Font Size
15px

Over the next few days, we spent most of our ti searching for the elusive heart severing liana. Supposedly, it could be found near this area, its distinct flowers located just below the crowns of the huge trees that made up the inner reaches of the forest.

So far, we hadnt had much luck. Of the two lianas which resembled what we were looking for, one was a different species and another hadnt flowered yet, so it wasnt usable.

Either way, we werent about to give up. If anything, our level progressed steadily while we fought the nurous hordes that attacked us, which resulted in reaching level 55. The monsters we ended up fighting varied wildly. So were monkeys, so were insects or frogs To make matters worse, they all fought in groups, and each species behaved differently. The wasps had been the most dangerous so far, since I had to block an attack for Eri a few tis. Her defensive skills were sowhat lacklustre in prolonged battles, I noticed, which ant that I had been wounded a few tis.

She was always very apologetic afterward, even though I would have long since healed by the end of the battle.

Eri had gained a few levels, too. She started at level 10 when we entered the forest, but now she was already level 23. 13 levels gained in comparison to my 8. That reaffird my suspicion that levels beca increasingly hard to gain as you progressed.

After gaining these levels, I noticed that my intelligence had finally reached the tree hundred mark, without needing any free points, so I resud my previous plan to distribute my points into my physical stats.

Na: Arthur Titles [Dark prodigy] Class: [Hollow essence knight] LVL 55 Strength 917 Constitution 917 Dexterity 917 Intelligence 304 Wisdom 467 Affinity 703 Free stat points 0

Skills:

Passive:

[Overloading combustion core](13%), [Dark flow sight](17%), [Cascading mana-intrusive Swordsmanship](34%),

[Sapphire ntal palace](N/A),[Dark Form](67%), [Crawling road](5%), [Weak mana sense](N/A),[Blackened essence(formative)](50%), [Hollow essence return](5%), [Essence lifespan](50%)

Active:

[Ghost apparition](43%), [Corrosive mark](9%), [Relentless orbs](15%), [Sword laser](8%), [Onyx chain wind](13%), [Aura step](78%), [Hollow manifestation](7%)

I felt a burst of strength as I distributed my stats. The air beca slightly easier to breathe and I felt light. As an experint, I slamd my fist into one of the monolithic trees nearby, only for my fist to splinter the wood and pierce through the bark. Only once my arm had disappeared into the wood up until my elbow did I realise that I was stuck. Another jerk of my upper body did the trick and freed , though. All that was left of my effort was a fist-sized hole in the tree.

"Impressive." Eri comnted. "Those trees grew in an environnt where tier 3 monsters run rampant. I imagine they're quite tough to compensate, yet you punched right through.

I rubbed the back of my head awkwardly. "I ant to shake the tree with my punch, though..." I murmured, causing Eri to start giggling.

"I think you would need a skill for that, Arthur."

I nodded and smiled, seeing her point. In hindsight, it wouldn't make much sense for the tree to shake after a punch.

Out of the corner of my eye, I noticed the system-notification I had been waiting for.

Ding! 300 intelligence reached! Awarded the [Eidetic sacrifice] skill.

[Eidetic sacrifice](0%)

Tier 3 skill.

Increase progression of a normal skill at the cost of a mory. The more valuable the mory is to the user, the more the skill progression increases.

Increase progression through use.

After reading the skill description, I scoffed. This was another attempt by the system to undo my sanity. Losing valuable mories for the sake of more powerful skills? How is that a worthwhile trade? Even the mories I didnt enjoy had value. Even my negative experiences had a reason to exist. Then again if I entered a crisis, if I had no other choice

Argh. There was ti to consider the implications of this skill at a later ti. Either way, the cost of using it was imnse in the long term, regardless of which mory I sacrificed. The fact that a skill like this even existed was a clear indication of the systems cruelty. Why it would give it to was another question, however.

I sensed a headache coming.

Eri, Im going to ditate for a few minutes. Will you be fine by yourself? I asked. This wasnt a safe place, but I felt like I had no choice. I needed to settle my mind, instead of fighting with a stormy cloud hanging over my head.

Eri nodded hesitantly. Go ahead. Just dont take too long.

