POV Kevin Vane, still one week earlier
“I need Sebastian in custody,” Kevin said, projecting an
almost divine authority. He paused, his eyes flickering around the room
briefly. Being so far from the capital made it more difficult to hold on
to the confidence he had built up. This was a high-leveled professional
he was talking to, a leader, and he found the pressure getting to him.
”If… If he finds out I’m here or that we know where he is, he’ll run,
he’ll disappear. You know this city, Commander; what are our options?”
he asked.
The two sat to discuss the matter in a conference room.
It looked much like similar rooms Kevin had used back home. A large
table in the center, a cork board on the far wall, and opaque windows.
There were two other officers in the room, but they both stood to the
side and knew better than to speak unless spoken to.
Commander Wadley leaned forward and rested his elbows on
the conference table. “The hunting party is one of only a handful of
rank 5 parties still in the city and we don’t have the available
manpower for a full on assault. We would win, obviously, but the
collateral damage would be… catastrophic. Entire city blocks would be
leveled before we could take them down, the death toll in the thousands.
To keep this operation within parameters, we need to move quietly.
Their Detection Skills are too powerful for us to sneak in. We’ll need
to lure them out, or better yet, lure the target away from the group.”
Taking a breath, Kevin leaned forward to match the commander. “I suspect you already have a plan in mind, Commander?”
“I do, sir. Although it is rather… underhanded. I’m not
sure how Sir Candidate feels about using underhanded means for an
operation like this,” Commander Wadley said softly, carefully gauging
the hero candidate’s reaction.
Kevin maintained direct eye contact. “Commander, if it
gets me alone in a room with Sebastian, I’m OK with just about anything
you could suggest.”
A bright, relieved smile formed on the commander’s face.
“Excellent, sir.” He brought out a folder and spread some papers out on
the table. “We have avoided touching any of the target’s direct points
of contacts within the city, lest we be discovered and cause the target
to flee or go underground. However, on his journey here, he shared a
compartment with four other travelers.”
“Do you suspect them of being affiliated with the demons as well, Commander?”
“No, sir.” The commander presented a few papers detailing
the four travelers. Images of Verrill, William, Ridgeley, and Marcel
were displayed on the top left of each respective file. “We’ve
investigated them thoroughly, and none of them have any ties with the
Demonic Lands in the East or any known, or suspected, demonic presences
in the city. However, they traveled with the target for several weeks.
Even if he didn’t share anything of importance with them, demons tend
not to leave loose threads behind unless they have plans for them later.
We suspect the target has marked those four as subjects for their
demonic rituals.”
With every mention of demons, Kevin’s mood dropped further. “Do we have any way of making sure?”
“I believe so, sir. We apprehended all of them shortly
after the Royal Freightliner arrived. My plan is as follows—we make use
of our contacts in Luxendorf’s criminal underworld who shall pretend to
have kidnapped them over some… slight, or other. They’re criminals,
motivations are irrelevant. If they truly are just strangers, citizens
who happened to have been in the wrong place at the wrong time, then the
target will most assuredly ignore the criminals’ summons, and we will
set them free and pursue other plans of attack. If, however, he truly
has marked them for his rituals, then he will surely come to secure
them. When he does, we will be waiting.”
POV Sebastian, now
Sebastian spent the morning familiarizing himself with his new Title, Skill, and Technique.
With the creation of his new Sword Art, he was astounded
by the ease with which he swung the sword. Without much effort, the
blade easily followed the path of the Techniques he had been training
with Silas for the past few weeks. There was no wobble or uncertainty in
his movements whatsoever.
It’s so strange. I’m following the
exact movements Silas showed me, and yet the [System] considers this to
be a new Sword Art. Shouldn’t this just be whichever style Silas trained
in? The only thing I can think of, other than the circulation of
essence through my meridian system, is that the [System] must just be that
sensitive to intent. Because the intent I formed yesterday is different
from what Silas wields, or what the style itself teaches, the [System]
considers it something different.
That’s very good to know, that means
that I can truly personalize just about any Technique or Skill I learn,
assuming I can muster an intent strong enough, and clear enough, for
the [System] to acknowledge.
After practicing for a few hours Sebastian felt much more
comfortable wielding his sword. Unlike before, when he mostly just
swung it at random, or at least according to his best judgment and
memory, now he was using actual swordsmanship.
“Well I’ll be damned, you actually look like a proper swordsman now,” said Silas as he announced himself from the door frame.
Sebastian turned around in surprise. “Thanks, I had
something of a breakthrough last night, and I finally gained the
[Swordsman] Title and [Swordsmanship] Skill thanks to your help.”
