Chapter 169: Jane, 1/2
Ar'Kendrithyst
Events proceeded rapidly after her father vanished from sight, but Jane still had to live through those events.
Darabella yelled about how the Beginning Pad simply wasnât capable of not linking with the Destination Pad. Yarlinnia collapsed to the ground, holding onto the wall so that she didnât collapse all the way. Visions of Implications of this happening in her house crossed her face like dark thoughts. She was in deep shit, and she knew it. Nirzir started crying like the little girl that she was as she finally realized that Erick was actually gone, which caused tears to fall from Teressaâs eyes, too.
Jane wiped away hot tears of her own, thinking, perhaps unkindly, that if this was what it was like to deal with the death of a loved one, then she was glad she only had the one. She was already exhausted. She wanted to crawl into bed and sleep for a day. But that was only her first reaction. Not one second after that feeling came, it went, and Jane resolved herself to emotional strengthâ¦
Minutes passed with Darabella yelling about how this wasnât possible and Yarlinnia saying the same and Nirzir demanding answers and Jane being numb to it allâ
And then Jane realized that being sad was probably premature. Sure, Ophiel had collapsed and âdiedâ rather spectacularly, and in a way Jane had never seen before. But...
Jane asked Poi, âIs Yggdrasil still out there?â
While staring at the Teleport Pad that had taken Erick away, Poi said, âYes.â All eyes in the room locked to him, as everyone suddenly went silent and hopeful. Poi elaborated, âYggdrasil is still at both Candlepoint and Holorulo, but heâs as dim as a normal tree and the rainbow crown is almost completely gone.â
Janeâs chest tightened. âWhat does that mean?â
âWeâre not sure. Weâve asked the Arbors of Treehome, but they are currently without consensus. They havenât had enough time to understand what just happened.â Poi turned away from the Teleport Pad, to look at Jane, and then glance at everyone else. âNews is spreading very, very fast, with many people having noticed that something massive and unknown shifted in the future of the world the very second Erick willingly stepped on that pad. This is how Redarrow thought to contact me, and how that conversation started. There is absolutely no covering up that this happened.â He looked to Yarlinnia, who had recovered some of her noble bearing. âSo before anything gets too out of hand, and to prevent future problems for you, Scion Yarlinnina, and for the rest of us, Iâm asking for everyone here to allow for a Mind Mage recording of the mind and memories of the last three hours, for all future investigatory purposes. Does anyone here have a problem with this?â
It had been three hours already? Jane frowned at herselfâ No. it had only been fifteen minutes since Erick vanished.
Ah.
She was probably in a bit of shock. Ah. Yeah. She was. She was sitting down in a provided chair. When did that happen? Anyway. Poi was calling for a recording all the time so far, starting at when they entered House Whitesteelâs property. Yeah. That made sense.
Yarlinna said, âI consent. I had nothing to do with this, and neither did House Whitesteelââ
Darabella yelled, âItâs the same people who killed Goliro! It has to be!â
âPlease,â Yarlinnia whispered, but apparently not loud enough for Darabella to hear.
Darabella accused, âThe Pads worked as they should have all this time until now! But now they didnât? When theyâre meters apart? Impossible! Someone was involved in shifting the magic, andââ
âDarabella!â Yarlinnia yelled. âPlease. Not right now.â
Nirzir demanded, âWhat do you think is going to happen now, Poi? What is going to happen here? Will there be an investigation?â
Yarlinnia paled. Darabellaâs hope soared.
Poi spoke with authority, saying, âThere are many people who are allied to Archmage Flatt, and they will be coming down on this land and this house like a storming archmageâ Which is oddly appropriate.â He continued, âWhatever these Teleporting Pads are doing will be investigated a lot more than they have been before. I advise everyone here to keep their emotions in check, and to only speak the truth.â
Jane suddenly realized the depths of what her father had done; this was a worldwide problem, now.
Teressa, who had been silent this whole time, stared hateful daggers at Yarlinnia and Darabella, but she remained silent.
Nirzir looked at the Teleporting Pads and obviously ran some ideas about them through her head. She seemed to readily come to the conclusion that she should take advantage of the situation for Clan Void Song, and take the pads for herself, but then she stared a bit more, frowned, and looked away from the pads. Jane wasnât entirely sure what she was seeing in Nirzir, but she guessed that the young girl had changed her mind about something.
Darabella looked as though she gazed upon a sunrise for the first time in a long time.
Yarlinna resolved herself. She said, âHouse Whitesteel has nothing to hide and neither does Enduring Forge. We will not allow foreign powers to infiltrate our land, but diplomatic inquiries are acceptable, as is a Mind Mage certified memory of the last few hours. We planted no traps for the Archmage, and I would like the rest of the world to know this, now.â
Poi nodded. âThen you consent to a Scan?â
âI do.â Yarlinnia stepped toward Poi, saying, âI consent.â
Poi began scanning Yarlinnia. Teressa was next because she wanted to get it over with before people started showing. This proved to be prescient of her, for people did start to show right away, and everyone was interrupting Poiâs scans to get him to talk to them.
For a moment there, as strangers yelled and demanded and questioned, Jane imagined that Erick was truly dead.
⦠She didnât believe it, though, and she told the strangers as much.
But.
⦠No. He was alive. He had to be.
- - - -
People stood outside of the tower rooms, waiting for Jane, Teressa, Poi, and Nirzir, by the time Jane and everyone else made it back to that space. Those people gestured to the [Prismatic Ward]s wrapping up the area, and spoke of how they couldnât exist with her father dead. None of those people knew that [Prismatic Ward] was a Permanent spell, and Jane didnât feel like correcting their erroneous thoughts.
She cleaned up her living space and packed away everything that she needed to pack away, while Teressa, Poi, and Nirzir did the same with their own living spaces.
There was a sudden concern halfway through packing.
Jane met with Nirzir in the workshop room.
Nirzir said, âI want all of it. The record players, the runic webs, the sparse notes. All of it. Even the rusted staff of [Grand Fireball]s. I will pay a handsome sum for these items.â
âTake them, Nirzir; theyâre a gift.â Jane glanced to the staff, and thought that her father could have done better; he could have splurged for rustless steel. Yesterday, the staff looked fine, but today it looked more like a metal spike that someone had left at the bottom of a swift-moving river for a century. It was rusted and pitted and looked like it would break under the slightest touch. Jane said, âI donât want this shit, and heâll be back.â
Nirzir stared for a moment, then she nodded. âThank you for your gifts. Songli will always remain open to you and to Erick. When he returns⦠Make sure to send word?â Her voice almost broke as she asked, âPlease?â
Jane nodded, saying, âI will tell you if he shows up.â
â⦠Dead or alive, Jane.â Nirzir said, âI have to know.â
Jane froze. After a moment she gave a small nod, then said, âGood luck with this rune stuff.â
Nirzir bowed a little.
Jane returned the gesture.
Time seemed to move swiftly. Soon, they were packed, and some porters from Void Song had come to help Nirzir take her new toys away. Jane was thankful that Poi and Teressa didnât seem to care that Erickâs work was being taken from them. They were rather hopeful that he was coming back, too.
As they exited the Watcherâs Roost, the [Prismatic Ward]s remained.
Which was rather concerning, but not for the reasons that other people found them concerning. A lot of people had odd ideas about her fatherâs magic, but it had been a few hours by now, and if he was alive then he would probably go to ground and make a safe space for himself, and in such a case, he only had access to eleven [Prismatic Ward]s; one for each Ophiel, and one for himself.
