"How long was I unconscious? "He asked, pressing his nostrils one by one with his fingertips to blow his nose. With his nose unclogged, he imdiately felt much better.
[ Not long. About 3 minutes. ] Xi answered gently.
It was much shorter than he feared.
[I took the initiative to activate Alloy Coating to protect your brain before impact.] She explained calmly when she saw his incomprehension. [ Given the amount of tal circulating in your body, it was relatively simple. The monster’s ntal wave was intercepted at more than 80%. It was all I could do in such a short ti without a reliable Oracle Path.]
Jake reflected briefly on her explanation and nodded his head in approval.
"Thank you Xi. "He said with heartfelt gratitude. "If it happens again, don’t hesitate to take such initiatives of your own free will."
[All right.]
Her voice sounded indifferent, but Jake could sense her imnse relief. Without her intervention, he might not have died, but several million Aether points had been consud for this tiny Alloy Coating.
It was preposterous how expensive these Oracle Device skills were, but he was aware that the level of control and compression required to encapsulate his nerve cells with tal without damaging his body tissue was probably such that he might never be able to do it. At least not for a very long ti.
"Where are the two Krishs? "Jake worried again as he heard no noise from the other room where they had fled.
[Already far away, but I heard one of them screaming. They must have t with another mishap.]
Jake let out a cheerful chuckle, but their two nas had not disappeared from the Player Rankings. He lost his good mood, however, when he discovered that Will’s na was nowhere to be found. He had expected this from the first trap, but it was extrely disheartening.
His comrade was indeed unlucky. His abilities might have shone in many circumstances, but here he was almost as helpless as a normal human. It was impossible for these Thralls to give in to his charisma when they were probably already under soone’s control.
As a precaution, Jake overloaded his Aether stats for the third ti in a row and examined the corpse of the creature at his feet. The first thing that caught his attention were the nasty scars zebrazing the surface of the creature’s dark, hairless skin. The alien had likely been tortured.
A scan surprisingly revealed that the monster was apparently not a Thrall, but a Zhorion prisoner nad Keshom. His species was preceded in the report by the ntion "Corrupted". A rusty tal chain from which hung a bronze plaque with inscriptions hugged the monster’s neck, sinking several milliters into its flesh.
Perhaps an identification number and presumably the alien’s na in its native language or that of its jailers. By comparing the symbols with those of the Zhorion grimoires he had in his database, he was able to confirm that it was a different language.
Increasingly perplexed, Jake slowly began to sense that this last test was not so simple. The Phantom Sanctuary was supposed to be so kind of sacred place for the Zhorions and the few Players who managed to enter it, but why did it look more like a prison?
At first, he had thought that the labyrinth and all those traps were a way to test them one last ti, but the whole picture was probably more sophisticated.
Gurgle!
"Ugh..." Jake grunted when he heard his stomach rumbling with hunger.
By activating Bloodline Ignition, his body had shed another 50 kilos. His proud stature was not much larger than that of a plucked eagle and the weight of the alloy in his body was felt all the more. Standing had beco painfully taxing, his wobbly legs almost failing him.
[ Eat Keshom.] Xi coldly urged as he wondered how to redy the problem.
Jake shuddered at the thought, but he soon forgot his moral preconceptions when his stomach rumbled again. To survive, he might even be able to eat another human. Especially if that person had tried to kill him. This Keshom had gone mad long ago and could no longer be considered an intelligent life form with sensitivity.
Pressed by ti, he raised his hands and generated an intense field of hot air to ticulously cook the creature. He hoped that this way the alien would not taste too bad. Alas, the monster’s roasted at turned out to be disgusting.
It took Jake long minutes to devour half of the monster and by preheating his digestive system he was able to assimilate the nutrients in no ti whatsoever. The longest part was spent chewing and in the end he just swallowed while suppressing his urge to vomit.
