Chapter 71
Blood Magus
After asking around a bit, Zeth found his way to the place the Inquisitors would be holding their witnesses.
At first, heâd assumed theyâd be using existing prisons in the guard precinct, or at least building onto them somehow, but it turned out that theyâd made an outpost on the outskirts of town. So he went out in the direction he was pointed in, expecting to see some tents set up.
But what he found was something else entirely.
Out away from the buildings and roads, Zeth saw a large stone structure cropping up from the ground, looking completely new. It was made of gray brick, walls towering high enough that it seemed to be several stories tall, and wide enough to be classified as a complex, not a simple buildingâit was like an entire office building, except made of reinforced stone and with defensive ramparts at the top. How had they made this thing so quickly?
Zeth worried that the real reason theyâd taken so many people prisoner under the guise of âinterrogatingâ them was actually because they just wanted to put them to work slaving away on this gigantic outpost, but even that couldnât have been the case. It was expertly constructed, not a single brick out of place; it couldnât have been made by a bunch of people who didnât know what they were doing.
He continued approaching, curious about the nature of this strange structure. As he rounded one of its corners, he found the entrance, with a small crowd of angry people in front of it. Several were shouting out for the Inquisitors to let the people go, or to leave this place and never return. Upon seeing this, he stopped, not wanting to continue closer and get involved with the protest. If it became a riot, the last thing heâd want would be for them to assume he was a part of it and attack him.
But as he watched from afar, Zeth realized the Inquisitors were taking a different approach to dismantling the protest. As the people shouted in front of the shut door, it suddenly opened up, and one of the Inquisitors stepped out, wearing their signature plate armor and unsettling mask. The moment they came out of the building, they approached one of the protestors. Zeth couldnât hear what they were saying, but the protester argued with them for a bit before calming down relatively quickly as the other ones continued to shout pointedly at the new target. But the Inquisitor ignored the others, and after a moment, they finished speaking, turning and walking right back into the building, bringing the person along with them, and shut the door.
Hesitantly, Zeth continued walking forward, curious about what was going on. The crowd seemed smaller than he wouldâve expected, considering what the Inquisitors had doneâwere they just pulling people in one by one to disperse everyone?
As he drew closer, he watched as the door opened once again. Now that he could see better, he noticed that as the door opened, several angry people attempted to push the soldier aside and shove their way in, but the Inquisitor clearly had more than enough Stats to shrug off their attempts to move them. The door also seemed to only open up into a small room which had two more Inquisitors guarding it, standing by another door that would let you further in. They clearly didnât want people barging in here.
The Inquisitor walked up to another person, and this time, Zeth could barely hear their unsettling voice as they spoke to a random protestor.
âDo you have someone inside you would like to see?â
âLet them go!â the person shouted.
âWould you like to see anyone?â
âY-yes, my brother. Heâs got a family to provide for! Let him go, or Iâllââ
âYou may enter.â
With that, the Inquisitor turned and began walking into the building, and the person hesitantly followed behind, the door shutting behind them.
Zeth wasnât sure why the Inquisitors were bringing visitors in like this, but it seemed to keep the crowd relatively in-check. Splitting them up as they gave the people not what they wanted, but at least a small form of it, kept the crowd small and the people placated.
It seemed like, if he wanted to enter, heâd have to come in through that entrance, though, so he walked up and stood by the door, next to the rowdy protestors. He empathized with them, but doubted their shouts of anger would ever change the Inquisitorsâ minds. With their powerful Classes, high Levels, and government sponsorship, there was nothing a few backwater peasants like them could do to threaten them, and Inquisitors didnât seem like they were the type to listen to emotional reasoning.
After a few minutes, one of them opened the door and came out again, eyes landing on Zeth, who was calmly leaning against the wall of the building.
âDo you have someone inside you would like to see?â
âYeah, a few. Is that alright?ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âYou may enter.â
The Inquisitor turned around. Zeth shrugged, and followed them inside. In the smaller guarded room, the Inquisitors stopped him and searched him for hidden weapons, of course finding none, and asked him who he wanted to see. He told them his sister and mom, as well as Rosalie and Erza, and they didnât seem to object to him visiting so many people, simply nodded and turning to walk him through the building.
Zeth examined the interior of the building as they walked, finding it to be made of the exact same perfectly square stone bricks as the exterior. The floor, walls, ceilingâall of it was made of the same stuff. The identical hallways felt strange; walking through them was surreal.
Or, noâhe frowned. It wasnât just the fact that everything looked the same that made this place feel so off. It was subtle, but there was an energy flowing through the place, he realized. Like the entire building, down to the very stones it was made of, was charged with mana. Not enough for him to see, but on the hairs of his arms, he could barely feel it tickling the edges of his person.
Before he could think about the weird feeling for too long, they arrived at their destinationâa simple room with a couple chairs and a table inside.
