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Millennial Mage - Chapter 114

Published at 22nd of March 2024 05:32:47 AM


Chapter 114: Less Than Ideal

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Chapter 114: Less Than Ideal

Tala found herself to be in a bad mood.

With around sixteen guards in need of additional healing and the death benefits for five further guards, the Mage protector payments had been less than shed hoped.

Not that I begrudge the guards their healing, or the families the money for the death of their loved ones She definitely wished that neither category had anyone in it, though. Thats a good, not-too-selfish thought. She gave herself a mental pat on the back.

In the end, shed received twelve gold as the caravans dimensional Mage; the increase to that figure was due to her verified status as an Archon. For her work as a Mage protector, shed received a token to use with any inscriber, so that they could charge half the inscription cost to the guild, and thirty-six ounces, gold.

She now had more money than shed ever had before, but it still felt like a ridiculously paltry amount.

Thankfully, shed also gotten permission to stay in her room within the cargo-slot, until the caravan left the city once more.

At least that takes care of housing.

Rane, Mistress Odera, and Tala all moved through the busy, but not crowded, ground-floor streets. They were heading for the spiral road on which worked the inscriptionist whom Holly had designated as Competent enough to work on a portion of Talas spell-forms.

Rane needed some touch-ups, and Mistress Odera had already affirmed that she could use the same.

The man had his workshop on the two oclock road, which began quite close to the work-yard that their caravan had stopped in.

The twelve spiraling roads were each named for the position on the clock at which they started, given the roughly circular interior of the tree. They had come in from the east, so that gate was at the three oclock position, and the three oclock spiral began at the gate tunnel. The two oclock road touched the bottom floor to the north of the eastern gate.

Each road did a full circuit before the next major floor, the next tier, was reached. There, more than a hundred feet above them, another large open space held more buildings, parks, or common spaces, depending on the tier. This basic structure repeated for each level as the city went up.

Thus, each road intersected the floor of every tier at the roads clock position, holding true to its name.

Now, this could cause all sorts of frustration to the uninformed. If a pedestrian wished to get to a place that they could see, but which was above them, on another spiral, they couldnt just walk straight towards it. To facilitate transition between the spiral streets, which were stacked one atop another and perfectly pitched for even spacing, there were inset ladder tubes every so often.

Anyone moving large vehicles around was not given such a convenient way to change between the spirals.

That said, as Tala inspected the city more closely, she noticed that each spiral had a color combination theme to it, which made it much easier to determine which oclock spiral would be needed to get to any given location, assuming she could see her desired destination. The two oclock street, on which they needed to walk, had red and white banding on the outside railing as well as most of the buildings.

When they reached the entrance to the spiraling road, they turned to the right, walking beside the buildings to leave the inner portion of the road, that which was closest to the railings, open for vehicle or animal traffic. There were some horses and a few oxen, but those were really the only beasts that Tala saw. There are probably all sorts, but they just arent as common.

Terry eyed each passing creature with interest but settled back down on Talas shoulder after they passed without doing more.

The walkway they used on the building side of the road, designated by more white and red stripes on the roadway, was wide enough for five or six people to pass with ease.

Tala glanced down the side passages as they moved past. Some were gated and clearly marked as private sections of the city. Some of those seemed to be entirely owned by a single family with unifying styles behind heraldically emblazoned gates. Others seemed to belong to trading groups, or one of the Guilds. Probably mostly farming or crafting related. It had seemed like most of the buildings on the first-tier main floor were oriented towards crafting or production of some kind.

Other roads were simply that: roads through a short side district, leading towards the outside of the great tree without penetrating to the open air.

There were residential streets, along with shops either of mixed types or of a unified kind.

Food! Tala turned down a side street, and Rane shook his head, smiling.

This particular side-street had alternating red and yellow magical lights down the length, and every shop they could see seemed to be oriented towards food of one kind or other. They were a mix of restaurants and supply stores, if Tala was seeing correctly. I could get ingredients here and cook for myself, or just buy bulk food more cheaply. It was a good thought. Her consumptive needs did not lend themselves to a reasonable budget.

Aside from the lighting, the obvious features of the street were a series of tables, trees, and low shrubs artfully spaced throughout the area, giving plenty of places for people to enjoy their food, as well as some privacy and nature. The plants were selected to be the most pleasing in the oddly colored lighting, too.

Mistress Odera gave the other two long looks. We should get to the inscriptionist.

Tala stopped, turning around to face the older woman. Of course we should, but I need some food. Tala hesitated. I should have gotten the Caravan Guild to pay for half my food, too

Mistress Odera huffed a laugh. You could probably make a case for it, given your need to eat so much because of your inscriptions, and for your inscriptions to use.

Can you authorize that?

As a blanket allowance? No, definitely not, but I can speak to it, once were back in Bandfast. She got a thoughtful look on her face but didnt say more.

But I need food now. Tala stopped, realizing just how whiny that had sounded. Sorry about that. I meant: My reserves are incredibly depleted.

Mistress Odera opened her mouth to say something but stopped as Rane walked back up to them. When did he leave?

He held out something to Tala. Eat. We can get you more after our inscriptions are refreshed.

Tala took it without thinking. It was a thick flatbread that had been slit open and stuffed full of meat and vegetables, and then drenched in sauce. The bread was such that nothing leaked out. The thing was heavy. Thank you! She smiled to Rane. What do I owe you?

He waved her off. I think you helped more than the pay distribution represented. It wasnt worth fighting about, but I can correct the slight imbalance with a couple of meals.

Tala opened her mouth to object, then considered his words. Yeah, it probably wouldnt be worth contesting the division of things for less than a gold, and there is no way this cost that much. Very well, then. Thank you, Master Rane.

