Chapter 284
Here is Chapter 302 of "Low-Fantasy Occultist": The two mages immediately recognized he was not one of theirs. They stiffened as he... Donāt miss it!
The two mages immediately recognized he was not one of theirs. They stiffened as he approached and looked at him warily, instead of causing a scene as he had expected, which made him reassess them slightly.āGentlemen,ā Nick said with a relaxed grin as he took a seat on the only available sofa.
There was no flash of recognition in their eyes, but heād expected that. Judging by their well-developed mana signatures, they were Tower mages, but their choice to live in the docks and start their own criminal gang suggested they werenāt particularly talented. No one with a clear path to the top would be caught dead here.
But they were here, and hadnāt been shut down, which meant he couldnāt underestimate them.
āGood evening,ā one of the mages replied, a redhead with a scraggly beard who couldnāt have been more than twenty but clearly thought highly of himself, judging by the luxurious robes and accessories he wore. He patted the girl hanging off his arm on the thigh, and she stood up and silently left, quickly joined by the other two, leaving Nick alone with the three men.
āI do not remember you among our associates,ā the other mage said, staring at Nick from beneath his blonde fringe. He had long hair, enough so that he could have braided it, but there was something in his eyes that spoke of wildness, which put Nick on edge.
This was someone who loved living life on the edge, chasing highs and avoiding lows. If a fight broke out, he could count on this man to go for the jugular right away.
āThatās because Iām not,ā he replied, still maintaining his mild smile.
āThen who the hell are you?ā The warrior grunted. He was older than the other two by at least a decade and clearly less patient, but also seasoned, judging by the scars that ran down his face into his chest.
āA friend, I hope,ā Nick said, keeping his eyes fixed on the blonde mage, knowing he was the most dangerous of the trio. Still, that didnāt mean he hadnāt noticed the movements coming from upstairs as word of his presence spread through the building.
he thought, and quietly began carving a few sigils in unobtrusive places.
āWell, friend, what can we do for you?ā The redhead asked, leaning on his elbows with an amused smile. He clearly knew Nick was a mage, but still thought he had the upper hand.
āI have two questions to ask, and if I like the answer, Iāll reward you handsomely,ā he said, and he was even being honest. He didnāt think this night would end without a fight of some kind, but that didnāt mean people couldnāt surprise him.
He had gained a lot of gold by selling thunderhoofs, and his income kept increasing the longer Alluria went without a new supply line.
And that was without unloading the most valuable pieces he had in his ring, the matriarchs.
The three men exchanged glances, and while their body language relaxed as if they were shifting gears now that they were talking business, Nick could see bloodlust grow in their souls.
He had admitted to having enough money to pay them. If he didnāt handle himself well, theyād jump him and take everything he had, at least in their minds. The reality would be quite different.
āWhat do you want to know?ā
Nick smiled as gullibly as he could. āI have heard that you guys are involved in most businesses, especially in bringing in merchandise, and smuggling things out, sometimes even people. I was wondering if you knew anything about a scout named Anthony. Heās the son of my favorite clothing merchant, you see, and heās gone and disappeared after a night of heavy drinking. Since it wasnāt the other gangs who took him, I believe you might at least know something.ā
The moment he mentioned who he was interested in, the three stiffened, and what had been light amusement at a kid wandering in and acting self-important became concern.
āWho sent you?ā The warrior growled.
You could be reading stolen content. Head to the original site for the genuine story.
āNobody sent me. Now answer my question,ā Nick replied, baring his teeth. That reaction was enough to tell him they had some information, even if they werenāt directly involved.
His original suspicion that these men might have chosen to live like kings among peasants, rather than servants among kings, was turning out to be more accurate than he expected.
Before things could escalate into violence, the blonde mageā the one Nick had labeled as the most volatileā raised a hand, stopping the other two. āWe might know something,ā he admitted, his lips curling into a smirk, ābut the price is high for that sort of information. The Duke is currently desperate for any scrap, you know? Why should we tell you this when we could get so much more by going to him?ā
And that was the core of the question, wasnāt it? The fact that these mages were left alone despite likely knowing something meant they had to have some strong backing.
If Nick hadnāt been able to sense the quick movements all around him as people were pulled out of the room and the other two mages set up to strike him from a blind spot, he might have been inclined to continue that line of questioning.
But he could see in their soul that they had no real intention of answering him. This was just a delaying tactic, so he wouldnāt humor them now that he was done with his battle prep.
