look like you''ve seen a-"
Without warning, Adom grabbed Sam''s arm and yanked him into the nearest doorway - a small antiquarian bookshop. The bell above the door hadn''t even finished ringing when Adom pressed them both behind a tall shelf.
"What''s going on?" Sam whispered, his frosty sloshing dangerously.
"Wait," Adom breathed, his fingers already weaving the delicate pattern of Mana Threading. The spell spread outward like a spider''s web made of ghostly blue light, catching fragments of sound and carrying them back. He filtered through them carefully: a child begging for sweets, two merchants haggling over prices, the clip-clop of horse hooves...
Then:
"Shit, we lost him!"
"The signal just... vanished."
"Keep looking. They have to be close."
"Sam," Adom whispered, his heart racing. "Someone was tracking us. Following us."
Sam''s frosty stopped halfway to his mouth. "What?"
Adom held up a finger, concentrating on the voices filtering through his spell:
"How can a tracking spell just cancel like that?"
"Maybe the kid noticed and dispelled it himself?"
"You absolute moron, when have you ever heard of someone detecting a tracking spell on themselves?"
"Well then, genius, how do you explain it?"
"Would you both shut up? They have to be around here somewh-"
"Can I help you boys?"
They whirled around to face a tall, thin man in a tweed jacket, his wire-rimmed glasses perched low on his nose. The shopkeeper''s lips were pressed into a tight line as he looked down at them.
Adom suddenly became aware of the other customers - all staring, all silent.
The shopkeeper sighed dramatically. "You know, we''ve had three shoplifters this week alone..."
"We''re not-" Sam started.
"I''ve heard that before," the man cut him off, his voice rising. "Now, you''re disrupting my customers'' shopping experience, and I must ask you to-"
"We can pay-" Adom''s fingers twitched, a defensive spell itching to form.
"Out! Out right now!" The shopkeeper actually started shooing them toward the door, his hands pushing at their shoulders. Adom''s jaw clenched, magic crackling at his fingertips before he forced it down.
"Wait, please, we just need-"
Too late. They stumbled onto the sidewalk as the shopkeeper stood in the doorway, red-faced and shouting: "And don''t come back! Next time I''ll call the police! Honestly, Xerkes students behaving like common thieves!"
Adom turned, his stomach dropping as he met the cold eyes of two men who had just passed the store. One smiled, all teeth and no warmth.
Shit.
"Found them," one of the men said quietly, his grin widening. Both started moving toward them through the afternoon crowd.
"Run," Adom hissed, grabbing Sam''s arm. They bolted down the street, nearly colliding with a woman carrying shopping bags.
"Sorry!" Sam called back as they weaved through the crowd. Adom could hear heavy footsteps behind them, getting closer.
"Move it, kid!" One of their pursuers shouted, shoving someone aside.
"Over there - a police officer!" Sam pointed, breathing hard.
At the corner stood a uniformed officer, shoulders slumped as he mechanically wrote in his notepad. His uniform was slightly disheveled, and he kept pausing to rub his temples.
"Sir! Officer, please-" Sam called out, approaching carefully.
The man looked up, his bloodshot eyes focusing on them. "Yes?" His voice was tired but professional.
"We need help," Adom said, constantly scanning the crowd. "Some men are following us-"
"Following you?" The officer straightened, scanning the area. "Can you describe them?"
As Adom described the men, the officer''s initial alertness gradually shifted to skepticism. His jaw tightened when he saw no immediate threat.
"And where are these men now?"
"They were just-" Sam looked around frantically. "They must have hidden when they saw us talking to you..."
The officer''s expression darkened. He pinched the bridge of his nose, letting out a long breath. "Listen, boys..."
"Please, you have to believe us," Adom insisted, his eyes still darting everywhere. A small crowd had begun to gather, watching the scene unfold.
"I''ve been standing here for hours," the officer''s voice cracked slightly. "Writing citations for illegal strider carriage parking. My wife- ex-wife served me papers this morning. Right in front of everyone at the precinct." He laughed bitterly. "And now..."
What the hell was this melodrama? Who the hell asked him to tell his story?
"Sir, we''re not lying-" Sam tried.
"Enough!" The officer''s voice rose, drawing more stares. "I don''t need this today. Not today of all days." His eyes were getting red. "Do you think this is funny? Making up stories?"
"But-"
"You students, always thinking you can..." he trailed off, wiping his eyes roughly. "Just... just go. Please."
"Officer-" Adom started, desperately aware of how exposed they were.
"GO!" the man suddenly roared, making several onlookers jump. "Before I call your school! I don''t need your pranks! I don''t need-" his voice broke again, and he turned away, shoulders shaking.
The crowd whispered. Some looked sympathetic toward the officer, others judgmental. A few shot disapproving glances at Adom and Sam.
"Damn it," Adom hissed, pulling Sam away. "Damn adults who won''t listen." His eyes scanned the growing crowd around them nervously. They were exposed, drawing attention, and their pursuers could be anywhere in this mass of people. The distraught officer clearly wasn''t going to be any help.
"We need to go. Now."
Adom''s mind raced. They couldn''t keep running in the open like this - too many people, too easy to track. His eyes darted around, searching for-
"This way!" He yanked Sam into a narrow alley between two buildings. The shadows swallowed them as they sprinted past overflowing trash bins and scattered cats.
"Who are they?" Sam panted. "What do they-"
"Less talking, more running!"
They emerged onto another street, this one quieter. Behind them, Adom heard one of the men curse as he stumbled over something in the alley.
"Split up?" Sam suggested.
"No," Adom said firmly. "Bad idea. We need to-" He stopped mid-sentence, an idea forming. "Actually... Sam, how good are you at illusions now?"
A sudden, searing heat erupted in Adom''s chest, like molten metal flooding his veins. He stumbled, catching himself against a wall as the world tilted sideways. His vision blurred, then sharpened with unnatural clarity as he saw Sam clutch his own chest, gasping.
The familiar blue window of the system materialized before him.
[Substance absorbed]
Sam looked up, his glasses reflecting the blue glow emanating from Adom''s trembling form.
"Is that Fluid...?"
*****
"Left alley! Move your asses!" Jaef shouted, shoving past a group of tourists. His leather coat caught on someone''s bag, nearly making him stumble.
"Would you shut up?" Trevor hissed, matching his pace. "Might as well wave a sign saying ''hey officers, suspicious people running here!''"
Kade brought up the rear, somehow managing to look bored while sprinting. "Man, I could really go for some ice cream right now. You see those frosties they had? Why don''t we get stuff like that in the Dregs?"
"Focus!" Jaef snarled, rounding the corner into the alley. "If we can''t catch him alive, we-"
"Yeah, yeah, kill the kid, clean job, higher-ups will have our heads," Trevor rolled his eyes. "You''ve only said it like fifty times today."
"Because you idiots keep getting distract- wait." Jaef stopped so suddenly that Kade crashed into his back.
The alley split in two directions.
"Oh for fuck''s sake," Kade groaned, straightening his jacket. "Did anyone actually see which way they went?"
Trevor squinted at the ground. "Footprints go both ways. Little shits must''ve used an illusion."
"Split up?" Kade suggested, already eyeing the right path.
"No, you moron, that''s exactly what they-" Jaef started.
"Last one to find them buys ice cream!" Kade called out, already sprinting down the right path.
"I hate this job," Jaef muttered, watching Trevor take off down the left. "I really, really hate this job."
Trevor skidded to a halt, chest heaving. "Wait... why can''t I see the end of this alley?"
"Because we''re fucking idiots who fell for the most obvious-" Jaef grabbed Trevor''s shoulder. "STOP MOVING!"
They froze. The alley ahead of them... stretched. And stretched. And stretched. The walls seemed to pull away like taffy, the cobblestones rippling like water. What should have been a twenty-meter alley now disappeared into an impossible vanishing point.
A child''s laugh echoed through the space, bouncing off the walls in a way that made it impossible to tell where it came from.
"What the fuck is that?" Trevor''s voice cracked. He turned to Jaef, face pale. "Hey, didn''t Helios say the kid was just an apprentice?"
Jaef stared at the warping reality around them, his mouth dry. "This doesn''t make sense. This is high-level spatial manipulation. No apprentice could..." He trailed off as the laughter echoed again, closer this time.
The walls continued stretching, twisting now, the bricks beginning to spiral in impossible patterns. Shadow and light played across the surfaces in ways that hurt their eyes.
"Jaef?" Trevor''s voice was barely a whisper.
"Yeah?"
"I don''t think we were told everything about this job."
"Move," Jaef growled.
"What?"
"MOVE!" He started weaving a complex pattern with his hands, magic crackling between his fingers. "If I can''t pinpoint the source, I''ll just blast this whole fucking illusion apart-"
"I wouldn''t do that if I was you." The voice echoed from everywhere and nowhere, calm and eerily adult-like for someone so young.
"WHERE THE FUCK ARE YOU?" Jaef spun in circles, his spell still building power. "SHOW YOURSELF!"
"Just surrender." The voice was gentle now, almost kind. "No one has to get hurt."
A scream pierced the twisted space behind him. Jaef whirled around.
Trevor was gone.
"Trevor?" His voice bounced off the warped walls. "TREVOR!"
Nothing but that damn child''s laughter, fading into silence.
Jaef stood alone in the impossible alley, his spell still crackling uselessly between his trembling fingers.
"Fuck this," Jaef snarled, letting his magic build to dangerous levels. Blue sparks danced across his skin, the air growing thick with potential energy. His hands shook as he forced more and more power into the spell, well past the point of safety.
The warped alley seemed to pulse in response, shadows writhing along the walls. That damn laughter echoed again, but Jaef ignored it, focusing on his spell. If these brats wanted to play games, he''d show them what real magic could do.
"Last chance!" he shouted, his voice cracking with strain. The magic was starting to burn now, like holding onto live wires. "Come out, or I''ll-"
The world tilted.
For a fraction of a second, Jaef felt weightless, his brain struggling to process what was happening. There was a blur of movement in his peripheral vision - too fast to track, too close to dodge.
Something solid connected with his jaw.
The impact sent shockwaves through his skull, rattling his teeth and exploding behind his eyes in a burst of white light. The half-formed spell shattered, magic dispersing in a shower of sparks that he barely registered.
His legs went numb first. Then his arms. The ground rushed up to meet him, or maybe he was falling down to meet it - his scrambled brain couldn''t tell the difference anymore.
As consciousness slipped away, Jaef had one final, absurd thought: When did the kid get so tall?
Then darkness swallowed him whole.
*****
Adom braced himself against the wall, chest heaving. A cowl of fluid fully covering him. The assasin knocked out in front of him. He stared at the notifications still hanging in his vision, trying to process what had just happened.
[You have consumed [Pure Mana Elixir] (Rank: S)]
[Your mana Pool has exceeded the maximum amount possible at your level]
[Level Up! Level 2 ¡ú Level 3]
[Stat Increases:
Mana pool: ¡ü500/500
Life force 205 ¡ú 210]
His mana paths burned - not painfully, but with an intense warmth that spoke of rapid expansion. What should have taken months of training had happened in seconds. He could feel the new channels forming, branching out like lightning through his body.
He flexed his fingers, watching small sparks dance between them. The mana responded instantly, flowing smooth as water where it had once been like pushing through sand.
On the moment, they''d just gone with it - what choice did they have? With assassins on their tail, Adom and Sam had to act fast.
The spatial manipulation spell had been risky - technically, Adom knew enough about mana control to attempt spells at a two-circle mage''s level. His understanding was there, his control was precise enough, but he''d always lacked the raw mana capacity for such feats.
This wasn''t anywhere near two-circle level, not even one-circle, but with his newly expanded pool, it was leagues beyond what he could have managed minutes ago.
The pure mana elixir... Adom''s thoughts kept circling back to Mr. Biggins'' chocolates. It had to be - especially since Sam had also eaten them. The timing, the effects-
"ADOM!"
Sam''s terrified shout ripped through his thoughts. Adom spun around, but too late - the assassin was already on him, dagger glinting as it swept toward his throat. Less than a second from death-
A black blur shot through the air.
The sound that followed wasn''t human - a deep, feral growl that resonated through the alley. The assassin didn''t even have time to scream before the wet crack of breaking bones filled the air. The sound of tearing flesh, the spray of blood across the cobblestones.
Adom looked down to his left, eyes widening in disbelief.
"...You?"
It turned to face him.
Those eyes... the exact same shade of blue as his own, seeming to pierce right through him. Its fur rippled like liquid shadow, darker than the alley''s gloom.
Midnight puma.
The same one he''d freed in the Undertow.
Time seemed to slow as they locked eyes, Adom''s chest still heaving from exertion. The creature''s presence felt surreal, yet here it was, standing over the remains of his would-be killer.
A sudden glow reflected off the puma''s fur.
The creature''s head snapped toward the light.
"NO, SAM!"
Adom''s hands moved faster than thought, throwing up a barrier just as Sam''s fireball roared through the air. Magic collided with magic in a thunderous crack. The explosion lit up the alley like miniature daylight, forcing Adom to shield his eyes.
When the spots cleared from his vision and the smoke began to settle, the puma had vanished. Only blood and the cooling corpse at his feet proved it had been there at all.
Sam''s legs gave out as he stared at the corpse, blood still pulsing from the ruined throat in grotesque spurts. He doubled over, retching violently onto the ground.
"Can''t- I can''t-" His breathing came in sharp, desperate gasps. "There''s so much blood- Adom, what-"
Adom sprinted to him, dropping to his knees. "Hey, hey, look at me man." he grabbed Sam''s shoulders, forcing his friend to face him instead of the corpse. "Deep breaths, okay? Like this." He exaggerated his breathing, keeping his voice steady. "In through the nose, out through the mouth. Come on, with me."
"But the- the thing, it just- and the man-" Sam''s words tumbled out between gasps.
Voices echoed from the street. Getting closer.
"Shit." Adom''s thoughts churned. They couldn''t be found here - not with a mutilated corpse and two unconscious assassins. His hands moved in quick, practiced motions, weaving spells over the knocked-out men.
The voices were almost at the alley''s entrance.
"Hold onto me," Adom ordered, pulling Sam close. His friend was still shaking, but managed to grip Adom''s robes.
They vanished, leaving behind only cooling blood and questions that would never be answered.
Chapter 12. A Mature Person Would Walk Away
The invisibility spell dissolved as the boys burst through the door of dorm 214, both panting from the run. Sam immediately started pacing the cramped space between their beds, hands clutching his head, fingers digging into his scalp.
"Dead," he muttered, his voice cracking. "He''s dead. We killed- there''s a dead man in that alley and we just- we just-" His breathing came in sharp, painful gasps. "Oh god, oh god, oh god-"
"Sam, you need to calm-"
"DON''T TELL ME TO CALM DOWN!" Sam whirled around, face contorted. "A MAN IS DEAD! Do you understand that? DEAD! Not sleeping, not unconscious - DEAD! His throat was- was-" He doubled over, dry heaving. "The sound- like ripping paper but- but wet and-"
Adom''s chest tightened with guilt. Assassins. This was his fault. He''d dragged a twelve-year-old - a child, really - into something that would haunt his dreams for years. Sam wasn''t ready for this. Not yet.
"Listen, I know it''s-"
"No, you don''t know!" Sam''s voice rose hysterically. "You don''t know anything! You''re just standing there like- like this is normal! Like we didn''t just watch someone die! Like there isn''t blood on our-" He looked down at his robes, seeing phantom stains, and suddenly started clawing at the fabric. "Get it off, get it off, GET IT OFF!"
"Sam, please-" Adom stepped forward, reaching for his friend''s shoulder.
The push spell erupted from Sam with explosive force - raw, uncontrolled magic born of pure panic and rage. The worst kind. It caught Adom square in the chest, sending him sprawling onto his backside. The impact knocked the wind from his lungs.
[-2 Life Force]
[+3 White Wyrm''s Body]
When he looked up, Sam stood there trembling, hands still raised, tears streaming down his face. For a moment, shock seemed to break through his panic - his eyes widened at what he''d just done, one hand half-reaching toward Adom.
"I-" Sam''s voice caught, guilt flashing across his features. But then something shifted in his eyes, like a door slamming shut. His half-extended hand clenched into a fist, and that raw, wounded anger returned with doubled intensity.
"What the actual- what just- WHAT?" His voice cracked. "There were assassins, Adom! ASSASSINS! And then that- that thing just appeared and- oh God, I- I-" He dry-heaved again, steadying himself against his desk. "How... how could this happen..."
"Sam-"
"And why were they even after us? We''re KIDS! We''re supposed to be worrying about homework and cleaning duty, not people trying to MURDER us! And that THING-"
"Sam, listen-"
"Was that creature even real? I saw you. You protected it. Maybe I''m going crazy. Yes, that''s it, I''m just going crazy and-"
"SAM!" Adom grabbed his shoulders, stopping the frantic pacing. "Breathe, man. Just... breathe. We''re safe now. In our room. No assassins, no blood, no giant cats. Just... sit down before you pass out."
Sam exhaled deeply.
"Listen, you need to calm down first, and-"
"You." Sam''s voice suddenly went cold, his panic shifting to something else. He took a step back, staring at Adom like he was seeing him for the first time. "Who are you, really?"
Oh no.
"What? Sam, what are you-"
"You''re not the friend I know." Sam''s hands were still shaking, but his eyes had gone hard. "The Adom I knew couldn''t even look at blood without getting queasy. The Adom I knew would never just... handle all this like it''s nothing. A hit on the head doesn''t change someone this fast." He backed up until he hit his desk. "So who the hell are you? Because you''re not him."
"Of course I''m me," Adom said quietly.
"STOP LYING!" Sam''s hands shot up, trembling as they began weaving a spell. "Who the hell are you? A spirit? Did you possess Adom? Get out of his body." The spell''s glow intensified. "GET THE FUCK OUT!"
Adom just looked at his friend - really looked at him. A scared twelve-year-old trying to make sense of a world that had just turned upside down. And wasn''t that the crux of it? Sam was right, in a way. He wasn''t the Adom from yesterday, not really. Sixty and plus years of apocalyptic future had changed him in ways this Sam couldn''t begin to understand.
He could tell him everything right now.
About the wars and catastrophes that would come. The plagues. The horrors that would break their world apart. About how he''d lived and died and somehow gotten a second chance to fix it all.
But what good would that do?
This Sam, young and already struggling with anxiety, would crumble under that knowledge.
Telling him now would just send him spiraling back into that shell of isolation he''d worked so hard to break free from.
No. Some truths were better carried alone, at least for now.
Sam''s hands shook harder at Adom''s silence, the half-formed spell flickering unstably between his fingers. He would not shoot. Never. Adom knew it. But it still felt horrible to see him in such a state. Sam''s face twisted through a mix of emotions - fear, betrayal, anger - each fighting for dominance.
"Say something!" The words came out almost like a plea. "Stop just... standing there! The real Adom would be freaking out, or making stupid jokes, or- or something!" His voice cracked. "But you''re just standing there, all calm, like people tried to kill us every day. Like we didn''t just see someone die. Like..." The spell wavered dangerously as tears started forming in his eyes. "Like you''re someone completely different wearing my best friend''s face."
Adom sighed, running a hand through his hair. "Of course I''m me, Sam."
"But-"
"You still sleep with Mr. Snuggles hidden under your pillow," Adom cut in calmly, watching Sam''s spell flicker. "You''re terrified of thunderstorms because of what happened that night at your grandmother''s farm. You put on a brave face, but you still check under your bed every night - not because you still believe in the Umbra, but because that''s what your mom used to do before everything."
The spell between Sam''s fingers dimmed slightly.
Good. Just like that.
"You hate carrots but eat them anyway because you think they''ll make you taller. You have a secret stash of romance novels hidden in that loose floorboard by your bed - the really cheesy ones with shirtless guys and sexy girls on the covers. And you still blame yourself for what happened to your mother and little sister, even though I keep telling you it wasn''t your fault."
Sam''s hands dropped to his sides, the spell dissipating entirely. "How..."
"Because I''m me, Sam. I might be acting different, but I''m still me. The same one who helped you sneak into the kitchen to steal cookies last summer break. The same one who covered for you when you accidentally set Professor Wilson''s wig on fire. The same one who knows you sing in the shower when you think no one can hear you."
"..."
The tension hung in the air like a physical thing. Adom held his breath, waiting. This was the moment - either Sam would accept him or...
Finally, Sam''s shoulders slumped. He took off his glasses, quickly wiping at the corner of his eye. When he spoke again, his voice was rough but had lost its edge. "The books, uh... they have really good plots, you know..."
The absurdity of the statement hit Adom like a wave. A laugh bubbled up in his throat, born perhaps from relief as much as humor. "Oh yeah, I''m sure it''s all about the plot. Just like that erotic novel you''ve got hidden in your sock drawer - what was it called? ''The Blacksmith''s Burning-''"
"I GET IT! Damn!" Sam''s face went bright red as he shoved his glasses back on. "No intimacy in this room. None. Zero." he mumbled, dropping onto his bed.
Then his expression sobered. "Hey, about earlier... when I pushed you. Are you hurt?"
Adom almost made a joke about his pride being wounded, but something in Sam''s face stopped him. "I''m fine. Really."
"Those men..." Sam''s voice dropped lower. "Why were they after us? What kind of trouble are you in?"
"I may have... gotten involved with some troublesome people."
"Troublesome?" Sam''s eyebrows shot up. "Troublesome enough to want you dead and kidnapped?"
"They''re... particularly spiteful."
"We need to tell Headmaster Meris," Sam said, sitting up straighter. "This isn''t just some school prank, Adom. These were actual assassins!"
"Let me sort this out first," Adom raised his hands placatingly. "Going to the Headmaster now would just create more problems. The school board would get involved, there''d be investigations-"
"That''s kind of the point!"
"Sam, please. Just... give me time to handle this. Trust me?"
Sam opened his mouth to argue, then closed it again. His shoulders slumped. "Okay. Alright. Fine. But if anything else happens-"
"We''ll go straight to Meris. Promise."
A heavy silence fell between them. Sam stared at the ceiling from his bed. Adom noticed how carefully his friend was avoiding certain questions, stepping around the edges of what had happened. And somehow, he knew Sam hadn''t completely bought his explanations - there was still doubt in those eyes, carefully hidden behind acceptance. Which was fair enough. But at least he wasn''t pushing further.
"...Look, I don''t know what happened to you," Sam finally said. "And clearly you don''t want to tell me. But..." He sighed. "You''re still you. Kinda."
"Ouch."
Sam chuckled. "Maybe Damus'' hit did change something, but..." He sat up, fixing Adom with a serious look. "I... guess change can be good. Just be careful what kind of stuff you get your feet into, yeah?"
Adom smiled. "Yeah."
The silence that followed was the special kind of awkward that only comes after baring your soul to someone. Sam suddenly found the ceiling absolutely fascinating, while Adom developed an intense interest in a loose thread on his sleeve. Someone coughed. Neither was sure who. The sound seemed to echo forever in the small room.
Adom shifted his weight, feeling like he should say something - he was technically the adult here, even if his current body disagreed - but everything that came to mind sounded painfully forced. The silence stretched on, becoming almost physically painful.
Thank whatever gods were listening when Sam practically lunged for his pocket watch, despite both of them knowing exactly what time it was. "We should head to class. Starts in 45 minutes, and today it''s at the Floating Spires." He grimaced, clearly overselling his concern. "Professor Crowley always gets cranky when we''re late."
Adom latched onto the save like a drowning man to driftwood. "Look at you," he said, perhaps a bit too enthusiastically. "Already bouncing back."
Sam stood up, slapped both his cheeks with his palms, and squared his shoulders. "Well, if you can change that much overnight, so can I." He grabbed his bag. "Even if I might throw up again later."
*****
The thud of another bullseye echoed across the training yard as Damus''s Firebolt struck dead center, leaving a smoking crater in the target. Third perfect shot in a row. The tall student grinned, already raising his hand for another weave.
"Adequate form, Mr. Lightbringer." Professor Crowley''s voice carried the perpetual edge of someone who''d seen too many students die from ''adequate.'' "But you''re telegraphing your strikes. In a real fight, that half-second wind-up will get you killed."
The grin faltered. "Yes, Professor."
"Excellent form, Miss Storm." Professor Crowley''s boots crunched on the gravel as he approached. "But that hesitation will get you killed. You''re not feeding your pet cat - you''re launching a combat spell. Commit to it."
Mia''s shoulders tensed. Her next cast flew straighter, harder, but still lacked killing force.
Crowley paced the line of students, his scarred face harsh in the morning light. "Miss Chen, your aim is off by three degrees. Mr. Blackwood, that''s not a Firebolt, that''s barely a spark - put some conviction into it." He stopped at a trembling student whose spell had gone wide. "Mr. Peterson, if that was a real battle, you''d have just immolated three civilians and missed your target entirely."
"Not like I''m going to be a battle mage anyway," Peterson muttered, just loud enough to carry.
The temperature seemed to drop several degrees as Crowley turned.
"Is that so?" His voice was deceptively soft. "Tell me, Mr. Peterson, do you think dark creatures care about your career choice? Do bandits stop to ask if you specialized in healing before they try to slit your throat?"
The boy swallowed hard.
"Students." Crowley''s voice cut through the air. "What empire do you serve?"
The question caught them off-guard. A few mumbled responses drifted across the yard.
"WHAT EMPIRE DO YOU SERVE?" The battlefield roar made several students jump. Adom''s hand twitched instinctively toward a defensive stance - He''d heard rumors that Crowley had been some high-ranking battle mage in the Imperial forces before choosing, for whatever reason, to teach at Xerkes. And it showed.
"THE GLORIOUS EMPIRE OF SUNDAR!" The response came in ragged unison, Adom''s voice mixing with the others.
Crowley''s eyes swept the line. "Mr. Blackwood. Why do we call it an Empire and not a Kingdom?"
"Um..." Blackwood shifted his weight. "Because... it''s bigger?"
"False. Miss Chen?"
"Because... we have colonies?"
"Partially. Mr. Lightbringer?"
Damus straightened. "An empire expands. A kingdom maintains. Empire means constant warfare at the borders."
"Excellent." Crowley paced the line. "And what does constant warfare mean for you, the next generation of mages?"
Silence.
