Learning to use the ring, certainly compared to merely holding the shard, was simplicity itself. Jack found that he could simply point and recite the spell without much force or mana flow at all. Within seconds, the aura would form and the dire hare fade.
They werenât dropping much in the way of gifts, though. Not like the haul heâd seen Osmando raking in.
âTake into consideration the size disparity between Osmando and the hare, Jackson Grenell,â Luciandro pointed out when Jack asked about it. âOne on one, you could probably throttle a dire hare with your bare hands, could you not?
âJust one?â Jack allowed. âSure, probably.â
âNow imagine Osmando trying it.â
âSo....â Jack paused while he sent the next hare on its way. â...The quantity of the gift is a reflection of the disparity of power between winner and loser?â
âQuantity, quality, and the experience earned for freeing the soul,â Luciandro explained. âAlthough, in the case of the experience differential, the variation is dwarfed by the earned experience variance of the battle itself. You earn far more experience defeating a foe larger or of a higher rank than yourself than for an equal contest or battling a lesser foe.
âFor Osmando, for instance, defeating a creature many orders of magnitude larger than himself gained him far more experience than you gained from defeating one a fraction of your own. And a concurrent increase in giftsâ
Which explained the jaeger drop sword, although heâd pretty much figured that out already.
The ward spell proved a different matter. It wasnât so much that the spell was particularly difficult, as it was that it was a third rank spell, while Jackâs mana manipulation skill remained solidly at rank one. It didnât help that ward manipulation was somewhat finicky.
It took him a number of tries, and taught him the valuable lesson of what a failed castingâs backlash felt like while it was still low ranked enough not to kill him or melt his hand off the end of his wrist. Or, indeed, any of the myriad of other lurid fates Luciandro regaled him with as he danced around in pain, blowing on his scorched fingers.
âWorry not, young Jackson,â the tiny wizard called as Jack cursed his way through the aftermath of another screwup. âSelf healing is up next, and now youâll have a target that will easily show you how well youâve learned it.â
Jack gave him the evilest of evil eyes he could muster. âI already have plenty of holes in me we can use as test subjects,â he rasped. âAnyway,â he lamented. âWouldnât it be easier for me to just flat out remove the ward and for you to put a fresh one in its place? I mean, youâre the one who put up the wards that kept this place safe, right?â
âIâm husbanding my mana,â the mouse told him. âSo that Iâll be able to help you with the bandit mage. As it is, it will be a tricky thing with what little I have remaining, and what little will naturally refresh on our way there.
âNow,â the mouse ordered, âif youâre quite finished flailing about...? Again.â
By comparison, Self Healing (Lesser), the spell most adventurers commonly shortened to Lesser Healing ---although it was technically its own spell, and completely different--- was a breeze. There wasnât even a spoken component.
Concentrate on the injury, aim the mana, and hum a short, easy to remember tune. Even the focus wasnât particularly necessary, as none of what it focused was leaving his body. He was essentially swapping MP for HP, at the rate of three to one.
Higher ranks would grant more favorable exchange rates as well as allow him to heal more serious injuries. Eventually, should his abilities not peak beforehand, heâd be able to cast a version that would initiate autoheal and leave it running in the background while he fought.
Luciandro couldnât tell him whether heâd ever reach that level of power, though. âEvery creature,â he explained, âhas a peak, beyond which it cannot climb. For the vast majority, human, beastkin, and beast alike, that peak is rank zero.â
âNot much of a peak,â Jack grunted.
âBut a peak, nonetheless,â the mouse assured.
"I will tell you a secret now, Jackson Grenell,â the old wizard confided conspiratorially. âThat I know because of who and what I am, and who my master was.â
Jack tilted his head to better hear the soft whisper, since the mouse was once more riding on his shoulder.
âThere is no such thing as an ungifted,â Luciandro told him.
Jack straightened his head abruptly and turned to look the tiny wizard in the eye.
âNo,â Luciandro assured him. âIt is true.
