Chapter 246 – Things Start To Go Wrong
by“Green mirage. We go around,” Feng said simply. “Stay close. You know combat spells too?”
Mirian kept a straight face. “I’m passable at them,” she said, glancing at Gabriel.
Feng made a grunting noise, then resumed his place at the head of the column.
“No combat spells yet,” Gabriel whispered to her. “The main route is a lost cause, but Feng’s good. He knows two alternate routes and where the derelict strongholds and caves are too.”
There was an earsplitting roar behind them.
“Oniwyrm,” one of the caravaneers muttered, and clutched his light charm for good luck.
Feng picked up the pace, then sniffed the air. His nose wrinkled. He cocked his head, listening for something. Apparently, one of the calls he heard was what he was listening for, because he immediately set off.
“Follow quickly,” he said. “No deviations from my path!” he called to the group, much louder than he normally was.
They heard the oniwyrm’s roar again, this time closer.
Feng pulled out a machete, using it to hack through a dense bit of brush, then wound them up a steep hill. The next time Mirian heard the oniwyrm roar, it was closer, but also to their left. The caravan leader smacked the rear of the lead marusaur lightly, then said something to it in Gulwenen. The beast made a deep sound resembling a sigh, but sped up. Around them, the birds had stopped chirping, though there was still the call of insects making a ruckus. They circled around another group of trees, backtracking slightly. The call of the insects seemed lessened here.
“Here. Stay put,” Feng called to the group.
“And definitely don’t move forward,” Gabriel whispered. “Look there.”
There was a small pond in front of them, and in the middle of it, the largest flower Mirian had ever seen. It had petals that were perfectly white, with long stalks in the center of the flower that had luminous green pollen clinging to them. Next to it was a lump of mud that she realized was a nest.
“A jade bloom,” Gabriel said. “It generates a spell that can dissolve flesh. Harmless to plants, but nasty to any creature that gets within its magical field—except one.”
“Petal demons,” Mirian said, remembering a distant lecture from Viridian.
“Yup. Petal demons are technically plants, even though they’re mobile carnivores. The parts they don’t eat, they feed to the jade bloom’s roots. Meanwhile, the jade bloom protects the nest. Symbolic relationship.”
“Symbiotic,” Mirian corrected.
“Whatever.”
The oniwyrm roared again, this time, much closer. Mirian watched as some sort of large rodent bolted from its hiding spot, dashing straight past the jade bloom. The rodent died so suddenly it was still in motion when its legs stopped moving. It skidded to a halt amidst the fallen leaves while its flesh began to dissolve. Red mist filled the air, gently drifting towards the jade bloom’s pond.
The oniwyrm emerged a moment later, bursting from between two trees, towering high above the group. The body looked like a huge snake, with overlapping green scales. Its face, though, was nothing of the sort. It looked like a wooden mask, the kind used in old plays. The creature caught sight of the dead rodent, and went in to sniff it. Then, ‘mask’ of the beast opened up, revealing five jaws arranged in a circle, each one with hooked teeth. Then it paused, apparently seeing the red mist for the first time.
That was when the petal demon emerged from its nest. The petal demon was much smaller than the oniwyrm—only about two meters tall, with petal-like frills. It stalked forward like a bog lion, mane of petals flaring as it hissed out a warning. As it moved, moss grew beneath its feet so that its steps were completely silent.
The oniwyrm drew back, rising up high enough its head scraped the bottom branches of the tall trees around the clearing. That was when the petal demon fired five beams of light, each one from the tip of a petal, then charged forward, letting out a burst of green mist as it did. The oniwyrm roared again, this time in pain, and started moving to flee, but it had failed to notice roots from the jade bloom wrapping around it.
What followed was a short but brutal tussle between the petal demon and the oniwyrm. The flesh-dissolving field of the jade bloom had taken a moment to pierce the wyrm’s thick scales, but once it was at work, the oniwyrm’s body was being quickly ripped from its skeleton. Meanwhile, the petal demon used its twisting vine-like limbs to wrestle the creature down to the ground where more roots from the jade bloom emerged, tying the creature to the ground. The oniwyrm got a single bite off on the petal demon, but no blood came from the wound; instead, it immediately began to grow back, the plant-flesh weaving itself together with small vines.
“Move,” Feng said.
Mirian took a moment longer, fascinated by the jade bloom’s natural spellwork, before a prod from Gabriel got her moving.