âSit,â one of the Inquisitors said curtly. Zeth still felt a little unsettled by these peopleâs appearances and general demeanor, but sat at the table as he was told, and they left him in the room, with one other staying inside to silently stand guard.
After a few minutes, Zeth heard the rattling of chains, and when he looked to the door, watched it open, with his mom walking through. She wore her own clothes, but with light shackles placed around her wrists and ankles. The moment her eyes landed on him, her expression lit up, and she ran forward as quickly as she could with the restraints placed on her.
âOh, Zeth!â she said. âIâm so glad to see you.â
She came close to embrace him, but one of the Inquisitors standing by the door watching them loudly said, âNo physical contact. Sit in the chair.â
She stopped, hesitantly complying and sitting in the chair opposite Zeth at the table.
âHow are you?â Zeth asked. âHow are they treating you?â
She sighed. âWell, I certainly wish I was back home, but I suppose theyâre treating us like people. I get fed, and I keep up with Sophie when I see her to make sure sheâs getting fed, too. But itâs been really hectic so far, so I havenât seen her much.â
âBut you have seen her?â
âYes, we all eat together in a common cafeteria, so Iâve made sure to find her each time weâre together there. There have been some other times they let us go outside to get some sun, and I thought everyone was given the opportunity, but couldnât find her then. But sheâs okay.â
He let out a breath heâd been holding in ever since he watched the Inquisitors take them away. âGood. So theyâve been giving you everything you need?â
She nodded. âWe all get private cells, and they even let us put in a request for them to go to our houses and retrieve some clothes from our rooms so we have something to wear. I really wish theyâd just let us go home, but itâs at least better than prison, which was what I was expecting. But speaking of home, howâs the farm doing? Have you been taking care of it?â
Zeth pursed his lips. âNot really.â
âWell, could you start? I donât know how long itâll be until I get back home, and the crops might die if it takes too long without anyone tending to them.â
âI canât take care of an entire field of crops,â Zeth said.
âButââ
âNo,â he interrupted. âIâm sorry, but this isnât something you can argue with me about. I wish you were able to take care of it, but I canât do the work in your stead. Iâm busy, and I know you didnât sign up to be arrested, but I didnât sign up to do all that labor.â
She looked at him for a moment. âZeth, this is our farm. Itâs what my parents handed down to me. They trusted me to take care of it, and I promised I would as my mother lay dying. You canât let her wish die like that. Please.â
He bit the inside of his mouth. As much as he disagreed with her, Zeth never wanted to hurt his mom. She just cared about something he couldnât bring himself to care about, himself. âIâm sorry.â
âCould you at least get someone else to look after it? Those mercenaries I hired to protect us, they couldââ
âOh,â he said, âwait, where were they when you got arrested?â
â...They backed off when they saw the Inquisitors. Said they didnât want to stop official business.â
âOkay, yeah, those guys have done nothing ever since you started paying them. If they wanna shirk their protection duties, they can do the farmwork instead.â
âYou really should be more understanding,â she said. âWe couldnât have expected them to try and stop the Inquisitors.â
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âYeah, well, I donât really care. Theyâre still on payroll. So theyâll be in charge of the farm until you get back. Howâs that sound?â
She sighed. âI suppose, as long as you make sure they take care of the crops right. I taught you how, and you were always good at it, so just make sure you watch them. Oh, and if theyâre going to be distracted, you make sure you stay safe, alright?â
âSure.â
âNo, I mean it. Out there, all aloneâ¦You know, bandits and Wicked thralls target people who are by themselves far more often. So donât let anyone know youâre in the house by yourself ever, okay? And if you ever see someone trying to hurt you, you just turn and run.â
âOkay.â
âIâm serious. Theyâve got combat Classesâyou wonât ever beat them. If you see strange shadows on the fields, or see a group of people coming up to the door, donât even bother asking who they are and letting them know thereâs someone inside. Just jump out the window and run for town.â
âDonât worry. Iâve got it handled.â
She gave him a look. âIt doesnât sound like youâre taking my words seriously.â
âMom, I promise. You donât have to worry about me.â
There was a relatively strict time limit on visitations, so pretty soon, Zethâs mom had to leave. But as they took her back to her cell, they brought the next person in, and Zethâs heart truly rested when he saw Sophie sit at the table opposite to him. Even in the stressful time, he felt a smile spread across his face as she climbed into the chair, feet dangling above the stone floor.
âHave you been okay?â he asked her.
