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It wasn’t the howls of enemy Ash Beasts that Vir noticed first. Nor was it even the blinding crack of lightning and the deafening thunder that accompanied it.
It was the prana. The sweet, sweet sensation of power flooding into him all at once was unlike anything he’d felt outside the Ash.
Vir took a great breath and flexed his entire body, feeling it ripple with the life-giving energy.
I’ve missed this place, was Vir’s first thought upon entering the blighted realm of death. Vir considered that something might not be quite right with his mental faculties, but quickly dismissed the thought.
Breaking out of his reverie, Vir finally registered the screams and agonized wails of the other demons. All but a handful had collapsed, and were writhing in agony on the ground.
Balagra, thankfully, was not one of them. He was bounding around the downed demons, treating them with his Panav healing arts.
With only one healer and almost two hundred demons, Balagra was stretched thin. By prioritizing the ones whose prana poisoning was most dire and working without even a moment of pause, the naga was only just barely able to keep them alive.
As much as Vir wanted to help his friend, it was all he could do to stand and watch over them, ensuring no opportunistic Ash Beasts drew close. For all Vir’s power, the only one he knew how to heal was himself. His strengths lay elsewhere.
A pack of Ash Wolves broke off from the larger horde in the distance, making a beeline for the injured prisoners. Vir could almost smell their ravenous hunger as they eyed the prisoners with unbridled bloodlust.
As far as prey went, the demons couldn’t have been any better. Weak, helpless, and utterly unable to flee or fight back.
Luckily, they weren’t alone.
Vir turned to meet the creatures. He’d fought thousands of these things in the past—a dozen would hardly even register. If, of course, he wielded his true power. That was assuming he didn’t hide his abilities out of fear of discovery.
As a maelstrom of prana coalesced around Vir’s body, as it became visible to the naked eye, wreathing him like black flame, Vir knew.
There would be no going back from this. He would soon be forced to confront his demons and reveal who he truly was.
And he was fine with that. For too long, he’d hidden out of fear of precipitating events before he was ready. For fear of the hatred he might receive.
No longer.
Unleashing the full might of his unbridled power, Vir Blinked—the ability surging him fifty paces forward. Furious, deadly black prana coated his talwar, begging to be released.
Vir landed with a plume of ash as tall as a geyser.
His six Ash Wolf foes crumpled in a heap, tumbling end over end, before they finally came to rest—dead—in front of the prisoners.
In a single movement, without even breaking stride, Vir had punctured their hearts and their heads, ending them before anyone had even registered his departure. Least of all his enemies.
Vir once again took a deep breath, allowing the prana to surge within him. There was just so much of it! Vir felt so alive here.
When Cirayus had first entered the Ash, the giant had had a similar reaction, and for the longest time, Vir had wondered if the giant was actually crazy. It was ironic—Vir was now protecting others in the same way that Cirayus had protected him when they’d first entered.
His godfather had been right. The feeling was intoxicating. So much so that Vir feared he might grow irresistibly addicted to the sensation if he wasn’t careful.
His eyes scanned the demons. Most hadn’t even noticed the wolves that had been about to end them, let alone Vir’s actions.
Most. Not all. The few who’d managed to retain their wits despite the onslaught of prana regarded him with a varied range of expressions. Some stared wide-eyed, others with suspicion. There were a couple who prostrated—those worried Vir the most.
Vir Blinked to Balagra’s side as he worked his healing magic. “Will they live?”
Balagra grunted. The perspiration streaming from his face showed just how much stress the demon was under.
This story originates from Royal Road. Ensure the author gets the support they deserve by reading it there.
“Give me another five healers and I’d say we have decent odds. With just me? Best pray that Yuma smiles on us. No deaths so far. Whether that continues, only they can say.”
“Understood. I’ll not bother you then,” Vir said. “Let me know when we’re out of danger.”
The next several hours passed in tense anxiety as Balagra worked nonstop, rushing to one demon after the other.
Despite his words of caution, not a single one had perished. Vir didn’t credit the feat to Yuma or any of the gods.
The credit lay with Balagra alone, and his tireless efforts to ensure that they all lived. How the demon drove himself so hard for so long, Vir couldn’t know.
All he knew was that he was immensely, deeply grateful for this miracle worker. Vir wasn’t sure he could ever properly thank Balagra for his actions on this day, but he certainly intended to try.
Despite what Balagra thought of himself—an outcast—he was a hero, through and through.
“How’s he doing?” Vir asked, looking at the sleeping form of the naga, who’d shifted into his full-serpent shape the moment he’d declared the demons safe.
“Well enough, considering the ordeal he’s just been through,” Malik said, crouching down beside him. “Now, I’m no healer, but I think he ought to be fine with some rest. Thank the prana of this realm. It either kills you or it turns you invincible.”
The gray demon was one among the many who would have perished without the healer.