As he cast Ophielâs [Prismatic Ward]s, the oldest ones got taken down, first.
And so, even though there were only seven [Prismatic Ward]s around this tower, it had been at least half a day since he vanished. If Erick were alive he should be recasting more [Prismatic Ward]s somewhere else, thus automatically removing the [Prismatic Ward]s from this area.
⦠He could be limiting himself to 3 [Prismatic Ward]s to keep people thinking he was deadâ Or more realistically, to ensure that the four of them had a safe place to be while he was gone. That first option didnât sound like her father, but the second one did. He could be purposefully not taking these ones down just to keep Jane safe; she could see that.
But even so! Her father would know that Jane and them would move back to Spur soon enough, so if the [Prismatic Ward]s around the Watcherâs Roost started vanishing on their own (because Erick would surely need them, right?) then he was alive.
But then, as they were getting ready to leave and Poi gave some parting words to Arakag, the mayor of Enduring Forge, the plan to watch the [Prismatic Ward]s was ripped away.
Some assholes in the gathered crowd, which Jane later discovered were from the Church of Storm and Thunder, having noticed that Erick was gone and every one of his party members was leaving, decided that they personally needed to investigate his rooms. Their goddess Sininindi had given them a Quest to discover Erickâs whereabouts, and so, the high-ranking cleric and several of his friends all cast [Ward Destruction]s, popping every single [Prismatic Ward].
Jane would have gone apocalypticâ
Except that Poi had stopped her, avoiding an international incident.
Time seemed to flow unceasingly toward the future, toward a moment when Jane would find out her father was dead, and Jane was lost in the flow.
Soon enough, it came out that the clerics had gained Enduring Forgeâs blessing to cast their spells. Everyone wanted inside Erickâs rooms, for maybe there was a clue about what the man had been thinking when he decided to try his luck with untested Spatial magic.
While Jane was still simmering in the background, almost insensate, with Teressaâs hand on her shoulder, Poi managed to tell everyone exactly how much they had managed to fuck up by breaking the [Prismatic Ward]s, and he had managed to do it without screaming. Jane wouldnât have been able to manage that, at all. Once the depth of the collective idiocy had been revealed there was a lot of shame to go around, but there was nothing more to be done about any of it.
Jane put that anger behind her.
Jane, Teressa, Nirzir, and Poi left Enduring Forge without further fanfare. Once they were on the Surface, in the Northern Tribulations where the snow fell fast and layered everything in ice, they bade a quick farewell to Nirzir. There were platitudes about âalways being welcome in Eralisâ and âYou could visit Spur if you wantâ, and while Jane tried to remain polite, and Nirzir was as pleasant as sheâd been this whole time they had traveled together, there was no mistaking that there was a class divide between them. Not only was Nirzir a princess, she was also a near-archmage, and Jane had no problem believing that the young girl would cross that final bridge to tier 8 and tier 9 spellwork in the coming months. Jane was still having difficulty combining tier 5 spellwork, and though gridwork had helped, it could not make up for pure talent.
They lived in different circles, and Jane was only able to step foot into Nirzirâs because of her father bridging gaps. And now that time was over.
Jane shared some of those thoughts with Nirzir, and it looked to hurt the girl deeply, but it was true, and so Jane said it. Nirzir wiped away a frozen tear as she blipped away in a shattering of violet light, leaving the rest of them there on that mountainside, under the heavy snow.
âJust us three, then,â Jane said, her voice half-stolen by the wind. She held out her hands, âYouâll have to excuse the blipping; Iâm not good at lightwalking. Itâs the lack of a Domain.â
âYouâre not the only one bad at spells, Jane.â Teressa took a hand, saying, âYour father is abnormal, and so is Nirzir.â
Poi silently took the other hand. Jane could tell he had words to share, but he held them back for now. Jane was in no mood to hear them, anyway.
It would be twenty [Teleport]s to get them all the way back to Spur, but that was only if they went in a straight line, and they couldnât go in a straight line. That was fine, though. Jane began blipping west, landing them on mountainsides and frozen tundras that she had already passed by when she was working with the Elites at Oceanside, helping people the world over.
And just like that, she let her thoughts move to more pleasant places. She had gained a lot of personal strength on this trip, and that was nice. Her power would be enough to get all three of them to where they needed to go without stressing her resources.
Jane Flatt
Human, age: 23
Level 75, Class: Prismatic Polymage
Exp: 1.52 e15 / 3.41 e17
Class: 8/10
Points: 4
HP
4389/5820
5520 per day
MP
4735/8220
8220 per day
Strength
35
+62
97
Vitality
30
+62
92
Willpower
75
+62
137
Focus
75
+62
137
Favored Spell waiting!
Favored Ability waiting!
Favored Ability waiting!
Favored Ability waiting!
She had even gained the Class Ability Blood Mana, so she could go as hard and as fast as she needed to go. The Class Ability Quest had even been the same for her as it had been for her father; âCreate a well-made tier 3 skill or spell born of a Health-cost skill and a Mana-cost spell.â She had chosen [Strike] and [Flying Weapon], to make [Flying Striker], which was what she used with the adamantium sword that her father had gotten for herâ¦
Jane had briefly shown her own [Flying Striker] to her father, showing him how she had copied his spellwork and made it her ownâ¦
There were differences, of course. Her own [Flying Striker] cost a bit more than his, and the [Strike]s cost Health, instead of costing Mana like her fatherâs version of the same spell.
Flying Striker, instant, close range, 280 MP + Variable
Create a nigh unbreakable weightless weapon that flies around at your command and Strikes with your personal strength, draining your Health with each Strike. Lasts until dismissed.
In the moment of those thoughts, Jane had a minor breakdown. Her father had always tried to get her to do more magic, but she had never been good enough at it until recently. She hadnât even shown him half of her spellwork, for she was embarrassed by inadequacy, but now⦠She might never get to show him any of it.
Gridwork, and even a bit of runework, and Charm Magic lessons from Riri Star Song, and [Polymorph] work⦠She was getting decent. She was achieving success.
She was much better than before.
But right as she was ready to go off on her own, to prove herself as competent and adequate...
Her father goes and runs off first.
âGods dammit, dad,â Jane whispered to no one in particular, as she stopped blipping and the world resolved into full focus, instead of just flashes of light and momentary landscapes.
The three of them landed on a stormy beach that was half frozen and too cold to support much life. Icebergs rolled in the ocean as ice floes threatened to roll up the beach and swallow Janeâs feet with every passing wave. A cold wind bit at her face, tossing frozen salt into her eyes. She teared up, and in that moment, something about everything was too heavy to hold. Jane could only feel the weight of it all pushing her down to the ground. She wanted to fall. She wanted to give in.
But she didnât.
âI⦠I need a moment,â Jane said, walking back up the beach, out of the threatening waves and their swallowing ice. She eyed a block of ice up the beach that she needed to sit on. âA little while. A few minutes.â
Poi followed to get out of the waves, but Teressa just stood there, not making a sound. The massive woman faced the sea as the frozen ocean rolled over her boots, but her [Conjured Armor] was pretty great, so she didnât seem to care. She simply watched the world for a bit, allowed herself to be covered up to her knees in ice, and remained. Jane went and had her meltdown a dozen meters away, up the shore, upon a cold, blue hunk of ice. Poi stood nearby, remaining as silent as his silent armor.
