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Chapter 2976: Hidden Lab (part 2)

By the time Lindell/Pharek's secret lab had been found, the damage to the hidden room had been repaired by the protective arrays of the palace. The complex and delicate instruments were intact, but too many things were out of place.

The Forge had disappeared, leaving only a depression in the carpet. The many books scattered throughout the room and the several empty shelves were the only remaining signs of struggle.

No mage would be foolish enough to set up an array to put books back in their place.

Otherwise they wouldn't be able to read without the array taking the tome off their hands like an annoying librarian. If a shelf had been broken, the books were right below it.

If a spell had blown it to bits, however, the explosion would propel the books away.

By studying the pattern of the books, it was easy to retrace the different phases of the fight and also understand when things had gotten dire. Self-repairing enchantments were no barriers and paper was frail by nature.

A tome with missing pages or the presence of scattered ashes meant that a spell strong enough to overpower the protections had been used.

"I'll tell you what we already know so you won't have to start from scratch." Azhom said. "Based on our timeline reconstruction, about five months ago someone entered Limbell's house. It must-"

"Five months ago?" Lith was flabbergasted. "You've sat on the scene for so long and expect us to find something?"

"No, we didn't 'sit on the scene', as you put it." Strider snarled. "We have used arrays to preserve everything as it was. From the dust on the furniture to the position of the books to the lingering energy signatures.

"Everything is still as we found it. Also, what did you expect? Awakened crimes aren't like human crimes. There are only so many possible suspects and no one steals something like this to keep it hidden.

"We were certain that by letting the culprit think that they had gotten away with it, they would have done something that would betray their involvement. Also, we've never stopped investigating. We believed that something would come out.

"The problem is that we were wrong. Please, continue, Azhom."

"It must have been a friend, because unless Limbell opened the door himself, the security system would have alerted him and he would have fought the intruder in the outer rooms, not in his hidden Forgemastering lab.

"Also, it must be someone Limbell trusted. A Forgemaster treasures his secrets more than his bedchambers." The Lich said and Bytra, Solus, and Lith nodded in agreement.

"We think that Limbell brought the killer here to show them something, maybe a piece that had been commissioned but still needed the input of the client before being completed.

"Then something was said or done that caused the violence. This is most likely a fist." He pointed at a pile of collapsed books in front of an empty shelf at the level of Limbell/Pharek's head.

"When that failed, spells started to fly." She pointed at the scattered and burned books on both sides of the room where the mages had probably crashed during the exchanges.

"Then Limbell died and you know the rest."

"Are there missing books?" Xenagrosh's Dragon Eyes had already counted the stray books and then calculated the empty volume on the shelves.

For them to be all destroyed there were too little ashes.

"Many." Rhuta said. "After accounting for the scattered books, those damaged, and the few that have been blown to cinders, we estimate that about half of the content from the empty shelves was taken.

"Another weird thing is that Limbell's diaries, Grimoires, and secret manuals are safe. He had entrusted them to his disciple and even though the young Nem Limbell refused to let us read them, we could still verify their contents.

"The books in his possession are so many that they would fit this entire room. The missing tomes are 'just' a few dozens."

"Before you ask, yes we checked Nem Limbell's whereabouts and alibi." Unanna the Naga said. "He was our first suspect since he fit the bill of the culprit to nigh-perfection.

"He was away when this happened. Old Limbell had sent him to fetch rare ingredients in the Council's market. We have witnesses, security footage, timeline, everything.

"Also, I specified nigh-perfection because the young Limbell has no damn motive. His master was old, there was no argument between them nor time to find a replacement.

"All of this was going to belong to Nem in a few years anyway. It was no secret that Sherk Limbell's life force was almost drained so why kill his master and risk death at the hand of the Council?"

"How can you be so sure that there was no argument with his disciple?" Bytra asked, knowing well how a disgruntled apprentice could hide their resentment until it turned into hatred.

Solus swallowed at those words, wondering if it took a murderer to know one.

"Because Limbell was old and had plenty of friends." Strider replied. "We have checked with them their conversations of the last few years and there's no mention of attrition with Nem Limbell nor did Sherk ask his friends to help him find a replacement.

"We even checked with Nem's friends who confirmed to us that the youth has been a mess for quite a while now. He loved the idea of becoming the master of the house but he hated that it came at the price of losing his beloved great-grandfather."

