Chapter Twenty: A Potion and a Promise
The Sorceress's Soul: A LitRPG Adventure (2.0)
We didnât speak much on the way back.
It was a long walk from the Steelclaw den, past partially collapsed tunnels and dust-thick air. And even though I wasnât tired, exactly, there was a heaviness to me that hadnât been there before. A quiet weight after all the fire and thunder. A buzz in my gauntleted fingertips that hadnât faded since Iâd first felt the ripple of the stone beneath my feet.
Varashan walked beside me. Steady. Spear still in hand.
Gwyn as always, guarded me closely.
We stepped into the city through one of the side entrances near the fungal markets. Light broke across the carved halls in pale blues and soft greens, nothing like the bloody glow of the Steelclaw tunnels. This was a home, lived-in. Scarred. But still breathing. Full of hesitant, guarded life.
Varashan guided me through its winding heart, all the way up a carved, spined ridge path to a tiered district shaded by pale-silver trees. And there, nestled at the top of a stone terrace, was Anaharaâs mansion.
Mansion might have been the wrong word. Temple? Manor? It was regal, yes. But also weathered, like it knew it had been built in the age before the world fell, and had simply refused to crumble like the rest of it. Dark jade tiles covered its roofs. Runes etched into the archways whispered softly with old power.
It was beautiful.
Varashan knocked once, sharp but polite.
The door opened a few moments later.
Sorayelle stood on the other side, bright-eyed and barefoot, her red-black hair half-tucked behind one ear. âYou donât have to knock, Clarissa,â she said, grabbing my wrist and tugging me forward. âYou live here now, remember?â
I blinked, then laughed awkwardly. âRight. Still not used to that.â
The look she gave meâsoft, expectant, proudâhit me in a way I wasnât ready for. Like when my youngest sister used to wait at the door for me to come home from school. Hopeful. Grateful. Like I was someone worth looking up to. "Well, get acquainted with it."
And for just a second, I wondered⦠was I filling someone else's place in Sorayelleâs life?
Did I remind her of her own sister?
âThank you,â I said quietly.
Her hand slid down to mine, her fingers wrapping around my palm. âAre these new?â she asked, staring at my gauntlets with awe. âThey look so sturdy and majestic. You have to tell me everything. What was the hunt like? Was it scary? Did Gwyn eat anything weird?â
Gwyn purred from beside me. "Gwyn can talk for herself, little one. And yes, I bit quite a few weird things."
Varashan cleared his throat behind me. âMay I come in as well? I need to speak with your grandmother.â
Sorayelle looked up. âSheâs having breakfast right now, but yesâI believe it should be fine.â
***SCENE BREAK***
My arms were sore.
Which didnât make sense, because I was strong now. System-strong. Monster-slaying strong. But grinding a Greater Mana Shard into powder by hand?
Still not easy.
Especially not while trying to monitor the heat of a bubbling alchemical brew that smelled like sweet mint and overcooked berries.
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âKeep grinding,â Anahara instructed from over my shoulder. âBut do not fail to watch the pot, girl. Too hot, and youâll burn the potency off entirely. Too cold, and the suspension will fail to take.â
âIâm trying,â I muttered, rotating the mortar beneath my pestle with short, steady pushes. I glanced up at the shimmering brew. âIs it supposed to glow like that?â
âYes. That means itâs still alive. Now hurry. Add the second shardâs dust. Itâs time.â
I lifted the pestle bowl of powdered shard and dumped it into the pot.
Anahara practically beamed. âNow bind the mixture with elderoot before it separates.â
I stared blankly at the roots sheâd laid out earlier. âUhâ¦â
She sighed, grabbed the rightmost root of the many, and shoved it into my hand. âChop. Quickly. You have seconds.â
I scrambled for the neaby cooking knife, diced the elderoot as fast as I could, and tossed the bits in. A puff of purple steam erupted from the pot, sweet and spicy and thick enough to make me blink.
Anahara grinned. âThatâs it. Smother the fire.â
I did, killing the flame with mud from a nearby jar of it. Just as a System ping hit me like a pat on the back.
