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My Necromancer Class

Jay was merely an abandoned butcher’s son, living in a small village on the outskirts of a magical world. When humans came of age, they would receive their class from a mana conduit, granting them magic powers, and begin their lives as adventurers. “Status,” Thought Jay, checking his class. [Necromancer Level 1] “...I’m a Necromancer?” His eyes widened in shock. Looking around in fear, he breathed a sigh of relief. No one heard him. This was a monster class, and one of the more powerful monsters at that; a powerful being which raised the dead to fight on its behalf. If anyone knew, they would hunt Jay down and kill on sight. He was not just a threat to the authority of the nobles, but to all living things. “But am I a monster now? Or human? I guess it doesn’t matter. They’ll kill me all the same.” Jay had only one option: to get stronger, building his necrotic powers up so that he may one day become untouchable. Through plotting, secrecy, and sometimes by sheer carnage, he can only attempt to survive in this hostile world. Join Jay as he struggles against all odds and misfortune, against a world that wants him dead, as he secretly rises and bends this world to his will.

Aero182 · Fantasia
Classificações insuficientes
373 Chs

Ghost Weaver

Jay raised the new level one skeleton and had it walk alongside his throne as he talked to it, giving it a name.

“Your name is Archers. That’s right, Archers with an S.” he nodded. “This will make it easier when I yell ‘archers, fire!’ in the future… Hopefully.”

The skeleton clapped its jaws, accepting its name.

“Blue, teach it my ways.”

Blue glanced up at Jay and gave a nod, accepting his order.

Jay watched them communicate in their strange silent skeleton language as the young skeleton was bombarded with orders, including Jay’s past orders: always collect all, don’t attack humans around Losla, and so on, until they reached Jay’s last grand order of revenge if he were ever to die.

“I wonder if they speak something other than Astratan.” Jay wondered as he watched.

“I’ll need to give Archers a mind too…”

The skeleton cohort had marched Jay downhill for a while, and the fresh forest air was replaced by a more humid, warmer one.