Chapter 17: A Few More

Name:Dragonheart Core Author:
Chapter 17: A Few More

Hmm.

Bronze-ranked mana wasn't what I was expecting.

My creatures—just the two kobolds, really, the horned serpent was merrily waiting for her venom to kill her enthralled victim—rose up to celebrate, crying out in their strange, warbling tongue. Mana flowed through them, rising strong and fast from their kill. Strange mana.

I didn't have many memories of my first humanoid kill, all thoughts consumed with Seros drowning in the river I had brought down on both our heads, and even now I could only remember the scraps of her soul and the memories that had come with it. Then the next group, where I had taken more time to split them open and truly examine what they knew; where I had learned the name of both Calarata, the lawless city, and the Dread Pirate who captained it. My mortal enemy.

The man who had killed me.

I took great pains to relax my mana before continuing.

But from what I could remember, while they had clearly had the most mana of any creature I'd yet killed, filling me to bursting with each of their deaths, this Bronze mana was different. Stronger, in a sort of way, but not necessarily more; just condensed. Like brine in saltwater, it gathered thick and heavy at the bottom of my core, weighed down by its own power.

I dragged out a tendril of it, waving it idly through the haze of my second floor; the kobold I swiped it through paused, forked tongue flickering out. His channels inhaled a spark of the mana like the finest of wines.

I withdrew. Something to save for when I needed real work done, then—maybe I could use it to make stronger creatures, although that might have been a fool's hope with the creature I now wanted to replace.

My cave bear had been young, idiotic, and with a head controlled more by a stomach than his brain, but he had still been mine. I couldn't feel him, our liminal connection snapped the moment he left my walls; but I liked to hope he was still alive. I had to imagine he would be.

But at the same time, it was worrying.

I still only had the capacity to hold twenty-five points of mana; I had easily received thirty alone from the two adventurers, and my core flashed in warning golden runes at me; I grimaced but released the excess five points rather than try to wrangle them under my control, letting them drift around the winners of the little duel. If I had wanted to try and create something with it, rather than wasting it, I didn't know what it would do to my core to try and harness more than I could successfully hold.

Only the unranked mana, of course. I wasn't enough of a fool to part with my new toy.

The two kobolds froze, almost shivering as power they hadn't experienced since the old days flooded through them; the female, still holding a shaken rat she hadn't yet released towards Luthia, let it drop as she absorbed the mana. The poor rat, squeaking and trembling, absorbed its own spark as it sprinted full-tilt into the nearest den and curled up. My horned serpent raised her head, already ignoring the man's body as she was familiar with my normal feeding habits; I thanked her with an errant curl of the mana and told her she could keep it. There wasn't anything I could do with the mana I would get from dissolving him, and I already knew I couldn't claim a humanoid's schema. Monsters were fine, somehow, even those with sapience like the kobolds; but the gods protected certain races. I had no idea what the distinction was, which races were safe or not; it wasn't like anyone was going to tell me.

Too many rules to being a dungeon, I was quickly finding. Limitations of mana, on schemas, and now apparently even for my creatures leaving my walls. Just a quick step and I could lose their mana-connection forever–

I paused.

Lose their mana, yes; but what about their soul? That still came from me.

Seros raised his head as I gently nudged our connection, uncurling from around my pillar. His tail splashed through the edge of the canal.

My cave bear had run out the other entrance, heading deeper into the caverns in a desperate run for his life; but maybe I could still find him. I had no place for a cave bear anyways, not yet at least; I would wait to create a second until I could make an honest effort to reclaim him. He deserved to come back.

For now, at least, I had well-full mana and plenty of places to use it. The second floor needed to be strengthened.

-

"I don't know what happened," Nicau said, curling his hands in his lap with a quiet little frown spreading over his face. "They just... disappeared."

He was getting very comfortable with lying. Poetic, in a sense, that it had taken Romei's death before he had started to learn from her.

The captain of the Diving Darling matched him with her own frown, one faux silver eye flashing in the light; some kind of detection spell, though Nicau wasn't near versed enough in magic to know what. "An' I guess you're the only one to have seen them last," she said dubiously. "In all of Calarata."

Nicau played dumb. It wasn't difficult. "I– I guess so. I don't know anyone else that would have."

She pursed her lips. "So two of my crew went missing in their mugs and haven't been seen for over a week, and when I start askin' around a pigeoncatcher is the one to have seen them. Any clue where?"

Courage built like a fire in his belly. "I'm not a pigeoncatcher."

"Oh?"

"Just a–" he paused, wetting his lips. What was he? Certainly not a pirate, with no love of raiding; perhaps a trader, even if his only trades had been in lives thus far. He couldn't well just say citizen. "–an adventurer. That's all."

She raised her eyebrows. "Adventurer, then."

"And I saw them near the mountain, where the dragon fell."

That finally cleared the smoke behind her eye; she sighed, pinching the bridge of her nose. "Gods. Of course they were; huntin' for scraps like I don't pay them damn well to serve under me. Scuttlin' around like a proper scavenger pair, I'd bet; the mountain cove, right over there?" She jabbed a finger at the ocean waves lapping against the base of the peak.

"A little lower," he offered. "Right where the water meets the shore."

She growled, flicked a copper piece at his head, and stomped off.

Nicau exhaled, rubbing a thumb over the miniscule payment; gods. It was working, it really was; people kept disappearing and others were beginning to ask questions. Just a few more and he could leave behind his past, truly rise to someone of power, of importance.

Just a few more.