Chapter 1
Starting Chapter 1 of "Low-Fantasy Occultist": āI am the deep shadow. Do not look for me, fools. Such a deed is... See what happens next!
āI am the deep shadow. Do not look for me, fools. Such a deed is beyond you. Only the greats can hope to see me.āNickās head rang painfully. The cold stone floor grounded him somewhat, but the pressure didnāt abate for a few long minutes.
āLeave him be. Some classes can take a toll on the body, especially when the childās lineage doesnāt have magic users,ā
The voice was familiar in a way Nick couldnāt put his finger on. He was sure he knew the man, and yet he was equally certain he had never even heard the language being spoken. It sounded nothing like any other human tongue he was familiar with, but it didnāt have the distinctive echo of what faes or daemons were said to have.
āHeāll still be here after we are done with the others. The bishop gave us enough resources to awaken all of Floriaās children, and so we shall.ā The second time he heard it, Nick was able to associate the voice with a balding, thin man who wore a white and gold cape. He was still pretty sure he had never met anyone who looked like that, but the image was present in his mind.
Forcing his eyes open and wincing at the light coming from the side, Nick took stock of his situation.
A large, arched room made of white and grey stone, an altar with several crystals emitting enough power to be almost visible to the naked eye.
There were at least twenty other people in the chamber. Two adults making the rounds and casting something and the rest were all kids like him. While technology had come leaps and bounds lately, Nick doubted itād be able to fake a levitation/glowing lights combo well enough to escape his senses, so this was either him tripping balls orā¦
Now even more confused than before, Nick closed his eyes again and tried to make sense of his thoughts.
But now that the pounding in his head was subsiding and he could finally unclench his tight grip over his mind, a new sensation made itself known just at the edges of his consciousness.
It was a matter of turning his attention that way that the cause was revealed. Even with his eyes closed, a bright blue display appeared in his mindās eye, as clear as if he was looking at it directly.
NICK CROWLEY
LEVEL
MANA
STR
DEX
CON
INT
WIS
CHA
Occultist/Human
1
4
9
13
11
14
14
14
This time, he didnāt have the chance to be confused because the answer bubbled up without bidding. It was a status screen, the kind of thing that he should have expected to see after the awakening ceremony.
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Knowledge that had been hiding in his brain as he tried to make sense of everything flooded in. And for all that Nick wasnāt an expert in soul magic, even he could immediately tell that something had happened to his.
Nicholas Crowley of Floria and Nicholas Crowley of Salem had somehow become the same person. The last memories of his previous life were still blurry, and Nick knew it would take some meditationāor better yet, some Dreamwineāto bring them out. Still, he could remotely remember realizing a Samhain ritual was going wrong and something with too many eyes smiling at him as reality fracturedā¦
A presence loomed over him, and Nick was forced to return to the real world.
āIs everything alright, young Crowley? I know these things can be exhausting, but I havenāt seen a reaction like yours before. What class did you get?ā It was the bald man from before, whom he now recognized as Vicar Alexander, the leading priest of the local congregation.
āI think Iām fine. It was just a lot of mana all at once.ā Nick replied, deliberately not mentioning his classā name.
āAh, yes. Mage, ay? I suspected, with all the mana you released. We get one or two of those every few years, even here in the boonies. Itās the wild mana, I say. That much energy floating around is bound to have consequences, no matter what they think in the hinterland about breeding.ā
Nick smiled, allowing the misunderstanding to continue. He still hadnāt finished cataloging every memory, but something told him that Occultist was not an ordinary class, just like it hadnāt been a common type of caster even among the underworld in his last life.
Once all the children had acclimated to the awakening, the doors to the chamber opened, and a stream of people entered.
Automatically, Nickās eyes scanned the crowd, looking for his family. A tall woman wearing a light lilac sundress was at the forefront of the crowd, and from how the other parents moved to let her pass unimpeded, she was obviously well respected.
Nick recognized her as his mother, and something inside him unclenched at the sight. His younger self had been worried sick he would get a useless class. While he hadnāt found the time to explore his status in full, he knew from his previous experience that anything regarding the occult could be very useful indeed. He hadnāt had a helpful system to guide him, but Nick knew he could do much, especially if this world was as full of mana as he could remember.
Any other thought was put aside as a force of nature swept him in her arms, āThere he is. My little boy. Iām so proud of you!ā
Dangling in his motherās arms, Nick could only smile warmly, enjoying the closeness he never had in his past life.
