Low-Fantasy Occultis Chapter 241

Novel: Low-Fantasy Occultis Author: Persimmon Updated:
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Sitting on his knees, feeling the hot sun on his back, with his arms sore from being held straight up for hours, Nick decided he might have been punished enough.

Sure, starting a fight with his brother inside his new room hadn’t been very smart. He could admit that. But they only scuffed the floors a little before they were stopped. A little property damage never hurt anyone, right?

Eyeing Devon, who was accepting his punishnt as if it were completely natural, he decided that keeping his mouth shut would be the smart move just this once.

I’m pretty sure my high CHA would let

sweet-talk Sonya into letting

leave, but if that didn’t stir up the wrath of a thousand suns in Devon, it definitely would put

at odds with Xander. And I really don’t want that old monster to be against .

Eventually, after another half-hour of enduring this ridiculous physical punishnt, the living sword walked by and grunted. “Alright, get out of here. And don’t try anything that stupid again.”

Nick was on his feet and sprinting toward the bathroom he sensed had been prepared for him in a flash, eager to escape that embarrassing mory.

Quickly undressing, he slipped into the still warm water and looked at it curiously. There was so mana here, although not aspected mana.

This isn’t conjured water. [One with the Storm] makes that clear. But it has a spell attached to it. A warming spell? No, it’s more complex than that, and I don’t feel fire mana either.

It took him a few monts to realize what it was. Soone—most likely Sonya—had cast a temperature stabilization spell, probably linked to the comfort of whoever was in contact with the water.

It was a subtle piece of work, so unobtrusive that if he didn’t possess such fine senses, he would have missed it and believed himself simply lucky to have arrived before the water cooled too much.

“So she really is a maid,” he murmured. He’d observed during his ‘diplomatic’ trip through Oakenhallow and Honeyton how valuable people with support and quality-of-life magic were, especially if their class was tied to service, but he hadn’t realized just how far that could go.

All of a sudden, he reevaluated Sonya. He’d known she couldn’t have been just a simple maid, of course. Not if his brother was so obviously smitten with her. But he hadn’t even considered what a prodigy in household magic might be capable of.

Maybe not a true prodigy, but she’s clearly more advanced than most servants, and she’s still young. In a way, she is Devon’s parallel.

At a high enough level, he suspected that a maid class would be quite formidable. The protection of a household should co under its scope, after all. And with the System, anyone could beco powerful enough if they were committed.

The soaps he’d been given felt almost sinfully luxurious, and he delighted in scrubbing every nook and cranny of sweat and dust away. The Blessed Hunt had already cleansed him, so there wasn’t much left to remove, but his modern sensibilities insisted that just because he’d been washed in magical rain, it didn’t an he was as clean as he could be with proper soap.

Once finished, Nick relaxed further, closing his eyes and extending his mind beyond its physical limits. [Empyrean Intuition] had technically stayed the sa since he acquired it, but his connection to spiritual magic had not, and the level of detail he could now perceive beca almost uncomfortable.

He really didn’t want to know exactly the level of lust his brother felt toward the pretty maid, nor the delighted affection and willful ignorance she had flowing through her, but there wasn’t much he could do to avoid them.

It seems like she’s aware of his feelings and even reciprocates them to so extent, but she’s still a little too cautious to fully open up. I wonder if she's aware of his reputation or if it’s due to their differing social statuses.

That wasn’t sothing he’d ever be bothered by, but Devon was now the Heir of a Barony. There were certain expectations about who he’d choose as his future bride. Hell, their parents were probably about to receive the first few letters testing the waters regarding engagents.

Not that they would force anything like that on him, no. The two of them had married for love, and they wouldn’t impose a wife on Devon just because so old fogeys thought that was the done thing.

This story has been stolen from Royal Road. If you read it on Amazon, please report it

But to Sonya, that had to seem like an insurmountable barrier. She didn’t know Eugene and Elena, and Devon probably hadn’t even begun to understand where her reticence ca from. If he even suspected she knew about his feelings and wasn’t opposed to being with him.

“Man, teenage drama almost makes

miss religious strife. That was less complicated.”

Chuckling at that absurdity, Nick finally got out of the water, drying himself with a snap of his fingers. Water gathered into a single globe from each droplet on his skin and hair, then splashed back into the tub, leaving him to put on the clothes that had been prepared for him without needing to use towels.

Eyeing them curiously, Nick realized these probably belonged to Devon from when he first arrived in Alluria. His brother had grown a lot in the past few months, which ant almost everything he’d left Floria with was now too small, but it fit Nick just fine.

By the ti he was done, the sky was starting to darken, and he could hear Sonya bustling below him in the kitchen, preparing their dinner.

Nick had planned to sign up for the exam today, but since he had been forced to volunteer for a shopping trip that would likely take him near the tower tomorrow, he would do it then.

