âYou know, we have the same hair,â Joan said, following behind Penthe down the abandoned halls of the cultâs hideout.
Penthe gave a small shrug and glanced back at her. âI guess? Itâs common.â
âYeah,â Joan said. âBut I really thought your hair would be more magical. Youâre kind ofâ¦â
âI have helmet hair,â Penthe said. âYou will too, once we get that armor off you.â
âDo you think youâll be able to?â Joan asked.
âMaybe,â Penthe said. âHave you gotten it off before?â
âChase did before,â Joan said. âBut he covered me in ice and then broke it from the inside out. It was cold.â
âDoes it hurt? Make you feel tired?â Penthe asked.
âNo,â Joan said. âSo, uhhhh, do you know the way?â
âNo,â Penthe said, before shoving open yet another door. The hinges squeaked and the room was filled with ancient, decaying furniture. She slammed it shut.
âWant me to show you?â Joan asked.
Penthe slowly looked back at her, her eyes narrowed to slits. âYou know the way?â
âIâve been here a lot,â Joan said sheepishly. âPast lives and all. We dealt with this. Sort of.â
âSort of,â Penthe said.
âI mean, aside from the elemental,â Joan said. âAnd I think Ifrit died. But other than that, we kind of came here. I know the way out, just not really⦠in.â
Penthe motioned her ahead.
Joan quickly started walking down the hall, quickly coming to a turn and then moving to the right. âYou know, when we came here a lot more things had been collapsed.â
Penthe just grunted at her.
âSo, howâve you been?â Joan asked. âI mean, are you still going by Gil orâ¦?â
âSometimes,â Penthe said.
âWould you prefer I call you that?â Joan asked.
âPenthe is fine,â Penthe said.
âYouâre uhhhh, not planning to kill me again, right?â Joan asked. âI mean. Thereâs not like, a second Hungry One you think is inside me or anything?â
âNo,â Penthe said.
âAre you⦠mad at me?â Joan asked softly.
âNo,â Penthe said.
âYou seem mad,â Joan said.
âI am,â Penthe said. âNot at you.â
âSorry I dragged you out here,â Joan said softly before glancing back at her.
Penthe gave a sigh and her gaze softened just a tiny bit. âJoan, Iâm not angry with you. If anything, I am angry with the fates. Theyâve made things more uncomfortable and more complex than they need to be.â
âHowâs uhhhh⦠the Demon Lord?â Joan asked.
âHeâs angry,â Penthe said. âItâs complex. Dixon will make it easier.â
âWhy do you need Dixon anyway?â Joan asked.
âDemon Lord needs allies,â Penthe said. âHis brother is his best one.â
âAnd the Chosen?â Joan asked.
âIn a way,â Penthe said. âDemon Lord cannot control demons anymore. Itâs making things⦠difficult.â
âSorry,â Joan said.
âItâs not something you need to be sorry for,â Penthe said. âJust stay aware. Taking time. Better you not be a part of it.â
âBut Dixon is okay?â Joan asked.
âHeâs not human,â Penthe said.
âYou are,â Joan said.
âBarely,â Penthe said.
âSorry,â Joan said.
âStop saying that,â Penthe said.
âYou feel angry,â Joan said softly.
Penthe just gave an exhausted sigh.
âHow much did this throw off your plans?â Joan asked.
âIâve made countless deals and agreements throughout the history of this world,â Penthe said softly. âIt is time to make good on them. You accelerated that.â
âHow did you get here so quickly?â Joan asked.
âThe gateways,â Penthe said. âI know where each is connected. I can traverse them far quicker when I go alone. When I realized someone was entering that oneâ¦â
âYou knew it had to be me?â Joan asked sheepishly.
âNo others would try,â Penthe said. âAnd I knew youâd get yourself killed if you did.â
âOhhhhh,â Joan said, a wide grin forming on her lips. âYou rushed all the way here to save me?â
âObviously,â Penthe said.
âBecause you liiiike me now?â Joan asked.
âBecause too many people will be furious with me if I let you die,â Penthe said calmly. âYou shouldnât have been here to begin with. My deal, not yours.â
âSo are there others?â Joan asked.
âCountless,â Penthe said.
âCan I help with those, too?â Joan asked, stopping at the base of a long, winding staircase before turning to face her. âPlease?â
Penthe stared down at her. âWhy do you want to so badly?â
âBecause I want to help you,â Joan said. âBecause it sounds fun. Because youâre kind of cool and I never really got to know you and I want to know you. Because youâve gone toe to toe against the Chosen and survived, even won a few times, with what I think is pretty much just a human body. I could learn a lot from you. Because--â
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âI get it,â Penthe said before reaching out and putting a hand on her head. âCan you not take this helmet off, even?â
âNo,â Joan said. âThe exit should be just up these steps, though. But thereâs no telling whatâs up there.â
âWhy?â Penthe asked.
