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Now reading: Chapter 73. Shadows from Re:Birth: A Slow Burn LitRPG Mage Regressor, a Comedy novel by AcetheOwl.

Adom stood in line at the post office, tapping the envelope against his palm. It felt heavier than it should have, though it contained just a single sheet of paper. He counted the people ahead of him.

Four.

His eyes drifted to the clock on the wall. 1:17 PM. The place slled of paper and ink and sothing faintly spicy that might have been the perfu of the woman two spots ahead. He stifled a yawn. Six hours of sleep hadn't been nearly enough, and his body was making that abundantly clear. The bed back in his dorm still called to him like a siren.

The line shuffled forward.

The letter to Duke Lightbringer was carefully worded, signed with his father's na and sealed with the House Sylla crest he'd borrowed from the Academy's heraldry collection. Not technically forgery since his father would absolutely approve, but still not entirely aboveboard. The Duke would understand the necessity.

Three people ahead.

Adom shifted his weight from one foot to the other. The ssenger service wasn't cheap, especially for priority delivery to Sundar, but he needed this letter in Duke Lightbringer's hands by tomorrow evening at the latest. The Duke had connections throughout the House of rchants—connections that could an the difference between securing their seat and watching the whole plan collapse.

Two people ahead.

His finger traced the wax seal. High-quality stuff, at least. The kind that would pass cursory inspection from the Duke's staff. And the letterhead was genuine House Sylla stationery. His mother had given him a stack when he was leaving Kati. "For whatever important matters may arise," she'd said quietly.

At the ti, Adom had simply nodded and tucked them away. He hadn't expected to need them so soon, and certainly not for sothing like rchant guild applications.

The line moved again.

Zuni chirped quietly from inside Adom's jacket pocket, apparently bored with the waiting. Adom gently tapped the pocket, signaling for quiet. The last thing he needed was to draw attention in a public place.

One person ahead.

The clerk behind the counter looked half-asleep, weighing packages and stamping forms. His eyes never quite focused on the custors, and his responses were monosyllabic grunts that sohow still conveyed exactly what he ant.

"Next."

Adom stepped forward, placing the envelope on the counter. "Priority delivery to Sundar. House Lightbringer estate."

The clerk raised an eyebrow, finally looking fully awake. "House Lightbringer? That's noble correspondence." His eyes flicked to the seal. "Hmm, is that... House Sylla? I'll need verification."

Adom slid his Academy identification across the counter. "I'm authorized to send on behalf of Lord Sylla."

It wasn't a complete lie. His father had given him carte blanche when it ca to correspondence, even if he hadn't specifically approved this particular letter.

The clerk examined the ID, then the letter, then Adom's face.

"Hmm."

Adom t his gaze evenly.

After a mont, the clerk nodded and reached for his stamp. "Fifteen silver for priority to Kati. Twenty if you want confirmation of receipt."

"Twenty, then." Adom counted out the coins from his pouch, placing them on the counter with a soft clink.

The clerk swept the money into his drawer and handed Adom a receipt. "One to two days delivery. Confirmation will co by return ssenger."

"Thank you."

That done, Adom stepped back into the morning sunlight, checking the second item off his ntal list.

The first had been easier—just asking Sam to approach his father about sponsorship. Sam had agreed imdiately, almost eager for the chance to show his usefulness. "My father's always going on about business opportunities," he'd said. "He'll jump at this if I fra it right."

Adom wasn't so sure, but he trusted Sam to handle it.

Pulling out a folded piece of paper from his pocket, Adom consulted his to-do list. Sam's request was marked with a check. The letter to Duke Lightbringer now had one too. Next on the list: "Visit Mr. Biggins - sponsor #3."

He tucked the list away and headed east, toward the rchant district. The early afternoon crowds parted around him as he walked, lost in thought.

Today's brief sleep had been... strange. In fact, these past few days, all his dreams had been sporadic, disjointed things. Random images, forgotten upon waking.

But this ti was different.

He'd dread of the tree again—that apple tree in the cave, its branches thriving sunlight he had no idea where the source was. And at its base, surrounded by twisted roots and leaves, lay the egg. It burned with blue fire that gave off no heat, its flas licking the air but consuming nothing.

In the dream, he'd approached the egg, reached out to touch it. But just before his fingers made contact, the scene dissolved, and then he would wake up.

Before, it had taken Veyshari tea to induce such vivid dreams. But now they were coming on their own, unannounced and uninvited.

Perhaps Mr. Biggins would know sothing about it. The old dragon had been alive for centuries, after all. If anyone might recognize the significance of recurring dreams about eggs wreathed in blue fla, it would be him.

A cart rumbled past, splashing through a puddle. Adom sidestepped neatly, avoiding the spray.

