Chapter 36
Blood Magus
Zeth stood in the middle of the storage shed, facing Erza, who stood between him and the exit.
Part of him just wanted to sprint out of there and never look back. But there was no way that would work. Erza knew his face and nameâif he spread word about him, Zeth would never know another peaceful day of his life. And, more importantly, itâd become basically impossible to get the drop on Garon or to kill the Blood Mage.
Plus, he had no idea how feasible doing such a thing would be. He was only now realizing just how much Erza had obfuscated his power. Sure, Zeth was able to glean some knowledge about a few of his capabilities, but he didnât know the manâs actual Skills, what Level he wasâhells, Zeth didnât even know his Class. He was a complete enigma. If Zeth tried to run, there was a chance heâd be instantly killed.
Other than fleeing, he had two options for defense. He could somehow lead Erza back to where heâd stowed the Hellfire Circle and use it on him, then run before anyone saw it was he who did it, or he could shout and call for his demon hiding in the woods. Both involved killing Erza and running a huge risk that heâd be caught and exposed. And Zeth wasnât ready to do either of those things just yet.
âYou have some sort of magic-based Class,â Erza said. âThat much is clear from everything youâve demonstrated yourself capable of.â
Maybe Zeth could just charge at him? Erza wasnât too muscularâat least, not compared to the workmanâs physique Zeth had built up from years in the minesâand likely wouldnât have too many Stats in his physical attributes to back him up in a fistfight. Zeth might be able to catch him off-guard if he rushed him. And even if Erza did gain the upper-hand, Zeth could always go to his last resort of just calling the demon to come and slaughter him.
He frowned. No, Erza was clearly too relaxed up-close. Even if he didnât have high Strength or a powerful physique, the number of magic items that surrounded them would definitely include at least one object that would allow Erza to fight Zeth off. A Stat-boosting piece of clothing, or a hidden weapon, or maybe just a real bomb. Perhaps it really would be best for Zeth to call the demon right now and kill Erza before anything bad could happen. Even if the man was far more powerful than he anticipated, he was confident nobody could get in a fight with a demon and not at least be kept busy for a while, which would give Zeth time to run.
âI would certainly like to know why you would hide such a thing. Did you conceal your Class out of an abundance of caution around strangers? Because your family wouldnât approve? Or becauseâ¦â Erza looked at Zeth, âyouâre the Blood Mage?â
Okay, it was officially an emergency. Scorched earth time. Zeth braced himself to shout for help and watch the demon tear him to shreds.
But then he hesitated. Why hadnât Erza just attacked the moment he figured it out? Whyâd he bother to explain everything?
ââ¦Why are you telling me all of this?â he asked.
âIsn't it obvious? Iâm a businessman. I want to make a deal with you.â
âI thought you wanted to kill the Blood Mage. Who you apparently think I am.â
âThereâs no reason I canât arrange a mutually beneficial relationship between the two of us. You donât get killed, I get to claim a bit of that mana of yours. I donât tell Rosalie about your secret, and you donât ask for any sort of payment for your services.â
âSo youâre blackmailing me.ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âI wouldnât say anything so extreme. Plenty of good can come from a deal that was originally made in aâ¦coercive environment.â
Zeth sighed. It was almost not even worth calling his demon to come kill Erza. He wouldnât have time to get into his identity-concealing outfit, which meant calling the demon with people around would result in them seeing an otherworldly beast crashing through buildings to serve at his beck and call. It would definitely expose himâexactly what Erza was threatening to do. At least if he took the manâs âbusiness dealâ now, heâd be able to control when his identity was exposed. It seemed like going along with the blackmail was the technically correct play.
â¦But then again, Zeth really didnât want to give this asshole what he wanted.