Janeâs meltdown rapidly flowed through the normal stages of pain, and then moved on, taking her to odd places filled with odd thoughts.
She also found she didnât really care about the weather, like Teressa, but for different reasons. Jane had gotten the Class Ability Extreme Survivor which greatly reduced the damage she took from natural environmental effects and even mitigated magical environmental effects. From a bit of testing, if an aura was large enough, it counted as an environmental effect; bit of a nice bonus from that Class Ability, in Janeâs opinion.
So being out here on this stormy, icy beach was probably as horrible as being at a real beach down in Florida in the winter, which was to say it probably wasnât that bad at all. But she had never been to Florida, like her father had when he went to help after the hurricanes. Maybe a more appropriate analogy would be... This felt about as bad as being at the edge of Lake Michigan in the summer.
Whatever the case, this physical experience wasnât that bad at all. She could go for a swim and feel fine, for sure. The emotional experience was something Jane tried to distance herself from, and she mostly succeeded.
Teressa seemed fine.
As for Poi? The Mind Mageâs black adamantium armor gleamed silver in the grey light of the cold world. Poiâs metallic armor seemed like it would have been a weak point in cold environments like this one, but he was used to protecting himself from the heat, anyway, so it was probably a small adjustment to protect from both the heat and the cold. Apparently he had figured out a cosmetic spell to make the adamantium appear to be silver, too, so that he could maintain regulations while not always being reflectiveâ
And Jane was trying to distract herself from her pain. It was easier to think about anything else at all, than it was to think about her father, and what he had done.
Poiâs voice was a small thing, âItâs okay to grieve.â
Like a dam had burst, Jane roared, âBut how can I grieve when I donât even know if heâs dead?â She barely had the cognizance to yell at the air, instead of at Poi, but she turned herself away from the man, and screamed, âAND THOSE IDIOTS WHO DISPELLED THEââ She guttered, her voice becoming a whisper, âThose idiots who broke the [Prismatic Ward]s⦠Why? Why did they do that?â
Teressa sighed; it was a small sound from all the way over there by the waves, but Jane still heard it.
Jane accused Poi, âAnd you canât sense him, can you.â
Poi instantly said, âNo. I cannot sense him, and I would tell you if I could, so donât get like that with me, young lady.â
Jane felt bad all over, for different, compounding reasons. She muttered, âSorry.â
âApology accepted.â Poi said, âAnyway: I have some small news on that front. Necromancers and even a few Arch Necromancers are trying their luck at summoning his soul. Iâll let you know if any of the ones we know succeed.â
Teressa whipped around, scattering ice as she moved. âShit!â
Jane stared at the ground. âShit.â
Poi stared at the horizon, his voice going hard as he said, âWe wonât let anything bad happen to his soul, but we have to know.â
A cold wind blew.
Jane stood. She said, âWe could check on the other places that he wanted to go. The Orrery. Oceanside. We could even go to the Core.â Jane knew that they would say no, and honestly, she had no idea why she suggested those places. In a bit of brightness, she suggested one place that they might agree to, âYggdrasil at Candlepoint?â
Teressa instantly said, âYes. Letâs go see Yggââ
âNo.â Poi said, âWeâre being recalled to Spur, and both of Yggdrasilâs bodies are rebuffing all attempts at communication. He started off calmly telling people to go away, but now heâs responding to every petitioner with full-lightning [Fulmination Aura]s. Someone tried to attack him with a [Dispel Familiar].â
Anger blossomed like a volcano unleashed.
Jane roared, âWho the FUCK at Candleââ
âThe attempt to [Dispel] was at the Yggdrasil at Holorulo, where he has no defenders,â Poi said. âThe shadelings and others at Candlepoint are heavily protecting Yggdrasil.â
Jane suddenly had no idea what to do about anything.
Teressa calmly, strongly, said, âI want to kill something. Letâs find a few monsters to end.â
âAnd this brings me to the next topic.â Poi said, âThere are enough monsters to kill at Spur. I didnât want to say this while Erick was with us, but there are certain truths that must be shared now that Erick has moved on.
âKiri and the archmages and a few of the true powerhouses, like Killzone and Merit and Mog, are all that stands between the life and death of everyone in Spur, since you canât count on random adventurers to do what needs to be done.â Poi said, âDark, dead souls flood out of ArâKendrithyst every single night like an endless, black ooze. We think that Melemizargo and the Shades no longer have a leash on the souls of the trillions of people from the Old Cosmology who once openly worshiped the old God of Magic, but whatever the case, the black ooze is deadly to all life. Brightwater has been abandoned. The Blessed Shade Farix âthatâs what heâs calling himselfâ has taken his people and occupied the destroyed city of Frontier. He has rebuilt that land into an impenetrable fortress in order for his people and himself to survive the dark floods each night. Anhelia and her Land of Light inside the Dead City either exacerbates or is the long term solution to the problem âweâre not sure whichâ for she has created a beachhead inside the Dead City, which is her attempt to take back ArâKendrithyst for the wrought.â Poi looked to Jane and Teressa, saying, âOur place is at Spur, and they have more than enough problems to keep us busy while weâre waiting for Erick to come back.â
The depth of Poiâs words sunk inâ¦
And Jane asked, âWhy not tell usââ She answered her own question, âBecause then dad would have quit the Path.â She looked to Teressa, saying, âThat explains the shadows in the [Future Sight].â
Terssa frowned.
Poi said, âAccording to Silverite, operating as though Erick had the option to quit the path was never an option for us, or for Spur. According to the answers Erick got on the Sliding System, this answer tracks.â Poi explained, âSo, if Erick had heard about this problem, then it is Silveriteâs opinion that the Path would have eaten Spur alive. The Path certainly fucked up Songli. It was only after that disaster that Erick operated to avoid another such problem at the grass lands. Perhaps if he went to Spur now, after Enduring Forge which seemed a complete success, he could have solved this black ooze problem in the space of an afternoon. He was getting good at that.â
Jane gave a small, strangled smile; her father was getting better at that, wasnât he.
Poi continued, âBut there is no way to know that, and Silverite was not willing to take that chance. It was a calculated risk to deal with the problem this way, and she took the risk. I believe she was right to take this risk.â He stated, âSo these are the problems we must solve for ourselves. With any luck, we people of Spur will be able to solve this problem on our own, without Fate fucking us over⦠But it is very possible that Erick will show up at the absolute last moment and fix everything, though we should not count on this.â He added, âIt would be preferable if we solved this problem before he gets back.â
Jane steeled herself. âWe can solve problems without dad. Thank you, Poi...â for the reminder.
