Chapter 171, 1/2
Ar'Kendrithyst
Erick got out of the hot tub. He dripped water and steam as he cleaned up his meal and every bit of mess he had made while he sat there, eating scones and gazing across the mountains. It had been a good break, but it was time to move on, and even though the elder of the house wasnât present, and likely only ever existed in the distant, distant past, if at all, Erick still wanted to be a good guest.
When he was once again dressed and ready to go, with his backpack on and his spellwork recast, Erick went out into the village and looked around one last time. He hadnât been a guest for long, but it was a nice little place. Maybe he would be back later, but probably not.
He looked up and relaxed as he simply stood there, letting the cool white light of the blue Core soak into his face, and warm his body. And then Erick opened his eyes and lightstepped into the air above the village.
âThanks for the hospitality,â Erick said one last time, before turning his gaze outward.
Where to next?
There were many choices. That mountain range with its cities. The dry lands over there in the center of that continent, with the little villages. The riverlands over there. The coast. The islands past the coast. The other continents. The giant cities on the other continent. Another small city nearby.
âGot a suggestion, Ophiel?â Erick glanced at the little guy on his shoulder.
Chirp chirp.
âSome place Yggdrasil would like.â Erick nodded. âGood idea.â
With that in mind⦠Where would Yggdrasil like to be?
âHeâs already in two bodies of water. Perhaps something⦠less wet?â
Chirp Chirp.
âHe likes the water so weâll keep that the same. That rules out the mountains and the plains⦠Letâs fly around until we find something nice.â Erick looked up the bowl of the inner world, to where it vanished past the depth of air, and then completely disappeared beyond the blue curvature of the Core above. âThe Core seems like an ocean of mana, but⦠Not there, either.â
Chirp chirp!
Erick said, âAh! Right. I should test some basic spellwork, to understand if everything works the same down here before I explore.â
One of the nearby Ophiel got ready for testing, chirping as he hovered in front of Erick.
Erick smiled. Then he and Ophiel moved high into the sky to test out his magics.
After a few tests of basic spellwork, aiming at nothing in particular and canceling his spells before they reached very far at all, Erick quickly realized some important facts about the Outer Core to keep in mind going forward. Magic down here was the same as it was on the Surface. Even [Teleport] worked, which was a surprise. For some reason, Spatial Magic didnât work in the Underworld, but it worked here, directly next to the Core.
But another test conducted on a cloudgate showed that there might be a problem leaving this place.
Ophiel blipped down, aiming for the tunnel Erick knew to exist beyond the cloudgate below. The ball of feathers and eyes ended up bouncing off of the cloudy surface, unable to pass through. Physically pushing didnât seem to get Ophiel anywhere, either. Erick recalled Ophiel and frowned at the cloudgate.
He could certainly get through the cloudgate again, no problem, but the thought of fighting so many monsters so soon filled him with a small dread that sent him mentally recoiling. Either the thought of being trapped down here, or the thought of having to face an unexpectedly strong monster, or the idea of never seeing Jane again⦠He wasnât certain which of his thousand and one thoughts sent him reeling, but he went reeling, for sure.
Several deep breaths later Erick calmed himself down, and he told himself that he could do what needed to be done, when it needed to be done. But not yet. Not so soon. There was still a lot to do down here.
And since Spatial Magic worked down here then maybe he could make [Gate] and get home that way, avoiding the monsters completely! Erick smiled as he had that thought. Well then. There was already a plan to work with Yggdrasil to make [Gate], so that plan moved to the front of his needs. He would conduct at least one of the tests he had in mind for [Gate] creation, and he might even succeed.
But there was a problem with that plan.
The Worldly Path ended with a visit from Melemizargo, and then the potential Walker got [Gate]. At least, this is how it was according to everything Erick had discovered so far. Because of that fact, Erick suspected that there might be a problem with completing this Quest in the Core. The mana down here felt different than the mana up there, but to be sure that his theory was correct, he caâ
He stopped.
Erick prepared to cast a spell in the same way that one prepares to touch a hot stove; hesitant, and then all at once. This time, he followed through. He cast a spell.
A cascading orb of white light flashed into existence overhead, spreading radio waves all over, and eliciting a white fog out of the air all around Erick. He had already input the searching target, and he was prepared to see the white fog turn deep blue the second [Cascade Imaging] started, but as moments turned to minutes and the foggy map turned more solidâ¦
There was no blue.
Melemizargo was not in this land.
Erick⦠was not sure how to feel about that. He had touched the stove and found it cold.
But if Melemizargo wasnât here⦠Were the other gods here?
To test this new theory, Erick thought up a good Particle Magic question about wormholes, so that he wouldnât be in violation of Particular Insightâs requirement to ask about Particle Magic, specifically, and he called the god of The End and Time. A hundred mana vanished into the manasphere like so many scattered white glows.
The white glows were odd; that had never happened before. Usually it was a simple cast of mana that vanished into the manasphere, and then gold fire appeared. But...
Erick waited. He frowned. It never took this long before.
He eyed the inverted world.
â⦠Hello?â Erick asked, âPhagar?â
No response.
He checked the manasphere, casting his sight back in time, to see if Phagar was there like he usually was when Erick went looking.
No Phagar.
