The Years of Apocalypse - A Time Loop Progression Fantasy

Chapter 95 - The Road to Frostland’s Gate



Chapter 95 - The Road to Frostland’s Gate

The glaciavore let out a blood-curdling roar. Mirian led with an incineration beam. It would have been powerful enough to lance a bog lion, but the ice armor on the huge myrvite only steamed. No heat attacks she thought as she circled behind the trunk of a tree so that the glaciavore couldn't charge her, then peeked out around as her hands flipped through her spellbook. She always organized her spellbook the same way, a habit she'd picked up preparing for the Battle of Torrviol, since the last thing you wanted in a fight was to be trying to remember what page you put a spell on.

It didn't seem to be in any rush as it moved forward. Mirian watched as the ground around it froze, ice crystals hardening before her very eyes. Glaciavores had a natural heat displacement aura that extended a few feet around them. Another reason engaging it in melee would be foolhardy. If it was flash-freezing trees it passed, even getting close would kill her.

Mirian carefully retreated, then cast warmth around her because she could already feel the bite of the cold from the glaciavore even at a distance. Then it did charge.

She bolted left, scrambling over a nearby log and then diving through some light underbrush, then as she hefted her spellbook from its chain at her side again, looked for where she might be able to move next. At least the glaciavore's big size was a hindrance to its movement. It made a growling noise and started circling around again, keeping its four beady eyes trained on Mirian.

A nearby tree let out a pop! as a section of its bark shattered. Mirian felt the bark splatter in her hair as she carefully stepped backward. She sent out a force blades spell. It was powerful enough to carve chunks out of the trees, but the blades just left wet marks on the armor. It was like trying to attack a lake with ice skates.

As the glaciavore rumbled forward again, pincer-mouth tearing through a piece of trunk. It started tearing up the underbrush between it and Mirian with its claws. Mirian dashed up the trail as it crashed through in hot pursuit.

Further up the trail, the road circled around another outcropping of rock. She scanned the boulders strewn about it. Direct attacks on the beast would just fizzle against it. She needed a new strategy.

From the chill deepening around her, she knew the glaciavore was gaining. Quickly, she flipped through her spellbook to lift multiple objects.

When all else failed, she could always rely on a classic.

With a mental heave, Mirian picked up three of the granite boulders, each weighing at least fifty pounds. She sent them past her, two of the rocks passing her shoulders by inches and the third going so close overhead she felt the whoosh of air. That was followed by the crunch! of ice shattering and—at last—a roar of pain from the beast. She whirled, keeping her mana flowing and concentration on the spell. Moving three objects at once was difficult enough that she had trouble remembering to move her body too. She sent the three boulders swirling about the glaciavore, smashing into it one after another, again and again.

Her mana was draining rapidly, but the beast couldn't ignore the attacks. Instead of coming after her, it was growling and swatting at the offending boulders.

Behind the glaciavore, Mirian noticed that one of the larger pines had been heavily damaged, first by the icy aura, then by the creature as it had smashed into it with a paw. She dropped two of the boulders, continuing to channel mana into the third one. Meanwhile, she crept slowly to the side so she was behind another trunk, then used one of the alternate enhancements on her force blade spell. This changed it from multiple blades to one big one.

She didn't attack the glaciavore. Instead, she went after the tree behind it.

The force spell took huge chunks out of the tough wood. Then Mirian swapped to a manipulate object, enhanced for raw power, and yanked on the trunk on a high point for the leverage.

There was a tremendous ripping sound. Wood splintered, and then the tree groaned as it fell forward.

The glaciavore stopped batting at the annoying boulder just in time to see the tree plummeting toward it. With a crash that echoed through the forest, it landed directly on top of the beast. Its ice-shell split open, and there was a wet crunch.

It twitched once more, then went still. Gradually, the frost-aura receded, and Mirian could finally ditch the warmth spell.

She let out a breath she'd been holding, then cautiously looked around to make sure nothing else was nearby. Hopefully, the glaciavore had already chased away anything else that might try to eat her. She waited to see if it really was dead, then approached it. She closed her eyes as she steadied her breathing, imagining the Mausoleum she saw so often in her dreams. Along the eastern wing (or what she assumed was east), she found the reliefs of strange creatures. They were carved to be so lifelike it was easy to imagine them just leaping from the wall, yet so alien that they made myrvites look mundane.

