
A wide grin extended on Ryder's face as he walked forward.
He was invited a few days earlier—now it was his turn to begin the ritual. The Ritual of Familiar. It was his turn to contract a familiar beast from the "Astral Shadow" plain. As he stepped into the building, a sudden burst of wind swept across his face—the aura radiating from the conjuring room to its enclosure was simply overwhelming. It wasn't comforting in any way; in fact, it felt like walking into a thunderstorm. The invisible energy prickled his skin, making his hair stand. His lungs felt as if they were compressed with each breath, as if the very air had grown too dense to be inhaled. Even despite the intensity of the aura, he still felt like his body was being drawn toward the direction of the conjuring room. "Holy mother of..." Ryder murmured under his breath, trying to maintain his composure. The last thing he wanted was to look weak in front of anyone, especially given his expectations. After eighteen years of dreaming about this moment, he'd sooner die than embarrass himself now. This was planet Terra, the planet of summoners. For as long as history could remember, the occupants of this planet had always been known as marked humans, every one of them. Although they aren't born as summoners, they become one after a certain period of maturation, when a mark appears on their left shoulder. This period is not exactly fixed, but it occurs mostly at the beginning of adulthood for the humans on this planet, and in the worst-case scenario, it will take longer, but eventually, they receive the mark to become a summoner. There hasn't been a case where a person who has aged up to fifty years did not receive an invitation to contract a familiar. Ryder had been one of the lucky ones. His mark had appeared just after his eighteenth birthday, while he was in the shower. The burning sensation had sent him tumbling out of the bathroom, naked and screaming—the pain was simply excruciating. The story had circulated through the neighborhood faster than wildfire, earning Ryder the nickname "Streaking Summoner." Eventually, the nickname faded, and the annoying taunt was replaced by curiosity. "What colour of mark did Ryder obtain?" Ryder never exposed his mark colour to anyone for some strange reason, and even after the persuasion of so many people, he kept the mark undisclosed. Eventually, everyone gave up and assumed he was probably a brown mark, or, best-case scenario, a red mark. If he had received a mark of great power, he would have been flaunting it and bragging, right?... Maybe. Just like Ryder and every other person, they received an invitation from the Astral Shadow plain in various colours, indicating the strength of the inviter. The invitation comes as a mark on their left shoulder. A colored mark appears on the shoulder of the invited human, and then they are meant to visit a place called the "Conjuring Room." No matter what, they have no choice but to contract the beast that invited them. The more time spent, the more uncomfortable the mark becomes for them until it eventually evolves into pain. And Ryder could feel it now—the faint ache that had begun as just a minor irritation three days ago when his mark first appeared. It now pulsed like a second heartbeat, giving nothing but discomfort down his entire left arm. He'd tried everything to reduce the pain—ice packs, heat therapy, even homemade herbs he invented by himself. Nothing had worked. If anything, the pain had intensified with each passing hour, as if his unattended familiar was growing impatient with his delay for each passing second. I was never told the mark was such a nightmare, Ryder said to himself. Ryder remembered the day his father had sat him down to explain the marks. He'd been six years old, and a questionnaire for sure. "Dad, why do you have that weird tattoo?" he had asked, pointing at the orange mark on his father's left shoulder. His father had smiled gently, that patient smile that only parents seemed to possess. "It's not a tattoo, Ryder. It's a mark. One day, you'll have one too." Ryder's eyes glinted with awe as he gasped excitedly. "Can I pick what color it is? I want blue!" His father had laughed. "Blue isn't one of the options, son. And no, you don't get to choose. The mark chooses you." "That's not fair," Ryder had pouted, crossing his hands against his chest. "Life rarely is," his father had replied, ruffling his hair. "But without the mark, we wouldn't have Kero." He'd pointed to the massive feline creature sitting in the corner of the room, its six eyes staring at Ryder lazily. His father's familiar, an orange mark beast with control over gravity, had been a constant presence in Ryder's childhood. He'd grown up watching Kero perform impossible feats—lifting the heaviest objects with a flick of its tail, creating zero-gravity bubbles for Ryder to float in, and even more. In the conjuring room, the ritual