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67.64% HP: A Magical Journey [Complete] / Chapter 298: Before The Answer

Kapitel 298: Before The Answer

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The link is also in the synopsis.

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". . . this time, I brought the curse along with me."

Alan's eye took over a golden hue as he channelled soul magic and gazed deeply at Quinn. The first thing that entered Alan's mind as he looked at Quinn's soulscape and his Soul was that Quinn had indeed made some impressive progress— it wasn't ground-breaking, and Alan had seen this level of achievement by many those he knew dabbled in soul magic— but all of them were closer to his age than they were to Quinn's.

Alan frowned. 'What is this?'

Quinn had no cover that allowed him to hide his soulscape and Soul, allowing Alan to peer right in— not many had them as the number of people practicing soul magic were few in between; as such, time and energy devoted to the dangerous soul magic were much better utilized in other useful things such as strengthening the Soul's connection to magic enabling better natural focus and thus better magical control with a magical focus (wand.)

But, even without a cover over the soulscape, Alan couldn't peer into Quinn's Soul. He could feel it and knew a Soul was present in front of him but couldn't see it.

'Is that because of the Sin curse?'

'That' was the opacity that hindered his sight. The entire soulscape was covered with shades of black— there were blotches of pitch black, while there were others spreads of lighter blacks that were letting out some light.

"Why can't I look into your soulscape?" he asked. "There's a lot black blocking my view."

"The curse is acting as a parasite, and even though I have stopped it from reaching the stage it had done the last time, the curse still has its hooks sunk in me," said Quinn before asking. "And what do you mean by black— isn't it seven-colored?"

"Seven colored? No, all I can see are shades of black . . . hmm, now that I see it . . . yeah, there's seven shades of black."

Quinn tilted his head. He dove into his soulscape, and the pristine was entirely stained with seven colors— it was one of the reasons Quinn had decided to ask for Alan's help— even though he had stopped the mind-whispers, the progression of the curse had continued to take over his soulscape with only his Soul being safe because of his shield.

"Show it to me," said Quinn.

"Come in, then," said Alan, smiling.

Quinn looked into Alan's eyes which went back to their normal blue color and reached out with his Legilimency. He found himself standing within the dense white fog the next second, limiting his visibility down to a few feet. He waited for the haze to clear, but seconds passed, and the fog didn't let up.

"Alright, very fun, haha; Quinn can't see anything," he said, "come on, get this out of my face."

He heard a peal of laughter booming from everywhere as the haze cleared and came into his vision was a ginormous blood-red sphere of liquid with surface rippling every other second, colliding with other ripples and making other sub-ripples.

Quinn sucked in a breath. It had been years since the last time he had seen this sight. Alan's Occlumency defense, built on another system of defense— one more advanced than Quinn could even imagine; Quinn was sure that Alan was so beyond everyone that if he turned back to see where the second stood, he wouldn't be able to see them.

A dual natural Occlumens and Legilimens, who worked hard to perfect his craft, was an absolutely terrifying being. Quinn had no idea how the blood-red sphere worked or how to even avoid the fog— he could spend his life wandering in the mind fog and get nowhere.

He watched as a point in the red liquid bubbled before a letter envelope came out, flying to him. Like Quinn used memory-books to store his memories, Alan used memory envelopes to form his storage; according to Alan, his mother used to send him a letter every week when he was away from home at school and was a big part of Alan's formative years— and when he formally started learning Occlumency, he used those letters as the model.

Quinn grabbed the envelope and turned it bottom side up. He slipped his finger inside the lip, flicked it open, and that's when Alan's memory of peering at Quinn's soulscape flooded into his mind.

Once again, he was made to realize how brilliant Alan was at mind magic. He had landed in the memory inside Alan's perspective. Quinn looked around and even turned back to see what was behind— usually, it would be a blurry mess of colors, but Alan, who had developed a perfect memory, knew precisely what was behind him as he had seen it when he entered the room and composited that image in the current memory, which lacked that information.

