The sunlight in the corridor was bright and almost painful. His vision swayed for a few seconds, like it always did when he woke up. Allen had once said it was a side effect of overworking on magic experiments. Luo Yan didn't really understand the theory. His disciple liked talking about strange concepts and odd ideas. But the boy was talented and endlessly creative. Luo Yan, a middle-aged mage, couldn't help but admire him.
If only that faint, cold light didn't sometimes flash behind Allen's cheerful eyes.
After a deep breath, the dizziness faded. Hunger replaced it. He thought of breakfast and quickened his pace.
Fresh fish roe from the Gona River. Cream-roasted cabbage. Venison-pumpkin pie.
Not bad at all.
The Magic Guild had offered free meals for registered mages for about a century. Officially, the goal was to keep mages from worrying about survival so they could devote themselves to research. But according to rumor, everything started with a "tragic accident" in the Seiya City branch 120 years ago.
Nearly ten mages had been poisoned by badly prepared magical beast entrails. Three were bedridden for half a year. One of the greatest alchemists of the era died. Research stalled. Projects collapsed. The loss was worse than any battle.
After that, the Guild President issued an order:
"Let professionals handle food. Dying of bad meals is the greatest shame for a mage."
The ancient Magic Tower rose in front of Luo Yan as he left the side building. Sunlight spilled through the arches, scattering colors on the stone floor and forcing him to narrow his eyes again.
For some reason, today felt too bright. As if something was about to happen.
Inside the dining hall, only a handful of mages sat scattered at the tables. No one greeted him. The staff were polite, but distant.
Luo Yan was a necromantic alchemist - rare, but not exceptional. His talent was average. His research results were ordinary. Without the rare profession label on his identity card, even the guild's benefits might have slipped away.
The Magic Guild was not a charity. You could eat. But if you wanted luxury, that was a dream.
Even with free food, Luo Yan still lived frugally. His monthly allowance barely covered the strange and rare materials needed to keep his experiments going. It was enough to survive - but far from enough to fund his ideals.
And if people knew that this quiet, disciplined necromantic alchemist secretly dreamed of becoming a rich, spoiled, carefree playboy, jaws would drop across the entire Davorma Empire.
Sadly, that dream had shattered 120 years ago, the day his father fell in the Discipline Office.
After breakfast, satisfied but still thoughtful, Luo Yan left the dining hall. The cabbage was a bit undercooked. The cream hadn't soaked in. But the venison-pumpkin pie was excellent. Someone had added pepper, masking the gamy flavor and giving it bite.
Yes - he truly had the heart of a playboy. What mage noticed things like that?
"Today, I have to finish that load-bearing experiment!"
He muttered to himself as he walked.
For more than ten years, Luo Yan had worked on one thing: increasing the combat power of necromantic summons. His goal was simple - a support spell, like an aura, that could double the strength of all undead within range.
For necromancers used to fighting among mountains of corpses, that would change everything.
Skeletons. Zombies. Ghosts.
With stronger bodies, sharper claws, harder bones - they would no longer be cannon fodder. They could crush ordinary troops. Maybe entire armies.
If this spell succeeded, war itself would change. So would the continent.
He could already imagine the future people praising his name.
If, of course, it worked.
After more than twenty years, he could boost a small number of undead. Now he was expanding the range. Another two weeks, he estimated, and the experiment would finally reach completion.
But rumors had spread. The guild warned him to be careful. Someone, somewhere, did not want this research finished.
After twenty years of effort, and with a comfortable life finally within reach, Luo Yan became cautious.
"Master!"
The familiar voice made him turn. A small black-haired figure ran toward him.
Allen.
The little genius who liked saying strange things.
"Good morning, Master!" Allen beamed.
Luo Yan frowned. "Didn't I tell you to rest at home today?"
Allen scratched his head. "There's nothing to do at home. I already took six days off this month. I want to practice first-level magic earlier, so I came anyway."
"Rest is part of training," Luo Yan said. "You need a solid foundation. Don't rush. When I was young, Master Aboya told me- and the Guild President also-"
His long lecture made Allen's smile stiffen. Finally, Allen cut in, laughing nervously:
"Master, you're doing your experiment today, right? Everything is ready. The president is waiting. I'll visit Master Adams and then go back. Don't worry about me."
Allen had assisted him for years. He understood magical materials better than most senior mages. And he had been deeply involved in the final stage of the enhancement experiment.
Reminded of the schedule, Luo Yan hurried away.
Inside the laboratory, the preparations were perfect: half-orc hearts, star gold, five-element fruit, wind crystals, strong acid. Beakers lined the tables. Alcohol burners flickered. The furnace glowed.
Luo Yan put on his gloves and began.
He roasted the half-orc heart over the flame. He dropped the star gold into a tube and poured in acid to dissolve it. Movements practiced. Calm. Focused.
Something flashed.
A thin blue flicker at the edge of his vision.
That shouldn't happen. Half-orc blood didn't glow like that.
Before the thought finished, the world exploded.
The blast shook the tower and shattered the windows. Mages across the guild winced at the thunderous sound.
Another failed experiment.
A severe one.
Explosions were common. Three or five a day. People barely reacted anymore.
But when the smoke cleared, Luo Yan's laboratory was gone - and so was Luo Yan.