CHAPTER 15
SUCCESS
In her first moments within the deluge of elemental energy, June found an intoxicating mix of chaos and peace. Wrapped in a cocoon of fire, June felt truly at peace for the first time since coming to this new world. Even though all the power of magic swam around her, she felt safe. Visions of the past flittered by, just outside of her awareness, buried within the walls of flame around her. As one image formed, it was almost immediately burned to ash and replaced with a new visage. June turned her awareness toward them, and tried to comprehend the mess of intermixed colors and experiences.
Visions of her mother fluttered past, starting first with her mom’s warm smile. But almost as quickly, the images took on a darker tone. Her mother’s smile was replaced with tears and a wailing expression. If she could hear the words being screamed, they would reflect a mother’s horror at some unseen disaster. But June wasn’t entirely sure she wanted to hear those unspoken words.
Before she could even take a moment to process, a new series of images flowed to her mind. The flow of memories, both hers and not her own, became a blur. A confusing mix of sights intermingled with her experiences since coming to Duneria. Images of skulls and bones soon dominated the flow of information. A thousand skulls piled high against a dark night. But even this visage wouldn’t last long. A lone voice broke through the din.
“Did you like my show, little one?” boomed a raspy echo out of the fiery ether. Instantly, June recognized the voice, and the image of a rotten pile of mismatched rags flashed into her mind. Anger and sorrow welled up in June. Intense pain racked her being from head to toe.
“It’s time to move beyond these simple games,” echoed the raspy ethereal voice. The voice sent icy fingers over June’s bones. The surrounding fire seemed to have disappeared. “An undead doesn’t sleep, eat, or lay idle. You, in particular, certainly don’t rest. Seize this moment, feast upon the opportunity.”
The tone of the voice bore into June’s mind, like a beetle boring its way through a tree. Like a rotted tree, June felt her resolve to retort tumble.
“Your journey has been long, and soon it will be rewarding,” June could almost hear the smile on the unseen face of this rotted nightmare. “The Red Knight’s children stir, and we must prepare. They gorge on feed on power and knowledge, so you too must feed, devour...” the voice trailed off. The statement brought new images to June’s consciousness.
Through the wall of flames around her, June caught glimpses of a banner featuring the image of a bronze tree against a red backdrop. Glimpses of a grand feast and red-adorned humans floated past as well. Deep in the recesses of her mind, June wished she could have remained in the seemingly peaceful scene, as what came next kicked her flight or fight response into an even higher level. Gone was the cocoon of fire, June flew above a new scene.
A field of bones and gravestones formed amid a foggy morning. A pair of men that June recognized in that same glinting green armor stood around a stone plinth. A third man in midnight-black armor was beside them. Atop some unknown hill, surrounded by tall, dry grasses and dead trees, the men silently waited. A terrified woman lay at their feet. One of the green-armored men forced the bound and screaming captive to her knees. She spoke a language that June didn’t know, but her pain and fear were plain to anyone with eyes or ears. Hovering over the woman was a crazed-looking man with a face made of scars, adorned in midnight-black leathers. The wicked blade in his hand glinted in the sun's light. “No,” said June “No, don’t,” she cried. But she could only watch the sacrifice play out. The man smiled wickedly before he brought the blade across the woman’s throat. June could swear she tasted iron. One figure knelt next to the twitching woman as her feet kicked against the dirt. Their hands held a wooden bowl carved with simple faces. The mouths of the faces screamed in silent agony. A red river flowed into a new basin, the overflow stained the brown earth a darker color.
This horrific scene burned into June’s vision, but it was merely the beginning. Images of blood and flesh twisted into a visual orgy of violence, and screams followed behind them. Abomination wasn’t a word that June used regularly, but it fit perfectly here. The word slid through her emotional core like a knife between a ribcage. And she knew full well that the source of these visions would keep coming back to her. Whether to torment her, or for some other nefarious purpose, she didn’t know. The scared child huddled in the back of her mind, fearful of new things—wailed. But an ever-curious June ignored its nagging pleas. June had always taken lessons from life and failure, or at least tried to. But the hidden truth of this moment was a hard force to ignore. She feared what the future held if it meant losing so much of herself. Had the quest to complete her latest task broken her sanity?
June thought magic would be something fun, liberating. She didn’t sign up for this, and she certainly didn’t sign up for sacrifices. Since being put into this demented circumstance, they had forced June to forge herself into something cold, monstrous. Is that something she could handle? She didn’t seem to have a choice. And like a lucid dream, June would control her path forward. And she placed the blame for all this misfortune squarely on the hunched and rotten form she had seen in that dreamy campfire. She didn’t know how or when, but her vengeance would come. A bloody vengeance would run through them like a knife.
The voice returned for a moment more, to spoil her fantasy. “For now, child, return to your work. Learn, and find the answers you seek.”
With a raspy laugh, the voice of that revolting pile of rot and wool was gone, but its mysterious visage clung to the edges of her mind.