“That was clever,” Mirian whispered as they quickly moved through the jungle again.
“Yeah, we’re not the usual petal demon food, so they won’t prioritize us. But, you know, if you were a horrible myrvite that ate just about anything, you wouldn’t say no to an egg-roll with legs,” Gabriel whispered back.
“Is that… are we egg-rolls with legs?”
“Obviously,” the other Prophet said.
Behind them, they heard the dying gasp of the oniwyrm, and then silence. Gradually, as they moved farther from the predators, the chatter of insects and birds resumed.
Twice more, Feng redirected their route, looking more and more concerned each time.
Finally, a few hours later, they saw the next rest point. It was a stout, stone building, half buried in the ground, with large trees looming over it. The stone walls were cracked where roots had penetrated.
“This is no good,” one of the carvaneers said. She was mixing Adamic and Gulwenen, but Mirian could pick up on the gist of it. “Why didn’t we head back to the main path?”
“Because it was blocked,” Feng said. “You saw the shadows in the undergrowth. You think you can outrun a light eater?”
“We have daylight. We could still head back east to rejoin the safer route.”
Feng shook his head. “Too many warning calls coming from that direction. And, Snake Mountain is between us and that trail now. This path isn’t in good shape, but it works. I’ve been this way twice before. We won’t get lost.”
The other caravaneer looked like she wanted to argue, but decided against it. Feng’s reputation, Mirian was coming to find, was beyond excellent, and now she could see why. With only his knowledge of the environment and careful positioning, he’d just avoided four lethal predators.
They entered the derelict stronghold cautiously. There were several types of fungus growing out of a refuse pile, but no myrvites. The enchantments that had once guarded the place were all broken.
Feng led the maursaurs into a fenced-off stable area, where they immediately began to munch on the mushrooms that were growing. Then he joined two of the caravaneers who were staring at the door mechanism, arms akimbo.
“The hinges fell off,” one of them said. “We can’t stay here without a proper door. Either we—”
Mirian didn’t particularly want to hear the argument. She’d just seen how much mana a jade bloom used when it was tethering prey, and she was quite sure that the predatory myrvites couldn’t detect auric mana as well as the caravaneers feared. She used shape iron to pick up the hinges, reattaching them to the thick wooden door by using shape wood to anchor them. “Done,” she said, and then turned her attention to the broken enchantments while the caravaneers gawked at her. If you thought that was impressive, you’re certainly in for a surprise, she thought, amused.
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When the others were busy, she talked quietly with Gabriel again. “What did you do last time?”
“I just repaired the heat stone glyphs because I don’t like cold food and the scent-masking glyphs on those two walls. We didn’t get attacked, so it must have worked.”
Mirian shrugged. They only had so many magical inks with them for enchanting, but that wouldn’t take much. “I’ll do those, then.” That would give her more time to train with Ibrahim, which was what she wanted. He was teaching her The Sheathed Blade Splits the Light, which was similar to the Sinister Hand auramancer stance, except instead of extending spell resistance outward, it focused it inward, concentrating the effect so that it only protected the user. The soul flow was similar to what she was used to, and so she picked it up quickly. The one she was more interested in was The Desert Flower Blooms Without Rain. That one, she was having more difficulty mastering.
She’d also tried and failed to assume two dervish forms at once. It was certainly related to whatever soul-ascension Ibrahim had achieved, and the longer she studied the flow of his soul, the more she was convinced that certain soul-ascensions were incompatible like her father had said. Even with the flexibility of flow she’d gained from Ceiba Yan, she couldn’t see how she could make the simultaneous flows she was picking up from Ibrahim work without sacrificing the beneficial flows she was using in the sub-outer layer of her soul.
As for Ibrahim’s lessons, she’d moved from trying to teach him arcane magic to celestial magic.
He was picking that up quite a bit faster. “This is easier. Why didn’t we start with this?” he told her that evening.
“Plenty of people think it’s harder,” she said. “I’ve come to think magic is like anything in life. Some people pick it up easier, some people pick it up with more difficulty. Just like music, calligraphy, or playing cards.”
Ibrahim snorted. “Who’s ever had trouble picking up how to play card games?”
Mirian grinned at him.
The dervish’s eyes grew wide. “You can’t be serious.”
She shrugged, and he just shook his head in mock anguish.
That night, Mirian’s sleep was shallow. The dark of the Jiandzhi was full of howls and screams.




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