"It means that whether you plan to heal the sick or grow prettier roses, you will serve. The Empire will call, and you will answer. And when that day comes..." He stopped in front of Peterson, whose earlier spell had gone wide. "Will you be ready? Or will you hesitate, like Miss Storm, and die wondering why your perfect form didn''t save you?"
The training dummy behind Peterson still smoldered.
"You are mages," Crowley continued, voice dropping to that dangerous quiet. "The non-mages fear you. Fear makes people irrational. Dangerous. You need to be ready - not just for the Empire''s enemies, but to be able to defend yourselves, whether you plan to be battle mages or bloody florists."
"Mr. Sylla." Crowley''s eyes fixed on Adom. "Show them proper form."
Why me of all people? Was what Adom wanted to ask, but kept to himself.
He stepped forward, ignoring the whispers. His hand rose, smooth and precise. No wasted movement. The spell formed with practiced ease - gather, compress, aim...
[Firebolt] streaked across the yard, a lance of concentrated flame that punched through the dummy''s chest. Before the smoke cleared, two more followed, creating a perfect triangle of destruction.
[Marksmanship has reached level 2!]
"Excellent targeting," Crowley nodded. "Note the economy of motion, the consistent power output."
Sam whistled low beside him. "Damn, you''ve gotten good at this. Been practicing?"
"A bit."
Adom flexed his fingers, feeling the familiar drain. [Firebolt] was efficient but demanding - each cast took more from his mana pool than a simple [Fireball]. Three shots and he was already feeling the strain. Not good enough. Not nearly good enough.
"Mr. Sylla has shown remarkable improvement," Crowley continued. "Though I suspect-"
BOOM
An explosion hit out of nowhere and the class spun to see Damus''s target sporting a perfect hole through its center, edges still smoking. The boy stood with his hand raised, a satisfied smirk playing at his lips.
"Mr. Lightbringer." Crowley''s muttered. "What have I said about interrupting lectures to show off?"
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"Sorry, Professor. The spell was ready, and I didn''t want to lose focus."
"If you had been focusing properly, you''d know that control matters more than power. Mr. Howl?" Crowley gestured to Gus. "Show us proper control."
Gus'' Firebolt was barely visible - a whisper of heat that left a precise, coin-sized hole in the dummy''s forehead. No excess damage, no wasted energy. An advantage of having only one affinity to an element was that you could do things with that element much faster than someone having more than one.
"Excellent. That, Mr. Lightbringer, is how you kill someone without destroying half the building behind them."
Damus''s face reddened. His eyes found Adom''s in that way they always did lately, looking for competition. Adom responded by sticking out his tongue, just slightly - childish, maybe, but worth it for the way Damus''s jaw clenched.
"Real mature," Sam whispered beside him, trying not to laugh.
"Says the guy who wants to put itching powder in his shoes."
"That''s different."
Adom focused on his next weave, hiding his grin. He knew it was petty, this little rivalry he''d cultivated just to annoy Xerkes''s golden boy. Crowley had always favored Damus, right until Adom started actually trying in class. Now the professor''s praise was split between them, and watching it drive Damus crazy was honestly the highlight of these morning sessions.
"Keep that up," Sam muttered as Adom landed another perfect shot, "and he''s going to challenge you to a proper duel."
"Good. Maybe then he''ll stop trying to prove himself every five minutes during class."
The class continued with its usual rhythm of spells, corrections, and the occasional explosion from someone''s miscast. Through it all, Adom kept count - he was three praise-worthy shots ahead of Damus now. Not that he was competing. Not at all.
*****
By the final class, Sam was complaining about the homework ("Three scrolls on elemental theory? Are they trying to kill us?") while fixing his tie. Adom nodded sympathetically, though he could probably write those scrolls in his sleep. After Sam''s earlier suspicions, he''d have to be even more careful about appearing ordinary.
"I''m heading back to the dorm," Sam yawned, stretching. "Got that stash of elven chocolate my aunt sent last week. The good kind, with those little golden sparkles you like. Want to come? We could break into it and play that new board game."
Adom''s mouth almost watered at the mention of elven chocolate - his one weakness in either lifetime - but... "Think I''ll stay out a bit longer," Adom said carefully. "Need some fresh air."
Sam gave him a look but didn''t push it. "Just... stay out of trouble? For real this time?"
"Yes, mom."
Sam rolled his eyes and headed off toward their dorm, leaving Adom alone with his thoughts.
Just another day pretending to be twelve again. Well, minus the whole assassination attempt thing.
Speaking of assassination... Adom''s mind drifted back to what he''d heard them say.
Helios.
Of course that bastard was involved. Must have tagged him during the chase - but how? A rune? Some kind of tracking device? Another mage working with them? The possibilities nagged at him, but one thing was clear: Helios needed to be dealt with. Permanently.
At least they were safe inside the Academy. Xerkes'' paranoia had its uses - they had layered so many protection spells into every brick and corner that even breathing wrong could trigger an alarm.
No one got in without the wards recognizing their magical signature. But being trapped inside wasn''t an option. They''d need to leave eventually, and Adom couldn''t have assassins waiting every time they stepped outside the gates.
That favor Cisco owed him... well, looked like he''d be calling it in sooner than expected.
Then there was the thing with Mr. Biggins.
Elixirs were the aristocracy of potions - crystallized mana in many forms, requiring ingredients so rare and conditions so specific that even attempting to make one could bankrupt a small nation.
The process itself was absurd: from months to years of preparation, precise astronomical alignments, and ingredients that had to be harvested at exact moments. Most elixir masters were lucky to produce three or four successful batches in years.
And what they''d consumed? Adom had never heard of anything like it, not even in his previous life.
Standard elixirs could expand your mana channels, sure - widen them by maybe 10%, 20% if you were lucky. The really premium stuff, the kind kings killed each other over, might push it to 30%.
But what Mr. Biggins had given them had shattered those limits completely. The kind of expansion they''d experienced should have been impossible, should have torn their channels apart.
The fact that they''d survived at all was miracle enough. The fact that they''d actually absorbed it... well, that opened up questions Adom wasn''t sure he wanted answered. What exactly had the old man given them? And more importantly, who was the old man?
Heck, who just hands out reality-breaking elixirs like they''re cheap candy?
The questions churned in Adom''s mind as he packed his bag, already planning his route to that bizarre little shop. Sam had headed back to their dorm, leaving Adom free to-
"Student Adom Sylla!"
The harsh caw made him jump.
One of the Academy''s messenger ravens - those glorified magical post offices with feathers, as students called them. The school''s solution to everything from emergency notifications to "your mother sent cookies."
Much more dignified than magical scrolls zipping through hallways and smacking students in the face, as had apparently happened in the Academy''s early years.
"You have a visitor waiting at the entrance," the raven announced in its peculiar mix of human speech and bird-like inflections. "They identified themselves as Eren."
Adom''s eyes widened. He quickly pulled out his pocket watch - 5 PM exactly. Right. He had promised to meet Eren today.
He hurried toward the entrance, his thoughts still tangled between elixirs and assassins, when he heard voices by the entrance - not shouting exactly, but that particular tone that always preceded trouble...
*****
"So you''re just... waiting here?" A girl''s voice. "That''s kind of weird, don''t you think?"
"Like I said, a raven was sent." Eren''s voice was steady, controlled. Too controlled. Adom knew that tone - it was the same one a person used right before things got messy. "I''m waiting for someone."
Adom rounded the corner to find three students standing near Eren. They weren''t doing anything obviously threatening - just chatting, if you didn''t know better. One girl, her uniform pristine down to the last fold, was examining her nails. The two boys flanking her looked equally relaxed, though something about their positioning made Adom''s instincts twitch.
"Oh, come on," one of the boys was saying. "We''re just curious. You can''t blame us for wondering when we see someone new hanging around. Safety first, right?" He smiled, all perfect teeth and calculated warmth.
"Especially these days," the girl added, looking up from her nails. "You understand, don''t you? With everything that''s been happening lately..."
Eren stood perfectly still, hands in his pockets, looking bored. But Adom caught the slight tension in his shoulders, the way his weight was shifted just so, ready to move.
"Must be nice," the other boy drawled, eyeing Eren''s worn jacket with careful casualness, "having friends in high places. Better than whatever... places you usually hang around in."
These little...
Eren''s hand slipped into his pocket, jaw tightening. "What did you just say to me, you-"
"Eren! How''re you doing, man?" Adom''s voice cut through the tension, deliberately bright.
The trio turned, and something shifted in their expressions - subtle, but there. The girl''s eyebrows rose slightly, while the boys exchanged a look that lasted a fraction too long.
"Oh," the girl said, voice dripping honey, "you must be the friend he''s waiting for. How... nice." She paused, examining Adom with the same attention she''d given her nails earlier. "I don''t believe we''ve had the pleasure. I''m Adelaide Rosewood, of the Baronial House Rosewood. These are Amadeus Blackdeer of the Baronial House Blackdeer, and Clyde Winterbourne of the Most Noble House Winterbourne, Marquis of the Northern Reaches."
Of course. Adelaide, Amadeus, and Clyde. Because God forbid they just be called Bob.
"Adom Sylla," he replied, keeping his voice neutral. He moved to stand beside Eren, casually breaking their loose circle. "Sorry I''m late. Just got the raven''s message."
"No problem." Eren''s response was minimal, measured.
"Sylla?" Amadeus tilted his head, like he was trying to place the name. "Not from one of the old families, are you?"
Adelaide''s lips curved into something that wasn''t quite a smile. "Oh, Amadeus, don''t be rude. I''m sure Adom''s family is... perfectly respectable." The pause was barely noticeable, but it was there.
Adom suppressed a sigh.
Clyde had been quiet, watching the exchange with an odd intensity. Now he straightened slightly, eyes narrowing. "Wait a minute. Sylla... I''ve heard that name recently." He studied Adom more carefully now, like he was piecing something together. "Weren''t you involved in something with Damus Lightbringer the other day?"
"Oh?" Adelaide''s interest sharpened visibly. "That incident? But I heard..." She trailed off, looking between Clyde and Adom.
"Can''t be," Amadeus said. "I mean, the story going around is that someone actually managed to..." He gestured vaguely, clearly skeptical.
"It is him," Clyde said slowly, certainty creeping into his voice. "I was there, actually. Saw the whole thing." His lips twitched. "Though I have to say, you look even less impressive up close."
Adelaide let out a small laugh, quickly covered by her hand. "Clyde, honestly."
"What? Just being observant." Clyde''s eyes never left Adom. "I mean, look at him. Those cracked glasses, barely comes up to my shoulder. Looks like he''d have trouble lifting a textbook, let alone..."
"Are you sure about what you saw?" Amadeus asked, not bothering to hide his amusement. "Because this is..." He gestured at Adom like he was some kind of puzzling specimen. "Well, you know."
Adom felt something cold and familiar stirring in his chest. He kept his face perfectly neutral, even as he cataloged every subtle jab, every measured slight.
"Oh, I''m quite sure," Clyde said, voice thick with false sincerity. "Though I have to wonder... how exactly did someone so..." He paused, clearly savoring the moment. "...diminutive manage such a feat? Unless, of course, you cheated?"
"Clyde!" Adelaide''s reprimand was laughing rather than serious. "You''ll hurt his feelings. Look, he''s already turning red."
"Just being honest," Clyde said, holding up his hands in mock surrender. "My parents always taught me the value of honesty. You don''t mind honesty, do you, Sylla?"
A mature person would walk away.
That''s what Adom kept telling himself, watching their perfectly practiced smiles, their calculated cruelty disguised as concern.
The funny thing was, in his seventy-nine years of life (and quite a few of those spent reading), he''d always thought these types of people were just lazy writing - the stuck-up rich kids with their carefully crafted insults and pristine uniforms. Yet here they were, like they''d walked straight out of a mediocre novel, hitting every predictable beat with almost admirable dedication.
It was almost fascinating, in a tired sort of way. If he weren''t so annoyed, he might have appreciated the sheer commitment to the stereotype. Adom knew himself quite well after living a little bit longer. He wasn''t the type to suffer disrespect - especially not from children who could technically be his great-grandchildren, and definitely not after the day he''d had.
Actually, this was perfect.
[Fluid Control Activating]
[Spiteful Fighting Spirit..]
These little brats needed a lesson in humility, and Adom was in just the right mood to deliver one. Something memorable. Something that would make them think twice before-
"Brother!"
The cheerful voice cut through his darkening thoughts.
Adom turned to see a group of familiar faces jogging towards them.
Hugo''s massive frame led the pack, his purple hair bouncing with each stride. Behind him came Diana with her scarred knuckles, Harry still nursing that pretzel-hold from earlier, Phil with his broad shoulders, and Kaius sporting what looked like two black eyes now instead of one.
"Transcendent nerd detected!" Kaius called out cheerfully, the whole group moving like a small, very muscular stampede.
The contrast couldn''t have been more stark - Clyde and his friends suddenly looking very small as Hugo''s towering frame approached, his genuine smile a sharp contrast to their practiced smirks.
"Everything alright here?" a sweating Hugo asked, his tone still cheerful but his eyes sharp as they swept over the scene.
"Yeah," Clyde grunted. "Just chatting."
"Oh, hope we''re not interrupting then," Hugo smiled, somehow managing to take up even more space as he casually stretched. "Adom, don''t forget tomorrow - 6 AM sharp."
"First day''s crucial for building proper form," Diana added professionally. "We''ll need to assess your baseline."
"Make sure to get the standard training gear from the equipment office," Phil chimed in, absently doing shoulder rolls. "They''re enchanted for durability. Better than ruining your own clothes."
"And don''t skip breakfast," Kaius grinned, shadow boxing. "You''ll need the energy. We go pretty hard on fundamentals."
"Speaking of which," Harry cracked his neck, "we should demonstrate proper stance sometime. You know, for educational purposes."
The kids began finding urgent reasons to check their watches and straighten their uniforms.
"Actually, we should-" Adelaide started.
"Right, class-" Amadeus added quickly.
"Yeah, wouldn''t want to be late," Clyde muttered, already backing away. "Nice chat."
"Oh, before you go-" Hugo pulled out some forms with that same bright smile, "recruitment''s still open. Could really use some new blood in the club."
Kaius helpfully pushed the papers into their hands. "Yeah, great for building character."
"And confidence," Diana added meaningfully.
The kids took the forms like they were handling live snakes. "Thanks, we''ll... consider it," Clyde mumbled.
"Have a great day!" the combat club members called out in perfect unison, waving enthusiastically until the group hurriedly disappeared around the corner.
Hugo turned to Adom. "You good, brother?"
"Thanks, guys."
"Don''t mention it!" they chorused, then noticed Eren half-hiding behind Adom.
"Oh!" Hugo immediately seemed to shrink, somehow making his massive frame less imposing. "Hello there! Friend of Adom?"
Eren nodded nervously.
"Any friend of our brother is family," Phil said warmly, his voice softer than before. "I''m Phil. The gentle giant here is Hugo."
"You should come watch Adom train sometime," Diana suggested kindly. "We have great seats for spectators. Very safe distance from the action."
"And snacks!" Kaius added. "Can''t forget the protein bars."
Eren relaxed slightly, managing a small smile.
"Well, we should get going," Hugo said, adjusting his glasses. "Still got five miles to run before dinner. Cardio day, you know how it is." He beamed at Adom. "See you tomorrow, brother! Bring water!"
"And your fighting spirit!" Harry called back.
"AND PROTEIN!" Kaius''s voice echoed across the yard.
As the group jogged away, their chant echoed across the courtyard:
"PAIN IS JUST WEAKNESS LEAVING THE BODY! OORAH!"
"PAIN IS JUST WEAKNESS LEAVING THE BODY! OORAH!"
"LIGHTWEIGHT BABY! YEAAAH!"
Adom and Eren watched in silence as the enthusiastic chorus faded into the distance.
Finally, Eren spoke.
"Somehow I feel like they just saved those kids from you. You were about to touch that Clyde guy, weren''t you?"
"Viciously."
After the word left his mouth, Adom had a brief moment of clarity where he realized that, as a mentally 79-year-old man, announcing his intentions to ''viciously touch'' a child probably wasn''t his finest moment. Even if said child was a remarkably punchable young noble.
Mental note: work on phrasing.
"Soo," Eren turned to him. "''Law'', or should I call you Adom?"
Adom chuckled. "Call me whatever you want."
"So... what are we doing this evening?"
"Well," Adom adjusted his broken glasses, "I had planned to test your current level, and I still will. But first, I need to make a detour in town and check something."
*****
On their way to town, Adom filled Eren in on his eventful morning - the assassination attempt, the ensuing chaos, and his rather creative solution to the problem.
"So basically," he explained, casually stepping over a puddle, "they''re walking around with scrambled memories right now. Can''t remember my face, my name, or anything about me. And the police caught them."
Eren whistled. "Brutal. Effective, but brutal."
"Speaking of which," Adom continued, "I need you to set up another meeting with Cisco in a few days. There are some... questions I need to ask him."
"About the people trying to kill you?"
"Among other things."
They turned the corner onto Market Street, and Adom stopped dead in his tracks. The Weird Stuff Store''s windows were dark, a "CLOSED" sign hanging crookedly on the door.
"Oh, you''ve got to be kidding me." Adom''s palm met his face with an audible smack.
The walk back was punctuated by Adom''s continuous stream of muttered curses.
"That old fox did this on purpose," he grumbled, kicking a pebble. "Probably sitting in there right now, laughing behind those dusty curtains."
"You really think so?" Eren asked, trying to keep up with Adom''s irritated pace.
"Oh, absolutely. He''s got that..." Adom waved his hands vaguely, "that whole mad and mysterious shopkeeper thing going on. Probably thinks it''s funny to make me come back later." He stuffed his hands in his pockets. "Watch, next time I show up he''ll act all surprised, like ''Oh, were you looking for me? I was just taking a very important nap.''"
His impression of the Mr. Biggins'' voice made Eren snort.
They finally reached the academy, and Adom led them to one of the training rooms.
It was everything you''d expect from Xerkes Academy - and then some.
Polished marble floors gleamed under floating orbs of light, their glow reflecting off walls covered in intricate runic arrays. Various magical devices lined the shelves: crystalline focusing prisms, enchanted practice dummies that could actually fight back, and measurement tools that looked like they belonged in some mad scientist''s laboratory.
Eren tried (and failed) to act casual as he walked around, but his eyes kept darting everywhere like an excited kid in a candy store. He paused at a display case, fingers hovering over a sleek wooden wand.
"Third-generation Hawthorne," he murmured. "Diamond core, triple-helix runic array. Even in the Undertow, these go for small fortunes."
"You know your wands," Adom noted.
Eren chuckled, a bit self-conscious. "Always wanted one for training. My hands aren''t great at weaving yet."
"That''s normal - you haven''t had proper magical education." Adom tilted his head thoughtfully. "Actually, I should still have my first-year wand somewhere in my dorm-"
"REALLY?!"
The shout echoed off the marble walls. Eren froze, caught in his own enthusiasm. He cleared his throat, squared his shoulders, and in a carefully measured voice said, "That would be... appreciated."
Adom burst out laughing.
"Stop it," Eren muttered, ears turning red.
"Your face!" Adom wheezed. "You went from five years old to fifty in two seconds flat!"
"I said stop!"
"You know," Adom finally managed, wiping tears from his eyes, "you could just act your age instead of trying to be Mr. Serious all the time."
Eren pointedly examined a nearby runic array, pretending he couldn''t hear the occasional snicker still coming from Adom''s direction.
After one final chuckle, Adom stepped to the center of the room. "Ready?"
"Yeah." Eren''s face was still a bit flushed, but his eyes were focused now.
"Take your clothes off."
"What?"
"Just the top." Adom fiddled with a crystalline device that looked like a cross between a stethoscope and a kaleidoscope. When Eren hesitated, he sighed. "It''s procedure. Less than a minute - just need to check your mana pool capacity and if you''ve hit any natural limits."
Eren muttered something under his breath but complied, shrugging off his jacket and pulling his shirt over his head.
"The device works by reading the mana pathways through direct contact," Adom explained, adjusting some dials. "I''ll place it on your back, activate it, and we''ll get a quantitative measurement of your-"
He stopped mid-sentence.
Eren half-turned. "Problem?"
There... might be.
Adom had studied runes since before he could properly write. Complex arrays, ancient scripts, forbidden patterns - he''d memorized thousands. Could recognize them in his sleep. It took a lot to surprise him these days.
But this...
To untrained eyes, the mark sprawling across Eren''s upper back might have looked like an oddly symmetric birthmark, or perhaps a scar that had healed unusually well. But Adom knew better. He''d seen this pattern exactly once before, years ago, in a book he wasn''t supposed to have access to for at least another decade.
A natural rune.
Not drawn, not carved, not branded - but grown into the flesh itself, as if it had always been meant to be there. The implications made his throat dry.
"Adom?" Eren''s voice had an edge to it now. "What''s wrong?"
"That mark on your back," Adom asked casually, placing the device against Eren''s skin, "where''d you get it?"
"Oh, this? Mother said I was born with it. Just a birthmark. Why?"
The device beeped, and Adom''s eyes widened at the display:
MANA POOL: 10,000+ M
ABSORPTION RATE: 98%
MEASUREMENT VERIFIED
CRYSTAL RESONANCE MODE ACTIVE
"What''s wrong?"
Silence.
Adom reset the device. Measured again. Same result. Third time. No change.
He stared at the screen.
This machine was Xerkes'' latest model, capable of measuring even the most powerful mana crystals.
When readings exceeded a certain level, it automatically switched to crystal resonance mode - a feature added for measuring artificial constructs like golems or crystal containing large quantities of mana. No one had expected to need it for a person, but Xerkes built their devices to measure everything. Just in case.
Adom''s current mana pool sat at 500 M according to his system, and he''d verified it against the machine''s measurements with Sam earlier today, after their elixir absorption. The readings matched perfectly - the system wasn''t using some alternate scale.
Mana pools were like fingerprints - everyone was born with one, each unique in size and potential. Some people were stuck with what they got at birth. Others grew steadily throughout their lives. Some hit their ceiling early, while others never stopped expanding. Natural limits varied wildly.
But when a mana pool reached certain thresholds, something extraordinary happened.
Rings.
At 3,000 M, the first ring formed around the mana core. The second ring appeared at 9,000 M, triple the first threshold. The third would manifest at 27,000 M, triple again, and each subsequent ring required tripling the previous threshold.
Magic was mathematics.
Each leap between circles represented not just a difference in raw power, but a fundamental transformation in what a mage could achieve.
In his past life, by age 79, Adom had achieved two rings - making him a two-circle mage.
The gap between a regular mage and a circle mage wasn''t just a matter of degree - it was a fundamental difference in nature. A regular mage might conjure a fireball; a one-circle mage''s output could turn a forest to ash in less than a few minutes. Two circles meant enough mana output to reshape coastlines and level cities.
Three circles?
The Farmer Mage, who was said to be over 50,000 M, conquered a level S dungeon by himself. Or so the legends say.
And here was Eren, casually sporting 10,000 M.
The absorption readings from the device had shown something else too.
Every mage had an absorption rate - a measure of how much their mana pool could still grow.
Adom liked to think of it like a sponge: a dry sponge (100%) could soak up lots of water, while a saturated one (0%) couldn''t absorb a single drop more.
Young mages with vast room for growth showed rates near 100%.
As they approached their natural limits, that number dropped steadily toward zero. Once it hit zero, that was it - their mana pool would never expand again.
Adom had witnessed countless mages face that moment - when the device showed zero and their dreams hit their ceiling. Some had wept, others smiled in acceptance. Each confronting their destiny in their own way.
Eren''s readout had shown 98%.
A monster, Adom thought, a chill running down his spine. He''s a true monster. Damn.
"How old are you?"
"Twelve. Why?"
"Two-circle mage at twelve..." Adom muttered, almost chuckling at the absurdity.
[Identify]
Name: Eren Raubtier
Race: Human
State: Curious. Agitated. Worried.
No level shown, as usual with non-monsters. A laugh bubbled up from Adom''s chest, startling Eren.
"What''s wrong with you? Is there a problem?"
Adom''s mind raced. Someone this exceptional existing in this time period, yet no trace of them in the future?
Impossible - unless... unless they died young.
He smiled, reaching out to fist-bump the rune on Eren''s back. "This is going to make a lot of things easier."
It felt like a weight lifting from his shoulders. What if he''d been wrong all along? What if he wasn''t meant to be the one to save the world? What if it was Eren? It would explain why Death sent him back - not to be the hero, but to be the guide. To shape this raw talent into something that could truly defy fate.
"What are you talking about?" Eren asked, confusion clear in his voice.
Adom''s smile widened. "I''m just really glad I found you."
Chapter 13. Wakey-Bird
CHIRP CHIRP CHIRP
A mechanical bird bounced on its brass perch, red crystal eyes flashing with each piercing note. Its metallic feathers clicked and whirred as its head bobbed up and down.
CHIRP CHIRP CHIRP
The sound echoed through the small room. A pillow flew through the air, missing completely.
CHIRP CHIRP-
CRUNCH.
Adom''s spell-enhanced fist smashed through the construct, scattering gears and springs across the floor. The bird''s head rolled under the bed, one eye still weakly blinking.
"Thank you," Sam mumbled, face buried in his mattress.
"No problem," Adom replied flatly, shaking his hand. "Remind me again why we keep making these things so durable?"
The Wakey-Birds, as Sam had dubbed them (despite Adom''s protests about the name), were their solution for days when they needed to wake up earlier than usual. Regular alarms could be turned off. These couldn''t. The only way to silence a Wakey-Bird was to physically destroy it - and they''d designed the stupid things to dodge the first few attacks.
"At least make them quieter next time," Sam muttered, still horizontal. "Why are we up at... what time is it?"
"Five."
"Why are we up at five?"
"Training at six, remember?"
The remains of the bird gave one last pathetic chirp before falling silent. That made seventeen they''d destroyed this year.
Adom stretched, joints popping. He''d forgotten how much being young hurt too. Everything was either too flexible or too stiff, with no in-between. "Come on. Up. If you make us late, I''m designing the next bird to shoot lightning."
"You wouldn''t."
"Try me."
Sam finally rolled over, hair sticking up in directions that defied geometry. "I hate morning you."