āA Mage is a fine class, Lady Elena. Heāll need some further education to become a proper one once heās a bit older, but for now, heāll be able to learn with the rest of the children at our lessons,ā Vicar Alexander came around to say, earning a nod from Nickās mother.
āA Mage, huh? Canāt say I know who you get it from, but Iāve fought alongside enough to be able to help you start training.ā
The post-ceremony celebrations were relatively limited compared to what he had been told happened in a proper city, as life on the frontier was never plentiful enough for them to afford to splurge without a good reason. However, the newly awakened children were still made to walk around the village in a parade as the other citizens clapped and cheered their accomplishment.
In Floria, accessing oneās system meant they could finally begin their apprenticeshipādepending on the class they had gotten. Of course, surprises werenāt common, and most children inherited the class of one of their parents.
Having lived his old life as a recluse, especially after his grandfather and teacher of the arcane had died just after he turned nineteen, Nick enjoyed the attention more than he thought he would. It was another example of him not being the same person he had been in the other world. That Nick would have shied away from leading the parade of children, but the current one didnāt mind. Instead, he happily walked alongside his mother as they headed to the town hall, where his father would be.
Floria was aptly named. The furthest village on the western edges of the Illumia Kingdom, where plant life and green covered everything. Sitting at the border of the Green Ocean, a massive forested area that ran along the entire border and much further beyond, Floria served as a starting point for any expedition in the unknown and little more besides. People farmed some of the land that had been cleared, and an economy had been built around monster parts that adventurers sold here because they werenāt worth the effort of lugging around until an actual city like Alluria, as it was three days of carriage travel away.
Finally, they reached the central plaza, where the market was held once a month and where the rest of the townās citizens were currently gathered, cheering for their arrival. Creeper vines of various colors had been carefully removed from their chosen trees and placed around the square as if garlands, and Nickās father, the townās Captain, waited for them with a wide smile.
Another hug, this time much more gentle and conscious of the image they were portraying followed, and the young part of Nickās consciousness couldnāt help but beam proudly.
āSo, what is it?ā His father, Eugene, whispered curiously.
āMage,ā Elena answered first, once again saving Nick from having to lie. He hadnāt really intended to, but the instincts of a life spent avoiding notice of the mundane world and any other practitioner made it challenging to be open, even though he felt all the affection an eleven-year-old boy should have toward his parents.
āI knew it! You were never gonna be a Knight!ā A younger voice interrupted, and Nick turned to see his older brother, Devon, rush toward him, pointing a finger dramatically. āToo wimpy!ā
Such a taunt would have usually been enough to set Nick off, sending the two tumbling to the ground as they wrestled. Though he didnāt have any intention of doing that here, his mother grabbed him in a vice grip. She sported a broad smile, but whispered harshly, āDonāt you dare. I bought you those clothes specifically for this day. If you get them dirty, Iāll make you train three times as hard.ā
A shiver ran down Nickās spine. While Elena was a perfectly loving mother most of the time, her past as an adventurer ensured she put her children through their paces, wanting to leave them capable enough to handle any path they would be assigned. It showed in his higher-than-average stats, though his strength was still lagging behind.
Devon quieted, knowing better than to call his motherās wrath upon himself. The festivity continued, and the family made sure to do the rounds, greeting all the movers and shakers of their little frontier town as much as any could be considered such.
āAre you gonna get a class change? I heard they can do those if you pay enough,ā Devon eventually asked. Nick immediately shook his head. He didnāt know much about the systemās underlying mechanism or how it would affect his abilities, but he was an Occultist at heart. And even if he didnāt want to be one, he remembered his mother explaining that arranging a class change was prohibitively expensive. They were only done in the direst of cases.
āBut then you wonāt be able to learn from mom or dad.ā
That was the issue, wasnāt it? Young Nick was terrified of being in a class that was incompatible with his familyās. It would mean learning only the basics from the temple and then leaving for a city where heād get an apprenticeship or remain stagnant all his life while trying to develop independently. It was a rational fear for an eleven-year-old kid to have.
The new Nick could barely keep a grin from forming. He had spent his entire previous life scraping by, experimenting with reagents and rituals of all kinds to squeeze just a little more magic out of a world that had left it behind. Being in a place where everyone, from the most humble Farmer to the greatest Paladin, lived and breathed mana made him giddy with excitement.