Chapter 104, 1/2
Ar'Kendrithyst
Lemon cookies scented the air with fruity sugar and a hint of sour, while coftea provided a pleasant dichotomy of bitter to the senses. Archmage Syllea had flavored her coftea with way too much milk, according to Erick, but after his initial suggestion to only put a bit of milk in the tea, and her turning her brown drink to the color of pale wood, he left off his suggestions, and paid more attention to the lesson unfolding in front of him. Sylleaâs voice had gone from simple professional pleasantness, to happy, to awe, as she spoke of Mana Altering. The joy in her voice had become infectious.
Erick was almost as lost as he was interested. Thankfully, he had gotten his mental feet under him, and was beginning to keep up with her words. He would need to experiment a lot with Mana Altering and aura control on his own in order duplicate the effects Syllea wanted to show him, but he would get a taste of what was to come, right now.
Syllea said, âThis first one is [Illusion Infusion]. It will make your Light-aspect magic act at unknown angles.â She held her hand up, and Erick felt a small weight on his shoulder; with Meditationâs ability to see intent imposed on the mana, Erick recognized a spell similar to his own [Flight of a Thousand Hands] touching him. She asked, âReady?â
âThis wonât affect my [Familiar]âs imbued magic, will it?â
âIt should not affect your [Familiar]s, but tell me if it does.â
âThen I am ready.â Erick said, grinning at nothing in particular, happy to get back to exploring magic for at least a while.
âYouâre going to want to try some small spell. Very small. Not [Greater Lightwalk]. Not at first.â Syllea pulsed with clear magic; Intent flowed down the connection from her to Erick.
[Illusion Infusion] took hold, flushing through his body like a distant roll of thunder, felt everywhere and nowhere at the same time.
Erick gazed through the Ophiel still at Candlepoint, and saw no change at all to their [Greater Lightwalk] forms. They were casting those spells themselves, and keeping their own mana high by floating back to [Prismatic Ward]s to regenerate when they got below half, so that made sense. In fact, almost all of Erickâs magic was imbued into Ophiel, and since he never fully dismissed the [Familiar], except for that one time that he had been Mind Controlled by Messalina, they still had all of his magic inside of them. He came back to himself, and lightly touched on the mana inside of him. It felt different, but almost exactly the same.
Syllea waited, her bright eyes watching him.
Erick, for his part, felt very little change at all, after the spell settled down. He asked, âI just realized, your spell doesnât have a duration.â
âItâs twenty thousand total mana, 5100 converted mana, or dismissal. The duration varies depending on how you stress the buff. Casting spells and using the buff is easier on your body than dismissal. If you dismiss it, then these buffs of mine will act like normal buffs when they expire. It wonât be fatal, but youâll feel like you want to die.â Syllea ignored the heavy caveat she just dumped on Erick, saying, âBut that doesnât matter. Try something! Mana Altering is great! You can get some really strange magics, though, so try something inconsequential, at first.â
Erick glanced out his window. Night had fallen, and the moons were on their way to slivers, so it was rather dark, but he could still see his garden in the light spilling out from the large windows of the room. He asked, âHow about [Tree of Light]?â
âOhh! A fine choice.â Syllea smiled wide. âThis is a very interesting interaction.â She glanced to the window with Erick, asking, âMaybe not near the other trees, though.â
âI can make that happen.â He stood up. âShall we go to the back yard? We can stand on the back porch; no need to venture into the night, or outside of the [Prismatic Ward].â
Syllea stood, saying, âLetâs.â
There had not been a back porch in Erickâs original house plan, but after the Myriad Citrus came down and destroyed the whole back yard, Erick rebuilt it better than it had been before. In addition to evening out the experimental farm, and gathering up his compost bins and sorting them out, there was now a porch. It was not a large porch and it did not have an awning, but it served a function that had been missing. Namely, the function of having a porch.
Erick led the way into the night, but not too far, while Syllea, Bayth, and Poi followed. Teressa stayed just inside the house, for the porch wasnât large enough to support three orcols. The lighting wasnât that adequate, either. So Erick reached up and cast a lightwardâ
Syllea giggled, as the lightward came out wrong. For a brief moment, Erick thought back to the ones he had created when he was first experimenting with lightwards, almost a year ago. Instead of a spotlight, a ball of glowing fog spilled misty white light onto the ground, like a flood released, to spread out across the experimental garden. Light wisped into the night air, and was not like a fog at all, except on the edges.
He said, âI was not expecting that.â He stared at the land, filled with liquid, the night above, and the swirling mists between the two zones. âItâs like the surface of a lake; half underwater, except itâs clear light.â He looked to his feet. âMy shadow is⦠odd.â
At his feet, his shadow was a splashed out bit of something darker, under the waves of light that came up to his waist. He lifted a foot, and the shadows came with it. He set his foot back down, and the shadows spread out again.
Syllea said, â[Illusion Infusion] makes all plain lightwards act different. Yours appears to act like a fog. Mine acts like a light with no source.â
âWhat about special lightwards?â Erick asked, thinking of a spell he almost used in his light slime dungeon.
Syllea paused in thought, then said, âLetâs do this one, first. [Tree of Light] has a rather special reaction with [Illusion Infusion].â
Mana Altering sounded more interesting with each new bit of information. With a thought, Erick directed the Ophiel on his shoulder to blip over to the garden. With another blip, the night air in front of Erick and Syllea flashed white and shadow, revealing a seven meter tall lemon tree in the center of the experimental garden.
