Chapter 5
Blood Magus
Zeth stood with the man who was apparently his friend, exchanging words with him for the first time in what had apparently been four months.
âWhere were you, man?â Turin asked.
He had no idea what was going on. âIâ¦underground, in the mines. Nestor asked me to help his team with the cave-in thing, andâ¦â
Turinâs eyes grew wide. âYou were in the cave-in? Why didnât anyone tell me?â
âI hadnât reported going down there. I, I just thought Iâd get Nestor to let Garon know once it was done. Listen, what do you mean Iâve been gone forââ
âAre the rest alive?â Turin asked, interrupting him. âTheyâeveryone caught in the cave-in was pronounced dead. There were funerals and everything. Are theyâ¦I mean, can weâ¦â
Zeth shook his head. The small movement felt like it took all of his energy. ââ¦I was the only survivor.â
âHow did you survive? I mean, there wasnât any food or water down there, right? And how did you dig your way out?â
Zeth opened his mouth, but no words came out for a moment. âI didnâtâ¦I didnât need to eat or drink. It was only a day.â
âIt wasnât, man. Iâm telling you. Youâve been gone forâ¦â he trailed off, eyes filling with tears. âWe thought you were dead, man. The funerals for Nestor and the rest, and then you disappear at the same timeâ¦It was hard. For all of us. Donât play with me, man. Where were you? What happened?â
Zethâs face flushed white. âMy family. Sophie, she thought I wasâ¦â
Turin nodded slowly.
I had a funeral. Everyone thought I was dead.
I made my nine year old sister go to my funeral.
Zeth set off, walking briskly down the road. âI need to see them.â
âWait!â Turin called, running after him. âYou said you didnât eat or drink anything the whole time?â
But hunger was the least of his worries right now. He needed to tell Sophie he was alive. âI drank some water out of the river down south when I escaped.â
âWhaâwhen did you get to the river?! I thought you were in the mines!â
Zeth turned to look at Turin, who was hurrying to walk beside him. âWhy did nobody come for us?â
He frowned. âWhat?â
âThere was a cave-in, and no rescue came.â Apparently, nobody came for four fucking months, however thatâs possible. âNestor said Garon promised him that heâd send down a rescue team if, and I quote, âhe felt even the slightest tremor in the ground.â I remember those words exactly because they were some of the last ones he said to me. So what happened? Was there some sort of disaster up here?â
âIâ¦â Turin faltered. âGaron didnât want to send down a rescue team. He saidâ¦he said that there was no use, he knew from the feeling that there was no hope of anyone surviving something that intense.â
He was clearly fucking wrong, wasnât he?! Zeth wanted to shout. Clearly someone was sitting there, waiting for help.
âWhy not send people down there anyway, in case he was wrong?â He asked through clenched teeth, fighting to keep his voice calm.
âSome people tried to convince him, butâ¦He, he said it would be a waste of money. That paying the Excavators for something like that would cost the guild a month of profits. I tried, man, I did everything I could, butââ
âIâm not mad at you,â Zeth said. He tried to calm his anger. âThank you for trying. I know Garon is aâ¦He makes it hard to get things past him.â
He kept the rest of his jumbled thoughts silent as they raced to his parentsâ farmhouse.
Four months? How in hell has it been four months? Was the cave enchanted, or something? Was there some sort of time dilation in effect? I havenât ever heard of something like that, though.
He frowned. No. No, the answer wasnât something insane like time dilation. He thought back to when heâd first woken up when he got his Class. His whole body had ached and felt stiff, like his limbs hadnât been used in forever.
Was I seriously knocked out for four months? Did that fucking ritual steal four months from my life?!
It would only be possible if the ritual had preserved his body somehow, keeping him from dying of thirst and starvation in his stupor, but that sort of thing was something heâd heard of. The Inquisitor Class had a pretty famous Skill that forced them to meditate for several days, sitting perfectly still, in order to read a personâs Status, and they never had problems with dying of thirst during that time. It was entirely possible that the ritual had just applied a much longer version of that Skillâs effect.
The only thing that could even remotely be considered an upside to all this was that the mage probably didnât expect to see him. Unless the time it would knock him out was some sort of exact recorded science, which he doubted if the ritual took years to conduct and there could only be one Blood Magus in the world at any given time, then they would have no idea when heâd be waking upâin fact, they may have just have assumed he died in the cave-in or something.