âUh. Okay.â Erick said, âThis is rather strange, Ophiel.â
Ophiel chirped; it was very strange!
Phagar could simply choose not to answer, as gods were wont to do, but that seemed incorrect.
Well.
Whatever.
Erick moved right along. He had the main plan already made; he just needed a place to plant Yggdrasil somewhere and then he could certainly talk to the people outside. Unless Yggdrasil couldnât grow here? Or maybe Yggdrasilâs other bodies had popped when Erick went out of range? Ohh. That might be bad. Hopefully that hadnât happened.
Erick picked a spot in the distance that looked good and headed that way.
- - - -
Upon seeing his chosen spot, which was a mountain, with a village and a freshwater lake at the base, Erick spotted a better location.
A city lay in the far distance, like a glittering patch of white buildings clinging to the space between a land of green, and the sparkling blue ocean. It didnât take long to get there, and when Erick did, he knew this was the proper location for Yggdrasil. Something called to Erick as he eyed the place and judged it perfectâ
Well. Not the city itself. More specifically, the patch of ocean next to the city. Erick would explore that later, but for now, he had a city to inspect.
⦠Purely to make sure this was an actually-good location. Heâd get to Yggdrasil soon enough.
⦠He was gunshy about summoning his largest [Familiar], too, but heâd get to it soon enough. He just needed some time. Yes. That was all. A bit more time.
The city was a land of white towers and cathedrals and shorter, but no less well-made duplexes and single family homes, and apartment buildings. Almost every building had a picture window of some sort, made of rainbow stained glass, while some, like the cathedrals and governmental buildings had multiple windows of artful, crystal light. And it was crystal in the more expensive places, for sure; not glass. The streets were paved with white stone. Fountains bubbled everywhere. Bakeries were fully stocked with bread while beer halls and smokehouses and restaurants were all well provisioned, like the people who lived here had simply stepped out for a break.
Except there were no people at all. A [Cascade Imaging] helped to prove as much, and with some shifting of that Imaging, Erick found a few good places to look for answers. Searching for âbooksâ proved a great diversion, for the libraries had so very, very many books. Thankfully, they were not blank, or some shit like that. Erick had half expected that to happen. But, no. The books were real. But the books held a different problem. They were in languages that Erick had never seen before. There were passing similarities to Ancient Script in more than a few books, and once, Erick even managed to read half of a letter he found tucked into a desk by a window. Only half the letter, though. The rest made no sense at all.
And now, Erick stood in a dark wood library of some noble, for sure, for the room was three stories tall and about that wide, with walls made of shelves. Every shelf was packed full of non magical books, each bound in fine leather and organized in some arcane system that Erick had never encountered before. Parts of it seemed organized alphabetically, but only smaller parts, and Erick could only tell this much because of his massive Intelligence, for sure.
This library was organized oddly, but at least it wasnât organized by color. He had found and dismissed four separate libraries of similar size to this one because they were organized by color. Massive wastes of space, for sure, but they were certainly pretty rooms to look at.
This library, in this massive house of white stone and towers and greenhouses, was probably the one Erick was going to study for a while, if he chose to stay here. This house didnât have any active magic âthere wasnât any active magic anywhere, actuallyâ but these books were clearly supposed to be of a magical nature. Erick recognized some formations on the shelves that should have been filled with magic, and almost every single book had smatterings of formation diagrams in them, tooâ
âAh. I should check my Minor Entity of the Script access.â Erick almost slapped himself. âMaybe there are more people in this land with me.â And if not people, then Rozeta, for sure. He put the book back on the shelf and instigatedâ
A human woman of white everything, from hair to skin to eyes to her white pantsuit, stepped out of the air three meters away.
Rozeta semi-rapidly said, âHello, Erick. Welcome to the Outer Core. I am exceedingly busy at the moment, otherwise I might have been here before now but since youâre forcing the issue: Is there some specific thing I can help you with?â
Erick nodded, then he rapidly asked, âWhere are all the people? Can I plant Yggdrasil in the ocean in that direction?â He pointed toward the ocean. âDo you mind if I make some magic here? Whatâs going on with this place? Whatâs up with the [Luminous Beam] on the guardians? And can I get a cast of [Language Acquisition] to understand these books? But I donât have any grand-rads on me at the moment.â
Rozeta nodded, then said, âEasy ones first, and not in the order you asked them: Make whatever magic you wish, but be respectful of this land. You were already respectful enough to solve the breach you caused, and youâre you, so though you have trespassed, I trust you enough not to force you out. Because I trust you, you may plant Yggdrasil wherever you wish.
âBut know this:
âThe Outer Core is a memorial to lost lands and a receptacle for replacement parts in case the worst should happen on Veird.â Rozeta said, âThis land was not intended to become a holy land to my people, but it has, and the wrought feverishly protect it from all intruders. You are an intruder, but you are also a Minor Entity, which does hold a certain amount of sway. How much? I will not say, for that would be involving myself with mortal matters.
âAs for the guardians possessing [Luminous Beam]: the Core is protected by the wrought, as previously explained. Itâs complicated and I wonât go into all of the details of how, mostly because security is security, but those guardians and their cloudgates have been there for a very, very long time. Theyâre old, but they also get upgraded every so often. Recently, theyâve been upgraded with [Luminous Beam], and since [Luminous Beam] is a very good spell, they use it almost exclusively ever since it was added.
