Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 402: Late Night Haircut from Realm of Monsters, a Action novel by Frostbird.

The room Virella had given Stryg was quite spacious, far larger than the tents he had grown up in or the rooms he had lived in with Feli. The furnishings were sparse, a plain bed with a single blanket, and a bare wooden chair in the corner. Even if this was a room in the Celestial Shrine, it was still the room of an acolyte. Stryg preferred it that way, it reminded him of his days spent training.

It had been a while since he had a room to himself to ditate and improve his mana flow. He sat down on the floor crossed-legged, closed his eyes, and took deep slow breaths. Carefully, he called out to the mana reserves in his heart. Gradually, ten chromatic colors of mana answered in their own tones.

Black and Orange eagerly answered the call first, the two colors he was most accustod to casting. Then ca the familiar Grey, the first chromatic mana he had ever called forth. Reliant Yellow ca next, followed by powerful Green, and serene White. Purple was coaxed out from its timid abode. Brown and Red were harder to summon, his ineptitude in half their spell-forms was evident in the colors’ stubbornness. Blue, fickle Blue, answered last; the color demanded stability in his emotions, and yet Blue felt the most volatile of his colors.

Soon the colors were streaming through his veins in a convoluted jumble, distorting his mana flow entirely. Stryg clenched his eyes and furrowed his brow as he tried to calm the colors and their tones as they clamored against one another.

He rembered the words Beatrix Morrigan had told him in their duel back in Undergrowth. The true blue mage had warned him of the unique nature of each mage’s mana equilibrium, each color within a mageborn vying for superiority. Most manifold mages only had to struggle with two or three colors, but a pri mage had to face them all. It felt like a storm brewing within Stryg’s chest, unable to escape, yet unwilling to stop fighting.

Stryg tried rembering Isne’s lessons on flow control. The more stable a mage’s mana flow, the more powerful their spells could beco. It was for that sa reason so few pri mages ever managed to reach the adept rank. The ten colors within them would consistently destabilize their mana flow. The body naturally did its best to stabilize the flow, but that would only get him so far. If he wanted to grow stronger, he would have to learn to consciously control his flow.

As usual, the colors fought against him, against each other. Stryg was ready to give up as usual, after the pain within his veins began to burn with a dull ache, but he tried to hold out, just a little longer.

Isne had once told him that chromatic colors felt different to each mageborn and it was his job to listen to the colors and understand their desires, for the mana was an expression of him, unconscious perhaps, but always a part of him.

Stryg turned his focus onto his heartbeats, the synchronous sounds of his two hearts echoing off one another in a rhythmic song. Despite the violent nature of his colors, he noticed they were reacting to the rhythmic song.

  They are all a part of …

If that was true then it explained the colors’ tendency for hostility. But it also ant that deep down… they desired to belong, to have a place, in a tribe, a family… in a song. In the song of his magic, deep within him. Slowly, Stryg tried to listen to the colors within.

So part of his mind whispered it was a terrible idea, that he was simply being a fool. What need was there for such a thing as belonging? Power, that was what mattered. With enough power one could make their own place to belong, they needed nothing else. Stryg ignored that voice and tried to listen once more, more carefully, to the colors within.

Then he heard it, the discordant notes of his colors. Yet instead of ignoring them as usual, forcing them to obey his will, he quietly listened to their broken tune. With a gentle focus, he steadily moved their notes into a different order, into a larger piece of his hearts’ song.

Ti felt weightless, the monts blending in one with another. Stryg did not hear the knock on his door, nor the quiet creak as the door opened. His thoughts were entirely on the broken notes within his flow. He whispered to them, silently, in the sa way they cried out to him in frustration, but he t their voices with patience and gentleness.

He had always pushed himself to be better, to be better than the failure he was ashad to be. Yet as he heard the broken voices of his colors, he felt compassion for them. He didn’t need them to be better, to be stronger, to stand above all else. To him they were enough, he loved them all the sa. For an instant, he forgot about his bitterness, frustrations, and desires for revenge. For an instant, he lived in the quiet mont of self-acceptance.

The colors reverberated with disbelief, yet they did not fight back. They flowed through his body in a quiet warm tune, the notes falling into place within his hearts’ song.

A cold, discordant note suddenly broke through the song. Its powerful shriek was disdainful against the rest of the colors. What color was it and why was it so indignant? Stryg tried to follow the imbalance sound, yet it did not co from the heart like the other colors. No, this note ca from his second heart. It wasn’t a color at all, it was sothing else, there was no warmth. There was only a primal frigidness that threatened to overwhelm the rest.