Silas’ eyes opened wide in shock.
“You earned the acknowledgment of the [System] last
night? That’s incredible, it usually takes months or even years of
training and— Wait… Did you say you gained a Skill called
‘[Swordsmanship]’?” asked Silas incredulously.
“Uhm… Yeah, I did. Is something wrong?”
Silas stared at him for a moment with his eyes still wide
open and his jaw almost touching the floor. “Swordsmen usually gain the
Skill of whichever sword style they’ve trained in, not just a generic
swordsmanship Skill. I have the [Imperial Sword] skill, with the
stances, defensive, and offensive techniques I’ve focused on as
Sub-Skills. How does that even work with just a generic Skill?”
Sebastian immediately realized that the discrepancy must
be because of his dual Statuses. His Sword Art was registered as a
Technique under his Cultivation Status, not a Skill under the System
Status.
Rather than trying to retcon what he had just said he decided to just play dumb.
“Yeah, I don’t actually know. I guess with your help and a
night of hard work the [System] decided to reward me,” Sebastian said
with a shrug.
“Clearly you’re a natural. I know you insist that you
don’t have some Talent for swords, but I don’t know how else to explain
it, I’ve never seen anything like it before.” He shook his head in
disbelief. “Anyway, lets put your new Skill and Title to the test, shall
we?”
This tale has been unlawfully lifted from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.
They both readied themselves for another spar.
Sebastian wielded a one-handed sword, so he didn’t have
much range. To test the waters, he slowly stepped forward and swung an
introductory horizontal strike using one the moves of the 1st. stage of
his new Sword Art.
Silas effortlessly blocked it and returned with a
diagonal slash which Sebastian barely managed to block as he recovered
from his own failed attack.
If this was a serious fight, Silas would have pressed on,
but instead he let Sebastian find his footing again before he stepped
in and lazily feinted an attack on his right, only to sidestep to the
left and deliver a slashing strike toward Sebastian’s side.
Sebastian successfully reacted in time and blocked the
slash and responded with a swing toward Silas’s head who simply took a
step back to evade his blade.
This continued for a while.
Sebastian did his absolute best to wield his sword with
his new Sword Art. He even tried his best to use his intent and
essence to empower his attacks. All the while, Silas easily kept him at
bay and occasionally threw a challenging attack to test Sebastian’s
limits.
It ended after a few hours with Sebastian lying on the
ground, beaten, bruised, and utterly exhausted. Perhaps even more so
than before.
“You did pretty good, Baz! Your swordsmanship is still
crude, and you’re obviously still rather weak and slow, but with your
new Skill and Title, you’ve improved by leaps and bounds. It’s like
fighting a completely different person from yesterday.”
Sebastian mustered a chuckle. “Thanks.”
“Seriously, you did surprisingly well. Honestly speaking,
with this, these spars are gonna turn into half-way decent training
sessions for me too.”
Once their sparring was done, they joined the rest of the group to plan what was to come next.
They didn’t get very far before they were interrupted by
someone approaching the church and knocking on the door. When Rafi
opened the door he was met by a skinny man with a nervous look in his
eyes and a crooked nose, wearing a basic leather jacket over a stained
white shirt. In his hand was a letter.
“I have a message for your newest member, on behalf of
Boss Raph.” the messenger’s previously nervous look was replaced by a
practiced look of confidence as he delivered a line which was most likely
rehearsed on his way over.
“Alright, give it here then, and I’ll pass it along,” Rafi said, extending his hand.
The messenger pulled back the letter defensively. “No! I’ve been instructed to hand this to him personally.”
The two looked at each other for a while before Rafi sighed. He turned around and called out, “Message for Baz!”
Sebastian felt a pang of dread and nervously looked
around. He stood up and walked over to the door. He didn’t even have
time to speak a word before the grunt shoved the letter into his hands.
“There, a message from Boss Raph!”
Sebastian stood there dumbstruck for a moment before
looking over to Rafi who simply shrugged his shoulders and walked back
to the others. Sebastian closed the door and followed suit.
“So, Baz, is this the trouble you mentioned? The reason
why you’re hiding and leaving the country. You have a gang out to get
you?” asked Bishop.
The dread from earlier had eased up knowing it wasn’t the
city guard come to drag him off to some prison to be tortured and
killed, but in its place was a mild curiosity overshadowed by
frustration. All he wanted to do was leave this country behind him, but
now he had to deal with criminals all of a sudden.
