Chapter 39
Blood Magus
Rosalie stared at the cloaked individual as their fingers tightened around the cloth. She was too far away to make it out, but it almost looked like something was written on it. It couldnât have been a ritual circle, but there was certainly something special about the seemingly mundane object.
The mannitor quickly closed the distance between itself and the mystery person, Rosalie watching intently. Just as it reached the person, stomping down to trample over their body, they jumped out of the way, just barely avoiding being crushed to death. The moment they landed, as the mannitor charged past them, they leapt to their feet and reached out with the cloth, as if they were attempting to press it against the monsterâs skin. However, they were just slightly too slow, and it ran past before stopping and spinning around, readying itself to charge once again.
Just what was this personâs plan? They clearly didnât have too much in the realm of physical Stats, considering how slowly they were moving, but they seemed to be confident they could defeat this fearsome monster with the help of that cloth. Really, the way they were acting, it did almost seem like they had a Fire Ritual painted onto it. But Rosalie knew it was impossible to move a ritual circle around like that.
Perhaps this person was merely trying to pretend to be a Blood Mage, and didnât know enough about the Class to know what they were pretending to do was impossible? But why would they fake such a thing? Were they trying to scare someone? But they wouldnât be able to scare a beast like a mannitor with an act like that, and there wasnât anyone else around but her and Alfonâand she certainly wasnât about to be fooled by a flawed imitation of this Class.
The monster charged, and the mystery person readied themself once again. They leapt out of its path right as it was about to hit them, landing more gracefully this time and pivoting to slam the cloth onto the beastâs back leg. Rosalie leaned forward, eager to see what would happen when they did so, but their foot caught on the ground and they tripped, falling into the rubble scattered across the dirt.
She frowned. This person clearly wasnât a trained fighter. It would only take a couple years of training or a few dozen points in Dexterity before a warrior would have enough control over their body to never make a mistake like that again. Was she wrong, then? Was this just some random insane person mimicking what descriptions theyâd heard of a powerful person in town? Did they even have a Class at all?
The mannitor turned around again. At this point, it seemed furious that its previous two attacks had missed, and was ready to gore straight through this poor individual.
She looked over at Alfon. âWe need to go kill that monster. That person is helpless. I donât think they have any defenses againstââ
Rosalie was interrupted by a bright light blazing to life in the corner of her vision. She glanced back over at the person and the mannitor, only to find that the monster that had once towered over this hooded individual had crashed to the ground, being eaten alive by flames as tall as the buildings it had once smashed to bits.
The fire burned so bright, she was afraid she may be blinded simply looking at it. It burned so hot that even she could feel the waves of heat wafting off from the corpse of the beast, hundreds of feet away. Nearby chunks of wood from fallen buildings sprouted their own flames simply from being too close to the inferno that covered every inch of the mannitorâs body.
The gigantic monster had died instantly. It hadnât even had time for its body to hit the ground before the fire had destroyed its body.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
Her eyes went wide, stumbling back from the explosion. âW-whatâ¦â
âWhatâs happening?â she heard Alfon say. âI feel heat. Is there an attack from the Blood Mage?â
She continued staring at the burning corpse. âI donâtâ¦But how did theyâ¦?â
Her breathing began to quicken. Sheâd only looked away for a second. What had even happened? Had they finally succeeded in pressing that cloth against the monster? But how had that translated intoâ¦this? This instant destruction of such a powerful beast? Even when Rosalie had been powered up by Alfonâs magic, she was nowhere close to being able to kill a mannitor in a single hit.
And the fireâit certainly looked like a Blood Mageâs Fire Ritual at first glance, but she knew for a fact that such a Skill had nowhere near that much killing power. Nor would it have even worked in this situation. Blood Mages couldnât move their rituals. That was one of the most universally understood things about the Class. So surely, no matter how much it looked like this person was the Blood Mage, surely
they werenât, right? Right?
Besides, with that amount of power at their fingertips, was there any hope left for this town if it was them? Was there any hope left for the empire?
She backed away even further from the scene. âA-Alfon, come with me. I think we need to retreat.â
âIt sounds like there has been a crisis. Should I open my eyes?â
âN-no. Keep them closed. I may need your magic.â
âIn case of what?â
âIn caseâ¦I donât know. In case weâre attacked. Iâll explain later; letâs just go.â
Keeping her eyes firmly planted on the cloaked person, she began backing away, almost afraid this person would see her. She had no evidence they were a bad personâin fact, all sheâd seen them do was slay a dangerous monster; theyâd done a favor to this town. But something in her chest screamed at her to run.