begins, and the soul of the marked human is transferred to the Astral Shadow plain for the contract. "Keep moving," a voice urged from behind him, startling Ryder from his thoughts. He turned to see another candidate—a tall, slim girl with short black hair—glaring impatiently for him to continue. The look in her eyes was a mixture of annoyance and nervousness. Right. He wasn't the only one going through this today. When transferred into the Astral Shadow plain, a test is given to the initiate. A test that can come in any nature is given to the human, and when it is cleared, he receives a beast that is equivalent to the trouble of the test. All this Ryder was aware of. Well, "aware" might be stretching it. Ryder always attended the mandatory preparation classes, but he never really focused during the lessons, rather daydreaming about what his familiar might be. He'd absorbed perhaps a quarter of the actual information—just enough to pass the final examination with a barely acceptable score. His teacher, Dr. Hamm, a short old man with a walrus mustache and a brown-mark turtle familiar that trailed eternally behind him, had warned Ryder over and over again about his nonchalant attitude towards necessary lectures. "The contraction process with a familiar from the Astral Shadow plain is not a game, Ryder," he'd said after catching him napping during a crucial lesson on survival techniques at some point in the past. "It's life or death, and all the confidence in the world won't save you if you have no clue how to counter the challenges of the Astral Shadow plain." Why am I suddenly receiving all these flashbacks of my naughty self, Ryder scoffed. The closer he got to the room, the more suffocating the feeling became. Ryder hadn't even gone through the conjuring room door yet, but was still trailing at the front of a line of soon-to-be summoners in the long hallway of the building. All this energy was radiating from the rune of the conjuring room, the rune that is used for transporting souls into the Astral Shadow plain. The rune of the Shadow; this is the common name for it. Standing beside the purple glowing symbols on the platform in the conjuring room were two figures, dressed in black cloaks. They stood absolutely still, like statues carved from stone. Their faces were hidden deep within their hoods, revealing nothing but the glint of their left eye. Ryder had heard stories about these priests—the Keepers of the Gate, as they were formally known, or "Gloomy Guses" as the students called them in recent times. "Are you Ryder Levi?" the calm, cold tone of one of the figures beside the door asked as Ryder finally got close enough. "Yes, I am," replied Ryder, not knowing how they suddenly knew his name. There weren't any documents to fill before visiting the conjuring room, so he should have been nothing but a stranger. They opened the door simultaneously and gestured for Ryder to get inside. Ryder obeyed, breaking off from the line he was in and into the room. The short-haired girl who had been standing beside him all the while—Mara—sighed. She just wanted the whole thing to be over with real quick. The room was completely empty, apart from some altars and pillars around. The main focus of the room was the platform in the middle where Ryder and the Gloomy Guses approached. Gesturing at the platform simultaneously, both of the cloaked figures said, "Climb on the platform." They instructed, and again, Ryder obeyed, not feeling the slightest bit of anxiety. Or at least, that's what he told himself as he wiped his sweaty palms on his pants and stepped onto the raised circular platform. The stone was cool beneath his feet, but seemed to warm a short while after he climbed onto it, nearly as if it were responding to his presence. "Before we begin the ritual, we must brief you on all you need to know," one of the cloaked figures, in a black cloak with a red trim, started. "This is the rune of Shadow; its history dates back to the Stone Age. When humans were still figuring out that round objects roll and pointy sticks hurt, this was already here, waiting for us to discover its potential." "Our ancestors came into existence to see this rune in this spot during ancient times. Before there were cities or nations, before there was writing or agriculture, the rune was here. It has existed long before many empires and civilizations, witnessing the rise and fall of countless generations." The figure's voice took on a rhythmic quality, like a group of children reciting an epic poem. Ryder felt a chill run down his spine at these words. He'd known the rune was old, of course, but hearing it described this way made it feel alien. "At first, they didn't know what it was and were curious about it, but even after many years, they couldn't figure out any useful information. The earliest records speak of priests and old wise women who would sit before the rune for days, seeking wisdom or