“No, I genuinely have no idea what this it about, I don’t even know who this Boss Raph is.”
“Well, open it and find out then,” said Silas.
Sebastian did just that. He broke the wax seal on the
envelope, opened the flap and took out the letter. It was a simple
message—a declaration and summons, which he read out loud for the others
to hear.
Dear asshole.
I understand you broke my brother’s jaw in an incident a few weeks past.
If there’s one thing I’m known for, it’s that I honor my debts.
You hurt someone of mine, so I’ve taken a few of yours.
It was difficult to find
anyone in the city who might matter to you, but I finally found four who
I hope shall do the trick, you did spend several weeks traveling
alongside them, after all.
Come to warehouse 7 at eleven PM tonight, or I will kill them and find someone else to hurt.
Know that I will not stop until my debt is payed in full.
Sincerely, Raphael Bronte.
PS. You are expected to come alone. If you do not, or if you so much as tell anyone else about this, they die.
“I really feel like that messenger should have told me not to read this out loud,” Sebastian said.
“You broke Raphael Bronte’s brother’s jaw?” asked Bishop.
“Not intentionally, I didn’t know he was Raphael Bronte’s
brother, I didn’t even know who Raphael Bronte was. Actually, I still
don’t, although I suppose I’m putting the pieces together.”
Dolan stood up and walked over to get his equipment.
“Well, you’re definitely not going alone. I’m coming with you. I can
keep out of sight and if something goes wrong—which it will because
you’ll be walking into a trap—I’ll provide some backup.”
When the late evening came around, Sebastian
hired a rickshaw to take him across the city. It was surprisingly
inexpensive and walking across the city wouldn’t have left him much time
to prepare. Not that he had much to prepare, but they did make some
plans for how Dolan would stay close and what to do when the gang
inevitably tried to kill him.
Time flies when you’re having fun, and Sebastian found
out that it flies just as fast, if not faster when you’re traveling
toward a deathtrap.
He got out of the rickshaw which quickly left him alone
in the dark, looking at a massive warehouse. On his way over, he had
expected a welcoming party as soon as he arrived, but the area was
empty, not a person in sight.
He approached a door on the side of the warehouse which
opened on its own just as he reached for the handle. The bright light
almost blinded him in contrast to the darkness of the outside.
Sebastian took a moment to take a deep breath.
As he walked in, he reminded himself that Dolan was around, somewhere.
Dolan was the party’s ranger and had a number of both
Stealth Skills and Detection Skills. Sebastian couldn’t see him, but he
knew that Dolan was watching. Knowing he had backup made him feel just a
little bit better.
He walked through a short corridor which led to a large,
bright, open space, as warehouses tend to have. The warehouse was
emptier than expected as well. There wasn’t an army of gang members to
immediately surround him. There were only two men—one sitting on a chair
in the middle of the room, facing another empty chair, and another man
standing on his left hand side.
The man who was standing was in, what Sebastian assumed
was, this world’s version of a black suit. Black pressed slacks, a
pristine white shirt, and a black jacket with some strings on the front
rather than buttons. If not for the sword hanging from his waist
Sebastian would probably have guessed that he had just come from some
fancy formal event, although this was most likely just how he always
dressed.
His boss, however, sitting on the chair with the casual
confidence of a man who owns every room he’s in, didn’t care as much
about his clothes.
He too was wearing a white shirt—which seemed to be
something of a theme with the gang—but rather than formal slacks he
paired his white shirt with a pair of shorts. More cargo shorts than
swim trunks. He crossed his arms, with his sleeves unevenly rolled up,
as he leaned back in his chair.
A simple gesture, but it made Sebastian’s spine tingle.
Maybe because his arms were size of tree trunks yet still felt
proportional to his massive shoulders, or because the essence that
emanated from the man rivaled the strongest he’d ever felt—which was
Bishop, and he had learned that Bishop was well over level 50. His
shoulder-length unkempt hair and the scar across his face weren’t even
particularly noticeable as his grey eyes practically forced your gaze to
stare directly at them.
“Sebastian, I presume,” his gravelly voice resonated
throughout the warehouse. “I’m pleasantly surprised, most people don’t
have the balls to show up to something like this. Certainly not alone. I
was quite curious, given the way they talked about you. I figured there
had to be something special about you. I asked myself—why is the
interim commander so desperate to catch you that he’d lower himself to
the point of asking for my help?” Boss Raph leaned forward, resting his
elbows on his knees and interlocking his fingers, and stared directly
into Sebastian’s soul. “So tell me, who are you, Sebastian Moore?”
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