So, once she was near the edge of the wrecked portion of town, she did. She turned on her heel and sprinted off, a confused Alfon in pursuit after her.
***
Zeth let out a breath, satisfied that heâd been able to kill this last monster.
Now that he was done, he needed to get out of here quickly. Without the protection of his demon or his Hellfire Ritual, and with the possibility of Erzaâs return growing more and more likely by the minute, he didnât want to stick around any longer than he had to.
Before he left, he reached into his belt and drew out some of the bottles he had lining his belt. They werenât too big, but what space they had was completely empty, ready to be filled with blood. And this mannitor was absolutely full of it.
He filled up the small bottles, submerging the entire things inside a wound thatâd been torn open on the gigantic monsterâs side, but it obviously had far, far more blood than he could ever fit into a few tiny vials. It had more blood than heâd be able to carry at allâno matter how much storage he had on his person.
Part of him wondered if he should take some time to figure out a method to gather up a bit more, but he didnât want to spend any longer out in the open like this. So, once he filled each of his bottles to the brim, he turned and fled into the forest, following the familiar path back to his underground base.
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When he returned, Zeth put the blood heâd taken from the mannitor into his storage room, then took a breath. Quite a lot had happened in a single day.
To begin with, Erza was going to be a problem. The man was still alive, and seemed convinced that Zeth was the Blood Mage. He wasnât sure if Erzaâs suspicions had shifted after their confrontation during the mannitor stampede, but Zeth certainly wasnât going to take any chances. Heâd need to do something about that manâand fast, considering how quickly it would spread if Erza started talking.
But Erzaâs theory was just thatâa theory. He didnât have any hard evidence. Which meant Zeth had a couple options. Either he could come up with a story to explain what Erza had seen and quell the rumor, or he could silence him in another, more violent, way. Ideally, he could at least attempt option one, while preparing for option two in the worst-case scenario.
So then, he needed two things. First, he needed to research what this mana field stuff was, and what other possible explanations there could be for how he was able to do it without a Class, and second, he needed to draw up a way to fight against this new enemy.
But before he did any of that, Zeth had one more task to complete.
He walked through the various rooms of his underground complex, following the sound of claws digging through stone. After briskly striding down a hallway and into a side room, he found who he was looking for.
The demon that had caused that whole disaster was in the room, carving away at the wall under Zethâs orders. As he walked into the room, the demon paused, but didnât turn to meet his gaze.
Zeth came to a stop in the center of the room. âHey, fuckface.â
The demon continued staring at the wall, like a dog thatâd misbehaved.
âSo thatâs it? Weâre gonna pretend that you didnât just try and destroy my town so you could convince me to let you commit mass murder?â
âThere is no discussion to be had,â he said. âOur previous deal still stands. Unless you would like to propose an additional deal with additional payment, then leave me be. I have two hours and nineteen minutes until I am allowed to take the life that is owed to me, and then I will leave.â
Zeth rubbed his fingers along the bridge of his nose. âShould I expect every demon I summon to pull a stunt like that? Because at this point, Iâm wondering if itâs even worth interacting with your species ever again.â
He whipped around, furious expression strewn across his face. âEvery single one of you slugs believes that you are so very capable of reading those around you. Of reaching a perfect understanding of the people you speak with. I have no possible idea what causes you to come to that conclusion, as in my experience, your people are some of the most idiotic, ignorant beings I have ever been forced to interact with.â
Zeth frowned, taken aback. âWhat do youââ
âNot everyone is raised in a perfect, quaint little human settlement in the peaceful, weakling First Realm. Not everyone goes about their day assuming they will be given the privilege of being alive the next morning. Some of us have to fight to stay alive. And if you make the incorrect assumption that, if my choices are between slaughtering a few worthless little humans, or lying down and letting myself be killed, I should simply die, then that is not my responsibility. I need strength. I have attempted to barter with you to obtain it. You have refused. If you are not to give it to me, then we have nothing to discuss. I will not hear your pathetic, naive insults about morality when you so clearly do not care about my life whatsoever.â
The demon took a deep breath, but the fury on his face refused to calm.
âI am a soldier. I am fighting in a war. I have no choice but to lay down my life for the empire that has subsumed my homeland. If you wish for me to be kind, and caring, and empathetic to the worthless little whelps that have never known hardship in their lives, then you will simply have to be content with disappointment.â
âI donât know what you expect,â Zeth said, âbut Iâm not gonna feel sorry for someone who just tried to force me to let them kill a thousand innocent people. And whose actions did just lead to the deaths of many more.â
He scoffed. âDo not worry. I have long since shed any expectation of understanding from your kind.â
Zeth shook his head. This was exhausting. He absolutely hated working with demons. They were backstabbing, murderous sons of bitches and he didnât know if heâd ever let one out of his sight again after this. He didnât know if heâd even bother with summoning them.