"Morning me hates everyone equally." Adom started gathering the scattered parts. They''d need these for bird number eighteen. "But morning me also knows we need to be ready by-"
"Yeah, yeah. Training. Six. Got it."
The red crystal eye under the bed finally stopped blinking.
Another morning at the academy was officially underway.
The bathroom filled with steam as Adom let the hot water run over his shoulders. His muscles were already complaining about the early hour, but his mind was racing.
He could hear Sam in the other room, probably making a mess with the porridge again. They''d worked out this routine for the academy - alternate shower and breakfast shifts. Efficiency was everything when you were trying to cram thirty hours of work into a twenty-four-hour day.
Adom had always been good at compartmentalizing - it was the only way to stay sane when juggling multiple lives'' worth of memories. Right now, he had several mental folders demanding attention: Making the cure, see his parents, the Mr. Biggins mystery, the Professor Kim file, the Helios problem, the treasure of the cave, the probably hungry puma roaming somewhere in the city because of him, saving the world, and of course, the Eren situation.
Hmm. That was a lot. Where to begin?
The Eren situation. Yeah. Might as well start there.
Two and a half billion.
That''s how many belonged to what scholars called the "Founder Races" - humans, dwarves, and elves.
Not that they were the only sentient species, far from it. Beastkin, spirits, and countless others populated the world. But these three races shared a peculiar connection - they all traced their origins to the same individual, built civilizations together, fought each other and most importantly, shared the same fundamental approach to magic.
Steam curled around Adom as he worked the soap into his hair, still trying to process yesterday''s discovery.
One percent. That''s how many were blessed - or cursed, depending on who you asked - with the ability to manipulate mana. Twenty-five million mages spread across the ten continents.
The average mage, after reaching their peak, commanded about 1,000 M(ana). The "talented" ones, the ones who got special treatment and entry into prestigious academies and institutions, might reach 2,000 M. Every family prayed their children would be among those blessed few.
But then there were the circle mages.
Adom traced a circle in the condensation on the shower wall. Out of all those millions of mages, only 0.85% ever achieved even a single ring. The math was brutal - roughly 212,500 circle mages in the entire world.
And among those...
He wiped the steam from his face. Two. There were exactly two known two-circle mages in the world right now. Sir Gaius, the current Archmage of the Magisterium, and High lady Sylaria Caelindril, Queen-Consort of the Great Elven Kingdom of Tan''or.
Both well over seventy years old. Both having spent decades climbing to that peak.
And then there was Eren. Twelve years old. Ten thousand M. Ninety-eight percent absorption rate.
The third two-circle mage in the world was a pre-teen from the dregs on the islands of Arkhos.
"Oi!" Sam''s voice cut through his thoughts. "Either drown yourself properly or hurry up! Your porridge is getting cold!"
Adom turned off the water, reaching for his towel. "Since when do you care about my breakfast?"
"Since you promised to help me with enhancement formulas if I stopped letting you skip meals!"
Right. He had promised that.
The numbers kept spinning. Two point five billion. One percent. Zero point eight-five percent. Two circle mages.
No, three now.
And none of them had saved the world.
Adom grabbed his porridge and settled at their small table, but not before pulling out Sam''s old tea collection - a parting gift from his merchant father that had gathered dust in the corner until yesterday, when Adom had casually asked if he could have it if Sam wasn''t going to use it.
Sam watched, both amused and disturbed, as his Adom weaved a precise heating spell on their battered kettle and meticulously measured loose tea leaves into an equally worn teapot.
"Since when do you drink tea?" Sam asked, pushing his own bowl aside. "I''ve never seen you touch the stuff before."
"Ah," Adom''s eyes lit up as steam rose from the kettle, his face morphing into that perfect noble''s expression - nose slightly upturned, one eyebrow arched just so. He crossed his legs with exaggerated grace and lifted his cup without extending his pinky finger - a deliberate jab at those who did. " Tea, my young friend, is one of life''s finest pleasures. Your father has excellent taste. This particular blend¡ª" he lifted the tin, inhaling deeply, "¡ªis a delicate balance of Northern herbs with just a hint of..."
"Stop," Sam held up a hand, fighting a grin. "You''re doing the weird old man thing again. And please don''t compliment my dad''s tea preferences. It''s unsettling."
"You simply cannot rush proper tea preparation," Adom continued, dropping exactly three sugar cubes into his cup. "The water must be precisely the right temperature, you see. Too hot and you''ll scald the leaves, too cool and¡ª"
"Your porridge is getting cold while you''re having your midlife crisis over my dad''s leaf water."
"Leaf water?" Adom looked genuinely offended, taking a slow, appreciative sip. "Mmm. Truly, your father is a man of refined¡ª"
"Nope. No. Stop being weird about my dad''s tea. Eat your breakfast, Professor Tea Time. We have ten minutes."
Adom sat with both his porridge and his carefully brewed tea, taking another reverent sip. Another thought hit him, and he almost choked on his first spoonful of porridge as he started chuckling.
Right. Because being a two-circle mage at twelve wasn''t enough. Eren also had what looked like a natural rune. A completely different mental folder right there - ''The Eren Case, Part Two: Because Obviously One Impossible Thing Wasn''t Enough.''
His chuckling turned into full-blown laughter.
"Stop being creepy and eat your breakfast," Sam said, throwing a sock at him. "And whatever''s breaking your brain this early in the morning, I don''t want to know. Also, you''re doing that thing where you cradle your teacup like it''s made of gold. We have ten minutes before we need to leave."
Adom caught the sock without looking, still grinning. "Just... just appreciating the absurdity of life." He took another slow sip of tea. "You know, in the Northern Isles, they age their tea leaves in¡ª"
"If you don''t start eating right now, I''m dumping your precious tea down the drain."
"You wouldn''t dare."
"Try me."
But he did stop laughing, focusing on his porridge instead. Two mental folders for one twelve-year-old. That had to be some kind of record. Though perhaps he could introduce the boy to proper tea appreciation...
"Stop smiling at your teacup like that. You''re freaking me out."
*****
The boys stood in front of the heavy wooden door like two condemned men at the gallows. The early morning darkness still clung to the corridors, broken only by the gentle glow of enchanted crystals. 5:59 AM.
Neither moved.
"I still can''t believe you convinced me to do this," Sam finally broke the silence, his voice barely above a whisper. His eyes hadn''t left the door since they''d arrived three minutes ago.
"I''m sure it will be a good and wholesome experience," Adom replied, face completely expressionless. "We''ll learn the power of friendship, get muscles, and have plenty of adventures together. Maybe even find our true selves along the way."
Sam''s head slowly turned toward him. "That... sounds exactly like the plot of ''The Iron Scholar''s Journey to Strength.''"
"It was supposed to be a novel reference joke, yes."
"Ah." Sam turned back to the door. "I get it now."
A moment of silence.
"Ha." The single syllable from Sam echoed in the empty corridor, dry as desert sand.
The clock struck six, and from behind the door came the first echoes of what sounded suspiciously like a war cry.
"Well," Adom said, reaching for the handle. "After you."
"I hate you."
"I know."
The door creaked open, and the first thing that hit them was the smell - a unique blend of sweat, leather, and something Sam couldn''t quite identify but made him wrinkle his nose.
"Don''t ask," Adom muttered. "Trust me on this one."
The training hall was already alive with activity. Students were scattered around, and if you passed them on the street, you''d never guess they were mages. Built like brick walls, most of them - the kind of people you''d expect to see hauling cargo at the docks, not drawing intricate magical circles.
At the front, Hugo was leading what appeared to be their morning ritual, his voice booming: "BODY IMPROVEMENT! FIGHT ON!"
The response shook dust from the ceiling, making Sam jump slightly.
Was this some sort of cult?
"Is it too late to fake my death?" Sam whispered.
"Yes." Adom grabbed his sleeve before he could retreat. "Besides, look how normal they are when they''re not... well, doing that."
Indeed, between the enthusiastic chanting, pairs of students were helping each other stretch, sharing water flasks, and exchanging what looked like training tips. In one corner, a massive guy who could probably bench-press a horse was gently showing a newer member proper form for what appeared to be a basic movement.
"I don''t want to be transcendent anymore," Sam muttered, watching as someone casually lifted a weight that looked heavier than his bookshelf. Very impressive.
"Too bad. We''re already here."
They waited in awkward silence as the chant concluded with one final "FIGHT ON!" that made the training dummies rattle. Hugo bounded over, practically glowing with enthusiasm, and spent the next few minutes introducing them to the rest of the club. Thirty faces, thirty names, thirty variations of encouraging smiles and friendly nods. Adom caught maybe half of them.
Now thirty-two members. The number felt significant somehow.
"You know," Sam observed, "when you said ''training club,'' I was expecting more... robes. Less muscles. Maybe some theoretical discussions about magical enhancement?"
"Oh, we have those too!" Hugo replied beside them, somehow managing to sound enthusiastic without shouting now. "Usually during breaks."
He produced two pieces of paper with a flourish. "Here you go, brothers! Your paths to greatness!"
Sam''s eyes grew wider with each line he read, his face slowly draining of color. "This... this can''t be..."
"Personalized training programs!" Hugo beamed. "I stayed up late designing them based on our chat yesterday. See, Sam, you''re showing classic signs of mana-strain induced muscle deterioration - common in theoretical specialists. We''ll need to focus on your core strength first, lots of stabilizing exercises. And your posture needs work, so I included specific stretches for that."
Sam made a sound like a deflating balloon.
"And Adom," Hugo turned, adjusting his glasses professionally, "you''ve got decent baseline fitness, but your right side is notably stronger than your left - probably from spell casting stance. We''ll need to balance that out. I''ve included a nutrition plan too - you both need more protein. And minerals. And everything, really."
The paper in Adom''s hands listed exercises he hadn''t done in decades. His muscles preemptively ached just reading them.
"Now!" Hugo clapped his hands, making them both jump. "Let''s start with stretching - VERY important, prevents injuries, improves mana flow. Then we''ll do some light cardio, just thirty minutes for you two since you''re new. The others will do their usual hour."
Around them, club members were already pairing up, helping each other stretch with the kind of cheerful enthusiasm usually reserved for holiday celebrations or particularly exciting theoretical breakthroughs.
"Light cardio," Sam repeated faintly, staring at the training program again. "Light."
Adom looked at the detailed schedule in his hands, then at the room full of energetic fitness enthusiasts, then at his friend''s increasingly pale face.
He couldn''t tell Sam he was regretting this too. Not after dragging him here. Not after all those speeches about getting stronger together.
"Come on," he said instead, patting Sam''s shoulder. "At least we''ll suffer as a team."
"That''s the spirit!" Hugo exclaimed, somehow having heard him despite being three meters away. "EVERYONE! Let''s welcome our new brothers properly! STRETCHING CIRCLE!"
The entire club moved with practiced coordination, forming a perfect circle. Two spots opened up between Diana and Vale, who waved them over with encouraging grins.
"I read that novel too, by the way," Sam muttered as they walked over. "''Iron Scholar''s Journey.'' The protagonist dies in chapter three from training too hard. He gets reincarnated, but still."
"That''s... not very motivating."
"Ha."
Then came a message:
[System Side Quest Alert]
Complete 10 miles under an hour using only physical means in a single continuous attempt
Note: Enhancement magic, movement spells, spatial manipulation, or any other magical assistance will void the quest. Progress must be completed in one uninterrupted session.
Current Best Time: N/A
Reward: Skill - [Iron Lungs] (Rare) (Passive)
Description: Dramatically increases overall stamina and oxygen efficiency. Reduces fatigue build-up, enables longer periods of sustained physical activity, and improves recovery time.
Status: In Progress (0%)
...10 miles. Under an hour.
He would have sighed and complained had he not been the one to drag Sam.
*****
Left foot, right foot. Left foot, right foot. The steady rhythm of feet hitting the ground mixed with Adom''s increasingly labored breathing.
[+1 Endurance]
His lungs burned.
[+1 Endurance]
[+1 Stamina]
Ten minutes in, and his legs felt like lead. Sweat trickled down his back, his temple, stinging his eyes. The training track stretched endlessly before him.
[+6 Endurance]
[Minor increase to Cardiovascular Endurance]
"Keep going, Adom!" Hugo called out encouragingly as he lapped Adom for the third time, barely breaking a sweat. Show-off.
His calves screamed. A stitch formed in his side, sharp and insistent. Beside him, Sam had given up any pretense of dignity and was making sounds like a dying whale.
[Minor increase to Pain Tolerance]
Twenty minutes. His throat was raw. Each breath felt like swallowing sand. But the notifications kept coming, each one a tiny victory.
The story has been illicitly taken; should you find it on Amazon, report the infringement.
[Body Adaptation Progress: 12%]
The world narrowed down to the next step, the next breath. His glasses slipped down his sweat-slicked nose. He didn''t bother pushing them back up.
[Achievement Unlocked: First Mile]
[+2 Stamina]
[Minor increase to Recovery Rate]
By minute twenty-five, even his eyebrows were sweating. He didn''t know eyebrows could sweat. The notifications blurred together, but he caught glimpses:
[+1 Stamina...]
[Minor increase...]
[Body Adaptation...]
Finally, mercifully, Hugo called time. Adom collapsed onto the nearest bench, lungs heaving, legs trembling.
Next to him, Sam lay face-down on the floor, mumbling something about regrets and betrayal. Adom would have laughed, but he didn''t have the breath for it.
[Side Quest Failed]
Time: 30:00
Status: Failed (Complete 10 mile in under an hour)
Analysis: Current completion time is much slower than required
Recommendation: Continue cardiovascular training. Current physical condition indicates potential for significant improvement.
Quest will reset tomorrow at dawn.
[Recovery Phase Initiated]
This skill would not be easy to obtain it seemed.
*****
After gulping down water like they''d crossed a desert, and a mandatory fifteen-minute rest period that Hugo insisted on ("Recovery is just as important as training, brothers!"), Kaius approached them, his usually boisterous demeanor replaced by a calm, teacher-like presence.
"First things first," Kaius said, adjusting Adom''s stance with gentle movements. "Boxing isn''t about hitting hard - it''s about proper form. Everything starts with your feet." He tapped Adom''s left foot. "Dominant hand back, non-dominant forward. Shoulder-width apart. You''re not a tree, stay light on your feet."
[System Side Quest Alert]
Master Basic Boxing Form
Requirements: Perfect stance maintenance (10 minutes)
Perfect basic straight punch form (50 repetitions)
Perfect basic defensive position
Reward: Skill - [Boxing Fundamentals]
Status: In Progress (0%)
"Good. Now, hands up, protect your face." Kaius demonstrated, bringing his fists up. "Elbows in - you''re protecting your body too. Chin down, eyes up. Your hands are your castle walls, and your chin is the treasure you''re protecting."
Adom mimicked the position, feeling somewhat awkward.
"Common beginner mistake - you''re too tense. Relax your shoulders. You need to be able to hold this position for rounds." Kaius gently pressed Adom''s shoulders down. "There. Now, basic straight punch. We''ll use the dummy."
He demonstrated in slow motion. "Power comes from the ground up. Turn your foot, rotate your hip, extend your arm. Straight line, like threading a needle. Return immediately to your defensive position. Every punch leaves you vulnerable - the faster you return, the safer you are."
[Form Analysis: 12% accuracy]
[Basic Stance Maintenance: 1:23/10:00]
"Again. Slower this time. Feel each movement."
The training dummy waited patiently as Adom worked through each punch, Kaius correcting small details - an elbow here, a foot position there. Each attempt brought new notifications:
[Form Analysis: 15% accuracy]
[Basic Straight Punch: 3/50]
[Form Analysis: 18% accuracy]
[Basic Straight Punch: 4/50]
"Good," Kaius nodded approvingly. "Remember, we''re not trying to knock anyone out today. Form first. Power comes later. Speed comes later. Everything in boxing builds on proper fundamentals."
[Form Analysis: 23% accuracy]
[Basic Stance Maintenance: 3:45/10:00]
[Basic Straight Punch: 7/50]
"That''s it," Kaius encouraged as Adom threw another careful punch. "Every movement has a purpose. Nothing wasted. Boxing isn''t just about hitting - it''s about efficiency."
The next hours blurred into a rhythm of punch, correct, repeat. The training hall echoed with the sounds of other members calling out encouragement between their own exercises.
"Looking good, Adom!"
"Keep that guard up, Sam!"
Sweat dripped down Adom''s back, his shirt long since soaked through. His arms trembled with each extension, muscles burning in ways he hadn''t felt since his Academy days.
"Elbow in," Kaius reminded, tapping Adom''s arm. "I know you''re tired, but form doesn''t take breaks."
"Kaius," Sam wheezed, "have mercy. Please."
"Mercy is for rest days," Kaius replied cheerfully. "Now, again!"
The absolute audacity of these young people, Adom thought, making a respected academic work like a common laborer. In his day, they had proper respect for... for...
Wait. This was his day.
His internal grumbling scattered as something clicked between one punch and the next. His body found the rhythm it had been fighting against, each movement flowing into the next with a precision that felt... right.
[Side Quest Completed: Master Basic Boxing Form]
Requirements met:
Stance maintenance: 10:00/10:00
Basic straight punch form: 50/50 (Final accuracy: 87%)
Basic defensive position mastered
Reward: Skill [Boxing Fundamentals] acquired!
[Boxing Fundamentals (Passive) - Level 1]
Basic understanding of boxing mechanics. Improves punch accuracy, defensive awareness, and overall form efficiency.
Current bonus: +5% to punch accuracy, +3% to reaction time
[Mana Pool Expanded: 505/505]
Note: Physical conditioning has improved mana circulation efficiency
Adom''s arms felt like overcooked noodles, his legs barely supporting him. Every muscle he didn''t know he had was announcing its existence through various degrees of pain. But for some reason, he was happy. Maybe it was due to the numbers going up in front of him, or-
[It is.]
Oh. Adom thought, noting how the System had interrupted his musing without being prompted. That psychological stuff you talked about the other day? About humans being drawn to measurable progress?
[Yes.]
So you tricked me into training, System?
[Incorrect. This was merely encouragement.]
Right. We''ll have to address a few things about you at some point.
[Sure.]
''Sure.'' Just ''sure.'' Adom mentally mimicked what he imagined to be the System''s tone. I bet you think you''re very clever with these one-word answers.
[Affirmative.]
...I walked right into that one, didn''t I?
[Indeed.]
"Excellent work today, brothers!" Hugo beamed, somehow still energetic. "That''s enough for you two. Here¡ª" He pulled four vials from his training bag, the liquids inside glowing faintly. "Tonic and muscle recovery potions. Made them myself. The green one''s for stamina, the blue for muscle repair. Take them now, they work best immediately after training."
Sam eyed the vials suspiciously. "These aren''t the ones from your experimental batch, are they?"
"Of course not! Those are for advanced members only."
Adom decided he didn''t want to know.
[Potion Consumed: Basic Tonic]
Effect: Restores 30% Stamina
Duration: Immediate
[Potion Consumed: Muscle Recovery Elixir]
Effect: Reduces muscle fatigue by 65%
Accelerates muscle repair by 40%
Duration: 6 hours
The effect was almost instant. Warmth spread through his limbs, the burning ache in his muscles fading to a manageable soreness. His vision sharpened as the fatigue-induced fog lifted.
"Remember: proper nutrition is key to recovery. Protein within thirty minutes. Complex carbs. Stay hydrated. Tomorrow we start weight training, same time!"
"Weight... training," Sam wheezed.
"Rest well! And no skipping meals!" Hugo called after them as they stumbled out. "Your bodies are temples under renovation!"
Sam dragged himself along the corridor. "I can''t wait to collapse into my bed and die."
"It''s 9:30."
"What?"
"We have Theoretical Applications of Arcane Geometry in thirty minutes."
A moment of silence.
"Adom?"
"Yes?"
"I know I''ve said this three times today already," Sam groaned, "but I really, truly, with every fiber of my currently dying body, hate you."
"Ouch."
*****
Whoever said that working out in the morning gives you energy for the day was either a liar or had never actually tried it. Sure, right after their morning session, riding high on Hugo''s suspicious potions and the satisfaction of completing his first quest, Adom had felt incredible - focused, energetic, like he could take on the world. That lasted approximately twenty-seven minutes.
Then, somewhere between Professor Bane''s arcane diagrams and their third attempt at drawing a straight line in Practical Enchantment, reality hit harder than his morning crash into the training bench.
The day stretched into an endless blur of trying not to fall asleep, questioning every life choice that led to this moment, and learning that even blinking could feel like a workout.
By the time their last class ended at 5 PM...
"Finally," Sam sighed deeply, his shoulders slumping. "I''m going to take the longest shower of my life and try to remember what it feels like to be human again."
"I need to head to the weird stuff store," Adom said, adjusting his glasses. Funny how that worked - dead tired all day, but now that rest was actually possible, he felt wide awake. Annoying, but convenient.
"The Mr. Biggins thing?"
"Yeah."
"Ah," Sam''s tired expression brightened slightly. "I''m curious too. My mana pool shot up to 400. Should probably thank the man, but..." he gestured vaguely at his entire being, "...existing is hard enough right now."
"Thank him?" Adom frowned. "Aren''t you worried about what kind of person he might be?"
Sam''s laugh came out as a wheezy chuckle. "Adom, we''ve known Mr. Biggins since we got to Xerkes. Sure, he''s weird - who names a magical shop ''Weird Stuff Store'' anyway? But evil? The guy gives candy to stray cats and names them after ancient mages and philosophers. Plus," he smiled, "anyone who gives me an elixir that brings me closer to becoming a legendary mage gets a high five in my book. Well, when I can lift my arms again."
Adom stood there for a moment, processing. He''d spent the whole day constructing elaborate theories about sinister plots and hidden agendas, and here was Sam, casually pointing out the obvious - sometimes a weird shopkeeper was just a weird shopkeeper who happened to help students achieve their dreams.
Maybe coming from an apocalyptic future had rewired his brain to see threats in every shadow, which was precisely why - despite his muscles protesting every step - Adom found himself at the store''s entrance as evening approached.
This time, it was open.
The bell jingled cheerfully as Adom stepped inside.
"WATCH OUT!"
[Boxing Fundamentals activated]
[Reaction Time +3%]
[Defensive Awareness active]
His body moved before his mind caught up, muscle memory from just hours ago kicking in like some sort of combat-induced PTSD. Chin tucked, elbows in, hands up - Kaius''s voice echoing in his head like an especially aggressive conscience.
He dropped into the defensive stance they''d drilled into him this morning, having vivid flashbacks of that training dummy rushing at his face.
All this happened in the split second it took for a mechanical bird to zoom past where his head had been, crash into a shelf of color-changing inkwells, and explode in a shower of purple sparks.
"Are you al-"
CRASH!
A cascade of boxes hit the floor as their levitation spell broke, followed by the sound of various magical items clattering, tinkling, and in one case, making a noise like a surprised goose.
A girl in a Xerkes uniform - 4th year by the four red lines on her robe''s shoulder pad - stood amid the chaos, her hands covering her mouth in horror. Her auburn pigtails seemed to droop along with her shoulders as she surveyed the damage.
"Oh no! Oh no oh no oh no-" She adjusted her glasses frantically, then remembered Adom existed. "I''m so sorry! The articulated messenger bird wasn''t supposed to be active, I was just moving it to the testing area and I must have bumped the activation rune and- oh dear, the color-changing ink is spreading- I''m really sorry! Are you okay? Not that I''m assuming you couldn''t handle a simple mechanical bird, but- oh, the ink is reaching the enchanted carpets..."
She fumbled for her wand, nearly dropped it, caught it, then promptly stepped on one of the fallen boxes, stumbling forward with a small "eep!"
Adom wove a quick [Control], helping guide some of the fallen items back into their boxes and then containing the spreading ink.
"Oh, thanks!" She brightened, then immediately knocked over a stack of books she''d just straightened. "Ar-are you a student from Xerkes? Me too!"
"We''re... both wearing the uniform, so..." Adom muttered to himself, not realizing he''d said it aloud.
"Sorry! Of course we are, that was a stupid question, I just- sorry! I get nervous and then I say obvious things and then I apologize too much and then I apologize for apologizing and- sorry! I mean- oh no, I''m doing it again..."
"Hey, it''s okay," Adom raised his hands in what he hoped was a calming gesture, feeling completely out of his depth. "Maybe we should focus on the ink before it reaches those singing crystals?"
After a few deep breaths ("In through the nose, out through the mouth - Mr. Biggins always says it helps with the nerves!"), they managed to clean up the mess together. Between his organizing spells and her apparently encyclopedic knowledge of where everything belonged, it only took a few minutes.
"Thank you so much! Really, you didn''t have to help, but you did, and the ink could have been such a disaster, and-" she caught herself before another avalanche of thanks could start.
"It was nothing, really."
She readjusted her glasses, and suddenly gasped so dramatically that Adom took a step back.
"Oh! Oh no! You''re a customer!" She smacked her forehead. "What am I doing?!" In a blur, she sprinted behind the counter, nearly tripping twice in the process. "Sorry! Sorry for not properly greeting you!"
She took a deep breath, closed her eyes, and with the brightest smile she could muster, recited in a carefully rehearsed tone: "Welcome to the Weird Stuff Store! Where the peculiar becomes particular, the strange becomes spectacular, and we guarantee every item has at least one feature we can''t explain! My name is Emma! How can I help you today?"
She opened her eyes, looking at Adom with an expression that clearly asked "Did I do the greeting right?"
"Uh... thanks?"
Adom then cleared his throat. "I didn''t know someone else worked here aside from Mr. Biggins?"
The question hit differently than it should have. In his past life, through all his years at Xerkes, the Weird Stuff Store had been synonymous with its eccentric owner. Until the day Arkhos burned, it had always been just Mr. Biggins and his mysterious merchandise.
"Oh! Yes!" Emma fidgeted with her sleeve. "I got hired two days ago! Assistant manager!" She said the title with equal parts pride and terror. "I actually just came in looking for a part-time job, and Mr. Biggins asked if I wanted to be assistant manager right there! Said the store practically runs itself and it wouldn''t be hard at all. Then he handed me the keys and... sort of ran off?" She laughed nervously. "Though I''m still learning where everything goes, and sometimes the mechanical birds activate themselves - well, maybe I activated them by accident - and the singing crystals don''t like my organizing system, they keep rearranging themselves when I''m not looking, and yesterday I found out some of the books are carnivorous but Mr. Biggins forgot to mention which ones..."