Glaciavores, she remembered at last, had two spell organs. All four eyes were magical, and it had its own unique organ, called a coldheart, that moved an entirely different circulatory system around. The eyes were easy enough to pry open out of its head once she'd smashed the skull open. The shone like sapphires—the world's creepiest sapphires. She'd heard of people wearing them in jewelry, but couldn't fathom why someone would want to wear blue eyeballs. However, they were also fantastic for any wand that used any of the glyphs that regulated heat energy, not just displacement, but heat generation.

The coldheart took some time to get out, because even with the ice armor shattered, the beast's hide was tough as anything. Also, it was beneath a tree. Thoughtless of whoever put it there, Mirian joked to herself.

For those that liked the challenge though, it provided. Frostland's Gate was a strange place. There were no manors or wealthy enclaves, nor beggars. Basic supplies were expensive to get up there, but the village more than made up for it with the income they brought in from myrvite hunting. Brave arcanists and trappers had worked for several centuries to stem the tide of myrvites that wandered down from the frostlands into Baracuel, and there was an official military barracks to help with that task. It also supplied Torrviol and the rest of the north with the myrvite parts it needed for its magic. For their life of hardship, the people were well compensated. After a few years, most people left Frostland's Gate for something more comfortable.

Unlike Torrviol's spellward, which one could just walk through, the spellward here had regular patrols. A pair of soldiers met her at the barrier, and Mirian had to bite her tongue so that she didn't ask why they weren't saluting her. All those years of fighting the Battle of Torrviol were still inside her, and she felt the impulse that what she had achieved there should be recognized.

But it couldn't be.

"Anyone else traveling with you?" the first soldier asked, peering out into the snowfields behind her.

"No, just me," Mirian said. "I'm Niluri, coming up from Cairnmouth."

"Just you?" the second soldier asked. He sounded surprised.

"Just me. Though I met another merchant on the road, though he's probably a few hours behind me. Sounded like he'd been here before."

"Right," said the first soldier, looking again out in the distance. "Thanks. We'll keep an eye out. Anything to declare?"

Mirian had read about this. Because Baracuel was trying to crack down on myrvite part smuggling, and a great deal of parts came from Frostland's Gate, they had a local ordinance requiring all visitors to declare any myrvite parts upon entering or leaving. It was a small village, and she had no contacts yet, so she did so. "Glaciavore spell organs, though the coldheart got a bit mashed."

"You'll want to stop by the Royal Courier's building. It's that one," he said, pointing at the building with orange and white trim and the Baracueli lion waving about on a banner. "They take care of all declarations and levy any of the fees. Then, this one's not official, you probably want to visit Elsadorra next door, she can get you an appraisal on anything you find. I do mean anything, but she specializes in myrvite parts and Labyrinth artifacts. You... found a dead glaciavore?"

Mirian closed her eyes and took a deep breath. People would know soon enough. "Yes."

They asked several questions to pin down the location, both soldiers quite concerned that a predator that large had gotten so far south.

"Been a long journey," Mirian said finally.

"Oh! Yes, of course. Welcome to Frostland's Gate," the second guard said. "Last bit. Traveler's lodgings are one block down from the Couriers. Taxes partially fund it, so it's free to stay at."

Mirian paid the two drachim fee to the office with a promissory note, since after all the supplies and purchases she'd made in Torrviol, she was completely out of coin. But since the fee was paid on a percentage of the worth of the parts, she was quite happy to; the tax was that high because the eyes and heart together were worth a full ten doubloons at least. Mirian skipped the appraiser's office so she could head to the Kivinotsuur, which was the name of the large stone lodge that took up an entire city block.

The base architecture was medieval, though it had been renovated with modern glyph lamps, hearth stones, and a fancy looking spell engine that played music in the central hall.

The smell of roasting meat and long simmered stews and the warmth of the hall gave Mirian a visceral feeling of comfort. It only took her a bit to get a room, and she was happy to pay a small fee (again, with a promissory note) for one with extra comforts and its own cozy workroom. The warm meal, soft bed, and heated bath was a blessing after the long journey.

She slept well, and as she did, a new dream came to her. She and the Ominian walked out into the Endelice Mountains, though in the logic of dreams, she traveled much faster and with less effort than if she was actually walking. The monsters that lived there simply watched as the colossal statue strode with her, and even the storms parted for Them, leaving a vast sky the same color as the glimmering glaciers below.

As They walked with her, she felt the reverence They had. Though the endless ice cracked with fissures and dagger-like peaks were death to any that tried to cross them, the desolation had this beauty to it that warmed her as much as the hot stew she'd had before bed.

Frostland's Gate, she thought, looking back, though by now there was nothing to see but more mountains. I wonder what I'll find here.


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