Teressa breathed deep, then exhaled; the seams of her armor around her neck briefly billowing out thick air. She hadnât spoken much since Erick vanished, but she did so now, saying, âI donât know about you, but Iâm shit against oozes. What the fuck do you expect us to do at Spur? Sit on our asses? Get swamped protecting the mages?â Not that Iâm necessarily against getting swamped, butâ Iâve felt useless for too long, Poi.â
Poi said, âMagic is the primary force that harms the dark souls, but [Cleanse] makes them physical enough to actually injure, so Kiri and the Archmages have been the primary forces to deal with them. For a while they were doing fine, but the problem has mutated. A few weeks ago, they experienced the first living dead amalgam, and itâs only gotten worse from there.â He said, âSometimes, the dead souls congregate around a host body theyâve found inside the city, or, at night, when they spill over the walls, the ooze finds a host among the defenders of Spur, or in the crystal mimics or other monsters or animals out there. These dead souls change those hosts. The soul amalgams that spill out from the Dead City are the worst, for theyâve had time to acclimate to their power; theyâve had time to discover what they are in their new life. All of them show sentience, but some actually show sapience. But the ones that happen outside of the city, the ones that are born each night the ooze spills out, those get crazy. Both types of dead-soul monsters are twisted into near-Ancient levels of power.â Poi told them, âThatâs what youâll be killing.â
Jane nodded. âThen thatâs what Iâll be killing.â
Teressa breathed a sigh of relief, agreeing, âThen thatâs what weâll be killing.â
Jane amended, ââwhat weâll be killing; yes.â
Teressa breathed out something that was near a laugh, but also too tired to be anything joyous. âThen if youâre done having your pity party, letâs get going, Team Leader Jane.â
At that, Jane laughed. âMaâam yes, maâam!â
Poi said, âBefore we continue, I need to say a few more personal things.â
Jane and Teressa looked to Poi.
Poi said, âJane. You need to send a letter to Nirzir to smooth over the shit you said back there. You really hurt her. She thought you were friends.â
Jane frowned and felt a sudden pain in her chest as Poiâs words hit unexpectedly hard.
Poi continued, âAlso, I apologize for stopping you from killing those priests.â
âAh. No.â Jane said, âIâm sorry that you had to do that. I should have kept my cool⦠And my words to Nirzir might have been too harsh. Youâre right to say what you said about that, too. I barely even remember what I said⦠it all happened too fast.â
Teressa said, âYou were right about us being in different circles, though. Erick could barrel through that shit because he belonged wherever he felt like belonging, but we three are uncivilized adventurers, and we do as the barbarians do. We cannot move to Nirzirâs circle, but she can move to ours.â
It seemed the large womanâs mood had improved.
âTeressa is also right.â Poi breathed, then said, âAs an addendum: I hope that Erick returns, soon, and I will also act like I expect him to return, sooner or later. We shall all pretend like we know that he will be back. But there is a certain subset of people who will pounce now that he is gone. Expect what happened back there at Enduring Forge, with the [Prismatic Ward]s, and how they tried to [Dispel] Yggdrasil at Holorulo, to happen again. Again and again, we will all be tested.â He said to Jane, âWhich is why it is important to ensure that you antagonize none of the enemies that your father might have made. You should send that apology letter to Singer Nirzir so that we donât have Songli as an accidental enemy; this is what you should hope for as an outcome to that.â
â⦠Right, right,â Jane said.
The cold wind blew.
Jane looked up at the cloudy sky and at the dim sunlight past the clouds to the south, asking, âWhen did it turn into fucking day? Wasnât it night? I blipped us west, didnât I? That means it should be darker...â She looked around, saying, âYeah. This is the right beach. Iâve been here before.â She pointed south. âThe Forest of Glaquin is past that ocean. Isnât it?â
âIt is.â Poi said, âWeâre on the right path. You simply didnât realize how deep the grief is hitting you, and how much time has gotten away from us. If you want to talk to a therapist there are some at Spur I can put you into contact with.â
Jane groaned.
Poi added, âI had hoped that your father would take the offer before we left, but it is what it is. We already have some therapists down at Candlepoint talking to the shadelings, too, and that seems to be going well.â
âAre the shadelings real people?â Jane asked.
âReal enough as anyone.â Poi said, âSo take that as you will.â
âIâm not opposed to a Forest jaunt...â Teressa stared south. âBut whyâd we come this way? Donât want to go through the Republic?â
âAbsolutely not,â Jane said, glad for the change of topic. âDone that before. Never again. Border patrol got a [Leash] on me and I almost had to kill them to get away. If I had a Domain like dad I probably could have clipped their [Leash] easily, but⦠I havenât made one of those yet, either.â
Teressa nodded. âMe either.â
After another moment of silence, Poi said, âItâs fucking freezing. Letâs get to blipping, please.â
Jane smiled. âYeah, yeah.â The party regathered and Jane held out her hands, saying, âThat was the halfway point. The ocean is a few blips away, and then weâll be in the air, moving as fast as I can. Iâll support us with [Greater Lightwalk], but itâs not that strong. Donât test the flooring.â
Teressa took her hand, saying, âDonât fall; got it.â
Poi took her other hand.
And then they were off.
- - - -
The northern coast of Glaquin was yet another frozen wasteland, but then they passed the coast, and headed into the skies above the Forest. The flashing landscape below grew taller, and greener. And then, after a few more blips, the Wyrmrest Mountains appeared. Another two blips put them firmly beyond the reach of those craggy peaks, which seemed much smaller and carefully organized when compared to the Tribulations. They were now in the Crystal Forest.
Jane, Poi, and Teressa, stood upon cold, orange sands as the sun rose in the east, shedding light upon orange dunes. They had managed to beat the sun here, but barely. There had been some minor falterings in the skies over the Forest, but they were here, and safe, for a relative definition of âsafeâ, anyway.
A typical example of a normal crystal mimic grew upon the rocky sands, not forty meters away. It reminded Jane of home.
She asked if anyone was against walking for a bit, for she was down to a third of her resources. Teressa gave a small joke about facing a wyrm attack while she rested, for this was the start of wyrm season. Poi said that any wyrm unfortunate enough to meet any of them would end up very dead, and he wasnât sure which one, Teressa or Jane, would kill it faster.
Teressa laughed. âIt would be a contest, of course! To see who could land the killing blow!â
Jane got into the spirit, saying, âYou think you could actually kill one these days? Last I saw, all you could do was stand in the way.â
âHey now! I could take on an eyebeam wyrm these days.â Teressa moved her left arm and her massive shield moved with her, to attach to her left arm. The magically enhanced shield was bright silver, but it reflected the dawn, becoming gold in the light. âWe got trained up like proper warriors over in Songli.â
Poi grumbled, âReflections make everything so much tougher for teammates.â
Jane laughed, then tapped his shoulder, saying, âSo thatâs why you got reflections in your adamantium, too, eh!â
âMy armor has multiple modes of use.â Poi said, âAnd thankfully, Iâm getting the hang of its reflective nature. Itâs a sight better than full-body reflection.â
Jane asked, âYou can still get through telepathically with the full body reflection, though, canât you?â
âI can, but itâs not that easy.â
Jane smirked. âAs long as you can get through it at all, then thatâs good enough for me.â
âMe too.â Teressa said, âI still prefer the directional reflection, though. Itâs stronger.â
âReflective armor is the best of both styles,â Poi said. âDirectional, but without compromising telepathic communication, and you can still touch the exposed parts for healing spells.â
They walked for a while, talking about nothing in particular, for no reason in particular. Jane would later reflect on this moment and see that this was the calm before the storm, but the storm was still a ways off. So for now, they shot the shit, and everything was as good as it could be, considering the circumstances. It felt like a return to normalcy, which was important. They were soldiers against the monstrous world, and thatâs what they needed to be; not an archmageâs attache.
⦠They were also putting off their meeting with Silverite, but no one actually spoke of that. They were each afraid in their own way of what the Mayor of Spur was going to say or do when they finally returned. But they were all responsible people, and they needed to talk about responsible things. Poi got to that point before the other two, though.
