The murky waves of ink-black ichor receded, leaving the water eerily still as my eyes snapped open, dragging back to the comfort—or relative comfort—of my own dragon body. My gaze darted over the surface, scanning for any sign, any ripple, anything at all. But there was nothing. Just the quiet retreat of the dark tide. My chest tightened.
Hell, how was I supposed to know I was working against a damn tir? Only in the final monts did I realize that the thread tethering to my body was thinning, unraveling like a fraying rope. Instinct whispered that snapping it myself might’ve worked, but with the way it was dwindling, it seed just as likely to snap all on its own. A ticking clock I hadn’t even noticed until it was almost too late.
I’d run like mad, tearing through a maze that felt less like a sewer and more like the fever dream of an architect who hates clarity. I could only hope I’d put enough distance between those kids and the cultists chasing them. Would be a damn sha if, after all that, they still got caught.
But hey, not my circus, not my monkeys—not anymore. I did my part, and then so. My goal? A simple, clean escape. What did I actually do? Saved a sacrificial lamb, sent the “alleged” head cultist to an early grave, sprinkled in a generous helping of chaos, and even bagged a shiny new level after redecorating the floor with a few smug elven skulls.
All in an hour’s work, really.
Still, the conclusion didn’t sit right with . Sure, I’d made their lives harder, but had I actually stopped them? Not quite. And the real kicker? I was still flying blind. No solid intel on where these cultists were holed up, no guarantee those kids made it out, no satisfying ending tied up in a neat little bow.
I did glean sothing from that smug leader’s rant, though: a ntion of sothing awakening, sothing beastkin had supposedly stolen from the elves—sothing the cultists were hellbent on reclaiming. Whatever it was, it didn’t sound like the kind of thing you’d want to unwrap under the Solstice tree. Still, I’d botched their plans a little, maybe more than a little. Killing a high yellow core—or what might’ve been a red core too—had to count for sothing, right?
My attention shifted back to the tunnel around , the still water, the oppressive quiet. What in all the burning hells was that? I had possessed soone, controlled their body like so ghostly puppet master. My own body felt foreign now, as if coming back to it left a lingering disconnect.
Peering closer, I finally caught sight of sothing I’d missed before: faint, nearly invisible markings etched beneath the water’s surface. The whole tunnel seed divided into sections, twelve in total—six on each side, forming a rough square if flattened out. One of these segnts was where I’d seen that girl earlier. Now, it was as empty as the rest. Except… one section stood out.
The markings there were faintly lighter, a subtle tentacle of dark ink swirling at its center. Intriguing. I tried to interact with it—poke it, prod it, ntally scream at it—but nothing happened. No clue what it ant, but it felt important.
My gaze followed the tunnel to where it ended. And with a sinking feeling, I realized the only creature who might have answers—the only other dragon I knew—wasn’t likely to share them without a fight. Oh, the delight of dealing with her again.
Still, she had a penchant for breadcrumb trails, and right now, I’d take whatever scraps she tossed my way. Call hungry, but I’d gobble them up. Better than being left in the dark.
That was if it lead to her. So I moved, towards the supposed entrance to my ‘dream.’
***
The water rippled once and receded as I stepped through, its surface smoothing back to an unnatural stillness. My entrance wasn’t unlike that of Alice’s, like stepping through a rippling puddle in reality itself. A curious phenonon, to say the least.
On the other side, an endless grassland stretched out before , flanked by a looming mountain of black scales. Not a mountain in the literal sense, mind you. The "mountain" shifted, revealing itself for what it truly was as a familiar draconic face peeled away from a massive rocky outcropping. Lotte. Her colossal mug turned slightly toward , her crimson eyes gleaming with that annoyingly self-assured glint.
Her voice slithered into my mind, smug and rich with amusent. "It appears you've had quite the eventful excursion today."
“Ooh, ‘eventful’ is putting it lightly, Lotte. Try sothing in the realm of bizarre.”
Without waiting for her to prod, I launched into the story, regaling her with everything that had happened monts before. The possession. The tether. The ink-stained chaos. Every vivid detail spilled out like water through a cracked dam.
When I finished, she paused. “Fascinating..."
I blinked at her, incredulous. “Fascinating? That’s all you’ve got? Lotte, I possessed soone! And while I’m not about to ask you for a dissertation on how or why—because we both know you’d give nothing but riddles anyway—did you at least know this might happen when you gave this… this second thod of entrance?”
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Her gaze lingered on , unblinking, before she finally spoke. "The potential always lurked beneath the surface, though I must admit, I did not foresee you plunging into it so... unreservedly. Most tread cautiously, skirting the edges of the unknown, content to gaze upon its depths without daring to breach them. But you?" Her mouth curved in what might have been a draconic smirk, if her face wasn’t the size of a hill. "You do not rely step beyond thresholds; you fling yourself past them with reckless abandon, heedless of what lies beyond. And the further you subrge yourself, the more the established order frays. Predictability dissolves into irrelevance. So doors, once unsealed, refuse to close. Or worse, refuse to let go."
I groaned dramatically, flopping onto the grass like a deflated marionette, my claws sprawled uselessly toward the heavens. The vast expanse of sky seed indifferent to my theatrics, though that didn’t stop . “Whatever it was… it was interesting. I’ll give you that much.”
