The crow remained silent, staring at the young man as if he had lost his mind.
âPlease buddy⊠Can you do this for me?â
Micky looked back and forth between Percy and the carcass a few times, seemingly pondering the request. Eventually, he begrudgingly hopped towards the bug, resigned to his fate. Pushing a mandible open with his talon, he crouched inside the gaping maw, disappearing into the dead knightâs horrid throat.
Letting his familiar do his thing, the young man turned to Nesha again, watching her with bated breath. Luckily, he didnât have to wait long. Soon, a flood of soul mana gushed through the connection, filling up his frame. It was a lot. Too much, even.
Without missing a beat, he poured everything into the girl, until she couldnât handle another drop. Both his and her wounds greedily drank the tonic as fast as they could, though more kept rushing in, forcing him to spill it out of his pores. It was a waste, but he couldnât help it. The two remained like that for several minutes, their frames saturated with mana, slowly but steadily patching them up.
âPlease workâŠâ he whispered, not knowing if anyone could hear him.
Well, Nesha seemed to. Her eyelids twitched, before she finally opened her eyes weakly. Regaining their lustre, her pupils darted around a little, before locking onto Percy. She blinked a few times, and then spoke.
âHave you seen my glasses?â
The young man was taken aback by the question. Instinctively, he shook his head. While the sturdy amulet had survived the violent fight, he doubted the glasses would be equally lucky. They hadnât packed any spares either.
âAt least we have some extra clothesâŠâ
That was when Percy jerked his head away, only now registering their bodies were barely covered. Nesha looked confused for a second, though her cheeks lit up with a rosy tint a moment later. Sifting through the cube, the young man handed her a fresh change, before wearing another pair of trousers himself. He was out of shirts,
however
, so heâd have to go around bare chested for the time being.
âAnother thing I would have bought if we had more time.â
he sighed.
Percy stood before helping Nesha up too.
âLetâs go. We barely have an hour to get the fuck out of here.
If weâre lucky.
â
âWhat about the knight? What happened?â Nesha asked, looking around.
Soon, she saw the giant wasp â
it was kinda hard to miss
â her body visibly tensing at the sight. A couple seconds passed before she found the courage to approach it, to examine it more closely, her poor eyesight not doing her any favours. Realizing it was dead, her expression twisted into an odd blend of shock and relief, as she turned to Percy, clearly ready to unleash a barrage of questions.
âLater.â he dismissed with a wave, before calling out to his familiar.
âCome on Micky. You did great buddy, but weâve got to go now.â
No response. Percy waited a moment before trying again.
âMicky?â
ââŠCAWâŠâ
the bird finally replied, though it sounded odd. Lethargic perhaps or⊠bloated?
Considering a possibility, the colour drained from Percyâs face.
âDonât tell meâŠâ
The familiar sent him a series of images, confirming his fears. It was eating a path through the waspâs flesh, when it spotted something glowing in the darkness. It was an orb thrumming in an intense amber colour â Green through Mana Sense. Unable to resist, the bird pecked at it and⊠it wasnât hard to guess what happened nextâŠ
âHere?! Now?!â
Percy panicked, though in hindsight, he should have seen this coming.
Heâd already known the crow would overtake him sooner or later, and it HAD spent the last three years stuffing its face full of Orange and Yellow cores. Dozens of them per day, even. It wouldâve been stranger if the knightâs core hadnât pushed it over the edge. StillâŠ ïżœ
âNesha!â he shouted, startling the poor girl. âChange of plans. I have to stay here a while longer⊠But we canât have you wait with me.â
âW-What? Why?
What?!
â
Percy pinched the bridge of his nose, thinking of the best way to explain it.
âKeep heading down the tunnel until you reach the end. Donât worry about losing the way, itâs just a straight path towards the exit â there arenât any more forks. Once you get there, youâll find yourself at a dead end.â
âA
dead end
?!â Nesha asked in horror.
âItâs not as bad as it sounds. It should only be around a dozen metres from the surface. We never finished digging the tunnel, because we hadnât expected to escape from the Guild so soon. My plan was to have the wasp dig us out, though that isnât an option anymoreâŠâ
Percy gestured at his broken clone, whose memories he was still suppressing.
