"How did you find the undead’s base of operation?" Lith asked.
"I was lucky. I stumbled upon the vampires during my patrol, while they were assaulting a travelers’ caravan. I was about to intervene when I noticed that the bandits were freaking undead.
"I let them do their job and then I followed them back to their hideout. They had taken the humans alive, so I thought that I could save them later. Worst case scenario, they would have been collateral damage. The Kingdom sometimes requires sacrifices." Acala shrugged.
"After alerting the Headquarters, I tailed them in an underground network of caves that led me damn deep. That plus the arrays shut down all communications.
"I got stuck there because, after performing the ritual to turn their prisoners into thralls, the guards resumed their positions while I was still studying the odd machinery they built. I had to wait for their next expedition to get my opportunity to escape.
"After days without sleep and eating, not only was I so tired that they spotted me, but I had also the pleasure to learn that fucking Baroness Margrave and all the fucking nobles I risked my ass for a decade to protect, didn’t trust me enough to get the job done and had their golden boy meddle with my hard work." By the time Acala was done talking, the veins on his neck were bulging in outrage.
’This explains a lot. The vampires didn’t let anyone escape, they were just unlucky. Also, deep underground caves? Machinery?’ Lith had no interest in Acala’s rants, only in figuring out what he was about to deal with.
"You talked about a ritual, but making a thrall doesn’t take one. Can you describe it in more detail?" He asked.
"The members of the nest formed a circle around a stone table where the victim was strapped. Then, their bodies emitted a white light that formed an array which empowered a white mana crystal.
"The crystal was embedded in a big bundle of metal wire and pipes. After a while, the energy was accumulated and amplified by the crystal and then injected inside the victim. That’s all I’ve got." Acala replied.
’From his description, it sounds like an Odi lab, but this still doesn’t make sense. The Odi despised undead and weren’t able to use tier five spells. Even assuming that all the undead I faced had their original personalities replaced, where the heck did they learn modern magic?
’Also, the fact that the vampires fueled the array needed to empower the machine is another inconsistency. Without enough people that know the ritual and how to operate the device, the whole thing is just a piece of junk.
’There’s no way a group of recently awakened Odi can overpower an entire nest of vampires to steal their bodies. Moreover, why would a nest even be here in the first place?’ Lith thought.
"You said the machine turned them into thralls instead of vampires. How can you be so sure?" Since the undead he had encountered were able to withstand sunlight, Lith was able to distinguish between thralls from vampire only thanks to Solus’s mana sense.
Acala’s words confused Lith to no end.
"You ask too many questions. How the heck did you manage to join the army with such an attitude? A soldier only needs to obey his orders and let his superiors do the thinking." Acala said.
"As for your question, the ritual involved the exchange of blood between victims and vampires so I assumed they became thralls. Undead don’t feed upon other undead."
"You ask too few questions and assume much." Lith replied. "No wonder you remained a grunt your whole career. Blind loyalty is only good for foot soldiers, whereas initiative is required from officials.
Even though runes couldn’t be seen by the naked eye, Acala was close enough for his mana perception to feel the complex pattern of mystical words that covered the sword and gave it its red glow.
"Either I scared the shit out of them or they are making new puppies as we speak." Lith sheathed Ruin and started to take small bags of food out of his pocket dimension. "Once we get in, our storage items will become useless.
"You’re the one who knows the complex. How much food do we need to safely complete the mission without starving?"
"How do you know that the arrays start right inside the cave and where did you get that sword?" Acala ignored Lith’s question. He was too busy cursing how life was unfair to answer him.
"I don’t." Lith lied. "Getting prepared in an open space instead of inside an unknown cave is just common sense. As for the blade, I traded a piece of my own for it with a fellow Forgemaster."
He avoided telling his drooling colleague that Ruin was just a prototype. Lith couldn’t risk Acala having a stroke out of envy. Not until he had outlived his usefulness.
"I heard you come from farmers and serious Forgemastering requires money. A lot of it. How could you afford to take such specialization?"
"For someone who claims to not be curious, you sure ask a lot of questions." Lith replied. "I don’t plan on having an official biographer so it’s none of your business. Take out the food and make way."
Acala grumbled non-stop until they stepped inside the cave, each one of them carrying five days’ worth of provisions stored inside special bags that trapped smells and sounds. The cave was dark, damp, and recent.
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