Syllea said, âAh. Uh. No. We need a sapling, or a new growth entirely.â
âIt makes a difference?â
âYes.â Syllea said, âA great deal. The reaction is not as great if the tree doesnât grow with the spell active. It still works, but⦠Itâs not the same at all.â She explained, âTrees grown under [Tree of Light] and its variants display a large affinity for the spell later in life, to the point where they could almost be described as magical plants. Trees buffed with [Tree of Light], later in life, are not capable of fully utilizing the effects of the spell.â
â⦠I made a myriad citrus tree with seven types of fruit, using [Tree of Light] from seven seeds. Seven trees became one tree.â Erick asked, âIs that a problem?â
â⦠Maybe not. Did you try to plant the seeds from the tree? Were they viable?â
âYes. Three new trees, each with the same qualities as the original.â
âHmmmm. Have they hurt anyone?â
Erick readily came to the defense of his creation. âQuite the opposite. They give fruits freely to people, though they do strike back when someone strikes them. The fruits are good, but I havenât had one myself.â
Syllea scrunched her face. She said, âYou made a magic plant, but itâll probably be fine. You wonât know the outcome for years, but if they start hurting people, you will have to kill them. Since you made them with [Tree of Light], they wonât show their full power under normal [Grow] conditions.â She shooed her hand toward the lemon tree, growing in the garden in front of them. âLetâs see some Illusion!â
Fair enough; Erick had already suspected most of what Syllea said, and had resolved to do much of that.
Erick grabbed a lemon from the tree, and blipped the tree back to the normal garden; like it had never left that growing location. His Handy Aura made short work of retrieving the seeds from the citrus. Erick looked to Poi, and Poi reached up and set a [Weather Ward] across the group, while Erick conjured platinum rain from the sky. With his Handy Aura planting a lemon seed, in the center of the field, he cast [Tree of Light], while glowing rain descended from the flashing dark above.
The growing seed became a tree over the course of one minute, but it did not glow neon, like when Erick normally cast [Tree of Light]. It grew, and grew. The trunk thickened, turning from green to brown, as branches spread. Lemons popped out of brown branches. The tree looked like an entirely normal lemon tree, the whole time it stretched up, into the air. When it had reached a good seven meter height, it formed a perfect version of itself, with even growth on all sides and a perfectly straight trunk. Growth stopped, but Erick knew the spell was still active.
Erick tried to figure out what he was looking at, but he saw no differences between this tree and a normal lemon tree; besides the perfect symmetry and growth.
Erick asked, âWhatâs supposed to change?â
Syllea had smiled the whole time the tree grew. She kept smiling, as she said, âHit it with an attack spell. A small one.â
Erick did as he was told, throwing a [Force Bolt] at the center trunkâ
The bolt of white mana curved in the air, flowing through the body of the tree, to land in the soil beyond. The tree remained, untouched, even though [Force Bolt] had directly struck the trunk.
Erick hummed. The whole tree was an illusion, wasnât it? Or was there something else going on?
Syllea smirked, offering. âTry something stronger.â
Erick conjured a [Flying Striker]; a two meter long sword, thin as a blade of grass, but strong as inflexible will. The sword flew at the tree trunk, horizontal with a great sweeping [Strike]â
And whiffed.
Syllea giggled. Erick smiled, both because of the unexpected magic, and because of Sylleaâs uncomplicated happiness at seeing magic in action. Erick felt the same way. This was an interesting problem! What was going on here, exactly?
His next experiment was a simple poke with the tip of the sword. He scratched the bark, this time, but when he applied more pressure, the tree simply turned to illusions, and the sword slipped through. So weak actions made it through the â[Tree of Illusion]â buff, but stronger actions did not? Erick tried a few more testing pokes, and his intuition proved true. And then he just went for it, with great, sweeping [Strike]s, flying the weapon through the canopy. The canopy was fake. The sword slipped through like it was touching air, or maybe thick light. But then suddenly, the sword caught the center, slicing the tree in half.
While a couple tons of greenery slowly left its support structure, the severed trunk flickered with light and shadows, like a sparking electrical cable. The illusory magic died, completely. The canopy fell to the ground with a great whooshing, crunching sound.
âSo what was that, exactly?â Erick asked, looking at the blue box for [Tree of Light]. âThe blue spell box didnât change, either.â
Syllea said, âSpells affected by Mana Altering in this way will not change their Box Display. The only way to know their full effects is to experiment with them to see what the new effects are. In this case, Iâve already done all of that experimentation. What [Tree of Light] does, is enable the tree to activate itself as an illusion, in order to avoid danger. If you were to attack it with Light or Shadow, you would be doing half damage, but it would not be able to avoid your [Strike]s.â She added, â[Tree of Illusions] is incredibly difficult to get on its own, but with Mana Altering itâs easy to achieve this magic. This is a great spell for protecting Arbors from attack, though you never want to create an Arbor with this spell, since it will make that Arbor able to avoid most attacks.â She said, âDonât make a magic plant with Illusion magic.â
âSeems prudent.â Erick said, âIâm actually thinking about making a tree [Familiar] but Iâm hoping it wonât become an arbor for a long time. Iâd like to talk to you about that, too, at some later date.â
âYou are?â Syllea looked down at Erick. âThatâs not a good idea. Magic plants made with [Tree of Light] are one thing, but tree [Familiar]s turn real faster than most.â She looked to Ophiel on Erickâs shoulder. âAnd you already have a [Familiar]?â
Ophiel trilled in violins.
