(Second Book Complete!) Runeblade: A Delving & Skill Merging LitRPG - Chapter 63: Runes pt. 3

Chapter 63: Runes pt. 3

Words : 2080 Author : Bacon Macleod

Discover the story in "(Second Book Complete!) Runeblade: A Delving & Skill Merging LitRPG" Chapter 64: Kaius held the piece of paper between ink stained fingers, his hands shaking slightly as... Continue exploring!

Kaius held the piece of paper between ink stained fingers, his hands shaking slightly as he stared at the complex mess of a runic sigil that had taken him the better part of an hour to write. It had to work this time. Ithadto.

He felt like he was going insane, pouring over the grain sized characters that built up into massive words, in turn whorling into curving lines of script. It wasn’t his hand writing. That wasperfect. His first attempt, the one that failed to connect to his mana, had been due to faulty substitutions. Mixing up the seventeenth and eighty-ninth Vhaxanish characters. Easy to do. One was an upside down equilateral triangle, the other an upside down equilateral triangle with a slight flick on its left point.

Failures two through five had been grammar issues. Basic things, but each one had caused the formation to burst into a shower of sparks the second he pushed mana through it.

He’d fixed those.

It had to be right, now. Syntax was fine. Spelling was fine. He’d used the correct characters. The angles and cross over points on the lines of text were perfect.

Kaius took a shaky breath. Reaching out to the sigil. Mana connected.

A soft glow lit from the central point of the Vhaxanish formation, a ball of white light emerging to hover over its centre.

**Ding! General Skill Available! Would you like to learn: Rune Mastery - Vhaxanish (Rare)?**

“Thank thefuckingGODS!” Kaius cried, throwing his hands up in triumph and letting the formation flutter to the ground. Half way it burst into flames, scattering ash across the floor.

He accepted the skill in a rush, pulling up its description. Unwilling to let a freak accident force him to spend any more time than was necessary on the utterly miserable script. Being forced to regain it would mean doingat leasttwice as many successful formations.

Rune Mastery - Vhaxanish:

Level 1

Rare

Lesser minds do not understand the value of precision.

This skill improves the users ability to create Vhaxanish formations, and increases the stability of the formations themselves.

Each level slightly increases speed and accuracy when inscribing Vhaxanish runes.

Each level slightly increases stability of Vhaxanish runes.

Each level slightly increases memory and learning capacity of Vhaxanish runes.

“Oh fuckoff.” Kaius mumbled, reading the epigraph of the skill. That was ridiculous. Vhaxanish wasnotprecise, it was cumbersome, unwieldy, and other scripts outshone it in almost every single use case imaginable. Thank you veryfuckingmuch.

A noise from the doorway tore him away from his frustration. He looked up, finding Porkchop poking his head into the office.

“You give up yet?”His friend asked.“I’m hungry.”

“Nope!” Kaius said, his voice a little more biting than he intended, still pissed off at his failures.

“So no food?”Porkchop asked, his whole body drooping. He soundeddevastated.

Kaius immediately felt bad. “No! I got it.” He said, pushing himself up and away from the desk.

Porkchop perked up immediately, bounding away from the door.“Race you to the kitchen!”

Laughing, Kaius jumped into a sprint, tearing through the halls after his friend.

Kaus leaned against one of the massive benches that lined the manor’s kitchen. He assumed it must have been staffed by a good handful of cooks, tucked away as it was at the back of the ground floor. Though smaller than the barrack kitchen, it was still large enough to prepare food for several dozen people, and had a larder stocked to match.

He worked his way through the bowl of piping hot stew in his hands, wondering about the strange numbing sensation that had spread through his mouth. He had to assume it came from the strange spice that Porkchop had insisted he use. It was… Nice enough, he supposed. A little citrusy. He wasn’t sure how he felt about the numbing though, he’d half thought that he’d been poisoned at first, or was having an allergic reaction.