It was dangerous, Stryg felt, but he didn’t shy away from it, not this ti. He was done ignoring the parts of him he was ashad to look at. Whatever the note of mana was, he was determined to listen to it even if it hurt him. As if realizing his choice, the mana scread in a deep roar, drowning out the colors’ notes and his heart song. Yet Stryg didn’t run from his mind, he didn’t try to push down the angry song. He sat still and listened patiently, accepting the cold pain as it washed over him.

He slowly noticed the pain was familiar. He had felt it when Clypeus had been struck down, when he had learned of Loh’s deception, when he had lifted the fallen log off Freya… when he had first descended down the lamia’s cave.

  You’re not dangerous, are you?

When he was afraid and in pain, it was this chaotic note, this deep part of himself, that had answered. It had rushed over him… protecting him.

  You’re not just angry, you’re worried… for ?

The cold mana answered with a painful note of confirmation.

  I’m sorry… I didn’t an for you to worry.

The cold mana’s roar settled down and its chaotic tune slowed to a halt, and played a new song, barely a whisper, underneath the first song. Where the first hearts’ song was a duet, a rhythm between both hearts, a symphony of all the chromatic color’s notes, the second song belonged to the cold mana and none else. 𐍂𝐚ΝŐ𝐛ƐS̈

The first song was beautiful but difficult to understand, overwhelming tunes all at once. The second song was quiet, but it was strong, dignified. If he could only sohow listen just a little closer, he could—

“...tryg… Stryg… Stryg!”

His eyes snapped open and he gasped for breath. He was covered in a cold sweat and his muscles trembled with debility.

“Stryg, are you alright?” Aurelia asked worriedly.

“First… Mother?” he muttered, confused.

Aurelia sat in front of him, not two feet away, her eyes staring intently at him.

“How long have you been sitting there?” Stryg asked.

“...Not too long. I noticed you were ditating. I didn’t want to break your concentration, so I waited, until… never mind. I ca because you are in desperate need of a haircut and I’m tired of you walking around looking like so vagrant, it’s an embarrassnt to our tribe.”

Stryg finally noticed the dagger, wash basin, and leather bag of supplies next to her.

“Sorry,” he winced.

First Mother had always been the one who had cut his hair back when he had lived with the Blood Fang Tribe. After he started living in Hollow Shade, one of Feli’s acquaintances had taken over that job. Yet he hadn’t bothered about his hair ever since Clypeus and Widow’s Crag.

“Co on then, we don’t have all night, go sit on the chair,” Aurelia pushed him on.

Stryg nodded and sat on the single chair in the room. He sighed quietly to himself. He should have expected sothing like this. First Mother had always been quite strict on appearances, especially his own. While the other Sylvan Mothers had taken turns cutting the other younglings’ hair, First Mother had insisted on cutting Stryg’s hair every ti. It was her way of interrogating him of whatever he had been up to, Stryg had long guessed.

Whenever he was alone with her, Stryg sohow always ended up telling her more than he had intended, which has often gotten him in trouble in the past.

Aurelia grabbed the wash basin and walked over behind him, then began washing hair with quick movents. Stryg leaned his head back and closed his eyes and tried his best to relax his tense muscles.

“...Stryg,” she said carefully.

“Yes?” he cracked an eye open.

She pulled a silver feather out of her pocket. “Have you ever seen sothing like this before?” she asked in a serious tone.

“A feather? Why would I…” Stryg abruptly stopped and frowned.

The mory of his ti in the Dark Fringe and his eting with the Monster stirred in his mind. The place was cold, distant. He had felt numb, weak. It was so dark, there was nothing there, save a great emptiness, and a silver feather.

  No, it can’t be.

That feather had crumbled into dust. It wasn’t real. The Dark Fringe wasn’t real either, at least not in the way the room he was sitting in was.

Stryg shook his head with a small smile. He was thinking too deeply about this. This was just an ordinary feather.

“I haven’t seen that particular kind of feather if that’s what you’re asking,” Stryg answered.

“Is that so?” she muttered.

“Why? Would it matter if I had?”

“Perhaps… It’s just odd, is all.”

“What is?”

“When I walked into your room the feather was on the ground next to you.”

“What?” Stryg stiffened. “I don’t— I don’t know how it got there.”

“Best not to think about it,” Aurelia said in a strange voice.

She was hiding sothing, Stryg thought. But why?