visions. Some claimed to hear voices, others to see fantastic beasts that would appear and disappear like smoke." "When they grew up to a certain level of maturity, they suddenly received a mark; this mark is in a variety of colors, and hence, it earned its name—the devil's mark. In those early days, fear and superstition ruled the humans due to their illiteracy. Those who received the mark were often banished from their empires and communities, feared and assumed to be touched by evil or cursed by angry gods. Some were even killed, their potential never realized." Ryder thought of his own mark on his shoulder. Would he have been one of those unfortunate ones in those early days? Would he have been cast out, feared, perhaps even killed for the mark he now wore with pride in this current age? "Our ancestors never knew what it was actually and couldn't understand its purpose. Whenever the mark appeared in one of them, it caused great discomfort—like an itch you can't scratch, a hunger you can't satisfy, a thirst that water cannot quench." It causes discomfort just like it does to you, Ryder; they kept directing our illiterate ancestors toward this rune, but no one knew why back then. Being unable to live freely, a meeting was called, and a group of all the smartest humans the world had to offer were summoned to unveil the hidden secret of this rune. They argued and debated, theorized and experimented, united and worked together only to figure out a way to relieve themselves from the discomfort of the mark on their left arms. Ryder imagined a group of cave people sitting around a fire and scratching their heads in confusion while they stared at drawings of the rune. The mental image was so absurd that he had to bite the inside of his cheek to keep from laughing out loud. This was, after all, supposed to be a moment of seriousness. The strong presence of wind they felt as they approached the rune made it clear to them that there was more to this rune than just a simple drawing of a pattern. The study of this rune took centuries, as multiple generations of humans did their part; they died while passing the knowledge of their discoveries to the next generation to continue onward. After multiple clueless attempts, they managed to rework the pattern of the rune into a readable scripture. The scripture is the language of magic—the only language that the rune obeys. Finally, after so many years, they managed to make the first summoner—a person who journeyed to the Astral Shadow plain and successfully returned back with a familiar. At first, fear gripped the humans who glanced at the first summoned beast and the summoner. They assumed he had made a contract with the devil and avoided him like a plague, but as time went on and multiple people performed the summoning ritual, they realized that they had the wrong impression of it. "Can't really blame them," Ryder muttered. "I mean, strange marks, glowing runes, otherworldly creatures... it's not exactly a good way of a warm welcome." He could imagine the scene: a village gathering where the first summoner proudly displayed their familiar, only to be met with screams of terror and accusations of witchcraft. "Soon, all the humans became interested in the rune, and all wanted to perform the ritual. It eventually became a cherished tradition." As you stand here, you are now going to pass through the eased version of what our ancestors and all other summoners who came before you went through. Now, with that said, we will be briefing you on the necessary intel about your summoning journey so you should know the expected intensity of your trial. Ryder straightened his posture, trying to focus. This part, at least, might contain information he hadn't dozed through in class. Starting with the mark, it comes in a variety of different colors. There are five different colors of marks—the brown, the orange, the red, the black, and lastly, the white. The brown is the weakest. It shows that the summoner is probably going to summon a weak beast; the orange will summon a stronger beast; the red will summon the mightiest beasts. As for the black, it is likely that the summoner will summon a demon or devil and not a beast, while for the white, the summoner could summon a divine being. "Now Ryder, take off your shirt," the other cloaked figure, with a similar black cloak with blue trim, instructed. "Right," Ryder smiled confidently as he undressed his garment—a white attire with purple trim by its tip. The symbol itself was intricate, resembling a mixture of both an ancient rune and a mathematical equation of the modern age. It pulsed with a faint energy that seemed to absorb the purple light from the platform, creating a mystic aura like a glyph. On his left shoulder, a clear black mark was visible on his light skin. The two Gloomy Guses standing by the platform were taken aback at the color of his mark. "A black mark! This is very