âIn the vast majority of Jehshaâs creatures,â he clarified. âThe gift is vanishingly small. But it is there. Life, itself is the gift, and the gift is life. If you wish, we may discuss this further, and at length, for I feel it something you will eventually need to know, given who youâve found yourself to be involved with. But not now, for it is a long tale, and weâve not the time.
âFor now, it is enough to know that, for most, the gift is so vanishingly faint that they may do nothing with it, useful or otherwise. So faint, that their crystals are, essentially, invisible to all but the most potent of appraisal skills. Their talents so small that they cannot even see the crystals of others.
âFor those we call âgiftedâ,â he raised a finger for emphasis. âThe gift burns brighter, its effects are more pronounced. But even for these, there is a peak. No one knows where this peak lies for any of them... for any of us. We only realize when we notice that we are no longer advancing, regardless of how hard we strive.â
This tale has been unlawfully lifted from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.
âSo a baked in, hard limit,â Jack decided as he examined his freshly healed hand.
âWeelllll,â the mouse shrugged. âHardish. There are ways to enhance the gift. If one knows the secret. My master knew this, and the secret. It was instrumental in the creation of my people. You see, Jackson,â he held a hand to the side of his mouth as though imparting a deep secret. âI, myself, was once an ordinary mouse.â
Jack narrowed his eyes. âOrdinary? Sorry, Iâm having trouble picturing that.â
Luciandro smiled, just a bit. âWould you believe an extraordinary, but common mouse?â
Jack shrugged, nearly dislodging the tiny wizard. âWeâll go with that,â he grinned.
The horse didnât seem to know quite what to make of the situation. It kept turning its head to examine the gaggle of mice clinging to its back. Jack was forced to smack its nose a few times as it reached around to bite before it got the idea that it probably shouldnât do that anymore. Once underway, thereâd be no problem, as the beastâs head would be held forward by the lead rope tied off to Jackâs chestnut
Heâd pulled his own blanket roll from the back of the chestnutâs saddle and draped and folded it over the saddle of the bay the bandit with the massless mace had ridden. Heâd folded and tied the ends to make a couple of troughs in the cloth for the mice to nestle into.
There hadnât been any sort of camping gear on any of the saddles heâd found thus far, which was why the fifty-odd of mice were nestled in his bedroll. He wasnât all that happy about it. They were still mice. But he wasnât about to say anything, and he sure wasnât going to begrudge them the aid after all that had passed.
Around half of them had to satisfy themselves with just hanging on to the rough weave out in the open. Jack noticed that, even after his having modified the ward, they were still staying well clear of the rough gemstone at the leading edge of the saddle.
âSo,â Jack heaved a great breath. âWe done here yet?â
Luciandro, perched on his left shoulder, nodded. âThere is nothing left for us here. Such of our dead as we could find have been laid to rest in the old sanctuary, and such belongings as could be salvaged are on the last horse.â
âAnd we arenât leaving anybody behind?â Although he already knew. His detect life skill was showing no signs of life within more than a mile.
âNo one alive,â Meynardo sighed from his right shoulder. âWe searched far out into the grass for more bodies, but found none.â
âSo weâre off then,â Jack nodded and clucked the chestnut forward.
âMore towards the east,â Luciandro warned. âI cannot hide you and the horses, so we dare not close within around, say, two miles of the camp before we hide them somewhere.â
Jack gave him a glance, but swung the reins, bringing the chestnutâs head a bit farther to the east.
* * *
Tiarraluna winced as she hobbled back and forth beside the Runstableâs, trying to relieve some of the pain from her legs without being forced into the use of magic. She was loathe to use the least drop of mana, not knowing what she might expect to encounter at their destination.
The northern road was far rougher than the eastern, and the speedwagon had thrown them about a bit, although Cable hadnât allowed their pace to slow overmuch. He was currently out in the bushes on the far side of the road throwing up.
Three quarters of an hour, Uncle had told them. The minimum length of the second rest period for the horses. After this next run, theyâd have to lead them out of their carriage and allow them a couple of hours to rest without the bindings before theyâd be of use again. By then, of course, they would have reached their destination.
