Volume 7 Chapter 175 - Mirages of the Great Mythra Desert (3)
Every time he exhaled, Jin felt his mouth drying, as if his breath was filled with sand.
Every day, he walked. Every night, he shivered alone in the piercing cold. Whenever he woke up, he found that his blanket turned very dry and brittle.
One time, he got stung by a scorpion that was never named. Every creature in the Great Mythra Desert had deadly venom. If he hadnât obtained the Thousand-Poison Antidote, his journey would have been far more dangerous.
Jin ate the scorpion to conserve his food. Every bug or two-headed snake with black scales that he saw, he immediately consumed it.
Was it because he swallowed too much sand? The creatures he cooked lazily with his magic smelled and tasted horrible, but he didnât feel it at all.
Crunch, crunch.
The snake got minced between his now-thin cheeks. He let the venom be a substitute for water, and he thanked Yona once more.
Then, four days passed since the first mirage.
He would have never known how much time had passed if the sun and moon didnât set. That was the harsh reality of the Great Desert; everywhere and anywhere he went, it looked the same.
âThere really is no one in this desertâ¦â
That was the most agonizing part.
He had never had such a lonely moment in his life. About ten days had passed since he left Tikan, but the time in the desert passed at a completely different pace than in the real world.
Another week passed.
No snake or scorpion appeared. Jin trekked and trudged through the desert in complete solitude. It would be better if he talked to himself, but his water canteen seemed to have bottomed out. Entertaining himself was not an option either.
And for him, things couldnât get any worse.
December 11th, 1796. There was no other perfect statement to describe the Great Mythra Desert.
âMy food that I rationed⦠is all gone?â
As soon as he woke up, he could only scream. However, only a shallow shout came out of his dry throat.
The food he conserved in the bag he hugged as he slept was all gone. All other items remained as it was, but just his consumables had disappearedânot a single jerky or grain left behind.
He shoved his head into the bag, and even the smell disappeared. As if the food was never there.
âHah.â
He began to curse. He threw his empty canteen across the sand and swore at the sky.
âWhy are you doing this to me, do you wanna fight?!â
His voice didnât even leave an echo. It just scattered into the emptiness of the desert.
He had to keep walking.
The only thing waiting for him was the sweet release of death if he just complained. Even if it was unfair, he couldnât let that stop him.
Even the strongest warriors couldnât survive without food or water. Jin was using his transcending grit to move forward, but it was only because he had no other choice.
A day passed, and the yellow didnât return.
Two days passed, and his frail body began to tremble. Surviving the desert without food or water for two days straight had to be a miracle.
For four days, there were no ponds or oases, no creatures to eat.
Thumpâ¦
He took a bad step and fell to the ground. All strength left his ankles and calves.
In his open mouth, a handful of sand slid in. His mouth was so dry, no sand stuck to his tongue.
He only tripped once, but he felt the exhaustion rapidly spreading through his bones. The desire to sleep forever overtook his brain like a tsunami.
Resisting the urge was not an easy feat. Especially in a hopeless situation.
âShit, itâs just one trip. I only tripped onceâ¦!â
Ptoo!
He grimaced and spat out the sand. He stood up. He felt dizzy at the sunlight reflected by the sand. His weak legs didnât feel like they were his own.
Then, he saw a hand holding a canteen.
Someone showed up right next to Jin and handed it to him. Obviously, there was no person like that in the desert.
âA mirage!â
Whether it was a mirage or a real person, it was important that he or she walked up without any footsteps and offered the canteen. If it were a sword inside of a water bottle, he would have died on the spot.
Shing!
He hit the canteen with the pommel of his sword and fully unsheathed Bradamante. Without even confirming the personâs face, he turned quickly and oriented himself behind them, holding his sword at their neck.
Thump.
Before the canteen even hit the ground, Jin held the opponentâs lifeline.
His speed was like that of a bullet. His body reacted so quickly, he didnât even understand how it had enough strength to move as fast.
The owner of the canteen didnât flinch despite having a sword close to their neck. Then, Jin realized it was a woman in a robe.
The woman held a staff in the opposite hand. A staff made of silver pineâan item he had seen many times before.
The womanâs red hair was also familiar.
Jinâs eyes widened. In his memory, there was only one person with magnificent crimson hair and a silver pine staff.
âValeriaâ¦?â
âCan you move your sword if you arenât really going to kill me?â
Jin slowly lowered the sword near her throat.
She sighed and turned around, welcoming Jin with the face that he longed to see greatly.