Mr. Biggins's shop wasn't far now. Just past the baker's and around the corner. The wooden sign—"Weird Stuff Store"—ca into view, swinging gently in the afternoon breeze. No cats today. They were rarely here as of late.

Third sponsor, and perhaps answers about the dreams. Two birds, one stone.

Adom rolled his shoulders, feeling the lingering soreness from last night's fights. The cuts on his arm had already completely healed, leaving only faint pink lines where Dasha's claws had struck.

[Healing Factor] was certainly useful, even if it drained him for heavier wounds. And sleeping seed to accelerate the healing, too.

Zuni chirped again from his pocket, more insistently this ti.

"I know, I know," Adom muttered. "We'll get lunch after this."

The quillick's answering chirp sounded suspiciously like disagreent.

As Adom reached for the shop door, he paused, glancing back over his shoulder at the busy street. For a mont, he'd felt... sothing. A prickling at the back of his neck, like he was being watched.

But the feeling passed as quickly as it had co. Just nerves, probably. Or lack of sleep.

The bell above the door jingled as Adom pushed it open, releasing the shop's scent— this ti, a peculiar blend of old parchnt, exotic spices, and sothing faintly tallic.

Emma stood behind the counter, her hair pulled back in a ssy bun, absentmindedly reshelfving a row of small crystal figurines. She looked up at the sound of the bell, her rehearsed greeting already halfway out.

"Welco to Weird stuff st—oh, hey Adom!" Her professional smile shifted to genuine recognition. A small crystal dragon nearly toppled from her hand before she caught it with an impressively quick save.

"Hey Emma. It's been a while." Adom nodded, stepping over what appeared to be a self-sweeping broom that had fallen asleep on the job. The bristles snored softly against the floorboards.

Was this by design?

"Almost three weeks." She carefully set down the dragon figurine. "I was starting to think you'd found a better weird stuff store."

"As if such a thing exists." Adom glanced around at the impossibly cramped shelves that sohow contained more items than the space should physically allow. "How's fourth year treating you?"

"Brutal." She tapped a thick to beneath the counter. "Professor Lachtna assigned a fifteen-page essay on the sociopolitical implications of healing magic. Due tomorrow."

The story has been stolen; if detected on Amazon, report the violation.

"Sounds thrilling."

"About as thrilling as watching paint dry on a sloth." She blew a stray hair from her face. "How about you? Still the Academy's most famous third year?"

"I prefer 'enigmatic,'" Adom replied. "Is Mr. Biggins around?"

"Yeah, he's in the b—"

"ADOM SYLLA!" The voice bood from sowhere behind the beaded curtain at the back of the shop, causing several delicate glass objects to rattle ominously on their shelves.

The curtain parted with dramatic flair as Mr. Biggins erged, resplendent in a purple top hat adorned with what might have been peacock feathers (if peacocks were fluorescent and occasionally blinked). His coat—a patchwork affair of at least seventeen different fabrics—swirled around his ankles as he strode forward.

"Perfect timing! Absolutely perfect!" Mr. Biggins declared, adjusting his monocle, which magnified his right eye to almost comical proportions. "I was just saying to myself, 'Biggins, what you need right now is an Adom Sylla,' and lo and behold—here you are!"

Emma stifled a laugh. "I was just telling him you were in the—"

"No ti for explanations!" Biggins cut her off, seizing Adom by the arm with surprising strength. "Terribly urgent business, my boy. Simply can't wait."

"Whoa!" Adom found himself being steered toward the door.

"Emma, dear!" Biggins called over his shoulder. "Mind the shop! Everything is one hundred percent off for the next hour!"

Emma's eyebrows shot up. "One hundred percent off? As in... free?"

"Precisely! Marvelous grasp of mathematics you have." Biggins bead at her. "Take care of yourself as well! Don't let the miniature kraken out of its tank—it's been rather moody since Tuesday."

Before Adom could process what was happening, he was halfway out the door, Zuni chirping in confusion from his pocket.

"Wait—one hundred percent off?" Adom asked. "Are you looking for another employee or going out of business?"

Biggins tsked, pushing him fully outside. "As greedy as a dragon, this one! Already has a mountain of gold and still wants discounts."

Did he just imply dragons are greedy? Adom wondered, not for the first ti.

He'd always wanted to ask if the stereotypes were true, but sothing about Biggins's knowing smile always made him hesitate.

The door closed behind them with a definitive click, Emma's bewildered expression visible through the window as she looked around at the suddenly free rchandise.

"She'll be fine," Biggins said, adjusting his hat. "Probably."

