Chapter 535: Alumni Visit II
Beneath the Dragoneye Moons
As I looked at the little token that would grant us permission to visit Artemisâs sub-island - I couldnât believe Artemis had an entire island - I realized a little problem.
âWait. How do we get to the islands?â I asked the [Clerk]. I mean, I supposed I could probably fly over there, but with the Schoolâs defenses and a token implying the island had additional protections, it was possible there was a special method.
I hadnât heard any concrete information about the islands when Iâd been a student here, just crazy rumors. Like if someone flew upside-down on the night of no moons in the sky, while singing a particular rowdy song and drinking, theyâd be able to get in.
Watching someone try it and epically fail had been the highlight of that month.
âThereâs a ferry when the weather is good.â The [Clerk] said.
âThank you for your time, we appreciate it.â Iona said.
Getting to Artemisâs little island was an adventure in and of itself, but we finally made it. I eyed the villa built on the edge of the lake that dominated the place, seeing some people swimming in the water.
âDo you think they copied our villa?â I asked Iona. âThey did spend quite a few years there, maybe they liked the layout.â
She squinted at the place as we approached.
âMaybe? On one hand, we had a really good [Architect] build the place, and Iâm not sure Iâd trust the students here on their first real project, best school in the world or not. On the other, the people teaching the classes are unparalleled, and the two of you couldâve drawn similar inspiration from Remus. I think weâd need to go inside to see, but the swimming dock is new at least.â
âLetâs go find Artemis!â I tore through the air towards the compound, only to hear a high-pitched whine a moment later.
âHeeeeeeeeealy buuuuug!â Artemis tore out of her home, surfing on some rocks up into the air. âYou finally made it!â
My senses and significantly higher speed and vitality made it trivial to get a good look at Artemis as she was flying towards me.
She was looking great! A few more laugh lines around her eyes and mouth suggested that time was taking a slow toll on her, but the time was filled with joy. She had a relaxed appearance, a far cry from the utterly paranoid Artemis Iâd grown up with, the one who was looking for danger behind every bush - and, to be fair, usually finding it. A pair of orbs hovered over each shoulder, one solid Earth and the other made of swirling Darkness. My old mentor hadnât bothered to wear a school robe, instead having a tunic with an apron over it, handprints made out of flour all over it. She hadnât gained too many levels, a strong indicator that her life had been peaceful, and she wasnât constantly throwing around [Lightning Bolts] to stay alive.
I slowed down and grabbed my hat as Artemis tackled me, letting her carry us to the ground. Iona followed behind us.
Artemis put me down, and dusted off my shoulders and arms, looking delighted like sheâd just won the biggest pot at cards. A few black-robed students peeked out curiously.
âLook at you! You donât look like youâve aged a day since I last saw you!â
An awkward look froze on my face, and Artemis shot me a cheeky wink. She twisted her head around at the gawkers.
âOi! This is my friend, Elaine, and thereâs nothing interesting going on here!â
I mean. Saying there was nothing interesting was a guarantee that theyâd all be eavesdropping like mad⦠but maybe Artemis was aware of that.
âArtemis! Iâm so glad to see you again. Howâs life at the School treating you?â Iona asked, confidently holding out a hand for Artemis. They shook, and Artemis looked thrilled.
âFantastically! I-â
âHey love! Is that Elaine!?â Julius emerged from the house, dusting flour off his hands. He traded a curt respectful nod with Iona.
Artemis whirled with me.
âYes! Our little healy-bugâs back!â
Julius cracked a grin.
âExcellent! Cookies are in the oven. I swear keeping this lot fed and happy is harder than any Ranger tour. Everything alright with Auri?â
My former Ranger leader still had his sharp eyes.
âWeeeeell, thatâs part of why weâre here. She-â
Julius flashed me the ancient Ranger hand-signal for quiet, and I shut up. Artemis clapped her hands together, a massive skill-based thunderclap roiling throughout the miniature island. Students spilled out of the villa, assembling poorly in the field.
âAlright all of you! Iâve got some friends over, and weâd like some private time to catch up together. Todayâs lesson! When the teacher has old friends swing by, sometimes she wants to chat with them! Get out of here, see you all tomorrow.â
There were no complaints or grumbles, although the looks on their faces suggested they wanted to. A few envious looks were shot our way, and a few eyes widened as they caught the notation on my robe.
âThank you for your teachings, instructor.â
âThank you for today.â
âAppreciate it.â
Most of the students had some variation of a courtesy they extended Artemis as they filed past us, towards the edge of the island where there was a ferry waiting for them.
I froze as they passed me.
