It was Vesdel's fortune that Bojan Myaskovsky had not been present at the inn when he arrived to eat breakfast. Such blatant display of ability would not have gone over too well at all and severe damage to both property and body would undoubtedly have occurred as a result of Vesdel's lack of care in concealing who and what he was. In one day, he would find his life had changed quite considerably - if he thought about it. Reapers were not to be taken lightly. Circumstances being what they were, Vesdel was just lucky that Basil was the one who had arrived to send him.
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Those who traveled through the town of Duland today would find that odd markers had appeared all over the place; at first, they could easily have been dismissed as graffiti, a child or hooligan’s scrawls, perhaps accidental, even, but some were more refined than others, thicker in stroke and color. Most were a dash or curved line housed inside a perfect circle but others were more detailed; it was these that were most attention catching as simply trying to follow them with one’s eyes caused them to squirm and wiggle almost as though they were alive. Needless to say, these symbols were the topic on everyone’s mind - but not lips, if they were sensible and god-fearing - and nobody quite knew who had put them up. Nobody, of course, but Basil, who at once recognized the symbols for what they were, and knew, too, that this meant Bojan was just about done with his preparations.
How long would it be now? Tonight? A day or two? One thing was for certain: The town of Duland had already been written off as a necessary casualty in this secret war against their target. Disregarding those difficult thoughts, however, Basil had the strangest urge to sightsee before the town was reduced to rubble. Markets, stores, landmarks, and, of course, the seat of the local government; it wasn’t long after he neared the last sight that he felt a familiar, spiritual tug . . . Right, last night’s vagrant soul had vanished just before he arrived. Although there would be a lot of death in the coming days, his job, as a reaper, was to send souls on their way, and that made him responsible for this spirit. He’d just have to go and get work out of the way before returning to his sightseeing.
Because he was capable of feeling the spirit’s presence, it didn’t take Basil long at all to find it, especially since it was sitting right in the open, almost as though it were waiting for someone, and he approached it, apprehensively so. The thing was . . . Horribly scarred, and its features were burnt and twisted. Had he been a harsher person, he may have felt a sense of revulsion, but he wasn’t and, instead, he felt pity for the thing. It must have had a hard life.
“Um, hello? I need to send you.” Basil said as he stopped and cast his shadow over top Vesdel.
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FATAL KERNEL ERROR_
Mind link to COMP disconnected_