Porkchop loved it though. Kaius watched his friend momentarily come up for air before shoving his head back into the mixing bowl of food he had given him. It had taken alotto convince him to wait long enough for it to not burn him.

“Sho Ghood”Porkchop moaned.

“I don’t even know why you do that. It’s not like you're actually using your mouth to talk.” Kaius cocked his eye at his friends antics

“You do it!”

“Idohave to use my mouth to talk,” he said with a grin.

Porkchop pulled his head out of his bowl long enough to huff in Kaius’s direction, before diving right back in.

“I hope we can visit some place like this one day. Not filled with goblins I mean.”

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“We probably could,” Kaius responded. “Maybe not exactly like this, I’m pretty sure this is modelled after a dwarven deepholm. More of a dwarf-only fortress than a proper city. But the Stoneholds themselves accept travellers!”

“It was weird at first, seeing a city. So different from the forest. I can't even imagine how many people there must have been.”

“Same. I didn’t grow up much different. The frontier villages arenice, but they are terribly small. Only a few hundred people. It’s a bit too remote and rough at the edge of the frontier for most people. I visited Deadacre once, it’s supposed to be a small city but even that was overwhelming.”

“I can’t wait to see them. The villages I mean. You mention them a lot. Do you have any friends there?”

Kaius smiled, thinking about the small hamlets that he and his father used to visit a couple of times a year.

“A few, mostly in Threefields. It’s where me and my father visited the most. Illendra and her father at the inn, the mayor, a few others. I’m not even really sure if I could call themfriends.Friendly, sure, but I only got to see them a few times a year for a couple of days at a time. Just long enough for us to restock.”

“Must have been lonely.”Porkchop said.“I can’t imagine growing up without all of my siblings and cousins, the Den was always crowded.”

“Not really.” Kaius shook his head. “I had my father, and my days were always full of things to do. Always more training after all. Ilikepeople, and meeting them, but unless I know them well, being around a lot of them can be quite exhausting. It’s a big part of why I wanted,want, to be an explorer. Lots of sights to see, people to meet, but never getting too bogged down.”

“Me too. The Den was nice, but it got soboringafter a while. Even the forest. After enough time every tree is basically the same as the next. I’m looking forward to seeing more of what's out there.”Porkchop said, wistful emotions bleeding across their link.

Kaius nodded. He couldn’t wait to be free of this death trap. Admittedly, being down here wasfantasticfor training, and meeting Porkchop had been a blessing, but he missed the sun. The scent of pine on the wind. The stars hanging in the night.

That didn’t mean he was going to waste the opportunity. More Champions. More loot. More Honours. MoreSkills.

He dug his spoon into his stew, hurrying to get through the rest. He had to keep working on hisRunic Lexicon.

Kaius walked back into the office, taking a seat at his desk. It was nice to take a meal break with Porkchop, and he felt comfortably full after the curiously spiced goat stew. Now though, he had to get back to working on collecting his skills.

He’d already successfully collected the scripts he needed for his keystone and controlling arrays, now it was time for the script he needed for the linking array.

It was a vital piece of the overall puzzle. His overall spell formation would be a disparate thing, made up of five different scripts working in tandem. That caused issues. Each style of runes had its own syntax, its own way of integrating separate arrays into an overall formation. He needed something to bind them together. To facilitate communication. Thankfully, it was not an uncommon problem for larger and more complex workings.

Modern runecraftoftenrelied on utilising the strengths of specific scripts and linking them together. Centuries ago it had been the sole purview of masters and grandmasters, now it was something that any middling apprentice was supposed to understand, at least the theory of it .

All thanks to the work of the runewright Yosh. He was supposedly the kind of genius that is only seen once a millennium. He solved the problem of linking scripts by inventing a new one whole cloth. Yosh’s Supplementary.

It was by no means asimplescript, but it was farfareasier to learn than what was required to integrate separate scripts without it. Where previously one had to be atleastmaster level proficiency in each andeveryscript they wanted to link, the Supplementary allowed that with a mere working understanding of it and the other desired components.