"Wait—slow down!" Adom tried to dig in his heels, but it was like trying to anchor a ship with a teacup. Biggins propelled him forward with uncanny montum, weaving through the crowded marketplace with the precision of a needle through fabric.

Yes. That was... the perfect description. This could only be a spell, as Adom was not even using his legs, they were just... moving between people, like fluid.

Did that make sense?

That did not make any sense.

"No ti for dawdling!" Biggins declared, his purple hat sohow remaining perfectly balanced despite their pace. They were probably faster than a horse at full speed right now. "No ti at all!"

The afternoon crowd was thick—rchants haggling, custors browsing, street perforrs juggling what appeared to be small flaming salamanders. A cart of apples tipped over as they rushed past, sending fruit rolling across cobblestones.

"What's going o- WHOA!" Adom nearly collided with a woman carrying a stack of fabric bolts. "Sorry!" he called back as Biggins yanked him onward.

Zuni chirped frantically from his pocket, tiny quills vibrating in agitation.

"Aha!" Biggins exclaid, not slowing. "Listen to your little friend there! Quillicks know! They always know!"

"Know what?" Adom stumbled over an uneven paving stone. "What is he saying?"

Biggins suddenly stopped—so abruptly that Adom nearly crashed into him. The old shopkeeper's expression shifted, playfulness giving way to sothing sharper, more focused. He turned to face Adom directly. His pupils were a line, vertical.

"You're being followed, my boy," he said, voice dropping to just above a whisper. "By shadows."

Adom's blood ran cold. "Shadows? What do you—"

Biggins was already moving again, pulling Adom down a narrow alley between a bakery and a blacksmith's shop. The sounds of the marketplace faded slightly, replaced by the hiss of a forge and the scent of baking bread.

"Don't look now," Biggins murmured, "but they're right behind us. Have probably been since you left your dormitory."

Instinctively, Adom glanced back. The alley appeared empty save for a stray cat licking its paw.

"I don't see anything."

"Of course you don't!" Biggins sounded almost delighted. "That's why they're called shadows, not 'obvious pursuers wearing bright orange hats'!"

They erged from the alley into a smaller square. A fountain burbled at its center, children tossing copper coins into the water.

"Now that they know you're aware of them," Biggins continued, his pace quickening, "they'll likely move to capture rather than follow. Oh, how exciting!"

"Exciting?" Adom hissed. "I don't even know who 'they' are!"

"Details, details!" Biggins waved dismissively. "The important thing is that we're having an adventure!"

Adom tried to process this madness as Biggins dragged him across the square. He scanned it but saw nothing suspicious—just ordinary people going about their day. No one seed to be paying them any particular attention.

Then he saw it—or rather, didn't see it. A patch of... nothing. Like a piece of the world had been cut out, leaving a person-shaped hole in reality. It moved with purpose through the crowd, which parted unconsciously around it.

"What the—"

"Don't stare!" Biggins yanked him behind the fountain. "They feed on attention!"

"They what?"

"Figure of speech! Mostly!" Biggins adjusted his hat. "Now, I hope you're not afraid of heights."

Before Adom could respond, Biggins grabbed his arm with both hands. The world lurched sideways, then upward.

"What are you—PUT DOWN!"

But it was too late. The ground fell away beneath them. Wind rushed past Adom's face as they shot upward, leaving his stomach sowhere around his ankles. Buildings shrank below, people reduced to specks.

They were flying.

Actually flying.

Zuni chirped in alarm, clinging to the inside of Adom's pocket.

"I HATE FLYING!" Adom shouted over the wind, eyes screwed shut.

"Nonsense!" Biggins called back cheerfully. "Everyone loves flying! They just don't all know it yet!"

Adom risked opening one eye. The city sprawled beneath them, a patchwork of rooftops and streets. People continued their business, apparently oblivious to two figures soaring overhead.

"Why isn't anyone looking up?" Adom managed, fighting nausea.

"We're invisible to most," Biggins explained, steering them east with casual ease. "A simple perception filter. Only those with the Sight can spot us now."

"The Sight?"

"Mages with certain talents, children under seven, cats, and faeries, of course."

"Faeries?!"

"Naturally!"

Adom's tears—whether from the wind or sheer terror, he wasn't sure—blurred his vision as they soared over the eastern districts. The city gave way to suburbs, then to countryside, and finally, the coastline ca into view—a long stretch of sand eting the vast blue expanse of the ocean.

Biggins began to descend toward a secluded cove, hidden from the main beach by jutting rocks. No people. Just sand, waves, and seabirds circling overhead.

Their landing was less graceful than their takeoff. Adom's feet hit the sand first, his knees buckling beneath him. He sprawled forward, face planting into the cool, damp sand as Biggins landed beside him with the delicate precision of a ballet dancer.

