Chapter 50
Blood Magus
âAllow me to stay here for as long as the time limit allows,â the demon begged, âand I will do whatever you ask.â
Zeth stared at her, still lying back at the edge of the ritual circle, his heart pounding so hard he felt it may snap his ribs in two. âWhat are you talking about?â
She looked up, meeting his eyes. To Zethâs fear-addled mind, the intense stare almost looked as if it contained the souls of thousands of tortured men, screaming for him to run. But within that look was also a clear sense of desperation. âI-I am speaking to my summoner, correct? Or does this process work differently from what I have heard?â
âIâ¦Yeah, thatâs me,â he said, frowning. Had any other demon ever asked him that question before? How did she not know he was her summoner?
âGood,â she said, bowing her head once more. She almost looked like she was treating Zeth as some sort of royalty. âThen please, if you would grant me my wish. Do not unsummon me, and I will follow your every order until the time limit is up and I am forced to return.â
He stared at her. âYouâll do whatever I ask? You donât want any payment?â
âNo,â she said. âMy kind typically accept summons in order to secure human lives in exchange for favors, yes? I want no such thing. Please, allow me to make up for my inexperience with enthusiasm. I will not fail you.â
This was strange. Suspiciously strange. What kind of demon spoke like this? So far, she hadnât insulted his intelligence, called him a slug, or even made the slightest implication that humans were an inferior species to demons. Zethâs mind, forced into paranoia by this demonâs immensely powerful aura of fear, saw such a strange occurrence and instantly ran in every direction it could with her behavior. She was buttering him up before backstabbing him. She was just an illusion while the real demon was already in town, slaughtering people by the thousands. She was buying time while a demonic army was on their way to arrive on his doorstep. Most of the theories made no sense, but they all slammed into his brain at full force, keeping him from considering anything else.
Her face morphed into a worried expression. âAm I displeasing you? Please, tell me what I am doing wrong, and I will remedy my action immediately.â
âW-why donât you want payment?â Zeth asked. âAnd why are you acting this way? You arenât like other demons.â
âWhat do you mean? How should I be acting?â
âJust answer the question.â
She nodded slowly. âYour summoning beacon, it landed in a place on the surface of the Thirteenth Realm near the River of Fire. That river is extremely important to us demons, as itââ
âI know about it,â Zeth said. âItâs the only source of drinkable liquid in your realm, right?â
She blinked. âOh. I did not know humans would be so knowledgeable about our home. Well, yes, then I will skip past the context. The River Powers empire is fighting against my homeland, the Thylmoor Kingdom, and I am aâ¦a soldier, who was on the frontlines of a particular battle occurring over control of a particularly important patch of land. It seems that, by happenstance, your beacon was dropped right on the site of this battle, after it occurred. Right after our forces were driven to retreat, and after I was taken prisoner. I have been held captive for some hours now, and suspect that they will decide to torture me for information and execute me soon. So, when the beacon landed and I got the notificationâ¦â
âYou took it so you could escape,â Zeth said, nodding. It was clever thinking on her part, really. Unfortunately, that was bad news for him. Clever demons werenât the type he wanted under his command.
âNot exactly,â she said. âWhen demons are summoned, our bodies are taken to the First Realm. However, our souls are left behind, back in the Thirteenth. They are invulnerable to harm while our bodies are separated from them, but magic users can still manipulate the souls to an extentâand that means moving them around, or keeping them in place. I have no doubt that my soul is still being kept in the same jail cell I was held in before, and when I am returned from your realm, I will be executed instantly.â
â...Oh,â Zeth said. âSo thatâs why you want to wait out the whole time limit? To extend your time to be as long as it can be before death?â
She nodded. âPerhapsâ¦Perhaps it is a cowardly decision. But when presented with the opportunity to at least live another twenty-four hours, I suppose my instincts carried my decision-making.
For a moment, poking through the bog of fear that currently swamped Zethâs mind, he felt a twinge of empathy for this poor woman. He was looking at someone in desperation, reaching out for the last lifeline she could take before being unceremoniously killed. He was witnessing her final moments. It was strangely intimate, in a way. Though, how she remained so calm if her story was true and she really was waiting out her final moments before death, he couldnât quite understand.
âAnd, as for why I am acting differently,â she continued, âI have never accepted a summon before. So, I apologize if I do not know the proper etiquette. Please, tell me if I should change my behavior in any regard.â
â...No, no, youâre good,â Zeth said. He certainly preferred this over the constant threats on his life.
Of course, Zeth wasnât sure that he bought her story. Just some simple demon woman living her life in peace, never accepting any summons, never taking any lives? Fat chance. Especially not when she had easily the strongest aura of fear heâd ever experienced. She was insanely powerfulâhe could feel it. No way she had never been summoned before.
However, if she wanted to lie, that was fine. He didnât particularly care about her personal history. If she was willing to take orders and didnât care about payment, that was fine by him. Heâd be cautious and ensure she couldnât backstab him either way.
Now wasnât the time for conversation, regardless; he was running on a tight timetable. The town should have already been asleep by now, so he was burning away minutes that couldâve been used killing Garon.