âI believe this is actually a bug in the formations which create the guardians, but it is only after your breakthrough that the caretakers of that magic are finally starting to agree with me that their system is bugged.
âFinally: Yes, you may have [Language Acquisition] cast upon you. Instead of the usual cost, Iâve already taken the liberty of removing the grand rads from the monsters you killed and left to rot. You now have a plus-395 grand rad balance. Use it as you wish.â She flickered with divine fire and magic settled over Erick. âThis [Language Acquisition] is a good version that will last as long as youâre inside the Outer Core and a week past that. You probably wonât learn anything too interesting from these books since theyâre all based upon reality that no longer exists, but I would never begrudge anyone their diversions.â She stood fractionally straighter, âAnd now that your questions are answered, I must tell you off.
âNormally, a breach is a lot more deadly for the breacher. Sometimes they get through, though, and they fail to stop the flood of monsters that come inside with them. Those monsters remove on average at least ten cloudgates, letting even more monsters flood into the Outer Core, before theyâre stopped. If ever all the cloudgates should fall, which has happened before, then the Inner Core becomes vulnerable. With the Inner Core exposed, all life on this world is in danger ofâ¦
âLetâs simply call it âbad thingsâ, because the failure states have looked different every time weâve gotten close to them. But, on the plus side: The Core Defenses ramp up significantly if things look to be going that way.â Rozeta said, âLuckily, this time you prevented that entire series of problems from ever becoming a problem. So, with that, and everything else youâve done taken into account, you get a pass, Erick.
âFrom me. I should clarify: You get a pass from me.â Rozeta stared a bit, saying, âBut this shit here was dangerous. You have more than enough power to prevent the worst case scenario, and Iâm truly glad you thought to do so, so you get a pass. But other people know what could have happened here, since theyâve lived through it multiple times before.
âEvery time someone tries to reach the core, and succeeds, the world almost dies. The wrought understand this. Perhaps theyâre too insular down here, in the Underworld. Perhaps some of them disregard fleshy life as frivolous and flighty, so they donât treat with true mortals like they should. Perhaps they should have been kinder and asked you to meet with them inside their cities.
âBut whatever.
âThe wrought have a purpose, and that purpose is to protect the world from an unexpected End, and they do a very good job of that. Aside from that, theyâre free to live their lives as they see fit, making their own governments and societies and decisions about those societies.â Rozeta breathed. Then she said, âI donât control the wrought. I give guidance and support, and thatâs it. So donât expect me to get between them and you when they invariably come for you.â
Erick felt the weight of the moment upon his chest. âOkay. I get it.â
âI know you do.â Rozeta said, âAnd just so you know: Some of those wrought will arrive here in a few days to investigate everything that happened, but there are no easy ways to get here. There are no back doors to the Core. So theyâll have to wade through the monsters like you did, but since all the doors are closed and monsters fill the passageways, thereâs not much of an actual emergency. A lot of the usual emergency response was not necessary.â Rozeta said, âThe people that do show will want you to leave, but youâre free to do whatever you want, and theyâre free to do whatever they want, too. I ask you not to kill them; I have already asked them not to kill you.â
A moment passed while Rozeta let that all sink in.
Erick said, âHeard and understood. Thanks for the warnings.â
Rozeta nodded. âEven with all that said, there is one more important thing to tell you, and then I must be going: I will not let you create a [Gate] in this land. You are a Wizard, so you could probably blow through a few of the protections against such a creation of magic, but I will not save you from the backlash when the defenses activate. There can be no back doors to the Core.â She paused. She continued, âBut simultaneously, I wish you well on your creation of [Gate]. I can guide you on that, if you wish, but such guidance will not happen here, or now. Come to the Orrery in Nergal, instead.â
âUnderstood.â Erick said, âNo back doors.â
âNone.â Rozeta said, âEven the [Telepathy] youâll get out of Yggdrasil isnât something I would normally allow, but Iâm planning for the far future, here, and I need to see what happens. So I will allow this, for a while. Yggdrasil will not be allowed to stay in the Outer Core, either.â Rozeta relaxed a fraction. âIf you want a place for Yggdrasil, I can make a nice spot for him outside of the Core. I promise heâll like it. I promise you will like it, too.â
âOkay. I understand.â Erick said, âIâll replant him elsewhere. What sort of place were you thinking?ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
Rozeta allowed herself a tiny smile, and a grateful sigh. âIâm not sure yet; Iâll probably ask some of my people to make a spot.â She said, âA final piece of advice: When you get out of here, donât accept my fatherâs help creating a [Gate]. You donât need him, Erick. Youâre Wizard enough on your own, and Iâm sure, with time, you willââ Her eyes flicked left with her head turning a moment later, but slower, and more methodical. She frowned at the empty space as she spoke to Erick, âYouâll come into your power soon enoâ Bah.â She turned back to Erick. âI must go. Call me again in a few days when you have more questions.â
And then she vanished.
Erick looked at the space Rozeta had occupied for a moment longer, wondering if that had been a good interaction, or not. He leaned toward âgoodâ, but he had apparently risked the world to break into this place, and Rozeta did not approve.
