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Now reading: Chapter 122. Potential from Re:Birth: A Slow Burn LitRPG Mage Regressor, a Comedy novel by AcetheOwl.

Long before humans walked the earth, before elves sang their first songs or dwarves delved their first mines, the world belonged to giants.

But they were not alone.

Whispered tales passed down through generations spoke of massive beasts that road ancient forests and plains. Creatures so large they could crush trees underfoot, with necks that reached into the clouds and tails that carved valleys with a single sweep. The Ancients called them the Great Wanderers, the First Children, or simply the Titans of Earth.

Most scholars dismissed these accounts as exaggerations or folklore. After all, no fossil record existed of creatures that size. The few ancient cave paintings depicting massive long-necked beasts were attributed to primitive imaginations or symbolic representations of natural forces.

Yet here they were, exactly as described in the oldest texts—creatures from a ti when the world itself was young, preserved sohow in this pocket of dense mana where ti itself seed to flow differently.

Adom stood transfixed, watching the long-necked giant lower its head toward him with surprising grace for sothing so enormous. Its mind touched his again, curiosity flowing between them like a gentle current.

"Stone-Singers," Adom repeated, letting his excitent filter through their ntal connection. "You know them? The giants?"

The creature's consciousness rippled with what felt like hesitation, then confirmation.

"They made... this place," ca the response, the ntal voice slow and deliberate. "Long ago. Before my mothers' mothers. They sang to the stones, and the stones... moved."

"That's incredible," Adom breathed. "I'm looking for their ruins. Their buildings. Do you know where I could find them?"

The creature's head swayed slightly, its enormous eyes blinking.

"Why does small one seek the tall walkers?"

"I'm searching for knowledge," Adom explained. "About magic. About where humans like ca from. The giants might have left records, writings that could help understand."

"Hmm." The sound resonated directly in Adom's mind. "Curious small one. What is your... na sound?"

"Adom," he replied, then realized he was speaking aloud unnecessarily. He shifted to purely ntal communication. "I'm Adom. What should I call you?"

The creature didn't respond with anything Adom recognized as a na. Instead, he received an impression—a complex ntal signature that conveyed identity through sensations rather than sounds. It felt like sunlight filtering through high branches, the satisfaction of reaching a particularly succulent leaf, the comfort of walking beside one's herd. If he had to translate it into sothing pronounceable, the closest approximation might be...

"Skyreacher?" Adom ventured.

The creature's consciousness brightened with sothing like amusent. "Close enough for your... small mind-sounds."

Skyreacher's neck curved in a more comfortable position, bringing her head lower. Adom could now see the fine details of her skin—the subtle patterns of scaling, the way her nostrils flared slightly with each breath, the intelligence in her deep brown eyes.

"The Stone-Singers' big nests lie beyond the three peaks," she projected, sending along an image of three distinctly shaped mountains rising from the far side of the valley. "Many days' walking for small legs."

"I could fly there," Adom suggested.

"Sky is... dangerous," Skyreacher warned. "Great wind-hunters patrol high places."

The ntal image that accompanied this warning showed massive winged creatures with leathery wings and elongated heads, soaring between the peaks.

"Could you guide there?" Adom asked. "Show a safe path?"

Skyreacher's mind went quiet for a mont. The other massive creatures continued their grazing in the background, seemingly unconcerned by their herd mber's conversation with the strange small being.

"No," she finally responded.

"Why not?" Adom asked, genuinely curious rather than offended.

Skyreacher's ntal voice carried a simple certainty. "Because I do not want to."

"Hmm. That's... fair," Adom said.

A pause.

"Could you at least tell the way to it?" he asked, regrouping. "General directions would help."

Skyreacher shifted her weight, creating a subtle tremor in the ground beneath Adom's feet. "I have never been there myself. Only heard tales from the older ones."

Her consciousness projected images—dense jungle gradually giving way to stone structures, massive formations that had clearly been shaped by intelligent hands. But the images were hazy, secondhand impressions rather than direct mories.

"It is dangerous beyond the three peaks," she continued. "The Sharp-Tooth claims that territory as hunting ground."

The ntal image that accompanied this warning made Adom's breath catch. A massive predator, walking on powerful hind legs with a head nearly as large as Skyreacher's, but filled with teeth like daggers. Its forearms were comically small in proportion to its body, but its jaws looked capable of snapping a human in half without effort.

"You should go back to where you ca from," Skyreacher advised. "It would be wiser. Safer."

"How dangerous are we talking?" Adom asked. "Because I'm a mage, and a pretty good one, too."

