Chapter 266
Chapter 282 of "Low-Fantasy Occultist" opens presenting key developments: From the determined frown Eona was wearing, Nick knew this wasnât going to be easy.... Read on!
From the determined frown Eona was wearing, Nick knew this wasnât going to be easy. With how busy heâd been studying everything he could get his hands on, they hadnât had much chance to deepen their growing rivalry, but he had noticed her desire to one-up him.Now, sheâd finally get the chance to face him, with the wards providing her the safety net to go all out.
Since this was the third round, only four duels would take place, and a clear gap between second-year and first-year students had become evident.
Of the eight participants, only three were new recruits, despite their initial numerical advantage. Since Nick and Eona were about to face off, and only one would come out on top, their numbers would be reduced even further.
âI hope you know there wonât be any holding back on my part,â Eona said as she took her position opposite him. âNo hard feelings, I just need to win.â
Nick smiled cheerfully, noticing the spike of annoyance it caused in her. âOh, donât worry. There wonât be any hard feelings on my part either.â
He hadnât said it outright, but it was pretty clear he was implying he wouldnât lose, no matter how seriously she took this.
Surprisingly, that appeared to snap her out of her building rage, and she settled into an almost unnatural calm.
âBegin!â Lasazar called, almost hopping in place with excitement.
A full plate armor of light materialized around Eona, but Nick had no intention of letting her set up like all the others had. A blast of annoyance-fueled shot into her, staggering her back and, more importantly, disrupting the coherence of her construct.
As the light mana shattered, Nick summoned his , adding multiple kinetic barriers on top of it.
To her credit, Eona didnât delay by summoning another armor, and since she noticed he had taken measures to protect himself, she chose to focus on a quick offense, crafting a lance and sprinting toward him.
Having seen how capable she could be in close combat, Nick didnât let her get more than two steps before a powerful gust of wind howled toward her, forcing her to disrupt her lance and turn it into a tower shield, which sank into the ground and protected her.
Not one to let a sitting enemy go unpunished, Nick gathered the howling winds into a mass of and launched his barrage, pinning Eona in place.
Constant explosions echoed for a full minute, never letting up until he ran out of patience and stopped to see whether sheâd give up.
Eona, it turned out, had very different ideas because the moment the wind spheres stopped raining, she dismissed her shield, transformed it into a lance, and threw it forward with her full body.
Given her size and her background as the daughter of a knightly family known for its martial skill, the strength she could impart to the light weapon was considerable.
Nick was tempted to take it on just to prove how big the gap was between them, but he remembered Lasazarâs teachings and knew that kind of showboating wouldnât be received well.
Instead, he pulled himself to the side with a lasso of air, quick enough that the lance only grazed the edge of his outer barriers.
The moment the two pieces of magic touched, the lance erupted into a blinding flash of light, causing him to groan in annoyance.
The genuine version of this novel can be found on another site. Support the author by reading it there.
If he were a regular human, he was pretty sure that would have permanently blinded him, but his VIT was high enough to withstand it with only mild annoyance, and the light had been filtered through several layers of defensive magic anyway.
Still, it gave Eona a few seconds to finally create something beyond just weapons.
A rumbling neigh echoed through the arena as Nick blinked away the last of the light and found himself facing not only Eona but also a steed of golden light, whose features were defined enough for him to know it couldnât have been a mere construct.
âAn elemental,â he realized, before the implications of that sank in his mind.
Elementals were fiercely willful creatures, as alien as spirits, yet tethered to the material plane by their element. They could be as harmless as the Dust Rabbits heâd once been tasked to clear out of the templeâs library in Floria, seen merely as pests, or as formidable as beings so powerful that only Prestige warriors and mages could hope to match them.
This horse was pretty clearly somewhere between the two, but the key was to know exactly where it fell.
Eona didnât seem interested in answering the unspoken questions because she kicked the elementalâs sides and sent it charging at him, even as another lance of pure light materialized in her hand and an even more intricate armor covered her features.