Erick wanted to rail against the injustice of not being let into a protected space, but that seemed childish. Security was security, for a reason, and the Core had a very good reason for being secured like it was.
Anyway. Next time Erick would ask Rozeta about what it meant to be a Wizard, and why the other gods werenât able to answer him here in the Inner Core. There were a lot of questions that Erick would have to save till next time. And⦠yeah.
Rozeta was busy.
Erick was busy, too. He could talk to her again later, but in the meantime, he had no idea what was going on outside of the Core and he didnât want to be separated from everyone else for too long. It was time to summon Yggdrasil. Even if [Gate] creation was blocked down here, there were many other reasons to plant the big guy down nearby. Erick wasnât done with his exploration of the land down here, for there were certainly secrets laying in wait in thousands upon thousands of places, but he needed someone to talk to that wasnât Ophiel just parroting him. Itâd be nice to talk to everyone else on the surface, too. Just how long had Erick been gone, anyway? Hopefully not too long.
And besides that, Yggdrasil was probably worried about Erick, too. Erick knew he was certainly worried about Yggdrasil.
One final thing to do in this library, though. Erick scanned through the stacks, looking for a few books with lots of pictures to aid with learning the language. Such targets were easy enough to find; there was a whole shelf of little knickknacks for kids, including stuffed toys and leather balls and more than a few dolls, along with a whole row of colorful books on the second to lowest shelf. Knowing what he now knew, Erick suspected that this place was a copy of someoneâs former home from the Old Cosmology, but translated to this New Cosmology.
Every single city down here was probably like that.
Erick copied every childrenâs book on that colorful childrenâs shelf, along with several dozen of the more expensive-looking probably-magic grimoires strung throughout the rest of the library. That would be enough reading material while he hung out with Yggdrasil for the next few days, or something.
Holding his new copies in his light, Erick and Ophiel took a lightstep to their next location, by the ocean.
- - - -
The white city had been built upon a jag of land extending out from the main continent. Past that jut of land, a string of smaller islands trailed off into the ocean to where they grew smaller and smaller until, after five islands, the bumpy land disappeared under the waves, and all that lay ahead was blue.
The city had developed onto the first three of those islands with a massive, arched, white bridge made of stone. For a brief moment Erick thought the bridge was an architectural marvel because stone couldnât get that thin without magic, and he saw no magic, but then his second thought informed him that this was the Underworld, and gravity was only a suggestion down here.
The bridge was but one of three such bridges leading from the mainland to the nearest island. A similar bridge connected that first island to the second one, and then a third one connected the second island to the third.
The first of the islands held a massive, soaring white castle of several towers and a few curtain walls. Bright blue roofs and shining silver gates served almost as decorations, while private gardens and rooms upon rooms of plush bedding and couches and all the proper amenities of nobility served almost as showrooms, telling the story of the white cityâs prosperity. Practically every room had a bit of rainbow stained âglassâ, too, in the form of windows set above doors. There were a few masterwork sculptures of crystal in courtyards here and there, as well.
The second island had a wizardâs tower of some sort, with an orrery at the top and enough sculptures of wizards to give Erick pause. He didnât spend too long there because that place was packed with secrets, and with the first sorts of traps that he had seen in this land. He could suss out all the little secrets of that place another day, though, for he had a mission.
But before he got to that mission, Erick checked on the third island. An obvious chapel stood in the center of that land, dedicated to gods Erick had never heard of, or seen before. He didnât spend too long there, either, but mostly because it was one of the few places that seemed truly sacred.
And, he had other stuff to do. He had checked out those locations just to ensure that there would be no obvious problems with what he came here to do, for the ocean and Yggdrasil called to him.
Erick returned to the sky above it all. To the right of the islands lay a protected harbor. Boats bobbed in the gentle waves of that harbor, looking ready to unload their goods, or to accept loads of goods waiting for them on the docks. Those transfers would never happen though, for those boats had been sitting there like that for a very, very long timeâ Or? Ah. Maybe not?
They had likely only been there since the last time this land was ravaged by monsters and the Core almost fell. According to Rozetaâs implications, nothing here was actually 1,450 years old; dated to the time of the Sundering. Whatever the case, Erick wasnât going to plant Yggdrasil in the harbor, anyway; that would be disrespectful.
To the left of the white castle and wizardâs tower and chapel and harbor, though, lay the open ocean. The ocean was freshwater, too, so saltwater wasnât even a concern.
Erick set down on a small, sandy beach at the base of the white castle. Ophiel propped up a [Prismatic Ward] across the beach while another primed themselves with [Greater Treat Wounds]. A third Ophiel was already out in the deep blue, under the freshwater waves, looking for a good spot.
The beach dipped below the waves, sand becoming seafloor as the land gently sloped down a continental shelf that ended about a kilometer and a half from shore, where a steep drop gave way to the true ocean. The greater ocean was only half a kilometer deep, though. There were a few underwater hills that rose halfway to the surface, but mostly, and judging only from the small inspection Erick had made of it all, the Outer Core ocean was a uniform half kilometer deep.