And if he was lucky, then it was possible they didnât even know passing out for that long was a part of it at all. Maybe the Skill didnât tell you that sort of thing would happen, or it only happened because Zeth didnât have the Blood Mage Class to start withâthe ritual had said that Blood Magus was an âupgraded versionâ of Blood Mage, after all. It was completely possible heâd have the drop on them.
He exited the main residential town areas, Turin following behind. All of the houses there were technically owned by the mining guild, having been built to house their employees close to the mountain, and over time, more and more people unaffiliated with the guild started moving in as well. Though, for whatever reason, the town never really evolved away from Otis and Roulâs being the dominant entity. Even when they had a lord ruling over the land, appointed by the empire once population reached a certain level, there wasnât much commerce that wasnât directly controlled by the guild.
His parents were some of the people trying to break that mold. Heâd been raised on their struggling farm, helping them with the work as they attempted to make ends meet for his whole childhood. They never really got the place off the ground, and when Zeth was coming into his teenage years and made it clear he intended to go and work for the mining guildâthe only place he could actually make moneyâwhen he reached working age, they decided to have another kidâhis sister, Sophie.
Since then, heâd been the main one paying for his familyâs expenses. He knew his parents were wasting a lot of it on their farm, but Sophie had potential. He knew just by talking to her that she was gonna grow up to be great. So if he had to be the one to pay so she could eat enough every day, maybe get an education, then so be it.
It didnât take long after leaving the residential area for his parentsâ farm to come into view. There were very few people still trying to till the land out here, the fact that doing anything other than mining in this town would end with you destitute having long since been common knowledge among its residents.
Zeth practically sprinted to the door of the house. The crops surrounding the place were different, but not unfamiliar. Really, now that he thought about it, it shouldâve been immediately obvious that so much time had passedâthe summer weather had practically ended, a chill now barely permeating the air. And the crops planted in the ground confirmed it. It was already almost autumn.
But he barely paid attention to any of that. The moment he got to the doorstep, he didnât hesitate in throwing it open and charging inside.
He glanced around the living room, finding nobody, then moved into the kitchen. Empty.
âHello?â he called out. No response.
Turin ran in after him, leaning on his knees and out of breath. âTheyâ¦Theyâre probably outside working.â
Zeth nodded and turned, ready to go find them, but Turin pushed a hand out to block him. He gasped another breath. âYou donât go. You havenât eaten in months. I donât know how you survived so far, but you need to put something in your mouth right now. Iâm afraid youâre gonna suddenly collapse and die if you move any more.â
âIâ¦â Zeth was about to argue, but at the mention of food, it was like his stomach realized how hungry it was. He was weak, his vision was spotty, and now, looking at the chairs around the dinner table, the faint smell of breakfast still lingering in the air, he had a hard time resisting. ââ¦Okay. Fine.â
Turin nodded, guiding Zeth to a chair and then walking over to the cabinets lining the countertops. âWhere do you keep your food again? I havenât been here since Iâd come to sleep over when we were, like, twelve.â
âShould be some in those bottom cabinets in front of you,â Zeth said weakly. He was really feeling the exhaustion now.
âAh, here.â Turin pulled out some of the stockpiled food grown from the previous season. There were always plenty of leftovers that they couldnât manage to sellâtoo much, in fact. âUhâ¦I donât know what all of this is good unprepared; Iâm just gonna grab a few handfuls and bring it to you.â
Zeth nodded. âThanks.â
The moment Turin placed the food in front of him, Zeth began grabbing items at random and shoving them into his salivating mouth. He was much hungrier than heâd realized. He snapped carrots off between his teeth, bit into juicy tomatoes, and shoved whole sticks of asparagus down his throat. Heâd never understand why these crops wouldnât sell well. They were absolutely delicious.
Turin, after staring in awe for a moment at the sheer volume of food Zeth was consuming, went and grabbed him a cup of water, as well.
After setting it down, he nodded slowly. âOkay, Iâll go look for your parents.â
Zeth swallowed. âYou can wait for me to finish and Iâll come with you.â
âNo, no, you just rest, man. Andâ¦maybe take a bath while Iâm looking for them? If you have the time and energy, I guess. Itâs justâ¦youâre in kind of a sorry state, and I donât want them to worry. Covered in dust and dirt andâ¦is that blood?â
âDonât worry about it,â Zeth said. âAnd please hurry.â
âR-right.â Turin took one last look at him, like he was afraid his friend would disappear if he let him out of sight for too long. But after that moment, he turned and rushed out the door.