Aurelia grabbed the sheathed knife and drew the sharp blade with a deft hand. She grabbed the tips of his pale locks and sliced them off with precise motions.

“Tell ,” she said. “How do you really feel about the orc?”

“You an Tauri?”

“Yes. She isn’t here, you’re free to speak your mind.”

“I was telling you the truth the first ti. I like her, a lot. And she likes too… I think.”

“Of course, you do,” she clicked her tongue. “You need to end your relationship with that orc co dawn.”

“I won’t,” Stryg said with hesitance, much to his surprise.

Aurelia raised her eyebrow, “What was that?”

Stryg swallowed in fear. “I… I like her, maybe I even love her, who knows? Either way, I’m not going to just throw that away.”

“You don’t know what love is. And no, infatuation isn’t love.”

“I know that.”

“Clearly, it seems you don’t. You’re still too young to know what’s truly important.”

“I’m old enough to know what love is.”

“No, you are not,” she said seriously. “True love is pain, Stryg. It is sacrifice. It requires putting soone else above your own needs.”

“You don’t think I can?” Stryg frowned.

“If you could, you would have already broken off your relationship with that Plum girl. I spoke with her earlier and she told about your mutual past. The only reason she is here is because you couldn’t let her go. You didn’t care if Plum being friends with her mother’s murderer bothered her, you just wanted your friend back.”

“That’s…” Stryg’s expression darkened in dismay.

He hadn’t thought of it like that before.

Aurelia sighed, “Look, it doesn’t matter. In the end, Plum chose to be here, it was her choice. Whatever you do with that drow doesn’t matter to . The orc is a different story. Having a relationship with a Scarletian is dangerous.”

“Tauri isn’t a Scarletian. She was born in the Ebon Realm like any of us, as were her parents.”

“She is an orc, she will always belong to the Scarlet Realm. They cannot be trusted. She’ll betray you just like her kind betrayed our people.”

“Tauri would never do that.”

Aurelia’s expression softened, “I used to think the sa. I had this… friend. He was a Scarletian, but I thought I could trust him. I was mistaken.”

“What happened?” Stryg asked curiously.

Aurelia narrowed her eyes, “It does not matter. Now stay still or I might accidentally nick you.”

“Right, sorry.”

“...I don’t approve of your relationship with that orc.”

“I know.”

“Yet you’re still not listening to , as usual.”

She flicked his pointy ear.

“Ow!” he winced.

“If she tries to tempt you, do not listen to her.”

“Tempt ?” Stryg couldn’t help but chuckle.

“I told you to stay still!” She flicked his ear again.

“Ah, dammit, stop, please! I won’t move, alright?”

“I don’t care how pretty that orc is, do not bed her, do you understand ?” Aurelia growled. “Sabina and the other Elects have spies everywhere on this mountain, the last thing we want is having them find out you’ve slept with an enemy.”

“I’ve already slept with two orcs before, what difference does it make if I sleep with one more,” Stryg grumbled to himself.

“...What was that?” Aurelia asked in a frigid voice.

Stryg paled in panic. “U-Uh… I an, I was drunk, really drunk, and it was one ti. I swear!”

“You little imbecile!” Aurelia hissed.

“I’ve killed orcs too! Like this one who was the leader of a gang!”

Aurelia raised her eyebrow, “What is a gang?”

“It’s what so people call their tribes back in Hollow Shade. Though they could never hold up against one of our Sylvan tribes.”

Aurelia smiled slightly. “Is that so? Tell more.”

You are reading Realm of Monsters Chapter 402: Late Night Haircut on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Timeless Assassin cover
Same genre

Timeless Assassin

RajShah7152 ·Action

Leoawakensinaworldhedoesn’trecognize,withnomemoryofwhoheisorwhyhe’sthere.Allheknowsisthatsurvivalisn’tjustanecessity—it’shisonlychancetouncoverthet...

MILF Paradise System cover
Trending now

MILF Paradise System

BeingOtaku ·Fantasy

[Warning:MatureContentR-18]LotsofMelons.OnlyNTRNetori-NoNetorare.Alexwasnineteen,acollegestudent,andapparentlytheuniversedecidedtocursehim…withasys...

My Arms Can Turn into Blades cover
Trending now

My Arms Can Turn into Blades

Ode ·Fantasy

ChenLuSifindsastrangestoneandmeetsastrangegirlduringhistombsweeping.Afterthegirlslasheshimwithasword,hefindsthathecouldn'tcontrolhiswholebodybuthis...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.