[You have created a potion!]
[Congratulations. You are the first soul from Earth to create a potion. Rewards granted.]
[Instinctive Herbalist [R] Perk added.]
[Perk Description: Your senses guide you to the useful plants and herbs of the varied worlds, sifting the wheat from the chaff. (By utilizing smell, sight, or taste, you may identify one effect of any given alchemical ingredient, stacking to discover other effects.)]
Anahara handed me a ladle and a squat, empty glass bottle. âStrain it in. Donât waste the brew. And then youâre done. Youâll want rest before tomorrow.â
âTomorrow?â I echoed, half-dazed.
âYour feast,â she said, amused. âIt is happening, dear. That's what Varashan and I were discussing before, while you and my granddaughter socialized."
I blinked at her. Then down at the pot of glowing liquid.
Now that it was finalized, the System identified it instantly:
[Greater Mana Potion (Poor): Brewed inefficiently and without much skill, this potion still brims with a greater aura of magical energy. Restores 100 mana. Quantity: 1.]
My first potion.
It smelled like sugar and lavender. And success--well, not really, but to me it did.
***SCENE BREAK***
We lay in the dark, the room aglow with soft light leaking through silver-crystaled windows.
Sorayelleâs bed sat beside mine. Gwyn curled up by the door, half-awake, her breath slow but alert.
âYou okay?â Sorayelle asked.
I paused. âYeahââ
âYou donât have to lie,â she cut in. âTalk to me. Grandmother says she wants to take you into our house officially. That makes us family.â
âThatâs the thing,â I said, voice quiet. âWould she do that for just anyone?â
âNo,â she said without hesitation. âBut youâre special.â
âBecause I might be able to save the world?â
âWell⦠yes.â
âItâs a lot,â I admitted. âAnd I keep thinking that if I do manage it, Iâll have to go back home and do it all over again there.â
âThis is your world now too,â Sorayelle said. âAt least, whatâs left of it.â
âWhat will you all do if I succeed?â I asked. âIf Cowagen falls? Will this place stop being a dungeon? Will it become a planet again?â
âI donât know,â she whispered. âBut maybe weâll just⦠live. Free. Not hunted. That could be enough. It'd be more than we have now by a lot."
I closed my eyes. âI want that for you. For all of you. Youâve been kind to me. I just⦠Iâm not used to having so much riding on me.â
âYouâre not alone,â she said. âEven if all I can do is listen, Iâll do that.â
Gwyn lifted her head slightly from the floor. âAnd I share your burden, my Lady.â
I smiled faintly. âIâm glad I have you. Both of you.â
There was a pause. Then Sorayelleâs voice, quieter.
âYou know⦠that used to be my sisterâs bed.â
I opened my eyes again. Iâd guessed, but hearing it made my chest ache.
âWhat really happened to her?â I asked gently. "How was she taken?"
âShe was part of a scavenging group,â Sorayelle said. âShe trained under Varashan. She wasnât a System user⦠but she was strong. Brave.â
âAnd?â
âWe had a bad harvest. The elders decided to risk the tunnels that led aboveground, ones that exited far from the Western Ruler. But my sister's party was ambushed. Skulkers.â Her voice cracked slightly. âShe and a few others held them off so the rest could run.â
âDid they take her?â
âOr kill her. But Skulkers donât usually kill. They want to make more of themselves.â
I felt my blood run cold. My hands curled beneath the blanket.
âIâm so sorry,â I whispered. âI canât imagine losing my sister.â
âYou have one?â
âTwo. But I was mostly thinking of Anna. Sheâs only a year younger than me. Prettier. Smarter, most of the time. I think I looked up to her more than she did to me, even though I was older. I miss her.â
The silence hung for a long while.
âCan I ask a favor?â Sorayelle said.
I turned toward her. âOf course.â
âIf thereâs any way⦠if you find her. My sister. If sheâs still aliveâ¦â
âI donât know how,â I said honestly. âBut if I can... I swear, I will.â
The faint light glimmered on her cheeks. Tears caught like stars in her eyes and then shooting down her cheeks.
âThank you.â