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âA lie by omission is still a lie andâŚâ
The nagging went on exactly as Lith had predicted, just changing the position of a few words and the phrasing here and there.
âGuilty as charge. Iâm a jerk, okay?â He snorted. âFeel free to team up with Kami and rip me a new one once we get back home but before we come to that, do you mind telling me another way to sway the Parliament of Leaves?
âNew or not, sane or not, I donât trust the World Tree after what his predecessor did to me. Also, if the elves accept their offer, they might as well become extinct since theyâll never leave the Fringe ever again, and fixing Jiera will be much more difficult.â
Solus frowned and flared her nostrils in annoyance as her brain worked at full gear to give him a proper answer. The problem was that she found none. The elves had no reason to trust the Council, let alone the humans.
Abandoning their home based on the words of a stranger was a potential disaster of which they had every reason to be wary. The only way to drag them out of the Fringe was to show rather than promise something worthwhile enough to take such a risk.
âFine. I forgive you only because at least this time your plan didnât involve killing anyone.â She grunted, crossing her arms and legs as she sat down on a smooth rock.
âAnytime, Solus. Anytime.â Lith replied with a smug grin on his face. âNow, before I take my turn at talking with Mogar, Iâd like us to pool our brains and decipher the meaning of your visions.
âAs Friya has confirmed, the same questions receive the same answers, no matter whoâs asking. To get Mogar to give me a glimpse of their hand, we need to find a different angle from which I can work.â
âTomorrow.â Friya said, her stomach gurgling loudly. âMaking those circles took us a lot of time and mana and meeting Mogar was no joke either.â
âAgreed.â Solus snuggled on Lith, relieved from his life force replenishing the strength she had lost by using so much magic in his absence. âI have a massive headache and I feel like I could eat a whole roasted cow and ask for seconds.â
âAbout thatâŚâ Faluel said as the Emperor Beastsâ stomachs made the cave vibrate with their grumblings. âWe need food and rest. Between getting inside the Fringe and the rituals, too many of us are worn out.
âWe need our full strength in case MâRael sends someone to make us disappear or if the negotiations fail and we need to fight our way out.â
âAgreed.â Ajatar said. âTaken one at a time, a bright blue-cored elf is not that much of a threat to any of us except for Nalrond. No offense.â
âNone taken.â The Rezar nodded.
âFacing hundreds of them, however, is a different story. They have the home advantage, can imbue their weapons with spells making arrows deadly, and the more of us leave the Fringe the more dangerous they become.
âWe canât have Friya and the others take part in the meetings to not stir the hatred from the War of the Races but we canât have them get to safety either. We need backup and someone covering our retreat if things go south.â
âThen this leaves us with only one question. Do we eat inside or outside?â Quylla asked.
Those who had been holed up in the caves wanted to breathe some fresh air while those who had been to Setraliie wanted to remain underground, afraid that teams of scouts might be looking for them and find their camp.
âThereâs no point staying hidden.â Aalejah shrugged. âIf the elves come here and look with Soul Vision, theyâll see our true form and spot us no matter what kind of cloaking arrays we set.
âEven worse, the more arrays we set, the easier will be to spot us.â
The group ultimately decided to eat outside and sleep inside, using magic solely to cook and dissipate the smells.
âSo, what do you make of the updated answers?â Solus asked while wolfing down her second serving of beef stew.
âI have no idea why both sides of Nalrond have to bleed, but Iâm afraid I know what the answer to my life force means.â Lith sighed.
âOkay, whatâs that?â Nalrond slouched his shoulders.
No one had managed to make sense of the vision that was supposed to hint at how to merge his life forces.
âWell, itâs kind of obvious.â Lith replied. âThe first time we assumed that the solution to my problem was Arthanâs Madness, but that was before Kolga proved to me that I canât just pump more life force, I also need to seal the cracks.
âJormun confirmed to me that the real answer was the Golden Griffon and its Unwavering Loyalty array. After the destruction of the lost academy, however, all thatâs left is the Madness and its ungodly price.â
âMeaning?â Solus tilted her head in confusion.
âThink about it. Thrud needed clones of herself and the method to grow them has been lost with her death. I have no clones, just the next best thing.â Lith massaged his temples, hating even the thought of those words.
âYour daughter?â Ajatar was flabbergasted. âIt makes sense. Half of her life force comes from you and itâs bound to be compatible with yours. Mogar must be sick in the head to propose such a disgusting act.â
âIt wasnât a proposal, just an answer.â Faluel countered. âMogar doesnât make miracles, they simply show you the way, no matter how thorny it is.â
âAlso, whatâs the role of Quyllaâs mentor?â Morok asked. âWhy is he in the vision?â
âI have no idea.â Lith half lied half said the truth.
He had long since suspected that the secret behind the Masterâs success in restoring the Eldritches to life was Forbidden Magic. He had no proof of it nor had he ever suspected Vastor to have retrofitted the Madness, but it made sense.
It was after their first fight with Thrud that the Eldritch-monster hybrids had appeared. It was after raiding Orpalâs palace from the knowledge he had amassed about the Mad Queen that Zorethâs condition had further improved.
Lith didnât like the thought, but refusing to look at the truth just because it was unpleasant would have been beyond foolish. Yet he couldnât share his worries with anyone since his destiny and the Professorâs were tied.
Not only because of Zinya, but also because of Solus. Bytra and Zoreth knew her as Elphyn and things could go really bad if his sworn allies became enemies.
Lith looked at Solus, wishing he could tell her how happy he was for her for meeting her parents. Even without the mind link, he could feel how heavy her burden was and how much she needed to share it, yet it had to wait.
âWhat about you two?â He asked Friya and Faluel.
âFirst of all, I want to thank my little apprentice for her thoughtfulness.â The Hydra ruffled Friyaâs hair. âJudging from her vision, we have so many things in common that sheâs almost a daughter to me.â
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