I cast my gaze over the mountainous region of the Dungeon, which, to my surprise, extends well beyond the full area of my perception. The mountain range stretches well over two thousand kilometers with no seeming end.
I feel the curious prodding of around two dozen mind-mage monsters and quickly push back as I create blind spots around them before they get more aggressive.
I should have slowly expanded my perceptive area, so I donât aggro so many at once.
That could have gone the same way as the Mind Eater if the monsters weren't so cautious. I suppose thatâs the benefit of such a high-level area; monsters that do spy on you are likely able to defend themselves, so everyone develops a cautious nature.
There are dozens of monster dens ranging from the amethyst golem caves with monsters in the one thousand total level range, to a volcanic magma chamber full of drakes totaling over two thousand levels in their classes. Each den has a Dungeon Waystone near the entrance. Between the Dens are many points of interest, such as particularly tall mountain peaks, special glades in small valleys, and many more, most marked with Waystones too.
Dangerous monsters such as powerful Rocs, and the many-eyed goat-like gazers I saw last time are way above those found in the dens averaging around a total level of three thousand. Beneath the ground, many worm-like creatures dig through the ground, with two thousand levels on average, making them a very dangerous hazard to anyone traveling these mountains.
So, where should we start training? I doubt I am capable of slaying the monsters with a combined level of two or more thousand, so I should start with the ones at or below level one thousand, so that is the amethyst golem caves.
I summon several clones to train in Dens of the other regions. Iâm not here for only [Manipulate Magic] training; Iâm going to make full use of the time here. After that, we fly to our destination. After a couple of hours of flying, we land at the Waystone near the amethyst caves, and I attune the key.
âIâll stay here. If thereâs danger nearby, I can just use the Key to teleport away.â I quickly make a sofa, plopping it next to the waystone and summon another clone as I jump into the cushions.
Kayafe gives me a look placing a hand on her hip.
âWhat?â I ask with a mischievous smile. âI fight monsters, they donât fight me!â I conjure several guard fairies. I donât expect them to be anything other than a light distraction while I run away from any potential threats.
âThe most frustrating part is that I canât argue against that. While everyone else fights in mortal combat, you just sit in a comfortable chair, and your perception is so good, that nothing can sneak up on you.â Kayafe sighs. âWell, letâs go in thenâ
Kayafe leads my clone into the caves and it isnât long until we hear the sounds of the golems digging new passages, the sound of rock smashing rock.
âThere are two types of golems,â Kayafe says, like a teacher giving a lecture to a classroom of students. âThese ones are monster-golems, made of a material given life. They often have âorgansâ, usually a gem, which is the âskeletonâ that defines their body. The rock is just a material around their real body. They can absorb more gems in order to grow, or remove gems they have previously absorbed from their influence for a life-giving âmotherâ crystal to make more monster-golems.â
âYou seem to know a lot about golems,â I remark.
âIâve spent some time among some golem shapers,â Kayafe shrugs. âThe second type are Golem-Constructs. These are enchanted or magical items emulating Monster-Golems. The constructed type canât get stronger, but are also made very strong, especially the rare legendary ones.â
The digging golems are careful not to break any amethysts they come across and seem to have an innate sense of where the crystals are, always digging in a straight line towards them.
âThe golems closest to us are worker typesâ Kayafe continues her lesson. âThe guardian types are fewer but much stronger and are often heavily armored with stone which gives them a bulky look. If you come across one, that means you are near the Hymn of Life that made them. Monster-Golems are often used to locate sources of gems, with some kingdoms protecting the Hymn of Life to make workers that they can then slay for training and precious resources, especially since the gems or crystals they absorb will gain magical properties once slain.â
âBut if the golem willingly removes the gems from their body, they donât gain any magical properties?â I ask.
âCorrectâ
I make a storage ring for my clone, wrapping the mana around its finger before enchanting it; I donât want to leave anything useful behind. Normally the enchantments constantly draw mana from the wearer to maintain its effects, but now I am constantly feeding it mana by transforming the mana around it into reserved mana.
