Chapter 302.5: Interlude Osmod 2
Chapter 322 of "Low-Fantasy Occultist" starts revealing the story: Life was strange. As with magic, using the same components at different times could produce... Donāt miss it!
Life was strange. As with magic, using the same components at different times could produce unexpected results, especially if the person in control lacked complete mastery of the process.Osmod would know. He had been exiled from the Tower less than four months ago. His career had hit a dead end, and he could only find work in the ward room of the auxiliary building because Archmage Tholm took pity on him, thinking he might still have some use left before he was discarded entirely.
He didnāt take it to heart. It was more than anyone else would have done, and it had given him a chance. A chance that he was now at risk of losing, all because the kid heād recommended the Archmage take in was so much more than he could have imagined back then.
Though heād wanted to meet with Nicholas Crowley more than once, the old Archmage kept him busy with menial tasks, sending him around the city to scout potential targets for the baby monster he was brooding over, so that he could sharpen his teeth before the training wheels had to come off.
It wasnāt glamorous, but it was more than he had done during his months as a glorified security guard, and given Epistulaās enthusiasm for the potential reversal in fortunes, he knew better than to complain.
That didnāt mean he enjoyed sneaking around the docks at night, avoiding guard patrols and the few gangs that remained after the Dukeās rage had swept through the district.
A more naive version of himself, the one who hadnāt been cast out, who hadnāt seen his life fall apart and his friends reject him, acting as if they had never even known him, would have believed that Tholm alone should have reinstated him.
That acting as a thug for the old man would bring him back into the light once he proved himself enough. But the current Osmod, the one who had learned more household charms than real magic over the past months just to make his life outside the Tower bearable and to lift the burden off his girlās shoulders enough so she wouldnāt be haunted by thoughts of leaving him, knew better.
Tholm had given him a chance, but instead of reclaiming his position, it was to prove himself useful for shadowy work where he could apply the skills heād gained over the years as his apprentice.
Feeding enough mana into the to start its activation, Osmod sent his senses through the darkened building, scanning every surface for recent presences.
As expected, nothing stood out, but he anticipated this and looked closer, searching for minor mismatches compared to what heād seen the night before.
It would have been impossible to remember all those details, even with his high INT score, but the amulet, a relic from when he could stand straight, made it possible, if only for brief bursts and with potential headaches if he overused it.
With its ghostly, unnatural fingers running down his spine, clearing his mind into a heightened state that few could ever hope to achieve naturally, even among the Prestige mages, he checked again, and this time, he saw hints of mana residue.
They were so subtle that even a dedicated sensor could have missed them, but Osmod was more skilled than that, having recently achieved with his , and now he had proof that Archmage Hone had personally been in the townhouse.
The amulet turned off at his command, and he sagged against the closest wall, closing his eyes and breathing in.
It wasnāt like he couldnāt see the big picture. Archmage Hone had gotten involved with the wrong people, using his son as the middleman to keep himself clean, and now he was forced to do damage control because a little monster he couldnāt have anticipated had blown everything apart.
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Once, Osmod would have been worried, even disgusted, that his mentor was sending a child into extremely dangerous missions. Nicholas Crowley might have been a prodigy, but he was just shy of fourteen years old, according to the records heād seen.
But heād seen firsthand the results of his encounter with Honeās gang of thugs. That kid had smacked them around like they were the barely classed mages, and not the other way around.
āSometimes, someone who breaks all the rules, whose power cannot be measured with simple levels and attributes, comes around, and everyone who has the privilege or the curse of being in their path has the choice to bend or break. Trying to understand them is useless,ā he muttered. It was an old saying, mostly meant to explain how Tower Master Bluetear had gone from a promising apprentice to a Prestige Mage in just two years.
It was, as far as he knew, the fastest anyone had ever reached the most coveted milestone. Something that a mere mortal couldnāt hope to comprehend.
Well, now it seemed like they might have another such monster among them.
Facing an actual Archmage was definitely enough to rip the wings off even the fastest bird.
Once he was fully recovered from using the amulet, Osmod prepared to slip back out of the docks, but not before one last check.
