Ash. The Legends of the Nameless World. Progression Gamelit Story by Kirill Klevanski (ink book reader .txt) π

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- Author: Kirill Klevanski
Read book online Β«Ash. The Legends of the Nameless World. Progression Gamelit Story by Kirill Klevanski (ink book reader .txt) πΒ». Author - Kirill Klevanski
βMy... staff...β the mage breathed out.
βYes, of course!β
Alice jumped up, frowned her thin brows, and said something. Her wind flew up like a swallow, and the spell holding the staff broke like a strained lute string. Ash stretched out his hand and in less than a moment felt a pleasant weight. His fingers gripped the warm wood. The Stumps stared with their mouths ajar as Ash underwent a metamorphosis. His eyes shone with a renewed light, and the circles under them seemed to disappear. The frostbitten blue was gone from his skin and replaced with a healthy shade of pink.
In less than a heartbeat, the mage was back on his feet, the usual mischievous smile back on his face. He grasped the staff tighter, flexed his fingers, cracked his neck, and bent over a couple of times to make sure that everything was working properly. Once he was done, he nodded with satisfaction.
βWhat... What was that?β Alice asked. She had never before seen something like that.
βA secret.β Ash smiled. He couldnβt let them know that a part of his soul was forever encased in the staff β the price of Firewoodβs power.
While Alice was trying to persuade the mage to reveal his secret, Lari was digging through a pile of ice and snow. After a couple of moments of rummaging around, he pulled out a heart-shaped chunk of ice. It was so brilliantly red that it looked like a ruby.
βThe faeβs heart!β Mary exclaimed, snatching the loot from her friendβs hands. βWeβre gonna be rich!β
She wasnβt exaggerating. It was hard to even imagine how much such a thing could be sold for at an auction. Let alone how much any mage worth their salt would be willing to pay for such an artifact.
βThe last hear went for almost thousand gold!β Her eyes shone with something between greed and pride.
βA thousand gold pieces!β Blackbeard exclaimed. βWith all the taxes, one hundred and fifty gold per person.β
The Stumps fell silent. An experienced adventurer earned that much for two or three years of hard and very dangerous work.
Ash scratched the top of his head and looked around. He had expected the enchanted castle to shake and fall apart after the death of its owner, but it didnβt. The ice continued to glitter, and the shadows continued to dance. If you strained your ears, you could hear the screams of the faeβs slaves from somewhere deep within the ancient halls. Having lost their mistress, they were now prisoners of the wasteland.
The mage cleared his throat.
βWhat?β Mary asked.
βWe canβt keep it.β
Silence.
βAre you out of your mind?!β Mary shouted.
βDonβt listen to him! He has lost his mind due to the torture!β Tul nodded.
βIt costs a fortune!β Lari added.
βItβs too precious!β Alice joined in.
βHeβs right,β Blackbeard said, combing his beloved beard. When everyone, including Ash, turned to look at him in bewilderment, he rolled his eyes and let out a sigh. βLook around. The place is still frozen. Whether we killed AnnaβBre or not wonβt matter. When we return and report to Moron, do you know what heβll hear? That we cowardly put an arrow in our enemyβs back!β
βWhat if we say that we just got lucky?β Lari suggested.
βLucky and dishonorable.β Blackbeard grimaced. βEveryone will blow the story out of proportion and weβll become known as cowards who wonβt hesitate to stab their enemy in the back.β
βWe donβt have to report anything,β Mary drawled thoughtfully.
βDo you really think that gold is more important than our reputation?!β Blackbeard exclaimed. He was getting rallied up. βHow many squads can brag about having killed a fae? No one! Even guilds donβt have more than one or two demons mounted on their walls! We could!β
βBut... But coin...β Tul mumbled, all sad.
βTo hell with it!β Blackbeard snapped. βThe king will give us three times more than that! Do you really think that we can carry this icy heart to the Fire Mountain? If it doesnβt melt there and curse us, then itβll attract everyone and everything that can sense magic.β
Silence fell upon them and Ash could swear that he could hear the sound of cogs turning in everyoneβs heads. Finally, Mary exhaled and unclenched her hand. The heart fell to the floor.
βYouβre right,β she said. βIf we tell them that we removed GravenβDorβs curse, then it wonβt matter that we stabbed AnnaβBre in the back.β
βAs if no one ever played dirty in a fight,β Tul said.
Lari and Alice tried to seem cheerful despite tears that kept trying to swell up in their eyes.
βEsh.β Mary turned to the slightly shocked mage. He had never expected the Stumps to give up on so much coin. βCan you destroy it?β
βIβll try.β
Having said that, he walked over to the heart and stood so that everyone could only see his back. Little did his companions know that his offer was less than noble. If a follower of magic absorbed something this powerful, like he did with Hu-Chinβs blue flame, thenβ¦
But before he could get down to destroying the heart, he had one more matter he needed to clear up.
βWhy did you come back for me?β
βWhat do you mean why?β Lari grunted. βWhat else should you do when your friend is in trouble?β
The mage turned sharply. The Stumps smiled, warmly and sincerely. Even Mary. Even Lari.
βHey, whatβs on your face?β Alice asked quietly.
βMeltwater.β
Ash turned away and wiped a salty tear from his cheek. He then raised his staff and drove it into the heart. No one noticed the bottom flash with blue fire before the impact.
The Stumps covered their ears, trying to block the deafening ring that still managed to daze them even through their pressed palms. Icicles fell from the ceiling; the centuries-old ice cracked; and the zombies, finally at
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