âSo, whatâs the best way to defeat them without damaging the materials?â I ask.
âNon-destructive means, of course. This is a good opportunity for you to learn how to drain vitality from your enemies. This should be a first choice of attack anyway, since those who canât resist or replenish faster than you are draining will be easily defeated. Golems are very tough, but this is one of their weaknesses.â
Directly attacking their vitality, huh? I doubt Golems are smarter than other hive-type monsters; they sound a lot like ants or bees.
âOne thing worth mentioning, the Hymn of Life will be immune to vitality damage. Or rather, itâs not just immune; it is their preferred method of attack.â
âI see, thank you,â I say as we come upon the first Golem.
I reach out to one of the worker golems, mentally grabbing its vitality with everything I can muster, and rip out as much as I can. Its vitality is easily stripped off from the amethysts making up its body, which falls down like a puppet whose strings have been cut. The outer rock becomes brittle and shatters as it hits the ground, revealing the now lifeless precious stone beneath. The notification of the kill chimes in my mind.
âThat⦠was easy?â I say, flabbergasted at how quickly I defeated it.
âI did say they are weak to vitality attacks,â Kayafe chuckles.
I even got a level up in my skill from that attack. Perhaps I can even defeat the guardian Golems! Unfortunately, because I didnât use my Bond or Classes, I got almost no experience in those. However, it will count for my race, so itâs not a complete waste, but this enforces the point that I also have to train my Bond and not rely only on this skill.
âNow, instead of targeting just one Golem, attack multiple; keep increasing how many you drain at once until you start struggling to do so, even if itâs one hundred of them,â Kayafe says, her tail dancing behind her amusedly.
I do so, reaching out to the five nearest Golems, easily ripping out their vitality. I conjure another clone and pass it the storage ring to retrieve the materials. Next, I drain the vitality of the nearest eight, then fifteen, then twenty. At twenty-two, I am no longer slaying the Golems instantly, but I still continue until I am draining the vitality of thirty.
These Golems are over twice my level, and I am slaying them so easily! This is how strong I am now?
âKeep in mind you have a ridiculously low level, and your stats arenât up to par; you should be able to slay more. I can kill all the golem workers here, which is what you should be aiming towards; just another reason why Bond Classes hold you back.â
âI get it! You donât like Bonds!â I flick a tail, tired of her biased opinion.
I continue to train, slaying several more golems in an effort to learn the best way to drain vitality from my foes. The Golems act erratically, alarmed by the constant damage being inflicted upon them.
âNo creature is going to let you take their vitality, they can resist so long as they are not met with overwhelming force,â Kayafe says, overlooking my efforts. âThe trick is to find out how to crush their resistance. So, you should avoid killing them. Practice fighting their resistance instead.â
I nod and expand my efforts to include more golems at once, alarming them and engaging in a vitality tug of war. The golems resist in a very straightforward way, simply pulling back. Their issue is that once the vitality leaves the confines of their body, it is no longer considered âtheirsâ, and so they lose all control over it. Itâs a poor method of resistance.
But how else does one resist vitality drain? And this is specifically vitality drain, not attacks directed to vitality like Tanaâs flames which uses vitality as fuel.
I start playing around, testing out other methods to reduce the vitality in my foes that arenât strictly draining, such as transforming the vitality into another form of mana.
âNow you are starting to think outside the box!â Kayafe smiles proudly while her tail swishes about in her excitement. She then replenishes the vitality so my practice dummies donât die.
I feel like thereâs a lot more I can do here. What if I make the vitality inaccessible? I ponder before manipulating the vitality to form solid micro-crystals.
âThatâs a nasty form of attack and exceedingly rare; almost no one will have trained a resistance to that type of vitality damage,â Kayafe grins. âYou are starting to realize the potential of vitality combat.â
âIf making these micro-crystals are effective then what about forming a large vitality crystal in the enemy?â I ask.