"Actually, I was hoping to see Mr. Biggins himself."
"Oh," she straightened her glasses again. "He said he''d be away from the islands for a while. But he left me instructions for everything!"
She reconsidered. "Well, most things." Another pause. "Some things... the important things? I think?" Her confidence deflated with each word.
This didn''t make sense. Adom knew he was probably overthinking this - Biggins was just an eccentric shopkeeper after all. And yet... the man had never left the store in all his years at Xerkes, not in Adom''s timeline anyway. The only variable now was Adom himself, and if Biggins had suddenly decided to travel, he wanted to know why.
Maybe Sam was right, and he was seeing conspiracies where there were none. But something about Biggins and this whole situation nagged at him, refused to let go.
He squinted at Emma, scratching his chin thoughtfully. "Hmm..."
Emma shifted under his intense stare, her fingers twisting the hem of her sleeve even more frantically. "Um... is... is something wrong?" She looked anywhere but at him, a blush creeping up her neck. "You''re making me a bit nervous..."
"Oh! I''m sorry," Adom said quickly, realizing he''d been glaring at her like some kind of suspicious detective. "Bad habit. I tend to... think too hard about things sometimes."
She relaxed a little, though her fingers still worried at her sleeve. Adom mentally shook himself. Surely this was an actual, authentic awkward teenager who couldn''t even maintain eye contact. Right?
...Right?
[Identify activated]
Name: Emanuella Belier
Race: Human
Status: Nervous, Anxious, Trying Her Best, Slightly Overwhelmed, Afraid of the Third Shelf on the Left]
She was... actually just Emma? Not Mr. Biggins in disguise? Then where was he, and why had he left right after...?
"Did Mr. Biggins say when he''d be back? Or where he was going?" Adom tried to keep his tone casual, though his suspicions were mounting.
"Um," Emma tapped her fingers together. "He was kind of... vague? He just said there was some ''urgent business'' he needed to attend to, and that it might take ''as long as it takes'' - which isn''t very specific, I know. He left yesterday morning, actually! Just showed up while I was organizing the gravity-defying paperweights - they keep floating away, by the way, I think they''re rebelling against the new management - and he said ''Emma, dear, watch the store for me, there''s a good lass'' and then he just..." she made a vague gesture with her hands, "...poof! Well, not literally poof. He used the door. But it felt very poof-like, if you know what I mean?"
Watching Emma ramble nervously, gesturing animatedly with her hands, Adom could more or less see why Mr. Biggins hired her as his assistant. Birds of a feather, indeed - they shared the same chaotic energy, though hers manifested more in physical clumsiness while his showed in... well, everything else.
"I see. I''ll come back another time then."
"Okay! Um, sorry I couldn''t help more! And sorry about the bird earlier! And thank you for helping with the mess! And- oh, I''m doing the sorry thing again..."
Adom couldn''t help but chuckle. "It''s okay," he said, waving goodbye before she could start another round of apologies, and stepped out of the store. The bell jingled behind him, accompanied by what sounded suspiciously like another crash and a muffled "oh no!"
Outside, a group of cats lounged in their usual spots - there was Merlin, the orange tabby, sprawled across the windowsill, and Eldrich, the fat gray one, dozing by the door. Arcanus, the one-eyed white cat, was busy grooming himself on the steps. But there was a new addition today - a sleek black cat with striking blue eyes, sitting regally apart from the others.
Adom ducked back inside. "Could I get some of those cat treats?"
"Oh! Of course!" Emma bustled around, nearly knocking over a jar in her haste. "Mr. Biggins always keeps some for them."
Armed with treats, Adom returned outside. Merlin and Eldrich immediately perked up, and even Arcanus deigned to accept an offering. But the black cat just watched him with those unnerving blue eyes, turning its nose up at the treats.
Emma poked her head out the door. "That one''s new," she said. "Showed up yesterday. Won''t eat the regular cat food - only takes meat, and only if it''s served on a proper plate." She giggled. "I''ve been calling it Your Highness. Seems fitting, right?"
As if to prove her point, Emma brought out a small plate with some meat scraps. The black cat gracefully rose, approached the plate with measured steps, and began to eat with what could only be described as refined dignity.
Something about those blue eyes nagged at Adom''s memory. The way it held itself, that particular shade of black...
The cat met his gaze.
[Ident-]
Before he could finish activating the skill, the cat bolted, knocking over the plate with a clatter. Emma jumped, nearly falling over herself.
"Oh! That''s the first time-" she steadied herself against the doorframe. "Usually it''s so composed..."
Adom took a half-step forward, questions burning - could it be? But the cat had already vanished down an alley, leaving only scattered meat scraps and an overturned plate.
"Sorry about that," Emma wrung her hands. "It''s probably not used to strangers yet. Most strays are like that at first."
Right. Just a stray. Probably.
"Well then," Adom said, forcing himself to focus. He had other mysteries to solve first. "I should get going. Good luck with... everything."
"Thanks! And sorry again about-"
The door closed on another string of apologies. Adom''s brain had already committed to a long evening of investigating Mr. Biggins''s mysterious behavior, and now it refused to switch into rest mode despite his protesting muscles.
Might as well be productive. He thought. There was still another task to do: the treasure.
*****
The bell above Garrett''s door chimed as Adom stepped inside, breathing in the familiar scent of leather and metal.
"Well, well." Garrett looked up from his ledger, those laugh lines crinkling around his eyes. "Look who learned to tell time."
"The sun''s still up and everything," Adom agreed, unable to help a sheepish grin. "Last time was an emergency."
"Ah yes, the ''school project.''" Garrett made air quotes with thick, calloused fingers. "Must have been quite the assignment to have you running like the Guard was after you."
"Something like that." Adom wandered over to a display of ornate compass boxes, trying to look casual. "How''s business?"
"Oh, you know." Garrett closed his ledger with a theatrical sigh. "The Merchant''s Guild keeps raising their fees, my wife keeps telling me to retire, and my competitors keep undercutting me with inferior goods." His mustache twitched. "Same as always."
"Your wife has a point about retiring."
"Bah!" Garrett waved dismissively. "What would I do all day? Garden? I''d rather wrestle a manticore." He squinted at Adom. "Speaking of which, my grandson won''t shut up about that incident at the academy last week. Something about a student beating the Lightbringer heir?"
"Really?" Adom suddenly found the compass display fascinating. "Haven''t heard about that."
"Mhmm." Garrett''s tone suggested he wasn''t buying it. "So, young man, while I enjoy our chat, I assume you didn''t come just to hear an old merchant complain about his troubles?"
"Actually..." Adom turned from the display, meeting Garrett''s knowing look. "I need a bag. The best dimensional one you have."
Both of Garrett''s eyebrows shot up. "Oh?" He leaned forward on his counter, fingers drumming against the wood. "You do realize that past a certain threshold, dimensional bags become... quite expensive?"
"That won''t be a problem."
"Won''t it now?" Garrett stroked his beard, eyes twinkling. "Well then, let me show you something special." He disappeared into his back room, still talking. "Most customers, they come in wanting the biggest space for the lowest price. But size isn''t everything, you know? It''s about the quality of the enchantment, the stability of the pocket dimension..."
There was some rummaging, followed by what sounded suspiciously like a small explosion and muttered cursing in at least three languages.
"Found it!" Garrett emerged, slightly singed but triumphant, holding what looked like an ordinary leather satchel. "This, my young friend, is what happens when you convince a master enchanter to work with quality materials instead of mass-producing cheap tricks."
"Just look at the stitching here - genuine drake leather with golden thread-"
"Are those potions?!" Adom blurted, spotting rows of gleaming bottles behind the counter.
"Hm?" Garrett glanced over his shoulder. "Eh? Oh, yes, yes. Now, as I was saying, the dimensional matrix is reinforced with-"
Adom spent the next ten minutes hearing more about leather treatment and spatial theory than he''d ever wanted to. Each time he opened his mouth to interrupt, Garrett would launch into another feature - the self-repairing enchantments, the built-in preservation runes, the weather-resistant coating that apparently involved the tears of some creature Adom was pretty sure didn''t exist.
"Mister Garrett..."
"And the expansion coefficient is perfectly calibrated to-"
"Mister Garrett, I''ll buy the bag."
"You haven''t even heard about the- what?" Garrett blinked. "Oh! Oh, right." He straightened his vest, clearing his throat. "Well then. That''ll be nine thousand gold coins."
Without a word, Adom began pulling stacks of coins from his inventory, dropping them into the counting receptor. The ancient mechanism whirred to life, golden pieces cascading down with musical clinks. Garrett''s eyes grew wider with each stack, his mouth forming a perfect ''o''.
Clink... clink... clink...
They stood in silence, watching the counter tick up.
Clink... clink... CLINK
"By the Thirteenth," Garrett said flatly, he picked up one of the coins, biting it. "Old minting too," he mused, eyeing Adom. "Are all of you Xerkes students this rich?"
"Isn''t your grandson studying there?" Adom raised an eyebrow.
"Never said he was poor," Garrett grinned, pocketing the tested coin. "Just perpetually ''between allowances,'' as he puts it."
"About those potions..." Adom gestured toward the bottles, pointedly ignoring the merchant''s questioning look.
Twenty minutes later, Adom stepped out into the evening air, his new bag considerably lighter than his coin purse. Behind him, Garrett called out, "Come back anytime! Preferably during business hours - and with more gold!"
"Goodbye!" Adom shouted back, grinning as he heard the merchant''s laughter fade behind him.
Chapter 14. Curiosity Killed The Cat
The sun hung low over the island, stretching shadows across the dirt path like dark fingers. To Adom''s right, the ocean crashed against the cliffs below, its breeze carrying salt and the sweetness of wildflowers from the grassy slopes to his left.
A flicker of movement caught his eye. High above, a figure on a broomstick glided through the clouds, their blue robes marking them as an Imperial mage. They waved as they passed overhead, and Adom returned the gesture automatically, watching them soar effortlessly through the air.
"I wonder how they do it," he muttered, shaking his head. "Even if I was trapped in a dungeon and flying was the only way out, I wouldn''t¡ª" He stopped mid-sentence and glanced skyward. "Hmm. Actually, forget I said that. No need to tempt fate or whatever cosmic force runs this universe. I''d rather not jinx myself."
A sudden gust of wind rustled through the grass, as if in acknowledgment. "Message received," Adom muttered with a short nod, not entirely sure if he was being paranoid or appropriately cautious.
This was the kind of weather that made you forget Arkhos was home to tens of different criminal organizations and one very angry vampire. The kind of weather that also made jogging feel like voluntary torture.
[Endurance +2]
Thirty minutes into his "light jog" and Adom''s legs burned with that special kind of hatred reserved for exercise.
Each step sent a dull throb through his bad leg, a constant reminder of why he was putting himself through this hell. He''d found that focusing on complex problems helped distract from the pain, or at least gave him something to be annoyed about besides his burning lungs.
The problem of Helios sat in his mind like a puzzle box waiting to be solved, though right now it competed with thoughts like ''breathing is overrated'' and ''who invented jogging and why haven''t they been arrested?'' Sun exposure was the only permanent solution for a vampire - everything else was just a temporary inconvenience.
Something about sunlight drained their life force completely. Imperial mages had theories about why the sun affected these mutants so drastically - perhaps something in their altered biology simply couldn''t handle solar radiation.
But studying vampires was nearly impossible; most victims of vampire bites either succumbed to the rotting effects of their bacteria-laden saliva, or, in rare cases where they got treatment in time, were cured. The even rarer survivors who weren''t treated became vampires themselves, but none had ever volunteered for research. Stake them with silverwood? They''d wake up eventually. Dismember them? They''d piece themselves back together. Burn them? The ashes would reconstruct given enough time.
The tracking spell Helios had placed on him was what worried him most. Sure, the Borealis duchy of Lumaria was huge - finding someone specific among its sprawling cities and countless islands was like looking for a particular grain of sand on a beach. But Helios had managed it once already. As long as the vampire was out there, Adom would never truly be safe.
"So, I need to get a vampire," he wheezed between breaths, "who''s probably centuries old and definitely not stupid, to walk into sunlight." He jumped over a loose stone, landing awkwardly. "Simple. I''ll just... ask... nicely."
His lungs felt like they were filled with angry wasps. He slowed to a walk for ten seconds, just enough to catch his breath, before grudgingly returning to what could charitably be called jogging.
The real challenge wasn''t even Helios himself - it was the aftermath. The Children of the Moon (or Moon Children? Their branding was so inconsistent) wouldn''t take kindly to losing someone like Helios. They''d want revenge, and unlike their daylight-challenged members, their human associates could operate at all hours.
[Endurance +3]
[Stamina +4]
[White Wyrm''s Body +1]
Adom started breaking down the problem like a complex spell formula, trying to ignore how his shirt was now thoroughly soaked with sweat. Step one: map the organization''s structure. Every criminal enterprise had a hierarchy, and hierarchies had weak points. Who reported to whom? Where did the money flow? Which members were loyal and which ones were opportunists?
"Information gathering first," he gasped out between strides. "Find their warehouses... safehouses... fronts..." He realized he was talking to himself again, but at this point, oxygen deprivation made it hard to care.
A hollow clop-clop-clop echoed from around the bend. The wooden cart came into view first, loaded with freshly cut logs that still carried the scent of the forest. Adom seriously considered whether being run over might be preferable to more jogging.
The horse - a sturdy brown mare with a white streak down her nose - plodded along at that particular pace that suggested she knew exactly how fast she needed to go and wouldn''t be convinced otherwise. Adom envied her reasonable speed.
"Evening there, young man!" The driver''s voice carried the warmth of well-aged whiskey, and far too much cheerfulness for someone watching another person slowly die via exercise.
He was the sort of old man who looked like he''d been old forever - face weathered by sun and wind into a map of laugh lines, white beard neatly trimmed, eyes twinkling with the kind of wisdom that came from decades of watching the world go by.
The kind of person who''d probably never had to jog a day in his life and lived to be a hundred anyway.
His clothes were simple but well-maintained, the sleeves of his cotton shirt rolled up, exposing forearms hardened by years of labor in the fields. A farmer, probably. The sort who got his exercise doing actual useful things instead of running in circles.
"Eve-" Adom wheezed, stepping to the side of the road, "-ning, sir."
The old man pulled gently on the reins, and the mare stopped with the air of someone who had already planned to stop anyway. "Getting mighty late for a Xerkes student to be out here dying of exercise." He squinted at Adom''s sweat-soaked uniform, then at the lengthening shadows. "Sun''s fixing to set soon." He reached into a worn leather bag beside him and pulled out what looked like an orange. "Care for a ride? Bessie here," he patted the horse''s neck, "could use a rest, and you look like you could use one even more."
Adom glanced at the path ahead. He''d planned to jog the whole way, but... The orange the old man was peeling released a sweet citrus scent into the air, and his legs were staging an open rebellion against further movement. Hugo would know, but at this point, Adom was too exhausted to care.
"That''s very kind of you, sir."
"Ben," the old man corrected, already making space on the wooden bench. "Sir was my father, and he was a much more serious fellow than me. Here," he handed Adom a perfectly peeled orange half as he climbed up, trying not to show how his muscles screamed at the movement, "fresh from my daughter''s grove. And I''ve got some salted peanuts here somewhere... ah!" He produced a small cloth bag. "Nothing better than peanuts and oranges on an evening ride, that''s what my grandmother used to say. Course, she said a lot of things. Once told me the secret to a happy life was never trusting a chicken that could whistle."
Adom couldn''t help but smile as he settled onto the bench, his body thanking him for finally stopping the torture session. The orange was perfectly ripe, the kind that made you understand why people bothered growing fruit in the first place.
"I''m Adom," he offered, accepting a handful of peanuts and trying to eat them at a pace that didn''t reveal how the run had made him ravenous.
"Adom! Good strong name, that. Bessie, say hello to Adom." The mare flicked an ear back without changing her pace. "Don''t mind her, she''s got opinions about everything. Been with me fifteen years now, knows these roads better than I do. Speaking of..." Ben clicked his tongue thoughtfully, "where you headed, young man? Not many students out this way unless they''re looking for trouble or treasure. Sometimes both, if the stories my daughter tells about her Xerkes days are true."
*****
"Redcliff Valley," Ben announced as the cart rounded a bend. "Sure is getting darker, though. Sure you want to stop here?"
"This is perfect," Adom said, preparing to get down. "Lots of good practice opportunities. Hunting too."
"Ah, you mages and your hunting. My daughter was the same way when she was at Xerkes. Always out here practicing, testing spells, hunting creatures..." His expression sobered slightly. "Course, that was before all these strange happenings. People seeing spirits nowadays, you know. Just last week, Miller''s boy swears he saw something with glowing eyes in the western woods."
Adom chuckled - he''d studied the ancient runic arrays himself, massive spell circles that encompassed the entire island chain. The Isle Wards, as they were called, had been repelling malevolent spirits and even demons (though those hadn''t been seen for millennia) since the time of Law. Whatever Miller''s boy had seen, it certainly wasn''t a spirit.
"Oh? You''re laughing at an old man''s warnings?" Ben''s mock-serious tone dissolved into a warm laugh. "Bah, look at you though - got a good head on your shoulders, I can tell. More mature than most youngsters these days. Still," he wagged a finger, "doesn''t hurt to be careful, eh?"
"I promise I''ll keep both eyes open," Adom assured him, jumping down from the cart.
"It''s been nice having company for the ride back," Ben said, adjusting the reins. "Most days it''s just me and Bessie exchanging opinions about the weather. You''re welcome to visit the farm sometime - good folk should stick together in these strange times."
"The farm?" Adom asked, brushing off his uniform.
"Up on the cliff, the one with the sea view. Can''t miss it - got those fancy enchanted windmills spinning day and night."
Adom''s eyebrows shot up. "Wait, you mean the Farmer Mage''s estate? That farm?"
Ben''s laugh echoed across the valley. "The very same! Twenty-three years now, serving the duchy. Someone''s got to keep those magical crops in line, might as well be this old groundskeeper."
He patted the cart''s side. "Come by sometime. We''ve always got fresh bread, and the missus makes a mean apple pie. Besides," he winked, "my daughter would never forgive me if I didn''t extend proper hospitality to a promising young mage."
"I''d like that," Adom said, genuinely meaning it. There was something comforting about talking to someone who reminded him of his actual age.
"Off with you then," Ben said, clicking his tongue at Bessie. "And remember - no trusting whistling chickens!"
If you discover this narrative on Amazon, be aware that it has been stolen. Please report the violation.
"Got it!"
The familiar path seemed shorter this time, muscle memory guiding him up the cliff face. The cave entrance was exactly as he remembered - and yet completely different. Nature had already reclaimed its territory, vines and scrub brush obscuring what had been freshly exposed during his last visit.
His fingers found the rune beneath the vegetation, just where he''d left it. One simple activation later:
The riddle came.
"Tomorrow," Adom answered, almost bored. The stone groaned open just like before, revealing the dark passage beyond. No need for theatrics this time - he had work to do.
The treasure chamber opened. After battling the motion sickness from the short travel, he wove [Light Sphere] after [Light Sphere], sending them to hover at different heights throughout the chamber. Each new light revealed more wonders.
Every small sound made him tense, ready to bolt, but the chamber remained as silent as before. Under the constellation of floating lights, he could finally appreciate the true scope of the treasury.
Mountains of gold coins formed the foundation, but it was what lay scattered among them that took his breath away. Rubies as big as his fist, sapphires that seemed to contain entire oceans, emeralds that put the forest''s deepest greens to shame. Ancient weapons caught his eye - a lance of silver color, its length perfectly balanced as he gave it an experimental thrust.
"Whoa!" he yelped as the lance suddenly elongated in his grip, nearly doubling its length.
"[Identify]"
[Item: Horizon''s Reach (Class S)
Type: Enchanted Weapon
Status: Active
Properties: Length manipulation, Piercing Enhancement]
He carefully set it down, moving on to an S-class warhammer that crackled with barely contained lightning when he lifted it. The weapon was beautiful, but so heavy he could barely swing it properly.
[Item: Storm''s Voice (Class S)
Type: Enchanted Weapon
Status: Active
Properties: Lightning Enhancement, Thunder Strike]
A set of throwing knives caught his attention next.
[Item: Seeker''s Set (Class A)
Type: Enchanted Weapons
Status: Active
Properties: Target Tracking, Return to Wielder]
"[Identify], [Identify], [Identify]," he muttered, moving from weapon to weapon. A-class, S-class, even a few that were clearly masterwork pieces. He tested a few more - a mace that left frost in its wake, twin short swords that moved like they were alive, a bow that didn''t seem to need arrows. But in the end, he regretfully set them aside. He already had Flamebrand, and these treasures, magnificent as they were, would just take up space he needed for more practical loot.
"I''ll come back for you, my preciouses," he whispered to the weapons, patting the frost mace one last time. "That''s a promise."
The rest of his systematic search yielded results faster than expected. A cluster of pure mana crystals, their azure depths still swirling with power after centuries. Those went straight into the first bag. A delicate chain of white gold with tiny pearls. Oooh. Expensive. Into the bag.
"Hello, what''s this?" Adom brushed aside a cascade of gold coins to reveal an ornate box inlaid with opal. Inside, nested in aged velvet, lay a set of rings, around a dozen, that made his instincts practically sing. The rings were light, their dark metallic sheen unmistakable.
"Is that Starfallen steel?" he whispered in disbelief. The metal was usually reserved for ancestral weapons, passed down through noble families for generations. To find rings made of it...
"[Identify]"
[Item: Starfallen Steel Ring (Class SS)
Type: Accessory
Status: Normal
Properties: Made of starfallen steel]
Even without enchantments, these rings were worth a small fortune just for their material alone. Those would need proper examination later, but for now - into the bag they went.
Two hours later, his bags were bulging with selected treasures: gems that still held magical charge, mana crystals that radiated power, and enough gold coins to make even a duke blush.
Adom stood in the middle of the chamber, surrounded by disturbed piles of wealth, and had a moment of perfect clarity.
"Damn. I''m rich," he stated flatly to no one in particular, the absurdity of it finally hitting him.
But there, at the heart of this sea of riches, something caught his eye. His earlier rummaging must have shifted enough of the treasure to reveal it - a light, brighter and purer than his magical spheres, seemed to pulse gently from beneath where a pile of coins had been.
Adom made his way carefully through the treasure, sending small avalanches of coins cascading with each step. As he got closer, he could see it was a necklace - a delicate silver chain supporting a crystal that seemed to hold daylight itself.
His hand trembled slightly as he picked it up. The gem was warm to the touch, almost alive. "[Identify]," he whispered.
"Celestium," he yelped, nearly dropping the necklace. "A genuine Celestium crystal!"
These stones were found only in the deepest mines of the Far North, where dwarves and humans had waged countless wars over mining rights. A single Celestium crystal could finance a kingdom''s war efforts for years, but their true value lay in their properties. They were known to be the most efficient mana storage medium ever discovered, capable of holding vast amounts of magical energy without degradation.
Folk tales spoke of even greater powers - the ability to seal away primordial beings like demons, umbra, phoenixes, and dragons. Some legends claimed the ancient heroes had used Celestium to imprison creatures that threatened to destroy the world itself.
Adom found himself strangely drawn to the crystal, its subtle warmth seeping into his fingers. Just to be safe...
"System, is there anything sealed in this crystal?"
[No entities detected within the Celestium crystal.]
"Phew," he laughed nervously, tucking the necklace carefully into his most secure bag. "Guess folk tales are just folk tales after all."
Adom pulled out his pocket watch, squinting at its face in the magical light. Yep. It was definitely time to wrap things up. He''d already found more than he''d dreamed of, enough to treat Sam and Eren to every fine restaurant in the Thousand Isles. Maybe even buy one of those restaurants, he thought with a grin.
He''d come back for those masterwork weapons another time. For now, he needed to get out and update the concealment runes outside, make sure this place stayed hidden. No sense in getting greedy and-
Something glinted in his peripheral vision, far in a corner he hadn''t explored yet. Adom sighed heavily. He was literally in the process of leaving, and now this? Still...
His curiosity won out. Making his way over, his search finally brought him to a shadowy corner of the chamber where [Identify] suddenly flashed:
[Ancient runic array (purpose: concealment)]
Adom froze, eyes narrowing, hand hovering mid-reach.
The same type of rune as the one at the entrance. His fingers traced the familiar leprechaun spiral pattern, following the lines of the Endless Return. The craftsmanship was identical - same artist, probably.
His thoughts immediately went to the last hidden chamber he''d uncovered - and the rather large, rather angry serpent that had been waiting inside.
He should probably leave it alone.
He should definitely focus on gathering the treasures he could already see and getting out.
He stared at the rune.
But what if...?
Curiosity killed the cat, as they say. Though in his case, it was more like "curiosity repeatedly put the cat in mortal danger, and the cat somehow kept coming back for more."
So Adom stood there, studying the rune, mind racing. "There''s no confirmation something dangerous is even in there."
But even as he thought it, he knew better. This was a sealed gate in an ancient treasury, protected by the same runes that had hidden a giant serpent. Of course there was something behind it.
He rolled his shoulders, feeling the day''s fatigue. No, who was he kidding? He''d come here already tired, and nothing guaranteed that whatever waited behind this door wouldn''t be beyond him even at full strength.
"I could always come back later..."
The thought rang hollow. Between the illness, the Undertow mess waiting outside, and everything else crashing down around him, when exactly would ''later'' be?
"Ugh.." Adom''s frustrated sigh echoed through the chamber, sending dust cascading from the shadows above. Several coins tumbled down a nearby pile, their tinkling somehow adding to his frustration.
A silence.
"Yeah, no," he muttered. "Not doing this today. I choose life."
He''d barely taken three steps when a pulse of pure light suddenly filled the chamber behind him. Adom spun around, hands raised defensively.
"I didn''t even touch anything..." he protested to the empty air.
The rune suddenly pulsed with a discordant light that made Adom''s senses scream in warning. The pattern was destabilizing, but not in the usual way of a failing spell. This was... deliberate. Engineered.
