Chapter 62: Gentle Mistress
The Vampire’s Templar
Her mission has been accomplished. Will Mistress praise her for it?
As she had been asked to, Kagriss put the flame haired girl into a spot where she had to meaningfully protect Fleur.
The instructions were vague, so she could take some liberties to achieve her goal. As a result, she had shaped the situation as she thought was necessary in order to truly test Anneâs resolve: a situation where both of them fell into a life or death situation where Anneâs only choice was abandoning Fleur or certain death.
In her opinion, a person possessing a resolution of any lesser caliber was unsuitable to become the lover of someone that her mistress favored. Fortunately, Anne had passed the test and with flying colors.
If Anne could be considered her counterpart as Fleur was to Mistress, then Anne had earned her respect for her dedication.
As happy as Kagriss was about her success, however, it wasnât easy.
Bestowing so much power into inferior vessels such as those chimeras took a lot out of herâthey wasted so much mana just by moving. Fleur had been exactly right when she pointed out the flaws on the chimeras.
âBut thatâs just because theyâre inferior,â Kagriss told herself.
She was sure that her bestowal would work much better on someone like her mistress who would be much more efficient with the extra mana and power. Someday, sheâll have the honor of accompanying her mistress into battle, and that day, sheâll be able to show off her true worth.
The trees blurred beneath Kagriss as she flew south, scanning the path for signs of her mistress and the horse. However, as she got closer to where her mistress should have been, she detected ripples of undead mana, pulsing at regular intervals into the air like a beacon. Changing course to fly toward the beacon out of curiosity, she soon found another one further off the beaten path.
Kagriss tilted her head in confusion. âDid Mistress leave these? Why is she heading that way?â
Regardless of the reason, if it really was a sign from her mistress, then it would be best to hurry and catch up. She knew that Fleur and Anne were both important people to her mistress, so if her mistress was willing to delay tending to their injuries, then whatever her mistress was up to must be of utmost importance.
She soon reached the magical beacon. It was a spell that she had never seen before and there were many inefficiencies in its structure. Just from those aspects, Kagriss knew that the caster of this beacon spell was her mistress.
Mistress loved to convert magic that used holy mana into magic that used undead mana, but the first iteration of each spell was always either a failure or riddled with inefficiencies. Kagriss has had the pleasure of refining and optimizing some of them before, and she considered it a great honor to help her mistress.
Theyâll definitely do more things together after this.
Speaking of more things together, what exactly was her mistress up to, laying all these beacons for her? Judging by the state of the construction, the beacon was laid pretty recently, and she sensed her mistressâs horse tied up nearby, which meant her mistress continued by flying.
Leaving the beacon spell alone, Kagriss took to the skies once more. The beacons were mostly in a straight line. âDid Mistress already have a destination in mind? It doesnât look like she found something interesting and wanted to investigateâ¦â
After she thought about the curious situation for a bit, Kagriss tossed the questions she had into the back of the mind and concentrated on flying. There was no need to question her mistressâs intentions.
After flying for a while, she finally came to the end of the beacons with her mistress nowhere in sight. Where could Mistress be? Kagriss landed near the beacon that was sitting at the base of a large tree, and looked around. However, there was no one nearby.
Still confused, Kagriss walked toward the beacon and crouched down next to it, trying to study it in case there were clues that her mistress left behind.
âHmmm?â As she studied the spell, she found something strange. The spell structure was slightly different compared to the other beacons. When she tried to investigate the spell in greater depth by pushing her own mana into it, the mana suddenly disappeared, absorbed into the spell.
Kagriss jumped back, surprised by the spellâs reaction. But what came after was even more surprising, as the spell seemed to transform intoâ¦something else, before collapsing entirely.
âHuh? What happened?â She ran back to where the spell had been, using her mana to search all over, but no matter what she did, there was nothing else of the spell except some residual mana. âThe spell! Mistressâs spell is gone!â
What was she going to do now? Her lead on her mistressâs whereabouts was gone.
Should she start casting out her mana to let her mistress know she was here? But what if her mistress was too far? What if there was a break in the beacon chain that her mistress didnât catch?
Before she could do anything, she felt an almost undetectable pulse of undead mana from somewhere ahead of her. She sensed it again and again, each pulse so brief that if she hadnât been waiting for it, or so used to it, she might have missed it.
Pulse pulse pulse, pauseâ¦pulseâ¦
Each series of pulses corresponded to letters in the human alphabet. According to her mistress, it was a way of communicating by substituting sound or light with mana. Her mistress had told her that it was a variation of the code used by the Templar Order her mistress used to be a part of, but because her mistress didnât fully trust her yet, she made changes to the code.
However, all Kagriss got from that was that she and her mistress shared a code that only they knew. Even if her mistress grew to trust her completely, sheâll still want to use this variation over any other.
âHideâ¦auraâ¦stayâ¦?â she muttered as she deciphered the message from the series of mana pulses and pauses. Now she was glad that she didnât go around announcing her presence to the world. Following her mistressâs instructions, she stayed exactly where she was while withdrawing her undead aura into her, effectively becoming invisible to anything that wasnât specifically searching for her without using spells.
About a minute later, she saw a figure running through the forest, so short that at times the figure disappeared behind the bushes. Finally, the figure burst out from behind an especially tall bush where she had disappeared behind and stopped in front of Kagriss. âMistress!â
âShhh!â her mistress hissed at her, putting her hand on her mouth. âDonât be so noisy!â
Kagrissâs eyes widened as she felt her mistressâs small fingers against her lips. Although her first instinct was to lick them, there was a time and place for everything and now wasnât it. She nodded and her mistress removed her hand. Dropping her voice to a whisper, she asked her mistress about the strange beacon spell.