Two of them had eaten apples recently, and the full force of their healer-repelling field hit me. Trying to run, dodge, flee, or otherwise act would simply draw dramatic amounts of attention to me, attention I could mostly avoid just by standing very still.
Artemis narrowed her eyes and shouted, her voice magically amplified.
âRoofus! I can fucking count, you ingrate! Donât make me fucking drag you out!â
One last black-robed student came sprinting out of Artemisâs home, trying to shove his way into the crowd like it would disguise him from Artemisâs wrath.
âWhatâs the story with them?â Iona asked. Artemis laughed, like a grandmother amused by the antics of her small grandchildren.
âOh, itâs quite the tale, let me tell you! Here, come on in, weâve got milk, cookies, and good beer. Come on in!â Artemis said.
âNot as good as Auriâs cookies, but weâre working on it!â
Three hours later, Iona and I were stuffed to bursting with delicious cookies. Sugar, peanut butter, chocolate chip, lemon, snickerdoodles - I swear, Artemis had gone from âhardened killerâ to âindustrial-scale cookie makerâ.
â... and now I live here. I carefully select which students I let âworkâ here, aiming for the newer ones that still have a [Student] class evolution in the future. Being here, working for me, and letting me teach them a little every day supercharges their class offerings, setting them up for the future nicely. Now and then Iâll teach a practical combat class, and that Shirayuki keeps trying to recruit me as a coach for the combat team. Bah! No offense to you two, I know you were on it, but the little kiddy games called âcombatâ here arenât for me. Lining up, knowing your opponent, and getting told when to start, itâs so unrealistic!â We didnât bother correcting Artemis about Ionaâs participation on the combat team.
Artemisâs story was a wild one.
The short version was hard for me to wrap my head around. Artemis and Julius had, upon leaving Exterreri and wanting to check out the School, gotten into their fair share of trouble, mischief, and mayhem. Once theyâd gotten here, after extensive poking around and a frankly unbelievable sequence of events, Artemis had managed to prove to herself that this was the same âlegacyâ of the School sheâd initially founded back in Remus - with some twists about it being burnt to the ground a few dozen times and rebuilt, prompting interesting philosophical âSchool of Theseusâ questions - and then managed to prove it to the School itself.
This story has been unlawfully obtained without the author's consent. Report any appearances on Amazon.
Which had been accomplished via a bizarre mix of Artemis personally mentoring a dozen promising young students from the low-level children educational facility to demonstrate it via potent class offerings, a divine blessing, and a dragon.
With how Julius flinched at the mention of the dragon, I wasnât sure if Artemis was pulling my leg, or dramatically underplaying the whole thing.
I wordlessly offered Iona the last cookie. It was one of my favorites, but I wanted her to have a chance at it. Artemis shamelessly stole it before Iona could grab it.
âSurely itâs better practice than nothing.â I defended my participation on the team, believing what I said. âYeah, itâs not ârealâ, but itâs the closest thing you can get to throwing abilities at other people to get some training in before needing to do it for real for the first time. Is it that different than sparring?â
Julius rolled his eyes, the subject clearly one of long discussion.
âWhat Artemis isnât saying is she offered to coach under certain conditions that they found unreasonable.â He added in.
âThree hours a day of real combat training with those oh-so-fancy shields was reasonable!â She protested.
âWhy not train the free-for-all segment?â I asked.
âNot enough dedication.â Artemis and Julius chimed together, one indignant, one resigned.
Iona leaned forward, using [Telekinesis] to snap half the cookie back to her hand, staring Artemis in the eyes as she bit down on it.
âJulius! What have you been up to?â She asked.
He stretched languidly, like a feral cat that had been domesticated, an old, loyal dog laying out by the fire.
âFrankly? Enjoying life, mentoring a few of the students Artemis has running around, and generally being actually retired. On one hand, thereâs a part of me that itches to go out and fight monsters, but the other knows Iâm in the rarest company. Rangers retiring? We donât get to retire. The School is fantastic though. Iâve got as many challenges as I want to engage in, the answers to any question I might have at my fingertips. My biggest worries in life are you lot, and a few of my proteges that have graduated and are busy making their mark on the world. You? I got the sense that Elaine was about to say you two were up to something highly illegal before I shut her up.â
âItâs not highly illegal!â I protested. âOnly one organization thinks itâs illegal!â
Julius cocked an eyebrow at me.
âI know Ranger training went over laws, legalities, and enforcement of them. Whatâs the only part that actually matters?â He grilled me, like I was 18 again instead of 38. I sighed.
âTheir ability to enforce the rules.â
Iona looked less than thrilled at the explanation, but had the practicality and experience to recognize it as a valid way of thinking.
