The arms race of the soul:
Pecholard the Studious and Gadrevan the Brilliant were considered the modern masters of the Pre-Mage era. They competed to advance the field of modern wizardry.
Pecholard was business-minded and cunning, hiring other inventors and subordinating them under himself, passing off their creations as his own. Historians have surmised that a great many of the manâs rituals were either bought or stolen from his competition, although he did have a strong knowledge of ritual magic himself.
Gadrevan was a savant, unconcerned with money and fame, much to his detriment, as modern history texts barely give mention to the man and his legacy.
For a time, Gadrevan worked under Pecholard, pioneering the rituals that accessed and binded to the subjectâs soul, making Pecholard rich beyond measure.
The two men had a falling out over Pecholard taking sole credit for Gadrevanâs creations, and a disagreement over the method of advancing ritual magic.
Pecholard advocated for the subordinating of the souls of powerful, intelligent magical creatures in order to harness their natural essences, while Gadrevan believed the practice to be vile.
Gadrevan proposed a method to store rituals in the soul and release them when needed. Perhaps more cumbersome than Pecholardâs proposal, but less dangerous to the user, and certainly less cruel to the creatures involved.
Pecholard leveraged his great wealth to stifle and delay Gadrevanâs work while spreading his own among society. By the time Gadrevan had anything to show for his efforts, the sheer power and convenience of modern mage-hood outweighed the risk and any moral concerns with the process of soul symbiotes.
Gadrevan died a poor man in a shack on the outskirts of the capital, his only friend a gibbering peech.
This author wonders what advancements could have been made had Gadrevan been heeded.
âHmmâ¦â Perry took a bite out of his apple as he skimmed through the Manitian history book. This was the first book heâd actually found that had been even a little bit critical of Pecholard the Studious, inventor of the symbiotic spirit.
âSounds a bit like Edison and Tesla,â Perry muttered to himself, cross referencing the two history books. âSounds a LOT like Edison and Tesla, actually.â
Perry pursed his lips and went back to his momâs spellbook and began flipping through it. Right there at the end was one of the last rituals ever developed, âPecholardâs Symbiotic Spiritâ.
No mention of this Gadrevan guy anywhere.
They were both pioneers of soul-magic. Perry wanted to break the moratorium on magic The System had on him, which seemed to be lodged in the soul. He needed tools to interact with the soul, and by extension, his System and the Symbiotic Spirit.
Or, if nothing else, figure out a way to anchor spells on the soul rather than my skin where people can see and target them.
I wonder if a higher Stability would provide a stronger soul to anchor onto? Perry thought, taking another bite as he set the history books down and started cruising through Momâs library. There were a few reference books related to the spirits that Mom had inside her, some herbalism books, and a few misplaced romance novels, but nothing further on this Gadrevan fellow.
Perry pulled out his cell phone and called Mom.
âSorry honey, if this isnât an emergency, Iâm gonna have to hang up!â Mom shouted over the sound of destruction and screaming.
âNo problem,â Perry said, hanging up and turning on the evening news, which showed Mom fighting a rat-man wielding top-tier cybernetic enhancements. He held his own, but didnât seem to take the rat-gimmick as far as he couldâve.
He was fighting Momâs team over some kind of tech robbery. Not even a spiel about rat mistreatment or âsurface dwellersâ. This guyâs got no theme. Lame.
Perry called up Dad.
âWhatâs up, Perry?â Dad asked.
âHey, do you know if mom has any more books about magic anywhere? Secret hideout or something?â
âNah, what you see is what you get. Theyâre all pretty much on loan from your grandma, actually. Sheâs got a ton more where that came from. Your mom told me she was pretty insistent on bringing as many books through the portal as she could, to preserve their culture.â
âUgh,â Perry rubbed his temples. âI was afraid of that. Thanks.â
âGood luck.â Dad said, and he could hear the shadenfreude oozing through the speakers.