The first man who fell didnāt even realize that things had changed. He was one of the four mages, whose presence seemed somewhat obscured in the ether, and who, despite having the smallest reserves among the four, felt very dangerous because of the shadow magic he was about to cast.
He collapsed as a struck him at the back of his head, full of enough resentment and spite to paralyze him for a solid hour.
The second hidden mage realized something had gone wrong, but also couldnāt do much about it. Heād been halfway through powering up a ward that felt like binding magic, and Nick wasnāt interested in fighting with his body tied up, even if he was somewhat confident he could still win.
The security guard who had welcomed him drew his sword, but his limbs froze and his consciousness faded soon after, as he stepped on an Nick had prepared in advance.
A moment of silence passed, during which the trio heād been talking with waited for their teammates to strike. When nothing happened, their eyes widened in realization, and they launched the attack on their own.
The warrior didnāt waste time, pulling a warhammer from subspace and swinging it directly at his head, hitting the golden shield of like a gong, causing the man to reel as electrical currents made his muscles convulse.
The two mages jumped back, each unleashing their own spells, but whatever their intentions had been, they simply lacked the power to overcome Nickās defenses, and their attacks fizzled out upon contact.
Nick raised his hand toward the blonde, relishing a little too much in the dawning realization that they were outmatched, before his vision was overtaken by fire, as the redhead moved faster than he would have expected.
It howled and raged for several seconds, hot enough to have turned him into a charred mess if he hadnāt been protected by a superior defensive spell.
Any hesitation he might have had about using force vanished into the ether as he endured its roaring anger, until it finally faded, and Nick launched his counterattack.
A suddenly formed, crashing into the hastily constructed barrier the redheaded mage had set up and shattering it like glass. Another one followed, then a third, which pierced through and lodged itself in its target, knocking him into the far wall.
In the meantime, the warrior had recovered enough to resume his attack. Now wielding a skill-enhanced weapon, he didnāt need to fear backlash, but he was still too slow to reach Nick before Nick reached him.
A rumbled through the room, shaking the windows and smashing him through the central island in a shower of liquor and wood.
āOops,ā Nick chuckled before being pulled back into the fight as the blonde mage finished whatever spell he was casting and unleashed it.
Given their lack of inventiveness so far, Nick expected another elemental attack. Instead, the floor rippled from underneath him, suddenly pulling back to reveal a hole in the ground that led to a spike-filled trap.
That hadnāt been there before, which only confirmed Nickās impression of the blonde as the most dangerous of the group. If he could cast a complex transmutation so quickly, heād surely be able to handle most novice mages. Eona might be able to tank the damage thanks to her light armor, and Bellamy could have overwhelmed his control of the bedrock, but everyone else in his class would have died there.
Nick, on the other hand, stayed exactly where he was. Sustained true flight might have been a bit too expensive for long trips, but he could easily levitate himself in place without needing to stop his other spells.
The enemy mage clearly hadnāt expected that, as his eyes bugged out, but he twisted his hands, turning the stationary spikes into javelins and launching them upward with enough force to go through stone.
barely budged, giving Nick time to unleash a barrage of on the man, and then on all the others for good measure.
The fight probably didn't last more than a minute or two, but it was extremely intense and left the reception room in disarray. Nick was briefly tempted to fix it up before deciding he couldnāt waste more time.
Walking up to the twitching form of the blonde mage, Nick prepared a specific mix of emotions for his next .
Considering how many times heād already been hit, there wasnāt much resistance to worry about, but he wasnāt interested in parsing through half-truths and hidden meanings, so he put as much submissiveness, pliancy, and trust into the spell as he could summon and released it directly into the manās head.
āNow then, what were we saying?ā He asked as his victim trembled and shook from the onslaught of foreign emotions, fighting a losing battle, until he finally loosened and his eyes went glassy.
āI told you that I knew something,ā the mage muttered back in a sluggish voice.
āYes, you did,ā Nick grinned. āGo on, what do you know about Anthony the scout?ā
He might have ten or twenty minutes at most before too much attention was drawn to the townhouse for him to stay, especially since the Dukeās guards would have noticed something was wrong, even with the distance they kept from the building, but that just meant he had to make the most of it.
āThe kid was marked from the start. Heād gotten into debt with several gangs and came to us offering to work as a go-between for protection,ā his prisoner said, and the more he kept talking, the wider Nickās eyes became.