âIt doesnât look like the place.â Isabel voiced everyoneâs thoughts.
And Mila had to agree with her love. They had sneaked as close as possible without getting discovered. The place where the ritual was held was across a spacious field of grass and flowerbeds. Or at least that was what the Messanger claimed.
Because the field was empty. There was nothing here. Or nothing that could be seen by simply looking. But Mila could feel the mana fluctuate. And there was a lot. She was only feeling what was leaking due to poor control, but it made her sweat.
They were taking shelter in yet another empty building. This one was the worst thus far. Mila had seen children's toys and paintings. Whoever were the parents, they had been taking proper care of their kids. She had seen the toys even in the owner's bedroom.
âAn illusion?â Viola took a deep breath. âBecause the place stinks of important people. And poor. And dead. It really doesnât smell good.â
âYes.â The Messengerâs gaze bore into the empty space, where a small bush was proudly displaying its leaves. âThey are there. Hiding. Killing. Casting.â He spoke as if seeing it.
Maybe he did. Mila still couldnât tell what the man was capable of. It wore on her nerves to be constantly so overmatched. It reminded her of the travelling with Silinth, honestly.
After looking at the bush for a while longer, Mila was forced to admit that she couldnât conjure anything more than a vague feeling. âWhat about the âSageâ?â She looked at the buildings that surrounded the empty area, trying to find the group of seven.
âThey are here. They are not our problem. Not now.â The Messenger vaguely stated. âNow, we must move. I have shown you what was needed. Did you learn anything?â He asked Viola, who nodded. âGood. There is another secret entrance into the facility below. Follow me.â
That sounded mighty ominous. Mila looked at the ground, imagining an expansive ant nest below, full of enemies. She then returned her gaze to Isabel. Her girl was chewing her lip while tightly gripping the hammer in her hands.
Isabel looked ready to either fight, puke or jump into a fire. Sometimes, all at once.
âGive us a minute, if you will and can spare.â Mila addressed the rest of the group.
The Messanger nodded. âA minute is fine.â He looked up to where the sun was setting. Of course, the wall obscured the view, but he still seemed to be able to read the time.
When she and Isabel were left alone in the room, Mila walked to her girl and leaned against her. âNow, my dear, what can this lady do for you?â
âI donât want thisâ¦â Isabel suddenly collapsed, only supported by Mila, who quickly caught her.
It was unclear what Isabel meant, so Mila waited while gently patting her girlâs back.
â... I donât want this city to end up like Ocheon.â Isabel let out a sob. âI feel so weak!â She complained. âSo insignificantâ¦â
Mila could understand. She was struggling with the same. They were too weak. There was no question about it. âThatâs why we grow. Thatâs why we are here.â She stated, but there wasnât much strength behind her words. They just felt fitting.
âWe canât even run awayâ¦â Isabel complained. âWhat kind of hell is this?â
Another unfortunate circumstance. Mila felt stifled as well. The lack of options, with the only direction forward, was unpleasant. Granted, she tended to forge onward regardless of the situation.
âWe canât allow all those people to die,â Isabel whispered. âSo many refugees. So many⦠Just like Ocheonâ¦â
âAhâ¦â Mila could only awkwardly keep patting her girlâs back. Isabel had hidden the trauma too well. Mila should have spent more time helping her work through the wound.
âOkay!â Isabel suddenly pushed Mila away. âI am better! Letâs go!â She put on her mask of a demon.
Mila didnât miss the tears rolling down Isabelâs cheeks. âIsabelâ¦â
âWe fight. We grow. Thatâs right. We still can do something about it. This doesnât have to be the same as Ocheon.â Isabel took a few breaths. â... Just saying stuff like that aloud doesnât actually help all that much, huh?â
âIt helped me.â Mila hooked her hand with Isabelâs. âThank you.â
âThatâs⦠thatâs good.â Isabel appeared to be taken aback. âYeah, so⦠We just go and deal with it, right. And then we find Andrew and kick his ass.â
âAnd then we leave the city,â Mila added. âYes. That sounds like a plan.â
âRight. Because there will be a city to leave.â Isabel sounded more spirited.
âAnd then you give me that date you owe.â Mila had more to include. âA magnificent one.â
âI⦠I did say something like that?â Isabel suddenly sounded unsure. âMaybe? Thatâs⦠How?â
âHmm?â Mila began to walk and pulled Isabel along. âWhatever do you mean by how? Of course, by planning. My expectations are high.â She mercilessly added. It was clear that this topic had turned away Isabelâs gloomy thoughts.
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âNot helping.â Isabelâs voice had a tinge of desperation of an entirely different sort. âYour dates were wonderful. I canât beat that.â
âThank you for the praise.â Mila led Isabel to join the group who were waiting at an exit. âI will keep my expectations high.â
âDonât do that. Like, actually. Donât.â Isabel pleaded. She didnât even pay attention to where they were heading next.
All things considered, it was wiser for Mila to try and scout the surroundings, but her girl needed attention now. She did notice a few glances from their group, wondering what the new atmosphere meant. But the peanut gallery could be safely ignored.