A less paranoid person might have missed it. Should have missed it, really, as he only felt the slightest flicker, even with his senses still tingling from being stretched so far, but Osmod knew that coincidences in magic were very rare, if they existed at all.
Something was moving below the building he was sent to observe, and while he had gotten the confirmation he needed, and if he was smart at all, he would have already fled, considering the likelihood of it being Archmage Hone again, he didnāt.
If there was one thing Osmod was guilty of, it was doing his job too well, and heād die on that hill.
Dust swirled inside the townhouse, moved by an unseen breeze. Lines etched themselves into the stone floor, and Osmod felt his eyes widen as he realized that someone was preparing a ritual from afar.
The number of people who could do so and go unnoticed was tiny. It was likely a Prestige mage or someone of similar mastery behind it.
The would keep him hidden, but Osmod felt too paranoid as he watched more and more lines appear out of nowhere. He doubled his defenses, slipping on one of Tholmās just to ensure he wouldnāt reveal his presence, even if it felt heavy on his finger, with the mana drain enough to prevent him from casting almost anything.
Such was the cost of using an Archmageās personal equipment. It was worth it anyway, as he could observe and document everything through a recording crystal; from the ritual lines spreading upward from the basement to the upper floors and covering the entire building, to the muted flash of mana that followed, as the power was contained within the cage, preventing anyone except him from seeing the teleportation of seventeen people into the city.
he thought, feeling lightheaded from the implications.
The new arrivals certainly didnāt seem to be a group of apprentices coming back from a field trip. They were warriors, all of them, with spiraling tattoos on their skin and fierce looks in their eyes. They quickly moved out of the basement, spreading through the townhouse and strengthening its defenses, turning it into a fortress in just over half an hour.
The amount of magic they used was truly staggering, and Osmod would have thought they were Prestige mages if it werenāt for the tattoos flaring up each time they cast one of the impressive spells.
A pit started to form in his stomach, and he knew he had to move to tell Tholm about this new development. However, he was equally certain that if he made one mistake, he would be discovered, and the consequences would be more severe than just an honorable mageās duel.
No, these men were killers, and he would be dealt with if they found him.
Slowly, he pushed off the wall and started slipping away. The townhouse was now well fortified enough to withstand a wyvernās fury, and he could barely detect anything through the layers of protection, meaning that any further moment he spent there would be pointless, besides being extremely risky.
The answer to that, of course, was that Hone and his apparent accomplices had no intention of getting caught.
āNow, now. Where is the little rat going?ā a sickly-sweet voice rang through the dark alley, and Osmod felt his heart jump. Slowly, oh so slowly, he turned around and saw that, as heād feared, two of the people heād sensed inside the Townhouse had found him.
One was a beautiful woman, whose eyes burned with intensity even in the shadows, and whose red lips curled up with sadistic intent.
The other was a small, unassuming man missing an arm. He was even more frightening because Osmod could hardly sense anything from him, and he was a very good sensor.
āLetās not waste time, Terentia,ā the man grunted, apparently having already dismissed him as a threat. āKill him and letās get back to our business.ā
With that, he vanished. Not teleporting, as spatial magic had a very familiar ring to it. He simply disappeared from one moment to the next.
The woman didnāt seem to enjoy being ordered around, but she sighed, āWell, you heard him. He might only be the nominal leader for now, but Immanuelās word is still law. I gotta kill you, canāt play, sorry.ā
Osmod didnāt bother engaging in banter. This Terentia was clearly too far gone to reason with, and any amount of time he spent here would only result in more of her people finding him.
Instead, he did something heād been working on for months, ever since the Night Hunger had killed his charges and stolen his future. Something extremely risky, but that was also his only shot at escaping here alive.
Thrusting almost all of his mana outside his body at once was not a skill mages normally took the time to master. It would leave them helpless, for one, and the resulting explosion was too unfocused, wasting much of the energy for little reward.
Yet, the shadows slithering toward him from all sides, pulsing in time with the tattoos on Terentiaās skin, could not be stopped by mere barriers.
His mana ignited, and the world turned to light.