His eyes widened as he recognized the dissolution sequence - a variation of the Architects'' Gambit, a failsafe used in the most secure magical vaults. The principle was simple and merciless: once initiated, a magical sequence had to be completed.
Failure to complete the intended action - in this case, walking through that door - would trigger the failsafe, either shunting everything it contained into a pocket dimension or destroying it entirely.
Either way: Anything behind that door, permanently lost.
The ancient mages weren''t known for leaving loose ends.
"Oh, you have got to be kidding me," he said flatly, watching the rune''s light begin to fluctuate. "Really? A completion compulsion sequence? That''s just... that''s just mean."
Adom glanced between the massive piles of treasure and the glowing doorway. Something clicked in his mind.
"Wait... the records said they found 500,000 gold pieces here, but this is..." He looked at the mountains of wealth surrounding him. "No, that can''t be right. Only whatever''s behind that door would vanish, not what''s out here in the main chamber..."
A soft, almost imperceptible ''hsssss'' whispered through the air.
A ''hssss''?
Adom didn''t even turn around. Didn''t hesitate. Didn''t think.
He just ran.
[Push]!
The spell launched him forward as the hissing grew louder behind him. His feet barely touched the ground as he propelled himself through the chamber, coins scattering in his wake.
[Push]!
Another burst of speed as the hissing intensified, closer now. Too close.
[PUSH]!
As the presence loomed directly behind him, Adom spun mid-flight, fingers already weaving the familiar pattern. Lightning crackled between his hands.
"[Thunderbolt]!"
The spell exploded from his palms just as something massive lunged from the darkness. For a split second, the lightning illuminated a nightmare of stone and crystal - then the blast hit, sending chunks of rock flying. The recoil combined with his [Push] momentum threw Adom backward through the tunnel.
He managed to twist in the air, rolling as he hit the ground. The impact knocked the wind from his lungs, but nothing felt broken. Small victories.
A grinding sound echoed through the chamber. Adom looked up.
And up.
And up.
"What is it with giant snakes?" he wheezed, scrambling backward.
But this wasn''t exactly a snake. The thing rising before him was a twisted mockery of one, its serpentine form carved from living stone, connected to the door. White light spilled from its partially opened maw like liquid moonlight. Its crystal eyes blazed with that same light.
The stone serpent''s head tilted at an impossible angle, joints grinding like millstones as it studied him. That movement - so fluid, so wrong - sent chills down Adom''s spine. It reminded him of something he''d seen in an old manuscript, an illustration of...
He didn''t finish the thought. The creature''s maw opened wider, that dead white light pouring out like a waterfall. Adom turned and ran.
His legs burned as he sprinted through the chamber, fatigue from his earlier run catching up at the worst possible moment. Behind him, stone scraped against stone as the monster gave chase, its massive body flowing across the ground like liquid rock.
[Push]!
The spell gave him another burst of speed, but he could hear the thing gaining. His chest felt like it was on fire.
Too slow. He was too slow, too tired, and that thing was too fast. The entrance seemed impossibly far away.
The snake''s head twitched.
Not the subtle play of light on crystal he''d seen before. This was actual movement. Smoother than last time. Alive. Stone grinding against stone in a way that stone absolutely should not move.
The rune flared brilliant white - not the prismatic shimmer of before, but a harsh, dead light that made his teeth ache. Wrong. This was wrong. The dissolution sequence shouldn''t look like-
The massive serpent''s head snapped toward him with impossible speed, crystal eyes now blazing with that same white light. Its jaw unhinged with a sound like breaking granite.
"FUC-" was all Adom managed before the stone serpent struck. He tried to dodge, tried to raise a shield, tried to do anything - but his body seemed frozen, caught in that terrible white glare.
The last thing he saw was an impossible maw of stone and light rushing toward him, and his last coherent thought was a bitter appreciation for the irony: he''d finally made the smart choice, and it hadn''t mattered at all.
Then the stone jaws closed around him, and everything went white.
Chapter 15. The Trial of Courage
Everything hurt.
That was the first coherent thought to surface through the grey fog. Not specific pain, just... everything. Like his entire body had decided to go on strike.
Sounds came next, muffled and distant, as if his ears were stuffed with cotton. His own breathing, echoing strangely.
He tried opening his eyes, immediately regretted it, and settled for cataloging what he could without moving. Cold stone pressed against his back. The air felt... old. Stale. His mouth tasted like he''d been licking a copper pot.
Who... was he?
The thought drifted lazily through his mind. He should probably know that. Important detail, really. Name. He had one of those.
Adom. Right. He was Adom.
Good start. Progress.
What else?
Mage. That felt right. Something about... research? Books? His head throbbed when he pushed too hard at the memories.
The copper taste in his mouth was getting worse. He tried swallowing, which led to coughing, which led to his body remembering it could move, which led to every muscle screaming in protest.
"Ow," he managed, his voice raspy and strange in his ears. "Ow, ow, ow."
He forced his eyes open again, blinking at the dim... ceiling? Stone. Definitely stone. Carved with some kind of pattern he couldn''t quite focus on.
Pattern. Stone...s... snake?
The memory hit him like a bucket of ice water. The treasure chamber. The gold. The giant stone snake that had-
Adom bolted upright with a strangled gasp, heart hammering. "It ate me!" he wheezed. "The door ate me!"
His vision swam from the sudden movement, and he braced himself against the floor, trying not to be sick as the memory of stone jaws and white light played behind his eyes.
Memory entanglement. A common consequence of bad dimensional travel. Another reason to hate portals. Because that snake was definitely one.
"Right. Right." Adom pressed his palms against his eyes, forcing himself to breathe slowly. "Assessment. I''m alive. That''s... that''s definitely step one covered. Good job, me."
He lowered his hands, taking proper stock of his surroundings. The chamber was roughly circular, maybe thirty feet across. Natural cave formation, but with signs of deliberate shaping - the floor had been smoothed, and there were what looked like drainage channels cut into the stone.
Phosphorescent moss provided a soft blue-green light, clustering around several crystalline formations that jutted from the walls. The air was cool but not cold, with a slight mineral taste.
"No immediate threats," he muttered, continuing his inventory. "Two passages leading out. One with a sort of spiral rune, one with none. Some kind of ventilation system - there''s airflow. Plant growth, so there''s enough moisture and..." He squinted at a patch of what looked like miniature silver ferns. "...nutrients? Those shouldn''t be able to grow underground unless..."
Adom''s eyes tracked across the chamber. Moss, crystals, unusual flora, small pile of broken machinery, grumpy leprechaun, two other paths, more crystals-
Wait.
Grumpy what?
His head snapped back so fast his neck cracked.
On his right, sitting cross-legged on a crystal outcropping, a leprechaun was watching Adom with mild interest.
His clothes might have once been the traditional greens and golds, but years of apparent wear had reduced them to a uniform grey.
His hair and beard were a wild mass that would have made any self-respecting bird reject it as too chaotic for nesting material. There was what looked like a small gear being used as a hair tie, a worn out hat and a small bag at his waist. From the looks of it, a very old dimensional bag, since it had a rune on the exterior.
"How''re you doing, lad?" The Leprechaun said.
"..."
Adom''s brain briefly considered shutting down again, or at least reassess. Illusions were not a symptom of bad dimensional travel.
The leprechaun''s bushy eyebrows furrowed. "Well, that''s just rude, that is. If you''re going to be one of me hallucinations, least you could do is answer when spoken to. Basic courtesy, even for a figment."
"I''m not-" Adom started, then paused. "Wait. Your hallucination? You''re clearly my hallucination. I''m the one who just got eaten by a stone snake."
"Oh, this one''s got some spirit!" The leprechaun brightened, adjusting the gear in his hair. Two more gears dropped from that somehow. "Been ages since me mind conjured up something with actual personality. Usually just get the quiet ones who stand there looking confused. Boring, the lot of them."
"I''m not a hallucination," Adom said firmly. "I''m a real person who just had a very bad day involving magical security systems and questionable life choices."
"That''s exactly what a hallucination would say," the leprechaun countered, wagging a finger. "Besides, no real person could get past the snake. I''ve been here..." He squinted at nothing in particular. "...a fair while."
"The snake ate me. I did not come here willingly."
"Likely story. Next you''ll be telling me you''re not just a manifestation of me loneliness and deteriorating sanity."
"I am absolutely not a-" Adom stopped. "Hang on. How long have you been down here?"
"Time''s a bit fuzzy," the leprechaun admitted, scratching his beard. Several small cogs fell out. "Lost count after the first few centuries. Or was it decades? The moss has grown seventeen times, or maybe seventy. Hard to tell when you''re going mad."
"You''re not real," Adom declared. It was likely just another effect of the dimensional travel messing with his head. "You''re just my brain trying to process trauma through increasingly bizarre imagery. I mean, look at your hair."
"Me hair?" The leprechaun looked offended. "Says the one dressed like..." He gestured vaguely at Adom''s robes, clearly struggling to find the right words. "...whatever you''re supposed to be."
"These are standard Academy robes."
"Well, they look ridiculous. Like something a confused rainbow would wear."
"This is ridiculous. I''m arguing with a hallucination about fashion."
"No, I''m arguing with a hallucination about fashion."
They glared at each other across the chamber.
"Right," the leprechaun announced, hopping down from his crystal. "Only one way to settle this."
Before Adom could react, the ancient fae darted forward with surprising speed and pinched his arm. Hard.
"Ow!" Adom yelped, jumping back. "That hurt!"
They stared at each other in mutual surprise.
"Huh," the leprechaun said finally. "You''re real."
"Of course I''m real. I''ve been saying that for- wait." Adom reached out and poked the leprechaun''s shoulder. His finger met solid resistance. "You''re real too."
"Well," the leprechaun said after a long moment. "This is awkward."
"...So," Adom said slowly, rubbing his pinched arm. "You''ve been trapped here since... whenever. And I just got swallowed by a stone snake. Any chance you know the way out?"
This was probably a stupid question. Since the Fae was still there. But it just came out of his mouth, for reasons unknown. Probably panic.
The leprechaun snorted, settling back onto his crystal perch. "If I knew that, lad, do you think I''d be using gears for hair accessories?" He tugged at the makeshift hair tie. "Though I''ve grown rather fond of this one."
"Fair point." Adom glanced between the two passages. "Those tunnels lead somewhere, though."
"Oh aye, they do." The leprechaun''s eyes glinted with what might have been amusement. "One leads to a room full of riddles. The other..." He shrugged. "Well, let''s just say there''s a reason I stopped exploring after the first few decades. Or centuries. Whatever it''s been."
"Wonderful," Adom muttered. "Just wonderful. I don''t suppose you have a name? Since we''re apparently sharing this delightful prison?"
The leprechaun stroked his chaotic beard thoughtfully, dislodging another small cog. "Had one once. These days I mostly go by..." He made a series of sounds that seemed to involve at least three consonants that shouldn''t be able to exist simultaneously.
Adom blinked. "I... can''t pronounce that."
"Neither can I, most days. Just been talking to meself too long." He waved a hand dismissively. "Call me whatever you like. Been called worse by better hallucinations."
"You do realize I''m still not a hallucination?"
"That''s exactly what all me hallucinations say. Right before they start singing. You''re not going to start singing, are you?"
"Good," the leprechaun nodded sagely. "You don''t look like you''d be any good at it anyway."
Adom let out a long-suffering sigh, looking around the chamber again. "Listen, I need to find a way back. So..." He hesitated, "since you don''t have a name... Bob?"
"Hmph." The leprechaun neither agreed nor disagreed, just continued watching him with that same mild interest.
"Right," Adom pressed on, trying to ignore the feeling that he was being silently judged. "Could you at least tell me what you''ve learned about this place? In all your time here?"
"A test?"
"Stop repeating everything I say, hallucination."
"Adom. That''s my name. And I just repeated it once."
"Humans," the leprechaun grumbled, shaking his head and dislodging another small gear. "Always so impolite. Of all the things me mind could conjure up, it had to be a human. Couldn''t be a nice, curvy leanansh¨ª with those perfect..."
He made several increasingly lewd gestures. "And that thing they do with their tongues when they''re about to steal your soul. Oooh. Now that''s what I call a way to go mad. At least I''d die happy."
At this point, Adom was certain the leprechaun was calling him ''hallucination'' purely out of spite. Also, gross. "Can we focus on the test part?"
The leprechaun blinked, snapping out of his reminiscing. "Eh? Oh, right. The test." He straightened up, some semblance of seriousness returning to his weathered face. "Some high-and-mighty mages built this place. All very mysterious and important, they were. Set up these trials and puzzles, they did. You want out?" He pointed upward with a crooked finger. "You''ve got to pass their test."
"And you''ve been stuck here because you couldn''t solve it?" Adom asked, his academic curiosity finally overriding his irritation.
The leprechaun''s bushy eyebrows drew together. "Couldn''t solve it? Listen here, hallucination."
"Adom."
"I solved three of their precious riddles before I realized something wasn''t right. The whole thing''s rigged, it is. Changes every time you think you''re getting somewhere." He paused, scratching his beard thoughtfully. "Course, might''ve just been going in circles. Hard to tell when you''re underground for a few centuries."
"So what kind of riddles were they?"
"Oh, nasty ones. Not your usual ''what walks on four legs'' nonsense." He leaned forward, lowering his voice. "First one was about sacrifice - had to figure out what to give up. Thought I was clever, offering a lock of me hair." He tugged at his wild mane. "Didn''t work. Then tried me shoes. Then me gold..." His voice trailed off, and for a moment, real pain flashed across his face.
"They took your gold?" Adom asked softly, understanding dawning. For a leprechaun to lose their gold...
"Aye. And that was just the first riddle." He straightened up, his voice hardening. "Second one was worse. All about choices and consequences. Third one..." He shuddered. "Well, let''s just say I decided to make this chamber me permanent residence after that. At least the moss is good company. Doesn''t ask riddles or steal anything."
The ancient fae glanced at one of the passages and muttered something that sounded suspiciously like "better than the singing statues, anyway."
"Singing statues?" Adom asked, then quickly shook his head. "No, wait - the riddle path. You said it took your gold as a sacrifice?" His eyes narrowed in thought, fingers absently tracing one of his sleeve. "And it kept demanding more sacrifices with each riddle..."
The leprechaun nodded glumly.
"That''s not a test," Adom said slowly. "It''s a terminal recursion trap. We studied these in Historical Magical Architecture. They were popular about eight centuries ago, inspired by high-level dungeons."
He started pacing. "The victim thinks they''re making progress, but each sacrifice just triggers the next loop. It''s designed to drain everything from the prisoner - possessions, hope, eventually life force itself."
Bob was silent.
"And now that it''s mentioned..." Adom gestured at the passage. "The architecture does gives it away - see how the stonework has that subtle spiral pattern? Classic Eighth Dynasty prisoner containment. They''d use these on the worst criminals, give them the illusion of possible escape while..." He trailed off, noticing the leprechaun''s increasingly red face.
"You mean to tell me," the ancient fae said very carefully, "that you figured this out just by looking at some stones? While I''ve been here for centuries trying to solve impossible riddles?"
"Well, it''s pretty standard knowledge now," Adom said apologetically. "They actually banned these types of traps about three hundred years ago. Too cruel, even for death row prisoners. The psychological torture of false hope combined with the slow drain of life force..." He winced. "The records say most victims went mad before they died."
The leprechaun''s face had progressed from red to an interesting shade of purple. Several gears fell from his beard as his jaw worked soundlessly.
What was it with those gears and why did he have that many and why did they keep dropping from his hair and beard?
Anyway.
"Though," Adom added quickly, ignoring his other questions for now, "you obviously figured out something was wrong. You stopped playing their game. Most victims didn''t."
"Figured it out," the leprechaun muttered. "Figured it out, he says. Like I meant to camp in this moss-covered hole for half a millennium." He glared at Adom. "Any other obvious observations you''d like to share, oh wise one?"
Adom studied the other passage, the one the leprechaun had briefly mentioned before changing the subject. "So... what about that other path? The one that made you decide the riddle route was preferable? You talked about singing statues.."
The leprechaun''s irritation faded into something more guarded. "Ah. That one." He tugged at his beard nervously. "It''s... direct. Very direct. No riddles, no tricks, just..." He made a vague gesture with his hand. "Pure chaos. Raw magic. The kind that makes your teeth taste purple and your eyes hear colors."
"That actually sounds promising," Adom said, earning a look of disbelief from his companion. "No, really. Think about it - the riddle path was designed to trap people by seeming logical and ordered. So the opposite path..."
"...might be the real way out," the leprechaun finished slowly. "Or it might be what finally drives me properly mad instead of just mostly mad." He hopped down from his crystal perch again, straightening his clothes. "Though I suppose if you''re not actually a hallucination, and I''m not actually a hallucination..."
"Then we might as well face whatever''s down there together?"
"I was going to say ''then at least I''ll have someone else to blame when it all goes horribly wrong,'' but your version sounds better."
Adom approached the other passage, his footsteps echoing strangely in the chamber. Unlike the riddle path with its ornate spiral stonework, this entrance was... plain. Almost crude. No runes, no markings, just rough-hewn stone that seemed to swallow the light.
He adjusted his increasingly battered glasses. "What exactly did you see in there?"
The leprechaun''s usual manic energy dimmed. "Everything. Nothing. Things that couldn''t exist but did anyway." His voice grew distant. "Felt like thousands of years in there, each second longer than the last. Saw meself losing everything, over and over. Saw things that..." He shuddered, several gears falling from his clothes. "Let''s just say the riddles seemed friendlier."
Adom frowned. "That doesn''t make sense." He gestured at the architecture. "This is something else. The construction is too old, too... purposeful."
He edged closer to the entrance, running his fingers along the stone frame, searching for hidden runes. The darkness beyond was absolute - not the darkness of absence of light, but something deeper.
When he called out a tentative "Hello," the sound didn''t echo or fade - it simply ceased to exist, as if the void had swallowed it whole.
"Mad, isn''t it?" The leprechaun''s laugh was sharp and brittle. "Makes those nice, orderly riddles seem downright welcoming."
As Adom''s fingers traced the rough stone, he felt subtle indentations beneath his touch. Furrowing his brow, he weaved a [Light Sphere], causing Bob to stumble back.
"You''re really a mage?" the leprechaun gasped.
Adom chuckled. "Yeah." He moved the light closer to the wall, illuminating ancient text carved into the stone. The writing seemed to shift and move under his gaze, but he could make out the words:
"Orynth''s Labyrinth," he read aloud. "Test of Courage - Face what lies within the void." His finger traced the final line. "And... ''Progress can only be made forward. Retreat will reset the trial.''"
Bob seemed to shift uncomfortably.
"Bob... did you know someone named Orynth?"
The leprechaun''s laughter filled the chamber, but it wasn''t his usual manic cackle. This was bitter, sharp. "Know him? That red-eyed bastard''s the one who trapped me here."
"The creator of the labyrinth?"
"Oh aye. One of them. Very proud of his work, he was." Bob''s fingers tightened around a gear until his knuckles went white. "Wouldn''t shut up about it."
Adom perked up. "That could be useful. Usually, a labyrinth''s design reflects its creator''s personality. If you knew him¡ª"
"Been a while," Bob cut him off, his voice clipped. Several gears clinked against the floor as he shifted uncomfortably. "Don''t remember much about him that way."
"But why would he trap you here if¡ª"
"By the void, you ask too many questions!" Bob snapped, throwing the gear he''d been clutching. It bounced off the wall with a metallic ping that echoed far longer than it should have. "Instead of interrogating me about ancient history, maybe use that scholarly brain of yours to figure out how this actually works!"
"That''s... what I was trying to do," Adom muttered, turning back to the entrance.
[Identify].
The darkness rippled. For a moment, something gleamed in the stone - a rune, hidden beneath layers of magic, pulsing with a faint, sickly light.
Adom reached out, fingers brushing against the faint outline in the stone. Blue text shimmered:
[Ancient runic array (purpose: concealment), estimated age: unknown]
The rune was complex - interwoven lines forming a pattern that seemed to shift under his gaze. Seven points, connected by curves that reminded him of water flowing through invisible channels.
"What are you doing now?" Bob asked, peering over his shoulder.
"Shh."
The leprechaun made an indignant sound. "Did you just ''shh'' me? In my own..." He continued muttering about "presumptuous little humans" and "no respect for their elders."
Adom ignored him, focusing on the pattern.
The rune''s design was familiar - a Septennial Concealment Array, though far more archaic than the streamlined versions used today.
Where modern arrays used efficient three-point formations, this one maintained the traditional seven points, complete with the redundant stabilization curves that hadn''t been necessary since the Third Age''s breakthroughs in runic optimization.
He pressed his palm flat against the stone, sending a careful pulse of mana into the first point.
The rune flickered.
Another pulse, slightly stronger. The second point lit up.
Third pulse. Fourth. Fifth. Each point illuminating in sequence, the curved lines between them beginning to glow with a pale blue light.
Sixth pulse - the pattern was almost complete.
Seventh -
The entire array blazed to life, lines of power spreading outward across the stone like frost across a window.
"How in the nine hells did you do that?" Bob demanded, his beard-gears spinning rapidly. "I''ve been staring at these walls for centuries and never saw any runes!"
"Because I''m smart," Adom said flatly, still studying the spreading patterns of light.
"Are you implying I''m not smart?"
"I never said that."
"But you thought about it."
Adom turned to him with the faintest smile, but before he could respond, the wall before them shifted. Stone ground against stone as a new surface emerged, covered in flowing script.
"What''s that then?" Bob squinted at the text. "More of your clever runes?"
"No, this is..." Adom leaned closer, adjusting his glasses. "Ancient Imperial. Fairly late period, actually. The grammatical structure is almost modern." He traced the characters with his finger. The script was elegant but practical - none of the flourishes that marked the early Imperial period''s obsession with calligraphic beauty.
"Well? What''s it say?" Bob hopped from foot to foot, gears jingling with each movement.
"Test of Courage," Adom read, his finger moving across the characters. "The first trial of Orynth''s Labyrinth demands that you face what lies within your own heart. Enter the void, confront your deepest fears, and emerge victorious." He paused, frowning at the next section. "Interesting..."
"What''s interesting?" Bob peered at the incomprehensible script.
"It says the test can be taken alone or with companions. If multiple people enter together, they share the trial - and if one succeeds, all succeed." Adom glanced at the leprechaun. "That''s unusually generous for an ancient trial."
"Oh?" Bob leaned closer to read.
"''Participants begin with 200 life force. Should it be depleted, you may retry the trial or surrender. Surrendering means starting from the very beginning of the Labyrinth.''" Adom''s fingers traced the warning runes. "No mention of permanent death, at least."
"Generous indeed," Bob snorted. "You didn''t see what''s in there. Though..." He tugged at his beard thoughtfully, several gears spinning slower. "Might explain why it didn''t work when I tried. Was alone then, wasn''t I?"
"The text doesn''t say it has to be done together," Adom clarified, still reading. "Just that it''s an option. Though considering what you''ve told me about your experience..."
"You''re not seriously suggesting we go in there together?"
"You said it yourself - the riddle path is a trap. This is the real way forward."
"Yes, but..." Bob''s gears clinked anxiously. "There''s facing your fears, and then there''s whatever that void does to your mind."
"It''s either that or¡ª" Adom stopped mid-sentence as another gear clinked to the floor. "Actually, I''ve been meaning to ask. What''s with all the gears? And why do they seem endless?"
"Oh, these?" Bob picked up the fallen gear, which immediately split into two in his hand. "Found them right here in this chamber, actually. Quite the neat trick - touch one, and it makes another."
Adom''s eyes widened. "That''s not just a neat trick. That''s a Multiplicity Artifact. There are only three known to exist in the entire..." He shook his head. "And you''ve just been using them as clothing decorations?"
"Well, what else was I supposed to do with them? Count them? Already tried that - got to several million before I lost track." Bob attached both gears to his sleeve. "Besides, they make a lovely sound, don''t you think? Almost like gold."
Adom turned back to the void, ignoring Bob''s impromptu gear orchestra. "So. The rune was just for instructions. We either go in together, or we stay here."
"Technically, you could go alone."
"And leave you here for another few centuries?"
"I''ve grown rather attached to the place," Bob said, though his gears clinked a distinctly nervous rhythm. How was that even possible?
"Right."
They both stared into the absolute darkness.
"Together then?" Bob asked quietly.
"Together."
"We''re going to regret this, aren''t we?"
"Probably."
They stepped into the void.
[Time of Entry: 19:23:07]
*****
Adom wove a [Flame] spell, the familiar warmth spreading from his palm. The darkness remained absolute, but at least he could see his own hand now. And Bob, standing uncomfortably close.
The void felt... wrong. Not empty, but somehow negative - as if the space itself was actively hostile to their presence. Their footsteps made no sound, and the air had no temperature. It was a unique sensation.
"Maybe we should..." Bob coughed, gears turning awkwardly. "Hold hands?"
"No."
"I''m being practical! You''re the one making it weird."
"Still no."
"Fine, but when you get lost in this nightmare void, don''t come crying to¡ª"
The sentence cut off mid-word.
Adom turned. Bob had been right beside him, close enough to touch. Now there was only darkness. He reached out, finding nothing but that same hostile emptiness.
"Bob?"
The void swallowed his voice.
"Right. Of course." Adom adjusted his glasses, more out of habit than necessity. The gesture felt absurdly normal in this abnormal space. He continued forward, his flame spell creating a small bubble of visibility that somehow made the surrounding darkness feel even darker.
The silence was absolute. No echoes, no ambient noise, not even the sound of his own breathing. Just the steady rhythm of his footsteps that he felt but couldn''t hear.
He kept walking.
More walking.
And more.
Adom stopped, turning in a slow circle. He hadn''t been afraid of the dark since he was five, when he''d finally understood that darkness was simply the absence of photons. He''d spent hours in the library reading about light particles and wave theory, finding comfort in the rational explanation that had chased away childish fears.
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But this... this wasn''t natural darkness. Obviously.
This void defied scientific explanation. The magical architecture required to create such a space was staggering. Modern mages had centuries of magical theory and advancement at their disposal, their spells far more sophisticated than anything from the past. And yet... this construction shouldn''t be possible for its time period. The complexity of the void''s structure went against everything he knew about magical development. It was like finding advanced crystalline matrices in primitive ritual circles - it simply didn''t align with any known progression of magical knowledge.