rare!" Ryder's grin extended as he heard the comments from the two figures beside the platform. "This is the first black mark that has appeared in the last one hundred years." Pride filled Ryder as he swelled his chest, temporarily replacing his nervousness with confidence. A black mark. Not brown like most of his classmates would receive. Not orange like his father. Not even red, but Black. The rarest of the rare. The mark of legendary summoners whose names were recorded in history books and whose deeds were still discussed lots of years after their death. Turning around with a prideful smirk, Ryder spoke, "Go on." "When the ritual begins, your soul will be teleported to the Astral Shadow plain. In there, you will appear in a habitat that is filled with beasts that have strengths equal to your mark. This was standard information, covered in the first week of Dr. Hamm's class. Each color of mark corresponded to a different region of the Astral Shadow plain, with environments and inhabitants that match the mark's colour. Brown marks typically found themselves in peaceful landscapes or gentle forests populated by mostly easygoing creatures that hardly show any hostility. Orange marks might encounter more challenging landscapes like mountains or deserts, with beasts that possess greater abilities and affinities but are still mostly animalistic in nature. In your habitat, there will be a variety of demons and devils of different power levels and different affinities. As soon as you step in, some of the creatures might show hostility toward you; some will be easygoing and peaceful. Depending on your luck, you'll encounter these beasts. Luck. Ryder clicked his teeth. It is one thing I do not have. You will receive the direction of the beast that invited you to the plain after you have spent some time alive. The trail may come in various different ways, so watch out. "'After you have spent some time alive,'" Ryder repeated slowly. "That... doesn't exactly sound like a comforting phrase." The Gloomy Guses ignored his comment, continuing their briefing as if they were reciting from a memorized script—which, Ryder was beginning to suspect, they probably were. You are to follow the trail; as you do so, you will face some traps and challenges. All those traps and obstacles are the tests given to you by the beast, so keep your guard up at all times. No familiar chooses an unworthy summoner. Being a black-marked summoner is very lucky and unlucky at the same time. If you succeed, you will be termed as a lucky one, and if you don't... you die! "Die?" he echoed, his voice suddenly sounding younger and less sure. "Like, die die? As in, not coming back?" There it was. Plain and simple. The bitter truth—failure meant death. Not social taunts and embarrassment, not a life of regret, but actual, eternal slumber of death. "The beasts do not care about who you are or what race you are from. They will be testing you with obstacles that will cause even them trouble in order to ensure that the soon-to-be summoner is worthy of them." Ordinary humans are only capable of handling a test from a brown mark, an orange mark, and rarely a red mark without dying. "And I'm... what? Extraordinary?" Ryder asked, trying to display some of his earlier courage but failing miserably. His voice cracked on the final word, exposing his fright. "That is yet to be seen," the purple-lined figure responded quietly. "The mark has chosen you, but whether you are worthy of it is another matter entirely." The beasts from the Astral plain are naturally strong. This, at least, was common knowledge. Even the familiars that seem unimpressive possess strength, speed, and physical capabilities far beyond anything found naturally on Terra. "The weakest beast from the weakest mark can battle the wildest beast from our planet." Talking of the orange mark beasts, most possess special attributes like breathing flame, excreting poisonous gas, and other deadly abilities. The test from them is the kind that should expect some extraordinary involvement. The beasts from the red mark are even worse, especially due to the fact that their attributes are always broader and much more refined than those of the orange mark. Ryder thought of his mother's familiar, with its foxlike cunning and lionlike strength. It had once saved their entire family from a house fire, roaring so loudly that it shattered windows for blocks around and created a wind strong enough to temporarily redirect the flames away from their bedrooms, giving them time to escape. If that was what an orange-mark familiar was capable of... Or his father's familiar that saved them from a fall while climbing by the mountainside of the village with its gravity affinity. During their test in the Astral Shadow plain, one should expect the worst-case scenario, as challenges like dipping oneself in hot volcanic lava in order to reach the beast and begin the contraction process