XaiJu
Actus
Actus

patreon


Return of the Runebound Professor - Chapter 880

Noah was doing his best to keep track of things, but it was really getting to be quite the hassle. The world was stubbornly insisting on shifting in and out of… well, everything. He was starting to wonder if everyone had suddenly learned spatial magic out of nowhere.

One moment, people would be fighting right in front of him. The next they were gone. Sometimes they’d just straight up disappear mid-fight, while others they would teleport over to the side, suddenly covered in a dozen new injuries.

It didn’t take a genius to figure out that the entire world had not, in fact, learned how to teleport. The randomly appearing wounds were proof of that. No, the problem had nothing at all to do with everyone else and everything to do with Noah.

He was slipping in and out of time. Or reality. Or — well, something. He wasn’t quite sure what it was yet. The strange thing was that he didn’t himself feel as if anything had been lost. There were no significant gaps in his memory, nor did it feel like his soul had suddenly taken any kind of damage that could have caused this.

It was like the world was just… forgetting about him.

Stranger still was the manner in which people reacted to him. Until he actually did anything, the other mages didn’t seem to notice his presence at all. It was like he was a ghost. Noah tested the theory by walking straight up to a pair of mages that were engrossed in flinging fireballs at each other.

He’d flicked one of the men in the side of the head before they even registered the fact that he was there.

Then the world had skipped forward again, and one of them was gone. The other was on the run from a new mage that had joined into the fight —

The world skipped.

No sign of the third party remained, but the remaining fire mage looked like he was on his last legs. He darted off as fast as his feet could carry him, trying to find somewhere to hide as the thunderous roar of magic crashed all around him.

Not a single person tried to attack Noah.

Annoyance mixed with his confusion. This was really quite frustrating. But, interestingly enough, the actual time covered by the skips seemed to be decreasing. He’d lost several minutes when he’d first arrived on the arena floor. Now, it was down to just mere seconds.

There were already a few theories forming in his mind as to what might have been happening. But Noah put them on hold. He wasn’t in danger. On the contrary. Whatever had happened to him was giving him a massive advantage. With how little people seemed to be aware of his presence, he was pretty sure that he could have walked up to just about any of his competitors and just slit their throat on the spot should he have been so inclined.

But that was considerably less useful when he was trying to make an impact. This strange magic was ridiculously powerful — and stood directly in the way of what he was trying to accomplish. If whatever effect was obscuring him from the other mages had also hidden him from the crowd… then people weren’t going to notice him.

This is a load of bullshit. Some god is having a joke at my expense. I would have loved to have this ability back when I was fighting Father. Why now, of all times?

But the fight isn’t over yet. There are a lot of mages left in the arena, and effects of whatever this shit is are fading. I’ve still got room to make up lost time.

Noah’s eyes swept over his competition. The world skipped forward slightly, but by no more than a few moments. Then the corners of his lips pulled upward as he spotted his next target.

This almost feels cruel.

***

“To your side!” Seleth barked.

Vincent dropped, calling on his storm magic and sweeping his leg out without even looking. There was a meaty thud followed by the crack of thunder and the sizzling hiss of scorched flesh. A mage tumbled across the ground, smoke rising from his shoulder, before skidding to a halt at the feet of a group of mages.

One of them immediately sent a blood-red scythe of magic slicing down into the fallen man’s chest. A beam of light crashed down, swallowing him whole and porting him away from the arena. The attacking mage hadn’t even been part of the fight.

But that was little surprise. Those who sought the large groups were cowards. They would only attack when they thought they had a chance to get away with it safely. Such an attitude disgusted Vincent, but he wasn’t going to refuse the help when they were besieged on all sides.

Such things were simply part of the rules of the tournament.

“Thanks,” Vincent said.

Seleth just nodded. Liquid stone coursed to form a snakelike structure around her, a beam of light swallowing the battered form of the mage that she’d just been fighting. Joining up with her had been a good move. There were just too many other people in the melee.

If she hadn’t been there, Vincent was fairly certain he might have already fallen. He could still feel the eyes of the grouped mages. They were like starved, ravenous rats, all waiting to see if anyone would leave themselves open enough for an attack.

I owe that masked musician a thank you. If he hadn’t appeared, we probably would have kept fighting and both been eliminated at some point during this round.

Vincent was forced to admit that the quality of his opponents was… higher than he had expected. He’d thought the melee would have been a clean sweep, barring the potential presence of any Rank 6s. But that couldn’t have been farther from the truth.

