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Millennial Mage - Chapter 186

Published at 22nd of March 2024 05:29:03 AM


Chapter 186: I Really Want To

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Chapter 186: I Really Want To

Tala was in awe.

She was busy processing the berries like mad, carefully biting them in half, pulling out the seed, sucking the juice off, and sending the seed back among the trees. The halved berries then went into another barrel, as she moved onto the next little packet of juice and power.

That was fairly standard, though she hadnt done it in a couple of months. She even was able to add in the tossing of jerky to Terry every so often.

No, what was awe inspiring was how Cazor could strip a tree with a bare few moments of work. Shed tried to pass it off and hide how impressive it was to her the first time hed done it, but that fiction was getting increasingly difficult to maintain as he repeated the act with aplomb.

It did seem to visibly drain him to do it, however, and the time between each tree grew markedly.

Tala had barely processed roughly as many berries as Cazor had gotten from the first tree when he flopped to the ground for the fourth time, panting.

I dont He pulled out a water-skin and took a deep pull, swallowing with abandon. I dont remember these things being deemed to have any sort of intelligence.

You mean the movement? She chucked another seed back among the trunks of the grove.

Well, thats a part of it I suppose, but that can be purely reactionary. They are adjusting to my method of harvest and are disrupting my power more effectively with each tree. He hesitated. Well, four is hardly a good sample-set, but even so.

Why dont you take a break while I process these?

He grunted. I was going to do that anyways, but sure. Thank you for the suggestion.

It honestly didnt take her long, and in the end, shed guess that she had just shy of fifty gallons of halved, de-seeded berries.

Thats ridiculous. His method of harvest was so incredibly efficient compared to her own. Id have had to be out here for days to get this much.

Cazor opened one eye. Done already?

Yeah, sorry. Seems like your break is over.

Eh, its fine. He made no immediate move to get up.

-Hey, I have kind of a crazy idea. Ask Cazor if hed be alright with us keeping some seeds to experiment with.-

Tala asked, and He sat up, giving her a long look. Not going to sell or trade them away? You only want them for your own use and experimentation?

Alat?

-Of course.-

She nodded. Exactly.

Thats fine, then. Theyre actually less dangerous than a good chunk of research materials for some specialties. You arent going to plant any within the city, right?

-No planting, no.-

That is not my plan, no.

I see no issue, then. He stood, groaning and making sounds of protest.

Something wrong, old man? Tala quirked a smile.

Cazor cocked an eyebrow at her. This is massively draining; I hope you know.

I can guess. And even if I couldnt, you make it quite obvious.

He huffed a laugh and shook his head. Fine, fine. Ill keep a lid on the complaints.

Oh, youre fine. I thought it was kind of funny.

He turned away, muttering to himself. Funny, eh? What Im doing is impressive as slag.

Tala just shook her head at the oddity and tossed more jerky for Terry.

I have an idea, and whether it works or not, it will likely wipe me out for a good while, but I think it will be more efficient, overall. He lifted both hands and a much greater pulse of power radiated off of him.

Tala stood up a bit straighter, watching as smaller iron clouds took turns picking from individual branches, instead of whole trees. As each finished its branch, it came to deposit the collected berries into the waiting barrel.

That makes sense. Smaller manipulations take less energy. But will it give the trees a greater chance to adapt?

That looks easier. Why would it wipe you out more?

More. Concentration. Required. He said each word greatly spaced out, and Tala took the hint.

With the process slowed a bit, Tala was able to see iron contracting around each stem as another portion grabbed and twisted a given berry free.

Masterful control, that.

Not wanting to get distracted, Tala began working on her part.

-Wasnt your part stripping?-

No. Hush, you.

Cazor was trembling from the effort as his little iron clouds finished with the fifth tree. He looked her way and smiled triumphantly. How was that?

Impressive.

Good, because thats all Ive got for the moment. Without another word, he flopped backwards, seemingly asleep before he hit the ground.

-Likely mental exhaustion. Hell be fine in an hour or so.-

Can we help him?

-I came across a few methods that might help. Can you alter your magical signature to match his so his body doesnt reject power coming from us?-

Um no?

-Oh, well, then none of these will work.-

Is such a transfer possible?

-In theory, yeah, but I found no evidence of it being done.-

Tala huffed an irritated growl. Is there anything we can do?

-Well, there are a few things that humans do to mentally relax.-

Oh?

-wowwe are nave.-

What do you mean?

-Nothing. Theres no way we can help him with what we have with us.-

You could have just said that.

-Wheres the fun in that?-

As Tala and Alat fell into silence, and Tala continued processing this new batch of berries. The only change was that, now, she had her final iron-salve out and was coating each seed in the substance before placing it in a container.

As she did this mindless work, her thoughts caught onto a thread. So, she began to pull.

Alat?

-Yeah?-

Youre basically a being of pure magic now, right? Just connected to a soul?

-A bit insulting, that. Im a soul manifesting through a medium of pure magic. But go on, I think I see what youre getting at.-

Cazor huffed. You and me both. But thats secondary. There is something, or more than one something, looking for us, out there, and I dont see any His eyes glanced to her briefly, considering, then continuing as if he hadnt stopped. Conceptual power, so I think were just dealing with magical beasts, not arcanes.

Can we go up? From a greater height we could have a better look and see whats going on?

He considered. We can, briefly. The magical beasts that can fly are usually a much greater danger to people than the ground-bound.

She remembered the night-wing ravens and saw his point. Those were just arcanous beasts, too. Up and back quickly, then.

Agreed.