'I can also do it,' thought Quinn, and it was true; it wasn't that difficult when you had ample immersion in the memory — 'but I can't do it in seconds like him.' Compositing memories like that was an easy yet time-consuming process and could anywhere from a few minutes to several hours or even multiple days.

He stood up from Alan's chair and walked to memory-Quinn.

"So this is what you're talking about, huh," muttered Quinn, looking at the black covering his soulscape. "Well, it looks real colorful from the inside."

Instantly, he was yanked out the memory and thrown out Alan's mindscape as the haze again populated the blank black space.

"Alright, now my turn," said Alan. "I'm going enter your soulscape and take a good look at the problem . . . not going to lie, but I'm excited to see what exactly is happening inside of you. I wonder if I would be able to learn something— it has been a while I have made some delicious progress on soul magic."

Quinn couldn't even rebuke; after all, if he was in Alan's shoes, he would have the same reaction.

"How are you going to enter my soulscape?" asked Quinn. "I presume entering on your own would not be ideal."

"Yes, can't be doing that, so you're going to take me inside on your own violation," said Alan.

Quinn shrugged. It was dangerous to let an external soul near one's own as it was one of the most significant vulnerabilities of a being. But here, it wasn't even a question for Quinn.

"Alright, let's get started. I want to get this out of me."

But before they did that, Alan and Quinn completed and enjoyed their meal. They knew that it was going to take some time for Alan to observe and take in the situation, then analyze it before he could give a conclusion, and that couldn't be done while a server was coming and going between courses.

After they were done, they asked Abraham if they could use the room. Abraham had no problems with it as he served fifteen parties and had fifteen rooms— a party could stay as long as they wanted, given that they left before the restaurant closed.

Quinn and Alan locked the room and told Abraham that no one was to disturb them and got to work.

"Give me your hand," said Alan setting his hand forward on the table.

Quinn grabbed Alan's hands, and after an intimation, Quinn felt Alan's magic flow, and he too closed his eyes to allow the entry to guide Alan into the soulscape. It was a strange feeling— he could feel fear from the bottom of his heart, screaming at him to throw Alan out, but ignored the basic instinct, which was overwhelming when the very essence of his being was in question.

". . . You look, but please hurry," said Quinn.

Alan nodded; he knew how Quinn must be feeling right now. He immediately got to work and started to work quickly.

"It really is colorful," said Alan, 'looking' around Quinn's soulscape. The colors had entirely covered the white of the soulscape. He then turned his vision to the soul in the center, and he couldn't see it with a thick, bubbling, thumping cacoon which looked like it had veins all over it.

"That doesn't look good," Alan said.

Quinn remained silent, keeping his instincts down.

Alan continued to watch the soulscape. He observed the blotches on the walls of the soulscape and the cocoon built upon Quinn's shield that was protecting his Soul.

"What does it feel like right now?" asked Alan. "There must be some effect on you with your soulscape like this; I refuse to believe that you aren't feeling anything."

"There are voices in my head," said Quinn quickly. "They are my own voices, each tainted with a certain sin— they pop up when I'm feeling strongly about something, or even when there's a potential that I could be tempted to fall for the curse and other times that I don't know why they pop up."

"Show me those memories later. I hope you have a compilation ready for me to look at."

"Yes."

It wasn't even a question. It was one of the first things Quinn had started upon when he thought of going to Alan.

After a while, Alan was satisfied with his observations and got out of the soulscape. Quinn slumped into his chair and breathed a long sigh with a sheen of sweat on his skin.

"Show me the memories," Alan said, ignoring Quinn's appearance.

Quinn grunted.

Alan took that as an invitation and instantly entered Quinn's mind.

"Oh? What's this?" Alan said, his voice rising in interest. "You have made some exciting additions to your defenses, child. What is this thing I am feeling emitting from defenses? It feels dangerous~."