It had its own drawbacks. It was built for one purpose, and one purpose alone. The Supplementary couldn’t be used for anything else. Often that meant thatmostdid not truely dive deep into learning it until they were well into their journeyman years. Afterall, it wasn’t until then that integrating scripts was really viable oruseful.

He was a little different, as a vital component of his spell array he had needed to learn it immediately. Admittedly his fathers teaching had been entirely focused on its use with his other key four scripts - and Gretchen's Standard for ease of practice.

Unfortunately, its sole use as a linking script meant that he would need to use it for that purpose. Thankfully, he already had an idea. A Ykkardian sigil of force, with a little basic shaping with Gretchen’s Standard should be enough for his purposes. Far less painful than trying to merge Vhaxanish at any rate.

In the centre of his page he wrote out a single twisting and looping line, slowly coming together into the form of a Force sigil. Ykkardian was nice to use as a baseline, its broad functionality responding well to shaping and controlling runes from a variety of forces. If he got his Standard right, the formationshouldactivate for long enough to tear the paper in half. Something that would hopefully disrupt it’s working fast enough that he wouldn’t shower his desk in more ash.

He moved to his controlling array, quickly scribing the simplified runes of Gretchen's standard. Both the controller and the keystone had space for basic links, but they were incompatible. Working off different syntax.

Redipping his pen, Kaius moved into the sharp, angular forms of Yosh’s Supplementary. It was mostly a geometric script. Relying less on characters and sigils, and more on the natural ability of mana pathway geometry to effect the working. He started from the sigil ofForce, twisting his line so that sacred geometry would modulate the flow of mana. Adjusting it into a form that would be recognised by the controller of Gretchen’s Standard.

A few minutes later he was finished. After waiting for the ink to dry, Kaius picked up the sheet. Holding it at arm's length, he held his breath as he reached out to the formation with his mana, nudging a little through the working.

The page tore in half. Kaius grinned.

**Ding! General Skill Available! Would you like to learn: Rune Mastery - Yosh’s Supplementary (Rare)?**

“Yes.”

Rune Mastery - Yosh’s Supplementary:

Level 1

Rare

If you cannot make something so easy that a Journeyman could do it, you were never really a Grandmaster.

This skill improves the users ability to create Yosh’s Supplementary arrays, and increases the stability of the arrays themselves.

Each level slightly increases speed and accuracy when inscribing Yosh’s Supplementary runes.

Each level slightly increases stability of Yosh’s Supplementary runes.

Each level slightly increases memory and learning capacity of Yosh’s Supplementary runes.

Kaius took in his new skill, happy to have gotten it done on the first try. It really hammered in howawfulVhaxanish was.

Oh well. Onto the next one. The grind never stops, after all.