Zeth did, in the end, have some time to wipe himself off with a wet rag. He couldnât do anything about his tattered clothesâall his replacement outfits were in his employee housing in one of the guild neighborhoodsâbut he could at least wash the blood off himself. Or, most of it. The wound torn across his forearm was still quite visible, even if it wasnât actively bleeding anymore.
Stolen story; please report.
As he finished eating and started cleaning himself, he got an unexpected notification that made him chuckle.
[Requirement fulfilled: Eat two daysâ worth of your average daily consumption of food in under one hour.
You have unlocked Universal Skill: Binge Eating.]
He glanced at the Skill just for posterityâs sake, but like most Universal Skills, not being limited to any specific Class led to it being much less powerful than his Blood Magus options.
Basically, for sixteen Skill Points, it would allow him to store more food in his stomach. So, he could eat a few daysâ worth of food all at once, then not eat for the next few days and still be perfectly comfortable. It seemed neat to have, but definitely not worth the cost.
However, the unlock did remind Zeth to take some time and organize his thoughts. Making some sort of a plan when it came to what Skills to buy in the future was basic practice for most Classers.
The way he saw it, he had a few goals right now:
1: Donât get killed by the Blood Mage who murdered his guildmates;
2: Confront Garon for leaving him and everyone else to die;
3: Donât get arrested for having what was almost certainly an illegal Class;
And 4: Level Up, which helped with the other three goals.
Right now, he wasnât quite strong enough to reliably complete any of the first three. Avoiding getting seen and arrested would be difficult if he intended to continue practicing his ritual magic, and he didnât really have the ability to fight back or escape currently. And, similarly, doing anything about the mage that wasnât âhope they donât notice meâ wasnât entirely within his ability, either.
So, Leveling Up would be his main priority for now.
He looked over his Status. He was only Level 3, but heâd already earned more Stats in the past day than some people would obtain over the course of their whole life. The only four Stats thatâd changed were the four he got inherently from his LevelsâEndurance, which had started at 6 from him having used a couple Skill Points to increase it when he was younger, was now up to 15, Awareness at 3, Poise at 6, and Shaping, his highest by far, at 21.
Then, there were Skills.
[PURCHASED CLASS-EXCLUSIVE SKILLS
Hellfire Ritual - Rank 2
Empowerment Ritual - Rank 3
Ritual Circle Mastery - Rank 5
UNLOCKED CLASS-EXCLUSIVE SKILLS
Forbidden Knowledge - Cost: 25
Vile Focus - Cost: 8
Unholy Strength - Cost: 18]
He had five Skill Points right now, which wasnât enough to buy anything heâd unlocked. Though, he was close to Vile Focus, whose requirement-decreasing effects he certainly felt would be of serious use. Now running the risk of being discovered at any moment while he was working on a ritual circle, heâd want to take as little time drawing them as possible.
Though, the Skill didnât actually make him any stronger in combat, which was something he sorely lacked currently. He wouldnât always have the luxury of taking a couple hours to set up some Hellfire Rituals and hoping his enemies stepped on them.
There were also his Universal Skills, which heâd mostly disregarded so far.
[PURCHASED UNIVERSAL SKILLS
Exercise - Rank 10
Steady Hands - Rank 10
Butchering - Rank 10
Meditation - Rank 10
Prayer - Rank 10
Human - Rank 10
UNLOCKED UNIVERSAL SKILLS
Binge Eating - Cost: 16
Dig - Cost: 21
Darkvision - Cost: 18
(28 more)]
The list of Universal Skills that heâd unlocked but not purchased over the course of his life was much too long to read through in its entirety, but most of them were in the same camp as Binge Eatingâway too many Skill Points for way too niche of an effect. And heâd already grabbed up any of the ones that cost less than ten Skill Pointsâthe profit Skills. Those were Prayer, Meditation, and Exercise. Plus Human, which everyone began with for free to get them started.
The only two Universal Skills heâd ever bought that cost more than tenâthe ones heâd actually spent Skill Points to acquireâwere Butchering and Steady Hands. Both of which he regretted taking.
Back when he was ten or so years old, his mom had started wanting him to get seriously involved with the family farm. Theyâd been failing with crops, so now they wanted to go all-in on animal product, and ten-year-old Zeth was the one who she put in charge of the operation.
