《Jackal Among Snakes: GameLit Fantasy Progression》Chapter 156: No Return Policy
Advertisement
Argrave and Anneliese talked for a long while before Argrave’s hunger started to eat at him, and they elected to return. On the way back, Argrave’s Brumesingers greeted him, climbing all over him like a friend sorely missed. Argrave could almost feel their worry for him.
Their fur was growing shades darker. It seemed they had food enough to live well in this place. It was a testament to the Alchemist’s callous nature, he supposed. It also served as a reminder not to step out of line.
But after a time, Argrave left them outside once more, entering into the Alchemist’s home alongside Anneliese. As they walked through the halls of the Alchemist’s home, faint voices echoed through the halls. They cast a glance at each other, and then Argrave rushed towards its source.
Argrave turned the corner to where Durran’s body had been resting. Galamon was looking at him, evidently hearing his approach long ago. Durran—or was it Garm? —twisted his head to look at Argrave.
“Argrave,” Galamon greeted.
Without words, Argrave stepped up to the other person in the room. A pair of golden eyes watched him, the purple light of the Alchemist’s abode reflecting off the golden tattoos on his skin.
He stared for a long while. Eventually, Durran took a deep breath. “Garm is gone,” he disclosed.
The words hit harder than Argrave thought they would. Perhaps he hadn’t accepted it. Perhaps he was holding onto the belief that some strange miracle would happen. But now, seeing Durran standing, it was like he’d seen the body in the coffin.
“I am sorry for deceiving you,” Durran continued, looking at Argrave. His gaze shifted to Anneliese as she entered. “For deceiving all of you. But what happened… it was something I strongly feel needed to happen. And Garm wanted this.”
At that moment, Argrave recalled something his father had told him once. He turned his body slightly to the side. Then he rotated again, throwing a punch as though something was behind Durran. His middle knuckle struck the man right in the nose.
Take a stance, rotate your hips, keep your wrist straight… and punch right through ‘im, his dad had insisted.
Maybe his dad was right, or maybe he was lucky. Regardless, Durran’s head jerked back and his knees buckled, and he stumbled backwards before falling against the ground. Argrave stood there, still tense. That was the first time he had ever punched anyone. Durran wasn’t small, by any means—well built, tall for normal-sized people, but Argrave had downed him. His hand hurt, but he felt a strange rush of relief.
He heard Anneliese gasp, and even Galamon looked a little surprised. Argrave stepped forward. Durran already regained his bearings. He scrambled upwards, ready to fight. Argrave only pointed.
“Don’t ever pull anything like that again,” Argrave declared.
Durran rose to his feet, one hand on his bleeding nose. His wide eyes stayed locked on Argrave for a long time, and then he nodded.
“I don’t want to see you for a while,” Argrave lowered his hand. “We’ll talk when I’ve got a cool head. Right now, I’m feeling like doing something we’ll both regret.”
Advertisement
“…alright,” Durran answered, voice nasally.
Argrave turned and left, storming down the hall. Anneliese quickly moved after him.
Once they were a decent distance away, Argrave asked, “Why did I do that?”
“Because you were angry,” Anneliese answered.
“I already regret it,” Argrave shook his head. “God damn it all. I can’t be doing stupid things like that. He’s supposed to be another member of our group.”
“It may be good thing,” she mused.
Argrave paused in the halls, turning. “How?”
“He may feel that he has been punished for what he has done. Subliminally… if this can be overcome, he would see you as a leader more naturally. After all, a leader needs to deliver punishment.”
He stared with a frown for a while, and then began walking back to him room once again. Once he passed the threshold to his room, he paused in his tracks, spotting the great Alchemist looming overhead.
“Refrain from that wandering again,” he commanded at once, holding Argrave’s report in his hand. “I do not need unnecessary variables in my observation.” He closed the book, then turned his head. “Regardless, your writing has regained some clarity. I expect you to describe how your body felt during that foolish outing.”
Argrave nodded slowly, feeling unsettled, tense, and angry. The second he wanted to hold Anneliese’s hand, she was already doing so. He found out her empathic abilities were nicer every day, it seemed.