"There we are!" the shopkeeper declared, dusting off his coat. "Safe and sound, miles from any shadows!"

Adom pushed himself up, spitting sand. "What," he demanded, "the HELL was that?!"

"Oh, shadows?" Biggins said, brushing sand from his outlandish coat as casually as if Adom had asked about the weather. "Nasty little things. Like parasites, really. They attach themselves to the mortal plane through cracks between dinsions. Must be working for a greater demon, judging by their coordination."

Adom's heart pounded in his chest. His mouth opened, but no words ca out. The blood rushing in his ears drowned out even the sound of the waves.

Biggins let out a hearty laugh. "No need to be afraid, my boy! You're with , after all." He adjusted his monocle with practiced precision. "Most people go their entire lives without seeing shadows. Consider yourself fortunate!"

Adom finally found his voice. "Fortunate? They were hunting like—"

"One mont, please." Biggins held up a finger, turning toward the horizon.

He clacked his fingers together—a simple snap that shouldn't have sounded like thunder. A shockwave rippled outward, distorting the air like heat over sumr roads.

The effect was imdiate.

Where there had been nothing but empty beach and sky, Adom now saw them—black figures moving across the sand. Not running, not walking, but gliding. Their forms shifted and wavered, like smoke caught in conflicting winds. They had no faces, just darker spots where features should be.

Adom scrambled to his feet, hands already weaving the pattern for a thunderbolt spell. Electricity crackled between his fingers.

[Thunderb-]

"Oh, no need for that," Biggins said, pulling a set of small glass bottles from his seemingly bottomless pockets. "If they knew who I was, they'd have never followed us here. Poor decision-making, really. In their defense, the shadow brain is quite small. About the size of a pebble."

The shadows advanced, their movents becoming more erratic as they drew closer. One lunged forward, stretching impossibly long, its dark mass hurtling toward Adom.

Biggins stepped in front of him and uncorked a bottle.

What happened next defied explanation.

The shadow scread—not with a mouth, but with its entire being. The sound pierced Adom's ears like icicles. The black mass contorted, stretched, and then collapsed inward, sucked into the tiny bottle as if it were a black hole.

Biggins corked it casually. "See that? It's all in the wrist." He tossed the bottle to Adom, who caught it reflexively. Inside, the shadow pressed against the glass, its form contorting in rage or pain.

Two more shadows attacked simultaneously, one from above, one from below. Biggins sidestepped the first, uncorking another bottle. The shadow above him scread as it was pulled in. The one below tried to wrap around his ankles.

"Oldest trick in the book," Biggins scoffed. He stomped his foot, and the sand beneath the shadow turned to glass, trapping part of its form. "You see that, Adom? Always control the battlefield! Rember that!"

The trapped shadow thrashed wildly. Biggins uncorked a third bottle, capturing it with a flourish.

"Are you taking notes? There will be a quiz later!" he called over his shoulder, dodging another attack with a dancer's grace.

Four more shadows circled them now, moving in perfect synchronization. They attacked from all sides at once.

Biggins spun in place, bottles in both hands. His purple hat never moved. The shadows shrieked as they were captured, their sounds cutting off abruptly as the corks went in.

"Teamwork!" Biggins exclaid. "Shows higher intelligence! Bravo!"

Three more shadows erged from behind a rock formation. Two charged forward while the third held back.

"The cautious one's the leader," Biggins told Adom. "Always look for the one that hesitates."

The attacking shadows t the sa fate as their companions, sucked into bottles with almost comical efficiency.

The leader turned to flee, stretching itself thin, moving across the sand faster than any human could run.

Biggins sighed. "They always run."

Then he simply wasn't where he had been. One mont beside Adom, the next directly in front of the escaping shadow. He hadn't seed to move—just relocated, as if the space between were an inconvenient detail.

"Going sowhere?" he asked, bottle already uncorked.

The shadow's scream was louder than the others, more desperate. Then silence as the cork went in.

Biggins walked back to Adom, nine bottles clinking in his pockets.

"And that's how it's done," he said, brushing invisible dust from his sleeves. "Shadows are nasty, but predictable. They actually love light, love fear, and have absolutely no appreciation for fine millinery." He adjusted his hat for emphasis.

Adom stood frozen, the bottle still clutched in his hand. Inside, the shadow pressed against the glass, a living blob of darkness.

"What... what are you going to do with them?" he finally managed.

Biggins took the bottle from Adom's hand and examined it like a fine wine. "Oh, various things. Shadow essence has many uses."

He pocketed the bottle and looked at Adom directly, all traces of whimsy suddenly gone from his face.

"So," Biggins said, his voice now serious. "I think it's ti we had a little talk, don't you? Have you been dream walking lately, my boy?"

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