Biracial Edgelord Can't Make Immortal : Power of Ten, Book Seven - BECMI Chapter 305 – Edge Heading Homedeep

BECMI Chapter 305 – Edge Heading Homedeep

Words : 2114 Author : RE Druin

Chapter 306 of "Biracial Edgelord Can't Make Immortal : Power of Ten, Book Seven" introduces: “Hello, mother,” I said to the Shadow-Elven Wizardess Keffe Nangeode as she padded quietly into... Read on to discover!

“Hello, mother,” I said to the Shadow-Elven Wizardess Keffe Nangeode as she padded quietly into the dining area adjacent to the small kitchen of my birth home.The slender and graceful white-haired figure tensed up, her fingers rising instantly and mana sparkling around them as she instinctively prepared a spell, startled at finding an intruder in her house, even seated at her own table!

Not the wisest house to invade, an elven wizardess whose daughter had gone missing and was believed to be dead. As an elf, she could be grieving for years, and woe to anyone who crossed her in that time!

Then she blinked as the light crossed me and lit me up, and our eyes met.

I watched quietly as her stricken jaw slowly dropped. She looked me up and down in astonishment and disbelief, her rage giving way to awkward confusion, and I remained silent while she inspected me.

Actually, I rose to my feet, lifted my hands like a dancer, and pirouetted so she could get a better look at all of me.

I was a couple inches taller than she was, had more curves to me, and was in much better physical condition. I moved with a grace alien and dangerous even to other elves, and of course my whiter-than-milk skin contrasted with her grayish natural hue, my black hair ending in crimson tips (regardless of length) was quite singular among the generally platinum or tow-headed Shaden, and my eyes of black sclera and ruby pupils were a completely unnatural and singular characteristic.

My preference for red and black attire, in absolute total contrast to the slightly threadbare whites, grays, and pale blues she was wearing, was also completely in keeping with my nature.

“Ed, Edgina?” she whispered in shock, staring at me and trying to process this. “What, what happened to you?” she managed to get out, stepping closer, her hands reaching up to touch my face. I was fully an adult by elven standards now, actually less than a century behind her… and, given how I timeskipped, catching up to her. “You’ve been missing for over three months, none of my spells could find any trace of you anywhere… How is this possible?”

The brittleness in her voice was unfeigned. Elves tended to have children many years apart, and I was indeed her first-born. Losing me while I was still a child and having so much to show me of the world was indeed hard on her, but now-!

“Yes, mother, it is me,” I stated, reaching up to grasp her hands, pulsing the heat through them as I had when a child, our own little intimate way of identifying one another by touch. Her fingers grasped my own tightly in automatic recognition. “My apologies for making you worry. There have been… extenuating circumstances why I could not come back sooner.”

Killing Avatars, starting a new timeline, founding a new kingdom, starting a religion. Minor stuff and all.

She stepped back to look me up and down again in disbelief. “How old are you, Edgina?” she asked, trying to digest this, seesawing between wary disbelief and joy that her baby was alive.

“I am nearly one hundred and twenty years old, Mother,” I reported to her calmly. She looked at me, and found herself putting her hand to her cheek in disbelief once again. “I have literally been traveling through time, and it took, ah, many years to get back to my proper time. I could not do so while I still existed here, so I had to wait until the whole cycle began to come back.”

Which was totally true, it had just happened several years ago, not three months ago.

“Traveling through ,” she repeated, her wizard training asserting itself with such a fantastic notion. “How? Where?”

“I think you will agree that such would best remain a secret, lest it attract others with even less common sense than I had at the time. The location is under my control and is effectively my personal estate now,” I replied firmly to that question. “I know that it has not been long since I vanished from here, mother, but a great deal has happened to me since then.”

Something in my tone made her take a half-step back, a look of concern upon her face, realizing that I was now a fully-grown elven adult who she barely knew. The realization instantly made this quite awkward for her, as she did not know how to relate to me.

She took a deep breath and steadied herself. “Then… I suppose you have a great deal to tell me,” she ventured, fighting to remain calm.

I nodded back to her kindly. “Yes. For starters, tell no one of me as yet, because there are some dire surprises in store which may well get you killed if you speak of them to the wrong party.”