Erick patted the little guy, saying, âHeâs great. But I need some more stable way to defend locations, and provide rains.â He was also feeling the pinch of 10 maximum Ophiel, but he didnât mention that; instead, he said, âIf the eventual plan is to push back the mimics, then Iâm going to need some way to provide for green spaces around the Crystal Forest.â He added, âAnyway: Particle Magic is still 40ish days from becoming a part of the Open Script. Iâm not going to make a tree [Familiar] until I can use [Call Lightning], or maybe even [Gate].â
Syllea seemed to reevaluate her earlier statement, looking pensive for a moment. She said, âIf you keep your tree [Familiar] to tier 2, it might take 50 years to turn real. That should be fine.â
âI calculated out 100 years?â Erick said, somewhat defensive. âI used the Compendium of Summons.â
âEhhh.â Syllea frowned a little. âYour goal is a [Familiar] spell that is uncapped, correct? No limit of 3, or 10?â
âIdeally.â
â⦠We can talk more about that, later.â She gestured to the experimental garden, and its single, dead occupant, saying, âBut: Back to Illusion. The general theme you should notice is that defensive Illusion is either not where it appears to be, or is incapable of being struck by physical means, while offensive Illusions will strike from unknown angles.â
Erick asked, âWhat about this?â He brought out the box for [Kaleidoscopic Radiance]. âHow would that work as an Illusion?â
Kaleidoscopic Radiance, instant, medium range, permanent, 500 mana
A medium-sized lightward of evershifting brilliance supports the growth of Light Essence creatures.
Syllea read the box, and almost said something, but she stopped. She read the box again, narrowing her eyes. She asked, âPermanent? I mean⦠Itâs obviously a lightward. A specialty lightward, and those can be made permanent. But it has an effect⦠and...â She narrowed her eyes, curiously, asking, âYou made an active spell out of a plain lightward?â She rapidly added, âObviously not âplainâ.â
âI thought the âsupport Light Essence creaturesâ was the impressive part?â
Syllea shook her head, saying, âThatâs just a rare variation on Rift magics not many people are capable of achieving.â She asked, âDid you put one of these up in your light slime dungeon?â
âNo.â Erick said, âI got this while crafting the dungeon, with very complicated lightwards. The Headmaster did not want a [Kaleidoscopic Radiance] on his property.â As he said the words, he remembered that the Headmaster did not say that, exactly. âAh. No. He said to put one or two up at the bottom, if I felt like it. But I did not.â
âI hear your dungeon is already producing a lot of slimes, anyway.â Syllea said, âI had thought the Headmaster had filled the place with Light Rifts, to speed up the process. But I guess not?â She said, âThatâs what you can do with magic like this, when you have an under-performing dungeon. You put up rifts or other essence support magics, and more slimes will pop out.â She said, âHowâd you make it permanent, though?â
Erick explained, âIâve been working on permanent magic for a while. Iâve already got my artifact rings, and Iâm working on figuring out the Grand [Prestidigitation] Stove variations, but the goal is permanent magics of any of my spells. Another of my long term goals is figuring out a [Renew] Basic Spell, or whatever tier it has to be, but something low. Something anyone could cast on an ongoing spell, to [Renew] the duration of that spell.â
Syllea looked off into the distance, thoughtful. âThatâs a very interesting problem.â
âI was thinking that I would like your assistance on this [Renew] problem, too, if youâd like to have a discussion about permanent lightwards, and such, some other time. Your ability with buffs might be what Iâm missing.â He gestured back to his house. âThis [Prismatic Ward] is permanent, too.â
Sylleaâs eyes had been glinting with an unseen light, as Erick spoke, but at his last words her eyes went wide, as she looked around at the dense air. Syllea said, âI can tell itâs Restful, but⦠Permanent, too?â She looked at him, asking, âWhy do you want to make permanent magics, Erick?â
Erick almost laughed at Sylleaâs questioning gaze, but she seemed serious, so Erick spoke candidly, âSo I can protect people long after Iâm gone, of course.â
Syllea looked away, thoughtful. âAh.â She said, âWe can talk more about permanency, later. With regard to your [Kaleidoscopic Radiance], it reads like a more subdued version of a Rift attuned to supporting Light Essence creatures. The wording on a spell like that usually reads like this.â She popped out a blue box, and handed it to Erick.
Light Rift, instant, medium range, 150 mana
A medium-sized rift of light empowers all Light Essence creatures and magic cast in the area. Lasts 12 hours.
Syllea continued, âMy spell uses basic language and says âempowersâ, but yours uses words like âevershifting brillianceâ, as well as stating it supports the growth of Light Essence creatures, but no nod to affecting magic in the area. Based upon that, I feel that your spell is likely of a higher refinement than mine. The âRadianceâ part of it means that youâve dipped a short ways toward Fire, for some reason, and thatâs rather interesting⦠The permanency effect is unknown to me âI never try for permanent buffs.â She added, âThereâs not much use for your spell outside of dungeons, or raising specialty animals, either.â
Erick asked, âHow about for use on shadelings, to bring them back to themselves?â
Syllea frowned, as she looked away, in thought. Erick waited.