The pounding of his heart and his shortened breath told the story. His enemies were skilled. Far more skilled than he’d expected. He was at the peak of Rank 5, nearly Rank 6… but it seemed many of the others were in the same boat. Vincent didn’t allow such thoughts to go far. They served him no good. Especially not here, when the fight was far from over.

“Shit,” Seleth said, fighting to catch her breath. “It never ends. Why is this fight going so long? I swear the other rounds were shorter.”

“Groups are too big,” Vincent replied grimly. “Not enough people are getting eliminated, and the big groups are just sitting around and waiting around for the little guys to fall before they risk making a move themselves.”

“Bastards,” Seleth snarled. “Don’t they have any shame?”

“There’s no shame in victory, regardless of the path.”

Seleth sent him a sidelong glance, though neither of them let their guards down. They were, after all, one of those small groups that the others were waiting to remove from the battlefield. “Weren’t you all about honor or something?”

“I do not impose my ideals upon others,” Vincent replied. “And I am not an idiot. The optimal path to victory is not always the righteous one. I…”

He trailed off as a deafening crash split the air. Both his and Seleth’s gaze snapped over toward it.

A young mage, probably just barely in their twenties, skidded back across the ground. Coils of smoke rose up from his skin and ash swirled in an angry storm around him.

Three mages darted toward him in a formation. It only took a single glance at them to tell the trio had fought together prior to the tournament. They dashed around the bolts of ash that the young mage sent in their direction, closing the distance between them in an instant.

The three of them all attacked at once, darting toward the boy from multiple different directions.

Ash exploded out from him with an angry howl, slicing through the air as the young mage threw himself back, trying to make room. He hit the ground in a roll, narrowly ducking under a streaking bolt of blue lighting, then launched himself to his feet and made to turn back toward the trio chasing after him.

But they had already surrounded him. His prior attack hadn’t slowed them at all. Bands of buzzing lightning snapped to life around them, connecting the trio in a triangle, and they closed in on their victim.

Three versus one when the solo is clearly less skilled than the others. Not a worthy fight. He’s finished.

The three mages blurred forward in a synchronized attack.

And then one of them launched into the air.

Vincent blinked.

What?

The mage seemed as surprised as Vincent was. He spun through the air, confusion and shock playing across his features as he found himself suspended in the sky.

Then he accelerated into the ground. He landed with a loud crunch. A beam of light descended an instant later, swallowing and porting him out of the arena.

Gooseflesh raced across Vincent’s back.

Standing where the man had been a moment before was the masked musician.

He did it again. When did he get there?

The other two mages of the trio noticed the man at the same time. They dashed toward him, lighting coursing between them, their former opponent forgotten as the realized there was a far greater threat to deal with.

It was pointless.

The masked musician raised his hand.

A mote of darkness twisted through the air just beside the mage on the right. He was yanked violently off course. The man tripped over his own feet, just barely managing to keep from faceplanting on the ground. He managed to regain his balance and spun back toward the masked musician…

And only then did he notice the fact that the band of lightning connecting him to his ally was gone.

His eyes widened and his gaze snapped to the side just in time to catch the beam of yellow light crashing down from the heavens to swallow up the second member of his trio. In the time it had taken him to recover his balance, the masked musician had dispatched his ally.

The mage’s face went pale as he realized all too late that the element of surprise had not been a factor in the fight. They were completely outclassed. Vincent’s spine prickled. A difference in power at this scale should have been astronomically unlikely.

He was pretty sure the trio had been at least fairly powerful Rank 5s, but the masked musician’s magic had cut through their domains with practically zero effort. It was like an adult fighting children. The difference in the quality and power of their runes must have been huge.

“What do you want with us?” The mage asked, his eyes darting around in search of an escape.

“Now? Nothing,” the masked man replied. “The fight just looked a little unfair. Three versus one. Not the most reasonable odds, wouldn’t you say? I was just fixing them a bit.”

“What?” The other mage asked, staring at the masked man in disbelief.

But he really should have been paying more attention to the first fight he’d been in. An ashen spike erupted from the center of his chest, bursting free in a spray of blood. The lightning mage looked down in stunned shock.

Then a pillar of yellow magic crashed down, stealing him away from the fight.

The ash flowed back to twist around the young mage, who inclined his head in appreciation.

“Thank you. Are we to fight now?”

The masked musician laughed. “No. Personally, I much prefer more… uneven odds.”

His gaze landed on the nearest large group of mages.

He didn’t have to say another word. The meaning was as clear as day.

A flash of darkness cut through the air. A woman in the group cried out, tumbling forward with a huge, smoking hole in her side. She was swallowed by a beam of magic an instant later — but the musician hadn’t even moved.