will arise. All these are impossibilities for ordinary humans. Being marked by a being for the black mark section of the Astral plain is very equivalent to being called to your early grave. The smirk slowly washed off Ryder's face as he listened. "There is a 0.5 percent chance that you will survive, Ryder. You should be worried about yourself. We have no idea what you will be expecting in the Astral Shadow plain or what beast has called on you, but you shouldn't expect guaranteed survival. Are you ready for the ritual, Ryder?" Ready? How could anyone be ready for this? Ryder wanted to laugh like a mad man at the question, but fear had frozen his vocal cords. He stared at the Gloomy Guses, at their partially visible faces covered by their hood, wondering if they took some sort pleasure in delivering these death sentences to new initiates. "If I die in the Astral Shadow plain, then what?" Ryder questioned, causing the two cloaked figures to exchange a nervous glance. "Unfortunately... your body will disintegrate into nothing in this world if you die in the soul realm. Rest assured, though, you should be confident in your ability." "Let's proceed, shall we?" Disintegrate into nothing! Not even a body for his parents to mourn over. Not even ashes, Just... gone. As if he had never existed at all. "No! I do not wish to proceed." Ryder decided, as he pulled his shirt on with a crushed spirit and dream. Walking towards the end of the platform, he attempted to exit, but then a sudden force flung him back to the center of the platform. "Oh, we didn't tell you about this earlier," one of the figures said. "From the moment you step onto the platform as an invited human, your soul automatically binds with the Astral Shadow plain. You cannot leave until you attend to your invitation." Ryder, I am sorry to break the news to you, but unfortunately, you have no choice but to contract your beast. Ryder's eyes widened. "I said, I am not interested!" Ryder barked. "I ain't wanna do this crap no more." At first, he locked eyes with the cloaked figure that spoke to him, and right in front of his eyes, a long scroll containing the incantation to activate the rune materialized out of thin air. Not giving him any answers, both figures echoed the incantation in a slow and steady synchronized rhythm. "Ahhrrrggh! Stop it, stop all this! I don't want to do this!" Ryder cried out. Ryder rushed towards the cloaked figures, but the invisible barrier of the platform blocked him from proceeding further or leaving the platform. The incantation got louder and louder, the rune glowed brighter and brighter, and after a while, a flash of purple light consumed Ryder's view. His soul was teleported away.Related Chapters
The Seven Demon's Tamer Chapter 2
Ryder's vision blurred as he traveled through an endless dark space. His scream echoed as he was jolted by an invisible force for what seemed like forever before he eventually arrived at a destination. "This is not what I signed up for!" he shrieked, his voice distorting too fast before it could echo in the empty space. After he was told his soul would be teleported, he never expected it to be like this. He never thought everything would feel so real. As his body levitated in the air of a strange horizon to which he was jolted, he attempted to steady himself, but it wasn't so easy. His limbs' responses were frustratingly out of control–wobbly, unreliable, and with a mind of their own. The sensation he was feeling was unlike anything he had ever felt. His body no longer obeyed the laws of gravity like it did back in the world where his real body was. It was as if Isaac Newton had taken one look at this place and thrown his hands up in surrender, declaring, "You're on your own with t
The Seven Demon's Tamer Chapter 3
This whole situation was offering Ryder more benefits than anything else. The fact that a human soul had no limit meant he had no fear of adding an extra summoning beast. Visiting the devil's plane as a whole was not common. As a chosen one of the black mark, if he was going to survive, it would be a waste not to enjoy the privilege to the fullest. The beast in front of him, despite being so small, was still a devil beast. Its strength was on another level. Since he was given the choice to allow this beast into his soul without any downside, he was more than happy to agree. "Fine," Ryder nodded, trying to project calmness despite the fear etched in his eyes. "I agree to your terms. Bind with my soul and guide me to the Dracogon." The devil-viper bunny's eyes gleamed with mischief. "Smart choice, human. I've been watching you since you arrived. Most marked ones run screaming when they see me." "Run when they see you," Ryder reasoned. "Who would run from a rabbit?" Suddenly, Luxy
The Seven Demon's Tamer Chapter 4