Syllea said, âSpells like my [Light Rift] are used to heal and support the growth of those types of creatures.â She added, âItâs possible. I honestly donât know what it would do to shadelings, though. Youâd likely have to try [Kaleidoscopic Radiance] with [Shadow Conversion], in order to achieve the best results.â
Erick said, âI used [Tree of Light] on a grove of those fruit trees I mentioned, and the people seemed to like both the glowing fruits and the glowing trees.â
âTheyâre eating the fruits of your magic plant?â Syllea said, almost incredulously. âWell. Okay?â She added, âConversion from Light to Shadow is rather easy. Some people find the action almost instinctual. Thatâs probably whatâs going on with your [Tree of Light] trees and the shadelings. Thereâs entire groves of those kinds of plants inside ArâKendrithyst. I hear Treant, the Shade of the Garden, has enchanted his whole stretch of land with various growing spells.â
Erick asked, âWhat about going the other way? From Shadow to Light?â
âDifficult, but doable.â Syllea said, âItâs easier if you leave the direct path, and go from Shadow, to Void, to Starlight. The final step to Light is simple.â
Erick smiled. âYou rattled that off, rather easy.â
âYou get a feel for it, after a while. With regard to transforming Shadow to Light, you can go through Illusion, but I find the purity of not traversing through Illusion to be much better for most solid actions.â Syllea said, âI prefer solid spellwork, but it all depends on your goals, really. Do you want to hit hard, or do you want to be less present on the battlefield?â
âThe second, for me.â
Syllea smiled, small. âMe too.â She thumbed back toward Bayth, standing behind them, saying, âSheâs all for the former, though.â
Bayth huffed, âAnd it works!â
Syllea said, âLetâs go back inside. Youâre going to want to try out the rest of your [Illusion Infusion] in a larger space, through your [Familiar].â
Erick smiled as he threw a [Cleansing Flame] on the remains of the tree, igniting it to white fire, casting shadows and light across the flat orange land of the Human District.
The rest of Erickâs experiments with [Illusion Infusion] involved sitting in the sunroom with Syllea, and casting spells through Ophiel, at raised stone pillars in the dark dunes of the Crystal Forest. Syllea watched through her viewing screen.
Ophiel held a wing forward, casting Light-aspect [Force Beam]s from the tip, but the spell did not just erupt from his feathers, but also from three different spots in the air around the [Familiar]. Each line of white zipped away from Ophiel, to hold in the air like the [Familiar] had dashed four different ways through the sky; but he hadnât. Each burning line of light carved tiny furrows in the stone pillar, all of them going wide and then swinging back to target, like they were drunk Rookies, unable to aim properly. A few more tests of the same spell, now knowing what he was looking at, enabled Erick to throw the four beams around with a slight semblance of control. They were still drunk Rookies, but now they were drunk, focused rookies.
Erick was excited to try his next spell, but if he was honest with himself, he was also a little afraid. [Luminous Beam] would come out weird, for sure. But how weird?
Ophiel held still in the dark air, his wings fluttering, his eyes trained forward. A ball of light flashed in front of him, casting brilliance into the night sky, shading wings and eyes into deep shadow and brilliant light, as the spell opened up like a raging river pushed through a pin hole. Luster and glitter instantly surged a kilometer forward; a cone of light and otherwise that crashed against the stone pillar and a good few hundred meters in every direction, obliteratingân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
Ah. No. Thatâs not what happened. [Luminous Beam] lasted five seconds, but it was only in the final moments that Erick understood what he was watching.
The original [Luminous Beam] moved at the speed of light. This one did not. That was the first major change Erick noticed. This barely moved slow enough to see countless blasts of light carve forward through the maybe-90 degree light cone. But half of those bolts struck the land, and did nothing. Another half struck the land, and burrowed holes into the dunes. Another half, somehow, were completely invisible, carving holes into the orange sand where no light had been. When the spell ended, the land was swiss cheese, and rapidly caved in on itself.
Syllea stared at her viewing screen, laughing, asking, âWhat was that!â
âParticle spell.â Erick handed Syllea the box for [Luminous Beam].
Luminous Beam X, instant, super long range, 500 mana
Conjure a coruscating, tightly controlled plume of severing light that deals and lasts for .
Particle Mage Only.
She read the box, disbelieving. She tossed it away with a laugh and a scowl, before quickly coming back to something that was mostly professional, but still full of disregard. âLight is not a particle.â
Erick smiled wide. âYou are correct, but only on a technicality.â
â⦠Fine. I guess I can accept that one of the Elements is not exactly as I always envisioned it to be.â
Erick laughed. âWhat! You changed your mind that easy?â
âWell of course.â Syllea said, âThe spell says âParticle Mage Onlyâ, therefore it must be a Particle Spell. Thatâs easy enough to understand. The Script doesnât lie, though it always obfuscates.â She added, perhaps a bit darkly, âOn the other path, it could be that youâve been lying to us about what âparticlesâ are, this whole time.â
âYou didnât think Iâd give away all my secrets in one lecture, did you?â Erick asked, âAre you telling me everything you know about Veirdâs Elements?â
â⦠Okay. I see your point. One lecture could never cover everything.â She said, âIf everything is made of âparticlesâ, then light must be made of particles, too? I can accept that. What about shadow?â
Erick waved his hand. âWhen I first came here, I heard from someone trustworthy that they didnât believe shadow existed, in truth, but only in magic.â He said, âHonestly, I have no idea what Shadow is truly supposed to be.â
Syllea frowned a little, then asked, âWhat other Elements are actually particles?â She offered, âFire is particles moving fast. Ice is particles moving slowââ
âCold,â Erick corrected. âNot âIceâ. To me, Ice is not an element, but a thing that water becomes when it is cold.â
â⦠Cold then. Electricity is those electron things?â
âElectrons, yes.â Erick added, âAnd electricity is much more complicated than just electrons. Literally everything has an electrical charge. Sometimes that electrical charge is âzeroâ. Visible light is actually a cross between electrical charge and magnetic charge; a wave of power moving through the fabric of reality, but also quantized as a particle.â
With a far off look in her eyes, Syllea asked, âWhen you gaze upon the world, how many elements do you see?â
Now that, was a tricky question. Erick could have given the answer Syllea already knew, that there were something like 150 elements on the Periodic Table, but thatâs not what she was actually asking, and Erick wasnât even sure about that â150â number. It had been a long time since he saw a Periodic Table.