âIn any case, youâre a Yellow. Iâm sure you can dig us out with a few spells.â he explained.
âWhat about you?â
âIâll meet you as soon as I can. But you need to get a move on. We wonât have enough time to expand the tunnel later, so Iâm counting on you to get it done by then.â
The girl stared at him in silence for a couple seconds, letting his words sink in. Percy could practically see the questions bubbling up but, understanding the urgency of the situation, she didnât voice them. In the end, she simply nodded, before placing her hand by the wall to orient herself, heading off. Only then did Percy turn back towards the carcass.
âWell, Micky⊠Whatever youâre doing, just hurry upâŠâ
Activating Mana Sense, he examined the dead knight, observing his familiarâs advancement. The waspâs body itself was now void of mana â whatever had remained in its channels was already gone, its core consumed. The crow was the only thing still visible within Percyâs sixth sense. The carapace did obscure it slightly, but a coreâs advancement was a difficult thing to hide.
Mickyâs entire silhouette shone in a vibrant Orange colour. His core burned a shade brighter, filled with strands of Yellow twisting and rolling within. More of them appeared each second, as they joined and banded together in a familiar manner.
âNot fast enoughâŠâ
Thinking of something, Percy walked to his cloneâs remains, picking a broken chunk off the ground. The gruesome piece of flesh was tough to identify, but he was almost sure it contained the creatureâs core. Scanning it, he confirmed it was indeed there, though more than half had already crumbled, the rest of it dim.
âOh well. Every little helps.â
he shrugged, tossing it into the knightâs mouth.
The bird complained of course â
it didnât exactly have room for dessert
â though it ultimately acquiesced, probably recognizing through Percyâs tone he wasnât in the mood for nonsense. As expected, the extra push increased the pressure in Mickyâs sternum, forcing the strands to fuse faster. The young man estimated it would be done in a couple minutes.
Sadly, their time had already run out.
Everything shook, from the shimmering crystals filled with mana, to the colourful ores lodged in the cavernâs walls, to the corpses of the two bugs, all the way to Percyâs very bones. Feeling the vibrations coursing through him, he could tell the army of insects was already upon them, his body oozing cold sweat. Then, he heard their wings. There were countless of them, their incessant buzzing echoing through the vast cavern, growing louder by the second.
Looking at the carcass again, Percy saw it shrivel and sink, as Micky had already moved to the second phase of his advancement, his core shining in a bright Yellow. Honestly, the young man was tempted to grab the bird right then and there, getting the hell out while he still could.
âNo, I donât know what happens if a beast doesnât get the food it needs after evolvingâŠâ
He had no idea if theyâd find enough outside. They might even run into other problems there. Unwilling to place his familiar at risk, he allowed him to continue devouring the Starry Knight, turning its flesh into his own. Percyâs heart did ache a little at the sight, as he couldnât help but imagine the Green clone he could have crafted out of the corpse. But that was just a pipe dream â he hadnât had the luxury of taking it easy on the creature to leave its body intact, nor to spend hours using his bloodline inside the hive.
âFeeding it to Micky was the best use for itâŠâ
Shaking the distracting thoughts out of his mind, he took a deep breath and then another, drawing the shimmering motes into both cores, preparing to fight.
The first bugs to appear were the workers. While the wasps grew faster with each grade, that was provided they were free to fly. Within the tight walls of the hive, a different dynamic manifested. Nothing above Orange had enough space to stretch its wings, so this wave of insects was the quickest to reach him.
Gritting his teeth, Percy formed a sickle in each hand, as two sets of glowing lines lit up underneath his skin. But he didnât stop there. Now that heâd managed to heal his flesh and soul both, he pushed the boosting arts to their very limits, as his muscles bulged and his skin reddened, a twin halo of cyan and silver shrouding his frame. Next, he poured even more mana into his weapons, sharpening them and growing them another touch, as he stared intently at the depths of the tunnel ahead.
And finally, the dense river of fox-sized wasps appeared, rushing him in all their maddened fury, as Percy pounced into the swarm, determined to surviveâŠ