âI have to admit,â Zeth said, âconsidering who you believe me to be, Iâm surprised youâre talking to me the way you are right now.â
âOh? And why is that?â
âWell, I wonât claim to be an expert on these things, but from what Iâve heard, Blood Mages are quite the dangerous foe. All the rituals they can performâflame traps, demon summoningsâ¦It seems that talking like you are could end up making you a very powerful enemy.â
Erza chuckled. âYou wonât be able to threaten me. Magic is my area of expertise; I know plenty about Blood Mages. Demons are obnoxious, difficult to summon, difficult to contain creatures that are only ever used as a last resort. The idea of someone using one for something so mundane as assassinating a single man with a little bit of dirt on you is ridiculous.â
Zeth thought about the many demons heâd summoned to construct his underground base, and the way theyâd been so surprised when he told them what theyâd be doing. If what Erza said was true about how people normally used demonic labor, maybe their reactions were more reasonable than he thought. But why would someone see such an awesome source of power and choose not to use it at every opportunity? What, just because it was a little dangerous? Seemed like a waste.
âAnd those flame traps,â Erza continued, âare a joke. Sure, you can catch an unsuspecting victim off-guard and set them alight, but what if they can resist fire? What if theyâre near a source of water they can use to extinguish themself? What if they simply have the mental wherewithal to spot the ritual circle on the ground in the first place? An âattackâ that requires your opponent to step in the exact right place after you had to spend hours preparing it isnât an attack at all. Itâs a glorified tripwire. A child could set one upâand make one thatâs more deadly than your pathetic magic.â
âI wouldnât be so certain,â Zeth said. âI heard the Blood Mage managed to kill a fleshtaker with a single ritual circle.â
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Erza blinked, clearly caught off-guard. âWhat? A fleshtaker? Howâ¦No, youâre lying. A blatant bluff to scare me off.â
âAsk anyone, and theyâll tell you about it. Countless eye witnesses. The monster was attacking a hooded figure, and then suddenly it burst out into flames covering its body. Only took a few seconds before it keeled over.â
He shook his head. âNo, no, youâre describing a Fire Ritual right now. A monster as powerful as a fleshtaker would have enough natural Endurance to easily resist a low-Level Skill like that. You clearly know nothing about how Blood Mages operate if youâre trying to make a claim as ridiculous as that.â
âOh? Well, if I know so little about Blood Mages, then maybe Iâm not one.â
âYou wonât be able to convince me youâre just some random miner boy that easily. Iâve seen your capabilities. I know youâre a practiced mage. Perhaps not an educated one, but a practiced one. Clearly, you were not given proper tutoring. That is extremely common with those who take illegal Classes. Youâre just some power junkie, lusting after every bit of strength that could give you the ability to exert your will upon the world. You took the first thing that presented itself to you, and now youâre facing the consequences for it. I have no sympathy for you. I took a proper, intelligent route to power. I went to three separate colleges and studied for twelve years before I even considered calling myself a mage. And then people like you come along, no discipline, no direction, no reason to do what you do, and tarnish our good reputation. Itâs a joke. You are a joke. There is no possibility in my mind that you could be anything but a stupid, unguided holder of an illegal Class.â
âSeriously?â Zeth asked. âYou have all this to say, all this certainty in your voice, becauseâ¦What? You saw me touch a magic item? You have no evidence that Iâve done anything but hide the fact that Iâve got some sense for mana. What if I just raised my Shaping a bit, huh?â
He scoffed. âA stupid peasant boy such as yourself wouldnât be able to do what youâve done purely by using their raw Stats. It takes an education to learn these things. And, while the gaps in your knowledge clearly show you havenât received a proper one, you certainly could have been provided with some knowledge from your bandit friends, or your little cabal of mages, or whoever it is you work for. Thereâs no other explanation for how you could be able to patch up the holes in those mana fields so quickly.â
Zeth stared at Erza. At first, heâd assumed he was arguing with a genuine intellectual force. But at this point, the man was spouting out blatant falsehoods. Heâd correctly come to the conclusion that Zeth was who they were hunting, but heâd done so through completely incorrect assumptions. This whole âyou could never do that without being told howâ thing was objectively false. Zeth hadnât been taught how to do anything. Heâd just practiced his Skills, and evidently, gotten good enough at drawing ritual circles and manipulating mana that he was able to figure out the mana fields relatively quickly.