The last table he had seen was actually back when he was at Oceanside, when people had been compiling a âlist of elementsâ and Erick had been privy to that gossip. That endeavor had gotten up to 100, last he knew. Last he heard, Rozeta was gearing up to release [Condense Element], as the base Particle Spell, too, and grandfathering in all those basic spells people had created to interact with specific elements.
But that wasnât what Syllea was asking. She was asking something much deeper than about the âelementsâ of Erickâs reality. But just to make sureâ¦
Erick asked, âWhat are you asking?â
âThis [Luminous Beam] is clearly different than the elements you spoke of, and this is the first Iâm hearing of electrical and magnetic âfieldsâ, or whatever those are. Itâs like⦠Like...â She paused, as her eyes went wide. âIt says âParticle Mageâ, but youâre actually a Force Mage! OH my gods. Youâre a Force Mage! But youâre not! OH!â Like a cloudy sky opening up, revealing a sunny, pale blue eternity, Sylleaâs eyes glinted bright and clear, as she said, âYouâre a Reality Mage!â
â⦠A what?â Erick said, his throat feeling constricted.
Had she just called him a wizard?
That wasnât good.
âWhatâs with that reaction!â Syllea brushed him off, saying, âItâs not a real Class; just an informal designation of those who take their chosen field far enough to be able to affect everything. Force Mage, which is what I actually am, is closer than most to becoming a Reality Mage...â She eyed him.
Erick chuckled nervously, saying, âWhat?â
âOh. I get it.â Syllea said, âI did not call you that. Youâve probably been called a Wizard before, havenât you?â
Erick tensed.
âPeople are uneducated.â Syllea shook her head, saying, âWhen youâre raised on stories of Wizards ending the Old Cosmology, or experimenting on souls to drown nations in undead, or Wizards creating monsters and furthering Melemizargoâs insane agendaâ Whatever the case: People will call Reality Mages what they know to call them; Wizards. And theyâre wrong, obviously. Doesnât stop the occasional mage from getting murdered by their neighbors.â
Erick gave a weak laugh.
She paused again, and looked at Erick, again. âOH my gods. Iâm so sorry! You were probably called that a lot, werenât you?â She mumbled to herself, âI should have realized that before I opened my mouth.â
Erick had only been called a Wizard by one person, and only in anger over having her job taken from her, but even Krakina apologized for doing so, later, when she became a part of the Farmerâs Council. Krakina had called him that in anger, and that was fine. But besides her, the Headmaster certainly implied he was a Wizard, didnât he?
⦠And Silverite had warned him that âYou donât invite Wizards into your homeâ.
⦠And then there were the big names who had called him a Wizard, and weighed that fact against his life, in a divine trial, in a blackened crater, in some godly part of the world. Sininindi, Phagar, Atunir, Koyabez, Rozeta. All of the gods had labeled him a Wizard.
Erick brushed her off, saying, âDonât worry about it.â He lied, âI never understood the insult. Whatâs the big deal about a Wizard?â
Syllea quickly said, âYou just donât understandâ I can tell you: Wizards were responsible for the Sundering. The deaths of untold trillions. The slavery of people, the Corruption of Melemizargo. The deaths of gods! The end of a universe, Erick.â
âLetâs just⦠forget about⦠that.â Erick put on his least complicated facial expression, and asked, âWhatâs a Reality Mage?â
For the briefest of moments, Syllea looked like she was speaking to someone incapable of understanding, but she recovered fast. With a calmer voice, she said, âItâs not Wizardry, at all. Reality Mages are just able to tap in to the fundamentals of reality. Take Force, for example. Force is undifferentiated possibility, condensed down into a solid form. But a good Force Mage, or Force Warrior, or even a few of the Prismatic Classes out, weâre all able to become Reality Mages or Warriors, if they apply themselves toward Reality, instead of toward any specific, singular magic.
âStone Mages will never get there, because they like Stone too much. Same goes for Fire or Water or any of the other, more esoteric Elements. Sword and shield fighters would never get there, either. Itâs only when you have a focus on influencing what actually exists, instead of what you believe exists, that you can awaken to the path of True Magic. The Path of the Reality Mage.â Syllea said, âLike me, with all my Mana Altering. I went down this path in order to understand more about the base components that made up the Old Cosmology, that compose Force. Eventually, I found Fundamental Force; the basic building block upon which magic is based. Itâs really nothing to do with wizardry at all, and I am sorry for bringing that up.â
âWellâ¦â Erick wasnât sure what to say, so he said, âThank you.â
Syllea smiled, saying, âAnd your Particle Mage is just like Force Mage, except youâve focused on the Fundamental Force of this New Cosmology, whatever those might be?â With a cheery voice, she asked, âSo what are they? Particles, sure! Light is another one? Or is that wrong?â She decided, âThat has to be wrong. But how wrong?â
âNo. Thatâs not...â Erick felt⦠odd. He wasnât sure how he felt. Syllea was a beautiful, cheerful woman, and Erick found he truly liked talking magic with her, but something felt off. Maybe he shouldnât have shown her [Luminous Beam]? But, eh. That was fine. He was just being nervous, after almost being called a Wizard.