Mistress Odera sighed, likely in part because shed been a guiding hand behind the distribution of their pay as Mage protectors. Even so, she didnt interject with regard to the food or pay. Can we go, then?

Im good for now, yes.

They went back out to the main road, and Tala took a huge bite of the meal-in-a-package. There really are a lot of variations on this concept. Its like a pasty, or a little caravan, or a pot-pie, or so many other things Ive come across, while being just a little different.

It wasmildly disappointing. It was good, especially because she was hungry, but something about the way the bread had been made gave it an odd, fibrous texture and almost no flavor. Meh, they cant all be winners, I suppose.

The inscriber, for his part, was looking over the slate in his hands, muttering to himself in incomprehensible fragments.

Based on her glances into side rooms as they passed, Tala would guess that this space expanded to the sides as it went further back. Most of the workrooms were empty, though there were a few closed doors that Tala thought she heard people beyond.

After the hall took a few turns, they came out into a courtyard, with a large tree growing in the center. A tree, growing in a tree? Shed seen them before, most notably in the food-oriented side street, but it was especially odd, in what was basically a building. A tree in a building, within a city in a tree.

Magical lights seemed to mimic the natural light outside, at the moment doing a good job of making the space feel like it was open to a sunset sky.

Are you really that busy? It seems like most of this place is empty.

Hmmm? Oh, well, this is after business hours for most of my workers. Theyre eating dinner with their families and will be back in the morning.

Oh Did we interrupt your meal?

Oh no, not at all. Theres always too much to do, so I live here, sleep when I can. He smiled her direction. I find it hard to turn away any in need of inscriptions. It just feels like Im robbing them of a tool. Does that make sense?

Tala found herself frowning. WellI understand seeing inscriptions as tools, but arent there other inscribers?

Yes and no. Yes, of course there are others, but they are just as busy as I am. He shook his head.

Didnt you turn away Master Rane and Mistress Odera, this evening?

No, not at all. I cant simply drop everything for every person who walks through the door, but I can make time for everyone who needs it. He smiled. Ah, here we are.

They had crossed the courtyard, skirting the spreading tree-within-a-tree, and come to a large archway, leading into what was clearly an inscriptionists sanctum.

One wall was covered with racks of inscribing needles of Hollys design.

Right, of course he wouldnt have an auto-inscriber. She thought for a moment. That might just revolutionize his scheduling. Tala considered telling him about it for a moment, then dismissed the idea. Im sure Holly will make it known when its ready.

Tala almost stumbled slightly as her mind connected that thought to her own experiences with the device and hitched. She used an unproven method on me. That wasnt news, precisely, but Tala had assumed that the auto-inscriber was relatively new, not utterly new. No, Tala, she even said that she tested it out by printing the books.

Tala grimaced. Well, thats a bit terrifying. I guess I didnt really think through what shed said, and what it meant. Tala promised herself that shed listen more closely to the mad-woman and consider what she actually meant by what she said.

Hawthorne sat on a wooden stool, still looking at the slate. I must say, I dont think I can help you with most of these.

Tala brought her attention back to the present and frowned. What do you mean?

Well, these are too delicate for me to work on. He huffed a laugh. Id say they are too delicate for anyone to do, but I see them in place within your flesh already. He shook his head. What has Mistress Holly come up with, this time?

The question wasnt directed at Tala, so she didnt reply.

So, how about you tell me what you were hoping to have done, and Ill see what I can do.

Tala glanced at her right arm, trying to decide how to explain. Well, I need a refresher on my activation rings, for my offensive casts.

Hawthorne moved a few things around on the slate, then nodded. Oh, I see, yes. I can do that. He grabbed a sheet of what appeared to be inscribed glass and brought it to a chair in the center of the room. Come on, sit here.

He pointed to the chair, beside him, and Tala sank into it.

Let me take a look at what were working with. He sent power into the glass and held it near her right arm. Wait Oh, my apologies, can you please lower your magical defenses? They are blocking my scan.

Tala hesitated. Oh my iron-salve. I apologize, do you have a private room? My magical defense is physical, and I neglected to remove it.

He arched an eyebrow at that but didnt comment. He showed her to a back room, and once the door was closed, she dropped into Kit, stripped out of her top, and scrubbed her right arm clean with near-boiling water, soap, and a scrub brush shed bought ages ago.

Less than five minutes later, she was dressed and back in the inscribers chair.

Hawthorne looked like he wanted to ask but restrained himself. Instead, he held up the inscribed item and looked through it once again. What he saw seemed to drive thoughts of her unorthodox defenses from his mind. Remarkable. Truly remarkable.

Tala glanced over, and through the glass, the organic material of her arm was invisible, only the metal of the inscriptions could be seen. She shuddered and looked away. It looked much too similar to how the inscriptions had looked, after her arm had fallen away.

Hawthorne frowned. Wait, I dont see the connecting scripts. He consulted his slate, then looked back through the glass. Did you burn through all the secondary inscriptions for those castings? He seemed to be talking to himself as he moved the glass up her arm. You did, they are utterly spent- He stopped, the glass allowing him to look at her shoulder. Mistress Tala. His voice was flat, utterly bereft of inflection.

Yes, Master Hawthorne?

Tell me what happened. Your secondary inscription channels are gone past a jagged point in your shoulder.

Well, you see I lost my arm.

You lost your arm.

Thats right.

And it grew back.

So it would seem.

Maintaining all the other inscriptions. He cocked his head to the side. Well, of course it would, if they were active, and these are active. He frowned, then shook his head and sighed. Alright then. Lets get to work. Its going to be a long night.




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