She nodded. âThe bed isnât too comfortable, and the food isnât as good as momâs, but itâs okay.â
âAnd the Inquisitors have been nice?â
âTheyâre really weird and creepy,â she said loudly, as though not caring one bit that there were several Inquisitors in the room listening to her. But none of them reacted. She continued, âThey brought me into a room like this one and asked me about that time I saw the Blood Mage fight that monster and how he used that really cool fire power and stuff, but that was all. I only saw the fire power once and never saw it again, even though I wanted to see it again, so I couldnât say much to them.â
Zeth stared at her, fighting back a smile as she sent him the most blatant secret message in all existence. But he doubted the Inquisitors would take her words as anything other than a kid being weird, especially if theyâd interacted with her already and she was like this with them, tooâwhich he had no doubt she had been. âAlright. Did they say when youâd be getting out?â
âNo. I keep asking them questions, but they never answer me. Watch.â She leaned over to stare at the unmoving Inquisitors by the door and shouted, âHey! Mister! Whatâs your name?â
They didnât respond.
âCan you do any magic?â
Nothing.
âIâll give you one of my pieces of meat from dinner tonight if you show me cool magic!â
âYeah,â Zeth said, âI think theyâre just focused on the Blood Mage stuff right now.â
âWell, they arenât fun.â
âHave you been able to make any friends, though? Like, do they just have you sitting in your room all day, or what? Mom said nobody had any roommates, which I guess is good, but do you get lonely?â
She shrugged. âI donât really talk to anyone but mom. Sometimes they let us outside to talk to each other, but that sounds boring, so I donât go.â
âWhat do you do instead?â
âI just sit in my room.â
âWhat? Alone? What do you do?â
She shrugged, looking away. âI dunno. I justâ¦sit around, I guess.â
Zeth stared at her. Heâd known her long enough to tell when she was lying. She clearly wasnât telling him something here, but couldnât ask her directly in case she was trying to keep it hidden from the Inquisitors. âHuh. Well, alright.â
âOh!â she said. âI actually saw that guy you work for, that Erza guy, earlier at breakfast! He was sitting on the other side of the cafeteria, but maybe he could teach me something about magic! Do you think heâll teach me now that he doesnât have anything else to do?â
âHuh. Actually, he might. Couldnât hurt to ask. Iâm actually supposed to talk to him after you, so I could put in a word for you. Heâll probably try to get some sort of favor out of me, but maybe I couldââ
âDo it! Tell him he should teach me all the stuff he knows. I promise Iâll make it up to you, even if he charges you a million gold Iâll go and get a job and get the money for you once I become a mage!â
Zeth chuckled. âIf thereâs anyone who can earn a million gold by doing magic for people, I bet itâs you.â
âYeah! So go tell him to teach me, right now!â
âYou sure? I think we still have some visiting time left, so we can keep talking for a bit if youââ
âNo, no, itâs fine. You should talk to him instead.â
Once again, Zeth got the sense Sophie was hiding something, and was maybe even doing what she could to make it obvious to him that she was doing so while keeping it a secret from the Inquisitors, but he still didnât know what it was. Either way, it seemed like she just wanted to get back to her cell, so he nodded. âAlright, sure. But just, uh, be careful, yâknow? Donât do anything that would make the Inquisitors mad.â
She nodded. âOkay.â
After Sophie, the Inquisitors brought in Erza.
âHey there,â Zeth said.
âIâm not paying you for this time,â he replied.
âWhat? I got you out of that stuffy cell. Surely this counts as working hours for me. I think I deserve my wages.â
He stared at him.
âHow have the interrogations gone?â Zeth asked, figuring Erza wasnât in the mood for banter.
âI told them what I know, which isnât much. Obviously not every tiny detailâitâs not like they asked for every single person Iâve ever suspectedâbut all the important info.â
Zeth nodded, taking that to mean Erza hadnât told the Inquisitors he had once suspected him. âAlright, good. Glad they havenât tried beating anything out of people yet.â
He shook his head. âI doubt thatâs why theyâre keeping us. Seems like itâs a combination of extreme witness protection and so they can easily grab us if they ever need to know more about the original statements we made. Plus, I guess if anyone in here happens to be the Blood Mage, theyâll soon realize it, since all the incidents will suddenly stop for as long as the Blood Mage is in captivity. Thatâd make their job a lot easier.â
âI guess so,â Zeth said, wondering if it was worth intentionally laying low for as long as possible to try and throw the Inquisitors off. Though, maybe that ship had sailed now that heâd wiped out an entire bandit camp. âUh, a little off-topic, but my little sisterâs in here, and she was wondering ifââ
âThey imprisoned a child?â he interrupted. âWhy?â
âYeah. She was a witness to the fleshtaker attack, so they took her and my mom in for questioning.â
âWhy not you too?â
âI wasnât there at the time.â
Erza eyed Zeth with just about as much suspicion as a look could convey.