“Garm said that he promised I would do something for you,” Argrave spoke. “What was it?”
Anneliese looked at him, evidently ignorant of this promise.
“You will stop Gerechtigkeit,” the Alchemist said plainly. “At any cost.”
Argrave took a deep breath, almost finding the promise funny. Anneliese had said he had chosen to fight Gerechtigkeit, that it wasn’t a responsibility—yet now, he was making a promise to do so.
“Yes, I will,” Argrave nodded.
If the Alchemist had a reaction to the vow, he displayed none. He held his hand out. His finger unfurled, revealing a set of black eyes with golden irises. Argrave flinched a little. Eyes made him uncomfortable.
“Who receives these? The head was not clear.”
Argrave stared at them, greatly disturbed. That was the saddest part of all, by his estimation. His throat tightened, and Argrave swallowed to dispel the feeling. The eyes seemed to have some intangible magic swirling about them, barely perceptible.
“Can I think about it?”
“’Can you think about it?’” the Alchemist repeated. “You query me seeking answers regarding something only you can answer. Do I have control of your faculties? I replaced your heart, not your brain, and even then both are yours alone.”
“I need time to think,” Argrave rephrased, feeling exhausted.
The Alchemist’s fingers popped as they curled, hiding away the two black eyes. He walked away without giving a confirmation, leaving Argrave even more battered.
“I think that’s his way of saying yes,” Argrave sighed, releasing Anneliese’s hand. He strode to his bed, recalling only now how filthy the place was.
Anneliese walked up, and perhaps noticing his disgust, pulled off the blankets. “I will replace these,” she stated.
Advertisement
“No,” Argrave stopped her. “Let’s sit for a minute.”
She held the blankets, frozen, then nodded. They both sat.
“Garm’s eyes,” Argrave said, shaking his head. “Christ. What a blow.”
“…they would be helpful,” Anneliese conceded. “He wrote a letter to me, too. He described them. Apparently, they’ll function as any other A-rank mage’s eyes, retaining their ability to perceive another’s magic, and moreover—”
“You can cast spells from them,” Argrave nodded. “He wrote the same to me.” He turned his head over to her. “A bit morbid, inheriting someone’s eyes. Since you remembered, can I take it that you…?”
“Argrave…” she looked down. “I am… not entirely sure I can…” he saw a chill run through her. “The idea of subjecting myself to the Alchemist makes me afraid.”
Argrave nodded. “Then put the idea out of your head. A good thing, too,” he noted, putting his hand to her cheek. “Elsewise I’d never be able to see those beautiful amber eyes again,” he said, trying to distract her with a compliment.
It seemed to work, and Anneliese regained some vigor. Argrave fell back to the bed, thinking on the matter. He pondered his eyes, then started to laugh.
“First I’m Black Blooded, now I’ve got golden eyes with black sclera… can’t get much edgier than that. What’s next, I wonder? Cursed arm? Third eye?”
Anneliese looked down at him. “I get the impression you do not want them.”
Argrave bit at his lip. “I stand out enough as is. With eyes like that, covert operations are… well, hell, covert operations were never on the table. I stick out way too much,” Argrave shook his head. “People might distrust me. Might think I’m possessed, or… inhuman, who knows?”
Anneliese watched him. “You feel conflicted. Talk to me,” she reminded him.
“I don’t know…” Argrave trailed off. “Would feel… very, very wrong to refuse them. A man donates his organs to me, I toss them out because they’re the wrong color? Talk about desecrating the dead, spitting on a last wish,” Argrave shook his head.
“Why not present them to Durran?” Anneliese suggested.
Argrave looked at her. “Garm never mentioned Durran,” he pointed out. “And… I don’t know. He’s very free-spirited. I’m not sure if… well,” he trailed off, but Anneliese nodded understandingly.
“Do you recall Helmuth?” Anneliese questioned. “The man had eyes like purple vortexes, as I recall.”