The attacker had been her own ally, a man in the group beside her.

“I’m not with them!” the man yelled, taking a hurried step back. Then shadows shot up from the ground and swallowed him. He’d broken ranks.

And he was only the first.

The large group disintegrated right in front of Vincent’s eyes. Flashes of magic split through the air as they turned on each other in an instant, and a dozen new beams of magic crashed down from overhead.

“Shit,” Vincent breathed. “He’s targeting the large groups on purpose to make them destroy themselves.”

And, even though Vincent couldn’t see his face, he somehow knew one thing for certain.

The musician was smiling.

Comments

Noah Vines (Spider) Runes: Sunder Fragment of Renewal Combustion Fragment of Self Hollow Symphony 5️⃣ Unraveling Disruption Concentrated Singularity Astral Ruin World Tremor Volcanic Cataclysm 4️⃣ Natural Disaster Crumbling Space Warped Matter Empty Proliferation Consuming Rot Spacial Deharmonization Fractured Reality 3️⃣ Thunderstorm Blizzard Volcano Tsunami Sandstorm Earthquake Cyclone

Fylbrom

fkn bad ass! damn actus may actually be a genius lol

jobe matula

TYFTC! Ahh, so Noah has stopped skipping across time, and is now making the larger groups tear themselves apart, I love it! I do love the notion that Noah's perfect Runes put him in such a higher class than everyone else. Wait until he gets to Rank 6 and his Divine Rune starts forming again.

Ben Bass

He didnt fight a Hand, he fought the Executioner.

Douglas Davis

Somebody picked noah from the water like a stone and threw him like its a stone skipping competition, and it took a little time for him to get back in the water.

fireok

Do y'all remember when a damn (fiery) monkey was the main antagonist of the story? Look how far this has come

Not_Joseph

Last chapter I was thinking whatever magic keeps the contestants from accidentally (or purposefully) attacking the crowded spectator stands was personally cast by whatsherface using her Beyond rune and Noah's own power was/is clashing with it. Your theory is a bit better, I think, but neither really account for Noah mentioning the effect lessening as time goes on. I guesssssss the staff wouldn't need the time-slow effect as much as less people are there, but the differences Noah felt of losing minutes before but now only seconds while so many remain seems too much. Edit: Oh, unless he is simply getting used to it / getting acclimated / attuning etcetc to the area/spell/effect/energy?

Emily Gurnavage

Funny cuz unbound is my number one along side this one cuz I cant choose 😆.

DJ Johnson

Noah playing with his food

Slashman1

I think having five rank 5 flawless runes + being a master at formations is kind of OP. Could be wrong though 🤷‍♀️

Lizy Flore

Awesome chapter, I can't wait till Monday! How is Noah so much stronger than everyone else? Is it because of The Citadel? His flawless runes? The kind of runes he has? I feel like I'm missing something

Paul Eugene

Seems like when Noah was phased out, that was when he was "constantly tapping at the beyond" Now I look forward more information about this beyond "feedback loop" that phased him out of existence. but the disconection from time itself sounds bit... dangerous.

Firel Dakuraito

The disappearing magic reminds me of the hand that Noah previously fought. Has to be an interaction with the prophets magic or the beyond

Daniel is ŁØNE

Personally I suspect the tournament is imposing some kind of time dilation field on the arena to slow things down and Noah is resistant to the effects. Slowing things down would allow them to more easily pull out contestants that concede before they die.

Daniel Tickle

Runebound is back baby

Chris Welsh

Actus, you have made an amazing book series that has taken the whole pattern recognition thing to a whole new level and in a whole new direction!!! In my mind, this series is right up there with the Unbound series by Nicholi Gonnella. You are, so far, one of the few authors I have read that has managed to, not just keep the momentum going through a long book series, but has managed to up the ante with each successive book you've added on to the series. And made it look completely effortless even though it's an acknowledged fact that writing and publishing books of any genre is rarely easy for any author. Especially fiction books. Translation. Your doing an amazing job and keep up the good work! Also, there's a sentence somewhere in the chapter that is really garbled up. Can't tell you where exactly, just remember coming across it and thinking "Huh? What the hell is Actus trying to say here?". There are a couple of typos also, sprinkled throughout the chapter also. Probably would just be better to do a quick read through yourself. Reading through, the typos and garbled sentence were easily caught as it is being read. Sorry that I can't be more detailed than that. Yes, I know. That's not detailed at all.

Nicole Hicks


More Creators