"It's a mystery." Xenagrosh thought long and hard about the issue but found no explanation.

Warping inside a mage's house was suicidal but before that, it was impossible unless you had been there already and knew the dimensional coordinates. A guest or a friend would have never known about the secret lab.

Even if somehow an intruder bypassed the dimensional sealing arrays with Spirit Magic, they would have appeared in the common areas that were also the most heavily protected.

Yet there was no trace of struggle in the rest of the house so there had been no fight. On top of that, killing an Awakened as old as Pharek in his own turn turf was far from easy. And that without taking the Ears of Menadion into the equation.

Zoreth couldn't think of a single way she could have done such a surgical job against someone with Pharek's resources.

It was a feat on Tezka's level but someone like the Suneater would have never run away and left behind so many treasures. He would have taken his time and stolen everything noteworthy.

Anyone strong enough to kill Pharek was supposed to have no reason to fear Nem's return. The culprit had killed like a powerful mage and then acted like a weakling with no plan or experience in cleaning his own mess.

The execution was the mark of a pro, everything else was the wreck of an amateur at his first kill.

The only silver lining was that Xenagrosh had no need to understand someone to track them to the end of Mogar.

"Indeed, and I don't have the time to solve mysteries." Lith took out his communicator amulet and pressed a familiar rune.

Comments 9

  1. Offline
    kollosus_na
    + 00 -
    It's interesting as far as the initial suspect pool goes… perhaps another family member?
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  2. Offline
    Kharjou
    + 20 -
    What if pharek faked his death to gtfo with the menadion item?
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  3. Offline
    here4mysteries
    + 30 -
    Its nice how Tezka's name is sometimes used more as a object of reference than just a comparison just like with Guardians.

    Btw Tezka is older than Salaark ryt? Is Leegain older than Salaark or younger?
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    1. Offline
      harriendergreen
      + 00 -
      Their ages were not stated outright, but Leegain was the third guardian after Tyris and Fenagar, so we can assume he's older than Salaark.
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      1. Offline
        here4mysteries
        + 10 -
        Oh was that mentioned somewhere that he was third? Idr...

        But its true that Tezka is older than Salaark, or atleast a contemporary. We can atleast say that the difference isnt similar to Bytra or Zoreth in whose perspective Salaark has always been a Guardian. Fo Tezka he basically still remembers Salaark's non-Guardian form(s). And him calling her a sparrow isnt the same as others who only 'know' it, he literally was present while she went from Sparrow to Guardian
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        1. Offline
          harriendergreen
          + 00 -
          I was wrong, Leegain was second and Fenagar was third. It was mentioned on chapter 1051.
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          1. Offline
            here4mysteries
            + 00 -
            Doesn’t that basically means that first there was only Tyris who educated the whole of Mogar (world tree didn’t help since it was a selfish bastard from the start). Then Leegain came who admired the world tree but was more benevolent about his knowledge. Till then Mogar was still not divided. After that Fenagar came and his quarrels ended up with the decision of each Guardian having a turf; this idea didn’t exist before since first there was only Tyris then even after Legain came, he was also friendly only.

            So it’s all Fenagar’a fault for the guardians becoming too individualistic instead of all guardians cooperating into making Mogar a better place under Tyris’s guidance and leadership.
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            1. Offline
              harriendergreen
              + 00 -
              Maybe. Fenagar set the tone for the guardians of Jiera, they were extremely individualistic and focuses only on their own talents while Garlen often help each other.

              On their own, they are the best at their fields: Rogar is Mogar's greatest spellcaster, Zagran is the strongest fighter (Salaark stated Zagran only loses to her because Zagrab fights for the sake of fighting, and not to protect like Salaark does), and Fenagar is the only one to have known all of Mogar's secrets.

              But because Garlen works as one unit, they have always been better at them at being "Guardians".
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              1. Offline
                here4mysteries
                + 00 -
                Nah even in Garlen, especially during the period between Tyris's mourning of Valeron's death, till Lith came and after Thrud's war, Lith consoled(?) Tyris, or atleast made her give up her obsession, during that middle period, the guardians were pretty isolated tbh.

                Regardless of that, just the fact tha Guardians of this era have their turfs where their own magic works better while any other Guardians' doesnt work properly - that itself shows what kind of divide ended up happening due to Fenagar's stupidity and stubbornness
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