While she wasnât exactly certain where they were just now, they couldnât be much more than an hour from the old ferry station at the speed theyâd been traveling. She wondered whether Cable would race right into the place, or stop short to come upon them ready for a fight. Given that she could clearly hear his tortured retching, she decided it would probably be the latter.
Within five or six minutes, Cable was done feeding the bugs and back inside the rear carriage, caring for the horses. This time, as they drank, he examined each leg in turn, running his hands along them, checking for injuries.
This whole being lashed into place and running on a moving platform was madness, and he had no notion of what sorts of injuries the animals risked engaging in it. So he made extra sure.
He figured they were about thirty lenn from the ferry station. Fifteen from their turn back to the east. Looking to the slowly clearing sky, he decided theyâd probably strike it just before dawn. He yawned reflexively.
Shaking his head, he fished a bar of what looked like compressed grain from his jerkin pocket, gnawing off a large chunk. Even as the flavor washed through his mouth, an electric tingle spread along his jaw and down his neck. Alchemical restoratives werenât a replacement for rest or sleep, but they were certainly an extra boost if neither of those other two were available..
Swallowing, he shook his head again and rolled his shoulders, feeling his strength returning, bit by bit, second by second. He took another bite and chewed while he watched the horses drink. Just this one bar wouldnât bring him back to his full capacity, but it would bring him well along the way.
Glancing up and over, as though he could see through the solid wall of the carriage, he wondered when the last time the girl had slept might have been. He had a couple more of the bars in his gear aboard the dungeoâ he winced, hunching his shoulders. ââwagonâs cabin. Heâd give her one as soon as heâd finished seeing to the horses.
While Tiarraluna seemed quite unaffected, Cableâs stomach started to turn the moment he set foot upon the wagonâs step. Crawl, he decided. Heâd crawl back before he drove this monstrosity an inch further than was absolutely necessary.
In a few more minutes, they were once again roaring up the road, bouncing like a babe on her motherâs knee over the rough cobbles. Or possibly like a barrel rolling down a rocky slope.
Hang on, kid, Cable thought as he clung for dear life to the aiming wheel. Weâre cominâ!
In the back, without the need to pilot the wagon, Tiarraluna continued pouring over the tome, fretting silently. Greater Heal was the spell she was studying at the moment. Completely different from Healing (Greater), or, indeed, anything sheâd ever heard of. It would seem to stand alone, with neither tiers nor ranks to divide it. It was beyond anything sheâd thought herself capable of. Yet Grandmother had assured her she would be able to learn it. That was good, since she feared that, when finally they'd come to the ending of this wild ride, she would need it.
* * *
In the old ferry station, Bear the Mauler gazed angrily up into the cloud bedecked sky, a vitality brew in his hand â his third of the night. Itâd be coming on dawn in a couple of hours, he decided. Glancing over his shoulder, he grunted.
âNothing yet, Boss,â Hurgus yawned.
Where the hells are they? Bear wondered. Do I need to send up a damned signal flare to draw them in? Growling, he stepped once more into the drizzle to make sure his men were still awake. And alive, in case their mysterious adversary had somehow snuck in despite Hurgusâ scrying.
* * *
From just within the treeline half a mile or so east of Mokkelton, the five invaders stared towards the city walls. There was where the trail led. The leader grunted a command and it and its subordinates each spread their arms wide. Another command, and, four from each of them, twenty nearly invisible shapes leapt from their backs and arms, taking to the sky.
The flits resembled stingrays in a broad sense, uniformly about half a meter across, and perhaps seven centimeters thick at their centerlines. Transluscent, nearly transparent, they swam up through the air with an undulating grace.
Theyâd already been programmed at a basic level. Theyâd section off the city into twenty grid squares, and each would circle over one such square until they either picked up one of the targets, or needed to be refreshed. At either point, theyâd return here, and the champion would scan each with the reader.