âAh, but my love, I am sure youâll do fine. You are a girl I chose to be with, after all.â
âNot helping. Stop that. I see what you are doing. You are trying to mess with my head to keep those fucking dark thoughts away.â
âGuilty as charged,â Mila admitted. They stepped into another mansion. This time, it was a gloomy place, a little rundown. There were also signs of a fight happening here. âBut as always, I am successful. She boasted. âYour mind is now full of me.â
âAnd thatâs a good thing?â Isabel tried to glare at Mila, but the mask made the effort pointless. âWe are about to fight.â
âNot right awayâ¦â The Messanger inserted but was ignored.
âIt is a good thing.â Mila raised her chin. âYou are not brooding anymore. And you can take a few glancing blows. It will quickly awaken your fighting instincts.â
âThatâs not how you taught me.â Isabelâs words were barbed. âOr what? Did you teach me incorrectly?â
âNot at all. I did everything right.â Mila kept her shameless act. At this point, she was just going with the flow. Mila was aware she wasnât a good teacher.
âWhat is this? Are you playing a new character?â
âI never play a character.â
âThen what is this?â
This time, Viola tried to speak. âItâs distracting. Stop that.â Only to be ignored.
âMorale-boosting exercise, of course.â Mila bullshitted.
Which didnât fly with Isabel. âThatâs not how it works, and you know it.â
âYou arenât thinking gloomy thoughts, so it is a morale-boosting exercise by practice.â
Isabel raised a finger to argue more, only to pause. âThat is a good point. Should I thank you?â
âWith that once-in-a-lifetime date, yes.â Mila nodded.
âYou are still set on that?â
âOf course.â
âWe are here.â The Messenger stopped their chatter. âSo, can you please focus? I feel like there are two more Peppers with all that talking.â
âHey!â Viola protested. âI take offence to that! I am not that bad.â
âTrue, you are worse.â The Messanger nodded.
And that was a line Mila didnât want to cross. âI apologise. I didnât realise we were closing Violaâs level of annoyance.â She slightly bowed her head.
âYeah.â Isabel joined. âI donât want to stoop to her level. Sorry.â
âThatâs so mean, right, my trusty swords?â Viola sought support from her mercenaries but only received indifferent looks. âHey! What am I paying you for?â
While Ugum and Raran averted their eyes, Laura did answer the question. âIt is hardly a fair question. I believe you are being annoying on purpose.â
âIf onlyâ¦â The Messenger murmured. âCan you all please focus. I cannot help much but with directions and information.â
These words immediately gathered the attention. Mila studied the cloaked figure. Was this why she couldnât read him? Perhaps a puppet? Clone? It couldnât be a projection as the flesh had substance. Golem of sorts? But the way he just suddenly appeared ruled out these guesses.
In the end, Mila just didnât know. âRather curious how you withheld this information. Why?â
âI am not powerless. I simply cannot act against weak opponents. If you will run into an impossible-to-win fight, Iâll help.â
Mila looked at Viola, who shrugged. âGotta trust the big boss.â
The Messanger led them through the mansion. It quickly became apparent this was one of the points from where the unfortunate âsuppliesâ were fed into the preparations for the ritual.
Drab, grey walls. No furniture. Leftover crates, pieces of clothing and the like were thrown in the corners. All the windows were closed with thick curtains, not allowing light to witness the horrors inside.
With the nightfall so close, it made the place almost completely dark. Raran cast a simple spell - a ball of light that flickered above his raised palm. The long shadows the light source cast made the place even more dreary.
They continued down. While avoiding a broken trolly, Mila stepped on the wide stairs leading down to the basement. Down in the basement, they found dark spots on the ground. Most likely blood.
But the entrance into the underground complex was blocked. Mila studied the large stone slab that stood in their way. âWhy was this place discarded? I would think they needed all the available entrance points to feed their dark magic.â
âLack of trustworthy people.â The Messanger explained. âMr Raran, if you would.â He asked the mage specialising in the earth to free the way.
At least they didnât have to hack their way through like Oscar did. Raran put his hand on the stone slab and started to melt it.
While the mage worked, the Messanger continued. âThey ran out of the workforce. Not many can be trusted to do such dark deeds. Or, thatâs what our comrades concluded.â
Soon, Raran made an opening, which he proceeded to widen. Mila heard distant voices coming from the hole. And the stench of rotten flesh, blood and death.
Viola violently gagged. âFuck me! I donât want to go in there.â
âYou will if you want to see another morning.â The Messanger simply stated.
âYeah, yeah, I know.â Viola looked over Raranâs shoulder. âWhat won't I do forâ¦â She started to mumble.
âAnother reason to go in there.â Isabel's voice was grim. She leaned on Mila. âThis is terrible. How can they do that to other people?â
There was no good answer. Or rather, there were too many. Greed. Insanity. Belief. Patriotism. Desperation and more. Mila could imagine many reasons people did horrible things.
âWe have to stop them.â Isabel hugged Mila tightly. âWe have toâ¦â