Chapter 122: Parai The Ancient
Vir awoke to a forest, but not the one hed just left. A thin haze hovered just off the ground, giving the forest an ethereal, serene feeling.
Peaceful, but also eerie. None of the trees in this forest had leaves, nor even branches. Bare trunks stood tall, piercing the mist-hidden sky high above.
Where am I?
Confused, Vir stood up and checked himself over. No wounds to speak of. Either some god had healed his wounds and spirited him away to this forest, orUpdated from novelbIn.(c)om
Ash Prana populated the air. There was only one place Vir had seen such a phenomenon.
So, Im experiencing another memory.
But if it was a memory, it was unlike all the others until now. Those had all featured one of his predecessors, usually embroiled in a battle of some sort. There was never anything so blissful.
Vir walked through the silent forest in a daze. So silent that the crunching of his boots sounded loud in his head. Before hed realized it, hed started softening his steps to avoid disturbing the peace.
He didnt wander for long. The ferocious prana signature emanating from the clearing ahead was hard to miss.
Vir cautiously wandered into the small meadow. At its center sat a being dressed in pure white. With a flowing white beard, Vir initially mistook him for Janak. But his facial features were different. Wrinkled and old, where Janaks had been taut and powerful.
The gray-skinned man sat barefoot in a lotus position, with his arms resting on his knees and his index fingers pressed against his thumbs. His eyes were closed in apparent meditation.
Um, hello? Vir asked, approaching the figure. But there was no response. Though Vir hesitated to interrupt the mans meditation, he needed to know what was going on. He reached out to shake the man, but found that his hand went right through.
Of course Im in his memory, arent I? Im not really here.
After pacing around the meditating man, he took a seat opposite him, crossing his legs. When Vir had asked for help, this wasnt exactly what he had in mind. But he knew little about how his past incarnations memory fragments functioned. Could they choose which one they showed him? Or was it random?
After his vision with Narak the Destroyer, Vir had learned that the older his incarnation, the less transmitted. The first to go was will and awareness, leaving these memories far less useful.
While it could be mere coincidence, Vir wanted to believe there was a reason his prior selves had shown him this memory. Shardul and Ekanai generally intervened when his life was in danger, and it was little wonder why.
Theyd made it abundantly clear that he had some destiny he was supposed to fulfill. One that lay in the Ashen Realm. It was in their best interest to keep him alive. Hed even tried abusing that, back in Daha, but help was not forthcoming.
Which likely meant they knew more about him and his thoughts than they let on.
But why are they helping me now? Or are these memories of older incarnations beyond their control?
Or were Shardul and Ekanai recognizing his journey south as progress toward the Ashen Realm? They werent wrongone of his goals was to collect as much information on the Ash as possiblebut whatever it was, Vir wasnt going to question it.
He had so many questions about how this all worked, but he feared he wouldnt find the answers anytime soon. Not until he ventured into the Ash.
For now, all he could do was to learn what he could from this bearded old man. Since he couldnt converse with him, he could at least watch him. Maybe hed glean something.
The patterns were far too complex and many for Vir to memorize. There must have been dozens, if not hundreds of patterns. Some small, others large. And it wasnt like he could experiment blindly, either. That was a sure path to accidental death.
What can I do? What can I take away?
Vir wracked his mind. At this rate, hed learn nothing of consequence. Only that Prana Armor was possible, and that cycling blood produced incredible results if done right.
Attempting to absorb it all was futile. So instead, Vir focused on one single pattern.
But which one?
The patterns at Parais arms and legs likely enhanced those parts. But what Vir really needed was a means to heal himself. Something to boost his vitality against the acid that was eating its way into his body.
While time must function differently in this memory fragment, Vir knew his time wasnt unlimited. Hed be forced to return, and if he didnt have a means to stop the acid, hed surely die.
Vir searched through the many patterns, looking for anything that might help solve his problem. Hed no doubt the answer was there, buried in the myriad of flows, but which was right?
Unfortunately, his wound constrained him. Vir wasnt about to experiment or modify Parais patterns, and right now, he needed something for his back. That limited where he searched. But even on the mans back, there were several.
One pattern looped in a very convoluted, complex figure eight, while another looked more like an oval, circling around Parais entire backside. Another was so complex, Vir didnt even know how to describe it.
Lacking a reference, Vir picked the oval. Not only did the blood in that pattern move the fastest, but it was also the simplest, and the least likely for Vir to mess up. For all he knew, they might all boost his vitality, or perhaps none of them would.
Vir focused inwardly and attempted to replicate Parais pattern. Though he braced for the pain, it still made him reel. And because hed attempted to move so much blood, he nearly blacked out.
Luckily, it seemed like blacking out was actually impossible in this space. In fact, he doubted whether he could die here.
Vir grinned. If thats the case
Then all he had to deal with was the pain. And Vir was no stranger to pain. If it meant he could experiment in a safe environment, he'd grin and bear it. Such an opportunity would likely never come again.
And so he practiced. He mimicked Parai's cycling pathways, only to find discrepancies. Issues that should have killed him, rupturing blood vessels in his body. Except nothing of the sort happened. Vir felt pain, yes, but nothing he couldn't handle.
Vir pressed on, unrelenting. Rather than be demoralized by the pain, he thrived in it. Where most would shy away and fear the pain, he used it as a guide to correct his errors. A brutal instructor that pointed the right way.
And slowly, he made progress. His cycling pattern mirrored Parai's closer and closer, and details he never even knew to look for initially were now mimicked near-perfectly.
An agonizing hour later, his time was up.
If only I had more time...
There were so many more patterns to learn. So much power to obtain here.
Yet whatever rules the memory fragment operated under had determined that he must leave. The fragment dimmed, and the man seated across from him grew hazy and incorporeal.
I dont know if you can hear me, Parai. But thank you. I owe you one.