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44th of Season of Fire, 59th year of the 32nd cycle

Newt ran, fiery blasts exploding from his feet, propelling him impossibly fast. The sun had long since set, and he did not pause to admire what was possibly his last sunset ever. He flew, his feet destroying the earth and the roads. He didn’t care. If anyone ever pursued the matter and he still lived, he would pave the road by hand if that was what the law required.

A thousand miles. All he needed was to cover another thousand miles before noon, and he would reach ho, reach safety. On the first day it was possible, even probable, for him to run a thousand miles in ten to twelve hours; after two weeks of working his body to the bone, not so much.

Newt abused his mana as soon as a trickle appeared in his body. As the fire flickered instead of bursting from his feet, Newt knew he had failed. He would struggle, do his best, but even eight hundred miles were beyond him, let alone the full one thousand. He was dead on his feet.

The librarian promised he would send Newt’s letter to the Explorer’s Gate. It wouldn’t arrive for another ten days, around the fifty-fifth, ten days after Newt’s death. The letter was short.

Esteed Gatemaster,

Please help, I’ll be heading for the Dragon’s Rest mountain and should be near it on the forty-fifth, prior to the solstice.

Eternally grateful,

Newstar Salamandra

It was a fool’s hope, but the two minutes needed to scribble a handful of words were not wasted. They gave Newt the last hope to cling to as he ran. He had not paused to sleep, nor eat, nor drink.

The last drop of water he had was the tea, and before that, he didn’t know. Newt’s lips were cracked, his head light, his limbs made of lead.

I’m dead. He wanted to cry. A day. One asly day, and he would have made it. Why had he strayed so far west while escaping Sumrsweald? Did the airship drift further west than they had calculated? Had they made an error right at the start? Should he have wasted more ti gathering his bearings when fleeing? Why was the world so damn huge?

Pointless questions flooded Newt’s mind. Questions void of answers, full of consequences.

The sky turned pink before him, a red line spreading beyond the mountains, the familiar chain of dormant volcanoes near his ho. Was it already dawn? Probably. The sands of ti were running out, a re handful of grains left.

Six hours left to live. Less. Would he really spend his last remaining monts running his legs and lungs and spirit ragged? Maybe sit down, lie on the grass and enjoy the feeling. Rest before the sun incinerated him. Would it really be too much to actually try to enjoy his final hours?

The idea sounded divine. There was no chance of making the distance, absolutely no chance, and yet Newt refused to surrender. If he had to die, he would die fighting. He was no longer the scared boy he once was. No, he would live through it sohow. Even if the sun scorched him, even if it reduced him to ash, he would sohow find a way. He would live.

What will happen to Magmin?

I’m delirious, thinking about the winged serpent at this ti. I’m dead. Why should I force myself still? Newt staggered, but righted himself with the next step and kept going. Because I can rest once I die. Until then, I will give it my all. For father, for mother, for Master, heavens, I’ll do it for Obi or the girls.

A tear slid down his cheek. For myself. I’ll do it for myself.

The sun rose higher. With only two hours left, Newt staggered forth, no longer running, no longer burning mana for techniques. He was sapped. No mana, no strength, moons of running had drained him of everything, save for the will to live. So he walked, his walk faster than a non-awakened’s sprint.

Stolen from its rightful author, this tale is not ant to be on Amazon; report any sightings.

Images flashed before his eyes - friends, family, regrets. He really regretted killing his uncle. The man was scum of the earth, a waste. He had tried to erase the family’s glorious history and topple them completely, and yet he had once carried Newt on his shoulders. They laughed and giggled, and he smuggled sweets for Newt even when his father and mother wouldn’t give him any as a punishnt for so irrelevant accident.

Newt rembered the white vase spinning on the small wooden stand after he had crashed into it. He could hear the sound echo as fine porcelain danced atop lacquered wood. The vase tipped, and Newt watched the leaf-thin work of art fall as if through molasses, its blue flowers spinning. The vase struck the floor, the fragile noise making Newt wince. He could still sll the dust, and recall the realization that he was in for a spanking.

Victor was the first to arrive, followed by Newt’s parents a handful of seconds later.

“What happened?”

“I was spinning little Newt, and he slipped from my hand and…” Victor gestured at the stand and the fragnts of white porcelain.

“Victor, you’re going to bring the whole house down one day.” Newt’s father stord out, furious, but Victor winked at Newt and left, just like that. A dozen years later, Newt killed him. Like a rabid raptor.

Another tear escaped Newt. If he could redo everything, he would have incapacitated Victor and let him go, like the other elders. Had he done that, he would have been furious with the Blood Cult once they killed Victor, but it was better than him dying to Newt’s fist.

Newt found himself facedown in the dirt. His mind had drifted too far into the past, losing the present. He picked himself up from the ground and trudged on, but the mories overflowed.

He was back at Jasmine’s place; the Steelwheel patriarch had arranged a playdate. The two of them rode a pair of flatbills, ten feet long, three feet tall, while the servants gripped the reins, ensuring no harm ca to the children.

He was older than when he broke the vase, six or seven. Jasmine was his best friend, and Newt loved her dearly. Every day he pestered his parents to let him visit her, studying, exercising, and doing Teacher Stronggrow’s assignnts just to get his father to allow him to visit his fiancee.

Patriarch Steelwheel always had treats for them, and fun activities, like swimming, riding exotic saurians Newt had never before seen; he even organized actors and plays for them.

How did that kind man get tangled with the Blood Cult?

Newt snapped out of his happy thoughts, taking another labored step forward, followed by another and another.

Why was the Blood Cult in the area? Were they looking for Magmin’s realm? For sothing else?

At that point, Newt realized sothing. I’m back at the Dragon’s Rest mountain. What if they are still here? Searching and watching?

A fraction of his strength returned in the surge of panic, and Newt abused it for all it was worth, getting up and sprinting forward once again.

The thought had already passed through his head countless tis since the crash. The Blood Cult was targeting him, and him specifically. Newt recalled his talk with the librarian.

The Blood Cult had suffered grievous losses, ones which would have crippled major orders, while the rest could not even suffer such damage, because they lacked the foundations and the cultivators of such high realms.

Nobody would have wasted so many ninth realm powerhouses just to avenge a ager realm three mageknight, even if that third-realr was the son of their leader. Any organization that acted in such a way would have been snuffed out a long ti ago.

There was a secret there, Newt realized in his delirious state. Sothing did not add up. The world relied on brutal efficiency, one in which those who made the wrong moves beca footnotes of history, and the Cults had been around for a long ti.

The only thing extraordinary about Newt was the Magmin’s realm. But the cultists had no way of knowing that.

And why not? Another voice asked within him. If my honorable ancestor had figured sothing out at his seventh realm, that ans that ninth realm grandmasters or tenth realm exalts had an even greater chance, observing the situation from even greater heights.

Newt’s mind labored, following the insane line of thought.

What if they knew all along? What if they don’t want Magmin’s realm? What if they wanted soone to snatch it? To replicate Magmin’s cultivation, and that’s the person they want, that’s the reason they left my ancestors alone, but always watched us? What if they had pushed us into decline through so underhanded manipulation?

Newt was out of breath; the sun was high. He glanced up; he had half an hour left. Half an hour to figure out the secret. He set it as his new purpose in life.

Why would the cultists manipulate us? What would they possibly need from us? Then Newt recalled Magmin from his vision, fighting and annihilating the Blood Cult’s tenth realm exalts.

They wanted to sacrifice Magmin? Newt’s labored breath sped up as he finally found the last piece. They want to sacrifice ?

He fell, but a powerful arm caught him.

“I’ve been searching for you for more than fifty years.”

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