Biracial Edgelord Can't Make Immortal : Power of Ten, Book Seven - BECMI Chapter 70 – Getting into Positions

BECMI Chapter 70 – Getting into Positions

Words : 2076 Author : RE Druin

Chapter 71 of "Biracial Edgelord Can't Make Immortal : Power of Ten, Book Seven" introduces new challenges: EBOOK SEVEN IS OUT! WOO HOO, Finally!While my elven colleagues were getting their training from... Keep following!

EBOOK SEVEN IS OUT! WOO HOO, Finally!

While my elven colleagues were getting their training from the Princess and her courtiers, I finally enrolled at the Great School of Magic in Zanzyr City.

Now, technically I was at correct age, at under fifty years of physical age, basically an elven teenager. I did make that very hard to tell, given how ageless elves could appear and the whole dhampyr dad thing really playing that up and making me look older then I was.

The key thing is that I was more than qualified to serve as a visiting professor, not a student, but I wanted to learn the unique things they had to teach, make connections, observe the various not-so Secret Societies at work and play, and make my own plans on what to accomplish there, recruiting followers, and so forth.

In short, I was going to have to do that most dreaded of Wizardly accomplishments… socialize!

It’s like I put those Ranks into Diplomacy, Intimidation, and Sense Motive for a reason.

The first thing I did was use my Curse Mastery to good effect, and reduce my level to one-third actual while on the grounds and areas about the Great School of Magic. At the same time, it tripled the amount of experience gained, as the suppressed energy was harnessed into a new direction.

This reduced me down to a Four, a Fourth Initiate. Basically, someone who could only Cast Valence I’s and II’s was an Initiate. Adepts could Cast III’s and then IV’s. The hallmark of a true Wizard and graduate of the School was the ability to cast V’s, especially the most desired spell of .

Now, I had intimate knowledge of more sophisticated Casting techniques than anyone at the Great School did. As a Four Ur-Priest, I still had access to IV’s, albeit on the Divine side of things, which were a no-no to Cast in Zanzyr. The Wizards here wanted no competition on the Divine side of things. I could easily introduce things which would revolutionize magic here… but this Neutral to Chaotic school was definitely not the place I was going to do that in.

The main problem was graduation requirements.

The School discounted Karma gained from ‘adventuring’, unless those were for the strict purposes of gaining spell components. Making gold via spellcasting was heavily discounted.

No, to earn credits towards graduation you actually had to learn magic and use magic towards the mastery of magic. You couldn’t just blast things down, you couldn’t just take money for Casting spells. Paying the bills and earning mastery of magic were two very different things.

The best way to earn credits was to make up new, custom spells. The second best way was to research known spells.

What it meant was that graduates of this school almost always had custom versions of their own spells, and a rather wide variety of other spells. The opportunistic and wise traded spells with their peers frequently to expand their own spellbooks, everyone Cast spells for fees (with the appropriate licenses), and everyone competed for attention, more knowledge, building personal libraries, acquiring components, helping make basic magical items (mostly Potions and one-off geegaws of minor power), and did a lot of copying.

All that… was incredibly easy for me, of course. I was fully aware of avenues of research that these people didn’t even know existed, and even if I had to engage in some radical alterations for the admittedly more Chaotic aspects of the local manafield (doubtless encouraged by Immortals of the Spheres of Energy), all that meant was that making individualized spells was actually easier and the norm. Standardized spells, the ones that became the ‘core spells’ of Wizardry, were actually the more difficult ones to make.

Which I thought was pretty funny, too. Given my completely straight-faced and cold-blooded goth approach to everything, naturally I leaned into this heavily.

First, however, I had to get through the Grandmaster of the School of Wizardry, the most powerful Wizard in all of Zanzyr, Prince Nathanael Jean-Arc, head of the most powerful wizarding family in the nation.

“Greetings, young lady,” the old man, looking like every long-bearded picture of an old human wizard ever, except his hair was still black as jet, said gravely, gesturing me to a chair with a gnarled finger.

The appearance of the pale-faced young Iendyl nobleman who’d left urgently before me had been rather effective in pushing home the lesson that the genial elder statesman and master of the Grand School of Wizardry was not to be underestimated, affable reputation or no.

I’d seen that he recognized me, which was not unexpected. Like many of the Princes, he strolled the Plaza of Machedon along the river between sessions of Parliament, as did many of the more powerful nobles. I had also walked through the plaza, putting faces to names and to nobles, when I could discreetly make it past their Divination Wards, which every single one of them had possessed.

But amusingly, they did not all have Charm Wards. I discreetly removed nine , three , two compulsions, four minor Curses, two effects at inopportune times, and I made it both obvious to the targets that a spell had been lifted and who the one who’d Cast that spell on them was.

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The Parliament discourses were particularly energetic for those two days!

Only one person had noticed me dispensing the spells, someone with two effects centered around him.

His anti-divination defenses were perfect, of course. But he couldn’t hide his effect on mana around him, he just didn’t expect anyone to be looking at that.

That and the gammathauma, which were both bending around and centered around him.

It meant he’d seen my spellcasting, and done nothing. He’d also seen the targets of my spells, and done nothing, as if it was irrelevant and all to be expected.