Of all the artificial things of this âwarehouse worldâ, the uniformity of the ocean depths was perhaps the strangest. Or, more likely, it was simply the strangest thing yet; there was still a lot of land and empty cities to explore.
That was all stuff to do later, though.
An Ophiel flooded the land with his [Physical Domain]; not to break anything, but to check to see how deep the dirt actually went, before it encountered the absolute barrier of the edge of the Outer Coreâ
Ah. Erick found the edge. With a bit of prodding to make sure⦠Yup! Beyond the flat bottom of the ocean, about 1500 meters beyond, a rather uniform pressure pushed back on Ophielâs power. Erick didnât press further. He relaxed Ophielâs [Physical Domain] and picked one of the larger underwater hills, about seven kilometers out from the beach.
A few Ophiel went there in sunform. One of them cast a columnar [Prismatic Ward] straight up and down, from the base of where Yggdrasil would grow, to three hundred meters up, pushing that Restful density to as large as it could go. Erick hoped such a preparation would lessen the mana drain he was about to endure⦠It might!
It might not.
âEnough preparation, Erick,â Erick said to himself. âJust do it.â
Ophiels chirped in agreement; they were ready to support him with [Greater Treat Wounds] if he went down, and he probably would.
Erick cast through Ophiel, targeting the land below the wavesâ
- - - -
A broken dream of fragmented sight and constant missing time, with days feeling like minutes and moments passing without measure, suddenly changed. The world seemed smaller, and larger. Land was land, water was water, air was air again, unlike the jumble it had once been. As reality solidified, time solidified, too.
In a lake by a city of protective candles and biting dirt, and in another lake in a place filled with great big fish and not enough lightning, Yggdrasil realized that he was also somewhere else. A new place. Tracing the whole of himself, he found a curved, strange path that connected him to another set of senses deep, deep underground. In the other direction, Yggdrasil found his old bodies, up on the Surface.
He focused completely on the new space.
A land of endless stillness. A land with a familiar person, of warmth and love and light, calling to him.
The world began to make sense again.
Yggdrasil asked the ending dream, âFather?â
- - - -
Erick slumped to the beach as everything left him, drained like so much blood from a body. His breath stopped as his heart slowed and Mana and Health ripped away, forming a small life at the bottom of a fake ocean that neededmore power. A hacking laugh and a spray of blood escaped Erickâs throat as blood spurted from his nose and turned his vision red and he struggled to stay awake. He managed, but it was a bare thing; he knew this was going to happen. He had been prepared. He was barely prepared enough. Ophiel hit him with a [Greater Treat Wounds], and that helped.
Erickâs vision drew him to the source of his pain, and his connection to the outside world.
Across the way, kilometers into the ocean, white surf burst the blue surface and kept on coming, lifting waves into the air and dumping millions of tons of water back into the ocean, only to form more fountains of white that rose further into the sky. As seconds passed the explosion parted, revealing what had surfaced from below.
White branches extended into the cloudy air of the Outer Core, and then stretched out, like rivers of white that rapidly spread into tributaries and streams of glowing brightness. Fiery green leaves burst into existenceâ
And the drain slowed.
Erick breathed deep, like someone had taken off a boulder from his chest. Ophiel hit him with another [Greater Treat Wounds], and that took the remaining edge off. Erick lifted himself from the sandsâ
A brilliant gold fire rippled inside the landscape of his soul, like the gentle tearing of a net. Freezing chills followed as the net tore, but the net began to repair almost as fast, as though a million invisible spiders were stitching it back together, but in a different arrangement. As the golden net fell back into his soul, back to invisibility, it seemed thicker in some spots, but looser in others. A brief check on Yggdrasilâs blue box revealed Erickâs maximum summons was at 4; one more than before.
A blue box appeared as soon as the gold light settled.
Special Quest!
The Worldly Path.
Steps taken: 3 of ???
Reward: Gate
So he was still on the right Path. That was good. Erick dismissed the box and gazed across the waters. His breath hitched as his heart beat harder; it was a magnificent sight.
Yggdrasil was almost fully grown. Kilometers tall and just as wide, the white tree towered over the blue ocean, its kilometer long branches filled with leaves of green fire. As Erick watched, more Mana drained from him, and a bright, rainbow crown encircled all of Yggdrasil like a road of prismatic light rounding a mountain.
The drain from Yggdrasil slowed even more, down to a trickle, and then to something small enough that Erickâs regeneration overcame Yggdrasilâs demands. He relaxed as he waited for some Mana and Health to regenerate. His spellwork had shut off when Yggdrasil emptied him. A half minute later, Erick turned on [Greater Lightwalk], and then [Lodestar]. Yggdrasil was almost fully formed.
With warm, loving thoughts, Erick sent a telepathic, wordless greeting to Yggdrasil, speaking of home and hello and howâve-you-been, all at once.
