Chapter 162: Ash Wolf
With an explosion of ash, Vir darted to the nearest Ash Wolf, his katar extended. Even in the Ash, Vir doubted many beasts could move as quickly as he could.
Ash Wolves didnt match his speed, they exceeded it handily. The wolf calmly moved to the side, easily dodging his thrust.
Worse, Vir shot past, giving his back to the enemy. Hed put so much power into his attack, it became extremely difficult to stop, let alone redirect his attacks. Vir flew for another fifty paces before finally slowing enough to dig his heels into the ash.
The moment he did, he was beset by all five wolves, and unlike before, Cirayus wasnt keeping them from pouncing on him all at once.
Forget attacking, Vir was hard-pressed to dodge and block their unending torrent of blows. The moment he blocked a claw, an open maw would be diving for his neck. Ducking that only put him face to face with two more sets of claws.
Vir had wondered why the Ash Wolves Balar rank soared so dramatically in a pack. Normally, the effect was additive, but not so with these beasts. Together, they were more than the sum of their parts, acting more like a single entity with five bodies, rather than individual units.
They fluidly and seamlessly pressured Vir, reminding him of Spears Edge and also the two Hiranyan warriors whod ambushed him in the Godshollow.
True teamwork is terrifying.
It was something hed never quite achieved with Spears Edge.
Vir dodged claws and maws, blocking the ones he had to. He was losing, and his enemy knew it.
I need some way of isolating one from the rest, he thought furiously.
Easier said than done. In the few instances where Vir attacked a wolf, it always moved in a way that kept it close to the pack.
After defending an onslaught of claws, Vir glimpsed the slightest opening, lunging forth with his katar only to find another pair of claws lunging at him from the sides.
A trap!?
Vir slammed his leg down, leveraging High Jump to abruptly change course. Even then, he wasnt fast enough.
Claws slashed across his armor, leaving scratch marks across the pristine seric.
These things are way too smart, he muttered under his breath.
The attack brought with it another considerationhe needed to be far more careful about damage to his armor. Without a means of repairing it, any damage would be permanent. Haymis magic had protected him before, taking damage before the actual armor took damage, but now that he lacked that boon, hed need to consider when and where he took hits.
Vir wasnt skilled enough to dodge every blow, but he started focusing on evasion more to protect his armor. Which meant he had even fewer opportunities to strike back.
He needed time to come up with a fresh strategy.
Reaching for his ultimate weapon, Vir pulled prana from his legs and tried to sink into the shadows Nothing happened. The Shadow Realm remained firmly shut. Then he looked up at the sky and understood.
It wasnt so much cloudy as it was murky. In the Ashen Realm, day and night didnt exist. The lighting was always hazy and dim, obscured by the unending ashfalls, which meant Dance was far less reliable.
Sweat built up along Virs brow and his breaths grew increasingly labored. The wolves were wearing him down, and if he didnt do something soon, theyd win.
One minute, Cirayus called from some distance away.
Desperately, Vir created more of a suction, pulling so much prana from his feet into his legs until it was practically dry.
It was not an easy task. Ground prana threatened to rush into his body, overloading the wall hed erected next to his skin.
Finally, just as an Ash Wolf lunged at him, the shadows opened, and Vir sunk, freezing time.
Not doing that again, he thought, taking a breather.
Though pain couldnt find him in the shadows, the throbbing sensation hed experienced right before lingered in his mind. Forcing Dance to activate like that came with its consequences. It might work for emergencies, but it wasnt something he could rely on continuously.
It left a sour taste in his mouth knowing his most powerful ability was crippled in the Ash, especially considering all the gains hed just made.
That said, in the Human Realm, it wouldve been impossible to brute force the ability, no matter how hard he tried.
Could it be the same reason?
Never before had he cycled so much. For the simple reason that there just wasnt enough prana to do so. Hed always rationed his consumption as aggressively as possible to allow more Talent uses in a prana-starved land.
With that limitation now removed, the prana he consumed was incomparable, even with Parais technique boosting his prana efficiency.