Angrily, June did her best to banish the thought. She pictured what she wished would happen to that undead freak. She grew wonderfully content at the prospect of cutting that ragged corpse to ribbons. In the next instant, June felt her awareness ripped out with an overwhelming pulling notion.
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She returned with a start from the visions, and she nearly fell from her chair.
“Are you alright, young one?” Spoke the Tome Lord as he watched the smaller skeleton with a glint in his eye.
A ragged breath escaped her mouth, before she answered, “I’m fine, just had something strange happen.” June snapped up the book she had been reading, pretending to read it and trying to hide her apprehension.
“I take it you found something of use?” came a careful question from the guardian of the library. “You’re a quick and studious servant, that will serve you well.”
Multiple elements of the statements ringing in her mind set June off. The notion of being a servant grated against her patient demeanor. And then there’s the matter of time. These visions were becoming yet another biting annoyance. Like the mosquitos and stinging flies of the swamps above, they bit at her little remaining patience.
“If another of these idiots says something cryptic to me...” Hatred for those around her burned once again. June fought back, pushing the feelings away, returning to the moment.
An icy grip chilled the heat in her bones. Seconds, just a few seconds had passed. The Tome Lord’s presence looming over the table confirmed they had been waiting for some response, waiting for her to read and learn the secrets she was hunting. It would seem she had found them, but at what price? Was June doomed to be dogged by these visions for an eternity? And would the words from that blasted pile of rot hold true?
“If that’s so, I guess I can have fun with it.” June thought as she returned to the painful and lonely echoes of her past life. She could think of nothing she would enjoy more than burning all those who had controlled her to ash. She slammed the book shut and strode out of the library. The Tome Lord was left staring in her fuming wake.
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The lights from within the forge burned low, but June still cast a shadow. For just a moment, June stood as tall as a titan, stomping her foes flat. Holding tight to the anger and resentment, she let it fester. Its fire burned through June. “I’ll show you a scroll...”
Ready, June yanked out a fresh piece of parchment and focused her mana. The force pooled in her fingers, tracing down the brush onto the prepared paper. As June began tracing lines, she focused in on her anger, let it guide her. The chains locking her to this dusty old place wouldn’t hold her forever.
As she traced the basic outline of runes on the parchment, a nagging pain pulled at the edges of her consciousness. Anger. Power. Hope. The words came to her like whispers on the wind, with the gale of desperation roaring around her, threatening to push her motivation away. The image from the horrifying dream of being buried alive came back in that moment, followed by the darkness and hard stone of her first awakening here in these tombs. A desire to give in and run was strong, it was like something was trying to force her to fail. Resolutely, June pushed back. With every passing moment, June swore she could hear her need to succeed roar against the darkness of failure. The howl of her emotions chased away the darkness. Like a wildfire, it burned her anxiety to ash in that moment. June forged on as the core of her emotional being filled with renewing energy.
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This was the key. Instead of letting horror dominate her mind, she calls on her own visions and fantasies, reclaiming them. Violet eye sockets burned with a deeper fire. Her mana span around her in a tighter spiral than ever before. June dreamed of that rotting mass of fabric burning to ash, she reveled in the scents and sights. The smell of rot and ash filled her senses. She saw a torrent of bugs amid a pile of rough-sewn fabrics, terrified and fleeing the burning pile of decay. June lost herself in the collected carnage, enjoying it. For several minutes, she joyously watched the freak burn.
When she broke free from the contentedness of the pile of ash, June saw she had finished her work, as if her arms and hands were guided by a force of will not her own. In a stunned moment, June stared down at the parchment. “Well, that’s not what I expected.” As she scanned the finished parchment, the runework glittered with a subtle energy.
Item Gained
Name
Scroll of Fireball
A freshly minted spell scroll. The intricate runework on this scroll will allow the caster to cast a single instance of the Tier 2 Fire Magic incantation, Fireball.
Rarity
Magical
Grade
Normal
Affinity
Fire
Effect
Allows single cast of Tier 2 Fireball
Nearly falling over, June grabbed the finished scroll and ran down the main hallway of the spellforges. She blitzed a path back to Bullin’s forge as she dodged around various undead in the halls. As June darted down the hallway back to the forge chamber she knew so well, the fire imp trotted after her. “Slow down, boney!” The fire imp called. As the skeleton bolted through the door to the forge, she skidded to a halt in front of Bullin, who was mid-swing with his hammer. Kotor came bolting through the door a few seconds later, huffing.
Bullin glanced down at the tiny living ember, then back to June, narrowing his eyes.
“Finally, I did it,” she shouted at the glaring dwarf. She eagerly placed the freshly created scroll down on the table as Bullin was removing his leather gloves and apron. He smiled as he casually strode over from the anvil.
Bullin picks up the scroll from the table, unfurling it with a tilted head. Carefully, he examined the scroll and runes written on its surface. His eyes twinkled with a soft blue light. After a moment, he almost dismissively rolled the scroll and placed it back on the table.
“I take it you learned how to tackle that little emotional block? Tricky business, that is.”