âBecause it was different before,â Joan said. âThis was the main entrance in the future, theyâll probably have shades and who knows what else waiting for us.â
âI doubt it,â Penthe said before she started up the steps. âJust keep quiet.â
Joan nodded and followed after the woman. In the dim light of the small glowing orb she could just barely make out the older womanâs form. She looked so decrepit, her skin almost hanging off her bones. Still, she didnât have the black veins anymore so that was probably an improvement. A part of her was worried that if she tripped sheâd shatter. Yet while she seemed tired, she wasnât sluggish.
Joan tightened her grip on her sword, readying herself for whatever was waiting for them at the top of the steps. It--
âHmm? Yeah, I got her, sheâs fine,â Penthe said.
âWhat?â Joan asked.
âShush,â Penthe said. âNot you, her. Why donât you cast it on her? She can explain.â
Joan rolled her eyes. The shadow bonding spell. Penthe had to know she didnât have to say the words out loud, right?
âWhat do you mean you canât? Sheâs like two steps behind me,â Penthe said. âReally?â She glanced back at Joan. âChase canât touch you with the spell.â
âDonât ask me,â Joan said with a shrug. âI didnât even know Chase could cast it. Ohhhh, wait, he has the Eye of the Night, doesnât he?â
âYeah, she doesnât know,â Penthe said. âCan you locate me? Good. Meet us, Iâm not sure where weâre going to be coming out but there will likely be a lot of bodies. Bring whichever guards can be spared.â She stopped when the steps came to a stop. Something big and wooden was blocking the exit. âNo, nothing dangerous. Just in case. Iâll need you anyway, I need to use the cityâs teleportation circle and itâll be easier if I have a Chosen with me. See you soon.â
âYou know you donât need to talk out loud with that spell, right?â Joan asked.
âIâve always found it to be pretty rude to not,â Penthe said. She then pushed a foot against the blockage. âHmm. Jammed or locked.â She pulled her foot back.
âWhat are you going to--â Joanâs words were cut off when the other woman gave the block a firm shove with her foot, sending what appeared to be a bookcase flying across the room with the sound of broken wood, shattered glass and bent metal. It had, once, been attached to a strange railing. Now the metal had been bent by the force. Dust filled the room, hiding whatever else was in there from sight. âHow?!â
Penthe covered her face with an arm, peering out through the dust. âShush,â she said.
The dust began to clear and the room beyond was slowly revealed. It seemed to be a basement, though an ancient one. The ground was covered in old chests and crates, though most looked like they had been there for ages. A line of bookcases covered the wall, filled with ancient books, vials and other trinkets. The case Penthe had kicked out was surrounded by a growing puddle of an unidentified liquid and shards of glass, while the crate it had smashed into seemed to be filled with rocks.
âAre you sure this is where you came out from?â Penthe asked.
âUhhhh, in the future,â Joan said. âI mean, when the Hero did it. But⦠that was a long time ago. Or will be a while from now? Past lives are weird.â
âWhen less tunnels were collapsed,â Penthe said. âThis place looks abandoned. It--â She stopped and glanced back. âSomething is coming after us.â
Joan turned around and readied her sword. âThe cultists? Should we--â She let out a startled yelp when she was grabbed by the arm and dragged through the room. âW-what? Why? What are you doing?â
âNo point in fighting them,â Penthe said. âChase should be here soon. Then the rest of this is their problem.â
âBut⦠but⦠you just kind of announced us being here,â Joan said softly. âWhy did you do that if you didnât want to fight them?â
Penthe ignored her and just started dragging her towards the stairs.
------
Joan tried to keep her breath steady while she followed Pentheâs instructions.
âFocus on it,â Penthe said. âEnvision your sword in your mind.â
âI am,â Joan said.
âWith the armor?â Penthe asked.
âI am,â Joan said. Though admittedly she felt kind of silly envisioning a hollow suit of armor holding Guardian Nova.
âNow imagine it coming off your body,â Penthe said. âImagine it slowly falling away, the opposite of what itâs like when you summon your sword to your hand.â
âIâm doing it,â Joan whispered. It had been so long since sheâd first learned how to bind a sword to be summoned. Now she barely had to even think about it when she summoned the sword to her hand. Reverse summoning it, though, was a bit harder.
âYouâre not doing it right,â Penthe said.