The cultures of Veird had a strange relationship with Wizardry, with the exact definition between what was magic and what was Wizardry being outside of Erickâs understanding. Wizardry was a case of âYou know it when you see itâ, and Erick had no idea what it looked like, but he understood why people hated it. According to some, Wizardry killed the Old Cosmology. According to Rozeta, herself, Melemizargo was a Wizard.
Darkness and Wizardry were often interchangeable terms.
He said, âWhen people experiment enough with Particle Magic, Iâm sure youâll uncover at least two of the Fundamental Forces of this New Cosmology.â Briefly, he felt like life had decided to do a repeat of nearly a year ago, when he spoke to the crowds in Sirocco Zagoâs Mage Guild classrooms. He did not repeat the exact words he had said then, but they were similar, âBut I donât feel I should upset established magic that much, just yet. Iâm sure with enough experimentation that others will get there, and have much more math and knowledge to go with their words, than I have, right now.â
Syllea said, âRight, right.â
An uncomfortable silence filled the room. Syllea picked up her tea, sipped it, then frowned as she sat it back down, and conjured a [Heat Ward] over the cup. Erickâs own coftea was cold, too.
Syllea changed the subject, âSo how much do you have left on [Illusion Infusion]? Itâs getting late, and I can leave you with [Shadow Conversion] to try out on your own. Iâm sure you have other necessities and I amââ Like a highschool girl that Erick had seen in the halls of his local school, but in a way wholly different from anything he had ever seen from Jane, Syllea blurted out, âI have made a Royal Ass of myself, with my unkind words, and I wish to salvage this situation on another day.â
Erick reflexively said, âOkay. Yes. Letâs do the rest of this some other dayâ after Iâve had a chance to try out some of your suggestions.â He asked âAwareness of these new elements is key to using them, yes?â
Syllea relaxed, her shoulders losing tension, as her eyes focused from the wall behind Erick, to Erick. She stood, saying, âYes. Much like how your elements are the same. That is the quick and bloody of itâ Waitwaitwaitwait. Thereâs one, fast thing we can do.â She asked, âHow would you like to find out your Element?â
Erick had stood with her, but he almost faltered. â⦠My Element?â
Syllea put on a happy face,. âItâs fun! You might like it?â
âOkay. Sure.â
âFirst, you just have to expel whatever is left of [Illusion Infusion]. Dismissing makes the buff end rather uncomfortably, though.â Syllea suggested, âJust cast a really expensive lightward outside?â
Erick went with Sylleaâs suggestion. With a mental command to the Ophiel on his shoulder, that ball of feathers blipped out in to the middle of a sandy, dark nowhere. Erick cast. 3000 mana went into the Variable cost of a lightward, producing a rainbow tetrahedron that stretched across the sky, which then began to morph into a fractal. The floating, glowing shape multiplied itself on every triangular face, then did it again, but smaller, on its new surfaces. Erick watched for a few moments as the lightward ended up being ten times more complicated than he expected it to be, as Illusion took his idea and ran with it, creating a triangular air that folded endlessly into itself, and spread out into the land, turning sight upsidedown, or sideways, or backwards, as it was wont.
Back in the sunroom, Erick took note of how he felt, as the buff faded. Like a buzz in his ears that he didnât know he was hearing until it was gone, [Illusion Infusion] ended. He breathed deep, centering himself. He said, âNot bad.â
Syllea said, âIâm sure you can learn how to make good buffs, too.â She smiled wide again. âBut letâs see where you should start!â With a quick reach into the pockets of her leathers, she pulled out a six sided die. She held it out to Erick, saying, âOne side for each main element. All you do is hold it for a moment, then roll it as many times as you want. Itâs not an exact magical item; more like a toy, that taints itself with your aura, and activates based on that.â
Erick smiled as he picked up the die that was sized for orcol hands. Three centimeters across, each side was emblazoned with an elemental symbol. Erick hefted the die; it was pretty weighty.
âCup it in both hands,â Syllea said, âThen roll it.â
Erick did as she suggested. The first time the die ended, it landed on âAirâ. He kept rolling, puzzling how the die was magically weighted. Syllea smiled, as one element turned up a lot more than the others.
Air. Air. Air. Light. Light. Water. Air. Air. Light. Water. Air. Air.