Every point on the hexagon grid was emitting something Alan couldn't see, but he could clearly feel them with his god-tier Legilimency skills. They were everywhere and were being produced by Quinn's defenses constantly.

"It's an invisible matter, a creation of mine," said Quinn, his tone flat.

"What does it do?"

"It will degrade Leglimency probes and mental attacks as they try to break through," said Alan. "They are being emitted by the layers of defenses, and because there's an elastic-type layer stretched over every hexagon, the probes slow down and keep getting radiated with the matter, continuing to degrade. If a probe somehow gets past the shields and enters the mindscape, they would be greeted by a concentrated version of the same matter woven into the very essence of my mindscape— probes will be snuffed before they get to my mind-structures.

And you aren't supposed to know that they are there— they're supposed to be completely invisible."

"Now that's sneaky," smiled Alan. "If they don't know it is there, they won't act against it."

"Yes, that was the motive behind it."

The place in front of Alan rippled, and a memory book manifested. It was the compilation for when the voices spoke to him. The book had every single whisper, hundreds of them, all recorded.

Alan grabbed the book, and the memories flowed. He instantly frowned, not because of the voices, but because the first memory wasn't about the voices, but a place he recognized from Quinn's memories that he had shown to his years ago.

"The Sin Vault?"

"Yes," said Quinn. "I was awake this time around . . . see if something in the room helps you."

Alan resumed the memory and watched with intense concentration. He saw how the Vault tried to knock Quinn out, how he resisted, how the runes appeared on the wall, and how they shot beams, which Alan was sure were laden with curses. After he was done with Vault memory, he moved on to the Sin voices.

"You have grown," said Alan with a smirk as he watched the memories. "Oh ho ho ho~."

Quinn furrowed his brows, confused.

"I'm done," said Alan, retreating out of Quinn's mind.

"And?" asked Quinn, hopefully.

Alan shook his head, and Quinn felt his heart drop.

"I can't help you."

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Alan D. Baddeley - Mind Master - Sorry.

Quinn West - MC - "I . . . ."

FictionOnlyReader - Author - I wonder . . . what lies in the future.

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next chapter

Kapitel 299: Truth Of The Matter

If you want to read ahead, you can check out my Patreón @

[ https://www.patreón.com/fictiononlyreader ]

The link is also in the synopsis.

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"I can't help you."

Silence dominated the room, but Quinn's devastated expression spoke volumes to Alan, who sat opposite him with an expression of regret mixed with pity.

Quinn placed his elbows on the desk and clutched his head between his hands; his eyes scrunched closed tight— his deep breaths audible in the room. He had come to America to meet Alan because he had run out of options to try out and couldn't find a road to progress— his hope was his master, who Quinn knew had dabbled into soul magic . . . yet here he was, hearing the words he didn't want to hear.

«If he can't help me . . . then I have no choice but to let the curse take over— maybe this time I'll let it run longer, extract more benefits . . . more magic, more power, more magic, more power, more magic, more power, magic, power, magic, power, magic, power, magic, power . . . . DO IT!!!»

"What are you thinking right now?" asked Alan.

From within his hands, Quinn spoke in a scratchy voice, ". . . . That I don't know what to do . . . that I don't want to think about anything right now . . . that I . . . ."

Quinn's voice faded with a sigh, his head still buried between his hands.

"Quite the standard reaction," said Alan, "and while I'll like to give you some time— I know you'd prefer to hear what I want to say as soon as possible."

"What?" Quinn asked, shifting his head in his hands, giving Alan a look from his half-lidded eyes.

"Even though I said I can't help you, that doesn't mean I haven't found some things that'd be useful to you. I have found some interesting things about the Sin curse— would you like to know?"

Quinn's eyes widened as he sat up straight and intently stared at Alan with reinvigorated light.

Alan smiled.

"Now that I have gotten you interested, there are a few things I noticed from your memories and your soulscape," said Alan.