A ripple of amusent flowed through their ntal connection, the equivalent of a gentle chuckle.

"You are adorable," Skyreacher projected. "Like the little ones over there."

She nodded her massive head toward a shallow lake on the far side of the valley. Adom squinted, making out several smaller versions of Skyreacher splashing and playing in the water. They were "smaller" only in relative terms—each still stood at least fifteen feet tall.

"I'm actually eighty years old," Adom said, feeling oddly defensive.

"My children are one hundred," Skyreacher replied simply.

Adom blinked. "Those are over a hundred years old?"

"Yes." A note of maternal pride colored her ntal voice. "They will grow for another fifty before reaching full height."

Adom stared at the "youngsters" with newfound wonder. His academic mind imdiately began cataloging questions: What was their growth rate? Diet requirents? Social structures? Lifespan? How many species existed in this valley? Were they sohow related to the giants, or had they evolved separately?

Sam would absolutely lose his mind if he were here. The mage in him would be frantically taking notes, sketching the creatures, probably trying to classify them into families and genera. For a brief mont, Adom regretted not bringing his friend along.

But no—this had been the safest approach. Sam was responsible and mature enough to understand that. Probably.

Adom's gaze swept across the valley. An undiscovered ecosystem, perfectly preserved for who knew how many thousands of years. If the magical academy knew these creatures actually existed... if the wider world found out...

The implications were staggering. Researchers would flood in. The Highland's unique mana conditions would be deed worth the risk. Tourist boats would increase tenfold. Soone would inevitably try to capture one of these magnificent beings for study or exhibition.

This peaceful valley would be destroyed by human curiosity and greed.

"I need to go to the ruins," Adom said finally, pushing aside his fascination for the mont. "Can you point in the right direction?"

Skyreacher's enormous eyes studied him. "Are you certain? The Sharp-Tooth hunts anything that moves."

"If push cos to shove, I can just run away," Adom said with more confidence than he felt.

"If you run, do not co back this way," Skyreacher warned. "The Sharp-Tooth would follow your scent, and we do not want it in our territory."

"Agreed," Adom said imdiately. He wouldn't risk bringing danger to these peaceful creatures.

Skyreacher's consciousness brightened, apparently having decided to help despite her reservations.

"Follow the river that flows from the eastern edge of the valley," she instructed, projecting a ntal map that unfolded in Adom's mind. "When you reach the split stone—a boulder cracked down the middle by lightning—turn toward the rising sun."

Adom nodded, morizing the landmarks.

"Avoid the bubbling pools with yellow edges," she continued. "The vapor will burn your lungs. And never walk beneath hanging vines with blue flowers. They... grab."

Her ntal imagery showed several specific hazards with remarkable clarity—steaming pools surrounded by sulfurous deposits, innocent-looking vines that whipped down with surprising speed to snare anything that passed beneath.

"There is a stretch beyond the singing waterfall where few trees grow. Not enough leaves for us to eat there. You should take so with you."

"Oh, I have my rations," Adom assured her. "So dried fruits, nuts, and a particularly good at pie from Old Mari."

Skyreacher went completely still.

"at?" she projected. "You eat... at?"

Adom froze, horror washing over him as he realized his mistake. He'd just casually ntioned eating flesh to a creature that was, itself, essentially walking food for predators.

"I, uh—" His mind raced for an explanation that wouldn't make him sound like a monster. "It's not—I an, we don't—it's a very complex cultural... thing, and..."

A warm ripple of amusent flowed through their connection, catching Adom off-guard.

"Your face," Skyreacher projected, and Adom could've sworn her enormous mouth curved slightly upward at the corners. "So worried."

"You were... joking?" Adom asked, feeling distinctly off-balance.

"Of course," she replied. "The Sharp-Tooth eats at. The flying hunters eat at. It is the way of things."

Adom cleared his throat, trying to regain his composure. "Right. Of course."

"If eating other creatures is in your nature, then so be it," Skyreacher continued. "Though perhaps you should not announce this to everyone you et. So might find it... unsettling."

Unauthorized tale usage: if you spot this story on Amazon, report the violation.

"Noted," Adom said, feeling his face grow warm.

Skyreacher lowered her head slightly, bringing one enormous eye level with Adom's face. "The Stone-Singers' valley lies three days' journey from here, for small legs. Beyond the three peaks, through the mist forest. Look for stones arranged in circles, larger than . That is where their path begins."

Adom thanked Skyreacher, genuinely grateful for her guidance. "I appreciate your help. And I promise to be careful."