âFATHER!â Yggdrasilâs voice boomed across the sky of the Outer Core, filling the world with demanding, and longing, and hope, âWHEREââ
âOver here, Yggdrasil.â Erick tugged on Yggdrasilâs sight, directing him to the beach. âIâm rightââ
A tendril of light erupted out from Yggdrasil, longer and thicker than all of his branches combined. He touched Erick, instantly. In a flashing moment, Erick found himself standing on the upper branches of Yggdrasil, upon a flattish section of the curving trunk. For a moment he was disoriented, but he recovered fast enough. Erick guessed he had been [Teleport Other]âd, and that was fine, because there was something else to worry about aside from his own safety. All around him, formerly-fiery green foliage dropped through the air in a minor downpour of crunchy, curled and browned leaves. The world seemed dimmer, and it probably was, for Yggdrasilâs bark flickered and faded with obvious sadness. He didnât cry, though, because that was a human emotion, and Yggdrasil certainly was not human.
Erick instantly laid down on Yggdrasil, putting his arms wide and hugging the branch as he pressed his face against the dim white surface, saying, âItâs okay, Yggdrasil. Sorry for leaving you behind. Did you have trouble while I was gone?â
Yggdrasilâs dim bark brightened where Erick touched. After a shaking moment, emotions settled. Slowly, for kilometers all around, light began returning to the massive tree. New green leaves began to grow like a spreading green fire at the ends of every one of Yggdrasilâs branches.
A small, prismatic colored [Scry] eye appeared in front of Erick. Looking at him. Erick smiled at the eye and sat up as the eye rapidly moved around him, checking for truth. A spell flickered out of the bark underneath Erickâs feet and his wounds began to close. Another spell flickered much less than a Script Second later, and the blood from his most recent incident vanished from his face.
Erick smiled gently. âHello, Yggdrasil.â
Yggdrasilâs voice was a small thing. âHello, Father.â
âI missed you.â
âI missed you, too.â
âTell me all about it.â Erick laid his head sideways on the now-glowing bark. âHow long has it been since I vanished?â
âI donât know! Why did you vanish!â
Erick turned around and looked upward, watching the Core through Yggdrasilâs brightly shining green leaves. And he started talking, first about Enduring Forge, and then about the blipping incident, and how he thought heâd appear somewhere dangerous, yes, but not nearly as dangerous as it turned out to be. And then Erick moved on to talk of monsters and danger and all that. Ophiel showed up soon enough, depositing the books Erick had copied next to him on the trunk, while Erick rambled on about everything.
Yggdrasil listened, silently, intently, his prismatic [Scry] eye hovering around Erick.
Erick got up and moved some of his new stuff around, organizing it as he continued to talk, giving highlights and lowlights to the experience of the Underworld, talking of specific monsters and their abilities. He felt like he was disgorging his worries onto a child, but he asked if his words were too much more than once.
Yggdrasil went, âNot too much. Tell me more, please.â
And so Erick did. He got to the part where he crossed the barrier, into this land, and he named this place the Outer Core, as Rozeta had explained to him.
âI havenât explored much, but I plan on doing more of that.â Erick added, âAnd now that youâre here, you can explore it with me.â
âNo. You canât leave me again. You stay right there.â Yggdrasil said, âThis Underworld is too dangerous.â
âI love you too, Yggdrasil.â Erick said, âIâll stay right here for a while because Iâm tired and I missed you, too. How about you tell me whatâs been happening on the Surface?â
â⦠I donât know.â Yggdrasil said, âThey hurt me, so I hurt them back. You left and they hurt me! I donât know whatâs happening out there. Lightning is happening. That is what they deserve.â
âIâm sorry that happened, Yggdrasil.â Erick asked, âDid you reach out to Poi, or Jane, or Teressa? Did you ask anyone for help?â
â⦠No⦠I should have?â
âYou should have; yes. I might be your connection to this world, but youâll be able to stand on your own eventually. You need to talk to other people, too.â Erick asked, âWant me to show you how? Iâve been lost down here for a bit, and I need to talk to some people, too. You can listen in while I talk to them.â
âYes. Show me.â
Erick stepped into Yggdrasilâs existenceâ
The world turned indistinct, and dark, except for a world of light around Erick, and two ephemeral streams of linking intent that passed outward, through deep darkness and into the world beyond. Other, broader sensory suites spread out in every other direction of this Outer Core, but only those two links went through the protections of this space. And so⦠Erick followed those links. Behind him hovered a prismatic presence, helping him remain connected, preventing any straying from the path.
Another land of light lay in the sun and starlight far awayâ
Erick came back to himself, following the guiding presence of Yggdrasil back though the dark, back to the Outer Core. He opened his real eyes again and gave himself a moment to understand what had just happened. He checked himself and he was still alive, still sitting on a flat bend in Yggdrasilâs upper trunk. He had obviously journeyed through the manasphere to Yggdrasilâs other bodies, but it was an odd sort of journey⦠Whatever had happened, it was apparently fine.
He nodded.
He went back in, following and allowing Yggdrasilâs light to guide his mind to the Surface, oh so far away.