âAnyway,â Zeth said, pointedly ignoring the manâs gaze, âyou remember how she asked about learning magic the other day, right?â
Erza nodded. âShe wants to learn from me now that I have nothing better to do?â
âYeah.â
âNo.â
Zeth deflated. âCâmon, sheâd really appreciate it. I would too. And sheâs a really easy student, I swear. She gobbles up information like nothing else.â
âNo. Itâs out of the question. I suppose you wouldnât know this, being as uneducated as you are, but you have to be careful about who you impart knowledge on. Itâs not about how difficult it would be to teach her. In fact, if sheâs as good a learner as you say, it would only make me more hesitant to do so. Knowledge is valuable, but itâs only as valuable as it is scarce. For my education to remain valuable, I must protect it. And not only would it mean a loss of commodity for me, it would also be plainly irresponsible. Magic is a weapon; not everyone should own it. So, no, I will not teach her. Besides, if she really wants to learn, it should be plenty easy in a place like this.â
Zeth frowned. âA place like this? What do you mean?â
âHm? You havenât realized? Itâs made out of mana. Likely the work of a Creation Mageâthey can conjure up materials to build with out of mana itself, and as long as they maintain the materials they create on a daily basis, they can effectively create an entire building in a single day, and keep it standing for as long as they need to.â
Zeth realized why this place felt so mana-rich. The stones he was standing on were mana. Heâd heard of Creation Mages in passing before, but hadnât realized that was how their magic functioned. âHuh. So you think she could learn by studying the building materials?â
âQuite frankly, I donât. If sheâs as inexperienced as you say, learning magic simply by sitting around in a building thatâs technically made from mana would be just as ridiculous as learning to be an expert warrior by sitting next to a sword for long enough. But if she really wants to learn, maybe sheâll be able to find a way to unlock one of the basic magic Skills by messing around with the mana that permeates the air in here.â
Just as Zeth was about to respond, he suddenly heard one of the Inquisitors call out from behind him, âCitizens, leave the room at once.â
He glanced behind himself, worried heâd somehow done something wrong, but the Inquisitors didnât look hostile. Well, it was impossible to really tell anything about them from their appearances, but they hadnât drawn their weapons. Instead they just stood there, staring at him and Erza.
Zeth hesitantly stood. âI thought I had more time with him. And there was someone else I wanted to visit after him, too.â
âYou may come back tomorrow, then.â
â...Can you at least tell me why I have to leave?â
âCome with me. I will guide you out of the building.â
The Inquisitor turned and began walking away, leaving the others in the room to go and grab Erza and walk him back to his cell. Not wanting to get in trouble, Zeth hurried to catch up to the one that was supposed to lead him out.
As he walked alongside the Inquisitor, he looked over at them. âHey, seriously. I didnât do anything wrong, did I?â
They just kept walking.
âLike, if I asked to visit too many people, you couldâve just told me up front I could only see three, not four. No reason to do this wholeââ
They looked over at him, mask stuck in a neutral face, but body language signifying slight annoyance. âThere is a guest who has arrived for questioning. All interrogation rooms were taken up by visitors. We needed room. As such, we have determined the questioning of that guest to be more important than your visitation, and removed you to make space. Come back tomorrow.â
Zeth sighed. âAlright. Fine, I guess.â
As they walked through the tight hallways, Zeth saw another Inquisitor walking toward him with a man walking behind them, dressed in familiar garbâit was someone from Otis and Roulâs, wearing the guild uniform. Though he didnât recognize this man. From his skinnier build, Zeth had to assume the guy was an office worker, not a miner.
He almost assumed the guy mustâve been with the cabal just from the fact that he worked in the offices, but stopped himself. He didnât actually know how much of the guild had been genuinely subsumed by the Blood Mages. It couldâve just been that only the higher leadership was with the cabal, and the other ninety percent was totally clueless as to who they were working for, like he had once been.
The Inquisitor Zeth was walking with saw the other two heading the opposite way down the same hallway they were in, and turned to flatten themself against the wall. Zeth realized why the Inquisitor was doing this a little too late, as in the skinny hallway, there wasnât enough room for the pair of people to pass, and they came to a stop right in front of him.
âExcuse you,â the guild member said in an annoyed tone.
âUh, right,â Zeth said, turning to let them squeeze past.
âApologize.â
Zeth stared at whoever this guy was who worked for the guild. He glanced at the manâs chest, seeing a name tag that read âClin,â but not recognizing the name. âSeriously? I moved. You can pass by.â
âDo not delay,â the Inquisitor who was accompanying the guild member said, and continued walking.
He scoffed, throwing one more annoyed glance at Zeth, and walked by to catch up with the Inquisitor. Zeth had no idea what that was about.
Afterward, the Inquisitor finished leading him out of the building, unceremoniously dumping Zeth back outside, where he continued to hear the shouts of the mob.
Heâd been interrupted early, but heâd at least figured out that the Inquisitors werenât immediately a threat to the safety of his family. Which meant he was safe to purchase Speedy Rites, and get to work Leveling up. So that was exactly what heâd do.