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Black Magus

What kind of realm would you choose to live in after digitizing your mind? For Amun, that was a magical world where he could be free to learn until his end of days. What he got was to become the living god of a vast realm in an odd universe. A being who'd be born with the world. And later stripped of it all. A being of juxtaposition and contradictions. A sinner and a saint. A wise sage and a genius scientist. A loving creator and a baleful explorer. An elf and a devil, living in a world of might and magic. But all is not what it seems. Peace is fleeting. Figures loom in the light. Forms strafe through the trees. And one Amun is woefully ignorant to the ways of a realm so ripe for change. Yet he is one who cannot help but change it. So he devotes himself to forming the greatest guild the Mortal Plane has ever seen, intending to change his world and others for the better. And yet, somewhere along the line of his undying march, Amun evolved into the being all denizens of the Mortal Plane either revered; or feared. The Black Magus. *** This novel’s lore, story, and characters are entirely fictitious. Certain long-standing countries, institutions, organizations, agencies, public offices, etc. are/may be mentioned, but their histories and the characters involved are wholly imaginary. *** This novel’s lore, story, and characters are entirely fictitious. Certain long-standing countries, institutions, organizations, agencies, and public offices are mentioned, but their histories and the characters involved are wholly imaginary. Look for the story on RR. https://www.royalroad.com/profile/202907/fictions

Liden_Snake · Fantasía
Sin suficientes valoraciones
467 Chs

Beware the Blessed

Etan Za'Darmondiel.

***

<<You should have killed them.>> I snorted, turning away from the dwarves retreating into the night.

<<Why, for being fools?>> Amun snorted in kind. <<If I killed every person who reacted to me with violence, humans, dwarves, and elves would be endangered species. Besides.>> He lifted his eyes from the sleeping goblin to give me a knowing grin. <<Even fools can become wise, given enough time.>>

I started to retort before I was cut off by a soft groan. Simultaneously, we dropped our gaze to see a pair of yellow eyes grow wide before overgrown rat ears sank to the sides of a chevroned head. A head that was cradled by spindly arms of darkness that reached eagerly at something beneath his flesh. A head clouded by a faceless visage that marked the end of the goblin's time on the Mortal Plane.

"PLEASE!" the goblin pushed away from us in a frenzy, uncaring of his ragged legs dragging through the snow. "DON'T KILL ME, S- SIR ELF- SIR DARK ELVES! PLEASE! I'M JUST A CHI-" It stopped suddenly, looked around to the barren fields, and began thrashing just as quickly as it stopped. "I'M JUST AN ORPHAN!"

Amun gave me an amused look while the tirade repeated with several variations of the same thing. Being hardly able to interpret it, I could only shrug. While what the goblin said may have been true, it was nothing short of what would be said by any other goblin in the same situation.

This one, however, took it to the extreme.

"Please! I- I just wanted to stay in the great rift. Cooking and cleaning. But they made me torture. They found a guy. Clock! They called him Clock! He kept dying and coming back so they tortured him. They made us torture him. I- I didn't want to do it! Kill! They said! You have to know how to kill! Then they brought me out here. It's my first battle. I haven't done anything. I didn't want to do it. I-

"What's your name?" Amun asked, cutting the ramblings off instantly.

"Leary! Oh!" it collapsed at the sight of the Owl perching on Amun's shoulder, much to my amusement. "Please! I'll do anything to live! Whatever you want! I'll be your slave! Your servant! Forever and ever! I'll cook! And clean! I'll even steal! I- I'll kill! I'll do it! Whatever you say! Just… I don't want to die! I wish to live!"

The last thing I saw was Amun's devilish maw curl into the foulest grin imaginable. Then an abyssal darkness consumed my senses. If only for a moment.

"Beware what you wish for, Leary."

It was not that the darkness dispersed. Only that I could now see through it. And within, I saw the unconscious goblin groaning and churning beneath the Owl's claws while Amun watched with a complicated expression.

With all the secrecy, I thought it a perfect time to practice the sign language practiced by his family.

Slowly, my fingers danced in the darkness, sending ripples through the shadows that danced in his ears in the form of words. 'What is this? What are you doing?'

'You'll see.' Amun signed back, amazing me by the sheer efficiency of the language. So akin to speech, it was. Heard only by those loved by the dark.