"Be wise, small one," she replied. "The curious often beco the eaten."

With a final nod to the massive creature, Adom weaved his [Flight] spell and rose to her eye level. The sensation was strange—the reduced gravity made the spell work more efficiently, sending him higher than he'd intended.

His sudden ascent drew attention from across the valley. Dozens of enormous heads turned in his direction, necks swiveling with surprising agility. The ntal network that connected these creatures suddenly buzzed with curious voices reaching toward his consciousness.

"What is that?"

"So small!"

"Can all small ones fly?"

"Is it a baby wind-hunter?"

"No, look—no wings!"

"Strange creature!"

There was no fear in their questions, just interest in this unusual visitor.

Adom waved—feeling slightly ridiculous but compelled by courtesy—and began moving in the direction Skyreacher had indicated.

"Farewell, Skyreacher," he projected, sensing her consciousness among the chorus.

"Safe journey, Adom," ca her reply, steady and clear despite the distance growing between them.

He flew east, following the river's winding path through the valley. Below him, smaller creatures scattered at his shadow—not in panic, but with the efficiency of beings who had evolved to be wary of anything passing overhead.

The flight was exhilarating. With the reduced gravity and the unusually dense mana making his spells more efficient, Adom found he could cover ground far more quickly than he'd anticipated. The river glead below him, occasionally disappearing beneath canopies of strange trees with spiral-patterned bark.

A notification appeared in his field of vision:

[Mana Pool: 998/2010]

Interesting. His maximum capacity was still increasing, but his current mana level was slowly decreasing due to the continuous spell usage. At this rate, he'd need to stop and recover before reaching the ruins.

Adom spotted a particularly tall tree near the river's edge, far enough from the herbivore valley to give them space but not so far that he'd lost his bearings. Its broad branches looked sturdy enough to support him, and the height would provide both visibility and safety from ground predators.

He descended carefully, choosing a thick horizontal branch about forty feet up. Landing lightly, he tested the branch's strength before settling down. It held his weight without so much as a creak.

Adom crossed his legs and arranged himself in a comfortable ditation position. The valley stretched out before him, a view so magnificent it almost distracted him from his purpose. Almost.

Closing his eyes, he began to regulate his breathing. In through the nose, out through the mouth. Slow and deliberate. He felt the mana of the Highlands swirling around him, thicker than anything he'd experienced before, yet sohow more orderly in this specific location.

He sank into ditation, allowing his depleted mana to begin its recovery process.

The system displayed his steadily recovering resources:

[Mana Pool: 1000/2010]

It kept growing.

[1050/2010]

And growing.

[1100/2010]

And more.

[1150/2010]

The numbers ticked upward at a rate that made him open one eye in surprise. This was fast. Very, very fast. Even in optimal conditions—perfect rest after complete depletion—most mages recovered at perhaps ten points per hour. He was gaining fifty points in re minutes. The advantages of this ambient mana, without a doubt.

[1200/2010]

[1300/2010]

He closed his eye again, focusing inward. What he found there was no longer sothing he could honestly call a mana core. It was an Axis core—fundantally different in structure and function.

As the first known human (to himself, at least) with such a feature, he still had little idea what to expect. Biggins could be a model to follow, but he was a dragon. That was the very reason Adom's transformation had diverged from the expected path in the first place—because Biggins had helped him reach Axis in the way a dragon would. Not a human.

He was grateful, no confusion about that. But to be honest, he was also a bit afraid. He'd been sick his whole past life and didn't want to deal with unexpected after-effects, no matter how beneficial the initial change seed.

[1500/2010]

[1700/2010]

[1900/2010]

[2010/2010]

His pool was replenished now, filled to capacity. Normally, this was where the process stopped. A mage would feel reinvigorated, satisfied—like after eating a good al. That pleasant fullness that signaled "enough."

But sothing was strange. Very strange.

Adom didn't feel satisfied. He felt... hungry. Like he'd taken a few bites of the most delicious al he'd ever tasted, only to have the plate pulled away. There was more to be had. He could sense it.

Instead of opening his eyes and ending his ditation, he pushed deeper, following his instinct. His Axis core responded imdiately.

[Mana Pool: 2010/2015]

Oh?

[2015/2020]

Oh!

[2020/2020]

His maximum capacity was increasing alongside his current mana. That shouldn't be possible. Mana pool capacity was sothing that increased gradually over months or years of maturation. It wasn't sothing that just... grew because you wanted it to.

And yet...

[Mana Pool: 2025/2025]

It was growing.

[2030/2030]

Again.