Artemis leaned forward.
âSo! Tell me more, and more importantly, tell me how we can help.â
I explained the situation with Auri, our agreement, the Phoenix Peaks, and the rest. Artemis looked thoughtful.
âYouâre going to struggle with the shields and protection around the School.â She said. âThey perform multiple functions. Thereâs obviously the barriers and protections, both passive and active. Thereâs the nets, which stop idiots from jumping off the School. They also make it difficult for people to leave the island while itâs over the North, given how easy itâd be to smuggle people with the island.â
We got a pair of pointed looks.
âAny easy ways around the protections?â I asked.
âYour [Blink] should do it.â Artemis said. âIâm unsure about Iona, and I assume Fenrirâs here as well, yeah? Yeah, I literally canât imagine them letting him go⦠unlessâ¦â Artemis got a devious look on her face. âUnless you were âreturning him homeâ to the north pole. Releasing a wyvern like that âback where he belongsâ would be allowed, and I seem to recall a certain story about someone being swallowed whole by a wyvern.â
I wanted a funny look on Ionaâs face, but she was serene.
âIf thatâs what I have to do, thatâs what I have to do.â
I didnât know it was possible to fall more in love with her, but I did.
Artemis clapped her hands.
âGreat! Fantastic! Onto the next subject! Elaine, Iâm almost disappointed in you. You havenât asked about lefty and righty at all! Whereâs your sense of curiosity? Whereâs the inquisitive brat that wouldnât stop pestering us?â
I opened my mouth in outrage.
âWait! Itâs a crime to be polite?! Itâs a crime to listen to your story without interrupting!? Itâs a crime to wait for the right time and place?! Yes, Iâm curious about righty and lefty, assuming you mean those two orbs! Goddess forbid I wait a bit!â
Artemis mimed wiping a tear away.
âJulius!â She mock-sobbed. âThey grow up so quickly! Where did the time go!â
âIâm 38!â I protested. Iona patted my arm, slowly shaking her head, then viciously ganged up on me like the rest.
âI know youâre 38, but Artemis, Julius, I think we should consider the alternative: With all the messing around Elaineâs done with her body and her age, maybe sheâs just gone senile early?â
There were no cookies left to steal, so I just crossed my arms and pouted.
âI hate you all. Artemis, be careful, if I ever get the chance to make you Immortal Iâm also going to make you eight.â
Threatening to turn someone eight wasnât something Iâd ever imagined before, but it was a potent threat.
âIs that any way to treat the person whoâs going to teach you cool new magic?â Artemis asked with her impish grin. I blew a raspberry at her, knowing Iâd lost the battle of words, but knowing I could still be petty.
âI think Elaineâs had enough.â Iona said. âAnymore and sheâll break.â
âThese orbs are great.â Artemis pointed to them. âItâs a passive-active skill with a modest mana drain, but any attacks coming my way are automatically intercepted.â
âItâs done wonders for her mental state.â Julius said. âSheâs not throwing Lightning bolts every time someone drops a plate.â
Artemis socked Julius in the arm.
âThat was once!â She protested.
âFine. Once on a plate, three times on cups, four soup bowlsâ¦â
Artemis shot him a look that promised heâd be sleeping in another room if he continued the list, and he shut up.
âGo on! Try something!â Artemis said. Iona flicked a plate at her. A bolt of Darkness shot out from the Dark orb at the same time a shield of Earth materialized in front of the plate. The bolt annihilated the plate before it could even reach the earth, which flew around Artemis three times before merging back with the Earth sphere.
âTada!â Artemis said. âElaine, speaking of shields, have you managed to upgrade your skill yet?â
âNo.â I frowned. It hadnât been for a lack of trying, but all these years later and I still hadnât succeeded. I didnât know if I was doing something wrong, if it wasnât a ânaturalâ evolution it wanted to go through, or if it just plain wasnât in [The Arbiter of Life and Deathâs] skillset.
âAlright, alright, cool! I want to show you another neat trick! Come on, follow me!â Artemis bounded out of her chair, Julius sighing at the table.
âI got this.â Iona said.
âNo, no, youâre a guest, donât bother.â Julius tried to wave Iona off. She arched a single eyebrow at him, and all the plates, dishes, and cups lifted themselves up, flying over to the kitchen. Julius stared after them and shrugged.
âAlright, that was easy enough, thank you Iona. Letâs go see what Artemis has in store.â
We found Artemis on a scarred and scorched field. I was intimately familiar with Lightning strikes, and the field screamed Artemis. She drew herself up to her full height as we entered.