Valeria Hister.
It was her who taught Jin the secrets of magic.
âHowâ¦?â
No, it wasnât âhowâ.
She was a mirage. Jin saw a 26-year-old Valeria. Just how she looked when Jin left her in his past life.
Was it because he couldnât take the strenuous days in the desert anymore?
The loneliness and depression that he suppressed for the past two weeks as well as his yearning were all about to burst out.
âItâs the same as when I gave my hand to you three years ago. That day, you were on the ground as well. Just like back then, you aimed your sword at me. Though, your skills werenât as sharp.â
That was Jin in the Garden of Swords three years ago.
However, that was not the case for Valeria. In her memory, Jin just got exiled and started roaming the land like a loser.
âValeria⦠No, Master. Are you the second mirage?â
âI guess so.â
âWhatâs thisâ¦? Are you aware that youâre a mirage?â
âYeah, I am. Well, the real me whoâs going to turn 15 soon doesnât, though.â
âThen what I have to do isâ¦â
âTo kill me and go along.â
It was cruel.
The first thought in Jinâs mind. Jin felt it.
The mirages of the Great Desert werenât born from magic or an ability. The mirages until now were all real people who existed deep within Jinâs heart.
In his heart and memories were the people who were important to him. Hence, when he killed the Tona Twins, he felt like he really killed his own siblings.
And now, he could only feel like he really met his own master.
âI⦠didnât want to reunite with you this way. It would have been better if we met in a better way.â
âDonât do this, Master. Why does it have to be you?â
Valeria picked up the canteen from the ground and threw it to Jin.
âDrink up. If you fight me in that condition, youâll die on my first cast.â
âIs there no other way?â
âYou know whatâs best. Donât deny it. I heard you were reborn and got so much stronger. Your concentration is also much better than the apprentice that I remember. Donât sound like such a pussy.â
Thump.
The canteen fell to Jinâs feet. With quivering hands, he picked it up.
He walked the living hell of a desert for many days, and the water he had been searching for was now right in front of him.
However, he didnât want to drink from it. If he drank it, then afterwardsâ¦
âIâll have to kill her.â
Killing her was incomparable to killing the Tona Twins.
If it werenât for her, Jin would have never gotten a second chance at life. He would have died alone after regretting his 25 miserable years in the Runcandel Clan and roaming the streets like a wild dog.
Because she lent her hand, even when Jin smacked her hand away and wielded his sword. Because she came back to save him.
Jin could exist today.
âYouâve gotten a lot more disrespectful, my apprentice.â
Noticing Jinâs hesitation, Valeria raised her staff. She cast Mana Release, and a deep-blue mana whirlpool appeared at the tip of her silver pine staff.
â7-star magic. Youâre not thinking that you can defeat me with only that, are you? Drink, Jin Runcandel. Iâm also your inner voice. Iâm sure youâre ready to fight me.â
Clickâ¦
He opened the canteen. One more moment of indecisiveness, and she would throw a barrage of spells at him. In Jinâs memories, Valeria Hister was more sword-like than any other warrior.
He then made up his mind. About the love and the hate. The connecting and the severing. The fighting and the fleeing.
âWhat am I to you?â
âMy most valuable, one-and-only apprentice. So all you need to do is to not disappoint me.â
âWould you have really done this?â
âI would have shown you more love than this. I would have hugged you by now. Maybe even kissed you on the forehead.â
âThat doesnât help the situation at all.â
âThen stop asking. Kill me and move along. Thereâs one more, you know? Another mirage is waiting for you.â
Glug, glug!
Jin chugged the water. However, unlike normal water, it filled Jin with energy.
âYou can use any trick up your sleeve. Swordsmanship, spiritual energy. Bring whatever you want to the table.â
Was the Master in his memory that strong? Enough to pour everything into this battle?
He couldnât make a decision quickly. However, he was certain of one thing: the mana gathered in Valeriaâs staff was stronger than he remembered.
âI will regret it if I take you down with my sword. You were everything for my magic, and forever more.â
âWell, I remember the best part about your looks not matching your recklessness.â
Pzzzt!
Valeriaâs mana immediately took the form of electricity. The spell that instantly cooked Jin during his apprentice days.
âAnd that recklessness got me in trouble every day.â
Flash!
Before he could even finish talking, five bolts of lightning fell from the sky. So fast that Jin could barely react.
Flaming with mana, Valeriaâs staff was already prepared to release another spell.
Translator â jhei
Proofreader â yukitokata