"What sort of things?"

"Well, let's get the disappointing stuff out of the way— I have zero clue about the runes that struck you in the Sin Vault. I'm not an expert in rune, after all— you probably are already much more knowledgeable about the subject than I am."

"So . . . both of us combined have no clue about the source of the curse."

Alan looked surprised as he raised his brows, "You too don't have any idea about the runes? That's surprising!"

"Believe me, I tried to find how those runes work— studied a lot on the individual runic languages that the rune clusters were constructed with, tried to find similar patterns in historic records and tomes . . . but there was nothing— not a single line of text I could find that would help me in the slightest."

"That is too bad; it could have helped us much."

"Yes, it could have," said Quinn with a frustrated tone; the amount of time he had spent in studying for the Vault's runes hadn't paid out one bit.

"That was the disappointing news. Now, let's move onto the next part," Alan said, folding his hand on the table. "Even with you, bring the curse along with you . . . allowing me to enter your soulscape . . . and let me look through your memories— I'm not able to understand how the curse works or how it has taken a grip on you . . . ." Alan sighed as he continued, "You overestimate my capabilities, child."

"What do you mean?" asked Quinn.

"While I've dabbled in soul magic, it is nowhere near the level of my mind magic," said Alan with a half-wry smile. "I'm a dual natural with Occlumency and Legilimency, and that's a big reason behind me reaching where I'm today with mind magic . . . but that level of progress doesn't convert into soul magic. Not only is soul magic much more touchy it is also quite volatile. I had to move very carefully, which translated into a safe yet low return.

I had told you about this one when we last met, but I picked up soul magic so that I could diversify and spend some time away from mind magic, to give myself a break— and well, while I'm at a respectable level, it seems that the curse is not something my level can decipher and decode . . . completely."

"Completely, you say," said Quinn, "that means there's something you did find."

"I did," said Alan sounding happy. "I think I was able to find a way for you to get rid of the curse . . . ."

"WHAT?! You did?! Tell me!"

"Now-now, calm down your hippogriffs," said Alan motioning Quinn to calm down. "Yes, I might have found a way . . . but you might not like."

"Eh, why wouldn't I like a way to get rid of this damned curse?"

"Because it is not exactly pleasant," Alan sighed.

"Tell me," Quinn asked impatiently, leaning forwards, his hands joined together in a tight grip.

". . . Quinn, you need to pull down the shield around your soul . . . and let the curse in."

Quinn blinked once, then twice, and thrice. "Did you . . . did you somehow got the curse while inside my soulspace," he put his hands forward on the table, "come on, let me take a look— it will be bad if both of us got the curse. If you really did catch the curse, then I'll have to teach you how to suppress the voices until we figure out how to get rid of the curse."

"There's nothing wrong. I haven't caught the curse," said Alan, "but you indeed need to let the curse in."

"But, why?!"

"Think about it, the last time around, what was the thing that triggered the expulsion of the curse from your soul?"

Quinn jerked back in his chair as the memory came up to the surface. He pursed his lips and bit the inside of his cheeks. ". . . I was going to punish . . . attack some students for bullying my friend."

"Yes, that is true, but that's not what I'm talking about."

"Then what . . . ?" Quinn furrowed his brows before they rose up. "You mean . . . ."

"Yes."

"I used . . . my wand, and that was the catalyst which made me snap out it," said Quinn. "But what does that has to do here?"

"From what I was able to judge from your memories last time around, in which you included a level your emotion— that was a great thing you did— I found out that you attempted to perform an action you hated so much, something that you would never want to do that your soul snapped back at the curse and expunged the curse— and. . ."

"And you want me to do the same this time around," said Quinn, understanding dawning upon him.

"Yes," said Alan, "you need to find something that you wouldn't want to do at any cost and well do it. And right now, what's the last things you want to do?"

