《The Dragon Mage Saga: A portal fantasy LitRPG》Dragon Mage 051 - Fragmented Hearts
Advertisement
383 days until the Arkon Shield falls
2 days, 9 hours until Dungeon Purge
Esteemed guildmaster,
I hear and obey. You will be pleased to note that I have instituted a three-shift regime. Our scryers are working round the clock. For now, the new approach is yielding better results, but it would be remiss of me not to point out that once fatigue sets in, progress will slow. —Senior Surveyor Wysterl.
After a quick search to assure myself that the bailey was empty, I set about healing my injured limb.
The arm was badly mangled, but it was nothing lay hands couldn’t fix. Leaning against one of the courtyard’s inner walls, I sent cooling streams of mana into the limb, realigning splintered bones, mending torn ligaments, and restoring ripped skin. A few minutes later, my arm was whole again and blessedly pain-free.
I’d gained three levels from the granite elementals’ deaths, and while I had not personally dealt any damage to either creature, I felt as if I had earned every point of experience the Trials awarded me. The encounter had not been easy, nor was it one I cared to repeat.
Flexing my fingers, I took a second longer look at the bailey. The cobblestones of the rainswept courtyard were dark and wet. On the end opposite the portcullis, a set of wooden double doors led into the Keep proper. To the left of the gate, a narrow set of stone steps led upwards to the ramparts and the towers set in each of the castle’s four corners.
The towers rose high enough above the castle proper that each had a clear line of sight to nearly every point in the bailey. If I hadn’t seen to the ice elementals earlier, at this very moment, I would be surrounded on all sides and facing a barrage of ice from above.
Huh. Good thing I took care of them before this, I thought, resuming my inspection of the bailey.
A toothed wheel was to the right of the portcullis, inset in the courtyard’s inner wall itself. It was the control mechanism for the gate, I assumed. The bailey itself was bare, absent of any furnishings and providing little shelter from the weather.
What now?
My gaze gravitated again to the Keep’s doors, and I rubbed at my chin as I considered my next move. It would be nice to get inside the castle and out of the rain, but all my energy pools were low, and I dared not enter the Keep unprepared.
I need to rest and recover before I move on. I glanced upwards at the towers. And perhaps do a bit of exploration.
Destroying the bridge had been a gamble. It had been necessary at the time, but it did not change the reality I faced. With the bridge gone, I had no way out of the Keep—other than swimming across the moat, of course, and that I was not about to attempt any time soon.
Advertisement
I shrugged, accepting my situation. I was trapped in the Keep, and there were likely orcs waiting for me outside the dungeon. Usually, either of those things would drive me crazy with worry, but given what I had gone through to get here, I didn’t let them trouble me.
First, I would clear the dungeon. Then I would worry about escaping. And only thereafter would I concern myself with the waiting orcs.
And who knows, with the way things have been going so far, I might not live long enough for two of those things to be of much concern.
✽✽✽
The first thing I did before moving on from the bailey was to check the dungeon run counter. Turning my gaze inwards, I queried my Trials core.
Time remaining before the Primal Keep is purged: 2 days and 9 hours.
Enough time to chance a rest, I decided.
Turning away from the Keep’s doors, I ascended the stairway leading to the ramparts. The steps were slippery but otherwise easy enough to climb, but my lips turned down unhappily when I reached the castle heights.
The weather atop was wilder than below. The rain pelted me hard, and the wind tugged at my clothes. I’d come up here primarily to find somewhere to rest. The bailey was not secure enough for my liking. With only a single staircase leading up to it, the castle heights seemed a far more ideal location. The rough weather made it less so.
Still, better safe than warm.
Descending back down, I cast a life monitor ward midway on the staircase before returning to the ramparts. Unless enemies descended down on me from above, the ward would provide me with ample forewarning of approaching hostiles.
Glancing from left to right, I surveyed the ramparts themselves. The walkway was narrow, barely wide enough for two people to walk abreast. It ran along the inside of the tower walls, too, I noted, forming a continuous loop atop the castle.
I pursed my lips as I considered the towers. It would certainly be warmer inside one of them, assuming I could get in. There hadn’t been any entrances from the bailey below; I’d checked.
Turning left, I approached the closest tower. As I drew nearer, I noticed another set of stairs zigzagging up the outside of the structure. Urgh. Seeing the exterior stairs, I suspected there wouldn’t be any entrances into the tower from this level either, and sure enough, there weren’t.