[2050/2050]

Adom's awareness narrowed to the process happening within him. He could feel it now—a circular pattern being completed around his core, like a ring slowly being drawn by an invisible hand. Each incrent in his numbers corresponded to another fraction of that circle being completed.

Was this... was he forming his first circle? Just like that? Really?

[Mana Pool: 2100/2100]

Huh...

[2200/2200]

Looks like he was.

[2300/2300]

The sensation was exhilarating. Adom felt like he was simultaneously being filled and expanded. As if soone were pouring water into a cup that grew larger with each drop, never quite reaching fullness.

His awareness of the outside world had completely faded. There was only the core, the growing circle, and the numbers that reflected his transformation.

[Mana Pool: 2500/2500]

[2700/2700]

[2900/2900]

He pushed further, driven by a hunger he couldn't explain. The idea of having more—of seeing how far this could go—was irresistible. The circle was nearly complete now, he could feel it, a band of pure energy wrapping around his core like a ring around a planet.

[Mana Pool: 3000/3000]

Ah!

[3050/3050]

More? Seriously?!

[3065/3065]

Don't mind if I do!

[3067/3067]

And then, resistance. Like hitting a wall. He pushed and pushed, but the numbers refused to increase further. The circle was complete—perfectly ford, stable—but this appeared to be its natural limit. At least, for now.

Adom opened his eyes.

He was drenched in sweat, his clothes clinging uncomfortably to his skin. The horizon had changed dramatically—the bright daylight replaced by the deep purple of early evening. The valley below was cast in long shadows, and the first stars were appearing overhead.

How long had he been sitting here?

He fumbled for his pocket watch, his fingers clumsy from prolonged stillness. The tipiece felt unusually heavy in his hand.

Fifteen hours. He'd been ditating for fifteen hours straight.

Adom almost slurred a curse, but the words died in his throat as he felt sothing shift in his core—a settling, a solidification of the change that had occurred. A notification appeared:

[First Circle Ford: Axis Core Stabilized]

[Classification Updated: First Circle Mage]

[Mana Regeneration Rate: 300%]

[Spell Efficiency: 25%]

[Mana Control: 30%]

Adom stared at the notification, completely stupefied.

First Circle Mage. Just like that.

In his previous life, he hadn't reached First Circle until his mid-sixties—and that wasn't through training or resources. It had simply been his natural limit, like a growth spurt that varies from person to person.

Despite all his knowledge and dedication, his previous body's capacity for mana had topped out there. It had still been a montous achievent, all things considered.

And now he'd done it at thirteen. Sitting in a tree.

If this was his new natural limit—if his [Primordial Body] could achieve in hours what took others decades—then what else might be possible? What were the natural limits of this new incarnation?

For the very first ti, a fresh ambition filled Adom.

It was that singular feeling you get when sothing you'd thought would be impossibly difficult turns out to be within easy reach. That mont when you realize the ceiling you've been staring at for years isn't a ceiling at all, but rely a floor to the next level. The intoxicating question forms: just how far can I go?

The analytical part of his mind kicked in, trying to make sense of what had just happened. This wasn't just good fortune or talent—there had to be a logical explanation.

"The Axis core," he murmured, examining the phenonon from first principles. "It must process ambient mana differently than a standard core."

Traditional mana cores worked like filters—drawing in raw mana from the environnt, processing it through the mage's personal magical signature, and storing the result. The process was inefficient by nature, with significant energy lost during conversion. Most mages only retained about 20% of the mana they absorbed, which explained why growth was so painfully slow.

But Axis was structured differently. More orderly. More efficient.

If his hypothesis was correct, his Axis core wasn't just filtering mana—it was actively restructuring it, aligning the chaotic energy into perfect patterns that could be absorbed without loss. In theory, that ant he could potentially convert 100% of ambient mana into usable energy.

And here in the Highlands, where mana density was off the charts...

"It's like giving a starving man access to an unlimited buffet," Adom said to himself.

This explained why a normal mage would go mad here rather than grow stronger. Their cores would try to process the overwhelming ambient mana using standard thods, resulting in overflow, contamination, and eventually, damage.

His Axis core didn't just protect him from the negative effects—it thrived on the conditions.

"The question is," Adom murmured, looking down at his hands, "what's the upper limit?"

*****

anwhile...

The moon cast silver streaks across the dark water as the group settled into their impromptu camp.

Hours had passed since they'd first spotted the leviathan, and the creature had developed a pattern—disappearing beneath the depths only to resurface every forty minutes or so, its massive silhouette breaking the moonlit surface before diving again.

