MPNS Ch 57
by berryChapter 57
Could it be sudden paroxysmal arrhythmia? Nikiel studied Lucienās condition carefully, frowning.
Come to think of it, wasnāt he treated as the āfrail characterā even in the original storyā¦?
Lucien, the prodigy magician, was cursed by the Mad Dragonās bloodlineācondemned to transform into a serpent. The tragedy was that serpent venom constantly circulated through his vessels, and when in human form, his body was always weakened, fragile, sickly.
This world seemed to have no distinct medical terminology for white hair, pallid skin, and red eyes, but Nikiel knew: Lucien was albinistic.
Albino traits often came with congenital frailty; add to that the venom threading his bloodstream, and Lucienās body was perpetually burdened.
And yet paradoxically, the Dragonās Curse had also reshaped his frameābroad bones, robust musculature, a body that grew fine and tall.
So while he rarely suffered from trivial colds, he would, at times, cough up bloodājust as Nikiel himself had in the story. At least, in the source text, thatās how it was.
Therefore, in this world too, Lucien could very well suffer the same.
If he is albinistic here as well, then the storyās settings really do remain intact⦠Of course, strong muscles donāt always equal sound health.
Nikiel recalled the terrifying force with which Lucien had seized his wristāenough to make him pale even now.
Was the man on the verge of arrhythmia induced by venom? If so, would Nikiel need to administer CPR? But he displayed no symptoms of hyperventilation. Nikiel had been staring worriedly into his flushed face.
Lucien turned his crimson face aside and released Nikielās shoulder.
Perhaps he was alright after all. At that moment, Nikiel thought to slip quickly out of the archiveā
But Lucienās arm darted out again, seizing his waist. He pulled him close a second time and plucked from his back the hidden volume.
āAhā!ā
āā¦This book is confiscated, Your Highness.ā
Lucienās complexion was still flushed as he looked down. The ruby eyes shimmered, staring with ineffable intensity, searching Nikielās face with a strange heat.
Nikiel had no idea what the look meant.
Why is he staring at me like a starved man staring at a banquet table? ā¦Wait. Some pythons do swallow humans whole. Does he⦠does he think of me as dinner?
Unease pricked his gut. He had never heard of cannibalism in this world but one could never be sure. Perhaps some document existed recording a cursed Lord who devoured his own royal scion seeking release from the curse. He stammered weakly:
āā¦I wouldnāt taste good, you know.ā
āWhat are you saying? Enough of this. Leave this place, Your Highness.ā
By then Lucien had regained his composure. He even poked Nikielās back with the book, urging him outward. The dismissive, brusque gesture reminded Nikiel all too much of Yullan and Raymon, both of whom shunned physical contact with him. He tilted his head, bemused.
I thought he was different, but⦠was I mistaken?
It did not please himāhaving the book snatched, the back jabbed. Yet Nikiel was stubborn. He knew when to retreat only to push forward again. He exhaled dramatically, an exaggerated sigh.
āFine, fine. But really! I only wanted to read a little at long last, and you bar the way. These books arenāt even yours, and yet you hoard them soāhow laughable!ā
āā¦ā¦ā
Lucien offered no retort, only stepped after Nikiel as he left the sealed archive.
Inside, candles burnedāno sunlight allowed to enter for the sake of the books. But once they stepped out, pale daylight spilled through latticed windows, making Nikiel squint.
Lucien followed more slowly, fingers brushing the shelves for support against the sudden flood of light.
Nikiel turned and noticedāhis crimson eyes, without melanin, must be painfully sensitive to sunlight. His vision was poor; he often secluded himself in windowless chambers, lungs weakened from damp seclusion, coughing often. Nikiel recalled these details from the story.
Embarrassment pricked him. He had been about to storm off and abandon the Duke. Instead he lingered, waiting silently until Lucien steadied in the light.