📖 Contents

1 Chapter 1: The Fall 2 Chapter 2: The Great Depths 3 Chapter 3: Cloudy with a Chance of Swarms 4 Chapter 4: The Grove 5 Chapter 5: Unnatural Encounters 6 Chapter 6: Fight, or Die 7 Chapter 7: Basecamp 8 Chapter 8: Light Weight! 9 Chapter 9: Fervour & Fury 10 Chapter 10: Kiting 11 Chapter 11: Unpleasant Surprises 12 Chapter 12: The Butcher 13 Chapter 13: Victory or Death 14 Chapter 14: Rewards 15 Chapter 15: Insight and Growth 16 Chapter 16: New Tools 17 Chapter 17: Snacks of the Unwise 18 Chapter 18: Crouching Tiger 19 Chapter 19: Armoured 20 Chapter 20: Temptation 21 Chapter 21: On the Nature of Curiosity and Death 22 Chapter 22: Champion’s Might 23 Chapter 23: Slugging Match 24 Chapter 24: Forgotten Mysteries 25 Chapter 25: Food? 26 Chapter 26: Interlude 1: Voyeur 27 Chapter 26: Attack Badger (Friendly?) 28 Chapter 27: How to Win Friends and Influence People 29 Chapter 28: Wrestling 30 Chapter 29: Training 31 Chapter 30: Adamant Body 32 Chapter 31: Pushing Deeper 33 Chapter 32: Labyrinth 34 Chapter 33: More Skills 35 Chapter 34: Inspect 36 Chapter 35: Tomblord 37 Chapter 36: Loot, and Other Surprises 38 Chapter 37: Bound 39 Chapter 38: Inscription 40 Chapter 39: Mistakes Were Made 41 Chapter 40: Learning More 42 Chapter 41: Hanging Lanterns 43 Chapter 42: Pitched Battle 44 Chapter 43: Hate 45 Chapter 44: Success 46 Chapter 45: A Lesser Merge 47 Chapter 46: New Environs 48 Chapter 47: A City, Lost 49 Chapter 48: Target Rich Environment 50 Chapter 49: Keikaku Means ‘Plan’ 51 Chapter 50: Duels 52 Chapter 51: Honour, and Other Rewards 53 Chapter 52: Tools 54 Chapter 53: Pushing Into The City 55 Chapter 54: Horde 56 Chapter 55: Sandwiches? 57 Chapter 56: A Song of Blood and Fire 58 Chapter 57: The Strength of Preparation 59 Chapter 58: New Toys 60 Chapter 59: Extravagance and Insight 61 Chapter 60: Sharing is Caring 62 Chapter 61: Runes pt. 1 63 Chapter 62: Runes pt. 2 64 Chapter 63: Runes pt. 3 65 Chapter 64: Runes pt. 4 66 Chapter 65: Runes pt. 5 67 Chapter 66: Runes Finale 68 Chapter 67: Mana pt. 1 69 Chapter 68: Mana pt. 2 70 Chapter 69: Race to the Finish 71 Chapter 70: Experimentation 72 Chapter 71: Honour in Discovery 73 Chapter 72: The First Spell 74 Chapter 73: Destructive Testing 75 Chapter 74: The Next Champion 76 Chapter 75: Shaman 77 Chapter 76: Osteogenesis Imperfecta 78 Chapter 77: The Whole Pharmacy 79 Chapter 78: The Final Layer 80 Chapter 79: Surprise! 81 Chapter 80: Life Blood 82 Chapter 81: Armoured pt. 2 83 Chapter 82: Font of Vitality 84 Chapter 83: Portent of Doom 85 Chapter 84: Towards New Horizons 86 Chapter 85: Unnatural Places 87 Chapter 86: Optimisation 88 Chapter 87: Explosion! 89 Chapter 88: Respite 90 Chapter 89: Solo Brawler 91 Chapter 90: Hidden Loot 92 Chapter 91: Forbidden Insight 93 Chapter 92: Unexpected Find 94 Chapter 93: On a Silver Platter 95 Chapter 94: Bossrush pt. 1 96 Chapter 95: Bossrush pt. 2 97 Chapter 96: Bossrush pt. 3 98 Chapter 97: Bossrush pt. 4 99 Chapter 98: Bossrush pt. 5 100 Chapter 99: Unexpected, But More Than Welcome 101 Chapter 100: Final Merge 102 Chapter 101: A Secret, Shared 103 Chapter 102: History and Choice 104 Chapter 103: The Oaths That Bind Us 105 Chapter 104: Evolution 106 Chapter 105: Celebrations 107 Chapter 106: Training 108 Chapter 107: Unexpected Gains 109 Chapter 108: Montage or: Eye of the Meles 110 Chapter 109: A Final Moment of Rest, Preparation, and Approach 111 Chapter 110: It’s All Ogre pt 1. 112 Chapter 111: It’s All Ogre pt.2 113 Chapter 112: It’s All Ogre pt. 3 114 Chapter 113: It’s All Ogre pt. 4 115 Chapter 114: It’s All Ogre Finale 116 Chapter 115: A Grand & Intoxicating Innocence pt. 1 117 Chapter 116: A Grand & Intoxicating Innocence Finale

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