Prana saturation Is that when the body reaches its prana channeling limit?
Aye. No one knows why, but after channeling a certain quantity of prana, the body begins to resist any more. It is as though prana burns us out. Luckily, the situation is temporary. A day or two of rest generally fixes the issue. One of our most gifted researchers, Saunak, once experimented with it, but his results were inconclusive, if I recall. And highly unethical. The man was rather insane.
Demons have prana researchers? Vir asked. Hed never heard of anything similar in the Human Realm.
Oh yes. Plenty. I think youll find our knowledge of prana far superior to that of the humans. If Im honest, felt like I was watching children play with toys.
Agreed, Vir replied. Humans had copied inscriptions for millennia, yet there had been nearly no advancement in that time. To this day, all of their spells are hailed from the Age of the Gods. Hadnt anyone tried to change the inscriptions? Hadnt anyone studied prana?
Or was it something else? Was there danger involved in doing so?
Vir didnt even need to think about thatthere was lots of danger playing with prana, as hed found out firsthand. Yet humans were often reckless. Surely there was bound to be someone who didnt mind losing their life, who progressed the science?
It has to be something else, then
Like a restriction. Some limitation that prevented humans from changing the script. Too bad Vir couldnt look into it until he was back in the Human Realm. He doubted itd be soon.
Youd best conserve your prana, Cirayus said, as he skinned the hide off of some of the beasts Vir has killed. Seems counterintuitive, but here, your body is the limiting factor. For our purposes, prana is essentially infinite.
Cirayus was right. Prior to the Ash, Vir could never have guessed just how nuanced controlling his abilities here would be. What would it be like for mejai, then? How many learned the tricks before prana poisoning took them?
First Dance, now saturation Vir had several developments to consider. Not to mention how Prana Vision continued to obscure his eyesight even now, with Ash Affinity obscuring most everything else.
If only I could tune it somehow
It was an idle thought, but not a bad one. Until now, hed simply sent prana to his eyes, and that was that. If he could selectively filter out affinities
A dozen applications unfolded. If he knew someones prana signature and could tune it for only that particular signature, hed be able to spot anyone, anywhere, anytime. If he wanted to scout for Lightning Affinity mejai, he could easily locate everyone. Even those with dual or triple affinities.
As it was, Prana Vision was good at analyzing an individual. It was largely useless for looking at a whole crowd of people and quickly picking out an individual unless they had strong affinities.
And if I can filter for strength Vir could tune out all the weaklings, focusing only on the highest-priority threats.
Of course, this was all conjecture. He didnt know if any of this was actually possible, but something needed to change, or Prana Vision would be more an impediment than a boon in the Ash.
Your training foundation is passable, Cirayus said, plucking a fang from a downed Ash Wolf. Your foundation is sound. Your instincts, your sense for the flow of battle, and your tactics are all logical and well-honed. Few at your level of strength can get an Ash Wolf pack to rout. Even weak ones here at the edge of the Ash.
Thanks to Dance of the Shadow Demon. Id have been in a lot of trouble without it.
Though, maybe I can match their speed now, with Blink.
It is good that you realize it. If you understand that much, Ive no doubt youll come up with countermeasures.
Thanks, Vir replied, thinking of how differently Cirayus treated him compared to Riyan. Riyan would just throw Vir into danger and force him to figure things out. Even when Vir succeeded, the man was conservative with his praise. And when he failed? Thered be no end of criticism.
Respect, Vir thought. Thats the difference.
Cirayus treated him with respect. Yes, the demon pushed him to challenge his limits, but in all situations, hed been there to back Vir up in case he got himself in trouble. Cirayus pointed out his shortcomings, but also recognized his strengths, and lauded him for his accomplishments.
It felt good. Maybe it was because Vir knew just how incredibly strong Cirayus was. There was just something about the mans bearing. The way he spoke and carried himself spoke of endless wisdom. The aura. It made his words have weight.
I guess its no wonder if hes lived for four hundred years
Now, let us review your performance in depth, shall we?