âOh, that? It lets me know if youâre here. Itâs really simple: since I know youâll definitely try to mess with the beacon and youâll put your mana into it, I set you as the trigger. Once the trigger absorbs your mana, the spell progresses into the next step and sends a ping to my mind as long as Iâm not too far away,â Mistress said. âThatâs how I know to come back.â
Mistress knew her so well!
âHow is the moonstone holding?â
âI donât knowâ¦â Kagriss took out the moonstone that her mistress had given her. Since they needed to take separate action and would be separated beyond the range of the bloodbonding moonstone, her mistress had taken out all the things she needed and bound it to her own blood. Her mistress then gave what remainedâwhich was almost everythingâto Kagriss for safekeeping, as well as so she could still wear that wine-red dress.
Her mistress held her small hand over it and dumped a bunch of blood mana into the blue-white rock. âThere. That should last you a while more, I think, as long as you donât keep taking things in and out of it.â
âThank you, Mistress!â Kagriss felt the bubbly feeling of happiness in her chest again as she put away the moonstoneâ¦the feeling was strange, but she felt sheâll never tire of it.
However, she quickly shook herself out of her joy and jumped to the main point. âWhat are you doing here, Mistress?â
âIâll tell you in a bit,â Mistress replied. âBy the way, how did the plan with Anne and the chimeras go? Was it a success?â
The mistress looked concerned. What could be so important that it took precedence over what happened with Fleur and Anne? Kagriss thought about her answer for a bit. âI think it went well. No matter what happened, Anne never gave up on protecting Fleur. Her resolve was really strong.â
âThatâs goodâ¦wait, what do you mean âno matter what happened?ââ The sigh of relief that her mistress released stopped abruptly. âWhat happened?â
âI empowered the chimeras and had them batter them a bit. They did surprisingly well,â Kagriss said, thinking back to the battle before continuing. âAfter I drove them into a corner and knocked Fleur out, Anne held her ground against the chimera, and after I ascertained that she was going to defend Fleur to the death, I killed the chimera.â
When she finished, Kagriss found her mistress staring at her. âWhatâs wrong?â she asked.
âIâm sorry, did you say empower? How powerfulâ¦?â
âUmâ¦Iâm not sure, but around five to ten times they would have had if they were living?â Kagriss said. âYou would call them pseudo knight-classes, Mistress.â
As the words came out of Kagrissâs mouth, she knew from her mistressâs expression that her mistress wasnât happy. The last time her mistress was that angry was when she had touched her out of curiosity when Mistress was with her mother and left her body in her care.
No, compared to now, last time was nothing. Kagriss squeezed her eyes shut as sheâd seen Anne and Fleur do, readying for the inevitable beration from her mistress. But as seconds ticked by and nothing happened, she opened her eyes slowly to peek at her mistress.
Her mistress didnât look angry anymoreâfar from it. She looked as if she had a difficult problem she couldnât solve, but needed it solved desperately. Stressedâ¦
âMistress?â she asked.
âKagrissâ¦are they okay?â Mistress asked.
âYes. I made sure to not inflict any fatal or permanent injuries,â Kagriss replied. âFleur is more wounded, but Iâm sure that you will be able to heal her when you return.â
âI see,â Mistress said. âWhen you said fatal or permanentâ¦are you using human standards or undead standards?â
âHumans.â
âGood, goodâ¦letâs head back now,â Mistress said. âJustâ¦donât do that again, if there is ever a next timeâ¦â
Mistress channeled blood mana into her wings and lifted into the air, keeping the extra mana carefully suppressed within the wingsâenough that Kagriss could barely detect it.
Following her mistressâs example, Kagriss casted her flying spells, suppressing their signatures as her mistress had. As they flew toward the path again, keeping low to the treelines, Kagriss sped up until she was right next to Mistress.
âMistress, what about the thing you were doing?â
âThing? Ohâ¦that can wait. Fleur is more important after all,â her mistress replied. âWell, I guess I can tell you now.â
Kagriss perked up her ears. She had thought that Mistress was going to withhold the information from her as punishment.
âMyâ¦mother told me that there was a small undead camp near where we were, and that it was related to Arvelâs case. I was going to raid it with your help.â
For something that her mistress was being so secretive about, her tone was surprisingly mildâ¦a bit too mild, as if she was thinking about something else and was distracted.
When Kagriss took a closer look, her mistressâs neck was a bit red, which meant she was embarrassed about something. Then again, Mistress was easily embarrassed.
âOhâ¦I had no idea.â
Kagriss hadnât detected any undead activities where Mistress came to get her.
Undead campâ¦were their next opponents going to be undead? Surprisingly, she didnât feel opposed to fighting undead, as long as she was going to be of help to her mistress. She wanted to be helpfulâ¦but this time, she seemed to have made a mistake and made Mistress upset at her.
Kagriss carefully looked over at her mistress. Mistressâs face was blank and Kagriss couldnât figure out what she was thinking.
Taking a deep breath to calm herself as sheâd seen Mistress do, she hesitated and asked her question.
âUmâ¦Mistress. What did I do wrong?â
Mistress turned. There was no anger in her eyes. Instead, she just stretched out her hand and patted Kagriss on the head. Her mistressâs touch was as gentle as ever.
âNothing. You did your best, but there was a misunderstanding. Itâs really all my fault for not being clear enough. Your mistake was just being too enthusiastic about it.â Mistress continued to rub her head as she explained.
Kagriss couldnât help but think about how gentle of a master her mistress was, so willing to forgive her mistakes. She hadnât made the wrong choice that fateful night she and her master met, almost by chance.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
Or could it be what they called fate?