Chapter 374: When the Star Fell (IV)

Chapter 374: When the Star Fell (IV)

Chapter 374

When the Star Fell (IV)

Fred loitered about the empty observatory, drinking, reading, and occasionally watching an episode or two of some of his favorite childhood TV shows. He had been at this station for ten years now, though it felt more akin to being in a lighthouse by the shoreline that never saw a ship. He nary had contact with another human being, and were it not for his youngest daughter occasionally paying him a visit, he would have likely gone partly mad in the meantime.

The job he got was fairly simpleobserve the Jupiters moons. That was it. It was in line with his field of study, in line with his dreams as a young boy, but it came at a time that couldnt be worse. All eyes veered away from the empty and open space and toward the Towers, where the dreams were being fulfilled at large. Even his youngest daughter, Sonya, who was born with severe asthma, was now completely cured. In fact, she was a fancy mage, she said, who could shoot fire and make it rain at will.

Fred was oldtoo old for those things. He was breaching his mid-sixties, but what he found strange was that he was almost growing younger rather than older. He was far sprier today than he was fifteen years ago. He could jump, he could dance, he could bend over and pick things up without crying out in pain. He had never went to the Towersnever conscripted himself with magic despite the urging of his kids. And, yet, here he wasyounger rather than old, mobile rather than crippled.

It didnt make his job any less boring, however. While the rest of the humanity was off researching actual alien worlds and learning about more things than he could imagine, he was stuck in the middle of nowhere, on the side of a mountain, staring at the carved portion of the sky, observing nothing and no one. Moons, he mused, were exciting at some point. There were ideas and dreams tossed about colonizing some of them, especially Europa. Today, though, those dreams were dead. In fact, the entire industry around space was dead. Nobody cared anymore. He didnt think so, anyway.

Sighing, he finished off the cup of tea and approached the telescope, peering through it. Hed seen nothing for years and expected to see nothing still. But he was wrong. His heart nearly stopped at the sight he was witnessing and he yelped, tossing himself backward as though he had seen a ghost. No, he did see a ghostor, rather, had seen something that shouldnt be there. Ships. There were ships.

Beams, one after another, shot forward in the burst of energy that would have wounded even him. It was clear that they came preparedbut he didnt care. He reached the armored man and clasped him around the throat, heaving the arm back before tossing it forward, throwing the figure like it was a javelin, imbuing it with a supercharged Mana bomb.

The figure bounced against the ship as the bomb went off. There was no sound in space, yet Cain could almost hear itthat was the sheer scale of the explosion that immediately evaporated two nearby ships from the existence. The shockwave sent him barreling backward and displaced their encirclement; there was likely panic and horror, for he had noted the surge in Mana consumption across the board.

Recovering, he waited for a moment. He felt a bit sick, no doubt the backlash of using over 50% of his total Mana in a singular attack. Though the explosion was truly massive and seemed to scare them momentarily, it was also the strongest attack he could conjure up without temporarily crippling himself. And hed only managed to take out two of their shipsnot to mention that the figure that had the bomb strapped to him survived somehow. Armor, no doubt, Cain mused. Gear, especially past a certain point, became almost as important as Classes and Skills and Spells. It could save or destroy at will, evidenced by Cains own arsenal. He mostly never met his match back on Earth, but this was different. He wasnt dealing with the curated enemies but rather with other Conquerors who likely had far more experience and equipment than he did.

Nonetheless, the blow he dealt seemed to strike well below the surface of things. The figure retreated hastily like a wounded dog licking his wounds while the ships, too, retreated a few paces, coming closer together like a pack of wolves eyeing a defiant prey. Cain didnt pursue or engage immediately, still feeling the effects of burning through so much Mana so quickly. It was just the beginning, he knew. Hed have to endure till Unul fell, at the very least. As far as he knew, Quinn had remained outside, but unlike him she wasnt equipped to fight in open space. By now, she had likely noticed the bursts of energy and was looking to research it.

There would be implicit understanding, he knew, once she realized the situation. The ground battle was all but inevitableand she would, to the best of her abilities, prepare for it while Cain held the armada back for as long as possible. He didnt think he would last that long, howevermostly because he didnt want to use his full strength. If he acted too hastily, he might draw one-too-many eyes at him and at Earth, especially those he didnt want seeing him just yet. This, in turn, limited how much he could do. While he displayed an impressive attack, he also made it obvious enough that it cost him a lot.

It was better to suffer in silence for a little while in the face of the hunting dogs rather than slip and invite over the lions. He knew that Earth was likely under a watchful eye, and though he was told there would be forces masking it, he didnt like the notion of leaving his fate in the hands of some intangible forces. Taking a deep breath, he settled down as the burn slowly faded, his Mana restoring slowly. Once again, he made it purposeful--he could restore all the expended Mana within a couple of minutes normally, but he elected deception instead. Felt safer. How much? That, he didnt know. But he was ready--as ready as he ever was going to be for fighting an invading, alien, space armada, a string of words he never thought would add up in a sentence that made sense.

And yet, he mumbled, grinning faintly as he felt the ships slowly coalesce energy. Lo and behold.