Nodding accordingly, I seated myself to watch him withdraw nearly two dozen Dimensionite ingots of varying sizes and teleport them away with some Arcanite Canisters before he turned his gaze to an ambiguous point for a few moments, then turned back to me.

"Are you aware that goblinoids have green blood?"

"I have killed many." I nodded. "I am aware."

{"I didn't know that."} Blude's voice echoed across the net.

"That's because goblinoids and perhaps the other creatures born from the Betrarthean Tree of Life have a copper-based blood called hemocyanin. Coincidentally, so too do sea creatures like squid, the octopus, and." He gestured into the distance. "Cuttlefish."

A popping sound punctuated his words, signaling the arrival of several items, including the now magic-infused ingots. The curious item was in his hand, however. A strange hand crossbow of glass and metal loaded with a vial of fluid rather than quarrel.

I examined it while Amun turned to check up on the Owl, seeming to be enthralled in an attempt to stare the goblin awake. What the net responded with, however, were flags and warnings stating that what I was searching for was heavily classified before my authorization approved me to learn of some sort of 'Nanite Injector.'

"That aside," Amun turned to face me while I read on. "Goblinoids have differing physiologies than orcs. Whether that is a surprise or not is up to you. But what's truly surprising is the rejection of any implant or augmentation not imbued into their bones.

"Any tampering with the flesh results in a spontaneous and horrendous rejection. The only exceptions are augmentations born from corrupted magic or from divine magic. Like this." He waved the injector around.

"Fascinating." I gasped, mostly from what I learned about the injector. Yet, I was still curious. "Is the same true for orcs?"

Amun shook his head. "A bit of the opposite. Orc flesh adapts to wood and stone-based prosthetics, implants, or augmentations extremely well. However, they can receive normal or cybernetic implants too. But bone augmentations do little for them. Now, if you'll give me a moment."

With a polite and unneeded nod, he walked into the cloud of shadow, allowing the Owl to flap out and toss aside its cowl and mask to land before me as a facsimile of Amun, leaning atop an exquisite cane.

"So," I began to sign. "This is your companion?"

"Our companion." Amun's clone corrected in a coldly harsh tone. "The last member of the Troupe. For now, at least. Though he will make the journey to our destination alone."

"And why is that?"

"As you all are blessed to be holy celestials and eventually Gods, they are cursed to be undying and eventually Devils. Undying Fiends. They will journey alone until we rendezvous to grow familiar with their new nature."

With a jerk of the neck and an unsettling smile, I was motioned forward to gaze into the abyss. "Like this one, they all had the Shadow of Death hanging over them. A man in Bakewia experimented on himself with potions. A girl in Chor lived in a toxic home. A girl in Redagh was tainted by the Blighted Woods. And, Leary. A goblin runt who simply ran out of time.

"All were greedy, sinful, or became wicked in one way or another. One sought immortality to achieve his magnum opus. One lost herself to vengeance. One killed everyone in her tribe, including her parents. And Leary went against his conscience by torturing and killing an innocent man, thus tainting it.

"In turn, they all walked willingly into the darkness. Thus they all had to die, so they may toe the line with death."

"And be corrupted into fiends." I concluded. "And then be blessed tremendously to be made into a paragon of himself like the rest of us."

"Exactly. But that's only the beginning." The clone turned with a flash of his jagged teeth. "Observe."

I needed not the clone to tell me. Like the Satellite, I was enthralled by Amun's deliberate actions. Analyzing all I saw with the Net to leave nothing unnoticed.

After suspending the goblin in the air like a butcher would a rothay, he took a precision cutting instrument- a scalpel- and carved a line down Leary's nearly severed back. Pausing when needed to allow the the shudders and twitches of the dead body to pass until he met the tail bone and he peeled away the flesh to expose the shattered spine beneath, then pinned the skin in place with thin needles held in place with magnetic mana.

On and on he continued, cutting out the flesh entirely to expose the bone beneath. Leaving, in the end, a brain housed within a bloodied skeleton.

A pulse of magic spawned a spool of thin black fibers and a roll of vibrant blue silk alongside several ingots of magnetically treated adamantine beside Amun while a small window bloomed within my augmented vision, describing how Amun projected x-rays from one eye and received the radiation with the other to scrutinize every detail of Leary's skeletal structure.