âHah, right,â Perry said, shaking his head.
âHey, did you wanna kill some prawns on the wall on Thursday, maybe comb the beach? A little father-son bonding time?â Dad asked.
âThat actually sounds pretty good, but I got the Draft Orientation tonight because of the whole âdemonâ thing.â Perry said.
âOh yeah. Guess you might be doing a little time in the Workshop. Say hi to Mad Mike if you see him.â
âWhoâs Mad Mike?â Perry asked.
âYouâll know him when you see him. Just donât eat or drink anything he gives you.â
âOminous. Alright, Iâll talk to you later. Gotta haggle with Grandma for books.â
âLater.â
Perry heaved a sigh and called Grandma.
âThis is Marigold Zauberer, to whom am I speaking?â Grandmaâs voice came over the line.
âMake a contacts list already, Gramma, jeez.â
âAh, Paradox, to what do I owe this pleasure?â
âI was going through the history book Mom gave me when I was twelve, and I found somebody named Gadrevan the ââ
âAnd you want to study his work in order to fool around with your own soul in an attempt to further that bizarre ritual magic youâve concocted.â
âBasically, yeah,â Perry said.
âHmmâ¦I have conditions.â
âShoot.â
âShoot what?â Gramma asked. Since she didnât have an accent, Perry forgot English was her second language.
âItâs an idiom, that means âcontinueâ or âgo aheadâ.â
âidioms are for idiots.â
Perry just waited silently. Any further input he added could only make things worse.
âAnyway,â Gramma continued. âSoul magic is very dangerous, obviously. Itâs a bit like performing brain surgery on yourself. Inherently dangerous and unlikely to be successful.â
âIâll allow you to study Gadrevanâs theses if you promise to only self-experiment while Iâm present to mend your soul.â
âThatâs it?â Perry asked. That actually was a perfectly reasonable requirement. After the bone-mending accident, Perry had learned to appreciate safety nets.
âOh, right, and a day working in my clinic for every day spent studying.â
âAnything else?â
âA compact eukaryotic DNA sample in case you die or pickle yourself like Claudette. Canât let you be the last Zauberer.â
âNot gonna happen, Grandma.â
âWell, you canât blame me for trying. Say hi to your mother for me,â Gramma said, hanging up on him.
Perry glanced at his phone and heaved a sigh.
Her phone etiquette sucks.
He opened up his calendar and began marking potential days he could help out at the clinic.
Under todayâs date:
Draft Orientation: 2:00 PM to 10:00 PM
He checked the time.
Well, I should be early to Nexus.
Perry got suited up and headed out to Nexus, where he was immediately press-ganged into a press conference.
âThis isnât exactly what I had in mind,â Perry muttered, facing the camera.
âYouâre on the clock now, kid. Your ass is mine until 10:00 PM,â Solaris said through a smile as he shook Perryâs hand through the discomboculating flash of cameras. âYou riled up the public, youâre gonna be the one to assure them everythingâs under control.â
Perryâs orientation was a whirlwind of posing for cameras and assuring everyone he spoke to that he was working on Nexusâs âcountermeasures for magical threatsâ.
He had a teleprompter in his helmet, with Solaris dictating every word he said. It was less stressful than being on air with Amber Hardy, given that he didnât have to figure out his own speech, but still pretty bad.
When Perry got back to his bed that night and collapsed into it, he felt like heâd been wrung out like a dishrag.
I guess I shouldâve known Solaris would use my Draft period to twist my arm into making anti-demon tech without pay.
Ah well, live and learn. Solaris was forced to use Perryâs Draft to counter Perryâs move on national TV rather than advance some other goal. Perrys Draft had become a wash for both parties.
Am I thinking of Solaris as my enemy? Perry thought, frowning to himself. That didnât seem right. Solaris was the guy in charge of making sure Franklin city didnât implode.