Guarded, June regarded Bullin with a careful gaze. “In a way,” she stated, as the proverbial warmth of her visions still lingered in her mind.
“I had to do a lot of studying, reading between the lines,” June said as she crossed her arms in front of her body.
“You’re welcome,” said Bullin while a light smile played on his lips.
“You didn’t do shit, you overblown windbag,” June thought, while she hid the thought behind a courteous smile. With an internal grimace, she broke away from the small talk. June pressed with a new question. “What do I do now?”
“You learn a bit more, and maybe we can get out of here,” Bullin said, as he trotted over to a small pile of junk on the side of the room. “You have a bit of a knack for magic, and surprisingly, combat.” Bullin pulled out a small book and a pile of leather and walked back over to the enchanting table.
June instantly recognized the leathers as the gambeson she had stopped wearing to the main forge chamber days ago.
“But, it would seem you’re still in need of some help.” he whipped the leather chest piece, and held it out in front towards June. “I grabbed this from ya room, and I made a pretty interesting change.”
Stamped into the upper section of the leather, around the neck, were three black gemstones. She also noted that rips and tears from previous combat had been mended.
Bullin smiled before speaking again, “these are going to be very useful once we get out of here. Just channel mana into the gems, and it will trigger a very interesting enchantment.”
June put the leathers back onto her frame, covering her previously exposed ribcage. Wrapping the straps around her frame, she began focusing her magical force. With reckless abandon, she let the gaseous form of Death Mana flow into the gems; she felt something strange. A cold she hadn’t noticed before spread over her bones.
Bullin watched for a moment, his eyes glowed blue once more. “You’re going to use a Glamour.” Being totally made of bones out there draws the wrong bit’a attention," he said between chuckles.
June turned her head and dropped her jaw while looking at the dwarf.
“Now, focus on a form that you want to take, picture that.”
As June let herself fall into this biting cold, she pictured her old self at first. The plain brown hair and lighter hazel eyes. But before the image crystalized, a realization crashed over her thoughts. Wiping the previous image from her mind, she pictured something more interesting, less plain. Shoulder-length red hair and piercing green eyes defined a simple face with a smaller nose than she had previously. June kept her old paler complexion, though, no point in changing that. A more athletic build that the old June would kill for rounded out the look.
“How do I look?” she said as she smiled up at the large undead. The hulking and mildly rotted dwarf looked even more bizarre than he had before, standing across from what appeared as much more human.
“Like a normal human,” Bullin said with a tiny smile on his lips. He held up a finger before continuing, “that’s not permanent, and then there’s this,” he reached across and poked her in the shoulder. His finger passed right through the illusion and hit her boney shoulder.
June’s smile faded, and her shoulders slumped. “Why even do this?”
“It’s helpful for getting around undetected.” Bullin’s form shifted as that phrase left his mouth, covering his bluish skin and bulbous body with a new look. A much younger, and alive, dwarf took its place. Black hair filled into a head of full braids, and an equally dark beard. “At least at a glance. There are better options, but this will do in a pinch. You’ll learn that soon, though. For now, let’s move on.” His form shifted and dropped back to the undead body she knew all too well. “This,” he held up a small black leather tome that lay on the table. “Is how you get ready for the world outside these walls.”
Taking the proffered book, June began flipping through it, getting much more excited after she read the title: A Martial and Magical Primer. Described within its pages were many skills, spells, and other elements of the system she was slowly being educated on. It was a fairly brief text, more like a pamphlet, really. But for June, it was a tremendous opportunity.
Eagerly, she focused on her Class Gem again and pulled up her character sheet to decide on her new skill choices. Having gained a decent amount of levels in the last few days of cultivation and practice, June was ready to spend some skill points.
As she thumbed through the text, tensions and disappointment temporarily forgotten, she allocated skill points in a way she was comfortable with. The pamphlet did help explain what other skills existed in this world, but critical details were still lacking. She did gain one helpful insight, namely that it took at least 10 points to raise certain skills to Tier 2. She even managed to dump the bulk of her points into raising her Arcane Prowess. That should help her Mana availability a bit. As June allocated batches of points into her various attributes, she was met with another new feeling. Her body seemed to become more heavy, and dense. It was as if invisible muscles around her bones tightened and hardened, before relaxing. Her entire body felt alive with power. Her mind felt more stable as well. Though emotions and memories still burned, her circumstances felt more clear and easily understood.
Name
June Vallentra
Race
Undead (Skeleton)
Magical Offense Defense Crafting Arcane Prowess Tier 3
Death Magic Tier 2
Fire Magic Tier 1
One-Handed Weapons Tier 2
Physical Resistance Tier 1
Magic Resistance Tier 1
Runic Mastery Tier 1 Level: Total: 10 (Summoner Tier 1) Class Points: 0 Attribute Points: 0
Magic Affinities Combat Affinities
Death Magic (Racial)
Strength
Endurance
Agility
18
20
15
Willpower
Intelligence
20
28
Passive Perks
Active Perks
Mana Sense
Fire Imp Companion