Morally, although he was full, he was sickened by his deed. Nevertheless, his body ballooning at a glance made him forget his grievances. Here, it was the Law of the Jungle that prevailed over everything else.
About an hour later, all that remained were the bones of Keshom and the offal that Jake hadn’t deigned to eat. The Zhorion’s body contained traces of Flintium, Orxanium, and Naequat, but his cells were already saturated with those minerals.
Instead of being assimilated as before, they continued to circulate passively in his blood vessels. Other than forcing him to slightly increase the output of ultraviolet radiation, there were no tangible benefits.
By the ti Jake regained his strength, the labyrinth’s conformation had changed six tis and Brice had finally died, whether from his injuries or otherwise.
Just as he was about to resu his exploration, Enya’s na also disappeared from the Player Ranking, brutally awakening his pessimism. Thanks to Hakkrasha, he had thought she would have nothing to fear, but obviously he was wrong again.
He was now the only human from his original group still in the running. Counting Ruby, Craig, Xiaoming, George and the other human Enya seed to know, they were now only six. Of the other Players, only Bawopi, Hakkrasha and the two Krishs were still alive.
Before leaving, Jake temporarily turned on his Berserk mode and used it to try to lt the bars separating him from the mass of greenish light, but he soon gave up. While the so-called armored doors, including the walls, were relatively destructible, the bars were not affected by his efforts, and the tal in them remained perfectly tepid in contact with his Aether.
Out of curiosity, Jake took the opportunity to throw a Red Soul Stone through the bars. Prepared for the worst, he hid hastily behind the armored door leading into a new room in anticipation of a huge explosion or worse, but to no avail.
Hearing no suspicious noises, he entered the previous room again, quickly closing the door behind him and noticed that the greenish light field had shortly changed color, turning abruptly to vermilion red.
However, a few seconds later, the light reverted back to its previous color and Jake found that the Red Soul Stone he had thrown there was missing altogether. Whatever that force field was, it was impassable. Firing a few ultraviolet lasers didn’t make any difference either. On the contrary, the greenish radiation intensified violently in response.
The bars being impossible to lt, he scraped the tal covering the walls to make himself a new sword. Fighting with his claws was too limited in the face of these over-ard Zhorions and Players.
His Earth Control didn’t enable him to finely manipulate tal, but with his telekinesis and enough heat he could perform more or less the sa feat.
In a few minutes, his armor was restored and a thick splitter about a ter and a half long took shape. He did not dare to make a larger weapon because of the limited size of most of the labyrinth’s halls.
Jake then injected the Grey Aether into it at the cost of a few more points and once he was satisfied, he set off. With his armor intact and a real weapon in his hand, he imdiately felt more confident.
The room next door was quite ordinary, but much more spacious. No traps seed to be hidden there, but there were several doors, one of them forming a trap door in the ceiling. He had long understood that rooms could change orientation, so he was not upset.
As he explored the new hall, he realized that three of the four doors were already half-open and that the light arrows pointed only to one of them. The hatch in the ceiling was still locked and for the first ti he discovered that the sacrifice of a Soul Stone was required to open it.
Of the three doors already open, two were plunged into darkness, while the third seed to have been the focus of a terrible battle. The walls and ceiling were covered with ice, while in so places the walls had completely lted, revealing directly the gears and sotis the void separating two neighboring rooms.
Over the next few hours, Jake continued to explore room after room, coming close to death on several occasions. He ca across no one except for the Thralls, which were in so of the darker rooms.
Rooms containing prisoners like Keshom were rare, but there were still enough of them to make exploration terribly difficult. Like the two Krishs before him, whenever he ca across such a creature, he would promptly seek refuge in a well-lit room.
Fortunately, once ard with a decent sword, Jake was no longer fooled. Taking advantage of the creatures’ stupidity, and by finely manipulating his Aether, he could deliver devastating death blows without breaking a sweat. The only precaution he had to take was to never get cornered.
Reviews
All reviews (0)