"Ryder, the Dracogon just sent a message to you," Luxy suddenly spoke. The words hung in the air like an executioner's axe, ready to fall with a bombshell. Ryder, who had just calmed down from the panic of losing Luxy mere moments ago, felt his newly regained peace shatter like glass. It was as if someone had replaced his blood with icy water. He didn't know why, but he was feeling intimidated by the mention of the Dracogon. "Great," Ryder thought sarcastically. "Just when I thought this day couldn't get any more exciting. First, I get soul-teleported to hell's version of Wonderland you call the Astral Shadow Plain, then I bond with a devil rabbit." "Devil viper bunny," Luxy snapped, annoyed by how Ryder was seeing him as a rabbit, but Ryder completely ignored him and continued blabbering, his heart shattered. "...and now the local overlord wants a chat. Mom always said I'd go places." His hands trembled slightly, and he tried to disguise it by clenching them into fists. "Dracogo
The Seven Demon's Tamer Chapter 5
The Astral Shadow Plain is made up of multiple smaller plains. About how big each of these small plains can turn out to be, it is easily three to four times greater than the biggest planet in the galaxy Ryder came from. It can also be relatively small, like the Dracogon's domain, which is just as big as a whole country back on Ryder's planet, Terra. The Dracogon's domain, despite its relatively small size, holds within it a power that would make even the mightiest beings pause. Each demon, even the weakest, can cause great chaos if brought to earth untamed. This fact isn't just for the Dracogon plain but also for other exclusive plains owned by demon monarchs. Rumors speak of a giant cave of raw, crystallized gamma energy at its center, where the Dracogon himself rests upon his throne, overseeing the activities of his plain from there and managing the conflicts of his plains in order to protect beasts from killing one another. This is the reason why the Dracogon made its plain so
The Seven Demon's Tamer Chapter 6
After listening to Ryder's proposal on what they should do next, Luxy merged into Ryder once more. The process, unlike the last time, was both fascinating and unsettling to witness—Luxy's form becoming translucent, then ethereal, before turning into a foggy black smoke that swirled around Ryder, then the black mist gradually sank into Ryder's skin until Luxy was completely inside Ryder's soul. The sensation was unlike anything Ryder had ever experienced—like being filled with liquid sunlight, not one of thousands of degrees Celsius, but the soft sunbeam radiation on Terra. Ryder traced the outline of the tattoo with his fingertips, the roughness of his skin in the area where the tattoo was embedded. "So this is how it works," he murmured. The last time was painful. Maybe it was because it was not just merging, but also the contraction process as well. "You'll get used to it," Luxy's voice echoed in his mind, carrying a hint of pride. Jumping off from the tall mountain where he p
The Seven Demon's Tamer Chapter 7
Luxy simply stared; that is all he could do right now. He stared, puzzled and surprised at the new information he was gaining from Hollow.To be honest, just like Hollow stated, he had no clue whether or why he suddenly changed. He was just like the other obedient servants in the Dracogon's plane, and suddenly, one day, he decided to disobey the Dracogon.After listening to Hollow, he understood why he did so. It was because of Ryder."Who are you, Ryder!" That question echoed in Luxy's brain."I had the aim to steal the Dracogon's attention, but still, the Dracogon never paid me any attention," he thought inwardly."I was guessing the Dracogon didn't notice me all this while, but that wasn't the case. The Dracogon knew all I was doing but didn't punish me because of the shared connection we had with Ryder from the moment of his birth."Hollow raised his snow-white furry arm a bit upwards, just a few inches above his head, and spoke."You see, Ryder, Dracogon made a very silly mistake
The Seven Demon's Tamer Chapter 8
Despite how Ryder continuously repeated to Hollow that he was not interested in his words, Hollow still paid no attention.What Hollow was saying was quite interesting after all, so Ryder decided to listen.'So I am the only vessel that can hold in a demon monarch.'Ryder never knew much about how markings work until he got to this world.From the looks of things, it is very rare for a human to be able to contract a familiar from the demon plane. The demon monarch is even the hardest.More than the majority of the demon monarchs have never contracted a host. Every human they have ever marked never successfully cleared their trial.Seeing that the trial is always too hard for humans to handle, they decided to cancel the trials they put in store for the humans and made the contraction process straightforward and direct.Despite the brevity of the contraction process and the ease, there was still a decline in the human body and soul. It just was not strong enough to contain the beasts fr