Argrave leaned up quickly, clarity coming to him as soon as she posed the question. “Yeah… yeah, you’re right,” he nodded. “I can just say it’s because I’m a spellcaster. Handwave things away, call it magic,”
“Indeed,” she nodded. “It will certainly take some… getting used to, nonetheless.”
“Yeah. I can’t even imagine what it’s like, perceiving magic.” Argrave shook his head. “Honestly… now that I think about it… a little exciting, honestly.”
“I referred to my own adaptation,” she shook her head. “I fear I will recall Garm when I look at you.”
“Look on the bright side,” he said cheerily. “These weren’t my eyes to begin with.”
She was taken off guard and laughed. “One way to look at things…”
#####
“You will have them?” the Alchemist questioned. “Annoying.”
Argrave frowned, but had regained his bearings and did not so easily ask questions as he had in days past. He didn’t care to push his luck.
The Alchemist stepped around Argrave’s bed. A day had passed, and the place had become much cleaner. The couch that Anneliese had been sleeping on had been moved away. She didn’t need to sleep there, anymore… although Argrave wasn’t sure either of them were ready to do more than actually sleeping. He had been concerned he might thrash in his sleep and disturb her, but their night was peaceful.
“I will not suffer yet more variables to disrupt my observation of your body. I will implant the eyes when the process is done… meaning I must preserve them until that time. A taxing, laborious task. Annoying,” he repeated.
Argrave said nothing, lowering his head.
“The worst of your metamorphosis is over,” declared the Alchemist. “You may thank the blood of Vasquer flowing within you. Feathered serpents have magic in their blood innately—in other such bloodlines it manifests as a high affinity for magic, generally. Here, it made your transition faster, easier, it seems. Something to note for the future. It may be a correlation, not a causation.” The Alchemist shook his head. “Unfortunately, I can conduct no more tests.”
Argrave brightened at the Alchemist’s words, then paled when he realized what he’d been through was ‘faster,’ and ‘easier.’ If he had not been a Vasquer, what would things have been like, he wondered?
“I think you will fail against Gerechtigkeit,” the Alchemist said. “But everyone you brought is very confident in you.”
The words were unexpected—frankly, Argrave wouldn’t have believed they came from the Alchemist had he not seen the man’s mouth rise and fall and voice them.
“I don’t think I will,” Argrave shook his head. “But that’s why I have to use my words. Make others aware, get them to finish things for me just in case. It’s my specialty,” Argrave smiled.
“The calamity changes every millennium,” the Alchemist said.
“I know,” Argrave nodded. “It’s changed greatly from last time. It’s sowing dissent. Targeting leadership, my… family… being the primary examples. Gerechtigkeit plays the puppet master. It’s using us for its own end. Has been for years, now.”
“Hmm,” the Alchemist turned away. “Then it learned.”
“And just as we won’t fight it alone… it won’t fight us alone,” Argrave stated seriously. “When the time comes, I will ask you to help us.”
The Alchemist put his hands behind his back, staring down at Argrave. Maybe it was a delusion, but the ivory-skinned monstrosity seemed the most human he ever had. As he always did, the Alchemist left seemingly mid-conversation, leaving Argrave feeling as disconcerted as ever.