The man lowered his tentative hand, walking properly again. Seeing the moment, Nikiel wet his lips and asked:
āConsidering⦠todayās sunlight is so harsh, how did you manage to come outside?ā
Lucien arched a snowy brow, taken aback by the sudden question, then answered evenly:
āI brew my own potion. A few drops, and for a time I can walk outdoors, even at noon.ā
āā¦I see.ā
Lucien studied him sidelong, unaware how fixedly he was staring. Nikielās lashes fluttered, his blue gaze lost in thought. Curiosity etched his face so deeply that Lucien nearly asked what he was thinking.
Nikiel, oblivious, straightened, lips parting. Already Lucien had quietly returned the book to its shelf and laid a simple sealing charm on the secret door. He could have left then, work complete. Yet something kept him there.
Perhaps⦠he came alone. He might need escort back to his palace.
When had he started caring for Nikielās safety? He ignored the contradiction, folding his arms, watching him rapt while Nikiel mused.
At last, when Lucien could no longer resist, ready to break the silence with What are you thinking?ā
Those lips moved first. Uneven, red as rose petals holding the shimmer of summerās heat, his lips shaped words.
āā¦Your Grace is very skilled in the alloying of metals, are you not?ā
Lucien blinked, brows furrowing.
āWhat do you mean?ā
Yet it was true. His greatest strength lay across magic and alchemy. Most magi and alchemists distanced themselvesātwo disciplines, two camps. Lucien excelled at both.
The troubling thing was: Nikiel knew that.
The prince sighed softly, only for himself.
Damn my meddlesome tongue. I hadnāt meant to betray that I knew.
For Nikiel, who had read the original story, already knew how Lucienāa child, then a suspect puppet Dukeāhad subjugated his treacherous vassals.
A prodigy in magic, yes, but he had taught himself alchemy. His knowledge of minerals approached genius. Not quite a modern chemistās mastery of the periodic table as Nikiel knew it, but enough that one could call him the finest alchemist in the western continent.
Armed with this, Lucien had when grown enough gathered his mutinous retainers and demonstrated before them the transmutation of copper into gold.
Until then, he had been a mere cadetās blood, placed temporarily while greater nobles quarrelled over who would control Turunās future. A puppet boy.
And then, in one day, he became the Goose that Laid the Golden Eggs.
Before all eyes, he conjured gold. Then he rewarded loyalty with wagons of his gold, in exacting sequence, supporting those who swore to him.
He ruled with that gold. Overnight, the scarecrow had become maker of treasure.
Though still not grown to full manhood, he handed out gold obsequiouslyāthen whispered dissections among them, sowing rivalries.
āLord A slandered Count B, swearing his loyalty to me above him, if only I grant him a thousand hundred million kerliarches worth of gold.ā
āCount B claimed Lord A was scheming treason; if he brought me proof, he demanded one thousand five hundred million instead.ā
The boyās innocent eyes had been his dagger tongue, dividing them even as they underestimated him. They did not see the serpentās forked tongue in play.
So while they bickered, he grew. He transformed a worthless mountain into what was officially recorded as a gold mine of his own estate, secured the kingās legal sanction, and paid a tithe of oneātenth of the gold to the crown. Thus he became a magnate.
Later, when the vassals who knew too much of his alchemy bled each other dry with feuds, he sent assassins to dispatch those survivors. Purge by purge, he cut away all chaff, until only the humble, loyal, or fundamentally true vassals of Turun remained.
What had begun as whispers and gold ended as a house rebornāits serpent master feared, respected, and utterly in control.
Footnotes:
- Albinism in Lucien: albinism explains his weakened health, light sensitivity, red irises. Nichiel applies modern medical perspective onto the fantasy setting.
- Dragonās Curse: afflicts each Lord line differently; for Lucien it manifests as serpent transformation and venom circulating, making him both weakened and empowered.
- Kerliarch (ķ¬ė¦¬ģ“ģ¹): fictional currency unit in the setting; vast amounts used to signal wealth and manipulation.
- Copper-to-Gold transmutation: Medieval fantasy world alchemy motif; Lucien used the dramatic lie/truth of alchemy to evolve from puppet to master.