Lotte’s massive draconic head shifted slightly, her tone dripping with bemusent. "I trust you found the experience... diverting."
“Hah, diverting…” I huffed, a wry smile tugging at my snout. “Well, kind of. On that note—was my aggression heightened when I body-swapped? It felt like my very thoughts were taking a sharp turn into… vulgarity and violence.”
Her crimson eyes narrowed ever so slightly. "That, of course, hinges entirely on the nature of the soul whose flesh you briefly commandeered."
“Huh…” I idly raked my claws through the grass, tail flicking as I mulled it over. “No wonder my head felt like it was shoving vulgarity and violence into every available crevice. My thoughts weren’t nearly as… well, refined as they are now.”
Not that I’d ever delude myself into thinking I was graceful—perish the thought—but I’ve always had a flair for verbal carnage. I can flay soone with words so elegantly they won’t even notice they’ve been reduced to smoldering taphorical ashes until they try to breathe and choke on the soot. A damn sight better than just barking ‘moron’ at soone.
Maybe it was Lotte’s influence. She had a talent for weaving truths into intricate little knots, never quite handing the full picture—always leaving to untangle her riddles.
So much fun.
She didn’t say anything else, her silence an answer in itself. There went my hopes of prying more information about this bizarre possession phenonon from her. Still, I knew Lotte well enough to trust her judgnt. If there had been any danger, she’d have told outright—her one exception to her own self-imposed rules about withholding knowledge. At least I had that reassurance.
Would I do it again, though? This whole body-possession… thing? If given the chance? Probably. But first, I needed to figure out what made soone eligible to be possessed in the first place. Those twelve segnts in the water tunnel weren’t just there for decoration—they had to an sothing. Twelve candidates, maybe? Made sense. I’d have to map it all out later, connecting the dots and forming so kind of working hypothesis.
But not right now. This whole strange escapade had almost derailed from my real purpose here: a final talk with Lotte before initiating the ritual to convert Belle into my supplicant.
I had questions. Specifically about the alternate ingredients I’d purchased, all bearing similar properties but slightly divergent effects. Pale Jasper Seeds, rumored to enhance ritual resonance; Gildroot Sap, said to bind mana more efficiently to the recipient’s core; and Ashen Feather Moss, which supposedly provided an extra layer of protection to fragile mana conduits. All exotic, all expensive, and all worth the effort if they worked.
And then there were the oh-so-practical trifles—the circle’s alignnt, the mana conduits’ sturdiness, and, most importantly, whether I could soften the blow of the transformation’s side effects. Supplicant rituals, as my ever-mighty draconic ntor would remind , were less a process and more an intricate dance. A single errant step could crack the delicate harmony between the supplicant’s essence and the dominant core. In the context of these rituals, cores weren’t just players—they were the orchestra, the conductor, and the damned stage. Botching it? Out of the question. Not with Belle at stake.
After a quick exchange of words, I began to think I might’ve been stressing over nothing. Lotte waved my worries off with a nonchalance that would’ve been comforting—if it weren’t Lotte. This was the sa dragon who once deed Mirror Summoning an easy task. Mirror Summoning! As if summoning a Netherbeast with my mana reserves barely scraping the bottom of the barrel wasn’t borderline suicidal.
So yes, I was sprinkling her "A trivial endeavor, really" with a heaping fistful of salt. Still, she managed to toss a few useful breadcrumbs, which I gratefully gathered. I nodded along, filing away her warnings: the importance of the central circle, the art of disguising my handiwork, and the ever-reliable reminder to prepare wards.
Wards. The last ti I attempted this, I had no mana, no wards, and absolutely no budget for the materials. But this ti? Thanks to Gwen’s “kind” pocket money support, I could scrape together enough coin to afford the basics. Rich? Hardly. Prepared? Better than last ti.
Once everything was in place, it was ti to leave.
“...But how do I leave now?!” I muttered, realization hitting like a hamr to the skull. Leaving before had been as simple as simulating an awakening and letting the dream unravel around . But now? Awake and very much here, that escape route seed less… plausible.
"Simply retrace your steps," Lotte said, utterly unbothered.
I scowled but decided not to argue. If the way in was being yanked by claws spun from eerie whispers, then descending back out should, in theory, work the sa way.
I closed my eyes and focused, summoning the mory of those spectral claws. Imdiately, the whispers stirred, soft and sinister, brushing against my mind like shadows with teeth.
They ca, curling around like a net of phantom tendrils, and yanked downward. The descent felt like sliding through clouds woven from fragnted murmurs—layer upon overlapping layer of voices, their anings tangled and indecipherable.
And then, with a jarring slam, I was back.
Staggering, I barely managed to keep myself upright. Hah. Victory.
“Welco back, mistress,” Alice greeted, her tone as chipper as ever.
“Good to be back,” I muttered, glancing around.
One look out the window and I groaned. Morning. Morning?! How long had I been gone? I’d hoped to finish everything today, but that plan had been thoroughly derailed.
I sighed. The ritual would have to wait. Vasilisa was already suspicious enough without disappearing at dawn to fan the flas. Evening, then. Tonight.
For now, I’d just have to bide my ti.
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