Chapter 436: Grieving Hollow
He knew that they were still near Caldera from the spatial teleportation that Arthur used.
There was no need to hide the young dragon anymore. No players dared to venture a hundred kilometres in the direction of the Grieving Hollow. As for the locals of Caldera, he couldn’t care less. If they were peaceful, they would simply continue on their way, doing their own things and whilst he did his own things.
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However, if they decided that today was the day they died. Then Arthur will naturally fulfil their wish and bury them there. In his opinion, being buried in such a cool-looking place wasn’t half bad.
Still, the facts proved that once you ventured this deep into the wilderness, you were beyond the reach of curious eyes or potential threats from other humans.
"Aether," Arthur said, pointing deeper into the forest where the Grieving Hollow was meant to be located. "Teleport us a hundred kilometres this way."
The distance would bring them within the range of their destination while conserving Arthur’s own spatial manipulation energy for the challenges ahead. Aether’s teleportation abilities were far more refined and efficient for long-distance travel.
"Yes, Master!" Aether’s voice carried obvious excitement. His favourite thing to do was follow Arthur’s instructions, especially when it involved using his spatial abilities to transport them around. The young dragon took pride in his mastery over dimensional manipulation, viewing each successful teleportation as an opportunity to demonstrate his heritage as a void dragon.
Aether’s eyes began to glow with concentrated spatial energy, the air around them shimmering as reality prepared to fold. Space enveloped them in its embrace like a mother protecting her children, as the world dissolved around them in a cascade of shifting colours and impossible lighting.
For a brief moment, they existed between dimensions, travelling through the void that connected all points in space. Then reality reasserted itself, and they materialised exactly one hundred kilometres deeper into the southern wilderness.
The change in atmosphere was immediate and striking to Arthur.