“The first thing you have to know is that everyone is trying to scam you,” Devon told him in a deathly serious tone, tilting his face so shadows hit him just right to give him the right gravitas.

The atmosphere was spoiled as Sonya slapped his shoulder, rolling her eyes. “That is not true. Your brother has just been taken in by smooth-talking rchants too many tis before I brought him to a decent blacksmith.”

Sheepishly grinning, Devon patted the sword by his side. Nick had noticed it earlier, as little escaped his senses, but he was intrigued to discover that there was a connection between his brother and his blade. One that went beyond what he was used to seeing among soldiers and that had gained so spiritual solidity.

“Well, I’m pretty good at handling scamrs,” he said after a mont, eyeing the nearly empty streets. It was quite early in the morning—in fact, the sun had risen less than half an hour ago—and according to Sonya, it was the best ti to find so hidden gems before the daily rush snatched up everything of value.

But Nick wasn’t just interested in buying new clothes, though he could admit that he would need so once he began attending the Tower’s courses.

He was also looking for buyers for the hundreds of thunderhoof corpses he had stacked in his ring.

I haven’t lost sight of my goal. Reaching a thousand gold in two and a half months might seem crazy, but selling the herd will get

a good part of the way there, and once I have the money, I can explore other ways to grow it.

As things stood, Nick only had fifteen gold coins, if he included the value of his silvers and coppers. It was a significant sum for a teenager, enough to elevate him well above the average citizen, but still far from what he needed.

He hadn’t forgotten about the orichalcum, and while he wouldn’t be certain until he saw it himself, he was quite sure its properties were exactly what he needed to fuse the divine relics into a single artifact.

“Oh, let’s go there. Miss Perry always has so good-quality underthings. She makes them herself, you know?” Sonya said as she started walking toward a stall that had just finished setting up its wares.

A motherly old woman greeted them with a warm smile, crinkling her eyes in delight when Sonya approached to hug her. “Oh, you little honeybun. So sweet.”

“Miss Perry,” Sonya said as she pulled back, “I’m here with a mission of great importance.” Her tone was full of mock seriousness, and the old woman picked up on it without missing a beat.

“Why, you’ve co to the right place. When you need them most, Perry’s underthings are always there to support you.” She replied, and Nick had to hide a snort at the pun.

Sonya nodded with the appropriate seriousness. “You see, my friend here only has three outfits, and he’s a shoo-in for the magic tower’s exam. This sad state of affairs cannot stand!”

A dangerous glint appeared in the old woman’s eyes, and Nick knew she’d slled a big deal. Although Sonya hadn’t directly said he was a noble, anyone who could take the tower’s exam was either one or considered important enough that it didn’t make much difference to common folk. Additionally, the young maid was known to be part of Grandmaster Wolfram’s household, which gave her words much more weight than they would normally have.

Basically, Nick had been outed as a rich cut of at and was thrown to a pack of hungry wolves.

What followed were hours of bargaining across various stalls and shops, during which he had to use every trick in the book to avoid getting steamrolled.

Nick was man enough to admit that it was only thanks to his unnaturally high CHA that he managed to keep sothing in his wallet. He was able to completely ignore most brute-force attacks where the rchants tried to bury him in complints and sleazy-seller babble, and got to the core of the issue every ti, comparing quality, quantity, and craftsmanship like a pro.

By the ti they exited the cobbler’s shop, having commissioned three new pairs of enchanted boots, even Nick was beginning to feel tired. anwhile, his companions looked at him with a mix of awe and shock.

“That was fantastic!” Sonya gasped, holding her hands clasped in front of her as if she’d seen a street perforr pull off a particularly tricky stunt.

“Man, I didn’t know you had it in you,” Devon said, wiping away a tear of manly pride with his finger while looking at him like a father watching his son win a sports competition.

Nick rolled his eyes so hard he almost feared they would fall out. It had been a fairly busy morning, but not as hectic as they were making it out to be.

To his satisfaction, he managed to find a few interested buyers for his thunderhoof collection, although everyone told him to co back in the evening or go straight to a slaughterhouse in the north where most edible monsters were processed and sold wholesale, which was near the Adventurer’s Guild.

A few were doubtful he really had the goods, but once again, Sonya’s presence as a known part of Wolfram’s household gave him credibility, which was why he hadn’t complained at all while she dressed him up like a doll.

It was a bit annoying, but she was making life much easier for him, so he put up with it.

From the looks of it, Devon had noticed too, because he was giving the girl sappy looks and seed seconds away from sighing in lovesickness.

Fortunately, he was spared the sight because they turned a corner, and Nick’s breath left him in a gasp.

He’d seen the Magic Tower from a distance before, but it was truly a magnificent sight. It seed to stretch for a thousand feet into the sky, with its spire reaching so high that one might be forgiven if they believed it touched the heavens.

More importantly, magic thrumd all around it, thick and heavy. And most of all, alive.

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