Advertisement
- In Serial193 Chapters
The Arcane Emperor
Rainer, an amateur arcanist and college student, sought to create a new spell far surpassing the magic of the few he inherited from his grandfather. Yet the interference of an unknown event during the casting of his spell led him to be thrown through space and time. Where status screens were accepted as normal and class distinctions were quite clear. Leveling and achieving a class beyond a simple farmer or peddler was an affair of life and death combined with years of hard training. Goblins were not the fodder that they should be, orcs filled bedtime stories in order to scare children into behaving, and a dragon? You might as well pack up and move to another country.He, however, enters this world with the rare and powerful class of the Arcanist. How will the recently ardent seeker of magic find greater heights, or will he land in deeper depths?Additional Tags: Game elements, Another World, Mature Themes Cover Art: by NGT http://forum.royalroadl.com/showthread.php?tid=83944Current Word Count: 413,193Weekly Schedule: Long Chapter(s) Every Saturday Night EST
8 458 - In Serial65 Chapters
Asuras and Dragons **Indefinite Hiatus**
We find ourselves as JD a typical sci-fi loving, video gaming, and anime loving nerd barely enjoying life playing video games and watching anime, but everything changes when he goes to sleep... Is it for the better though? Authors Note: Cover Art is a picture from Google Images. Feel free to submit some drawings if you want :-D Chapter release is honestly whenever I can. (Warning. Story is partially wish fulfillment.) Also, if any one has anything to add that they feel would make this story better please let me know although I can't promise that I will add it in or change something I will at least take your ideas into consideration as long as it don't change my view for the story too much. Please read all the chapters posted before getting mad over something that doens't make sense, it may have been explained in the next chapter or a later chapter. If it has not been explained feel free to comment or pm me and I will do my best to explain it in a future chapter or in a reply for you. Alot of things that have been complained about are actually explained in the same chapter or in a later chapter.
8 121 - In Serial21 Chapters
Impera
Gaius is the Emperor of The Roman Empire, that is one of his own creation in Impera. Ruling a massive empire, Gaius does what no other ever managed, uniting the entire world under the imperial banner. Hailed as the World Conqueror, a series of events unfold such that Gaius is forced into a world shaped by his past actions. He will face the true burdens and benefits his position awards, embarking in a struggle far beyond his worst nightmares. In his journey, Gaius will understand what truly means to be an Emperor, and what it takes to rule.
8 163 - In Serial8 Chapters
Beneath No Sky: Chronicles of the Atmospheric Sector
After bringing themselves back from the brink of annihilation, humanity's future seemed bleak. However, it's remnants, throwing aside the old order and donning a new mantle of progress aimed to rise above their ancient disputes and go forward as one. Once the Earth reached it's natural limit, and colonies around Terra and Luna had shown promising results, humanity finally decided to make the move to the stars. Believing this to be the start of a new age, they eagerly poured across the solar system and further beyond, greeting what space had to offer with hope and optimism. It was misplaced, however, for humanity's traditional quarrels soon resurfaced and engulfed a now interplanetary empire of many races.As the Earth Empire burned and an intense depression overtook the once optimistic people, some held out hope. They theorized that their problems were born of an inherent sense of home and, in order to rid humanity, now comprising of the Terrans as well as all the other known species of the galaxy, of this burden, decided to move far away from civilized space, into uncharted depths, to start anew. Some 200 years have passed since then, and those hopeful ones have finally found a place to settle on. Firmly planting their flag in paradise, they called this untouched land "Eden" and declared the beginning of a true new age, the age of After Eden.Trouble, however, seemed to still be hounding them, as barely three years after its founding, Eden finds itself at war with a seemingly uncommunicative and uncompromising enemy that far outclasses the odd pirates they were used to facing. A new era of peace, marked by an immediate conflict. Time will tell if Eden, the Grand Experiment, truly is as great as it's supposed to be. ---------------------------------------- This is a sci-fi, character driven, military space drama. Multiple POV protagonists and lots of unnecessary detail. Somewhat psychological. My first work on this website. Cover is AI-generated, cover font is Salvar Font by Salvar on fontspace (https://www.fontspace.com/salvar-font-f42807).
8 144 - In Serial9 Chapters
When You Transmigrate Into a Harem Novel
Tired of the repetitive OP MC trope? You won’t be disappointed. You’ll still have that. This is a story about a MC with missing a nerve and the life she leads as she is transmigrated to a harem cultivation novel. Prologue might be dark, but it's important- please read. Please leave your brains behind!! Disclaimer: Any similarity to persons or other works are merely coincidental and this work is not representational of the author’s viewpoint or beliefs. Enjoy as entertainment only. ***** Update once/twice per week over weekend******
8 167 - In Serial5 Chapters
BAMBISONAS!! MY OCS (DO NOT STEAL!)
My dave and bambi golden apple ocs! PLEASE PLEASE.. DO NOT STEAL!
8 136