“Not invincible,” Vir said with a small chuckle. “Not quite. Let me know when he’s awake. I’ve set the others to guard duty, but I’d feel a lot safer with Balagra on watch.”
“You and me both,” Lagen said, approaching with a couple of other demons Vir had scouted. Or rather, the only demons who hadn’t immediately succumbed to prana poisoning. “We owe our lives to this naga. We’ll watch over him like mothers.”
“You sound as though you’re going somewhere,” Malik said.
“I am,” Vir replied. “We’re running through the last of our food and water. It is imperative I find a new source quickly.”
“What of the Ash Beasts?” Malik asked. “We may be able to drive off one or two weaker ones, but without you…”
“Don’t worry,” Vir said. “When Balagra awakens, you’ll be in good hands. Over the past hours, I’ve driven away or killed all beasts within a full mile of here, and I won’t be gone long.”
Lagen’s eyes met Malik’s, and they exchanged a look. Vir knew that look. That clearing the area for a mile ought to have been impossible, but both accepted his words as fact. They’d seen what he could do firsthand, after all.
“We’ll do our best to stay alive while you’re gone,” Malik said at last. “Please, do be careful.”
Vir nodded. “You have my promise.”
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Armed with a large rucksack filled with canteens and a couple of large cloths for hauling back any food he found, Vir set out, Leaping three hundred paces with each bound.
At that pace, it didn’t take long to locate a nearby forest, complete with more than enough fruits and wild edibles to feed the prisoners. Landing, he plucked several oversized melons similar to the ones Cirayus had first brought for him when he’d first entered the Ash. After filling the bags, he pushed deeper, and came upon several springs. Protected by the forests’ canopy, this fresh water was likely what kept the forest alive. A common feature in the outer regions of the Ash.
As Vir worked to fill up the canteens he’d brought along, he thanked the gods for their luck. Yes, the transition had been arduous, but ultimately, they’d landed in the outer regions of the Ash as he’d hoped.
He’d had reason to hope, of course, with how weak the Ash Beasts had been where they’d entered the Boundary, but that was only a rough guideline at best. Cirayus had mentioned how, in the past, he’d been thrown deep into the Ash, despite having taken every precaution.
As Vir finished up with the spring, his thoughts turned to the longer term. Food and water were essential, but those were easily solved with a source nearby. Shelter, however, was another matter entirely.
With the encampment the demons had made on the other side of the boundary, protection was of utmost importance, even above basic needs.
Forests offered excellent concealment, though that cut both ways. The forest was alive with life, from insects far larger than they had any right to be, to ground critters, and everything in between. Ash Beasts were not the only fauna that survived in this realm, after all.
With so much prana in the roots and trunks, Vir would be hard-pressed to spot predators before they attacked.
Even if he did notice them, an attack could come from any direction at any time. And what about when he was asleep?
Then again, the Ashen Realm offered few locations suitable for building a base. The base of a volcano was a possibility, but how would they ferry the materials needed to construct a true, fortified base? Rocks and boulders might’ve worked, but what they wanted were wooden palisades with proper gates.
And if Vir was the only one who could ferry supplies, he feared he’d spend most of his time doing just that.
No, they’d need something that was both defensible and convenient.
Vir looked at the tall, spindly trees that soared easily as high as the trees of the Godshollow.
The forest truly was the perfect location for constructing a fortified garrison. Perhaps not out in the open, but if they cleared trees and built a fort… They could even dig a dry moat and erect sharpened pikes, giving them a clear field of view for any potential attackers. Their supplies had included basic survival items such as saws, axes, and knifes, after all. With some work, such things could be fashioned.
Not only that, but the forest’s natural canopy shielded from the sight of Shrikes, and as for building materials… They would never run out. If they were smart, they could even build their garrison right on top of a freshwater spring—eliminating their most pressing need.
The more Vir considered the idea, the better it sounded. Maybe the demons wouldn’t ever sleep in comfort in this blighted land. But at least they could sleep with a proper roof over their heads, and a sturdy wall to protect them.
And yet, how to lead those demons into such a place, where dangers could lurk around every corner?
It was this thought that weighed on Vir’s mind as he returned with fresh water and food.
It was on his mind when he set the supplies down and distributed it to his demons.
Hours later, most demons had regained consciousness, huddling near each other, either for warmth or protection. The camp was mostly silent, and the demons were sullen. Though they’d just survived an incredible ordeal, most were exhausted. Worse—their eyes lacked the flame of hope, and no amount of food or water would change that.
They needed something more.
Vir stood at the center of the seated demons, cleared his throat, and addressed them.
For the first time in what felt like an eternity to Vir, he shed his lies and his deceptions and addressed the camp as the person he truly was.
“Friends. My fellow demons. We have entered the Ash, and we have survived. And now, the time has come for you to know who I truly am and why we are here.”