His father had tried to help out where he couldâheâd always been less gung-ho about the farm idea, and he was clearly opposed to forcing Zeth to start working at such a young ageâbut he was still busy with his own duties, so Zeth was the primary person raising the pigs, cows, and chickens.
And, of course, when the time came, he was the one to slaughter them.
So, to help with his cutting of the meat, his mom ended up convincing him to purchase Butchering and Steady Hands. The Skills certainly helped him cut better pieces of meat, and Zeth had gotten better and better at his job the more he worked, but by the time a few years rolled by it became clear that selling animal meat was simply not profitable.
So the animal endeavor ended up failing, as anything related to the farm usually did. Too many animal casualties to monster attacks out in the relatively unprotected outskirts, and too much competition with traders who came in from out of town with their own meat, preserved using specialized magic items. Turning a profit in those conditions would be tough for anyone.
Zeth just wished his mother could have figured that fact out before making him spend a total of twenty-seven Skill Points on those two Skillsâa seven point net loss after getting them both to Rank ten. He would have certainly loved to have seven more Points now, that was for sure.
If he found some time, one thing he could do was find another Universal profit Skill to purchase and train. Prayer and Meditation were the two that were the most well-known to give good Skill Points in return for the work put in, and Exercise was probably the most popular third choice after them, but stopping by the library to find some others that were worth unlocking and purchasing could be beneficial. Especially now that he had a Class, the options available as to what would be feasible to train had widely expanded.
But that was for later. Now, Zeth waited to see his family. He didnât really feel like he missed themâheâd seen them just a couple days ago, from his perspectiveâbut he was still filled with nervous anticipation, hoping he hadnât been away for any big events.
But overwhelming all of those feelings was the desire to make things right. His family had him stolen from them, and heâd had months of his own life stolen, as well. He just hoped things could go back to relative normalcy.
It was only after a few minutes of waiting at the kitchen table after washing himself that Zeth heard the door open. He immediately shot to his feet and turned to look at the doorway.
The first person through, sprinting into the room like an arrow shot by the highest-Level Archer in all the land, was Zethâs little sister.
She tackled into him, burying her face into his stomach. Zeth coughed, laughing at the sudden impact. âWoah, Sophie! Youâre strong! Careful, or youâll break my ribs.â
âDonât ever leave again!â she shouted, face still smothered in his tattered shirt.
He sighed and hugged her. âYeah. Iâm sorry.â
Another voice came from outside. ââ¦It canât be.â
Hesitantly walking through the door, as though afraid sheâd see that Zeth wasnât there after all, was his mother. Tears were already welling in her eyes, hands clasped to her mouth the moment she saw him. Her dirtied blue dress told him sheâd been working on her knees outside all morning.
âI canât believe it,â she said, standing in the doorway. âIâd lost hope. Iâ¦â
Sophie looked up, long blonde hair a mess across her face. Sheâd gotten their dadâs hair, while Zeth had gotten their momâs brown curls. Sniffling, she huffed out a breath. âI always knew you were coming back! I knew for sure.â
âShe never stopped looking,â their mom said, smiling.
Sophie looked back at her angrily. âYou told me to stop wasting my time and go back to working! You were wrong, it wasnât a waste.â
Zeth frowned. âI thought she wasnât working on the farm yet. Sheâs only nine.â
His mom sighed. âWell, itâs justâ¦Look, letâs not argue right now. I know you disagree, but Iâve been doing the best I can. Itâs not important right now, besides. Where even were you?!â
Zeth shook his head, unsure how to begin explaining. âI can barely understand what happened, myself. I was in the cave-in, andâ¦Actually, whereâs dad? I want to see him, and itâd be pointless to explain while heâs not here.â
Zethâs mom gave him a strange look, and Sophie shoved her face back into his shirt.
âMom,â he said. âWhereâs dad?â
ââ¦He started working really hard after you disappeared, since we werenât getting the income from your work anymore. And, and we needed to expand our farmland some, anyway, so we could try some new crop Iâd bought, soâ¦â
Zeth looked at her. Sheâd been watery-eyed since she walked in, but now the tears were flowing down her face. âWhat are you saying?â
âAbout two weeks ago, heâ¦he was out tilling some land near the forestline. He was supposed to be in long before dinner, and he wasnât coming, so I went to check on him, but when I found him, heâ¦Oh, gods.â She stopped, unable to continue, and sobbed into her hands.