Sighing, I considered the upward spiraling stairs. It would be even colder atop the tower. Still, better check what’s there, at least. Leaning heavily on my staff for support, I climbed up.
I was right. It was cold. Icy, really.
Advertisement
Narrowing my eyes against the driving rain, I surveyed the top of the tower. It was empty. There wasn’t even a trapdoor leading down. The suspicion that there was one was why I had climbed up in the first place. What a waste, I thought and began turning away.
Midway through the motion, I stopped.
There was a heap of something white lying against the opposite end of the tower. Now, what can that be? I wondered, my brows creasing.
A moment later, my face cleared as the realization hit me. Of course. It’s the dead elemental. Turning about, I approached the corpse. As I drew closer, the air turned abruptly frigid.
I stopped. Took a step back. Immediately the temperature rose. Not a lot, but enough so that it was perceptibly warmer.
Curious.
Setting down my staff, I tentatively probed the surrounding air with my hands and confirmed that there was indeed a bubble of more profound cold around the corpse. Hmm. I eyed the ice elemental. It was undoubtedly dead. But what then was causing the cold?
Gritting my teeth against the expected freezing, I stepped into the unnatural bubble. Shivering near uncontrollably—but refusing to warm myself with dragonfire—I knelt down and inspected the corpse.
In death, the elemental’s body had shrunk. All that remained were blocks of ice, some as large as my hand, many smaller than a pebble. There were no organs, blood, bones, or anything else that vaguely hinted at it having been a living creature.
I sifted through the remains with stiff hands, and more by happenstance than by design, found the source of unnatural chill—a frost-white crystal from which frigid waves of almost visible cold emanated. The moment my fingers touched the object, the cold dissipated, seeming to recede back into the source.
Elemental reconstruction interrupted. Hibernation activated. Fragment dormant.
I stilled with my hand outstretched towards the crystal and reread the Trials message.
Reconstruction?
If that implied what I thought it did, I was doubly glad I had explored the tower and interrupted whatever was going on it. Made suddenly cautious, I drew back my hand and analyzed the still-glowing object instead.
You have uncovered the heart of a lesser ice elemental: an elemental fragment of water. Current state: dormant. Your skill in anatomy has advanced to level 9.
The special properties of this item are unknown. Your lore skill is insufficient.
My brows crinkled. “An elemental fragment?” I murmured. Despite my research into the Infopedia, I had never heard of such a thing. Picking up the crystal, I held it gingerly in the palm of my hand.
The fragment was no bigger than my smallest finger and but for its burning cold, appeared innocuous. I wasn’t deceived, though. The crystal was important. It didn’t take any great intuition to divine that.
Thoughtfully, I dropped the object into my backpack. It would be safest there for now. Rising to my feet, I headed down the steps and towards the next tower.
I had more fragments to collect.
✽✽✽
I found the other water fragments in the same state as the first. All three were surrounded by an aura of cold that dissipated when I handled them.
After collecting the crystals, I sat down in the driest-looking corner of one of the towers and inspected the fragments anew.
What are they? I wondered. The Trials had called each the ‘heart’ of an elemental. They were not literal hearts, of course, but given that the ice elementals had been reconstituting themselves around the fragments, it was no stretch to believe they were what gave life to an elemental.
This is the essence of an elemental, I thought.
It was a pity that the granite elementals had fallen into the moat. What would I have found inside them? Elemental fragments of earth, I guessed.
Opening my magesight, I studied the crystals through the lens of magic and was unsurprised to find dense lines of spirit swirling within each fragment.
Only living things possessed spirit. Which meant that whatever the crystals were, they were alive in some sense.
Well. Well. The fragments’ spirits were not as complex as the intricate web forming my own spirit or even that of a murluk, but nor were they as simple as the spirit weaves I’d seen in the saplings.
It raised some interesting questions, not least of which was: could the fragments be used to channel magic?
The urge to slip mana into one of the crystals and find out was nearly irresistible. Still, I had learned from my experiments with the saplings how risky that was—I could easily destroy the thing—and the fragments were too precious for such carelessness.
I closed my eyes. As fascinating as I found the fragments, I would have to leave further study of them for after I left the dungeon.
If I leave the dungeon.
The errant thought slipped in unnoticed. Firmly, I banished it and bowed my head.