Erick had done enough. He picked up the die, and did not roll it again, saying, âThatâs a lot of Air.â
âI knew it!â Syllea said, âIt makes so much sense. The Lightning. The Rain. Obviously, youâre Air, Light, and Water.â
âHow does this die work?â Erick asked, âWhat are you?â
âThe die comes up pretty much evenly, for me.â To accentuate her point, she took the die from Erickâs hand, and cupped it in her hands, and began rolling. It turned up every element, before rolling duplicates. There were, maybe, one or two more âWaterâ and âStoneâ for every set of rolls, but Erick wasnât really counting that closely. She said, âIt used to mean something, back in the Old Cosmology. Whatever you rolled determined where you should most focus your talents. It still means something, these days, but not nearly as much as it did.â She picked up the die after it had rolled every Element for the fourth time, saying, âThese days, a lot of people just use it as a dating guide.â She put the die away, saying, âIt works based on tasting your aura and combining that with the essences infused in each face of the die, and a weight in the center that moves away from what you are.â
âDating?â Erick smiled, asking, âWhat element should a lightning and rain guy go for?â
Syllea teased, âSomething to keep you grounded, for sure.â She glanced to the dark window, saying, âItâs getting late. Would you like to experiment with [Shadow Conversion]?â
âYes.â
Syllea reached over and tapped Erick on the shoulder. Magic flashed between them, to soak into Erickâs being. The tiny difference in his sense of the world was noticeable, this time, but still not detrimental. She said, âThatâs 9000 mana of conversion. Have funââ She looked to the door to the room. Bayth stood there, ready to go. Syllea nodded to the massively muscular woman, then said to Erick, âTime to go. Contact me when you wish to continue, or after youâve had some time to experiment with the odder elements. If you want a book on the subject, I recommend âEsoteric Elementsâ. Itâs what got me started on this whole Mana Altering jaunt, twenty years ago. It might be written for children, but thereâs a lot of knowledge packed into that tiny book!â
Erick said, âThank you, Syllea. Iâll look for that book. I hope your peopleâs trip to ArâKendrithyst goes well.â
Syllea lost some of her joy. âI hope so, too.â She stepped to Bayth, adding, âWeâll have to take the quick route, Erick. Sorry for being rude.â
Erick said, âIt was great to finally talk to you again.â
Syllea smiled. âIt was great to talk to you again, too, but my bargain of trade isnât nearly discharged yet. See you later.â
Syllea and Bayth flickered with clear light, and vanished from the sunroom.
After a long moment of staring at the space they had occupied, Erick removed both Sylleaâs and Baythâs [Prismatic Ward] permissions. He sat back down, and heated up his cold coftea in a quick [Heat Ward], while he nibbled on one of the two remaining lemon cookies. And he thought.
Poi walked in, asking, âIs everything alright?â
âNot really.â Erick asked, âAre Teressa and Justine asleep?â
âJustine is upstairs on the third floor veranda, tending to her plants. Teressa is walking here right now.â
Teressa walked into the room, but paused. âUh. I can go away if you want?â
âNo. Thatâs not it⦠I just⦠I havenât had to deal with being called a wizard in a long time and itâs making me wonder where all my people are. If theyâre safe.â He asked, âKiri will be here tomorrow?â
âYes, sir,â Poi said.
âGood.â Erick said, âI donât know why I faltered at being called a Wizard. That was strange. We even have a deck of Wizardâs Towers cards over there.â He gestured to a bookshelf in the room, then said, âWhatâs up with that?â
Teressa looked to the shelves, and offered, âItâs⦠fun to use such an awful thing in a playful light?â
âWizards are Moon Reachers, sirââ Poi paused, then said, âI mean. Boogeymen?â He asked Teressa, âWhen was the last time you heard of one?â
âThe only one I grew up hearing stories of was the Wizard of the Fractal Citadel.â Teressa said, âSheâs some Reacher in some lost Fractured Citadel, in Quintlan. Thatâs a four hundred year old story, though.â
Poi looked a little disappointed at Teressa, while the large woman scoffed at him, as if to say, âWhatâ?
Poi turned to Erick, saying, âThe last known Wizard was the Hullbreaker, in the Letri Oceanââ
âOh yeah,â mumbled Teressa. âThat was twenty years ago.â
Poi continued, âThe Headmaster took care of Hullbreaker, though. Sent out a good hundred Elites to kill the Wizard Pirate. Hullbreaker took out half of them, but they got him before a month passed, from Hullbreakerâs ascension to power.â
Teressa joked, âA lot of people thought you were a Wizardâ
Poi cleared his throat.
Erick looked away, as Teressa soldiered on, âBut anyone who knows how can make a Particle spell.â She said, âYouâre not a wizard, and Iâll punch anyone who says otherwise, Boss.â
Erick smiled at the window, and kept his smile as he turned back to Teressa. âThank you.â
âOf course, Boss!â
Erick changed the subject, âHas Jane spoken to Kiri, and then to you, Poi?â
Poi said, âNot about anything in particular, but they are housing together in Windy Manor. Jane is fine, as far as I know. She is running missions for the Headmaster and getting some personalized instruction in return, but that is the extent of my knowledge.â
âShe said she was coming right home, but thatâs hasnât happened yetââ A lightbulb went off, and Erickâs eyes went wide. âI should invent texting!â He frowned. âOne more thing to add to the pile.â He asked Teressa and Poi, âSo that was Syllea Wyrmrest. What did you think of her?â
Teressa reported, âAbout as kooky as Iâve heard, but still deeply knowledgeable about many esoteric magics. That die she had you roll was something she invented herself, and has been trying to popularize ever since she graduated from Oceanside, 25 years ago. The mana-sensing dice tradition comes from South Nelboor.â She added, âAside from all that: Orcols have a long history of buffing magic because we can endure the aftereffects easier than most other races. This was why I started down the path of developing my [Warcry], but Syllea has taken orcol buffs to extremes unheard of until she came along. Not to mention the whole âarchmageâ thing. Most people focus on the âarchmageâ thing, though. Big explosions and magical solutions to every problem are all anyone really sees.â
âShe was fine.â Poi said, âBut I still feel that buffs are dangerous.â
âAnd they are.â Teressa said, âBut small edges here and there can mean a lot in any fight.â
Erick decided, âIâm going to have to learn some buff spells. At least something approaching your [Warcry], Teressa. The percentage buff to damage and defense cannot be overlooked, going forward.â
Teressa said, âYouâre going to have to learn from someone else besides me. I know I got it wrong.â She brightened, to say, âBut when we visit Treehome, Iâm sure you can find a proper instructor, or at least a good book on the subject.â
Erick smiled. âI will do that, then.â He asked, âNow⦠I think I want to put up a [Kaleidoscopic Radiance], but with this [Shadow Conversion], up at Candlepoint. But thatâs just an idea. Iâm asking your opinions, first.â
Teressa subtly froze. She said, âUh.â She went silent.
