Author's note.
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All Characters in the story are 18 years of age and above...
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Chapter Twenty Five: Rejected...
It's amazing how the best laid-out plans can fall apart at the first road bump that they meet. Greg had been planning to work diligently with the healer for a few months. During that time, he would show her just how driven a person he could be and slowly earn her trust. In such a way, he would get her to eventually agree to teach him magic. One might be tempted to call him a hypocrite, seeking to earn the healer's trust when all his attempts were based on the lie that he needed a cure for his disfigurement. To Greg, however, this was just a necessary evil on his part. If there was a way that he could just come right out and ask the healer to take him on as a student of magic without her immediately turning him down, then that is exactly what he would have done. Besides, it wasn't a lie that he wanted to heal his disfigured face. It just wasn't as desperately as he made it seem to the healer.
These were the thoughts running through Greg's head even as he slowly moved through the town toward the infirmary. In the east, the sun was halfway up the horizon, its rays illuminating the morning sky, painting it with bright orange colors. Both his clones had been sent back to the cave. In the time that they would still be around, Greg planned to have them clean and renovate the cave. It would be Greg's new secret lair. Whenever there were things that he needed to do but couldn't afford to have any witnesses, the cave would be his base of operations. Not only was it hidden, but, if Olivia's erasing of Nolruk's memories was effective, he was the only one who knew about the cave.
Even though the clones could act single-mindedly when ordered to do so, they were still copies of him. As such, they could be trusted to act independently. This was the reason Greg didn't try to micromanage the clone that he sent to town. His instructions to it had been simple. Get his family out of the house, and have them stay at his uncle's house until he came back. Counterintuitive as it may have seemed, Greg judged this to have been the safest place that he could send them. Why? Well, because probably the last place that his uncle would have the dark crawler attack was his own house. At least that is what Greg had judged, and Olivia seemed to agree with him.
When his clone arrived at the gate of his house and nothing seemed to be off, the real Greg had stopped dividing his attention between the town and the forest and focused entirely on the fight with his uncle. Had Greg kept on monitoring the clone he sent to town even just half a minute more, he would have discovered the fact that, when his clone entered his house, his family wasn't there! Instead, after moving from room to room. Greg's clone came across an unexpected visitor seated at their table in what was the equivalent of a dining room in this small house.
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With a steaming bowl of porridge set before her, the healer seemed lost in her thoughts as she sat there. "Teacher," The word, naturally full of surprise, had left his clone's lips.
The healer, who thus far had seemed to be in a contemplative mood, turned to his clone with a smile. Rather than immediately answer his clone, the healer's gaze turned to his bulging right pocket. Just in case things went south and he was left with no choice but to fight. Greg had given his clone one of the six tier-three contained alchemical bombs that he'd bought from the magic shop. It was this tier-three item that was currently bulging in his right pocket. Given that there was a real chance of this clone blowing itself up, Greg hadn't thought it necessary to buy it a storage ring.
The healer's gaze moved from the bulge to the pants themselves. To most others in the town, the pants would have appeared as no different from any other mundane clothing. There was little doubt in Greg however, that to a seventh-tier mage like the healer, the tier-one enchantments of the subtlety pants weren't in any way hidden. This was the only clone for whom Greg bought the pants to aid him in moving through the forest as quickly as possible to get to his family. The only item that Greg bought for all ten of his clones was the shoes of haste. Which, unsurprisingly, was the next spot that the healer's gaze stopped on. That his clone was still heavily breathing and covered in a slight sheen of sweat, clearly showed that he had made use of the shoes to get here.
When the healer's gaze turned back to meet that of his clone, it had immediately become clear to his clone that he was busted. What a mundane human with no background in magic was doing with such magical items was an explanation he would have to give the healer if he hoped to go on as her student. The healer's next words, however, showed his clone that he'd still been underestimating just how perceptive the healer was. "It's been a very long time since I last saw someone use the hive scroll," The healer said as she rose to her feet. "Please," She said indicating the seat at the head of the table. It was only now that Greg noticed that, the healer herself hadn't seated herself at the head of the table, despite her power and status as a seventh-tier mage. Instead, she had taken the seat that was closest to that seat. Despite its proximity to the head seat, it was still subordinate to the head seat in terms of the regard that the one seated there commanded.
"Forgive my impertinence," His clone said with a bow at his teacher. "But I need to find my family," He replied. "I cannot rest until I am certain that they are safe," his clone added. Much as his clone had enough sense to remain respectful to his teacher, it was still a clone that had been given a task. Nothing and no one would stop it from accomplishing that task.