âI, Artemis, Founder of the School of Sorcery and Spellcraft, will now teach Elaine how to properly use a Darkness shield. Block.â
Artemis giving me enough warning before she attacked almost stunned me enough that I didnât throw up my shield. I recovered in time, throwing up [Shroud of the Stellar Sea] in a protective bubble around us all.
A narrow, focused bolt of Lightning crashed against my shields, somehow entirely silent.
The Systemâs blue box appeared in front of me.
[*ding!* Would you like to upgrade [Shroud of the Stellar Sea] to [Event Horizon]? Y/N]
Event Horizon:
The black hole. The absolute finality of nature, the great gravitational well of the vast cosmos. Nothing that passes the event horizon can ever come back, utterly annihilated for all practical purposes. -32,752 mana regeneration.
I blinked at the notification, then refocused on Artemis, who looked as smug as a [Mage] whoâd just used [Chain Lightning] on a goblin horde. n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
[Luminary Mind] let me think about the choice while the rest of me thanked Artemis and explained the skill, getting some light feedback.
I wasnât completely sure I wanted to take the skill, just that I wanted it offered so I could compare. There were pros and cons to the two different styles of shields, and the exact analysis would depend on the details.
The details that were staggeringly light on the skill description.
The words and imagery used were powerful. Short, sweet, to the point. âUtter annihilationâ was direct and to the point. The mana regeneration rate was lower, which was both a pro and a con. It implied it was weaker than [Shroud], but at the same time, destruction-type shields didnât need to have quite the same amount of power as blocking-type shields. At the same time, it would free up a modest amount of mana regeneration for myself.
The downside to destruction-style shields was the complete weakness against vitality-reinforced attacks. Then again, most of those happened at close range, and a physical Classer whaling on my shield was a great way to rapidly drain my mana and break the shield. It was the classic counter to instant shields like [Shroud].
There was utility to consider. [Shroud] could, at a continuous cost depending on what it was holding, be any tool I needed, any shape I wanted. Iâd done things like make a food funnel for a hatchling Auri, or wrapped myself up like it was clothes.
I suppose [Event Horizon] also worked for clothes. Speaking ofâ¦
[Shroud] was just so pretty as a skill!
The decision might not be reversible though. If I went to [Event Horizon] and didnât like it, I might not be able to get [Shroud] back.
Plus, starry fieldsâ¦
âHowâd you do that?â I asked. âIâve been trying for literal years, and you made it happen in a single go?â
Artemis looked way too smug, and I doubted Iâd hear the end of it. Sheâd earned it though.
âWell! The biggest part is, frankly, the island weâre on. Itâs an Oddity. I donât know if you heard the rumors or if students know for a fact, but the property of this Oddity is skill development and acquisition. It's incredibly easy to pick things up. Iâve got a [Teaching] skill which helps, and Iâve got a ton of weight to throw around System-wise. Iâve figured out how to put it all together and get people skills like that.â Artemis snapped her fingers to demonstrate.
âSpeaking of weight - I was wondering about the potency effect. Isnât helping people all the time diluting the quality of classes youâre upgrading, and making skills harder to teach?â
Artemis scoffed loudly.
âBullshit. Yeah, maybe I could get someone a better class if I taught one person every decade, but bully to that! Iâd rather spread a thousand promising seeds than go all-in on one student. It lets me spread the love, and if the System isnât rewarding as hard, so what? Just being my student shouldnât be a treat, a reward with no effort put into it. They want good classes? They can earn it themselves.â
I explained the details of my skill to them, along with what I thought.
Everyone gave me their opinions, most of which was a rehash of things Iâd already thought of. Julius had the most interesting take.
âYou know, itâs possible that you werenât able to get the skill to evolve like that because itâs normally too far outside of what a [Healer] class, and your class, is supposed to do. The School lets you stretch further, but Iâd expect a shield skill like that to be the domain of a more dedicated barrier classer. Iâd consider what holes you currently have in your kit, and if it fills them or not.â
Julius had a good point.
I had a lot of tools in my arsenal. I literally carried around multiple warehouses worth of goods and equipment. Kinda⦠the need for extensive passageways between the different rooms in [Vault]significantly cut down how much I could store and carry around. I didnât need to shape [Shroud of the Stellar Sea] into a food funnel for hungry phoenix hatchlings, I had a room filled to the brim with kitchen supplies already.
Thinking about it - I should absolutely start building storage units inside of [Vault].
I had tons of tools. It was a little worse against vitality-based attacks, better against everything else. It wasnât going to stop a tidal wave, but then again, [Shroud] would instantly shatter against one as well.
In the end, I took [Event Horizon].