I wont. I affird. I perceived ti differently in my ntal space, which would allow to turn 15 minutes into 45.

I closed my eyes and quickly found myself in the dingy shack I was used to seeing. My repairs to the woodwork were still hanging on, but it was clear that I would eventually need to rebuild it.

I headed outside and took stock of the situation. Everything seed fine at first glance, and my red roses were looking healthier than before. I still wasnt sure what those represented in the first place, but whatever. Those werent the reason why I was here.

I headed into the little forest that had grown around my shack, and quickly found sothing that could be my target. I was looking for any new additions to my ntal space, and this strange weed that covered the undergrowth of my forest. Their yellow stems made them stand out from the plants that were clinging too. When I was a child, my parents were farrs. Many a ti, my father would warn of these little buggers, which he called dodders. Essentially, dodders were a plant that ate the nutrients of other plants. This was a parasite.

The fact that it appeared right after I had gotten a new skill, and the corresponding temptation to use it, was no coincidence. The very idea of using it was gnawing away at my principles and morals. It had to be removed.

Over the next half hour, I worked away at removing the clingy plant without damaging what was already there. It was tough, and the plant caught on to my clothes and skin. In the end, though, I managed to pry it away from my forest.

I gathered the clump into a ball and walked out into the big nothing, before leaving it out in the middle of nowhere, where it wouldnt find a food source and, therefore, die.

Satisfied, I left my ntal space and re-joined Eri in the real world. Rather than the llow greeting I had been expecting, though, Eri had a wide grin on her face and an excited spark in her eye.

I found it! she said. I found a flowering liana, not far from here!

I jumped up and gathered my things. Then what are we waiting for? Lets go get it!

-Scene transition-

A few minutes later, Eri and I arrived at a small pond lit up by sunlight that pierced through the canopy. The pond had an azure coloration, and its only occupant was a green vine as thick as my arm that spread so purple roots into the water, before climbing up one of the nearby trees. Sure enough, near the crown of the tree, a large purple flower hung upside down. Though we couldnt sll it from down here, it was clear that the liana was flowering fully.

Happy to finally finish Agards request, I moved to step into the clearing, but Eri jerked back and crouched behind a tree root. I copied her actions with a questioning look on my face, but understood her reasoning monts later.

The sound of giant wings flapping resounded throughout the clearing, and a giant multi-coloured bird descended through the hole in the canopy. It only barely fit, but managed to, all the sa. Its red and green colours reminded of a phoenix, though its body wasnt made up of flas like they were in the stories.

Thats a paradise bird! Eri explained in a hushed whisper. With talons the size of horses and feathers the size of a house, I had a hard ti figuring out why a monster of this size would be called a paradise bird, but stranger things had happened, I supposed.

Thats a tier 4 creature, nearly tier 5. I warned. My weak mana sense was just barely able to pick up its signature. It felt like a blistering sun and a warm sumr breeze simultaneously.

We have to kill it. Eri said, determined. I did a double-take. Since when was she the one to hunt first, and ask questions later?

What do you an we have to kill it? Cant we just wait for it to leave? I asked

Eri shook her head. You dont understand. Paradise birds take a mate for life. When I was here earlier, a different bird was guarding the liana. Theyre taking turns between guarding the liana and hunting deeper in the forest.

Cant we find a different liana then? I asked, none too keen on antagonizing not one but two quasi-tier 5 creatures at the sa ti.

Can you guarantee well even find one? That it wont be guarded by a creature of its own? We only have one option, to kill it before its mate returns.

I sighed. Youre sure about this? I thought you didnt like killing monsters? I asked, but Eri just shook her head.

I dont like killing living creatures in general, but I want to save Agards wife. We promised we would.

Sothing about the look in Eris eyes told there was more to this, but I let it go. For now.

All right then. I consented. Lets hunt us a colorful bird, shall we?

You are reading My class Death Knight is just barely legal… Chapter 151: Paradise bird on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Elven Invasion cover
Similar genre

Elven Invasion

Respro ·Action

MagicvsScience HumanvsElves EarthvsForestia MortalvsGod ThisisataleinwhichGoddessLunainordertosaveherplanetandcivilizationstartsainvasiononEarth,Wi...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.