Both locations felt the sameâ
âErick!â Poiâs voice came to him from the right-ish side of Yggdrasilâs Surface bodies. âYouâre alive! Thank the gods.â
Erick almost laughed in joy to hear Poiâs voice, but Poiâs voice was desperate. âWhatâs wrong?â
âWhâ Uh!â Poi backpedaled, âNothing is wrong. Are you enjoying yourself? While the rest of us worry ourselves near to death?â
Erick asked again, âWhatâs wrong, Poi?â
âNothing is wrong, Erick. Everything is fine. But, if you could give me a lesson to hand to Kiri regarding Permanency magic, then things might be a bit more fine.â
âSo youâre not willing to tell me. Okay.â Erick paused. He asked, âHow bad is it?â
âNothing is wrong, Erick. Do whatever you have to do to get [Gate], then come back to Spur.â Poi added, âAh. And help Yggdrasil with his defenses over at Holorulo. Candlepoint is working to protect Yggdrasil, but people keep trying to [Dispel] him over in Nelboor. Heâs defenseless over there and the sky is a bit more full of lightning than it has to be.â
Yggdrasil spoke in their connection, âThey hurt me. So I hurt them back.â
âIâll work with him, Poi.â Erick asked, âHow long have I been gone?â
â33 days.â Poi said, âItâs been a concern, but Silverite was right; she wasnât going to start worrying until two months had passed. Jane will be happy to know that youâre okay. Weâre all happy to know that youâre okay.â
âSorry I made you worry. Iâm glad to hear youâre okay, too.â Erick sent, âIâll send a packet about what happened, first, and then another about Permanency tips.â With a spark of concentration, Erick lined up his memories and sent them along in two bursts of magic. He didnât edit many of the memories of his time after falling out of the mana stream, up until he reached the cloudgate and the guardians, but past that he left it as a blur of oddity in a safe land. The Permanency package was well crafted, though; everything Kiri would need to apply that spellwork to all of her magic was in there. After those messages flowed down the pipe, Erick sent, âIâll try to get back as soon as I can, but itâs going to be rough returning.â
After a long moment, Poi sent, âUh. Yeah. That will be rough. Uh. Do you want me to talk to Killzoneâ Iâm going to talk to Killzone and Silverite about this. Maybe they know a way to call off whatever squad is going after you.â
âThey probably donât have anything to do with Underworld politics anymore⦠But do gauge how they respond to me being in the Outer Core. I want to know that before I come backââ
âYou canât come back while youâre still on the Worldly Path.â Poi sent, âWeâre handling the problems here, Erick. You should return with ancient magics at your beck and call, and not before.â
Erick frowned. âYou call me if it gets bad. I can probably help, even though you refuse to tell me what is going on.â
â⦠Do you want to tell Kiri how to get [Luminous Beam]? While weâre at this, anyway.â
âYes,â Erick said, without reservation. âItâs like thisâ¦â He sent along another packet. âThat should be it.â
Relief flooded down the connection.
Poi sent, âThis is more than enough help.â
Erick mentally nodded, then he sent, âSo. Anyway. This is Yggdrasil. Yggdrasil, this is Poi, one of my best friends. You can talk to him if you have problems.â
Yggdrasilâs massive, world spanning power flickered away from Erick, and landed on Poi. âHello, small blue man. I am Yggdrasil.â
With a proper mental bow and politeness, Poi sent, âHello, large World Tree. I am Poi Fulisade.â
âNow you two can talk for a while, or as long as you need.â Erick sent, âIâll talk to you later, Poi. Send everyone else my love!â
âYes, sir.â
Erick stepped back, flowing back to himself. As he departed the scene he felt, more than heard, Yggdrasil talk to Poi, like a mountain talking to an ant. He smiled at that feeling; talking to Yggdrasil was about the same for him, too.
Opening his eyes in the Outer Core, Erick sighed into the brightness all around. He watched the fiery green leaves dance upon the gentle winds of this quiet land. With a thought, he sent out Ophiels back into the white city to grab some necessities, like the copy of a bed, and a dresser with clothes fit for him, and a few other assorted items. In half an hour, Erick had a little space for himself set up on the flat-enough trunk of Yggdrasil, with some privacy dividers acting like walls to block the wind and make everything feel just a bit more secure.
When that was done Erick went to the stove and made himself a cup of tea, then he sat down on a nice couch to read some books, to learn at least one of the local languages. It was busywork, more than actual, productive work. Heâd make a [Renew] when Yggdrasil came back from talking to Poi, and after a rest ofâ
âAh. Shit. The kids with the mana sense problems.â
Erick set aside the book and dove back into Yggdrasilâs connections, to speak toâ
Ah.
Found her.
âArchmage Flatt!â Caretaker Shani of the House of the Wandering Soul responded, âWe heard you were dead!â
Erick smiled. âThe rumors of my untimely demise have been greatly exaggerated. I was merely indisposed for a while. Anyway. You need some new mana sense blocking spells, do you not?â
âWe do!â Shani softly said, âThe kids thought you had abandoned them.â
âAh. Well. Sorry about that. Things happen.â Erick glanced out through Yggdrasil at Holorulo, actually looking at the Surface world around him. It was a bit hard to understand, actually. The land was water. The water was air. The sky was fire and lightning. It was all quite surreal, but Erick could tell that Yggdrasil had torn up the place, too. Lightning shattered the water. Wind tore at the air. Storms broke the fire and washed away all who would attempt to attack.