Zeth got to his feet, taking a shaky breath. Even now that the strange situation had been mostly sorted, the fear persisted in his mind. This was really not comfortable. âAlright. Come with me, then. Iâll give you some orders and explain whatâs going on while we walk.â
âShall we exchange names?â she asked.
He stopped, looking back at her. âWhat?â
âOh. Was I wrong to ask that? I apologize, we do not have to. I simplyââ
âNo,â he said, âyou werenât wrong. Itâs just, Iâve never heard a demon ask that before. Iâm Zeth.â
She nodded slowly. Once again, even through the aura of fear clouding his thoughts, Zeth could clearly tell this woman was terrified of angering him. She probably felt just as afraid as he did, ironically. Though, strangely, despite being the one to ask, she almost looked reluctant to tell him her own name. â...I am Astrys.â
âAstrys, huh?â
She stared at him, as though waiting for him to say more.
But Zeth didnât have more to say. He nodded. âItâs nice to meet you then, I guess. Letâs go. Here are your orders: you will walk in a straight line behind me, never straying more than ten feet from my person at any time. Donât make any unnecessary noise, or draw attention to yourself in any way unless I order youâ¦â
As he continued speaking, they made their way through his base, with Astrys looking at the dirt around them and the ritual lines painted along the walls with curious eyes. Sheâd been wearing a controlled expression of indifference this entire time, but now, it seemed like that control was just barely beginning to slip, and a look of wonder was able to encroach onto her face. Zeth began questioning his suspicionsâmaybe this really was her first time in the First Realm, considering how interested she seemed in such mundane things.
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He pushed the thought from his mind. Once again, it didnât matter what it was she was lying about. She was a demon; demons lied. He obviously couldnât take her word on anything she said.
Zeth was reminded, as they walked, of the three Skills heâd unlocked in the process of the summoning. Now wasnât a good time to sit down and read through their full descriptions, so instead, he simply glanced over the beginning of each one, checking their Skill Point costs. He found that he wasnât able to afford any of them with his meager six Skill Points, so for now, that was all he had to check. He would read through the detailed descriptions later, when he wasnât on such a strict schedule.
As they walked through the maze of rooms, Astrys eventually asked, âSo, what is it you summoned me for?â
âWeâre gonna go to my town and kill someone,â he said. âIâll be doing the killing, but he might have a demon of his own. There might even be more than one. So, ideally, youâll be able to hold them off long enough for me to finish the job.â
She nodded. âAny demons that stand against me will fall.â
His eyebrows raised at that, remembering the first demon heâd summoned. That one, too, heâd told about potentially facing off against another demon, and the demon had flat-out said he didnât think itâd be realistic for Zeth to expect him to fight a demon and live. It was inherently a fifty-fifty shot when asking whose demon was stronger, after all. But this Astrys woman seemed pretty confident.
âThis town of yours,â she continued, âwill we be making the journey there on the surface? Or underground?â
He looked at her curiously. âOn the surface. Why do you ask?â
âHow far will the trek be? I do not know how long I will be able to endure your sun.â She nodded to her dark skin. âIn my own realm, I have built up a tolerance. But I am unsure about yours.â
âUhâ¦â Zeth suddenly realized how strange it was to be on the other side of this arrangement. Heâd spent so long asking demons about their alien environment, but he hadnât ever thought heâd have to explain how the First Realm worked to one of them. âYou wonât need to worry about it. You can stay out in the open all you want under our sun and you wonât get hurt.â
She stared at him. âYour sun does not burn you? Does it provide any light?â
âUh, yeah, plenty. Though, itâs nighttime right now, so you wonât be able to see it. Just our moon.â
âNighttime? Moon?â
âOh. You guys donât have that, either, huh? Uh, yeah, so our sun only stays out for about two thirds of the day. The other third, it goes away, and the moon appears. Itâs like a weaker version of the sunânot bright enough to provide more than a tiny bit of light. Not even bright enough to illuminate the sky, so the stars come out at night, too.â
âAnd what is a star?â
Zeth couldnât help but smile at her naivety. It was almost cute, the way she was asking so many questions. He couldnât explain why, but he felt slightly excited to show this woman her first starry night. âJust walk with me; weâre almost out of my base. Iâll show you.â
He strode over to the wooden spiral staircase that led up to the surface, stepping up onto it and beginning the ascent. Astrys froze when she saw it, though, stepping back as if on guard.
âWhat is it?â Zeth asked.
âAre humans immune to void trees?â she asked, looking at him in amazement.