How had mages from that era managed something this complex?
He felt a pull ¨C not physical, but an inexplicable certainty in his mind. Forward. He knew which way was forward, though he couldn''t have explained how. The knowledge simply existed, as fundamental as gravity.
Turning back in that direction, Adom gasped. A door had materialized at the edge of his flame''s light ¨C simple, brown, wooden. Utterly ordinary, which made its presence here all the more unsettling. It stood unsupported in the void, as if someone had simply forgotten to build the wall around it.
His steps faltered for just a moment.
This door...
"What the hell is this?" said Adom. That damned door...
That scratched corner where he''d kicked it in frustration. The brass handle, slightly tarnished on the right side where thousands of nervous hands had gripped it. Even that peculiar whorl in the wood grain that his young eyes had traced over and over while waiting.
Room 347. Doctor Kane''s office.
"So this is where we''re going, huh? Memory?" Adom muttered. His voice still made no sound, but he felt the words in his throat.
He stood before the door, studying it with the same detached curiosity he now used for analyzing magical phenomena. Funny how such an unremarkable piece of wood could mark the boundary between before and after. Between health and decay. Between childhood and... whatever came after.
Forward.
His hand reached for the handle.
Light flooded his vision, and suddenly the world had weight again.
*****
"¡ªdom? Adom? Can you hear me, young man?"
His mother''s arms were around him, warm and real. The scent of her sweet apple and cinnamon perfume mixed with the sharp antiseptic hospital smell. He''d forgotten that detail - how the two scents had clashed yet somehow merged in his memory.
Her tears were soaking into his shirt. His father stood by the window, shoulders rigid, staring at nothing. The afternoon sun cast long shadows across the sterile white floor.
This felt more substantial than memory. The scratch of his cotton shirt against his skin. The slight tremor in his mother''s embrace. The weight of the air itself.
It all felt real. Undeniably real.
Where was he again? Ah, yes. Room 347. Doctor Kane had just finished explaining Lifedrain Syndrome. Three to five years, he''d said. Maybe less.
He''d lived sixty-seven more, just to spite the diagnosis.
"Orynth, you bastard," Adom muttered.
Making him relive this moment, the exact second his life began to crumble. Of all the trials the ancient mage could have designed...
His mother''s arms tightened around him, misinterpreting his words as confusion or denial. So he could interact with them here, huh?
If only she knew.
"I missed you both," Adom said softly, looking between them. "So much."
His mother pulled back, brow furrowing. "What are you talking about, my little one?"
"Doctor," his father''s voice was tight, controlled. "Are there cognitive symptoms we should know about?"
"Arthur." His mother whirled on him. "Our son just got the worst news of his life and you''re suggesting he''s losing his mind?"
"I''m trying to understand all the¡ª"
"Understand? Understand what? That you''re already giving up on him?"
The doctor raised his hands. "Please, Sir and Lady Syll¡ª"
Adom watched them argue, a familiar heaviness settling in his chest that had nothing to do with his illness.
These fights. They''d had so many after his diagnosis - voices rising, blame flying, love turning bitter with fear and helplessness. He''d forgotten how early they''d started. How bad they''d ended.
Then it came.
That familiar tickle in his throat. Adom almost laughed - he knew this script by heart. First the tickle, then the burning sensation spreading through his chest like hot wire. The tightness that made each breath shorter than the last. The metallic taste at the back of his throat.
He coughed.
His mother stopped mid-sentence. His father took a half-step forward.
Another cough. Harder this time. Then another. And another. A rhythm he''d lived with for sixty-seven years, now playing out in its opening performance.
He raised his hand to his mouth, going through motions that felt like muscle memory even though this body hadn''t learned them yet. When he pulled it away, black blood coated his palm, thick and glistening in the afternoon light.
"Heh." The chuckle came out wet and dark.
"Adom!" His mother''s scream.
"Son!" His father''s shout.
The world tilted sideways, the floor rushing up to meet him. Right on schedule.
As consciousness faded, he wondered what Orynth had in store for him next.
1st attempt successful.
Would you like to continue? [Y/N]
Forward. Always. It was the only way out.
"...Yes. Yes you asshole."
*****
Adom opened his eyes and squinted immediately due to the light.
A warm breeze ruffled his fur. Not his - a dog. The Service Companion sat beside his chair, tongue lolling in a perpetual smile. An old Moonspire Shepherd, with its characteristic white coat that seemed to catch and hold sunlight.
"...Fido?" Adom''s voice caught. His first dog. His last dog. The one his father got him for his eighteenth birthday. He''d forgotten. How had he forgotten?
The dog''s tail thumped against the cobblestones, ears perking at his name. That same goofy expression Adom remembered from that time.
He reached down, fingers sinking into thick fur. Fido smelled like pear and summer storms - the enchanted shampoo his mother used to buy from the markets. The memory hit harder than any spell.
The caf¨¦ terrace buzzed with afternoon life. Children chased each other between tables while their parents sipped spiced tea. A street performer juggled balls of light, each one singing a different note as it arced through the air. Two old men argued over a game of stones, their laughter carrying across the square.
Adom''s tea had gone cold, forgotten beside a half-eaten plate of honey cakes. The sun hung lazy and golden in the cloudless sky, casting long shadows across the festival banners.
Festival banners.
His eyes caught on the flowing script: "1457th Festival of Kati."
His cup clattered against the saucer. "No."
This wasn''t just any festival day in Kati. By then, his hometown had transformed into one of the Sundar Empire''s most formidable fortress cities. Its walls, reinforced with defensive enchantments, stood as a beacon of hope for refugees fleeing the endless border wars. The city where he''d grown up had become a sanctuary for millions of souls.
Millions.
"No," he repeated, softer this time.
Fido whined, pressing against his leg. The old dog always knew when something was wrong.
"Papa, what''s that?"
A child''s voice, from the next table. Small finger pointing up.
Adom''s hands began to shake. Sweat beaded on his forehead despite the pleasant temperature. He knew what he''d see before he looked, but he looked anyway.
Could he do anything about it? Probably not.
The sky was darkening. Not with clouds - with absence. A void spreading across the blue, like ink in water. People were noticing now, conversations falling quiet, faces turning upward.
The juggler''s light-balls winked out.
"Just weather magic," someone said, uncertain. "For the festival?"
But Adom remembered this day. Remembered what came next.
A low hum began, felt more than heard. The stones beneath his feet trembled. Cups rattled on tables. The old men''s game pieces scattered.
Fido growled, hackles rising.
"Oh gods," a woman whispered. "Look."
Through the spreading darkness, a point of light. Growing larger. Brighter. A falling star in reverse colors, wrong in ways that hurt to look at.
It had many names.
Life''s bane. God''s wrath. World-ender. The Final Word. A hundred names in a dozen languages, each attempting to describe the indescribable. But in that moment, as it fell toward Kati, only one name mattered.
Dragon''s Breath.
Not fire, not destruction, but erasure. Complete. Absolute. The kind of death that didn''t just kill - it rewrote existence itself, leaving nothing behind. Not even ashes. Not even memories. Humanity''s crowning achievement in the art of warfare. The weapon that made elves pause their eternal dances, that hushed the singing forests, that gave even the deathless ones reason to fear. The ultimate expression of human ingenuity turned toward a single purpose: unmaking.
And he was watching it descend on his home. Again.
Adom lunged for Fido''s collar. "We need to move!"
The dog planted his paws, one hundred and forty pounds of muscle refusing to budge. It wasn''t Fido''s fault. He was trained like that. To not let Adom do simple things like running. In his condition at that time, he would have had a heart attack for that.
"Fido, please," he begged the dog. "Please move!"
People still sat at their tables, pointing up at the darkening sky. A child started crying.
"RUN!" It was pointless. "Everyone needs to run! NOW!"
A few heads turned. A mother grabbed her children, hurrying them away. Others just stared at him, the crazy young man screaming in the square.
The sky shifted from steel-gray to a darker one. The air felt wrong - too thick, too heavy.
Then he saw it.
A star falling in daylight, but wrong. No star should move that fast. No star should pulse with that twisted light. The horizon where it fell began to glow, a false dawn in the wrong direction.
Someone whispered, "Saints preserve us."
The ground shook. Tea cups danced off tables. A woman screamed.
Fido finally moved, but in the wrong direction - trying to herd Adom toward shelter. The dog''s training fighting Adom''s desperate pulls.
"I order you to-"
The horizon ignited, far beyond the city walls where the Empire''s Third Legion made camp. Ten miles distant, but it didn''t matter.
A pinprick of light bloomed into an impossible sun - white-hot, reality-bending brilliance that turned day into negative space. The festival crowd fell silent, necks craned upward. Some still stood transfixed, shielding their eyes, murmuring about new festival magic. They didn''t understand. Couldn''t understand.
The ground shook first. Not the gentle tremor of earlier, but a deep, primal vibration that rattled teeth and toppled glasses. In the distance, a sound no human throat could make - part thunder, part scream, part the universe tearing. The very air seemed to hold its breath.
Then it rose. A pillar of destruction climbing into the sky, burning white at its heart, crowned by a blooming mushroom of blacks and grays that devoured the clouds. Even at this distance, the world lost its colors, reduced to stark shadows and searing light. Those still watching saw their own bones through closed eyelids. Time stretched like taffy, each second an eternity of waiting.
The shockwave came visible across the plains - a wall of pure force that flattened the grasslands, rolled through the army camp like it was paper. Even from here, they could see the massive siege engines tossed like children''s toys. It raced toward the city, a ripple in reality that turned stone to dust and flesh to vapor. The roar of its approach drowned out even the screams.
People ran. Really ran now, a stampede of bodies crushing together in the narrow streets. Adom lost his grip on Fido''s collar in the surge. The dog vanished in the panicked crowd.
"FIDO!"
A mountain of a man slammed into him, sending them both sprawling. "Sorry lad, sorry!" The stranger hauled Adom to his feet with one meaty hand.
The second wave hit.
This one wasn''t light or sound - it was force. Pure, unstoppable force that picked up carts and people like toys. The air itself seemed to catch fire.
Adom saw the building coming. A small house, lifted whole from its foundations, tumbling end over end through the burning air.
His last thought before impact was of Fido''s goofy smile.
Then world exploded into sound and fire.
*****
His ears rang with a high-pitched whine that drowned out everything else. The world spun lazily, even with his eyes closed. Consciousness came back in fragments - the taste of copper in his mouth, dust coating his tongue, the weight of... something pressing down.
Where...?
The ringing slowly faded, replaced by muffled sounds of destruction. Reality pieced itself together through the fog in his mind. The festival. Fido. The light in the sky.
Ah. Yes.
Orynth''s test.
Pain screamed through every nerve as tons of concrete pinned him down. His legs - he couldn''t feel his right leg anymore, but his left was a symphony of agony, bone fragments grinding against each other with each breath.
Hot wetness pooled beneath him, and he wasn''t sure if it was blood or the broken heating pipes. His chest felt like it was being crushed in a vice, each shallow breath sending jolts of electricity through his ribs. Dust filled his lungs, making him cough, each spasm multiplying the pain exponentially.
Even knowing this was Orynth''s test didn''t dull the sensations. The body remembers, and Adom''s remembered this moment with perfect clarity - the precise way his pelvis had shattered, the burning as debris scraped against exposed bone, the peculiar numbness creeping up from his toes that would never quite go away.
This was the sequence burned into his nightmares. Dragon''s Breath to shatter their defenses, to erase their strongest warriors and mightiest walls. Then, while the survivors still reeled from the horror, the Aslan Empire would descend like wolves upon the helpless. A perfect strategy, tested and proven across a dozen conquered nations.
The concussive force of spells shattering shields vibrated through the rubble crushing his legs, each tremor sending fresh waves of torment through his broken body.
Through a gap in the concrete, Adom watched the sky turn colors that shouldn''t exist as battle mages tore reality apart above.
A knight crashed through a wall, his armor molten, screaming.
A child stumbled past, cradling something gray and wet in blood-stained hands, calling "Mama, mama, your head fell off..." Adom would never forget that face - hollow-eyed, tear-streaked, yet focused with terrible determination as small fingers tried to push pulpy matter back into a shattered skull. "Stay still, Mama. I''ll make it better. I promise I''ll make it better."
"Hey..." Adom''s voice cracked.
The child looked up. Couldn''t have been more than six. A face that should have been worrying about lost toys or scraped knees, not... this. "Mister, can you help me? My mama''s not answering. I''m trying to put her thoughts back, but they keep slipping."
Adom''s throat closed. He reached out, tried to form words to pull the child away from the corpse, to run, to live-
The light spell cracked across the street like lightning. A single shot, precise, professional. The child''s body jerked, a puppet with cut strings. Those empty eyes locked onto Adom''s face in the final moment, filled not with fear or pain, but simple confusion.
Adom''s scream died in his throat. How? How could anyone...? What threat could a child possibly...?
But this was war. This was the moment when the world stopped making sense, when humanity shed its skin and revealed the monster beneath.
The air tasted like copper and ozone. Someone was singing - a lullaby mixed with sobs, coming from beneath a collapsed building. The singing stopped abruptly as another explosion sent bodies flying.
His father''s voice cut through the chaos: "Hold the line! Protect the civilians!"
Through the smoke and debris, Adom saw him. Commander Arthur Sylla. Two star knight. Leading the defense, his sword glowing with fluid as he cut through enemy soldiers. Each swing precise, each step calculated. A warrior doing his duty.
It was about to happen.
In exactly four minutes, his father would spot him in the rubble. In four minutes and thirty seconds, he would turn his back on an enemy to reach his son. In four minutes and forty-five seconds...
A mage''s corpse landed nearby, still crackling with residual energy. Her eyes were open, staring at nothing, mouth frozen in a half-cast spell.
The singing had started again, from somewhere else now. A different voice, a different lullaby. The same abrupt end.
The rubble pressed against his chest.
Four minutes.
He could already see his father scanning the battlefield, that moment of recognition about to dawn on his face. The enemy mage was positioning himself, spell already forming in the air.
The same choreography of death he''d carried for decades.
A child screamed somewhere - not in pain, but in that hollow way that meant they''d seen something their mind couldn''t process.
A battlemage''s shield shattered, raining crystalline shards that cut through three soldiers below. The singing had started again, from beneath another pile of rubble.
Adom''s hands found purchase on broken concrete. First try - muscles screamed, bones ground against metal rebar piercing his abdomen. The pain whited out his vision. He collapsed.
[Life force: 38/200]
His father turned.
Second try - he pushed harder. Blood bubbled up his throat, spilling black over his chin. The rebar twisted inside him, tearing new paths through flesh. The edges of his vision darkened. By all rights, he should have passed out. He refused.
[Life force: 23/200]
His father took another step.
Third try - Adom roared. His flesh tore around the metal, blood streaming hot down his side. Concrete shifted, crushing his left leg further. Every nerve ending blazed with agony. His body begged him to stop.
[Life force: 19/200]
He told his body to shut up.
"Fuck that."
The words came out as a growl. The rubble shifted as Adom pushed his torso up on trembling arms, metal sliding wet and raw through his abdomen. His crushed legs remained pinned, useless, but his upper body rose like a wounded beast.
[Life force: 09/200]
"Illusion or not¡ª" Energy crackled around his hands, blue-white and savage. Each movement sent fresh waves of agony through his shredded flesh. He didn''t care.
[Life force: 03/200]
"I. Am. Not. Reliving. This."
His father''s eyes widened in recognition. The enemy mage raised his hands, death-spell forming¡ª
"NOT THIS TIME!"
The energy beam erupted from Adom''s palms with decades of rage behind it. Clean. Precise. A perfect circle through the mage''s chest where his heart should have been. The spell dissipated as its caster fell, surprise frozen on his face.
The battlefield seemed to stutter, like reality hiccuping. His father stood frozen mid-step, sword half-raised, expression caught between shock and confusion.
Around them, the war raged on. A knight''s enhancement gear backfired, turning him inside out. A young mage apprentice tried to hold his intestines in while still weaving shields. The singing had stopped again.
"Son?" his father''s voice wavered. "How did you¡ª"
Time stopped.
206th attempt successful.
Would you like to continue? [Y/N]
[Warning: Progress can only be made forward. Retreat will reset the trial]
Right. Two hundred and six times he''d felt the rebar tear through his organs. Two hundred and six times he''d tasted his own blood, felt his bones splinter. Two hundred and six times he''d watched that child try to piece their mother''s brains back together. Then die for no reason.
But this time - this one time - his father was still standing.
The battlefield continued its apocalyptic dance around them, but for just a moment, Adom allowed himself to look at his father''s time stopped face. Alive. Confused, but alive.
Blood bubbled up his throat again, darker than before. His vision swam.
[Life Force: 01/200]
[Warning: Terminal threshold approaching]
He needed to choose. Quickly. Forward into whatever fresh hell Orynth had prepared, or reset and lose this victory he''d paid for two hundred and six times over.
The choice was obvious.
*****
The world shifted. Memory flooded in - another moment, burned into his soul. The camp of New Harbor, Year 853.
The cough tore through his chest like barbed wire, each spasm threatening to split him in two. Adom gripped the metal rails of his wheelchair, knuckles white, waiting for his lungs to remember how to work. Blood flooded his mouth.
The fluorescent lights of the refugee camp''s medical wing buzzed overhead, casting harsh shadows across equipment that looked ancient even by pre-war standards. His reflection in the cracked mirror told its own story of decay: hair white as fresh snow, skin like old parchment stretched too thin across hollow cheeks.
He was twenty-two at that time. Twenty-two going on eighty.
He dabbed at his mouth with a handkerchief. Red, of course. Always red these days.
The Life Drain Syndrome had carved lines into his face that belonged on men thrice his age. Each wrinkle mapped a different spell, a different experiment, a different desperate attempt to protect what remained of humanity. The mage suit hung loose on his frame now - he''d lost weight again. The crystalline nodes embedded in the fabric pulsed with a weak blue light, monitoring his failing vital signs.
"PLEASE! NO, IT STILL WORKS! I CAN FEEL MY TOES!"
The screams from the next chamber cut through the thin walls. Adom knew that voice - Gregory, one of the scouts. Yesterday''s patrol had gone wrong.
"Hold him down!" The healer''s voice, sharp with urgency. "The rot''s reaching his knee. It''s this or death."
"I''LL DIE WITH MY LEG! PLEASE! I CAN STILL-" The words dissolved into unintelligible sobbing.
The wet sound of saw meeting flesh. Gregory''s screams pitched higher, became something animal, primal. The rhythmic scraping continued, inexorable.
The door burst open. "My Lord Mage!" A soldier stood there, blood-splattered and breathing hard. Her armor bore fresh dents. "We''ve got incoming. Orc warband, at least two hundred strong. They''ve got dwarven siege engines with them."
A particularly agonized shriek from next door. The saw hit bone.
"GODS, PLEASE, JUST KILL ME!"
The soldier flinched at Gregory''s plea but kept her eyes on Adom. "Sir, we need to move. Now."
"Where is my mother?"
The soldier hesitated, just for a moment. "Lady Sylla was last seen at the outer perimeter, my lord. Healing survivors from the first wave."
No.
"Get her back." His voice cracked. "Get her back inside NOW."
But he knew. He already knew. The memory was already playing out - his gentle mother, who''d sing healing hymns while tending gardens, who''d cradle injured birds and weep over withered flowers. Who never turned away anyone in need.
"Sir, we need to evacuate. The orcs are-"
He remembered how it played out: The sounds came first. The splintering of bones. The wet, meaty sounds. Then someone screaming "Lady Sylla!" And finally, finally, the sight of her through the medical tent''s window - her small form caught between massive, armored bodies. Crushed like a flower under boots.
His heart stuttered, skipped, seized. Not from the Life Drain this time, but from seeing something so pure, so kind, reduced to... to...
They''d had to peel her off the ground. His mother, who''d spent her life putting broken things back together, couldn''t even be buried whole.
Adom slumped in his wheelchair, chest constricting. The seventh heart attack in his life wasn''t from pushing too hard. It was from remembering this moment, remembering how they''d brought him her remnants, remembering how someone who''d dedicated her life to healing had died with such violence.
"My lord!" The soldier''s voice seemed distant now. "We need to move!"
But Adom could only see his mother''s last smile that morning, could only hear her last words: "Remember to eat something, dear. You''re working too hard again."
The war horns bellowed closer, but they couldn''t drown out the truth - this was the day his mother died, and something in him died with her. Not just his health, not just his heart, but his belief that anything good could survive this world.
This needed correction.
Adom wheeled himself forward, each turn of the wheels sending sparks of pain through his arms.
[Life Force: 189/200]
This was attempt ninety-eight. He''d memorized every death, every failure, every moment he wasn''t fast enough, strong enough, clever enough to save her. Not this time.
"My lord, you can''t possibly-" The soldier''s protest died as Adom raised his hand.
"Watch me."
The first wave hit the outer barriers. Adom''s fingers traced complex patterns, weaving spells that made his blood burn. He was already a circle mage by then. A sick, wounded one, but a circle mage nonetheless.
A dwarven siege engine exploded, showering the advancing horde with burning debris. His heart stumbled, protesting the strain.
[Life Force: 156/200]
"FORM RANKS!" His voice carried across the battlefield, stronger than his body had any right to be. Soldiers rallied, finding formation around his wheelchair. "ARCHERS, TARGET THE SHAMANS!"
Another spell. Lightning chained between orc warriors, their armor conducting death. The effort sent him into a coughing fit, spattering his lap with blood.
[Life Force: 134/200]
He could see her now - his mother, kneeling beside wounded refugees, her healing magic a soft green glow. So focused on saving others, she didn''t see the berserkers breaking through.
[Life Force: 112/200]
"LEFT FLANK, BRACE!" The command tore from his throat as he channeled power through his failing body. A wall of force materialized, crushing the first berserker wave. His vision blurred. Too much. Too fast.
But he was closer now. Ninety-seven failures had taught him every move, every spell, every sacrifice needed. His wheelchair creaked as he pushed forward, soldiers forming a protective wedge around him.
[Life Force: 87/200]
A dwarven bolt thrower targeted his position. Adom''s counter-spell caught the projectile, reversed its course. The machine exploded, taking its crew with it. Blood trickled from his nose.
[Life Force: 65/200]
"Mother!" His voice barely carried over the chaos. She looked up, eyes widening. The massive orc behind her raised its axe-
Time slowed. Not from magic, but from desperation. Adom saw every detail: the axe''s arc, his mother''s turning head, the distance between them. Numbers and calculations flooded his mind - trajectory, force, spell matrices.
[Life Force: 43/200]
The spell left his hands before he could consider the cost. Reality bent. Space folded. His mother vanished from the axe''s path, reappearing beside his wheelchair. The effort sent him into cardiac arrest.
[Life Force: 21/200]
"Adom!" Her hands glowed green, pouring healing magic into his seizing heart. "My boy, what have you-"
"Not... done... yet." Each word was agony. But he had one more spell. One final gambit.
[Life Force: 9/200]
Power gathered around him, drawing from his very soul. The remaining orcs charged. The last siege engine aimed.
[Life Force: 4/200]
"I love you, mother. And I missed you." The words came clearly despite his failing body. "Now run. Please."
The spell released. A dome of pure force expanded outward, disintegrating everything in its path. Orc, dwarf, machine - all reduced to ash.
[Life Force: 2/200]
As darkness took him, Adom smiled. Ninety-eight tries, but he''d finally done it. His mother was saved. He knew this was not real. This was an illusion. But God, it felt right.
And this time, when his heart stopped, it was worth it.
A new wave charged.
[Life Force: 1/200]
"Come on then," Adom whispered, raising his hands one final time.
Time stopped.
[Congratulations. You''ve conquered this fear.]
[Would you like to proceed with the next memories?]
[Warning: Each attempt drains your spirit. Surrender is always an option.]
Continue? [Y/N]
"..."
[Y]
*****
The first hundred years nearly shattered Adom.
He lived through all the events of his past life. One by one. Each detail. Each experience.
Watching Sundar fall again and again, hearing children scream as they plummeted through clouds turned to fire. His mind started fracturing around the fifties - laughing as blood rained down, trying to catch it with his tongue. By the seventieth fall, he was singing nursery rhymes while deflecting arrows.
He almost gave up then. Almost.
[Life Force: 189/200]
[Status: Fragmenting]
The Plague Wars twisted everything. Black spores blooming under skin, turning friends to enemies. He tried saving everyone at first. Then some. Then just himself. His hands shook for weeks after watching a mother eat her children, spores bursting from their eyes like black tears.
"Just surrender," the voices whispered. "Start over."
The voices, ah, the voices. He did not know who they belonged to, many voices, male and female, intertwined, always tempting him, they appeared around the 30th year of this test.
He refused. Always refused. Always moved forward. Out of spite. Out of rage. Out of ardent desire to punch the hell out of whoever made him go through this.
Was this madness?
[Life Force: 167/200]
[Status: Reshaping]
Something changed during the Dead March. When the Necromancer rose from the north.
Fifty thousand corpses shambling across the plains, and amid the horror, he found... purpose. Not hope - hope had died somewhere between the hundredth child''s death and the thousandth betrayal. Something harder. Colder.
The voice saying "give up" grew quieter.
The World Dungeon rose.
When every dungeon, in every part of the globe hit S-rank and above, simultaneously, the world held its breath. Then came the great outbreak - all dungeons breaching at once, their portals dissolving until the entire planet became one massive, living dungeon. Monsters pouring out endlessly.
Civilizations fell then.
No more safe zones. No more sanctuary cities. Just endless dungeon floors where continents used to be.
Nobody ever knew why and how it came to be.
He survived that. Lived through the Night of Long Knives by feeling blade-paths before they cut. Watched humanity turn savage as they realized there were no more rules, no more borders between ''inside'' and ''outside.'' Just an endless maze of monsters, traps, and people who''d learned to become worse than both.
[Life Force: 134/200]
[Status: Evolving]
Each failure taught him. Each success cost him pieces of who he was.
The Children''s Crusade should have broken him. Watching infants manifest powers that turned reality inside out. Instead, he found himself understanding their babbled prophecies, seeing the logic in their madness.