She inhaled sharply, her eyes narrowing, the old agent of the Shaden king surfacing once more. “What has happened?” she asked promptly, somehow back on familiar ground.

“Well,” I eyed her considerately, “I have found out that Gaebrel has been lying to our people for thousands of years, and the king has been lying to everyone for hundreds of years. Which of the lies would you like to learn the truth of first, mother?”

Love what you're reading? Discover and support the author on the platform they originally published on.

Her expression wavered, torn between disbelief and the voice of her own daughter, delivered in such a calm, forceful tone. She considered me, my very calm expression, and could only hesitate. “I was an agent of the king on the surface world, my Edgina. That… is what led to your birth,” she pointed out carefully.

“You would find that I am very, very well known in Zanzyr if you were to return there, mother,” I answered that with an arched eyebrow, making her blink. “I am known as the Lady Edge there, one of the primary advisors to Princess Brittabelle of Erendyl, and a Cryptomancer of great ability and renown. I top the list for the single highest graduating score from the Great School of Magic of Zanzyr, as a matter of fact.”

She blinked at me in puzzlement, started to say something, and then blinked again rapidly as she processed all of that. “You are… not joking?” she asked faintly. “You… are a traitor to the Shaden?” she probed even more hesitantly.

“Oh, not at all, although I am definitely not loyal to the king, nor to Gaebrel. I do not appreciate being lied to at all, especially blatantly and to my face.” I eyed her and her wavering loyalty. “Do you know the purpose for which you were sent to the surface, mother?” I asked her gravely.

“My job was to locate any allies of Sidheduiche, identify them, and distance them from the surface elves of the Relarin forest there in preparation for our eventual return to the surface,” she said primly. “The Erendyl elves are prominent allies of the Sidheduiche!” she pointed out to me, distinctly not pleased with finding out I had a high standing among them.

“Would it alarm you to know that in the great meeting between the Sidhe and the Shaden two hundred and more years ago, the Sidhe agreed immediately to allow two hundred families of Shaden to emigrate to the surface a year?”

She stared at me in disbelief. “That, that must be a lie!” she managed to get out, suddenly flustered.

“No. I had an agent at the meeting who observed it all,” I informed her calmly, making her flinch. “Knowing it was going to happen, and how far back in time it was, it was not difficult to plan matters out so that I could learn the truth.

“The Sidhe were eagerly ready to help Shaden start returning to the surface. As you know, it takes time and energy to acclimate to the surface world, and the Sidhe do not practice farming and live in tight spaces like humans and dwarves do. The Sidhe were ready to help our people return to the surface, and if they did not wish to live in the forest, help them emigrate to other elven kingdoms or lands, as they desired.

“The two hundred families was a reasonable opening limitation, allowing them to test their resources. If acclimation was quick and easy, the number most certainly would have been raised.

“The Sidhe were the Shaden ambassadors, mother. They embraced them like long-lost kin and were ready and willing to help them.” I let that truth sink into her as she frowned more deeply than I had ever seen her.

“Ambassador Kloumialle, acting on direct orders from the king, insisted that the entire population of the Shaden be allowed to emigrate immediately.” Her eyes popped wide open at my words. Any sensible person knew that a mass migration of that level would have ruinous consequences. “Furthermore, they also insisted that the Shaden immediately be granted royal status and take total control over the forest, and that the worship of Gaebrel and customs of the Shaden be made law over all the tribes of Sidheduiche.”

My mother’s eyebrows climbed towards her hairline, stunned at such idiocy. “That… that is not what we are told, Edgina,” she finally managed to say, staring at me. “I can still remember the day the ambassadors returned with the news they had been forced out of the surface by our rude and dismissive cousins there, violating all codes of diplomacy and safe-conduct.” She took a very deep breath. “It was indeed hlosh, a very bad day, that our own kin would deny us the surface...”

“Our representatives were the first to draw blood, once the Sidhe would not submit. It was only courtesy towards fellow elves that allowed them to survive to retreat to the deeps here once more. If the Sidhe had been Shaden… they would have exterminated such a callous, arrogant, and rude people immediately, there would have been no question about it.” My scorn was clear, and my gaze on her stern. “The king had also been placing agents among the Sidhe before he even sent forth his envoys. One of them was already a friend of the elven king, and even present in his court at the time of the meeting! Naturally he did not bother to identify himself as Shaden, either, since he was tasked as the head spymaster of the Shaden infiltration of the Sidhe!”