Clearly, she had been holding back quite a bit if she was capable of that much. Her casting speed had been her biggest problem so far, but she was now able to summon multiple constructs within a second of each other, even while moving.
It made sense. Nick knew that not all contracts with different entities were as straightforward as the one he had with Talbot. Some required the signee to permanently relinquish parts of their mana, while others were more mutually beneficial.
For the daughter of a knightly house, contracting an elemental horse capable of serving as her steed everywhere would be an obvious choice, especially if it could boost her magic.
A few options crossed Nickâs mind. He could probably destroy the horse with , but that would kill it permanently, and he wasn't sure if the wards extended to protect a summon.
Alternatively, he could establish a sympathetic connection with the horse, thereby contesting Eonaâs contract just long enough to weaken her while he dispatched of the creature through more conventional means. However, that approach seemed overly complicated, and given their rapid momentum, it also appeared too lengthy to be worth pursuing.
Lastly, he could go for something a bit different. Something a bit risky, but equally promising. Get full chapters from novelâ˘ďŹre.net
He asked himself with a sardonic smile.
âI always did my best work under pressure, so this shouldnât be too different.â
His multi-layer shielding had served him well, allowing him to withstand even exotic effects like the False Philosopherâs Stoneâs Rubedo stage, but it was clearly approaching its limits.
Using to get out of her charge wasnât the most glamorous method, but Nick just needed a little time, so he circled around the arena, leading Eona by her nose.
The more time he gained, the more he would need to rework the formulas for his defensive spell suite, but also, the more time she would have to strengthen her armor and lance, which, by the look of it, were developing a quite dangerous sheen.
Clearly, she knew he was planning something and had no intention of letting him do it, so she thrust her lance forward with a shout, unleashing a bolt of light.
He somersaulted out of the way and let out a burst of laughter, which only made her angrier.
âStay still, damn it!â She yelled.
Nick, meanwhile, was frantically working on the newest version of his defenses. He began by slotting into the basic block and added more force magic elements, similar to those he had used for . However, he quickly realized the result would be mediocre.
He knew he could do it, but why would he when provided him with such a strong connection to two other elements? Especially after personally experiencing a Greater Ritual and witnessing a Thunderbird form above him, which could give his magic incredible stability if he used it as a focusing memory.
Thus, he rejected the first option and started creating a much more complex, yet deceptively simple structure.
People shouted something, probably telling him to fight back, but he couldnât care less. He was very close to a major breakthrough; he just needed one last thing to give the whole thing stabilityâŚ
The Thunderbird was a majestic creature, close enough to divinity that he could feel its concept resonate with the spell, but to help it along, he needed to add a resonance, something to make the magic reach for the power it held.
Fortunately, Nick had already done something similar before. It had been almost accidental, but it didnât really matter. Getting a glimpse of the System in action when he granted himself , which then became , had served him well.
So, he assembled all the elemental pieces into the massive circle forming in his mind and reached for the tiny fragments of purified mana inside him, which still bore the imprint of the Thunderbird he had summoned.
A flash of light followed, so blinding and powerful that it shook the chamberâs dimension, forcing the Tower to supply extra power to keep it stable.
Eona and her horse didnât hesitate to lunge forward as soon as he stopped, clearly knowing he was about to unleash the result of his efforts and that it was their last chance to win.
Hidden behind her helmet, he couldnât quite see her expression, but he knew it had to be very frustrating as he mouthed an apology.
ââ he intoned, and the light took on a golden sheen.
Eonaâs spear struck him just as the magic finished forming, then vanished.
Unfortunately for her, her momentum was too strong to stop mid-charge, and he could see the horror in her eyes as her horse began dispersing upon contact with the nearly invisible field around him.
Yet, before the horse could fully vanish and Eona could crash into his newest protection herselfâlikely to get seriously hurt despite his careful deactivation of its offensive powersâthe Tower intervened. The girl disappeared in a flash and reappeared next to her steed fifty feet away, her momentum gone.
CONGRATULATIONS!
You have developed a new spell
+211.000 Exp