Perry could 100% see why Solaris had dragged Perry through all that. He just couldnât stop himself from being a bit salty about it.
Perry flopped over on his back and glanced at his calendar. Tomorrow morning he was needed at the scrapyard to keep his machines outputting at Paradox levels, then that afternoon and evening was free. He didnât have his finalized orders yet, and might not have them for a couple weeks.
I miss Hardcase. Perry hadnât seen her or the rest of Titanâs Crew since the SNAFU with the demon over a week ago. Perryâd been putting out fires the entire time.
Huh.
Perryâs circle of friends had actually expanded quite a bit in the last few months.
I should ask Hardcase out on another date. He was going to be gone for a couple weeks soon, after all.Perrygroaned as he reached over and turned off his lamp, passing out within seconds afterwards.
***Natalie, AKA Hardcase***
âOh god,â Natalie muttered, staring down at the text for a moment before calling Sophie.
âThis is Sophie the Elysian Attendant, how can I brighten your day?â
âIâm not ready!â Natalie shouted. âHe wants to hang out and Iâm not ready! Also, add me to your contacts list, I already told you how to do it.â
âGimmie a break, this is the first cell phone Iâve ever owned.â Sophie pouted.
âHe wants to visit his grandma and get lunch!â Natalie said. âIs that code for something!?â
âProbably not.â Sophie said. âLook, I think youâre probably overthinking this.â
âBut Iâm not ready! I havenât got it completely under control yet!â
âIâm sorry to tell you, I donât think youâll ever feel like you have it under control. The important question is: Do you want to go?â
âWell, yeah,â Natalie admitted.
âThen go. Youâre gonna have to practice on people eventually anyway.â
âBut itâs so embarrassing!â
âThis was YOUR plan!âSophie said.
âI know! I just need someone to tell me to do it.â
Sophie was silent for a long moment.
ââ¦Do it.â
âDo I have to?â Natalie hedged.
âYou wanna alienate those two? Avoiding people has that effect.â
âFine! Iâll go!â
âAttagirl.â Sophie said. âHave a great time.â
Sophie hung up, and stared at Paradoxâs text, her body literally feeling like it was at deathâs door.
Sure, that sounds great!She wrote, Looking forwarâ
She erased that line, and started over. Is it a date or will Wraith be there too. It could be boâ
She erased the line.
Itâs a date â
She erased it.
Sure, sounds great!
***Perry***
âHold him down, would you, dear?â Gramma said, brandishing a massive sawblade. âHardcase, be ready with that towel.â
âO-okay.â Hardcase said, holding the towel at the ready, her face pale.
âSorry,â Perry said, glancing up at Hardcase. âI didnât expect gramma would be doing surgery.â
âNonsense, this is dentistry,â Gramma said, bracing the blade against the top of the urglotâs oversized tusk. âThe root stops here,â She pointed to a spot about a palmâs length past the edge of the saw. âThere shouldnât be any blood.â
âUrglots usually grind down and sharpen their tusks in battle and mating displays with other males, but there isnât a whole lot of that going on in Funkytown these days, so these boys need to have their tusks trimmed down regularly.â
She glanced down at the urglot. âIsnât that right, Stu?â
ââ¦Iâm afraid of dentists, your majesty.â The stocky boar-man admitted.
âWell, now instead of a mildly unpleasant sanding, you have to have to get it sawed off, which is distinctly worse. Keep that in mind in the future.â
âYes, your majesty,â Stewart said, looking thoroughly chastised.
âGrab the back of his neck and hold it steady with everything youâve got,â Gramma said and began sawing.
Stewart squealed loud enough to startle Hardcase, bucking in his chair.
âThey literally canât help but thrash,â Gramma said to Hardcase as she sawed, a fine ivory powder drifting to the ground. âWhich was why I needed my grandsonâs brute strength.â
She smiled at Hardcase. âMost of my assistants are your size. Half-pixies and such. Are you sure youâre fully human?â
âYouâre the only person in the world that would describe me as brutish.â Perry said. If there was one thing he was proud of, it was being pretty clever.