Poi spoke up, âI cannot give you a suggestion, for I would never trust anything Shadow. That is a blind spot of mine, especially since my people have vetted Justine as being her own person, without any controls on her mind. You should have this conversation with Justine. Alternatively, I can ask Silverite.â He heavily said, âYou should ask Silverite, sir.â
Teressa thawed, and said, âI think you should do this for them. Make them come back to themselves, sir. Help them become real again.â
Poi turned toward Teressa, his bluescaled eyebrows furrowing. âReally?â
âYes.â Teressa stood tall, saying, âIf it works that way; if it actually brings them back to themselves, then you have to. But you should be able to know if that spell of yours would actually work how you think it would work. I donât know much of anything about dungeons, but I do know that working dungeons are highly controlled, with daily changes to keep the slime populations well regulated. I didnât know they did it with rifts, though.â
âRight.â Erick said, âIf what I made is like the spells they use to regulate dungeons, then there should be some information somewhere about how Elemental Essence boosting magic affects essence monstersâ shadelings do have shadow essence in them, donât they? I wasnât sure, but they have to, right?â
Poi said, âYes. Enough essence for [Shadow Blend].â
Teressa said, âPeople hunt shadelings for shadow essence, sometimes. Mostly, they donât. But it does happen.â
Erick got up, saying, âIâm sure I have those dungeoneering books in my library, somewhere.â He nodded, he said, âOkay⦠Now I need to talk to Justine.â
Teressa said, âIâll go get her.â
âThank you, Teressa.â As she left, Erick said, âPoi, can you ask Silverite her opinion? Sheâs still awake at this hour, right?â
âYes. I will ask her.â Poi sent out tendrils of thought.
When eventually Teressa returned to the sunroom, escorting Justine. The incani woman looked to Erick with tired, but strong eyes, saying, âHello, sir.â And then her facade cracked, and seemed like a woman headed to an executionerâs block. Erickâs heart almost broke as she sat down on the couch across from him. Her facade was back in place.
Erick said, âI know today has been rough, but itâs getting better.â He got right to it, âI just wanted to ask you about spells that boost the growth of shadow essence monstersâ I mean. Shadelings.â
Justine blinked her ruby red eyes for a few moments, then said, âHow do you mean?â
âI wish to help shadelings come back to themselves, easier.â
âAh.â Justine said, âThese spells do help shadelings come back to themselves, yes, among other powers. The same is true for any spell that boosts the growth of light essence creatures. Though the second option requires a certain ability among the shadeling in question, in order to begin the conversion, and not everyone has that ability.â She said, âA spell that supports the growth of shadow creatures will likely do a lot that I am unaware of. I suggest you ask someone else more knowledgeable on that particular situation. I was never one for dungeon work.â
âWhat about something that boosts illusion⦠Well. Not essence. But that boosts illusion creatures?â He said to himself, âI should have asked Syllea if there were such a thing.â
Justine, unsure, said, âI⦠have no idea. Iâve never done much with buffing, or dungeon work, or illusions, for that matter. The only person I knew who ever did was the Witch, but I never worked with her. I have no idea what the effect would be on light essence or shadow essence existences.â
Teressa tensed slightly at the mention of the Witch. If Erick didnât know about Teressaâs history with that Shade, he would have missed her reaction.
Erick said, âOkay. Thank you, Justine. And what level are you?â Erick offered, âIf you want an escort into the Crystal Forest for an hour tomorrow, I can get you to 32 rather fast. Maybe a bit beyond.â
Justine sat straighter, saying, âIâm level twelve, and have been pushing myself, daily, to the edge of Mana Exhaustion. I would appreciate a boost in the morning, or at your leisure.â She said, âAs far as leveling plans are concerned, I will be going for Focus, unlike how I went for Willpower back when we first met.â
Erick smirked; he saw what Justine was doing. âItâs my understanding that most would see a Scion of Focus as an underpowered Mage, but thatâs just one of the many cultural things I do not understand.â
Justine just nodded.
âThen itâs decided: we can do some boosting in the morning.â Erick then set a small stone box on the table between them. Ophiel had blipped it in when Teressa went to go get Justine. Erick said, âI should have given you one of these earlier, especially since Koyabez vouches for your sincerity. I think you already know what they are.â
Justine gazed down at the stone box. Water blurred her ruby red eyes. She blinked, as she took the box. As she opened it, and saw the pair of silver rings inside, small tears rolled down her pale skin. She said a shaky, âThank you.â
âThey should make you feel a little safer; I know thatâs what theyâve done for me. Each one is plus-25 All Statsâ Heh. Iâm going to have to stop calling it that.â He said, âIf theyâre not your size, I can make others.â
Justine shook her head, as she took the rings out and slipped them on her fingers. âThese are perfect.â She smiled, sniffled, and laughed, then said, âThey feel good, too.â She held up a hand, and smiled at the silver band upon her finger. âNo Stat Sickness, just like I heard.â
Erick smiled, to see Justine happy.