âSilverite hasnât explained,â Poi said, âBut Iâm assuming that Kiri is going to be our new assignment.â
Jane felt like her feet were suddenly twice as heavy as complicated emotions swirled in her mind. She rapidly picked one of her multiple, sudden problems out of the maelstrom, asking, âHow does inheritance work in Spur?â
Poi said, âAt Silveriteâs decree.â
â⦠Ah.â
âYouâd get the house, Jane,â Teressa said, âBut letâs leave things like they are for a while longer.â
âI wasnât going to do thatâ I mean. I would neverâ But weâre going back and my father isnât with us, and I want to be prepared for⦠I suppose Iâm thinking more like Earth-inheritance rules and that shit...â Jane winced. âAh. Fucking shit. Do I have to pay taxes on dadâs money?â
âYup.â Teressa smiled. âAnd if you donât want to pay them, then youâre probably not getting anything.â
â⦠Silverite wouldnât do that.â Jane asked, âWould she?â
âSheâs done it before.â Poi said, âI doubt she would change for Erick⦠But Erick was a different kind ofâ He is a different kind of person.â
Jane felt her heart seize all over again.
The conversation moved on.
Jane was perfectly fine being âon Kiri dutyâ, whatever that meant. It was nice to get a heads-up before the fact, though. Eventually, Janeâs Mana and Health ticked up high enough that more blipping was in order, but Jane sent a [Scry] orb ahead to check out the place, first; to get an overview of what sort of city she was coming back to.
⦠And Spur looked perfectly fine. Despite news that the place was under difficult siege every single night, and that there were three more sets of concentric walls around the place, all of the walls were intact and many of the buildings were occupied. The Mage Guild District and the Adventurer Guild District were absolutely packed with people, going to and fro. Guards were out and keeping the peace, but there were no fights happening at that particular moment. There were never that many discipline problems inside the city.
Jane smiled to herself. Adventurer lands werenât that much more uncivilized than all the rest of the world. Like, sure, the people here were much higher powered, and they fought, for sure, but they took their fights out of the city, because anyone caught fighting inside the city was promptly fucked up by the city guard. Her fatherâs interest in massive population oppression didnât make sense to Jane, because when left to their own devices and allowed to level off of monster killing as much as they wanted, people either lived peaceably with their neighbors, or they were kicked out to fend for themselves. And this was fine.
Spur was doing well, despite the shadows looming all around!
Jane recast her [Scry] into the designated spot inside City Hall, the one where Poi told her to check, to see if the location was good to blipâ
âAh.â Jane froze. âTheyâre ready for us. Weâre headed right into a debrief.â
Teressa breathed deep, then said, âSounds like fun.â
Poi held out his hand, saying, âLetâs get this over with.â
Jane took their hands, and then they were off.
- - - -
Jane stood in the center of the room flanked by Poi on one side and Teressa on the other. The three of them stood at parade attention, while their bags had been laid to the side, for now.
Silverite sat at the judgeâs seat, as she usually did, and she looked exactly as Jane remembered; a completely silver dragonkin who wore clothes, unlike the vast majority of wrought. Today she wore a blue pantsuit. The Mage Guildâs Sirocco Zago sat in the audience, beside her daughter, Sizzi; the two of them resembled one another, as both of them were violet-purple incani with upturned horns and white hair. Guildmaster Mogarithag Moggargal or just 'Mog', of the Adventurerâs Guild, was the same massively muscular orcol woman who Jane remembered. She sat alongside one of the receptionists from the guild. Aside from those major faces, Jane knew most of the other people in the room, from some farmers who farmed the lands surrounding the Human District, to people in the Army. Liquid and Killzone were present; the Quartermaster and the General. Both were wrought, with Liquid resembling a female dragonkin of iron, and Killzone resembling a male orcol made of adamantium. Both of those wrought were technically nude, but their skin had been shaped to appear like clothes; they were more normal wrought, for sure.
Killzone didnât seem to appreciate the new adamantium armaments in his midst, though. He glanced at Teressaâs shield, and Poiâs currently-silver armor, and Janeâs sword, strapped to her waist.
Well nuts to him.
Liquid and Silverite took a moment to look at the adamantium, too. Perhaps they were more ambivalent? It was hard to tell.
The other people in the audience âand there were quite a lot!â Jane had no idea who they were. Some of them sat near to the positions of the actual powerful people in the room and were themselves dressed quite nicely. Jane guessed, at a glance, that they were all nobles of some sort, or perhaps they were the merchant powers that existed in Spur, instead of standard nobility. But some of the nicely dressed people present were human, and that set Jane to remembering that there were some changes of the âhuman nobilityâ kind going on back before they left for the Worldly Path. She had never paid attention to them, but perhaps she should have; she could have matched her new neighbors to the faces out there.
The various [Familiar]s of the archmages were also present. They hung to the side of the room, floating near the wall. Waveâs floating blob of water, Opalâs pearlescent white sphere, Obsidianâs spiky black ball. They were all watching.
Kiri was not there, and neither was her [Familiar]; Sunny the shapeshifting couatl.
There would have been a lot more people in that room if the clamoring public outside had been allowed into the courtroom, but they were not. The air would have been chock full of [Scry] orbs, though, if Obsidian hadnât cast some sort of autonomous-[Scry]-orb-popper into the air in the room. As it was, that construct had been popping a thousand [Scry] orbs every second, just to keep the air clear of those damnable prying eyes.
A full minute they stood there, Jane and Poi and Teressa, while the crowd was calmed down by soldiers appointed to City Hall and everyone finished taking their seats. It had been a hastily assembled debrief, but it had assembled nonetheless.
Silverite brought the gathering to order, her voice filling the air and rapidly drowning out all others, âWe are here, today, to find out what happened to Archmage Flatt. Jane Flatt. Teressa Rednail. Poi Fulisade. You were there when he vanished. One of you, speak. Explain what happened, without divulging secrets best left covered. Tell us: are we at war? Did someone take Erick from us?â
Jane suddenly reevaluated everything about the moment. She wasnât on trial. The rest of the world was at trial. She blurted out, âNo one took him from me. He left willingly.â
The crowd gasped.
âExplain,â Silverite demanded.
Jane didnât even know where to startâ
Poi, thankfully, started speaking. He gave a concise account of what happened, talking about how Erick was getting into runework and he wanted to increase the range of [Teleport], for it might help him with the creation of [Gate]. Erick had learned a lot from Enduring Forge, who had been nothing but extremely helpful and informative, but then Erick saw an opportunity.
Erick stepped on the testing pad of his own volition.
Other people started talking, accusing individuals of Enduring Forge, or elsewhere, of bad intentions, of traps and intrigue. Of assassination. Someone got the idea that a dragon of Ooloraptoor had something to do with Erickâs disappearance, while others spoke badly of the nobility of the Highlands. After everyone had a chance to vent, Silverite shut down the outbursts and guided further questioning.
The debrief took three hours.
Poi spoke for most of it, but Silverite asked questions of Jane and Teressa, and so they had to speak, too. Words about The Worldly Path came out, because they had to, but most of those words came out in a nebulous manner that hid what the Path really did to a person, and to the world, when someone walked it.
Poi, Teressa, and Jane, were not on trial, and never were.
In the last half-hour of the debrief, Poi spoke the words that would become Spurâs reaction to Erickâs disappearance, âI donât believe he is dead, for Yggdrasil is still alive, and that is the biggest indication that Erick survives. If anything: Erick is merely further along on the Worldly Path than anyone else before him. And so, I will wait, and I will ensure that his house does not fall down while he is gone, and when he does return, then Iâm going to at least punch him for doing this to me, and to us.â
The debrief eventually ended.