His disease changed too. The black blood grew thicker, more alive. Sometimes he caught it spelling words in languages that shouldn''t exist.
Yes. this was madness.
[Life Force: 98/200]
[Status: Awakening]
He lost count of the attempts somewhere during the wars and cataclysms. Time became fluid, meaning shifted like quicksand. He died so many times the concept of death became abstract - just another transition, another lesson.
The voices in his head still screamed for surrender, but now a deeper voice answered back:
"No."
[Life Force: 76/200]
[Status: Transcending]
During the Week of Burning Stars in the World Dungeon, he realized he wasn''t going mad anymore. He realized he''d stopped counting attempts. Stopped fearing failure.
His broken mind had reassembled itself into something new.
The Day of Inverted Light almost felt beautiful. Reality fractured into twelve black suns, each showing him his deepest fears, his worst failures. He watched himself break in a thousand ways.
But he didn''t break.
[Status: Emerging]
Through all the horror, all the death and rebirth and madness, something was taking shape. His will hadn''t broken - it had crystallized.
The voice that had begged for surrender was silent now. In its place, something new had formed. Not fearlessness - fear would always exist. But something stronger than fear.
[Status: Becoming]
He kept walking. Kept moving forward.
Chains rattled with each step. Iron links bit into flesh, wrapped around limbs, throat, heart. Adom trudged forward, each movement a war against weight that shouldn''t exist.
He turned. Turned to look at his burden.
The chains stretched endlessly behind him, each link screaming. Memories dangled from them like rotting fruit. Every failure. Every death. Every moment he wasn''t strong enough, fast enough, smart enough to save them all.
How does one carry a world?
Adom stood still, the weight crushing his shoulders. He found himself drowning in the absurdity of his task.
A bitter laugh escaped his lips. "What rational mind would accept this?" he asked the darkness. There was no answer. "What sane person looks at the end of all things and says ''Yes, I''ll carry this alone''?"
The memories shifted, showing him cities yet to burn, friends yet to die. Knowledge was his prison - knowing every horror that awaited, every moment where humanity would prove itself unworthy of salvation.
"They don''t even want to be saved," he whispered, watching the chains of future-past wrap tighter. "They''ll tear each other apart regardless. I''ve seen it - how they turn on each other when the dungeons break, how quickly they abandon their humanity."
The logical part of his mind - the part that had survived a hundred resets - laid out the facts with cruel clarity: One man cannot change the nature of billions. One soul cannot bear the weight of every possible tomorrow.
It was mathematically impossible, fundamentally irrational.
He sank to his knees, feeling the cold comfort of reason. Why struggle against inevitability? Why carry this burden when the outcome was statistically predetermined? The voices whispered calculations of failure, probabilities of doom, and each number felt like truth.
"Perhaps," he murmured, "this is simply the universe''s way of teaching acceptance. Some equations have no solution. Some weights cannot be borne..."
The darkness crept closer, offering rest. Offering an end to the paradox of his existence. After all, what was more rational than accepting one''s limitations? What was more logical than acknowledging the impossible?
His eyes grew heavy. The chains sang softly of release, of letting go, of embracing the statistical certainty of failure. His brilliant mind, his analytical soul, everything that made him who he was agreed - this was the reasonable choice.
The only choice.
His eyes began to close...
"Lad? Lad! Where are you?!"
"Huh?"
"LAD! WHERE IN THE BLAZES ARE YOU?"
That impossibly annoying voice cut through the darkness. Bob. The leprechaun''s brash tones somehow pierced through the statistical fog of despair, and Adom found himself calculating a new probability.
The chains shifted as he laughed, not bitter this time. "Probability," he mused.
He remembered a story his mother once told him, about how life began on Earth. A precise dance of molecules, temperature, and timing. The odds against it were astronomical - trillions upon trillions to one. If the planet had been slightly closer to the sun, if one comet had struck differently, if any single variable had changed... and yet, here they were.
"ADOM! DON''T MAKE ME COME LOOKING FOR YOU, LAD!"
The voice was getting closer, and with it came clarity. Humans weren''t equations to be solved. They were impossibilities that insisted on existing anyway. Every breath was a defiance of entropy, every heartbeat a rebellion against cosmic odds.
"We''re all unlikely stories," he whispered to the chains. "Every one of us shouldn''t exist, and yet we do. We persist. We fight."
The memories shifted again, but now he saw them differently. Yes, humanity would tear itself apart - but they would also rebuild. Yes, they would betray - but they would also sacrifice themselves for strangers. Every horror he''d witnessed had its mirror in acts of impossible courage, impossible love.
"LAD, I SWEAR TO THE OLD GODS, IF YOU''RE MOPING-"
The leprechaun''s voice carried equal parts irritation and concern.
...Concern? Why? They barely knew each other.
Then Adom realized something else - in all his calculations of failure, he''d forgotten to factor in the variables he couldn''t predict. The Bob-shaped variables. The moments of random kindness. The statistical impossibilities that kept happening anyway.
The chains still weighed heavy, but now they felt different. Not a burden to escape, but a proof to humanity''s stubborn refusal to follow mathematical certainty. Every reset, every failure, every moment of darkness was just another impossible story waiting to be told.
"Who am I," he asked the void, "to decide which impossibilities are too impossible?"
The darkness retreated slightly, confused by this new calculation.
"FOUND YOU! What''re you doing sitting in the dark like some brooding hero from those terrible stories?"
Bob''s voice. Not memory, not probability, but present. Real. Annoying.
"Bob. A little help here?"
"You disappeared right in the middle of me rambling!" Bob huffed, extending his small hand. "Nearly gave me a heart attack, which would''ve been quite the feat considering we leprechauns do not suffer heart attacks."
As he helped Adom up, Bob''s voice trailed off, his eyes fixing on something ahead. "Well, would you look at that."
A white door stood before them, pristine and impossible in the void.
"Fancy bit of carpentry, that," Bob mused, trying to mask his unease with humor. "Though the color scheme''s a bit bland for my taste. Could use some gold trim, maybe a few rotating gears..."
Adom''s hand hesitated over the handle. This time, though, another hand - small - reached out alongside his.
"Together then?" Bob asked, his voice unusually serious. "Since you seem to have a knack for doing the impossible, and I have a knack for being impossibly annoying."
Adom felt the ghost of a smile touch his lips. "Together."
They turned the handle.
Light embraced him, lifted them, carried him up through layers of gentle radiance until...
Adom gasped, falling to his knees in a cave. His lungs burned as if he''d been holding his breath for centuries.
His mind reeled, trying to process the weight of countless apocalypses, numberless deaths, infinite horrors - all compressed into memory like diamonds formed under impossible pressure.
Adom looked at his hands. Clean. Unmarked. No scars from the Dragon''s Breath. No burns from catching starfire. The same hands he''d had when he first entered.
His thoughts, chaotic and frenzied, began to settle.
A soft chime echoed in his mind as text appeared before him:
[Time of Entry: 19:23:07]
[Current Time: 19:24:12]
One minute and five seconds...
One minute and...
[Congratulations! You have completed the Trial of Courage]
[Detecting changes...]
[New Skill Acquired: Indomitable Will (Transcendent Rank)]
[Indomitable Will - Passive - Level 1]
Your will has been tested against every conceivable horror and emerged unbroken. Fear becomes a tool rather than a master. Mental attacks and control effects are reduced by 90%. Resilience scales infinitely with your emotional state, turning overwhelming pressure into strength.
Special Effect: "That Which Does Not Yield" - When all hope seems lost, when survival seems impossible, your will crystalizes. Each consecutive action against impossible odds increases your chance of success.
"How''re you doing, lad?"
Adom turned to see Bob stumbling out of another exit, gears flying everywhere as he steadied himself against the wall. The ancient fae looked shaken, his usual manic energy subdued.
"I... gave up," Bob admitted, his voice uncharacteristically quiet. "Same as always. But then..." He looked around, confused. "There was this light. Never saw that before when I failed. Usually just get sent right back to the start, don''t I? But this time... And then i heard you mumbling nonsense. Then, I saw you."
"The trial rules," Adom said, understanding dawning. "If one person succeeds, everyone does."
"You mean..." Bob''s eyes widened. "You actually did it? You faced whatever that..." He gestured vaguely at the void. "Whatever that was?"
Adom nodded, still processing the weight of what he''d experienced.
"Well," Bob said, a hint of his usual spirit returning as more gears clattered to the floor. "Suppose I owe you one then. Though don''t expect me to stop calling you hallucination just because you got us through."
It was strange, really.
Just moments ago, Adom had lived through what he did. Yet now... now it was slipping away like morning dew, becoming hazy and distant, like trying to remember a dream you made last week.
He chuckled, shaking his head at the sheer audacity of it. Orynth hadn''t just designed a trial to break people - he''d made sure they couldn''t even properly remember what broke them.
The memories were there, somewhere, compressed into that crystalline core of newfound strength in his mind, but trying to recall the specifics was like grasping at smoke. Just vague impressions of terror and triumph, without the messy details that might drive someone mad in retrospect.
What a magnificently twisted piece of work. Really had to admire the craftsmanship, even while hating everything it represented.
"So... what now?" Bob asked, plucking a gear from his beard and watching it split into two. "Never actually made it to this part before. Suppose you''re the expert here."
Suddenly, a laugh rolled through the chamber. Deep. Resonant. Each note lingering longer than it should.
Bob''s gears clinked frantically as he shoved Adom behind him. "Get back, lad."
Metal clinked against stone as something massive descended from the darkness above. Golden fur caught the light, rippling over muscles that could tear a man in half. Wings of deepest black unfurled, each feather sharp as a blade. Its face bore a woman''s features, but those eyes... cold, calculating, watching them like a cat watches mice.
"No one has walked these halls since their creation," it purred, tail swishing back and forth against the stone. "I wonder... who passed my master''s first trial?"
A sphinx.
Chapter 16. The Trial Of Wisdom
Meeting a sphinx was rarely good news.
Sure, they were magnificent creatures, guardians of ancient knowledge and sacred places - but they also had this rather unfortunate habit of eating people who couldn''t answer their riddles. Which, historically speaking, was most people.
The whole setup was rather unfair, really. Here you had beings who''d spent centuries, or even millennia contemplating the mysteries of existence, asking impossible questions to folks who were just trying to get through their day without being eaten by a giant cat-bird-person hybrid.
Not that anyone would point this out to a sphinx. That would be the kind of mistake you''d only make once.
And of course, because the universe had a sense of humor that bordered on sadistic, sphinxes were almost always found in exactly the places you couldn''t avoid - guarding ancient treasures, protecting forbidden knowledge, or, in this particular case, serving as the arbiter of a Test of Wisdom in a magical labyrinth designed by someone who clearly enjoyed watching people suffer.
At least they were better than dragons. Dragons just ate you without the courtesy of a philosophical discussion first.
Or so Adom heard.
The sphinx lounged across the chamber''s entrance, its massive form both graceful and terrifying. Golden fur rippled over muscles that could tear a man in half without effort. Its wings, folded now, stretched halfway up the cavern walls - each feather edged in metallic bronze. A golden monocle glinted over its right eye, somehow making its leonine features even more unsettling.
Its tail - thick as a young tree - swished lazily against the stone floor as it studied them, head tilted at an angle that somehow managed to look both regal and predatory. A deep purr rumbled through the chamber, like distant thunder trapped underground.
"Hello, friends," it said pleasantly, voice rich and cultured despite coming from a mouth filled with teeth longer than daggers.
"We''re not your friends," Bob growled, still planted firmly between Adom and the sphinx. Several gears dropped from his beard, their multiplication making a small cascade of metallic sounds. "And don''t try any of that riddle nonsense with us, you overgrown house cat."
Adom barely registered Bob''s protective hostility.
He was too busy staring at the monocle. Of all the bizarre things he''d seen in this labyrinth - and there had been many - somehow a sphinx wearing a monocle felt like it should have been mentioned in at least one of the ancient texts.
The sphinx adjusted said monocle with one massive paw, the gesture so prim and proper it bordered on absurd. "Such hostility. And here I was, preparing my best riddles."
"Right then. We''ll just be on our way," Bob said, backing up slowly and pulling Adom with him. "No need to bother a... distinguished creature such as yourself."
The sphinx clicked its tongue - an oddly human gesture from a decidedly inhuman mouth. Its chuckle echoed off the chamber walls. "I''m afraid that won''t be possible."
"And why''s that?" Bob''s gears clinked a nervous rhythm.
"I am the guardian of this place." The sphinx said, examining them like particularly interesting insects. "Have been for..." It paused, considering. "Well, long enough that things get rather dull. So you''ll have to play with me if you want to pass." Its tail swished against the stone floor. "Obviously."
"What kind of ''game'' exactly?" Adom asked, eyeing the monocle that caught the light with each tilt of the sphinx''s massive head.
"Oh, not just one." The sphinx said. "I''ve been terribly bored, you see. Three or four wouldn''t be too much to ask for, would it?" It purred, a smile spreading across its feline features. "Or five... even six, why not?" It looked positively delighted at the prospect, tail curling in obvious pleasure.
Adom frowned. This casual "maybe this many, maybe more" approach felt wrong.
"What is it then?" Bob''s gears clinked impatiently.
"My, aren''t we hasty?" The sphinx stretched, claws scraping against stone. "I''ve had quite a lot of time to think about this. First would be a riddle-"
"Bloody hell, I knew it!" Bob spat, gears flying. "You''re all the same, aren''t you? Always with the sodding riddles-"
The sphinx pressed a paw to its chest in mock offense. "How terribly stereotypical of you. Next you''ll accuse me of eating failed contestants."
"You don''t?" Adom asked.
"Oh no, I absolutely do," the sphinx said, adjusting its monocle. "But one shouldn''t judge a book by its number of teeth." It threw its head back and laughed at its own joke, the sound bouncing off the walls.
"What''s the second?" Adom cut in.
The sphinx''s gaze swept over him, slow and considering, like a butcher appraising meat. Adom fought the urge to step back. "For you two... a puzzle."
"What kind of puzzle?" Bob demanded.
"Hmm. Perhaps we should focus on passing the first challenge before discussing the others, no?"
Adom and Bob exchanged glances. The Leprechaun cleared his throat, suddenly finding the floor very interesting.
"Now then," the sphinx said, looking at them both. "Which of you was it that passed the test of courage?"
"The laddie here," Bob said, jerking a thumb toward Adom.
Before either could blink, the sphinx was there - right there - its massive head inches from Adom''s face. The speed of the movement was impossible for something so large. The displacement of air knocked loose crystals from the walls.
"Bloody hell!" Bob cursed, stumbling backward.
Adom took one step back but held his ground, though his heart hammered against his ribs. The sphinx''s breath was hot against his face, smelling of ancient stone and something metallic.
"Fascinating," it purred, studying him with eyes like molten gold. "I didn''t expect a boy to be the one. They usually break so easily." Its tail swished with interest. "Tell me, little human - how do you feel? Any... changes you''ve noticed?"
He opened his mouth to ask it to back away, but the sphinx spoke first.
"Was it horrible?" it purred, whiskers twitching with excitement. "Traumatizing? How many times did you die? How long did you spend in there? I heard it was quite... exquisite in its cruelty."
A laugh rumbled from its throat, and something in Adom snapped.
He had, until that moment, managed to push most of it away - like waking from a nightmare that immediately starts to fade. The memories were there but distant, blurred, safer when kept unfocused. But the sphinx''s words dragged them back into sharp relief: the feeling of his bones breaking, the sound of his own screams, the endless, endless dying-
"Did you scream each time? Did you-"
Blue mana erupted around Adom''s hand, responding to a rage he didn''t even know he was feeling. The spell formed almost by itself, raw and violent, seeking release-
Bob''s hand clamped around his wrist. "Don''t."
The sphinx''s smile widened, showing every one of its gleaming teeth. "You should listen to your friend, little human. Though I must say, that reaction was... illuminating."
"Back off," Adom said, voice tight. "Please."
The sphinx inclined its head and retreated with fluid grace, still wearing that knowing smile. "As you wish."
The sphinx glided back, and Adom drew in a long, shaky breath. Released it slowly. His hand trembled in Bob''s grip - residual magic or anger or fear, he couldn''t tell which.
Bob released him gently. "I know, lad. I know it was hard." His voice dropped lower, meant just for Adom. "Been trapped here centuries meself, never managed that test. Not once." Another gear gear fell. "But right now we need you calm. Let''s get through this first, then you can fall apart all you want."
"My, my," the sphinx drawled. "A leprechaun dispensing wisdom! How novel. Perhaps centuries of imprisonment do have their benefits after all?"
Bob ignored it completely, his attention still on Adom.
"Oh, no sense of humor at all," the sphinx sighed, tail flicking with mock disappointment. Its expression brightened suddenly, monocle glinting. "So! The riddle!"
"Hmm. Never been... ah... particularly good with riddles, lad," Bob muttered, looking at Adom. "More of a hit-things-until-they-stop-moving sort of fellow."
"Wonderful timing for that confession," the sphinx said, settling into a more comfortable position. "Now then, the rules are simple. One question. But..." Its monocle caught the light. "If one of you fails, you both fail. And if you both fail..."
The sphinx smiled, revealing far too many teeth.
"Bloody bollocks," Bob whispered.
Adom''s eyes darted around the chamber while Bob and the sphinx traded barbs.
Circular room, about forty feet across. High ceiling lost in shadow. Two exits - the one they''d come through, and another across the room. Columns every ten feet or so. If it came to a fight...
[Identify]
[Name: Alexandros the Knowing]
[Race: Greater Sphinx]
[State: Amused/Anticipating]
[Traits:
- Ancient Being
- Guardian of Knowledge
- Reality Warper (Local)
- Immune to Mental Effects]
The results made his throat go dry.
Those weren''t the stats of something they could fight. Not here, not in its domain. The "Reality Warper (Local)" trait alone...
"Well then," Alexandros purred, settling into a crouch like an oversized house cat. Its wings folded neatly against its sides. "Shall we begin with your first question?"
"Hang on," Bob raised a hand. "Don''t we get to confer or something first?"
"Oh, by all means." The sphinx''s tail swished. "Take all the time you need. I''ve waited centuries - what''s a few more minutes?"
Adom leaned closer to Bob, keeping his voice low. "See that exit behind it? If we-"
"Don''t even finish that thought, lad," Bob whispered back, eyes fixed on the sphinx. "Look at how it''s positioned. That''s not just lounging - it''s got every angle covered. And..." He nodded subtly toward the ceiling. "It''s got wings. Sphinxes are absolute masters of their territories - they don''t just guard them, they ARE the territory. Running isn''t an option."
The sphinx''s monocle glinted as it watched their exchange with obvious amusement, like someone observing mice discussing how to outsmart a cat. Its tail kept drawing lazy patterns on the stone floor.
"Right then," Bob sighed. "Suppose we''ll have to do this properly." He straightened up, beard clinking softly. "Give us your worst, you pretentious feline."
"Oh, I intend to."
Alexandros cleared its throat - a sound somewhere between a purr and thunder - and spoke in a voice that seemed to resonate throughout the chamber:
"Three scholars seek truth in their own way,
The first through books that cannot lie,
The second through deeds that cannot hide,
The third through hearts that cannot die.
When darkness falls and truth is lost,
Which path led furthest from the light?"
The words hung in the air.
"You have one hour," the sphinx said casually, examining its claws. "Oh, and silly me - I nearly forgot the rest of the rules."
Its smile widened incrementally.
"Each wrong answer costs you one of your senses. Both of you. And once you''re out of senses..." It let the implication hang. "Also, any attempt to communicate your thoughts about the answer counts as an answer itself. Oh, and if one of you gets it wrong..." It gestured between them with a massive paw. "Well, you both suffer the consequences."
"Hold on, that''s not how you-" Bob''s face turned an impressive shade of red. "You can''t just add rules after- Huh?"
The leprechaun stopped mid-sentence, his nose twitching. Adom noticed it too - or rather, noticed the absence of it. The musty chamber air, the ozone tang, the sphinx''s peculiar scent - all gone. Just... nothing.
"Ah," Alexandros purred, "I see you''ve discovered what happens when you protest the rules. Shall we count that as your first wrong answer? One sense down, four to go."
Adom''s brows furrowed as he watched Bob''s mouth open and close soundlessly, the leprechaun''s face cycling through several interesting shades of purple. The sphinx just sat there, monocle glinting, looking for all the world like a cat that had just been served a particularly fine cream.
The chamber suddenly felt much smaller.
Adom stared at the sphinx''s smug face, fighting down an overwhelming urge to punch that monocle right through its skull. Not that he could - the [Identify] results had made that clear enough - but the fantasy was satisfying.
Everything about these rules was designed to isolate them. No communication? Shared punishments? It wasn''t just about solving the riddle - it was about breaking any chance of cooperation. Divide and conquer.
He glanced at Bob, who was still doing his best impression of a kettle about to boil over. The leprechaun had admitted he wasn''t good with riddles, true, but...
Adom''s fingers twitched, half-forming the gestures for a Message spell before stopping. Would that count as communication? Probably. The sphinx seemed the type to count even raised eyebrows as an answer attempt. And they couldn''t afford to lose another sense.
But then again, did he really need Bob''s help? The leprechaun had straight-up admitted to being terrible at riddles. Maybe it would be better to just-
No.
Adom forced himself to focus. One hour. Limited senses. The smart play was solving the riddle first, then figuring out how to share the answer. No point in creating the perfect communication system if they didn''t know what to communicate.
Three scholars. Truth. Books that cannot lie, deeds that cannot hide, hearts that cannot-
"Knowledge!" Bob''s voice cut through his concentration, stern and confident.
Adom''s thoughts screeched to a halt. He blinked.
Did... did Bob just...?
"Incorrect," the sphinx purred, sounding absolutely delighted.
This damned fae...
Adom''s hands clenched into fists, his mouth opening to scream at Bob - but he caught himself just in time. His tongue suddenly felt... wrong. Dead. Like trying to taste with a piece of leather in his mouth.
The second sense. Taste. Gone.
Adom whirled on Bob, gesturing wildly - what were you thinking, why would you just blurt out an answer, are you trying to get us both killed? His hands moved in increasingly agitated patterns while the leprechaun shrunk back, hands moving in frantic patterns of regret..
And then... nothing.
The sphinx''s tail was swishing against stone. But there was no sound. None at all. The absolute silence pressed against his ears like cotton wool, making his head spin.
Then Adom realized their mistake. They were communicating. Right in front of the sphinx.
Three senses gone.
Sight and touch left.
And still... fifty-four minutes on the clock.
Adom sat down cross-legged on the stone floor. Panicking wouldn''t help. Getting angry at Bob''s impulsiveness wouldn''t help. And gesturing wildly definitely wouldn''t help - they''d learned that lesson the hard way.
Three scholars seeking truth. Each with their own methodology. Books that cannot lie - perhaps representing pure knowledge, academic pursuit. But no, that was exactly what Bob had guessed, and the sphinx had shot it down.
Movement caught his eye. The sphinx was... grooming itself. Like a housecat.
It noticed him watching and waved cheerfully, somehow managing to make even that simple gesture insufferably smug.
Adom quickly looked away.
He glanced up at Bob, who sat with his eyes closed, completely still. Was he... meditating? In the middle of a life-or-death riddle game?
Focus.
A dull throb had started behind Adom''s eyes, growing steadily more insistent. He rubbed his temples with a grimace.
Deeds that cannot hide - actions, perhaps? The physical manifestation of truth? And hearts that cannot die... emotion? Faith? Love?
But then there was that last part. "When darkness falls and truth is lost." A test, then. When everything goes wrong, which path remains truest?
Faith seemed like a strong contender. When all else fails, belief endures. But... no. Too obvious. Sphinxes didn''t pose riddles with obvious answers. That was the whole point.
Experience, maybe? Deeds that cannot hide - practical knowledge earned through action rather than study. When everything falls apart, experience remains.
He had that and faith as possible answers. Two chances left. If either was wrong...
Bob hadn''t moved an inch, still sitting there like some bizarre statue. What was he...?
No. Focus. Think.
The key had to be in that last line. "Which path led furthest from the light." Not closest to truth, but furthest from light. Was it a trick question? Was the answer about which path was wrong rather than right?
His head hurt. Was the Sphynx doing something?
Two answers. Two chances. And absolute silence to think in.
Thirty minutes passed.
Wisdom, experience, faith, emotion, belief, instinct, truth itself, memory, love, conscience - each answer seemed perfectly logical until he examined it from another angle. Then it would fall apart, and he''d be back to square one.
Movement drew his attention. Bob was getting up, his movements deliberate and slow. Adom watched, puzzled, as the leprechaun walked over and sat directly in front of him. What was he doing?
Adom looked away, his gaze finding the sphinx instead. It had stopped its grooming, head tilted, watching them with unblinking eyes. He tried to ignore Bob''s presence, tried to return to his mental list of possible answers, but...
From the corner of his eye, he could see Bob''s hand moving against the stone floor. Was he writing something? No, that would count as communication, wouldn''t it? The sphinx wasn''t stopping him. In fact...
The massive creature padded closer, moving with liquid grace until it loomed over them both. Its shadow fell across Adom''s face as it bent down, that eternal smile still fixed in place, waiting. Expecting.
Why wasn''t it stopping Bob? Why was it waiting for Adom to look down? Was this another trick? Another trap?
If Bob was risking this, it had to be important. Right?
...Right?
After a moment''s hesitation, Adom looked down.
One word: MIND
Darkness immediately slammed into him like a physical blow. He almost chuckled - of course. Of course the sphinx would let them have that one last exchange, just to take another sense. Bastard probably had that smug smile plastered across its face right now.
His heart raced. One chance left. One single chance before the final sense would be stripped away, leaving them helpless prey for the sphinx. The pressure of it made his thoughts scatter like startled birds.
Again. Focus.
Mind? What did that have to do with anything? He''d been considering wisdom, knowledge, emotion, faith... but mind? He turned the word over in his thoughts, trying to connect it to the riddle. Three scholars, books, deeds, hearts... was Bob onto something, or had they just wasted their second-to-last sense on a dead end?
Only touch remained now. And twenty-five minutes to solve this in complete darkness and silence.
At least he wouldn''t have to look at that monocled face anymore.
