Chapter 104
Five days passed by. During that time, Alice spent a lot of time thinking about Boris and his Class Seed. By using what she had already learned from previous experiments, Alice eventually came to a few new guesses about how broken mana worked.
Alice remembered that when she had done a few other tests with the System, she had learned that she couldn’t level up when mana wasn’t present in her environment. If she stepped into a manaless room and then exercised or did an experiment, she wouldn’t gain any Attributes or Levels in related classes.
From this, Alice realized that mana wasn’t being created by people like [Farmers] when they farmed. Instead, they were probably breaking the mana they came into contact with. In other words, when someone farmed, the mana they were close to would probably become [Farmer] broken mana, get absorbed by their body, and then their class seed would absorb it from their body and turn it into Levels and Perks. This had a lot of implications that she needed to sit down and think about, but it did allow Alice to expand her thinking in a new direction.
For a long time, people talked about how quickly dimensional mana could spread, and about how a huge amount of mana in the air around any portal would rapidly break. Alice had originally had no clue why this might be true, but if a [Farmer] could break normal mana and turn it into [Farmer] mana, just by touching mana while farming... what if dimensional portals did the same thing? Right now, Alice assumed that mana would be converted from pure mana into broken mana if it came into contact with a certain ‘concept,’ such as farming. There were obviously some restrictions on this; after all, fires didn’t leave ‘fire’ broken mana everywhere, and plants also didn’t create ‘plant’ broken mana when they came into contact with mana. Alice wasn’t sure why this was the case yet.
But the idea that pure mana was so easily influenced by its surroundings was an interesting one, and if every single chunk of mana that flowed through a portal became dimensional broken mana just by coming into contact with a portal, it would explain why any use of dimensional mana quickly flooded an area with broken dimensional mana. The mana in the air was always moving, and so any portal from one place to another would have small amounts of mana passing through it every second.
She wasn’t sure why some people became ‘contagious’ afterwards, polluting their environment with more broken mana after being ‘baptized’ by dimensional broken mana, but she did think she was on the right track for learning more about broken and dimensional mana. While she hadn’t had time to set up a specific experiment to test her assumptions yet, she was getting all sorts of ideas she wanted to analyze in further detail.
Unfortunately, while Alice had gotten some useful information out of Boris’s situation, she was still completely clueless about why Boris’s class seed was partially working when it previously hadn’t. Even though Alice had learned all sorts of interesting tidbits that could help fuel research about the nature of mana, she had no idea how to actually speed up Boris’s recovery. She racked her brain, running back over Natasha’s recount of the past week, but no matter what she thought about, there just didn’t seem to be anything that could have caused Boris’s class seed to change. And, more importantly, Alice had no idea how to help it work faster, or help the Class Seeds of other afflicted start working. This caused Alice no small amount of frustration.
To work off some stress and raise her Levels a bit, Alice took some time to update her enchanted items. She had been meaning to swap out her enchantments ever since she picked up the {Kinetic Enchanting} Perk, which allowed her to permanently increase the number of instructions an enchanting material could ‘remember’ by one. Most of her enchanted items currently only had one or two instructions right now, and given her increasing skill as an [Enchanter], and the increasingly dangerous threats she might face in the future, Alice decided it was time to improve her items. The extra power her enchantments could give her in an emergency situation might save her life one day. Since Ethan was giving her enough money that she no longer cared about her income, Alice decided to splurge on some materials to make her upgrades even bigger.
Alice’s bracelet was the first object she updated. Previously, Alice’s bracelet of stone beads had simply had beads that would turn into makeshift bullets when being thrown, and Alice had eventually added in an Organic component to further attack the flesh of people who got injured by the beads. However, now that Alice had a little bit more funding and better Perks, she decided to swap out the enchanting material entirely, replacing it with a kind of metal that was already able to hold three instructions on its own: one organic, one kinetic, and one pure-mana based instruction. Then Alice tried layering a few different instructions together to explicitly counter what she had faced during the fight to rescue Samantha.
First, she made the objects fire themselves like bullets upon activation towards a specific target. This hadn’t changed from her original bracelet at all. Then, she added in the instruction to make it hard to heal or manipulate flesh within several centimeters of a metal bead after it hit something. Since many of the Society members were Organic Mages, shutting down or weakening their healing abilities seemed like a good idea, even if the natural magic resistance all creatures possessed would weaken the effect of this enchantment instruction by a large amount. Finally, she added in a layer of pure magic to the beads, in order to make them try to mimic the patterns of mana around them. Alice wasn’t sure if this idea would actually help or not, but she felt that it should make it a bit harder for Mages to track the objects using most forms of mana related vision. Some Perks, such as Alice’s {Vastly Improved Kinetic Vision}, would still be able to track the beads easily. However, there were plenty of Perks that relied on mana and mana-related ideas to track objects, and with Alice’s most recent addition to her projectile beads, she would be able to counter those Perks in the future.
With the extra instruction slot granted by {Kinetic Enchanting}, Alice also made the beads explode like shattered glass when they hit something, making them into shrapnel-based enchanted bullets that avoided some detection by Mages and made it hard to heal wounds caused by them. It was an effective counter to lower level Society Mages, although Alice suspected the use of her enchantments would decrease significantly against higher Level combatants. However, even against high Level combatants, wave after wave of beads had a decent chance of killing them if they made a mistake.