The courtroom dispersed. No one was happy, but everyone was at least less mad.
Jane, Poi, and Teressa, picked their bags back up and followed Silverite into the room behind the courtroom. Killzone and Liquid joined them. Soon, it was the three of them inside a small room, made smaller by the two orcol-sized people.
And then Silverite screamed out her anger, roaring at the floor and at the walls and at the table, filling the room with a hateful sound that washed over Jane like a raging ocean. And then Silverite stopped. She stood, silent and threatening, her solid silver eyes boring into Janeâs.
Silverite said, âNot your fuckup. Youâre fine. Iâm angry, though. He could actually be dead.â
âHeâs not dead,â Jane found herself saying, with extreme vehemence.
âWell I hope youâre right, Jane.â Silverite half-yelled. She forced herself to calm again, briefly closing her eyes and focusing on something that wasnât the people in front of her. She opened her eyes, and asked, âHave you heard about the dead souls thing we got going on, now? Ar'Kendrithystâs little death knell?â
âPoi told us on the way over here,â Teressa said.
âThen he has followed at least those directions correctly.â Silverite said, âYouâre going to be involved in that defense. All three of you, and primarily through Kiri. Kiri now has most of the spellwork that Erick hadâ Has.â She paused. She said, âKiri has most of the spellwork that Erick has. Sheâs done it differently in a lot of places, though, and she doesnât have a Domain yet. Probably gonna take her decades to get that good, like most normal mages of her caliber. Problem is we donât have decadesâ Wait. Teressa. Youâre good with mana sense now, yes?â
âAnd basic prognostication.â Teressa said, âItâs a lot easier to do without Erick being around, too.â
âYay for glimmering sights,â Silverite said, sarcastically. Then she spoke seriously, âI want you to take the tests for certification. We can use another proven prognosticator of any ability at all, and youâre supposed to be good, to hear Poi tell it. You still need to prove youâre good, and then I have a good place for you.â
âI understand.â Teressa said, âI will get this certification.â
âThen youâre on that. Report to Liquid when you can to take the tests.â Silverite looked at Jane, saying, âYouâre likely gonna end up on major monster detail. Poi will be on coordination efforts, through Kiri and you. Teressa might be involved elsewhere, or settled down next to Kiri inside the [Prismatic Ward] around your houseââ She roared, âAt least that spellwork is still thereââ She calmed, âUnlike the [Prismatic Ward]s around the rooms in Enduring Forgeâ¦â She breathed. She said, âHe never shifted the spellwork around his home so I doubt it would shift now, but to ensure that it wonât be taken down by anything less than Erick himself, I had Archmage Opal enact some extra layers of defense around that particular spellwork; long lasting [Force Wall]s and other such spellwork. The three of you will remain stationed in that safe space, of course, but youâre gonna have to [Blink] to get through Opalâs spells.â
A swell of emotions rolled up and out of Jane, as she felt hot tears roll down her face. She wasnât sure why, but she was really touched that Silverite caredâ Of course she cared, but⦠Actions mattered, and this was good. Jane said, âThank you, Mayor Silverite.â
With a momentarily softer voice, Silverite said, âYou three survived being accomplices on the Worldly Path; you have no idea how rare that is. At least one of you should have died. Possibly all of you. But Erick is Erick, so I suppose I shouldnât be too surprised. Hopefully, heâs simply on his next step and heâll return when he can. With any luck, it wonât take him more than a month to get back to us. Maybe two. Two months is my timetable before I start worrying.â She spoke stronger, âSo I want this black soul ooze sorted well before then, because if Erick comes back here and he doesnât have [Gate]... Then that means weâre on the Path with him, and I do not like what that means for us, or for Spur.â
Jane felt a need to speak, so she did, âEarlier, in the debrief⦠We spoke of the Sliding System and what the machine had said. I get the impression that my father would not be allowed to leave the Worldly Path? Is that why you didnât want him coming here?â
âExactly right, Jane, and Iâm glad to hear you actually ask this question because that means that my information embargo worked. That youâre even able to ask it at all gives me good hope that weâre far enough away from his Worldly Path that weâre not currently under Fateâs fist. Which is fantastic.â Silverite explained, âMany people on the Worldly Path have come to Spur before, for Melemizargo is at the end of all iterations of the Path. This information comes to everyone who walks the Path. In turn, those people come here, hoping to get into ArâKendrithyst to find more answers. Sometimes those people are total failures, though, so Melemizargo lets them quit, for he has grown tired of their presence. But for your father? The man who brought him out of his insanity?â Silverite stressed, âDragons donât let shiny things go, Jane.â
Janeâs chest felt tight. â⦠Is it possible for him to ever complete it, then?â
Silverite said, âI donât know.â
Killzone spoke up, âHe can complete it, but heâd need to find a different Wizard to do the final step. I doubt Melemizargo would let him complete the Path in the normal manner, either.â
Jane stared at the big man. âWizardry? Really? Thatâs the final step?â
Silverite frowned at the big man. Teressa scowled at nothing in particular, her eyes flickering with grey light as she looked elsewhere. Poi sighed, and Liquid shrugged.
Liquid said, âItâs a theory. Weâve seen a lot of various Walkers come and go over the centuries, with some coming a lot closer to [Gate] than others, and with at least two that I personally knew that had it in their heads to go chase down a Wizard for assistance.â
Killzone said, âIâve personally seen three Walkers try to find Wizards.â
âAnd Iâve seen twenty four.â Silverite said, âOne and all, every Walker that tried that route ended up dead.â
Jane said, âThen Iâm glad my father didnât know of this, or we would have triedâ Oh. He taunted a dragon with the threat of finding a wizard that would transform the dragon from Elemental Shadow and Ooze into Elemental Truth, with the goal to get the dragon to speak truths.â
Liquid, Killzone, and Silverite each listened, but she could tell they had heard this fact already. Probably from Poi.
But Jane hadnât been a part of that conversation, so Jane continued, âAnd Goldie appeared to us before that, directly telling us that dragons only truly cared about one thing; finding Wizards. Which is why dad taunted the dragon in that way.â
Silverite spoke first, âSounds like Iâve now reached 25 of my Worldly Path Wizardly count.â
Liquid said, âThatâs a lot of purely circumstantial evidence since thereâs never been anyone who actually solved [Gate] magic the hard way... But Iâm officially up to three-Wizard-mentions.â
âFour.â Killzone said, âAnd thatâs more than enough circumstantial evidence to put that at the true final step of the Worldly Path.â
âPossibly only near the end; maybe not a true final step,â Liquid said.
Silverite waved a hand, saying, âOkay. Thatâs great.â She said, âTeressa, Jane, Poi; Weâre glad to have you back. Welcome home. For now youâre assisting Kiri and on nightly monster-killing duty with everyone else. Liquid will sort you out before sunset.â She looked directly at Jane, saying, âWeâre going to end this black ooze threat, and then you can go search for Erick. Am I understood?â
Jane latched onto the goal, sounding off in time with Poi and Teressa, âYes, maâam!â
âDismissed.â
- - - -
Home was exactly as Jane had left it.
