[Severed Divinity] 83. A Busy Day
Added 2024-07-04 03:59:32 +0000 UTCWhen Isen came to, he was soaking in a warm, shallow pool that had a medicinal aroma. His eyes were covered by a heavy strip of cloth that blocked out all light. He didnât perceive any danger from removing it, so he tore it off.
The room was windowless, with multiple individual basins all sunk into the dark stone floor, offset by walls made from a light wood. Racks of folded towels rested on each wall.
Isen wasnât alone. Also floating in a medicinal basin was Welco, whose face was wrapped in white bandages. He was still clearly unconscious, his head resting on the waterâs surface, supported by a block.
Both Isen and the mage were nude, though the water was filled with foam, obscuring everything underwater.
Theyâd clearly escaped, but where had they gone? Or more specifically, where had Allezin and the queen taken them?
Isen inspected his body, holding up his arm. His collarbone twinged, but it was mostly healed, same with his ribs. He noticed a new pattern of thin, jagged scars, pink and puckered across his right shoulder, extending over his back. He shuddered as he retracted his fingers.
He took in a breath and cycled. Immediately, he noticed a sharp pain in his meridians near the scarred area. He didnât think the damage was permanent, but he found it unsettling that this was how he felt after soaking in medicinal waterâand probably taking a healing pill.
How close to death had he come?
Just thinking back to the palace, and how crushingly terrible the sense of danger had become, made Isen tremble. Why had the sixth sense not warned him earlier, so the encounter with the tier four couldâve been avoided? Wasnât it just... supposed to know if there was danger ahead?
It was like the incident with Lady Jin and the other orphans all over again. Heâd felt an opportunity, but had been unable to fully sense the misfortune that accompanied it.
It was a new mark against the sixth sense after a year building up trust in it.
Even as he despaired of its fallibility, he felt gratitude. What heâd pulled off in the palace wouldnât have been possible without it. They would have all died. Well, him, Allezin, and Welco.
The violet-eyed woman was nothing like Erasmus, whoâd awoken from a long hibernation to a torn gullet while sluggish and deprived of energy. Erasmus had been powerful and tenacious, but in many ways just like a bigger, stronger tier three.
From what Isen had seen so far, the aura of tier threes was a pressure that warred to exert its influence on the world, weighing down and slowing the enemyâs movements. In contrast, the tier fourâs aura was an attack, like if Isen stood within it for too long, it would grind away at him until there was nothing left.
And that was just her aura. Her constitution must have been incredible to survive multiple fiery blasts from the queen, including a head blow. And even with awful looking wounds, sheâd charged after them and released that final attackâat least the final one before Isen had lost consciousness.
It was the strongest technique Isen had ever witnessed. Enormous jaws of fulminous energy had formed all around them, crossed over a hundred feet without losing potency. Isen was sure that without the queenâs intercessionâfor that must have been what saved themâthe attack wouldâve killed them all.
And there was no way the womanâs attack could have been her best, injured as she was, her speech slurred.
It painted a clear vision of just how large the rank gap was.
And at each stage, it grows wider. If this was the gap between core consolidation and divine core, what was the chasm between divine core and nascent soul?
If I canât kill tier threes by the time I reach the peak of tier two, Iâll already be behind, Isen thought. Not behind others at his own tier, or even the next, but behind those who earnestly sought the peak.
Now that he had taken Luminaâs legacy, he had a real shot at reaching tier five, if he made it to tier fourâand the legacy actually worked.
Even reaching tier four would make him one of the most powerful existences. He would be a legend, and heâd be able to do so many incredible things. Maybe heâd even form a kingdom of his own like Lumina or Devon Aran.
It sounded amazing, but it was also so far away, so removed from his present reality. Nothing but a dream.
With a sigh, Isen stood from the pool, water dripping from his limbs as he strode for the towel rack. He wrapped one around his hips and made for the only egress he saw, a double archway leading to a dark hall, at the end of which lay a set of stairs leading to a single closed wooden door.
He opened it and found himself in an airy room with expensive-looking furniture and a plush carpet. A green fire burned in the fireplace, identical to the one Isen had seen when he last visited Welco.
He realized where he was with a start. He was in Clan Femeraâmost likely in an unfamiliar wing of Welcoâs mansion. Before he could move more than a few steps, he noticed a presence. Footsteps in another room.
Feeling like an intruder, he resisted the urge to hide and instead called out. âHello?â
âYouâre awake.â The voice was quiet, tense. Kelsina appeared a moment later, her steel-gray hair falling around her shoulders. Her hands were stained a dark green, and she held a bulging silk pouch. If Isen had to guess, heâd say it was filled with pills.
âI saw the patriarch,â Isen replied. âWere there... others?â
âThe man who brought you here, Allezin the Wanderer, is resting in one of the bedrooms.â
Allezin was here! âI see. Is he awake?â
She scowled. âNo. He took a healing pill and conked out. Itâs been a few hours since then.â
Then where was the queen? Had she escaped unscathed? And what about her flamebearer? Isen hadnât seen anyone come with the queen, but a fire wielding mage must have been nearby to keep her divine flame from going out.
Heâd need to ask Allezin for more details when the warrior woke up.