The Seven Demon's Tamer Chapter 9
They are distorted. The climate malfunctioned. The intense presence consumed everything as the Dracogon made its way downward. Reality itself seemed to warp and bend around the descending figure. Temperature fluctuated wildly—sweltering heat one moment, a more intense heat the next—coloring the plane in colored radiation. Plants withered and crumbled to dust while the soil beneath cracked. The atmosphere grew thick with a raging inferno, almost viscous, and made it seem as if the plane itself was pleading for help. Each time he flapped his wings, a gust of hot wind was sent through the entire planet, reaching everywhere—even up to Hollow, who wasn't present in the physical plane. Those weren't mere gusts. Each time the wing flapped, it unleashed a powerful, raw force that tore the trees around from their roots, scattered boulders into pebbles, and sent lesser demons and devils present in the plane tumbling through the air like autumn leaves. Even mountains couldn't contain the ass
Latest Chapter
chapter 25
Let the fight... begin.Crusher wasted no time with his offensive strikes.He blasted forward with a leap, covering the distance between him and his opponent nearly instantly.Whoosh.He swung his fist straight at Green Bloody's face. With the power enhancement he had gotten from his familiar, the punch was catastrophic. The air itself seemed to compress around Crusher's fist, creating a small shockwave that ruffled Green Bloody's hair.No, more appropriately, the punch would have been catastrophic if it had hit.Green Bloody dodged the punch, much to Crusher's greatest shock, by ducking under his arm and swiftly appearing behind him. His movement was fluid in its grace.Unlike the few others Crusher had fought, he instantly recognized that Green Bloody wouldn't be easy.A collective gasp rippled through the crowd. No one had ever made Crusher miss so completely since today's tournament began.Wham!
chapter 24
The number of people in the warehouse was easily a thousand or two, if not even more. Every breath Ryder took felt like inhaling a cocktail of cheap alcohol and stale cigarettes.Bodies pressed against one another, creating a suffocating atmosphere with every breath. The warehouse—once used for storing imported goods that never made it past customs—now housed a different kind of contraband: violence for profit.It was dominated mainly by gangsters. Men and women with hard eyes and harder knuckles, bearing scars all over as if their bodies were illustrating the intensity of their misdeeds with scars that spoke louder than any confession.Although various other criminals were there, they weren't there for the fight but to carry out some more illegal activities that could help them bag a great deal of cash, mostly gambling."Five grand on Crusher breaking at least three bones!" shouted a man with a face that looked like it had been rearranged by an a
Chapter 23
As Ryder walked through the moonlit streets, his newly purchased cloak flowed gently in the evening breeze; he observed the multitude of posters plastered haphazardly on walls and poles.He pulled his hood lower, ensuring his face remained hidden. The best decision he could think of was hiding his face at all times since only a few people know his identity. His name is quite famous now, and as long as his face remains hidden, then it should be fine.A particular poster caught his eye, the paper still fresh, unlike most of the other weather-beaten announcements surrounding it.[Underlings TournamentEvery Tuesday and FridayOrganized at midnightLocation: undisclosedWhoever defeats the champion goes home with the prize.#10,000 Terra gold coin.]"They'll be organizing it today," Ryder thought inwardly, mentally calculating the hours until midnight. "It's Tuesday."He patted the pocket of his tr
chapter 22
With how popular Ryder was turning out to be, he was beginning to trend around the four nations of the United Kingdom.All the radio channels were booming. All they could say was about Ryder and the most recent disaster.—"Today on the recent unexplainable disaster: What exactly is Ryder? Man, myth, or monster?"—"One who contracted with the devil beast."—"Has the devil beast possessed the anonymous Ryder?"The news anchors delivered their lines with a wry grin that was supposed to be fake, just to appear presentable, but the excitement in their eyes betrayed them.This was the story of a lifetime. Ratings had never been higher.And as for the rumors? They multiplied at a crazy rate.Some said he could fly; others insisted he could walk through walls. One particularly creative someone said Ryder was actually three small children in a trenchcoat who had been possessed by his familiar.Cases like these do spring up once in a while about someone contracting a familiar from the devil pla
chapter 21