The mansion was three stories of near-Victorian architecture, but done in solid orange stone, with a mage tower at the north for Jane, and a mage tower at the south for her father. To the west, in the front of the house, grew a garden of earthly vegetables and fruits alongside veirdly varieties, while on the east side was an⦠An orchard of cocoa trees, apparently. About twenty cocoa trees. That was new. There had only been a few cocoa trees in that secondary garden patch when they had all left for the Worldly Path, but apparently the ladies of âAnd Dessert!â were doing well with their chocolate.
The house also had a proper fence now, which was different. It was a thick stone fence, lit up with politely-worded lightwards telling people not to cross onto the property. The warnings seemed to need to be enforced, though, since there were guards from Spur stationed inside the property. Some of those guards were actually gardening, or at least they were keeping the place looking nice. Jane even knew them. One of the guards was Biggie, a dragonkin with dark grey scales who Jane and Kiri had worked with when Jane was stationed under Sargent Nanark, back at her time in ArâKendrithyst, before she became a Team Leader and was mostly independent.
The Human District had changed, though.
Where once it was mostly empty, flat orange stone, surrounded by distant farm beds, there were seven new mansions dotting the land here and there. One of them was mostly built when Jane had left with her father on the Worldly Path, and now it looked fully built and occupied. That house belonged to a noble with a name that escaped Jane at the moment, but which would probably come to her later. Most of the other houses looked similarly fancy, except for one. The mage trioâs house, to the north, retained its normal look, almost mirroring Erickâs house; it looked a bit neglected, actually. Even Erickâs house looked run down when compared to all the others, though. The noble vacation/adventuring houses had paint on the walls, or colored stone layered atop the orange. Some even had fancy fountains in their lawns and gardens.
At least no one had built directly next to the house. Silverite probably had something to do with that. Security concerns and common decency and prestige; take your pick, they were all valid reasons.
Jane, Poi, and Teressa, had bypassed almost all of the security measures, though, and taken the shortcut directly into the houseâs foyer. But there was one security measure that Jane did not think would be a problem, and here that problem was, hovering in front of them and hissing at them. Jane had even checked the target location with a [Scry] before she blipped, but it seemed that Sunny barely remembered any of them.
Jane let Poi deal with Sunny.
The little green couatl screeched loud, again. Though it hadnât attacked with any spellwork, it certainly made a racket. How could Kiri sleep through this? Jane almost sent up some light to poke at the woman, but she didnât want to make any large movements; not when the one Sunny in front of them contented itself with screeching, but the other Sunnys, hiding here and there around the house, looked ready to pounce.
Or more accurately, spew lightning, or something.
Poi spoke calmly, though he was beyond agitated. âSunny. You remember usââ
Kiri stepped into view at the top of the stairs. She was in night clothes and half wrapped in a quilted blanket that trailed behind her, while her emerald eyes were puffy. Her tears were held back by the barest of threads. All at once, every Sunny suddenly relaxed and flitted away from the foyer. Kiri whispered, âErick isnât with you.â
Jane said, âHeâs alive, but he went on without us.â
Kiri sniffled, then asked, âHe left you behind, too?â
âItâs complicated.â Poi said, âWe can speak more of all of it, but it comes down to this: Weâre here now, and weâre your backup.â
Kiri huffed a nervous laugh. From one moment to the next, she seemed better. Her tears dried as she dropped the blanket, revealing nightclothes and chuckling once, before sobbing deeply and turning to light to appear right in front of Jane. Janeâs eyes went wide as Kiri crashed into her, hugging tight, before moving on to Teressa and then Poi, saying, âIâm so glad youâre back. Itâs been difficult and Iâve tried to keep it together but weâre losing people every night and itâsââ She hugged Jane again, and this time Jane was able to hug her back. âItâs beenââ She broke down, sobbing briefly, before saying, âItâs been tough.â
Jane held her for a while, and she found that she had missed Kiri. She had missed the house. She had missed Spur. She said, âWeâre back now, and Iâll help with the near-Ancients, or whatever they are.â
Kiri whispered, âThank the gods.â She sighed, as she pulled away and looked at them all, saying, âSorry about that. Itâs been rough, but I guess you guys went through a war, too.â
Teressa said, âAye, we did. But it looks like you went through this war all on your own.â
âNo one else can enter the house, and this is where Iâm safestâ We already hadââ Kiri glanced at the bags, saying, âUh. Iâll help you with those.â The bags vanished in flickers of rapidly-moving Sunnys. âSo Iâm awake, now. Letâs talk about everything.â
Poi frowned a little, saying, âI think you should go back to bed. Weâre here, youâre safe, and you need the rest. We should all probably go to our own beds and sleep, too. Tonight will be difficult and thereâs no need for more stress at the moment.â
Kiri lashed out, âErick could do this just fine! Iââ She pulled back, closing her eyes as she waved a hand. âSorry. Sorry. I thought I could do this, too.â Kiri breathed out, saying, âYeah. Iâm going back to bed. Wake me up an hour till sunset, please?â
âSure thing, Kiri,â Jane said.
âI want to know all about it.â Kiri said, âEverything. Okay?â
Jane smiled. âYeah. Weâll tell you.â
âEven the shit you wouldnât tell anyone else,â Kiri stared a bit, then she softened, and whispered, âOkay?â
Jane nodded. Teressa hummed assent.
Poi just flicked his eyes upward, to the second story.
Kiri sighed and flashed into green light. When she resolved, she was upstairs, and walking to her room, muttering, âSleep, sleep, sleep.â
Everyone parted to their own parts of the house. Teressa went straight to bed. Poi went to the third floor, for whatever reason. Jane went to the kitchen, to see if the place was stocked, or not.
The kitchen had more food than any one person could ever eat; the kitchen was fine. And yet, Kiri had felt thin when Jane had her arms around her. She had looked thin, too, but⦠She had always been thin, right? No. She hadnât always been that thin.
Hmm.
Jane explored the rest of the house, quick as a shadowâ
She reappeared on the third floor hallway, because she had seen what Poi had gone after. In the third floor of the house, in one of the larger rooms, her fatherâs [Prismatic Ward] did not exist. Erick had left it that way on purpose so that he could experiment with smaller scale magics without the interference of that dense air.
The Army had turned this part of the house into a miniature command center.
The space was empty of people at the moment, but there were chairs and tables and a chalkboard and a lightward 3D map of the battlefield between Spurâs walls and the entire surrounding battlefield to ten kilometers out, including a bit of the walls of ArâKendrithyst to the south. Poi was already inside going over papers and checking out recorded monsters and their abilities. Jane joined him. Soon, Teressa showed, and she got in on the action as well.
As Jane read over the recorded monsters âofficially called amalgamsâ she got more and more concerned, but also more than a little bit excited.
Teressa said it best, âThese arenât simple monsters⦠Theyâre dead people. People.â She enunciated, âAs in multiples of people. Thousands, in some cases.â
Poi was reading something else as he commented, âThe more dangerous ones act as fully-linked mage covens, which means they can either cast multiple spells at once and cooperative cast for massive effects.â
Teressa shook a small folder, saying, âThe most dangerous one so far was a three-person meld. From our own side! Gone to sleep in the same room and woken up changed, and crazed.â
âSo donât get the shit on you and [Cleanse] for at least 30 seconds after every battle.â Jane held up her own folder, saying, âThis one was five shadow giants and a hundred shadowolves, melded together into one massive monster of limbs and jaws and claws and with the regenerative properties of a wyrm.â
Teressa frowned, but Jane could tell she was interested.