âWhat were you doing last night?â Kelsina asked.
âDid Allezin say anything?â
âNot enough. Something about a crazy cultivator attacking you.â She leaned in close. âI canât bully a tier three for answers, even one thatâs injured and dead tired. Rank gapâs a bitch. So, kid, that leaves you. What. Happened? And why didnât me or Jorin know about it?â
Isen recoiled, his stomach dropping. He couldnât fault Kelsinaâs temper, thoughâher patriarch was incapacitated and no one was giving her answers.
What should he tell her? The truth was genuinely unbelievable. He also wasnât sure how much he wanted to reveal about himself. Welco knowing he was... special... was maybe fine. But did that mean heâd tell others in his orbit? Would he confide in Jorin and Kelsina, or his mage disciples whoâd already evacuated the city?
Isen wanted as few people to know about his sixth sense as possible. He might let Jorin and Kelsina into that inner circle, but he wasnât ready to make that decision on the spur of the moment.
âIâm not sure,â Isen finally said, knowing the answer would piss the half elf off.
She snorted coldly. âNot sure?â
He nodded.
âWhy were you with Welco outside of the clan at night?â
He just stared at her.
âIsen, I need to know,â she ground out, walking forward, forcing Isen to back up. âThe patriarch might have died without Allezinâs rescue. Someone has made an enemy of Clan Femera, and I must know if the enemy comes from within or without.â
âI donât understand.â
âEldrassin, or foreign,â she said. Isen took another step back and his shoulders hit the wall. Kelsina loomed down at him. âThe personâor personsâthat attacked you.â
âHow would I know? Iâm new to Eldrassin.â If he had to guess, heâd say the elf was probably from Shor Mei. He wasnât sure if that counted as foreign, though. Beyond Eldrassin, yes; beyond the elven lands, no.
Kelsina looked like she was about to explode. âHow did the patriarch react, then? Give me something to work with.â
Ironically, Isen hadnât been able to see Welcoâs reaction, given the circumstances. But no one had expected the tier fourâs presence. âSurprised. Very surprised.â
Kelsinaâs frown deepened. âWhere were you?â
âThe queenâs palace,â Isen said.
The woman blinked and leaned back. âWhat?â
The surprise was genuine. Isen couldnât tell if Kelsina was shocked because she didnât know why theyâd gone to the palace, or because she couldnât believe the patriarch had gone there without her or Jorin.
If it was the latter... Well, Jorin, and especially Kelsina, had been wounded the night before, requiring rescue. If Welco went alone, it would have been to protect them.
Kelsina composed herself, then gave Isen an inscrutable look. She was probably wondering just how much Isen knew, and what she was permitted to tell him.
âHow long until the patriarch should wake?â Isen asked.
âHis injuries were severe. A few more hours. By noon bell, Iâd guess.â She turned away. âBefore you ask, your belongings are with Jorin. Heâs cultivating outside.â
âWhat about my clothes?â Including his Eldrassin pin, which he was technically supposed to wear at all times. Not that the city seemed to be enforcing it, given the brewing storm.
Her lips pressed into a thin line. âYou were wearing little more than rags when Allezin charged in. Even the patriarchâs robes were damaged, like someone had ground the cloth on a mill. Jorin fetched you a new uniform.â
Just then, Isenâs stomach growled.
She took a deep breath. âKid, whatâd I tell you about skipping meals?â
âDoesnât healing make you hungry?â Isen pointed out. He felt like it should.
She snorted. âWhatever. Letâs get you fedâthen off to Jorin. Todayâs gonna be a busy day.â
âWhy?â
âItâs the end of the two-month cycle. Rank day. And knowing what I know, I think things are gonna be a bit shaken up. Especially because of you.â
Rank day? Why did that matter, with everything going on? For all Isen knew, when Welco woke, heâd arrange for everyone to evacuate the city. Or maybe Allezin would steal him away when he got up, now that he knew Isen offered tier-transcending utility.
For a second, he wondered if heâd made a mistake not telling Kelsina more. What if the violet-eyed tier four tracked them to Clan Femera? Wouldnât it be his fault if people died because he kept quiet, just because it was easier and convenient to do so? Maybe they should all be packing up in haste, so theyâd be able to depart as soon as Welco woke.
It felt like the kind of decision he shouldnât have to make.
He reminded himself that if things were really urgent, Allezin wouldnât have let himself rest.
âCanât we postpone rank day for later?â Isen asked. âMost of the mages are gone. People are worried. The cultivators have been patrolling in force at night. Justâ Whatâs the point?â
She looked at him like heâd grown an extra head. âGood luck with that. Besides, thereâs no point in postponing rank day, even if the patriarch remains unconscious,â she said, shutting him down. âThis conflict is beyond us. Worry about what you can control and help where you can.â
His mind came up with five separate sharp-tongued retorts, but he let them all go unsaid. He was tired. He was hungry.
He wanted clothes. And gods, he wanted his dagger.
Comments
That was my first question! WHERE DA GAR?! lol thanks as always and congratulations!
PoeticSaint
2024-07-08 09:26:41 +0000 UTCThanks for the chapter!
Jakob
2024-07-05 16:37:39 +0000 UTC