âYes, but it will cause a lot of damage and may destroy useful materials, which defeats the purpose of vitality attacks. Plus, there are better forms of attack, so you are better off not bothering unless vitality attacks are your only option.â
I spend the next several hours trying all sorts of vitality attacks and refining the methods. The one thing I canât seem to get right is something in the vein of Tanaâs flames. Any vitality conjured spells coming from me or are first drained from the enemy, which means it is just vitality draining with extra steps. In that regard, Tana has his unique form of attack all to himself.
In the meantime, one of my Clones has reached my fairy friend; Sylanna, the Snowfairy Mother.
âIâm sorry for not seeing you for so long. My home has been facing some problems.â I say apologetically.
âNo problem, friend!â Sylanna giggles. âIâve been here for thousands of years with just my children, so I can live without you for a few months.â
I study the Likeness of Varath, a statue made of war and battle essence. Perhaps itâs time I retrieve it? I suppose I donât have to. Other than the historical value, thereâs no reason to do so. Plus I may make one anyway for the trial.
Hold on. Isnât the likeness special? The statues of Myrou have her image projected onto them, right? And Myrou can possess her likeness or something? Does this mean that the gods can spy on me if I make their likeness? Maybe I should ask Kayafe?
Itâs very convenient to talk with multiple people across large distances with my clones!
âKayafe, what does a likeness of the gods, like the ones you made, actually do?â I ask. After the initial lesson, things quieted down and moved on to just me practicing, Kayafe too made a soft lounge chair to relax in, but her expression shows that she is deep in thought. In any case I need to know if the Likenesses are dangerous.
âHmm? Well, it gives them a direct connection to us. Thatâs why theyâre so hard to create and why they are important. I specifically chose Varath, Myrou, and Venaro because they represent three fundamental pillars of society; Strength, Culture, and Knowledge. The likenesses were supposed to ensure those foundations stand the test of time, although it seems your society has regressed in the strength and knowledge department.â
Venaro and Varath were both in favor of not using my soul as a resource, but they had ulterior motives that may not keep them on my side once they get what they want.
Yeah, on second thought, Itâs best the Likenesses stay here for now. But this is not the only reason why I came to see my fairy friends.
âCan you help me with something, Sylanna?â I ask
âWhat is it?â Sylannaâs musical voice soothes my worries. Did she sense my concern over the Likeness?
âI need to understand beauty moreâ Sylanna has a snow Bond, but she is intimate with beauty essence; perhaps I can get some insight from her.
She giggles, fluttering around me with several other snow fairies.
âBeauty is what you make of it! But if you really want to improve your Bond, then I canât help you; Iâm on the same stage of my Bond as you, so there is not much I am able to teach.â
Fair enough. I should ask Kayafe how she got to level two thousand in her Bond. She must think I am being weird suddenly asking random questions.
âWhat did you do to get to level two thousand in your Bond?â I ask her. âI sorry if I am acting strange, I am having another conversation with someone else but they couldnât help meâ
âThat sounds really useful, almost makes me want to take a mind mage for my last Class,â Kayafe says. âBut to answer your question, I fought a lot of powerful monsters.â
Her straightforward answer does not give me much confidence, but she pauses to think for a moment. It looks like sheâs not done speaking yet. âWith that said, someone whose paths I crossed said that one needs to start merging their Anima with their bond⦠or something along those lines. I have no idea how to do something like that. âYou explored Beauty, you fought with it, you trusted your life with it, and youâve externalized it. Now you must become one with it.ââ She quotes something, slightly changing it for my sake.
âWhat does that mean?â I tilt my head quizzically.
âAgain, Iâm not entirely sure; but Anima is life in concept, right? So you need that concept to include Beauty. Thatâs the biggest part I have trouble with; I donât even know where to begin doing thatâ
I let out a sigh. It doesnât seem like thereâs a shortcut. I could ask Safyr, but sheâs not the type to always answer questions; she prefers that I work it out myself. Looks like I will just have to put my nose to the grindstone and slay a lot of monsters to level up my Bond.