Since Alice was happy with her new bracelet, she made a {Blueprint} out of it and made six more copies. Then, she stuck them into {Sample Collection} for future use. After that, she made a necklace that detected and repelled objects that moved too quickly towards her as well. The detection part of the enchantment was rather tricky to figure out, but the Perk Alice got after making her new bead bracelets helped out a lot.
You have leveled up!
Explorer of Magic: 68 -> 69, Careful Enchanter: 20 -> 27, Kinetic Manabinder 38 -> 41, Student 7 -> 8, Student of Organic Magic 1 -> 3
Speed Analysis
Requirements: Kinetic Manabinder level 40, Intelligence 150 or Greater, Perception 100 or Greater, Great amount of time spent trying to manipulate object speeds using Enchantments
I can also see that you have gone far above and beyond any level of connection my husband’s business network may have granted you. To be an apprentice of one of Illvaria’s six surviving Immortals is a feat few people have achieved. I would like to claim that I had a hand in your success, but at this point, I do wonder if you wouldn’t have reached the same heights with or without my help. Congratulations to you, and I’m glad to see that you are doing so well for yourself.
My acquaintanceship with Immortal Ethan goes back to my days in the army. I served on the northern border under Immortal Ethan’s father, and the Sun Knight spent a good amount of time and effort providing me with the materials and training I needed to succeed. I would not have reached the Level I have reached today without his assistance, and I am grateful for his help.
I have interacted less with his Immortal son, but I have still spent some time with him. I have known him to have a somewhat... odd personality. He is sometimes frustrating to work with because his personality can come off as abrasive, especially in certain situations. However, while he can come across the wrong way, I have known him to be very... enthusiastic about the idea of another Immortal showing up in Illvaria.
Alice was highly amused to see Illa, of all people, referring to someone as sometimes abrasive. While Alice didn’t mind Illa’s blunt, pragmatic personality, she was willing to bet it had also irritated plenty of people Illa had worked with in the past.
One of the things you should keep in mind is that most Immortals are lonely. An Immortal is still, at the end of the day, a human. They love their family, laugh with their friends, and cry when their loved ones get hurt. This is why many Immortals are afraid to interact with non-Immortals too frequently; they fear growing close to them because they are afraid of the day their friends will leave them, never to return because they, like many others, failed to reach Immortality before old age took them.
The Sun Knight, for example, grieved for nearly three decades when his first wife died of old age, or so the legends go. Afterwards, he refused to even entertain the idea of remarrying until his current wife approached him. Since she was also an Immortal, he was more willing to entertain the idea of a relationship, and eventually they got married.
They then had several children, most of whom died of old age.
Doll, the Immortal of Steel and Fabric, is an even better example of Immortal loneliness. She refuses to even see non-Immortals for fear of getting attached to them unless they are effectively guaranteed to become Immortals, meaning that they must have proven they have access to a Tier 2 Class and still be relatively young.
The point that I am trying to make is that Ethan is no exception to the concept of Immortal loneliness. In fact, he might be the Immortal who is most influenced by it, since he grew up with parents half-convinced he would die of old age like his siblings. He managed to beat the odds and become an Immortal, but... being the child of two Immortals means that he grew up with a very different view of life and death than most people. And he also had a very unique social status while growing up, making it even harder for him to connect with other people. This is the reason he continuously takes in apprentices and tries to raise them to Immortality, although he has yet to succeed.
If Ethan thinks that you have a good chance of reaching Immortality, he is likely to prioritize your safety and growth over almost everything else. The more you convince him that you have a good chance of reaching Immortality, the more trustworthy he will be with all of your secrets, needs, and wants. The more he feels that you won’t make it, and the more he worries you will die of old age and fail to reach Immortality, the less trustworthy he will become. While I do not think of him as the kind of person who would harm one of his subordinates or acquaintances, either through malice or recklessness, your matters will certainly weigh less heavily on his heart if he thinks you will die in a few decades either way. He is more concerned with making friends who will be around for a few centuries than with friends who will disappear in the blink of an eye.
Considering your age and what I’ve heard of your achievements, you should be very safe.
It has been a delight hearing from you, and I hope to hear from you again in the near future.
Sincerely,
Illa Weissarus
Milo’s letter was much less concentrated on Immortals and Ethan than Illa’s letter, since Alice hadn’t asked him for any information on the subject. His letter was mostly a collection of ramblings about life in southern Illvaria, talking about things such as the increased flow of trade and money in the south, the completion of Illa’s dock, and a pretty [Barmaid] that Milo had begun courting. Alice read over his letter as a pleasant distraction, catching up with Milo’s life before she turned her attention back to the information given to her by Illa.
She had been debating whether to fully trust Ethan for a while now, and while Illa hadn’t said she could trust Ethan unconditionally with her secrets, Alice was happy to have Illa’s thoughts on the psychology of Immortals in this world. And, perhaps more importantly, while there were some conditions attached to Alice’s trust of Ethan, based on Illa’s words it would probably make Alice safer if she told Ethan about her past as an {Outworlder} than if she tried to keep things hidden. Alice felt that her odds of reaching Immortality were quite good; she was much higher level than most people her age, and while her experience multipliers still needed some work before they reached the levels needed for Immortality, Alice was definitely getting closer and closer as time passed. And so, that Friday night, Alice found herself once again outside of Ethan’s study, preparing to talk about the most dangerous part of her past.