âEh,â Gramma shrugged a moment before the saw worked its way through the last of the tusk, snapping the ivory off into Hardcaseâs waiting hands.
âTowel,â Gramma said, taking the towel away from Hardcase and cleaning up the area,
âA little souvenir.â Gramma said, handing the urglot his severed tusk as Perry let go of his neck.
âThank you, your majesty,â Stewart said.
âYou can sell it to Dave if you donât feel like keeping it.â Gramma said.
Stewart nodded, thanking her profusely as he backed out of the clinic, seemingly afraid to turn his back on his grandmother.
Gramma sighed and ran her fingers through her hair. âThe younger generation generally doesnât act like that anymore, but every once in a while, you come across one whose parents are diehards.â
She sighed, staring into the distance for a moment, before heading around behind her reception desk and fishing out a stack of books.
âYour payment, Paradox.â She said, putting them in a burlap sack before handing them over. âKeep in mind there will be no self-experimentation without me present.â
âGot it,â Perry said, picking up the books.
âAnd if you lose those books, there will likely be severe consequences.â
âUnderstood.â
âGood.â Gramma gave them a brilliant smile. âHave a wonderful evening, you two.â
Thatâs odd.No parting insult? No jab at my parentage or my potato-monger of a father? Perry followed his Grandmotherâs gaze to Hardcase who seemed to be wiggling in place with some kind of suppressed impulse.
Weird. She seems to like Hardcase a lot more than Heather.
Together, they headed out onto the streets of Funkytown and Perry checked the time on his phone.
3:45
Too late for lunch, not quite dinnertime.
âWhatâs the contraction of dinner and lunch?â Perry asked, glancing over at Hardcase. âLinner or Dunch?â
Hardcase made hard eye contact, cocked a brow, made a perfect dog-shape with her hands, and hooted at him like an owl.
Perry couldnât help but bust out laughing.
âWhy!?â
âIâve been studying pantomime, prop comedy and hand puppetry,â Hardcase said, her shoulders relaxing as Perry gasped for breath.
âYeah, butâ¦why?â
âThat message in Metalonâs lair did something weird to my head. Itâs permanent.â She said with a shrug. âNow I haveâ¦outbursts. Iâve been doing some research and I canât pin down exactly what it is. Itâs got a few similarities to Tourettes, but itâs not.â
âOh.â Perry said, guilt sinking into his stomach like ice.
Hardcase met his gaze and shook her head. âPlease. Please donât feel bad. Iâd rather be funny and quirky than broken.â
Before Perry could respond, she looped an arm through his.
âNow, instead of talking about me, how about you tell me why that man kept calling your grandma âYour Majestyâ.
âUmm...â Perry said, glancing around the streets of Funkytown, spotting a revenant law-man who tipped his hat to Perry before shambling past them into the clinic.
âItâs kind of a long story.â
âShe is your gramma right?â Hardcase asked.
âThatâs never been in dispute.â
âThen why did she call you by your super name?â
âShe insists on calling me by my full name. Sheâs kind of old-fashioned.â
âYour actual name is Paradox!?â Hardcase asked, staring up at him wide-eyed.
âWell,â Perry rubbed the back of his neck. âYeah, I was freaking out when Solaris asked me my name and I accidentally gave him my real one. Nobody thought twice about it, so I decided it was better to own it rather than draw attention to my mistake and out myself.â
âWhy did your parents name you Paradox?â Hardcase asked.
âBecause I probably shouldnât exist,â Perry said with a shrug.
ââ¦Iâm Natalie,â Hardca-Natalie said after a long pause.
âNice to meet you, Natalie. Iâm Perry.â Perry said, reaching around to shake the hand looped through his elbow.
âOh my god, it really is your name,â Natalie giggled.