The morning sunlight penetrated through the half-drawn curtains, casting beams of soft sun rays across the living room.Ryder sat cross-legged on the wooden floor, his dark eyes fixed on the translucent figure hovering before him. Luxy—his familiar—floated in the air, the edges of his ethereal holographic form rippling once in a while like disturbed water."Familiars and their summoners are emotionally linked, but not you, Luxy," Ryder said, breaking the silence that had stretched between them for nearly an hour.This is one of the few times he had summoned Luxy out. This kind of summoning style wasn't the regular one; it was different.It may appear like a unique style he developed by himself at first, but then, deep down, he knew this was a failure.He has tried multiple times to summon Luxy out of his body to experience the world, but not once has he succeeded.Normally, summoning a familiar isn't something that is learned, because the knowledge of it naturally engraves itself on t
chapter 20
Normally, when a human receives a mark of invitation to the Astral Shadow plain, the mark is shapeless, resembling a scar. It is an ugly-looking, twisted thing that appears somewhere on their body all of a sudden—simply there one morning when the newly marked person wakes.New bearers of the mark might mistake it for perhaps a strange bruise from sleeping awkwardly. But, due to how widespread the summoning mark is and how summoners populate the entirety of planet Terra, it does not appear as a foreign mark.Everyone, including those familiar with the ways of summoners and those who have partaken in any practical aspect of summoning, recognizes it for what it truly is: an invitation to power beyond mortal comprehension.The marks vary in color—some blood red, others brown, a few with an orange marking. Tang Jim's had been a deep red, so dark it seemed to absorb the light from everywhere, located on his left arm. He'd spent years proudly displaying it at every chance he found, watching
chapter 19
The piercing wail of FSG van sirens cut through the heavy afternoon air, along with the continuous, windy noise from the flapping wings of various familiars. The cries and roar of familiars and sirens echoed across what had once been the busy eastern district of Ludlow. The district where various shops and busy street markets had stood just hours before now contained only an area filled with rubble—a wasteland of shattered concrete and twisted metal. Commander Lucian stepped out of the lead vehicle, his boots crunching on debris all around. The smell of smoke, along with something else—something he'd come to recognize from too many scenes like this—hung in the air. There was also the unmistakable scent of spent magical energy—the remaining trace of gamma energy that had been unleashed through an affinity for fire. "Spread out, fifteen-meter intervals. Our priority is survival of the survivors, and evidence accumulation," Lucian ordered, his voice carrying the authority that came wi
chapter 18
"If I go all out and kill this familiar, then what?" Ryder questioned."Well, if you kill a familiar, then it will die for good, and there'll be no way to revive it."Ryder rolled his eyes. "You're right. That's generally what 'killing' means."Familiars are dwellers of the Astral Shadow Plain. The Astral Shadow Plain is a plain for partially dead creatures.When some creatures die, their souls instantly travel to the dead domain, but while others do, their souls get transferred to the Astral Shadow Plain."Death has one beginning and one end, but what lies in-between differs," Luxy explained, his tone taking on that professorial quality that made Ryder picture him wearing tiny spectacles and suits, that is, if beings inhabiting one's soul could wear spectacles."The Astral Shadow Plain makes creatures half alive and half dead. With that state of existence, they can either visit the living or the dead Plain at will, if a contract is being made."Ryder tilted his body to the side, narr
chapter 17
Ryder was quite surprised at the situation unfolding right before his eyes.He knew there was something up right from the time he got into the room. The muscular size and strong presence of the disguised workers made him already know that he might be having a problem.Furthermore, he was most certain of the fact that they were all interested in him from the moment he noticed their piercing gaze on him.It was like being watched by a pack of wolves who thought they were being subtle.Every time he glanced up to stare around, at least three pairs of eyes would quickly look away, busying themselves with random tasks that seemed comically out of place.One particularly large man with scars peeking from beneath his rolled-up sleeves was delicately arranging chopsticks with the precision of someone disarming a bomb.He never expected this situation he had found himself in as the outcome of being unable to pay for his meal. But before attending to all the workers there, Ryder couldn't get so