". . . I don't want to let the curse take over my soul," Quinn forced the words out with incredible difficulty. "But . . . ! What if it takes over and I am not able to escape it?! Wouldn't that be worse!"

". . . Quinn, have you noticed the state of your soulscape? It had started with a few blotches on the soulscape's walls and thin veins on your shield, but now they have grown to the white walls covered thoroughly, and the shield has become the base to a thick cocoon.

Even if you don't voluntarily let the curse get a chance at your soul, it will continue to grow stronger, and eventually, it will break through."

Quinn had no reply. There were multiple reasons he had decided to be not at Hogwarts during Easter for the first time since he had started school. He had noticed that the curse was progressing to spread across his soulscape, and him snuffing the Sin voices was just treating the symptoms while ignoring the root problem.

"I won't tell you to do it immediately," said Alan. "You have to do it when you're ready. I won't be able to help you because you know how it feels to have an external soul inside your soulscape. What I can do for you is stay with you here before you have to go back home and help you prepare.

We probably won't make any progress on your soul magic, but I can share my experience with you, and that might raise your chances to succeed."

After a pause, Quinn said, "Let's say that I let the curse in by disabling the shield, and my soul struggles back with the curse. Then what should I do afterward? I don't want to leave the chances of my soul coming out on top to luck."

Yes, his soul was stronger than before, but so was the curse, which had been growing inside his soulscape. He had no way to measure the chances of his success.

"If I fail, then I don't know how long I would be out," said Quinn. "I don't know how long it will take for me to do something that would expunge the curse— not to mention, I would be under the influence in the period between— which believe me, I don't want to be in."

"It's a risk that you'll have to take," said Alan. "It's clear that the curse is growing faster than you're growing your soul magic, so you can only hold it back for only so long."

"I know, I know," Quinn grumbled, scratching his hair.

Alan stared at Quinn for a while before he said bluntly, "You messed up."

Quinn looked at Alan, startled.

"You made a mistake going inside the Sin Vault the second time. You did it because of asinine pride and an inflated ego— you had the Resurrection Stone, and if you continued to work with it without going to the Sin Vault, your soul magic would've slowly built it up— but you got greedy and decided to go in there looking for a treasure. You had no way of knowing if you'd be able to dodge the curse, yet you still went in there.

I know this isn't what you want to hear, but it is the truth. So make up your mind, make a plan, and follow it until you have the curse out. That's all there is to it."

Quinn leaned into his chair and stared at the ceiling. It was as Alan said— pride and greed were his weaknesses. He had become greedy that with only one year remaining at Hogwarts, he only had one year to clear the Sin vault. And his pride didn't allow him to be defeated by a mere vault; he had conquered all others in a single year; why should the Sin Vault be any different.

Resurrection Stone was just the justification that he needed for allowing himself into the vault.

He removed his eyes from the ceiling and looked at Alan.

"Alright . . . I'll let the curse in— but I'll do it on my own time. For now, I request that you help me."

The option of letting in the curse in America was not a choice. If he fell to the curse in America, he wouldn't be able to go back to Hogwarts, and that wasn't an option as he had some important work to do— that if he missed, he would never get the chance to do again.

"Well then, it is decided," Alan smiled widely. "We're staying America . . . Now, let's come to the more important thing."

"What is it?" asked Quinn, there was something more important?

"The owner of this place is your sister's boyfriend, right? Do you think he will let us come here every day?"

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Alan D. Baddeley - Master - I'm not giving this spot up.

Quinn West - MC - "I can't give up . . . I have to regain the top spot."

FictionOnlyReader - Author - But . . . is Alan right? Am I bluffing, or is there's something else?

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.

If you have any ideas regarding the magic you want to see in this fiction or want to offer some ideas regarding the progression. Move onto the DISCORD Server and blast those ideas.

The link is in the synopsis!


AUTORENGEDANKEN
FictionOnlyReader FictionOnlyReader

Just like always,

Review, comment, add to the library, and share this fic.

Thx

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