Seconds passed and more information clouded Amun's vision, in turn flooding my eyes with tales of the utterly insane. But of course, they were anything but tales.

Methodically, Amun went about the brutalized body, infusing the essence of the Divine Engineer into the adamantine ingots before his gravitational magic pulled them to rest atop the bones. He then wrapped the divine fibers around the discarded flesh, tying them around the frame as if he were preparing a crude mummy. Or if not that, as if he was trying to fill in the muscle with the wire and fill the skull with Attosilk, data crystals, and Biogold, much to my horror.

Once he was done, he went around the body a final time, sinking the injector into every rib, every vertebra, every bone that he could find. Probing down to the marrow with sickening crunches to fill the chasm with a sample of the thick blue-green slurry.

That was simple. But what the Net told me, even my blessings struggled to help me understand.

Nanites, they were called. Another device born from his realm of gods and made more revolutionary through magic.

Even without magic, they were machines made as small as machines could be. Capable of manipulating the basic blocks of the universe as we would rocks to make a building. They manufactured molecules from atoms like Edward Pascal made vehicles from metals. With magic, however, the so-called Arcanites could infuse a magical affinity into every molecule they touched. As was the case with Leary.

The Arcanites, housed within a slurry of carbon, calcium, boron, and other elements, awoke from their dormancy shortly after entering Leary's marrow. Immediately, they began stripping the environment of every molecule present in an effort to build a swarm with the mission to disassemble and quickly reassemble the entirety of Leary's skeleton. A process that would take hours without the temporal domain Amun enclosed him in.

It appeared like a living thing. A blue-green goo that consumed the body wholly, leaving the magically-infused ingots and black threads floating or poking above the amorphous fluid like ice on water. Until they too began to sink and disappear.

Yet, through the Net, I could bear witness to an illusory simulation of the process, involving a field of cascading mechanical hands that moved countless times per second. From a grid-like wall, they stripped spheres of varying colors and passed them down the chain, mixing them with other materials to create complex structures that were carefully laid into a lattice at the far side. An effort that, on a large scale, would grow a new skeleton in real-time.

A minute through the process saw the goo recede in various places as the flesh-wrapped wires were consumed, in turn exposing an incomplete skeleton of adamantine, laced with veins- circuits that glowed a deep blue. Bringing about the true moment of disbelief.

Though, in hindsight, I should not have been so shocked.

Indeed, just as he had done with Zaraxus, Amun went about the body, placing the dozens of magic-infused Dimensionite ingots into recesses and housing and open hands made by the goo. But whereas the Umbra Emperor had enchantments in his bones and thus could use each as a single spell. The majority of Leary's very bones were infused with a different magical affinity.

The adamantine was found throughout his skull and in the marrow of his bone. Ordinary, it was, though it was infused with the essence of the Divine Engineer and some electromagnetism to negate the ferrous properties of the metal while simultaneously granting him control over any machines he'd create in the future. And of course, his body.

Everything else, however, was a tool of destruction.

Each of his fingers and toes was tipped with Dimensionite infused with blade magic. Similarly, his forearms were infused with shield magic. Each of his ribs held charge magic and to eject it, beam magic was infused into his sternum. Gravity was infused in the lowest portion of his metallic spine. Rubber magic infused the once-shattered vertebrae in his lumbar region. And each vertebrae higher was tainted by the color of a different magic.

The lime green of barrier magic. The slate-gray of scale magic. The off-white of bone magic. The soupy black of shadow magic. The pearly ivory of feather magic. The five thoracic vertebrae of the goblin's anatomy remained exposed to the air, even as the gray goo swelled to consume the body and dispersed in an anticlimactic mist minutes later. Leaving quite the exotic-looking goblin to drop unceremoniously into the snow.

When all was said and done, the clone grinned at me with supreme satisfaction while Amun turned to me with an anticipatory grin. <<Last two stops.>> They both said, ascending into the air. <<And we'll be wasting no time to get there.>>

<<In a hurry for once?>> I chortled in full surprise. <<To where?>>

While the clone only grinned, Amun turned his gaze to a curiously bright point of silver in the distant mountains. Yet they both replied.

<<My houses of worship.>>