It was almost more frustrating being caught by an idiot who was completely wrong about this stuff than being caught by someone who had genuinely found him out.
He didnât even know how to respond. âListen. Iâm telling you the truthâIâm no Blood Mage. I donât have any ties to bandits or cabals. I donât know what you think youâre doing blackmailing some randomââ
âDonât even try to lie to me,â Erza said. âIf you canât come up with an actually believable explanation for what Iâve seen, then be prepared toââ
He was cut off by a crash from outside.
Zeth tensed. Was it backup? Had he called Rosalie and Alfon through some silent means? But Erza seemed confused, too, giving Zeth a suspicious look.
And then a second crash echoed out. Erza whipped around, peering out to try and find the source of the noise. âWhat was that?â
â...I have no idea. You should probably go check it out.â
Erza chuckled nervously. âIâm not going anywhere you tell me to go, mage.â
âIâve told you, Iâm not a mage.â
âThen how did youââ
A third crash echoed out, this time much louder.
Zeth sighed. Yâknow what? Fuck it. He stepped forward. âStop me if you want to stop me.â
After striding past Erza, who leaned back, apparently too cautious to even risk coming into physical contact with a potential Blood Mage, Zeth opened the door to the shed. It was completely empty outside, nobody around to be seen. Certainly nothing that could cause such a noise. Itâd sounded almost like an entire building falling to the ground. Or, no, maybe not a building. More likeâ¦
Another crash. This time, Zeth spotted the cause. An entire tree tipped over above the tops of the others, slowly tilting to the ground as the sound of a log being torn in two echoed across the townscape.
âWhat theâ¦?â he muttered, gazing at the forestline.
âIs this your doing?â Erza demanded, peering out from inside the shed.
âNo,â he said. âI have no idea whatâs going on. Did some lumberjack start cutting down trees where theyâre not supposed to, or something? Or, no, that didnât sound like an axe. It almost sounded like someone just pushed the tree over.â
âBut what around here couldâ¦?â
Just then came another crash, this one closest out of all of them. And this time, Zeth could see the base of the tree that fell. And he could see what had knocked it over.
A gigantic beast, standing at least three times as tall as Zeth, came charging out of the treeline. It had wooly, matted fur that hung down from its body, swaying back and forth with every step and covering even its own eyes. Horns as thick as Zethâs torso protruded from its head, curling out to either side, and tusks protruding straight out from its mouth. Every step it took shook the ground and pushed yet more trees aside to make room for its massive body.
As it came into view, charging at the town, panicked gasps and shouts started erupting out from the streets.
âWhat even is that?â Zeth asked.
âI-Is that a mannitor?â Erza gasped. âItâs from the Beast Realmâdonât tell me you have a portal leaking into your forests.â
âA while back there was a leak, yeah,â Zeth said.
âAnd the monsters werenât cleared out already?!â
âAre you insane? We donât have the manpower to clear out a whole forest of Second Realm monsters. All the aggressive ones took care of themselves, anyway. At least, that was what we thought.â
âMannitors are supposed to be peaceful. They donât even eat meat. I have no idea what couldâve scared one into stampeding like this.â He groaned in frustration. âPoor towns like these constantly find ways to piss me off.â
âWill this thing be a problem?â
âPerhaps. Itâll certainly be too tough for your town guard. Now might be a good time to show off your Blood Mage powers.â
âIâm telling you, Iâm not a Blood Mage.â
âFine. Then Iâll handle it. You can justââ
He was interrupted when another crash sounded out. Then another, and another, until an entire cacophony of chaos echoed through the town. The earth quaked beneath their feet. Zethâs head shot back to look at the still-approaching mannitor, only to find that there wasnât just one. Behind it came an entire herd of building-sized creatures. A pack of the monsters, at least a full dozen in number, all charging straight at them.
Erza stared at the approaching mob. â...I wonât be able to handle that.â