She swallowed as she stared at me, working through the implications quickly. “King Ershultaen never wanted to get our people to the surface at all, did he?” she whispered in shock.

“No. There are a dozen surface lands he could have started a movement to immigrate to, lands where there would be no elves to fight.

“Instead, he chose an Elven Homeland, and other elves, because he wants his children to reign over a kingdom where the priests of Gaebrel cannot outrank them. He wants war and conquest over a forest kingdom and Elven Homeland, not realizing he will lose both even if he were to invade, fight, and win the resulting clash, the first elven monarch to declare war on another elven kingdom in the history of the world… and for no reason but his own ego!” I grit my teeth, the scorn and contempt in my voice hot and icy at the same time.

“We, we would lose the forest? Even if we won?” my mother asked in shock, stunned at the fruitlessness of what the Shaden were doing.

I favored her with a teacher’s stare. “Mother. You are a wizard. The Relarin was raised by elven magic, with the explicit aid of their Immortals, centered around their mighty Lumina Trees.

“The elves of the surface hold no reverence for Gaebrel, as we hold no reverence for Corellin.

“The magic of the Trees ensures that there is rain every night in the Relarin. That magic grants the forest the vitality and power to sustain the elven population, and allows the trees to grow with supernatural speed to impossible heights.

“It is an Elven Homeland, made by the Sidhe, mother. It was not made by the Shaden.” I paused for emphasis. “Remove the Sidhe, remove the power of the Lumina Trees, and the rains stop, the trees begin to wither, and the magic goes swiftly away, mother. In very little time, the all-conquering Shaden would be inhabiting a firetrap of dying trees which can no longer sustain themselves, growing in a harsh, cold, and dry land that cannot support them!”