âIâm not going to get it in ten seconds, can you please stop yelling at me?â Joan asked.
âIâm not yelling,â Penthe said.
âPressuring me, then?â Joan said.
âJust focus,â Penthe said.
âIâm trying!â Joan yelled, unable to keep her voice even.
âPerhaps if I--â
There was a clang and her sword disappeared from her hand, taking the armor with it. They appeared a bit ahead of her, dropping on top of Penthe, who lifted her arms to shield herself. Fortunately, sheâd retrieved a new set of armor once theyâd made it back into the city. How sheâd done it, though, Joan couldnât be certain.
Chase had been able to come with her and get her access to the cityâs teleportation circles, but the spell sheâd used wasnât one Joan was familiar with. Penthe had connected to the teleportation network setup throughout the world, but rather than teleporting herself, sheâd instead summoned the armor and a massive poleaxe. The armor itself was silver and green, almost jade-like, while the poleaxe was a bright, angry red. At least it seemed to not be demonic in nature, as those black veins on Pentheâs body still hadnât made an appearance, even while she was sliding the armor on.
More importantly, it didnât seem damaged even from the dropped armor pieces.
âNot the smoothest removal,â Penthe said, shoving the pieces off her. âBut it at least confirms one of my guesses. What the hell?â She picked up one of the gauntlets and peered within it. âWhat did you do to this?â
âUhhhh, I donât know. Whatever your guess was,â Joan said with a shrug. âDo you mind explaining that to me?â
âArmor made by the Chosen,â Penthe said. âItâs powerful. For it to be changed this drastically, wellâ¦â She motioned to the sword. âThat is the root cause of all of it.â
âI imagined so,â Joan said. âWhat does that mean, though? Is it the Star of the Hero?â
Penthe gave a small shrug. âI couldnât say. The Star of the Hero was originally the Championâs. When it was passed onto you, it stayed as it was. Your Guardian Nova shares some similarities with it, but I couldnât say for certain that it is it.â
âOkay, can you tell me what those similarities are?â Joan asked.
âIt was a weapon of the gods,â Penthe said. âIt could absorb the magic of other things. Well, once. Eventually it became too powerful that nothing could really be absorbed again.â
âWhat?â Joan asked. âHow much more powerful is it going to become?â
âNo idea,â Penthe said. âBut whatever it did definitely seems to have gotten into the armor the Chosen made for you. Itâs all one big magic ball of trouble. Kind of like you.â
Joan gave a light snicker at that, before sighing. âSo, basically I have a big bundle of magic energy attached to my soul because I bonded to it.â
âYes,â Penthe said. âOr possibly whatever that magic was, would have torn your soul apart and your sword only managed to keep you safe by shoving what it could into the armor.â
âThatâs⦠thatâs a much better thought,â Joan said nervously. âIs the armor safe to wear?â
âPossibly,â Penthe said. âProbably a lot safer than bonding to it. But a little late for that.â
âSpeaking of my soul, when you did⦠whatever it was you did in there, to dispel all the elementals? It kind of felt like something was tugging at my soul,â Joan said. âShould⦠I worry about that?â
Penthe gave an exhausted sigh and just rested her head in her palm. âYes. Yes you should. Damn it Joanâ¦â
âSorry!â
âDonât be sorry, be better,â Penthe said. âWeâre going to need the Chosen of Light, Earth and Dreams for something like this. All of which are quite busy right now.â
âEhh, itâs probably fine. I wonât keel over if it takes a few days. Will I?â Joan asked.
â⦠Hopefully not,â Penthe said before getting to her feet. âBut the armor is off, that will have to do for now. Iâm going to get some sleep.â
âSleep? But itâs the middle of the day,â Joan said.
â⦠Not in the Demon Lands,â Penthe said. âAnd I had to rush here to make sure you didnât get killed. Iâm exhausted. So now? Sleep. You may want to deal with⦠that,â Penthe said before motioning towards the door that was glowing bright red. âThe seal wonât last long once I fall asleep.â
âAre you sure you donât want to stay up a little longer? You could meet my friends!â Joan said, unable to keep the excitement out of her voice.
Penthe just stared at her. Then, without answering, walked away, collapsing onto the bed. She didnât even get out of her armor.
Joan watched her for a few moments and wondered if sheâd actually be able to fall asleep like that. The armor had to be incredible uncomfortable. Still, after a few moments the door stopped glowing⦠and almost instantly fell open. Sending Bauteut, Qakog, Ifrit and Francis onto the ground with startled shrieks.
âJOAN!â they all yelled in unison.
She had a lot of explaining to do.