84th of Season of Fire, 57th year of the 32nd cycle
The Chamber of Punishnt was bare. It looked like the base model all other Chamber buildings used for their layout before filling it with furniture and life. All the furniture in the Chamber of Punishnt was sculpted out of the sa material as the walls, then Newt realized it was fused with the walls. It was impossible to move or reposition anything.
“Those visiting the Chamber of Punishnt rarely deserve comfort.” The old woman’s voice was even and calm, her statent matter-of-factly. She led the way through the well-lit corridors, took a seemingly random door, and held it open for Newt.
“Take a seat.” Inside the chamber was a large table with three sets of identical seats on either side. Newt took the closest one, and the old woman sat across from him.
“This is your third noteworthy incident this season. Any comnts?”
The tiny old woman with droopy eyes, struggling not to yawn, suddenly lood over Newt. His sense of danger scread at him in a manner he had never experienced. Crossing that granny ant death.
The first one was just before the season started? But that wasn’t the thing to say.
“I’m sorry.”
“I’m sure you are, but that’s not what I’m here to hear. What happened? How did you get separated from your friends? How did you get out?”
Newt said everything. Every thought he rembered, every action he rembered, everything save for things involving Magmin and his dragon core. The disciplinary chaplain listened carefully. She dissected him with her eyes, and he felt the pressure of her gaze as it hamred against his danger sense in so way. He wondered how she was doing what she did, but he dared not utter a word outside of what she asked for.
Newt had no clue where the nace ca from. The disciplinary chaplain sat still as a statue, not even breathing as she listened to his account.
“I see.” She steepled her fingers hours later, once his telling was done. “You have developed precognition, sotis called pre-sense, or intuition.”
The old woman nodded. “You shan’t breathe a word of it to anyone below the eighth realm.”
She pierced him with her gaze until Newt nodded. “Yes, Lady Chaplain.”
“I will not obstruct your growth and developnt. If you need soone to discuss your newfound sense, if you have any questions, or need instruction, you will co to directly. I sharpened my intuition long before you or any of your long-dead ancestors were born. If you have questions that I don’t know the answer to, I will point you towards soone more accomplished than myself.”
The disciplinary chaplain’s voice suddenly turned steely and sharp like a sword.
“You will explain everything you know about the Blood Cult.”
If the old woman was a nace to his danger sense before, her piercing gaze beca a cataclysm with that statent.
Newt gulped, the presence pressing down on him making his bones creak.
“I had a vision during the sumr solstice. In it, I was a dragon assaulted by a large number of human-like creatures made of blood…” The vision was fragnted. Newt recalled monts of pain, the blood-n hurting him, but it had beco a blur, a fever dream he suffered from as the sun tried to scorch him.
“I see,” the disciplinary chaplain said again, re-assuming her relaxed, contemplative pose. She either had a habit or she practiced it ages ago until it beca a habit.
“Demonic cults are taboo. You shan’t discuss them with anyone until your realm is high enough. Once that happens, you will enter the draft list, and other things will happen, but that is irrelevant to your current circumstances. Until then, all you need to know is if you encounter demons, head for the heresy hunters and report them.”
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The woman stood from her chair. “Any questions? If not, you are dismissed.”
It was obvious she expected no questions, but Newt surprised her.
“Esteed Lady Chaplain, I have so questions. Which parts of my wandering through the Valley of the Lost may I share? When can I co to discuss intuition with you?”
The latter question made the woman open her eyes just a tad.
“Regarding your first question, you may tell them everything except for the parts regarding how you developed your intuition, the steps you took, and how it helped you. As for discussing intuition with , you will have to make an appointnt at the front desk. Is that all?”
“Yes, Esteed Lady Chaplain.” Newt nodded, and the disciplinary chaplain vanished after opening the cramped room’s door.
Newt felt a surge of relief. He was back at the order, an old monster brought him to the Chamber of Punishnt, and nothing bad happened to him. He even found soone he could discuss his ideas with and who might offer him guidance.
Newt left the featureless building, coming face to face with his master.
“I want to know everything you can tell .”
And so, on their way back to her residence, Newt retold his master a much shorter and less detailed version of what he had told the disciplinary chaplain.
Does she even have a na?
Newt decided not to ask, answering Lady Alabaster’s questions instead. By the ti they returned to the white palace, he had mostly explained what had happened, how many manabeasts he slew, and what he had learned about his body, techniques, and realm.
“And what do you think your next steps should be?”
“I’m torn between advancing my skill with spell seals and reading. Learning new runes and how to arrange them may prove invaluable if I find myself in situations similar to what happened in the Valley of the Lost, and as for reading, there are a lot of mundane questions I have.”
That ca out wrong.
Newt gathered his thoughts before continuing. “The more I read and experience, the more I understand how little I know. Is that strange?”
Lady Alabaster’s stern face softened. “That’s perfectly normal. I’m much older than you, and yet I find the world full of mysteries beyond my ability to understand. Even the gatemaster, an exalt, who is at the tenth realm and wields incomprehensible power, is rely a human. He neither knows nor understands everything. In fact, he might be the one most confused, since he sees the most.”
His master’s words didn’t help Newt one bit. All they told him was that no matter how high he climbed, how far he reached, there would still exist questions beyond him.
“I’ll answer so of your questions. Just this once, as a reward for doing exceptionally well on your mission.”
Newt jumped at the opportunity. He could have asked about tracing, about mana sense, and a host of other subjects, but as soon as those topics ca to mind, he decided against them. Those were the challenges his master had given him. Asking her for answers was no different from surrendering.
“I was wondering about two things. Is it possible to create ever-burning flas inside my realm, and are there different kinds of fires with different properties? Like more powerful flas, more explosive, gentler, hotter, colder, stuff like that.”
“The first question is simple, and you can find the answer in the library with a bit of effort, but I will answer it. Yes, you can make ever-burning flas, perpetual waterfalls, everlasting landslides, never-ending storms, and many other things. However, those require mana to maintain, not much, unless you have vast expanses of them, but large enough quantities of them will impact the rate of your realm’s expansion.”
Lady Alabaster paused for a mont, and Newt considered the implication. He doubted Dandelion gave him a clue that would harm him. That ant making ever-burning flas wasn’t what the man had in mind when designing his realm.
“If a mageknight has a particularly important concept they wish to manifest in their realm, the loss is acceptable. Especially if it will greatly increase your power. Otherwise, it’s not worth the bother.”
She motioned him to enter.
“Are you hungry? If you are, I could have Lord Freshshine bring you so food.”
“No thank you, Master. I have too many things to do, and I just ate the other day.”
Lady Alabaster nodded, a proud smile on her lips.
“Regarding your other question, I will talk with Lord Flaax. Fire is his attribute, and he should offer better advice than I ever could.”
She was about to close the door and paused when they were still cracked open.
“Where do you intend to go now?”
“I think I will head to the Chamber of Runes to practice.”
“I figured it would be sothing like that.” Lady Alabaster opened the door to fully see Newt’s face. “You know, your teammates ca running over to my ho as soon as they returned from their mission. I bet they are worried sick about you, and they would really appreciate it if you went back to your apartnt and told them everything was all right.”
Newt had completely forgotten about his new friends and teammates after checking whether they left safely.
“Yes, Master, thank you, Master.”
He turned around embarrassed and went to his apartnt, Lady Alabaster staring at his departing back before closing the door and retiring for the night.
“What a season. Frosty, you said I’d owe you one. So far, he’s been fraying my nerves and trying to torch my ho.” The woman shook her head and went to her study.
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