It was time to sleep.
Advertisement
- In Serial9 Chapters
Is It Too Late To Move My Lair?
A legendary dragon... It has been told in the stories for hundreds of years. Some say it keeps a mountain of treasure in its cave, some say it is a vicious beast, some say it protects the village nearby, some claim it can grant their wishes, and some just think it's nothing more than a fairytale. He is not. The dragon is very real, although he isn't bothered by what people think of him in the slightest. He also doesn't have a grand treasure, nor does he grant wishes, like a magical genie. He is not interested in eating humans either. And as for protecting them… well. This is the story of the time before the legends, how they came to life and a dragon in the quest of his snooze. In a nutshell, this is a simple, light-hearted story with a dragon in it. What I have in mind is a relatively short one compared to most of the works on this site, but we'll see where it goes. This is my first attempt at writing something like this, so please be patient and kind in pointing out mistakes. As for the posting schedule... let's say it will be sporadic. Hope you enjoy reading, as much as I do while writing it… THE STORY IS NOT DROPPED, JUST SLOW ON THE UPDATES. Cover art by Nane, aka me. (Cross-posted on Scribble Hub.)
8 187 - In Serial52 Chapters
Searful - Rise of The Alaba [Dropped]
[Dropped]
8 234 - In Serial13 Chapters
Beyond the Horizon's Eye
It is less than two weeks after the event known as the Flux Causality, and two days after the Grand Council has put forth the edict demanding the immediate retrieval and deletion of all Stringhoppers. Finding such Travelers, however, is proving more difficult than expected. A young boy and his sister find themselves violently taken from their world to another, and soon thereafter are forcibly separated. Now sold into slavery, the young man must find not only a reason to survive but a purpose to carry him home. The journey has just begun, and the hardest step is always the first one. ~ This is my attempt at both the Xianxia/Wuxia and Portal/Isekai genre of fiction that I love, and the means to provide a story set in such guidelines, while distancing myself from some of the more common tropes. I do hope you enjoy the story I shall endeavor to tell. ~ Average post between 1000 - 3000 words. This is a work in progress, and will be edited and adjusted over time. If you’re interested in something a bit more GameLIT, you might want to check out my second story on Royal Road, “The Dawnfire Archives”. My newest story is a combination of both genres, but with a female main character at the helm. Feel free to check out "The Card Thief of Culnivar"!
8 159 - In Serial34 Chapters
My Life As A Magician
What would you do if your greatest talent - the one thing you naturally excelled at - was a dark art you desperately didn't want to practise? That's the dilemma trapping Arcadia Guzmata. As a young magician who reads minds, she's all-too- aware of the darker potential her gift carries. It's a potential her mentor, Mr Bishop, actively nurtures as they travel from town to town, performing magic shows. Mr Bishop's own gift is making things disappear; and Arcadia has watched him struggle time and time again to keep it from consuming him. She knows she wants a better life for herself, but what else is there for a young woman with two pigtails and a gift for the dark arts? Then, one day, as she's sitting in a café, the most beautiful music she's ever heard leads to a life- changing conversation. With that one conversation, a whole new world opens up for her. But can she step into that world and leave her dark gift behind?
8 139 - In Serial6 Chapters
Heavenly Hollow Rhapsody
The day Shirley May dies, she goes to her own personal heaven where anything she could ever want is already hers. She can live anywhere she wants, meet anyone she could ever want to meet, own whatever she had couldn't previously afford to buy. Her unwavering kindness and hard honest work guarantee her an eternity is her own self-made paradise. She can’t stand it. It’s egocentric. It’s boring. It’s empty. To have everything is, in Shirley’s opinion, to want for nothing. She needs to escape.
8 183 - In Serial6 Chapters
Fragment of a Dragon Soul
eX-0281 is a sub-dragon, a basic enemy grunt subject to a terrible workplace. All he looks forward to is an afternoon spent basking under his heat lamp after work. Life is good. That is until... the power goes off. Any dragon would be outraged if his heat lamp went out! When eX-0281 decides to investigate, he meets a fellow clone. Together, they hatch a lizard-brained scheme to leave the company. But if they want freedom, they must escape the underground city first.... Fragment of a Dragon Soul is set in the futuristic world of Burden of a Fire Dragon! Release Schedule: Monday, Wednesday, Friday at 9:00 PM EST. Cover Art by the author.
8 154