They rose, cresting out of the steep-walled valley. They both immediately felt the turbulence in the magic around them.

Terry squawked quietly and clamped down tighter with his talons, locking him more firmly in place.

Likely in reaction against his instinct to run. She swallowed to clear her mouth. I dont blame him.

But Tala couldnt give Terry more than that passing thought. She and Cazor were focused on other things.

Specifically, their gazes were glued to a distant clash that was taking place at the head of the canyon, which led to the ending-berry grove. Right where we slowed down sufficiently to stop making me into a beacon.

The auras of the two beasts were both yellow, but that was their only similarity.

-I want to chastise you for exaggeration, but I cant see any other overlap I guess they both exist? We can see them both?-

Alat was trying to distract Tala, pull her out of her shocked focus. It wasnt working.

One of the two magical creatures was, of all things, a griffon, seemingly taken straight from childrens tales.

The fur on most of its body looked positively metallic-gold, while still somehow looking alive in a way that Tala couldnt quite pin down. The feathers on the front portion and wings were a brown that evoked bark without seeming wooden, dirt without being dirty, and topazes without being gem-like.

Its beak and talons reminded Tala of Terrys in an incredibly not-comforting sort of way. And even at this great distance, Tala felt like she could see intelligence in the predators eyes.

Its opponent was an amorphous something, which currently had six fully formed spindly legs which didnt seem to be truly holding its bulk off the ground. Another leg was growing outwards as she watched.

More than anything, the legs seemed to facilitate quick changes in direction. And they seemed required because, despite its size, it was fast.

The blob darted, reshaped, and almost flowed around the griffons mostly physical attacks, occasionally even splitting into two seemingly independent entities before recombining and continuing the conflict.

Strangely, neither obviously magical creature was using anything that seemed to be a magical ability, relying instead on their brute physicality. The attacks that came closest to being magical were gusts of wind thrown by the griffons wings, seemingly sent to unbalance the blob.

As Tala watched, the blob-thing ripped off and then threw a portion of its body, which struck the griffon as it strafed past, seemingly trying to rake at its opponent with talon and claw.

The mini-blob impacted one of the griffons wings and immediately sprouted at least fifteen little clawed legs that began to tear at the feathered appendage.

The griffon dropped to the ground, twisting the affected wing in front of its face so that it could peck free the offending new opponent. The eagle-lion seemed very little worse for wear after it had eviscerated the seemingly homogeneous, living projectile.

Why arent they using magic? Talas voice was barely above a whisper, even though the combatants were miles away, down the mountain, nearly back in the plains. Only her incredibly good eyesight let her see as much as she had.

I cant really see whats going on. Im just watching tight masses of power move around each other in violent seeming patterns.

Tala briefly explained what she was seeing.

Your vision is insane. Do you know that?

She gave a weak smile. Thank you? But what about my question.

Cazor grunted. Any magic they use will produce far-reaching echoes. Even their presence is causing the ripples were looking at. Those ripples can look awfully tasty to anything higher up the food chain.

Talas eyes widened. So theyre trying to avoid discovery, too?

That would be my bet. Humans are much better at detecting, and worse at hiding from, magical creatures, so I dont think anything else would notice that conflict and come looking.

That was at least slightly comforting.

So, they both sensed our magic booms and came looking?

Magic boom? He hesitated, then nodded. Like a sonic boom. Not really the same, but close enough. He nodded again. Yeah, that was my guess, too.

Tala tsked. No wonder theres a prohibition against traveling too fast outside of cities. Can you imagine if wed led them to Bandfast?

Yeah, that would have been bad.

She cleared her throat. Speaking of which how are we going to get back without doing just that?

I can move us as fast as possible, below the threshold that you begin to create a, he smiled, magic boom.

Dont laugh at me. It makes sense. Its understandable.

Im not laughing.

Do you have a better name for it?

The technical term is motive aura resonance.

Oh yeah thats better.

He grinned. Anyways. Ill take us as fast as I can around those and back to Bandfast.

How fast is that?

He hesitated. How much risk are we willing to tolerate?

Some? I really dont want to draw a magical creature down on Bandfast.

Any chance were getting helped with those?

Tala grimaced unhappily. Unlikely. She didnt say more. The watchers are watching for an arcane. They arent babysitting us to protect against magical creatures.

Yeah, I thought not. He clucked his tongue, his thoughts seemingly taking a new direction. It would be really foolish to go fight those.

Tala felt her grimace morph into a grin as she picked up on what he was getting at. Incredibly foolish.

It would practically be begging for our magic to be seen for dozens of miles in every direction. Who knows what wed bring down on ourselves.

Undoubtedly.

Cazor scratched at his chin. Im sad to admit: Ive never gotten to test myself against something that powerful, and the times its been close, theres always someone or something to protect, which limited my effectiveness. Or, there were more powerful Hunters nearby to clinch the kill.

She nodded sagely. That sounds like that wouldnt be a fair test.

Exactly.

Mages need to test themselves in order to grow.

Thats true. Thats true.

She shrugged. Not much out here worth worrying about, and theres no one to clinch the kill but us.

He gave her a long look, his smile slowly growing. I really want to do it.

Ill take the griffon?

An expression of joyous glee stole over his face. Mistress Tala?

Yes, Master Cazor?

"You have the best ideas."

-And here I would have guessed that Mage Hunters were selected for their sound judgment and careful nature. That boy is just like us, only more fragile. How is he even still alive?-

Hush, you. Hes confident and experienced. Weve trained together and fought at similar levels. If he can take one, I should be able to as well. Cazors not a fool. We can do this.




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