Jane teased, âYou complained about not fighting enough monsters! See what complaining gets you!â
Teressa huffed a small laugh. âI see what complaining gets me.â
âAnd now weâre all here in the deep shit with you,â Jane said, smiling. âOceans of deep black shit.â
Poi put his papers back into their folder, then began putting the folder away, saying, âIâm going to get some sleep while I can. I suggest you all do the same.â
A round of agreements had everything put back where it was supposed to go, and then they all left to their rooms.
Jane collapsed onto her bed âher own bed!â and it smelled like home⦠Probably a bit too much. She got back up, [Cleanse]d, put away shit, took off crap, hung her sword on the wallâ
Gods, that was a beautiful sword.
Jane smiled at the straight-back weapon that would be killing many, many monsters in the coming hours and days, and then she crawled back into bed, feeling a lot more weary than she expected. She set an [Alarm Ward] to go off in 6 hours, with a personal-only sound, giving her some time before nightly siege. Jane closed her eyes.
She was out in minutes.
She dreamed of her father.
All too quickly, the alarm woke her up. Bleary-eyed, Jane got out of bed and brushed the tears from her eyes, and then she went to go see about dinner. Teressa was already up and cooking up a storm with copious amounts of meat and a lot of bluebell seasoning.
Jane teased her, âYou really like that shitty little flower spice, donât you?â
âI do!â Teressa laughed. âItâs been too long since I had it, too.ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âWanna try that 12 star spice?â
âFuck you. No.â Teressa said, âDonât you go ruining my food with that shit, either.â
âOh! Comeâon! You might like it!â
Poi came into the roomâ
Teressa latched onto Poiâs leadership, saying, âPoi! This Team Leader is about to commit 12-star culinary crimes! Whatâs her punishment?â
âSend her out to fight for her life against monsters that will eat her alive.â
Jane laughed. Poi smiled.
Teressa seriously said, âI donât want to be put on background duty, Poi. Donât let that happen.â
âIâll see what I can do,â Poi said, âBut weâre all getting the assignments we need, and you made yourself an indispensable prognosticator with a natural mana sense range of 120 meters and an eye on the big picture. Blame yourself.â
âYeah yeah.â Teressa said, âPoint taken.â
Jane went to the pantry, asking, âHow can I help make dinner?â
âI want mashed potatoes,â Kiri said, coming into the room. âLike how Erick made them.â
âThen that is what we shall have.â Jane moved toward the cold room, asking, âWho wants to start explaining?â
Kiri said, âI want to know where Erick is, and why you think he isnât dead, even though Yggdrasil has been shown to survive when horrible things have been done to Erick. And then I want a highlight of everything else you think is important.â She added, âAnd I want to know about the runic armaments you all got, but I can wait on that. We probably donât have enough time to get through everything before the nightly siege.â
Jane glanced to Teressa, who glanced to Poi. Who was going to start?
Poi began, âSo there was this Teleporting Pad in this place called Enduring Forge, located under the Northern Tribulations; the mountain range that runs all throughout Nelboor. It was there thatâ¦â
Poi explained a lot of things.
Kiri listened. She calmly raised objections. Poi elaborated. Jane joined in sometimes. Teressa took over once she was done with the major cooking, weaving a story of the Worldly Path fit for a bard. As they ate nice steaks and copious mashed potatoes with lots of butter, they got back to barracks teasing, and assorted stories, and gallows humor. Kiri broke down a few times for reasons she didnât go into, but Jane, Poi, and Teressa were there to lift her back up. By the time dinner was actually over and cleaned up, Kiri remained concerned about what happened to Erick.
Jane said, âHeâs alive, Kiri, because if heâs dead then Iâm⦠Iâm not sure what. Itâll be bad.â
Poi said, âWe have Minds on various necromancers the world over, who are already trying to call forth Erickâs soul from the manasphere. Thereâs a small chance that he could slip through those nets, but itâs a low chance. Very low.â
Jane looked to Poi, and asked a question that had been burning a hole in the back of her thoughts. âQuilatalap?â
âYes,â Poi answered.
Teressa breathed deep, mumbling, âFuck.â
âIf thatâs how it is, then thatâs how it is. Okay. Fine.â Kiri breathed deep, then she seemed to appear lighter, as though she had set aside her worries, and moved on to other ones. She declared, âDammit all to fucking shit. I missed out by coming back to Spur, didnât I!â She looked to Teressa, saying, âFucking world-class prognosticator.â She looked to Poi. âAdamantium armor!â And then Jane. âAnd enough Points to make everything easier!â
âYup!â Jane said, âAnd donât forget the runework! And the gridwork! And the reflections. Thatâs probably the biggest deal to come out of all this. All three of us can reflect most directed spellwork.â
Kiri scowled. âWhy donât they teach us that in Arcanaeum!â
Teressa smirked. âAnd I got aura control and Remade every single Shaping spell and a lot of the basic ones, too.â
Poi said, âYou made out very well, Teressa.â
âI did, didnât I?â Teressa smiled.
Kiri said, âThis is infuriating! I thought I had a good education, but I didnât get a sponsor until I came here⦠Granted, my sponsor is Erick, but... Dammit.â She asked Teressa, âWhich do you think is more important? Aura control, or all the senses?â
Teressa said, âAura control, for sure.â
Jane said, âYeah. Aura control. Iâm working on it, but I havenât had much luck.â
âThereâs gonna be a lot of downtime in the coming siege,â Poi said, âSo you got time to practice.â
âBut besides all that, reflection spellwork is super important.â Teressa said, âThe reflection-thing is mostly used against people, though, which isnât something that happens a lot in Spur.â
Jane said, âDad knew about the importance of reflections before we went to Nelboor.â
âHe did.â Teressa said, âAnd I think I was rather dismissive at the time; shows what I know.â
Kiri looked a bit lostâ
Poi said to Kiri, âSpur would have lost a lot more people without your presence. And besides that, Erick will eventually be back. Iâm sure heâll pick up some equally world-changing magic aside from [Gate], too, and heâll want to share.â
âOh yeah.â Teressa said, â100% gonna happen.â
Jane smiled.
Kiri gave a small grin. âI can only hope.â And then she frowned, and said, âIâm glad to be here, but⦠Itâs been⦠Sometimes Iâve felt as though Iâve saved someone from themselves only to find their corpse among the dead the next day. And these idiotsâ These traveling adventurers from Greensoil are the worst. Theyâre all FUCKING IDIOTS.â
âAh. So nothing has changed.â Teressa nodded.
Poi said, âYup. You were saving idiots back on your tour of duty in ArâKendrithyst, too, so this shouldnât be that much different.â
Kiri frowned. â⦠I suppose the scale is different. I actually see every individual body these days. I see every failure to communicate, and every failure of orders. Every single night at least 10 to 15 people die trying to kill a big amalgam because the big ones can be anywhere from level 75 to 95.â She stressed, âEveryone wants the easy levels and none of the idiots are prepared to actually fight at that level.â
Jane smiled softly, feeling suddenly giddy as she said, âThen itâs a good thing weâre back. Iâm going to kill-steal all of those amalgams.â
âGood fucking luck!â Kiri exclaimed.
It was good to be home.
Poi said, âYou will follow orders, Jane, and not deviate from them.â
Jane waved him off, âYeah, yeah, yeah.â
Poi gave her a pretty impressive glare.
Jane held her hands in the air, saying, âIâll be good! I swear!â
Teressa grinned. Kiri smirked.
Poi mm-hmmâd.