📖 Contents

1 BECMI (Biracial Edgelord Can Make Immortal!) : Prologue 2 BECMI Chapter 1 – Babyhood Sucks 3 BECMI Chapter 2 – We’re at Character Creation and trying to Minmax! 4 BECMI Chapter 3 – Getting Around 5 BECMI Chapter 4 – Setting Yourself Up for Success 6 BECMI Chapter 5 – Immortal Lies, Mortal Meanings 7 BECMI Chapter 6 – Going Hunting above my Weight 8 BECMI Chapter 7 – Material Acquisitions 9 BECMI Chapter 8 – Out in the Darkness 10 BECMI Chapter 9 – Picking up an Animal Friend 11 BECMI Chapter 10 – Butter and Poison 12 BECMI Chapter 11 – Item Creation Guidelines are Important 13 BECMI Chapter 12 – A Stave to Edgelord By 14 BECMI Chapter 13 – With This Staff in Hand... 15 BECMI Chapter 14 – The not-Radiance, it's Gammathauma Radiation, Fools! 16 BECMI Chapter 15 – Explosive News 17 BECMI Chapter 16 – A Study in Time 18 BECMI Chapter 17 – The Elements of Time 19 BECMI Chapter 18 – Busy as the Bugs 20 BECMI Chapter 19 – What Lies Over There 21 BECMI Chapter 20 – Miraculous Possibilities 22 BECMI Chapter 21 – The First Dragon 23 BECMI Chapter 22 – Leveraging Time 24 BECMI Chapter 23 – Working the Runes 25 BECMI Chapter 24 – Runes and Running About 26 BECMI Chapter 25 – Dwarven Hospitality 27 BECMI Chapter 26 – Elven Hospitality 28 BECMI Chapter 27 – Truth Cuts Deep 29 BECMI Chapter 28- A Wrinkle in Time 30 BECMI Chapter 29 – Time is Cruel 31 BECMI Chapter 30 – New Recruits 32 BECMI Chapter 31 – Out-Voted 33 BECMI Chapter 32 – A Long Trek Backwards 34 BECMI Chapter 33 – Warrior and Human 35 BECMI Chapter 34 – The Alternate Road 36 BECMI Chapter 35 – Past Misgivings 37 BECMI Chapter 36 – Another Pause in Proceedings 38 BECMI Chapter 37 – Stragglers Here and There 39 BECMI Chapter 38 – More Stragglers 40 BECMI Chapter 39 - Outlawed 41 BECMI Chapter 40 – Messing with History 42 BECMI Chapter 41 – A Potent Future from the Past 43 BECMI Chapter 42 – One Last Night before we Rest 44 BECMI Chapter 43 – Filling Up the Time 45 BECMI Chapter 44 – A Chill is Setting In 46 BECMI Chapter 45 – A Cataclysm Cometh 47 BECMI Chapter 46 – Some Time Alone 48 BECMI Chapter 47 – A Dragon’s Years 49 BECMI Chapter 48 – Draconic Discoveries 50 BECMI Chapter 49 – The Long Years 51 BECMI Chapter 50 – An Immortal Visitor 52 BECMI Chapter 51 – Immortal Consequences 53 BECMI Chapter 52 - Dragonsleep 54 BECMI Chapter 53 – It’s Time to Go 55 BECMI Chapter 54 – A Final Pause 56 BECMI Chapter 55 – The Last Sunken Hurdles 57 BECMI Chapter 56 – A Scale of Time 58 BECMI Chapter 57 – All the way here to Thisbean Inn 59 BECMI Chapter 58 – Of Ladies and Kings 60 BECMI Chapter 59 – The Guilty Parties 61 BECMI Chapter 60 – Divining the Traitors 62 BECMI Chapter 61 – Of Kings and Things 63 BECMI Chapter 62 – The Ei is Watching 64 BECMI Chapter 63 – A Roadmap to the Future 65 BECMI Chapter 64 – Marked for Greatness 66 BECMI Chapter 65 – About Time and the Land of Darkmoor 67 BECMI Chapter 66 – Trade Matters 68 BECMI Chapter 67 – First Contracts 69 BECMI Chapter 68 – A Working Vacation? 70 BECMI Chapter 69 – Preserved by Amber 71 BECMI Chapter 70 – Getting into Positions 72 BECMI Chapter 71 - Attendance 73 BECMI Chapter 72 – Extending Influence 74 BECMI Chapter 73 – Family Problems Counselor 75 BECMI Chapter 74 – Timely Political Contributions 76 BECMI Chapter 75 – Running Simulations 77 BECMI Chapter 76 – Prepping for Adventure 78 BECMI Chapter 77 – Module, er, Quest Accepted! 79 BECMI Chapter 78 – The Batrachian Basilica 80 BECMI Chapter 79 – Scouting Speed Run Complete 81 BECMI Chapter 80 – Special Forces in Special Places 82 BECMI Chapter 81 – A Failure of Technology 83 BECMI Chapter 82 – Taking the Temple 84 BECMI Chapter 83 – Setting the Spoils 85 BECMI Chapter 84 – New Roads Forward 86 BECMI Chapter 85 – Recruitment Drive 87 BECMI Chapter 86 – Crazy Origins 88 BECMI Chapter 87 – Off to the Weirwoods 89 BECMI Chapter 88 – A Walk in the Moonlight 90 BECMI Chapter 89 – Annihilation: Code Black 91 BECMI Chapter 90 – To the Stormspires and Overstern 92 BECMI Chapter 91 – The Man in the Middle 93 BECMI Chapter 92 – The Forgebridge 94 BECMI Chapter 93 – The Abbey 95 BECMI Chapter 94 – Murder, She Witnessed 96 BECMI Chapter 95 – The Hunt will begin Soon 97 BECMI Chapter 96 – Recovering a Regent 98 BECMI Chapter 97 – A Blood Price 99 BECMI Chapter 98 – Ill Deeds come home to Roost 100 BECMI Chapter 99 – Freedom Rides on Black Wings 101 BECMI Chapter 100 – Beckoned by Fire 102 BECMI Chapter 101 – Forged in a Lava Pit… Sounds Familiar?