âWhat?â
âVoid trees. They are beasts that root into the ground and stay perfectly still, waiting for their prey to stumble too close to them so they may consume the personâs flesh right from the bone. They are some of the most dangerous predators in our realm. The surface you are standing on, it looks almost identical to the material they are made of. Though, I suppose they must be exclusive to my realm, if you do not recognize the name.â
Zeth remembered hearing about those things from another of the demons; heâd written down the info and kept it in his map room. âOh, uh, Iâve heard about them, but we donât have them here. This is justâ¦a tree. A normal one. Theyâre plants, and theyâre totally harmless; we cut them up and use them for building materials.â
She didnât budge, continuing to eye the mundane planks of wood. âAnd you are sure of this? You have seen other demons make contact with these ânormal treesâ and survive?â
â...Yeah.â
With a deep breath, she nodded and took cautious steps forward, until she was standing in front of the staircase. Slowly, she lifted a foot and crept her toe closer and closer to the wooden step, until it tapped against the material. Nothing happened.
She let out the breath, lifting the foot up and placing it fully down on the surface, though she continued to watch it cautiously. âIt feels so strange, touching the flesh of a void tree. Or, I suppose, a ânormal tree.â Still, I wonder if this is what void trees feel like. Nobody has ever made contact with one without being devoured first.â
Zeth just shrugged. Now that she was on the steps, he continued climbing upward. âSo, youâve really never heard anything about the First Realm from any of your demon friends? Nothing about what itâs like here, or how everyone here is a weakling slug?â
âPerhaps occasionally,â she said. âDo you prefer to be called slugs? I always took it to be an insult.â
â...No. I donât prefer that.â
âI see. Well, yes, I have heard some. But I suppose I was never too social, so I havenât heard much.â She said that last part with a slight bit of bitterness creeping into her tone.
He nodded. âWell, weâre just about to the surface. Weâre on a tight schedule, so Iâll show you the way, and explain the plan while we walk. Alright?â
With that, he climbed up the last few steps, placed his hand on the trapdoor covering the entrance, and pushed it open.
âSo,â he said, climbing up out of the hole and standing on solid ground, âthis is just the forest outside town. Donât worry, none of this stuffâs dangerous. Follow me and Iâll lead the way.â
But as he walked in the direction of town, he glanced back to see Astrys still standing on the last step of the staircase, looking up into the sky with wide eyes and a jaw hanging open, the stars reflecting off of her pupils. At this point, the faux indifferent expression had been completely dropped. She looked absolutely spellbound.
âWhatâ¦â she muttered, unable to finish her thought. Eventually, her gaze still fixated on the sky, she asked, â...You live with this scene painted above you at all times?â
âEvery night, yeah,â Zeth said with a nod. He glanced upward. The moon was full, reflecting a great deal of pale light across the forest, with a swath of little white dots scattered out around it. âI guess it does look pretty beautiful, huh?â
âItâs amazing.â
After a moment of silence between them, Zeth cleared his throat. âAnywayâ¦â
âR-right,â she said, looking back down and hurrying up out of the stairwell, herself. âI apologize for the delay.â
âItâs okay,â he said. âJust donât take any action against me, and youâre good.â
As she placed her feet down in the dirt, she blinked, looking down. âYour ground is soft here. And these little green things poking up out of the dirt feel so strange.â
âUh, yeah. Thatâs called grass. You really donât have much in the Thirteenth Realm, huh?â
âI suppose not,â she said, lifting her leg up and hovering her foot over the ground as she moved it back and forth, feeling the blades brush against her. After a moment of this, she shook her head, blinking once again and squaring her shoulders. âUm, I apologize once again for the delay. Let us depart.â
So they did, finally beginning the trek through the forest. Astrys occasionally spoke up, asking about whatever they came across, and Zeth explained whatever he could as they walked.
But as they were getting close to arriving, she suddenly stopped in her tracks, going on alert.
Zeth stopped too, looking at her. âWhat is it?â
âI hear something approaching. Four legs, heavy stature,â she said, speaking in a completely different, militaristic tone of voice.
Soon, he heard the approaching steps, too, slowly moving to stand behind his demonic escort. And sure enough, within a couple seconds, the nasty face of a monster came peeking out from between a pair of trees in the darkened forest. Heâd seen one of them beforeâa mass of sinewy muscle that was taut from head to toe, like the beast was constantly ready to pounce on anything that dared move within its vision. Drool leaked from between sharpened teeth, dripping onto the forest floor as it slowly approached, two beady eyes fixed on them.
But, of course, the moment it got close enough to Zethâor, more specifically, to Astrysâit froze in place, its pupils dilating wide and eyes darting around, looking for danger. Itâd obviously just gotten hit by her fear aura.
âI do not know how powerful this monster is,â she said, having shifted into a combat-ready stance. âShall we flee?â
âYou should be able to take it,â Zeth said. âGo ahead and kill the thingâquietly. At least, as long as youâre as strong as the other demons Iâveââ
Before he could even finish, she lunged ahead, closing the distance between herself and the monster in two steps, and thrust her fist forward, where it struck the head of the monster, split its skull open, drove through its brain, and protruded all the way through the other side.
Its body fell limp, never having been given the time to react, as she held her fist straight out, the thingâs body hanging off it like a piece of meat thatâd been skewered.
She looked down at her own arm, seemingly in surprise at how quickly sheâd destroyed her foe. â...It seems the monsters in this realm are quite weak.â
Zeth nodded, a smile creeping onto his face. âYou are going to be absolutely perfect.â