The mana did not respond to him like anything mortal. The Faith energy was coming to him… and going right back out.

And only one Immortal was actively venerated by the Wizards in Zanzyr.

“Grandmaster,” I responded, bowing gracefully to him, then moving smoothly over to the indicated chair, sitting there with perfect form.

He held up an introduction that was quite familiar to me. “A formidable recommendation you come with, young lady. Princess ‘Belle does not write these lightly, unlike some of the other Princes.” He had a soft and suave, authority-filled Verdain accent, which sounded quite French to me.

“That is probably because I am the most gifted young spellcaster that she has ever met, and proved it to her, Grandmaster,” I responded forthrightly, drawing another scroll out of my sleeve and holding it out in my hand. “Some additional matters that may be of import that I recently shared with Her Highness.”

A crooked finger, and the scroll wafted across the air to his grasp. He inspected the Seal, raised an eye at me at seeing the Princess’ Seal again, and opened it directly.

His “Hmmph!” of surprise was well-feigned. “You actually revealed this to the Princess?” he asked me, surprised at my daring.

“I am here of my own volition, and my father is a citizen in good standing of Zanzyr. As I am not here as an agent of a foreign power, the Princess had no reason to refuse me, and cause to admit me.

“Also, my mother attended here, although I am uncertain if she graduated.”

“She did not. It was plain after a year of classes that she was attending as an agent of her king and was summarily expelled.” His voice was level and unperturbed by the fact. “You have already been recruited into the Cryptomancers.” It wasn’t in the scroll, but obviously he could sense it.

“I have mastered multiple Runes already, Grandmaster,” I bowed slightly. Which was very, very true.

“The spell you used on the representatives on the plaza. Is that of your own creation?” he asked absently, still reading the scroll he had probably processed at a glance.

“It is a modified and specialized variation of a standard , concentrating entirely on the suppression of mind-control effects. Once they realized they were under mental domination effects, the recipients naturally threw off the magic themselves. Identifying who was under the effects was more challenging, but not much, as anyone foolish enough to get themselves are not good at hiding evidence of the effects from those used to looking for them, Grandmaster.”

“Intelligent and observant. And your skill of Casting without word or gesture?”

“To be utterly frank, repetitive Casting of the appropriate spells many, many times over a great deal of time and so building my familiarity with the magic. Many thousands of times, Grandmaster,” I replied firmly.

“Indeed?” he arched an eyebrow, but that was utter truth, too. “Would that other students of magic were so disciplined. I begin to understand what Belle sees in you.”

“It is a minor personal foible.”

His dark old eyes glittered with amusement. “Who are you claiming as your father?”

“My sire is Boraz Bludevich-Jubvanyl, the son of Prince Mordai Bludevich-Jubvanyl. I have never met the man, of course. My mother remarked that I was named after his battleaxe of an aunt.”

He grunted and actually half-smiled at that description, clearly knowing who I spoke of. “You affect a rather refined Transyvian accent for someone not raised there.”

“This is how I learned the common tongue of surface worlders. Is it improper?” I asked with my own arched eyebrow. “I understand the accent of my people is somewhat discomfiting to humans. My mother spoke of having to change how she spoke on the surface.”

“No. It is quite elegant, actually. Please retain it.” He raised his eyes to mine as the scroll in his hand burned away, leaving nothing for any other to read as blackmail or something similar. “I trust you know the true nature of your relatives?” he asked perfunctorily.

“My sire is a dhampir. Vampires are not known for preferring living subordinates, and what I know of my sire indicates that he is basically ignored by his father, possibly because he cannot be turned.” I inclined my head. “Clearly you know of their true nature, and the Princes must, as well. Is there a reason you have not taken collective action against them? I do not believe that there is any way his thralls can stand against the joint efforts of the Princes, regardless of their numbers.”

He considered me for a long and somber moment, then sighed slightly. “Politics,” he finally replied. “There is no law in Zanzyr that the undead cannot be Princes, only that they must be Wizards. However, neither is there a law that the destruction of undead is illegal. Thus, it is expedient to let the weight of their existence fall upon one’s rivals, instead of taking up a costly and risky extermination on one’s own.”

Fight and even if you won, you were weakened, and your political opponents would immediately capitalize on that weakness, leaving you unable to profit from your success and likely getting hammered for your valor.

Princess Brittabelle had alluded to the matter when I had revealed my parentage.

I, of course, was neither a Zanzyran nor a noble, so not obligated to any of those silent tolerances while a house of necromancers and undead built their power across the years, decades, and centuries.

If they were kin, well, maybe I’d shed a crimson tear for their stupidity.

“You are not enrolling under the auspices of the House of Bulgarov. That does not mean you’ll not attract attention and be accosted by your relatives at some point. However, they will do nothing to you before you graduate from this School, or they will attract MY ire.” There was just a pulse of tremendous magical power filling the air, which I tolerated without batting an eye, rather impressing him with my willpower. “Impress me, young lady. Magic always needs a few surprises, and I think you’re going to give us some.”

“As the Grandmaster wishes,” I replied, rising and bowing again. “I will ask a final question: how well is it known among the faculty that shadenelves have attended the School?”

📖 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

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