"It's looking for sothing," Mia said, braiding strands of local reeds into what looked like the beginning of a basket, her work illuminated by the small light ball hovering above their camp. "Or soone."

Sam sat cross-legged on a flat rock, his notebook open but largely ignored as he bribed Zuni with candied berries. The quillick chittered excitedly, stuffing each treat into its cheek pouches before performing elaborate acrobatics around Sam's shoulders.

"That's it, show that jump again," Sam encouraged, holding out another berry. "For science."

Zuni launched into a backflip that no creature with such stubby legs should have been able to manage, landing precisely on Sam's outstretched palm.

Eren snorted from where he was skipping stones into the water, the ripples glinting like scattered coins. "So 'scientific observation' you're doing there."

"Positive reinforcent is a legitimate research thodology," Sam replied primly, though his grin betrayed him.

Naia sat a few yards away, her eyes closed in ditation. A small globe of water hovered between her palms, shifting shapes in response to her breathing, reflecting the moonlight like a miniature star. Luna, Gus's shimrscale, had coiled herself beside Naia, apparently entranced by the water manipulation.

Gus himself was busy adjusting the makeshift shelter he'd built using driftwood and the tarp from his pack. "Wind's picking up," he said to no one in particular. "Might get chilly tonight."

Karion paced near the water's edge, occasionally glancing toward the blue lanterns that marked the boundary of the "safe zone." In the darkness, the lanterns' glow seed more ominous than reassuring, and Karion's restless energy had only grown more pronounced as the night deepened.

Damus sat apart from the others, back straight, face impassive as he stared out at the water. He hadn't spoken in hours, barely acknowledging the food Sam had offered earlier. The moonlight cast half his face in shadow, making his expression even more unreadable than usual.

"Tch."

A sudden movent caught everyone's attention.

Damus stood up, brushed sand from his clothes, and began walking—not toward the camp, but in the direction of the unmarked territory beyond the lanterns.

All conversation ceased. Even Zuni froze mid-chitter.

"Where are you going?" Karion called out.

Damus didn't break stride or turn around. "None of your business."

Karion's eyes narrowed. He jogged forward, circling around to plant himself directly in Damus's path. "Actually, it is."

Damus stopped, his expression unreadable in the half-light.

"Look," Karion said, spreading his hands in a gesture that might have been conciliatory if not for the tension in his shoulders, "I'd like to go there too. Have so real adventures instead of sitting on this beach waiting for... what exactly? Permission? While Adom is out there probably making so groundbreaking discovery or fighting sothing aweso."

"Move," Damus said, his voice flat.

"We could work together, you know," Karion continued, placing a hand on Damus's chest to halt his advance. "Since we both want the sa thing."

"We don't want the sa thing," Damus replied. "I doubt you know what you want beyond attention. Remove your hand."

Sam, sensing the rising tension, closed his notebook and set Zuni aside. Everyone was watching now, conversations abandoned, the leviathan temporarily forgotten.

"Hey there," Karion said, his smile not quite reaching his eyes. "Let's be friendly, yeah? We're all classmates here."

"Classmates," Damus repeated, his tone making the word sound aningless. "Is that why you insist on this juvenile 'rivalry' with Adom? A pathetic attempt to elevate yourself by association?"

Karion's smile hardened. "You know what? I actually like to fight. It's honest. Simple." His hand was still on Damus's chest. "I've fought most people I thought could handle themselves. Never got around to you, though."

"Guys," Sam said, standing up and approaching cautiously. "Maybe don't do this here? The fisherman said to keep a low profile, rember?"

Karion ignored him, eyes fixed on Damus. "How about it? Want to have a go? Might make you feel better. You've been brooding since we got here."

Damus looked Karion up and down with cool assessnt. "I don't feel like fighting."

"Afraid I'll ss up that perfect face?" Karion's grin widened. "Or afraid your monotone act will crack if soone actually lands a hit?"

The air between them practically crackled. Naia's water sphere collapsed as her concentration broke. Gus stopped adjusting the shelter. Eren's stone dropped from his hand before he could throw it.

"I'm not afraid," Damus said, his voice still maddeningly calm. "I just find it pointless. Like most things you do."

"Say that again," Karion said, his friendly facade dropping entirely. His hand moved from Damus's chest to grip his collar.

Damus's eyes narrowed a fraction—the most emotion anyone had seen from him all day.

"Okay, STOP!" Sam shouted, just as Karion's free hand curled into a fist and Damus's fingers began to trace what looked suspiciously like the beginning of a spell pattern.

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