… 103 BECMI Chapter 102 – I Wish for a Bad Ending to All This 104 BECMI Chapter 103 – A Massacre for a Massacre 105 BECMI Chapter 104 – The Judgment of Heaven 106 BECMI Chapter 105 – Energy in Hand with Entropy 107 BECMI Chapter 106 – Another Courting Call 108 BECMI Chapter 107 – Ripple Effects 109 BECMI Chapter 108 – Fiends for Demons 110 BECMI Chapter 109 – Immortal Words and Wills 111 BECMI Chapter 110 – The Collapse of the Khirifi 112 BECMI Chapter 111 – Intervention of the Elders 113 BECMI Chapter 112 – The Roads to Immortality 114 BECMI Chapter 113 – A Road to the Eternal 115 BECMI Chapter 114 – The End of the Khirifi Empire 116 BECMI Chapter 115 – More Imperial Ambitions 117 BECMI Chapter 116 – Conjured Doom 118 BECMI Chapter 117 – Deathly Bequests 119 BECMI Chapter 118 – On a Higher Cause 120 BECMI Chapter 119 – An Expansion of Strength 121 BECMI Chapter 120 – Immediate Plans 122 BECMI Chapter 121 – At the Tower of Daffid the Red 123 BECMI Chapter 122 – Fiery Food leads to Fond Farewells 124 BECMI Chapter 123 – Fallen from the Stars 125 BECMI Chapter 124 – Diplomatic Dealings 126 BECMI Chapter 125 – Inside the Barhund 127 BECMI Chapter 126 – Hearts at Ease 128 BECMI Chapter 127 – Discussions of Consequences 129 BECMI Chapter 128 – Waking from a Bad Dream 130 BECMI Chapter 129 – The Destiny of the Barhund 131 BECMI Chapter 130 – A Call to Battle 132 BECMI Chapter 131 – A Letter of Blood and Souls 133 BECMI Chapter 132 – Where We are Going and What We are Doing 134 BECMI Chapter 133 – A Map to Massacre By 135 BECMI Chapter 134 – The Cost of a Curse 136 BECMI Chapter 135 – There is no Glory in This 137 BECMI Chapter 136 – Breaking the Northern Fist 138 BECMI Chapter 137 – Vikings get Viked by Southern Cross 139 BECMI Chapter 138 – Killer Legacies 140 BECMI Chapter 139 – What is Locked Within 141 BECMI Chapter 140 – Yellow goes White 142 BECMI Chapter 141 – Something for Later 143 BECMI Chapter 142 – Annealed by the Annelid 144 BECMI Chapter 143 – Cavernous Elimination 145 BECMI Chapter 144 – Cold Relief 146 BECMI Chapter 145 – A Moment to Reflect 147 BECMI Chapter 146 – The Temples are Doomed 148 BECMI Chapter 147 – Death is, in fact, Quite Proud 149 BECMI Chapter 148 – Not a Duel of Fates 150 BECMI Chapter 149 – Chatter in the Coliseum 151 BECMI Chapter 150 – It’s Not Fighting and Slaughter, It’s just Showbiz! 152 BECMI Chapter 151 – Avaunt, ye Avatar of Nifl! 153 BECMI Chapter 152 – Gold and Glory 154 BECMI Chapter 153 – And there was Dancing 155 BECMI Chapter 154 – A Dwarf Redoubts 156 BECMI Chapter 155 – A Legacy to Endure 157 BECMI Chapter 156 – Unmoored Parts moving in the Dark 158 BECMI Chapter 157 – Grifting by a Graf 159 BECMI Chapter 158 – A Return to the Present 160 BECMI Chapter 159 – Wind and Fire do not mix Well 161 BECMI Chapter 160 – I Wish I Knew... 162 BECMI Chapter 161 – Clans and Claymores 163 BECMI Chapter 162 – Time is Anchored 164 BECMI Chapter 163 – Overland Travels 165 BECMI Chapter 164 – Over Roads, Past the Dales, as We Head for the Bleaklands Trails… 166 BECMI Chapter 165 – A New Trade Road 167 BECMI Chapter 166 – A New Trade City 168 BECMI Chapter 167 – Elves Moving Forward with the Times 169 BECMI Chapter 168 – On the Road Again, I just can’t Wait to get on the Road Again… 170 BECMI Chapter 169 – A Bridge over Troubled Waters 171 BECMI Chapter 170 – The Bridge is no Trouble 172 BECMI Chapter 171 – The Road ahead is Bleak, Bleak, I Say! 173 BECMI Chapter 172 – Just Some Random Mercantile Proceedings

⚙️ Reading Settings