The author''s content has been appropriated; report any instances of this story on Amazon.
The headache intensified.
Mind... no, that couldn''t be the answer. It was too simple, didn''t fit the structure of the riddle at all. Which meant Bob was trying to tell him something else.
Mind. Mind magic?
Oh?
Oh!
The realization hit. Bob wasn''t giving him an answer. He was most likely telling Adom to lower his mental defenses. But why would he...?
Unless...
[Indomitable Will]
In the darkness and silence, Adom carefully, deliberately, let his mental barriers drop. It felt like unclenching a muscle he hadn''t known was tense - the mental equivalent of finally releasing a breath held for so long he''d forgotten he was holding it.
Almost immediately, heaviness crept through his body. His muscles felt like lead, his thoughts growing sluggish. Even through touch alone, he could feel himself sliding sideways, stone floor cool against his cheek.
The last thing he registered before consciousness fled was the faint sensation of falling, falling, falling...
The sensation of stone against his cheek vanished, replaced by soft grass beneath his feet. Sunlight filtered through leaves above, birds called to each other in the canopy, and a warm breeze carried the scent of wildflowers.
"Took you long enough."
Bob sat on a fallen log, looking exactly as he had in the real world, but somehow... more at ease. More in his element.
"Almost thought I''d made a mistake, thinking you were smart."
"You can dream walk?" Adom blurted out, still trying to process the shift from dark silence to this vibrant forest.
Dream walking was, at its core, a specialized form of mind magic that let the user enter and manipulate the dreams of others. Unlike regular mind magic that affected consciousness directly, dream walking operated in that strange space between sleeping and waking - the realm where minds naturally drifted during sleep.
Most creatures capable of it were spirits, beings of pure mind and energy who could slip between dreams as easily as humans walked through doorways. Some particularly skilled mages could manage it too, though it took years of study and precise control.
Which made Bob''s ability all the more puzzling.
Leprechauns were magical creatures, yes, but they weren''t spirits. They were firmly physical beings, known more for their crafting abilities and mischievous nature than any sort of mind magic. Yet here he was, casually strolling through Adom''s dreamspace like he owned it.
"How are you even doing this?" Adom asked, watching a butterfly that seemed to be made of liquid gold float past his nose.
"We don''t have time for magical theory right now," Bob cut him off, waving a hand dismissively. "Where are you at with the riddle?"
"Right." Adom nodded, pushing back his questions for later - assuming there would be a later. "I''ve got about ten possibilities. Faith, experience, wisdom, memory... but none of them feel quite right. They all fall apart when I look at them too closely."
"Let''s break this down, lad," Bob said, conjuring two more logs for them to sit on. "Time''s slipperier than a greased pig in here, so we''ve got to make haste. What''s got your mind in knots?"
"The scholars," Adom began, settling onto one of the logs. "Three different approaches to truth. Books, deeds, hearts - knowledge, action, and feeling. But then it asks which path led furthest from the light, not closest to truth."
"Ach, could be a trick question," Bob muttered, picking at some moss. "Reminds me of me cousin Tommy, the wee devil. Caught him nicking me gold, he did. Swore on his mother''s grave he''d never tell me another lie. Kept his word too - stopped talking to me altogether, the crafty little shite."
"What did you say?"
"Eh? About Tommy? Just that the lying gobshite kept his word by not speaking to me at all instead of-"
"No, before that. About it being a trick question." Adom stood up, pacing. "We''re looking at it wrong. We''re assuming the scholars are searching for truth together, but what if they''re not? What if they''re competing?"
Bob shrugged. "Makes sense, don''t it? Put three folk in a room, they''ll be at each other''s throats before you can say ''top o'' the morning.''"
"And each would believe their way is right..." Adom''s mind was racing now. "Books cannot lie - but they can be misinterpreted. Deeds cannot hide - but their meaning can be twisted. Hearts cannot die - but they can be..."
The dream-forest darkened suddenly. Bob leapt to his feet with a string of colorful curses. "The beastie''s found us!"
The trees began to twist, their branches turning to writhing shadows. The golden butterfly from earlier melted, its wings dripping onto the forest floor like molten metal.
"When darkness falls and truth is lost," a familiar voice echoed from everywhere and nowhere. The sphinx materialized from the shadows, but wrong - too many teeth, too many eyes, its monocle reflecting impossible geometries.
"Well, well, well," it purred, each word distorting the dream further. "Aren''t you two a clever pair?"
"Seven seconds," the sphinx''s distorted voice reverberated through the twisting dreamscape. "Shall we count together?"
"Go feck yourself, you pompous cat!" Bob snarled, stepping in front of Adom. "If you want a fight-"
"Six..."
The forest was collapsing inward, reality folding like wet paper.
"Five..."
"We were so close," Adom muttered, his mind still racing. Books, deeds, hearts...
"Four..."
When darkness falls and truth is lost...
"Three..."
Each believing their path...
"Two..."
"BETRAYAL!" Adom screamed.
The countdown stopped. The dream froze mid-collapse, held in perfect stasis. The sphinx''s monstrous form paused, then melted away like morning mist, leaving only the familiar monocled face they knew. Its eternal smile faltered for just a moment.
"Oh," it said, sounding almost disappointed. "And here I was hoping you''d fail this one. No fun."
The dream shattered-
Adom jerked awake, gasping, his sense of touch overwhelmed by the cold stone beneath him. Next to him, he heard Bob wheeze as consciousness returned.
"Congratulations," came the sphinx''s voice, somehow managing to sound both pleased and annoyed at once. "You have passed the riddles."
"Ha! Knew you''d crack it, lad!" Bob wheezed between fits of laughter, slapping his knee. "Clever as a fox in a henhouse, you are! Though I''ll tell you what - for a moment there, when that overgrown housecat started its countdown, I thought we were proper fecked!"
Adom barely heard him, too busy cursing his own curiosity.
All because he couldn''t leave a strange cave entrance alone. All because he had to know what was behind that glowing barrier. Now here he was, one test down, an even harder one ahead, and no way to turn back.
Bob was still going, practically dancing now. "Did you see its face? Like someone poured salt in its sugar bowl, it was! Serves you right, you pompous-"
"If you''re quite finished celebrating the most elementary portion of our encounter," the sphinx cut in, its voice dry as desert sand, "we can proceed to what you''ve actually come here for."
Both of them fell silent.
The sphinx''s smile widened just a fraction. "The puzzles await." Its tail swished lazily through the air. "Shall we begin?"
As Bob continued his celebratory jig, Adom''s mind began to work in a different direction.
He studied the sphinx - its perfectly composed posture, that eternal smile, the way it watched them through that ridiculous monocle with barely concealed amusement.
A thought came to mind. They''d solved the riddles, yes. Barely. With luck and dream magic and split-second timing. And now... puzzles. After that, what? How many layers of challenge could this creature invent?
The answer was obvious: as many as it wanted.
There were no rules here except those the sphinx chose to enforce. No oversight, no limitations. It could keep adding conditions, raising difficulties, moving goalposts until they inevitably failed. And then... well, sphinxes weren''t known for letting their prey leave disappointed.
He watched Bob, still laughing and cursing in equal measure, and felt an unfamiliar darkness settle over his thoughts. If this trial was about wisdom, then the wise thing to do would be to get out of here. Not trying to solve puzzles and infinite riddles.
They needed an exit strategy.
Or - and the thought surprised him with how natural it felt - they needed to figure out how to kill a sphinx.
The sphinx''s paw moved through the air with deliberate grace, and suddenly there was an orb floating between them. About the size of a melon, its surface was a maze of interlocking runes that seemed to shift and dance in the cave''s dim light.
"One hour," it said simply. "No communication." Its eyes flicked to Bob, who was already opening his mouth. "No complaints." The monocle glinted. "And no magic."
Adom''s hand, already halfway to the orb, froze. Runes without magic were like... like a book without words. The entire point of runic arrays was their ability to channel and shape magical energy. Even the simplest activation required mana.
Bob''s face was turning an interesting shade of red, his mouth opening and closing like a fish out of water. Adom''s arm twitched instinctively to stop him, but he caught himself - even that would have counted as communication.
The leprechaun''s face then went from red to purple, but he kept his mouth shut. Somehow.
Good.
The sphinx leaned forward slightly, tail curling with anticipation. "Ah," it sighed, watching Bob struggle against his own nature. "Shame. I thought you''d make it funnier."
The orb continued to float between them, its runes mockingly inert, while the sphinx settled back to watch.
Adom settled onto the cold floor, the orb''s shifting runes reflecting in his eyes. But his mind was elsewhere.
One hour. Not to solve a puzzle - to solve a sphinx.
He watched it from the corner of his eye. The way it lounged in the air as if gravity was merely a polite suggestion. The way shadows bent around it slightly wrong. Everything here moved to its will, reality itself bowing to its whims. In its domain, a sphinx was practically a god.
In its domain...
His fingers traced absent patterns in the dust as his mind raced. No one killed sphinxes because in their lairs, they were invincible. But outside... without their reality-bending powers... without their ability to strip senses and twist dreams...
The sphinx''s purr deepened as it watched him, clearly amused by whatever it thought he was plotting. Bob had settled into sullen silence, probably still fighting the urge to curse in seventeen different dialects.
Slowly, deliberately, Adom reached into his inventory and withdrew Garrett''s dimensional bag. The sphinx''s ears perked up with interest as he began methodically emptying it onto the floor. Gold coins clinked and rolled. Scrolls clattered. Potion bottles clinked against each other.
"Ooh," the sphinx practically cooed, tail curling with curiosity. "What are we doing here?" Its monocle glinted as it leaned forward to watch, clearly thinking this was part of some attempt at the puzzle.
The pile of items grew. More coins. A silver chalice. Three rubies. A lot of other things.
Bob''s eyes followed the gold with professional interest, but Adom kept his focus on the now-empty bag, mind racing through calculations and possibilities.
Runes were, at their core, instructions written into reality itself. The simplest ones were single commands - heat, light, force. But the real art came in their combination, the way they flowed into each other, each modification changing how mana moved through the whole array.
Dimensional bags were something else entirely. The rune that created their pocket dimensions was a masterpiece of magical engineering, refined over centuries. What had once been a sprawling array of hundreds of interconnected symbols had been gradually compressed, simplified, optimized.
The modern version looked almost elegant: three concentric circles, crossed by lines that bent at precisely calculated angles, with smaller symbols nestled in the spaces between - like a mandala designed by a mathematician with an obsession for spatial geometry.
Here was the neat part: the rune was actually terrifyingly unstable.
The only reason dimensional bags worked at all was because of the layers of security runes wrapped around them, preventing any tampering with the dimensional matrix. Without those safeguards, the pocket dimension would collapse in on itself, creating a vacuum that would try to equalize with reality.
Anything nearby would be pulled in until the pocket was full, at which point it would seal permanently - a one-way trip into a space between spaces.
Only someone either suicidally brave or stubbornly desperate would even consider bypassing those security runes to mess with the dimensional matrix itself. Someone who knew exactly what they were doing - or exactly what they wanted to break. A runicologist.
Adom, staring at his empty bag while the sphinx watched with growing curiosity, was definitely all of the above.
Ha. Haha...
With practiced precision, Adom dragged his thumbnail across his palm, letting blood well up. Blood was, after all, the most basic magical conductor - far less detectable than actively channeling mana. The sphinx continued watching, head tilted, as Adom pretended to examine the bag''s outer surface.
The security runes were simple enough to bypass if you knew what you were looking for. Three key points, modified with exactly two drops of blood each. The standard Arnstadt configuration, used in nearly all modern dimensional bags. The blood seeped into the leather, and he felt the first layer of protection dissolve.
The second layer was trickier. Temporal locks, designed to prevent exactly this kind of tampering by desynchronizing the rune matrix from local time. But they had a weakness - they were calibrated assuming someone would try to rush the process. Moving deliberately slowly, he traced the counterpattern with his bloodied nail, letting each line stabilize before moving to the next. Fifteen seconds per stroke. Enough time for the temporal disruption to normalize.
Finally, he reached the dimensional rune itself. The real artistry wasn''t in breaking it - that was easy. The challenge was modifying it just enough to create instability while maintaining directional control. Too much damage and the vacuum would pull everything in. Too little and it wouldn''t activate at all.
He altered three key vertices, using the bag''s own geometric pattern as a guide. Each vertex needed to be shifted just enough to create instability - about one-eighth of the distance to their nearest neighboring rune.
Too far would cause immediate collapse, too little would fail to compromise the matrix. After years of studying runic arrays, his fingers knew the exact distance by feel, like a locksmith sensing tumbler positions.
The blood seeped into the final marks, and he felt the matrix shiver, holding itself together by a thread. Like a dam with hairline cracks, just waiting for the right pressure.
The intact bag in his hands meant success - the dimensional matrix was now like a coiled spring, waiting for its trigger. One opening was all it would take. The bag closed with a soft click.
"No solution yet?" the sphinx asked, its voice dripping with false sympathy. "Thirty minutes remaining."
Adom looked up at the creature and smiled. Not a nervous smile, or a defeated one, but the kind of smile that made the sphinx''s own falter for just a fraction of a second.
"And what," it asked, monocle glinting, "could possibly be amusing you at this moment?"
Adom kept smiling, tilting his head slightly as if to say ''you know I can''t answer that.''
The sphinx''s tail twitched - the first genuine sign of irritation he''d seen from it. "Oh, come now. I said you couldn''t communicate with each other. I never said anything about speaking with me."
Of course you didn''t, Adom thought, maintaining his smile. And if I''d tried to point that out earlier, you''d have created a new rule on the spot.
But now... now he just needed to figure out how to get an ancient, reality-bending creature of pure cunning to stick its head in a bag.
"Hey. What are your thoughts on time travel?" Adom asked casually, running his fingers along the bag''s edge.
The sphinx blinked. "You do realize you have thirty minutes left?" A pause. "Twenty-nine, now."
"Yes."
"And you wish to spend your remaining time discussing theoretical impossibilities?" Its tail swished lazily. "If those are to be your last moments, who am I to deny you?"
"Impossibilities?" Adom''s smile widened fractionally. There it was - that slight shift in the sphinx''s posture, that barely perceptible lean forward. For all their power, sphinxes had one consistent weakness: they couldn''t resist new knowledge. And what could be more tempting than something they believed impossible?
"Time travel," the sphinx stated flatly, "is a magical impossibility. The mana requirements alone-"
"What if I could prove otherwise?"
The sphinx''s tail stopped mid-swish. Its eternal smile flickered, replaced for just a moment by something else - hunger. Not the physical kind it had shown before, but the intellectual variety. The need to know.
"Prove?" it purred, shifting slightly closer. "And how would you propose to do that?"
"My arrival here is proof; I traveled from the future."
Bob lifted his head.
The sphinx''s purr cut off abruptly. Its monocle actually slipped a fraction before realigning itself. For the first time, the creature''s composed demeanor cracked, revealing raw curiosity underneath.
"That''s..." it started, then paused, recalculating. "You''re lying."
"Am I?" Adom kept his voice carefully neutral. "You can sense lies, can''t you? All sphinxes can. So tell me - am I lying? Alexandros?"
The sphinx''s composure shattered completely. Its monocle slipped off, dangling from its chain as its massive head jerked back in shock. "Wait a minute... How could you possibly-"
"It''s a perk of time travel," Adom said simply.
The creature''s tail had stopped moving entirely now. Its eyes narrowed, studying him with new intensity. Testing. Probing. Looking for the deception it was certain had to be there.
The silence stretched. The sphinx drifted closer, almost unconsciously, its scholarly nature warring with its certainty that time travel was impossible.
"Twenty-seven minutes," it said finally, but its voice had lost its mocking edge. "Explain."
"The method is less important than the result." Adom replied. Chuckling.
The sphinx''s eyes narrowed to slits. It despised not knowing - all sphinxes did. And now here was someone claiming to know something it didn''t, something it thought impossible, and refusing to share the details?
"Less important?" Its voice had dropped an octave, a hint of growl beneath the scholarly tone. The sphinx drifted even closer, almost at arm''s length now. "You claim to have achieved what centuries of mages and archmages couldn''t even theorize properly, and you consider the method... less important?"
Adom kept his expression carefully neutral, though his heart was hammering. The bag felt heavy in his hands. Not yet. Not quite yet.
"The proof is in the result," he said simply. "Unless, of course, you''re not interested in seeing it?"
The sphinx''s tail was lashing now, its scholarly patience warring with growing frustration. "Twenty-six minutes," it said, but the time seemed almost an afterthought now. "Show me."
"Allow me to present the result."
He lifted the bag slowly, deliberately, watching the sphinx''s eyes lock onto it with laser focus. The creature was practically hovering over him now, its scholarly demeanor completely overtaken by raw intellectual hunger. Even its monocle seemed to gleam with anticipation.
The perfect predator, about to become prey.
One movement. That''s all he would have. One chance to trigger the compromised dimensional matrix before the sphinx could react, before it could bend reality or strip his senses or simply tear him apart.
His fingers found the opening clasp.
Bob, forgotten in the corner, had gone completely still, as if sensing the tension in the air.
"Well?" the sphinx purred, leaning closer still, its eternal smile now tight with impatience. "Show me this impossible-"
Click.
The vacuum erupted with the force of a collapsing star.
Reality warped and twisted as the compromised dimensional matrix tore open, creating a pull that made Adom''s bones vibrate. The sphinx''s eyes widened in that fraction of a second before understanding hit - literally.
"YOU DARE-" its roar cut short as the force yanked it forward. Its claws carved deep gouges into the stone floor, golden fur rippling in the dimensional wind. Bob dove behind a boulder, screaming something that would have made a sailor blush.
Adom braced himself behind the bag, feet sliding on the stone. The pull was stronger than he''d calculated - much stronger. His robes whipped violently, he was trying to maintain his glasses on his nose, and loose stones flew past his head into the void.
The sphinx''s rear half was already being drawn in, its form distorting as it fought against the dimensional pull. But instead of using its reality-bending powers, it was fully occupied with raw physical resistance, muscles straining, claws leaving molten streaks in the stone.
See, there''s a cruel irony in dimensional magic - for all its reality-warping might, a sphinx becomes as helpless as a kitten when caught between worlds. The bag''s maw had created a pocket where Alexandros''s powers meant nothing, like a king suddenly stripped of his crown and army the moment he steps into foreign lands.
Here, in this between-space, where the cave''s reality bled into the endless void of the bag, all the creature had were its muscles, claws, and increasingly desperate determination not to be pulled into a dimension it couldn''t bend to its will.
Hah. As if.
[Fireball]!
Adom''s spell struck true, engulfing the sphinx''s face. It screamed - not its usual controlled voice, but something ancient and furious.
[Lightning Chain]
[Force Bolt]
[Burning Arrow]
Each spell hammered into the creature as it struggled.
"FECKING BRILLIANT!" Bob emerged from cover, hurling his own arsenal. Daggers, coins, and what looked suspiciously like stolen silverware pelted the sphinx''s face.
But it was working free. Inch by terrible inch, its muscles straining, the sphinx was pulling itself out of the vortex. Its monocle had fallen, revealing an eye blazing with fury.
Adom''s mana was dropping fast - [200], [150], [100]... The spells weren''t enough. The bag needed to fill completely to seal, and the sphinx was too strong, too-
Oh!
"Bob! The bolt! NOW!"
The leprechaun understood instantly, tossing his prized multiplying bolt. Adom caught it and threw it into the vortex. The bolt split into two, then four, then sixteen, then hundreds, thousands, each copy striking the sphinx before being sucked into the void. A storm of metal, each hit driving the creature back slightly.
"HAH! EAT THAT, YE PRETENTIOUS FELINE!" Bob cackled.
The sphinx''s roar of rage turned to one of desperation as the combined force finally overwhelmed it. Its claws left burning trails in the air itself as it fought, but the vacuum was winning. Just a little more...
But Adom could see its wings starting to spread, preparing for one final effort. If it got them fully extended-
"No... NO-" The sphinx''s final scream cut off with a thunderous BOOM that shook the entire cave. The shockwave sent Adom cartwheeling through the air, his glasses vanishing into the void in the last instant before the bag sealed. Bob flew in the opposite direction with a string of creative curses that ended in a solid thunk against stone.
Dust filled the air, thick enough to choke on. Debris rained down from the ceiling, pinging off rocks and adding to the chaos.
"LAD! LAD, WHERE ARE YE?" Bob''s voice echoed through the haze.
Adom pushed himself up, every muscle screaming. "Here," he managed between coughs.
A wet, gurgling sound froze them both.
"Bloody hell," Bob whispered. "The bastard''s still-"
A weak curse in an ancient language drifted through the settling dust, followed by the sound of liquid spattering on stone.
Adom forced himself to his feet, vision blurry without his glasses. His mana reserves were dangerously low - barely enough for two more spells. But if he was going to die here anyway...
The dust began to clear.
The sealed bag lay innocently on the cave floor, looking almost pristine despite everything. Behind it...
The sphinx''s front half lay sprawled on the stone, the rest of its body cleanly severed where the dimensional pocket had sealed. Golden fur matted with ichor, wings broken and twisted at unnatural angles. One had been completely crushed by falling rocks. Its chest heaved with labored breaths, each one bringing fresh streams of golden fluid from its mouth.
But its eyes - its eyes were still sharp, still focused, still burning with intelligence as they fixed on Adom and Bob. Its eternal smile had finally vanished, replaced by a grimace of pain and fury.
"You..." it rasped, more ichor bubbling up. "How... dare..."
Adom didn''t hesitate.
The Flamebrand Sword flashed in his grip as he lunged forward. No speeches. No final words. Just the brutal necessity of survival.
The blade struck true, punching through fur and bone with a wet crunch. The sphinx''s eyes widened - not in pain or fear, but in pure shock. Its mouth opened, but instead of words, only golden blood bubbled forth.
Adom twisted the blade, driving it deeper, feeling the resistance of muscle and sinew give way. The sphinx''s remaining claws scraped weakly against the stone, leaving molten trails that quickly cooled. Its one intact wing spasmed, then fell limp.
Those ancient, intelligent eyes locked with his for one final moment. The knowledge in them clouded, dimmed, and finally went dark - like stars winking out one by one.
The sphinx''s head slumped forward, its body sagging around the embedded blade. Golden blood pooled beneath it, steaming slightly where it touched the stone.
Silence fell in the cave, broken only by Adom''s ragged breathing and the soft plink of liquid dripping from the sword''s hilt.
"YE DID IT! YE ACTUALLY BLOODY DID IT!" Bob was jumping up and down, his hat long lost in the chaos. "YOU THOUGHT YOU OUTSMARTED US, BUT WE OUTSMARTED YOUR OUTSMARTING!" His manic laughter echoed through the cave. "ADOM! ADOM! ADOM!" His voice bounced off the walls like a victory chant. "I''ve never- In all me years- A SPHINX! A bloody SPHINX!"
As Bob''s celebration continued, blue text materialized in Adom''s vision:
[Congratulations! You have completed the Trial of Wisdom!]
[Your ability to see through the sphinx''s deception and refuse to continue its game of riddles marks you as truly wise.]
[Rare Achievement: First sphinx slaying in 300 years]
Bob was still dancing around, picking up scattered gold coins and what remained of his multiplying bolt. "We''re rich! We''re alive! And we''re bloody RICH!"
[+3 White Wyrm Body]
[Physical Resistance increased]
His fingers brushed against the golden monocle lying in the blood. The artifact shimmered and contracted, shrinking until it fit perfectly in his palm - no longer sized for a massive sphinx''s eye.
The delicate frame bore flowing dwarven runes, intertwining like vines around the rim. Despite its age, the craftsmanship was unmistakable - definitely post-Sundering era work. Before men, elves and dwarves separated. A crack ran through the lens, likely from the battle.
[Riddler''s Bane (S-Class)]
This monocle enhances magical perception, allowing the wearer to perceive the subtle patterns and structures within magical phenomena they study. The deeper the wearer''s knowledge of a particular magical system, the more intricate details the monocle reveals.
Effects:
- Reveals the underlying structure of magical workings
- Heightens perception of mana flow and its interactions
Note: The monocle does not grant knowledge - it only illuminates what the user already understands at a deeper level.
[Current Status: Active]
Adom slipped the monocle over his right eye, and the world... shifted. Not dramatically, but in countless subtle ways that made his breath catch. The air itself seemed alive with gossamer threads of mana - ambient magic he''d always had to strain to perceive now danced clearly in his vision. The cave walls thrummed with old enchantments, their patterns unfurling like ancient tapestries.
[Light], he cast experimentally.
His eyes widened. Through the monocle, he could see the exact way his mana coalesced, the precise moment it transformed into luminous energy. The spell''s structure was laid bare - not just the surface pattern he''d memorized, but the deeper flows and eddies that made it work. Like seeing the individual brushstrokes in a painting he''d only ever viewed from afar.
The residual magic from their battle still lingered in the air. He could trace the exact path his fireball had taken, see where it had interacted with the sphinx''s failing reality-bend. Even the dimensional bag''s fractured matrix was visible, its broken geometry still bleeding traces of power.
Fascinating. With this, he could-
"Ooh, shiny." Bob wandered over, peering at the monocle. "That''s some fancy eyewear ye got there. Interesting?"
"Very," Adom replied before storing it in his inventory.
Feeling the magical exhaustion weighing heavily on him, Adom reached for one of the high-grade mana potions he''d purchased, now on the ground.
The crystalline liquid went down smoothly - none of that bitter aftertaste of cheaper potions. Instead, it tasted like honeyed mint tea with a hint of citrus. You could always tell the quality by how sweet it was.
[Mana regenerating...]
"You about done staring at that trinket?" Bob called, his dimensional bag steadily swallowing coin after golden coin. "Not that I''m complaining about the haul, mind you, but you haven''t touched a single piece of this lovely gold." He paused, narrowing his eyes suspiciously. "Feeling ill?"
Adom smiled tiredly. "Take it all, Bob. You earned it."
"Now I know something''s wrong with- wait, what?" The leprechaun froze mid-grab. "All of it? Seriously?"
"All yours."
Bob''s grin threatened to split his face as he began shoveling gold faster. "You''re either the most generous mage I''ve ever met or the most foolish. Either way, I''m not arguing!"
Adom turned toward the passage the sphinx had been guarding.