For the time being, he left the demon and went to another empty ritual room. He had more important things to do than sit around and argue with a monster.
Zeth needed a way to fight back against Erza in case of an emergency, and he also needed to figure out how everything he spoke about worked. Because evidently, not knowing too much about the theory of magic would get him into trouble far more easily than he originally thought.
Staring at the wall of the room, Zeth gazed at the lines of chalky substance decorating the roomâthe same ones he used to draw ritual circles. These werenât for any ritual purposes, of course; these were simple, straight lines that took seconds to draw and would have no uses for any of his Skills. They were just there because of the subtle glow they gave off, allowing him to see in the would-be pitch black structure. It was the lighting system he used throughout the entire complex.
Only, as he stared at the simple lines, Zeth realized something. Heâd always known the glow they gave off wasnât quite the same as any normal light, but never thought much of it. But now, looking at them, he thought the light they gave off was remarkably similar to the light heâd seen being given off from the magic items Erza had shown him. Of course, Erzaâs items gave off a brilliant radiance, while these ritual lines were simply a faded glow, but it was the same type.
He stood and walked over to the wall, examining the ritual lines more closely. The chalky substance, wherever it touched the wall, gave off that strange, almost moving light, like it was flowing through the air.
This mustâve been the same mana leakage Erza had been talking about happening to his items. Zeth had never noticed the glow of his lines until he gained some practice with his ritual circlesâsomething heâd always assumed was because he simply wasnât observant enough. But maybe it was that he hadnât noticed earlier because he simply wasnât capable of seeing it?
Thinking back, heâd drawn plenty of ritual circles back in the cave, and that was absolutely a dark enough environment to see this faint light. And back then, heâd had little to no points in the Shaping Stat, whereas now, heâd gained far more. So it was that Statâor perhaps his general practice with manaâthat allowed him to see it, then.
That also meant that anyone with a little bit of Shaping would be able to see a glow coming from his ritual circles, even if he concealed them. That is, theyâd be able to see a glow unless he went and patched up those holes in the mana fields like Erza had taught him to. Hopefully, if he did that, itâd make his magic far more difficult to detect. The man had been useful after all, it seemed. Despite his flaws, he definitely had far more knowledge about higher-level magic than Zeth did.
He needed to test this further. After getting a piece of fabric to draw on, Zeth began tracing the lines necessary to create a Hellfire Ritual circle. After around fifty minutes of drawing, he finished it, and gazed at the creation. Just like the lines on the walls, the circle was radiating out bright rays of mana.
But it wasnât done yet. Next, he closed his eyes and placed his hands on the circle, trying to imagine the object beyond its physical existence. Just like with the magic objects before, within his mind he saw a mesh surrounding the circle, full of tears and holes ready to be patched up.
So, Zeth got to work closing them. He was much better now than when he started out, but working with a ritual circle instead of a normal object presented its own challenges. Not only did the abnormal shape give the mesh a difficult form to work with, but everything just seemedâ¦sloppier. The mesh had more holes, and the object was absolutely pouring mana out of it, unlike the slight trickle of the item Erza had Zeth repair. So much mana was coming out, it was difficult for Zeth to even see what he was doing with the mesh. He assumed that was because he had relatively little practice drawing ritual circlesâlittle mistakes he couldnât even see were accumulating and creating the mess in front of him.
But he worked steadily regardless, patching up holes as the time passed. It only took a few minutes before heâd gotten done with a few dozen of the smaller holes. Next, heâd move onto one of the larger tears. First, he gripped onto the edge of it, then pulledâ
[Vile Focusâs Rank has increased to 9.
+1 Skill Point. You have 12 Skill Points.]
Zethâs eyes opened in surprise. A Rank-up for Vile Focus? He glanced around the room as if to confirm that he wasnât, in fact, drawing any rituals. Sure enough, his hands were still placed in the same position on the already-drawn hellfire circle.
It mustâve been that the requirements for Vile Focus were loose enough to consider any working with his rituals to count as progress toward its next Rank? And, judging by how little time heâd been patching those holes in order to get a Rank, it seemed to count far more strongly than actually drawing circles did.
He hesitantly closed his eyes, settling back into routine and getting back to work. But only a few minutes later, another notification came in.
[Ritual Circle Masteryâs Rank has increased to 9.
+1 Skill Point. You have 13 Skill Points.]
He stared at the pair of notifications.
Seemed like heâd be getting these two Skills to max Rank way sooner than he thought.