Zeth tried to step forward and comfort her, but Sophie was latched onto his torso harder than ever, holding him in place.
âHey,â he said gently. âMom.â
She took a deep breath, wiping her eyes with her sleeves. âUm, it was bandits. They were Wicked thralls. Iâm not sure if it was in the news before you disappeared, but a gang of them popped up around the outskirts not too long ago. They went after him because he was alone, I think, and they had combat Classes, soâ¦I, I stumbled upon his body, and it didnât look like he went without a fight.â
The blood drained from Zethâs face. ââ¦What?â
âThey, they didnât even take anything,â she got out between sobs. âJustâ¦senseless! Like he was nothing but a Level to them.â
âHeâsâ¦?â
âWe had the funeral the day after,â she said. âHeâs gone.â
âHe is not!â Sophie shouted, words muffled. âDadâs coming back too!â
âSweetie,â their mom said, voice broken. âI donât thinkâ¦I donât think itâs healthy to keep hoping for something that isnât possible.â
âZeth came back,â she said.
âZeth wasnât, well, he was missing. We thought he was gone, but we werenât sure. But your fatherâ¦We know where he is.â
âDadâs coming back!â she shouted again. âI know he is. Youâre wrong. I know heâs coming back for sure.â
Zeth fell into his chair. His legs couldnât support his body. His mouth couldnât move. His mind couldnât bear reality.
He stared at a blank wall.
ââ¦Bandits did this?â he eventually asked. âThey were Wicked thralls? Where are they?â
âThey were caught, eventually. Theyâre in jail awaiting trial.â
âThey arenât dead?â These bastards killed dad and they arenât already six feet under?
âNo, the Inquisitors arenât coming for a few more months.â
âWhat do you need Inquisitors for?â
She gave him a confused look. âTheyâre the only ones who can legally carry out executions. L-look, I donât think this is a good thing to talk about. If you need rest, thenââ
âIâm fine. I donât need to rest.â Youâre exactly right. Theyâre the only ones who can legally carry out executions.
She took a breath and nodded. âOkay, honey. And, um, you can stay with us from now on, of course. I can fix up your old bedroom in no time, andââ
Zeth blinked. âWait, what? Why wouldnât I stay at my house?â
Her face fell. âYou, you havenât heard. Oh, itâs just one bad thing after another, I know.â
âWhat is it?â Zeth asked, brows furrowed.
âWhen you went missingâ¦Well, once you were gone for a few days, your manager, Garon, came by and informed us heâd, er, replaced your position. So, if you came back, you would be out of the guild.â
Zeth blinked. âGaron fired me. And kicked me out of my house.â
âIâ¦Iâm sure we can find work for you on the farm. If youâd like, you can pick up working as a butcher againâwe still keep a couple animals, and we can always try to get the whole process working better this time. Maybe people will be more willing to buy from us? Oh, and now that youâre back, you can go and pick up your last salary, too! So maybe that can fund us for a little while longer.â
âLast salary? Why wouldnât Garon just give that to you? He knows youâre my mom.â
âW-well, I saw him at, erâ¦at your fatherâs funeral. He just happened to be passing by on the street, and I came up to him and asked about it, and he said that he didnât technically need to give that out since you werenât around to claim it. And, since the guild only pays out to family in the case of a confirmed death, and we couldnât prove one way or another where you wereâ¦But, but now that youâre back, you can go and get the money! So, itâs all okay. No need to worry. So, if you go and do that, we might have enough to afford another pig or two in addition toâ¦â
Zeth had stopped listening.
Garon fired me for going missing in the cave-in that he refused to save me from. And then, upon seeing my grieving mother at her own husbandâs funeral, he refused to pay her the money that was rightfully hers.
It was like he was so angry, it looped back around to perfect calm.
Oh.
I should update my to-do list.
1: Kill the Blood Mage;
2: Kill Garon;
3: Kill the bandits;
4: Level Up until youâre strong enough to do items 1-3.
He focused on 4. He needed to get as powerful as possible, as quickly as possible. That meant he needed more sacrifices.
âHey mom,â he said. âYeah, Iâll do it. Iâll work as a butcher again.â
Her eyes lit up. âReally? You will?â
âI will. You still have that old shed I can work in, right?ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âYes, yes, of course, whatever you need.â
âGreat. Just get me some animals I can kill, and Iâll do what I need to do.â