Erick began to fix everything, one spellcast at a time, and gradually, things began to make sense again. The lightning rain stopped. The waters calmed. The stone shoreline repaired, but this time, there was a stone box sitting on the shore. Erick began filling that stone box with [Personal Delirium Charm]s, as he sent to Shani, âI canât personally deliver them this time, but theyâre right herebeside Yggdrasil, so you donât have too long of a trip in front of you. I calmed the sky. Can you please tell whomever you feel like telling: Stop attacking Yggdrasil.â Without giving her time to respond, he showed Yggdrasil to Shani, saying, âYggdrasil. This is Shani. Sheâll be by to pick up those charms I just cast into that box. Okay?â
Shani mentally panicked as a presence the size of the sky focused on her.
Yggdrasil sent, âOkay, Father. I understand. This person may approach.â
âThank you, Yggdrasil.â Erick sent, âSorry about the interruption of service, Shani.â
âPeâ Perfectly⦠Perfectly fine, Archmage Flatt. Thank you.â Shani rapidly sent, âThe kids appreciate this.â
Erick pulled back from that conversation, but he continued to fix a few more things around Yggdrasil at Holorulo, while telling Yggdrasil how to maintain proper defenses. Yggdrasil learned quickly, casting spells how Erick told him to cast.
Then Erick dove across the world, to Candlepoint, to check on the surroundings. The lake at Candlepoint seemed fine. The sky could use some touching up, though, so Erick fixed the weather while Yggdrasil placed some defenses.
Erick pulled back.
Opening his real eyes one again, he saw Yggdrasilâs [Scry] eye watching him.
Erick smiled, and said, âYou did well when I was gone, Yggdrasil. I didnât get any unexpected Kill Notifications from you. Iâm very proud of you for not killing anyone.â
âI tried to be good, just like you said, Father.â Yggdrasil asked, âYou wonât leave me again, will you?â
âI never meant to leave you in the first place. Iâm very sorry for that. I hope it never happens again.â Erick picked up a childrenâs book, asking, âWant to learn a new language with me? Or would you like to watch me make some magic?â
âI donât care about words on paper. I canât read.â
Erickâs eyes went wide, but before he could say anythingâ
Yggdrasil said, âI want to do nothing. You sit there and do nothing, too. Okay?â
Erick nodded. âIâll stay right here, Yggdrasil.â
âGood.â
Erick decided to read the book. Heâd try teaching Yggdrasil how to read later, if Yggdrasil felt like it. Probably wouldnât happen, though.
He sipped his tea, trying to understand the childrenâs book, and had a bit of bread and cheese while he was at it. Yggdrasilâs bright green foliage, kilometers away and waving like a dome of light and green fire, rustled a bit. A breeze flowed through.
This was relaxing.
⦠Erick wondered about Spur, though.
They were probably fine. Poi would have told him if he had to come home. Wouldnât he? Yeah; he would. Honestly⦠Erick had spent too much time âvacationingâ. It was likely past due for him to speed up this Worldly Path.
But if the end of this Path was Wizardryâ¦
Erick had been hesitant about summoning another Yggdrasil, but he was absolutely against dealing with Wizards, because that would mean dealing with himself, and his true place in the world. People seemed to like him so far, but he was under no illusions about what would happen if people discovered he was a Wizard. Everything and everyone would turn on him in a flashing instant.
- - - -
Hours and hours later, Yggdrasil quietly said, âThe light is always.â
Erick startled awake. He had fallen asleep while reading but he couldnât have been unconscious for anymore than an hour or two. He plucked the open magic book off his chest and set it aside, next to the bed with all the others.
Learning the language hadnât been that difficult and when the childrenâs books started making sense Erick had moved on to the grimoires, but reading those had been like reading Jabberwocky. Half the words were real, but the other half were arcane to him, both in sensibility and literally since they were about magical concepts that no longer existed. He barely recalled what he was reading, anyway, since he was barely awake at the moment. He eyed the fiery green sky of a canopy above, and the white lightning-like branches that held those flaming leaves far, far aloft.
He tried to make sense of what Yggdrasil had said.
He got nothing.
Groggily, Erick asked, âWhat?â
Yggdrasilâs [Scry] eye appeared in the air next to him; a small ball of prismatic light. âThe light is always. And my roots donât go deep. And everything pulls oddly.â
Erick stretched, yawning a bit as he dissected Yggdrasilâs words. Apparently he was still exhausted from the trek down here, and nothing made sense at that moment, but Erick came to himself quick enough. He got up, saying, âThere is no sun down here, Yggdrasil. That blue planet-sized sphere above is the Inner Core of Veird. Weâre in the Outer Core right now; the warehouse of Veird, where they keep their spare parts of the trappings of life in case anything should happen to the rest of the world. And so, this is a protected space. Thereâs a lock on this space to prevent people from easily entering, or leaving, and youâre brushing up against it when you send your roots deep. Gravity is also odd, since down here gravity always points toward the largest mass of stone. You might be experiencing a self-gravity of a kind, so yes, that would feel odd.â
âItâs not a sun?â
âCorrect. That blue thing is not a sun.â Erick walked over to the kitchen he had set up and started preparing dinner, since it might as well be dinner time. âIâm not sure how it works either, but the Inner Core gives off light like a sun. I know the world looks a bit weird to you, and feels even stranger⦠Does the light of the Inner Core feel good? Or are you mainly using your own [Kaleidoscopic Radiance] for light?â
Yggdrasil took a moment to respond. âI like the light. Iâm always in light. Down here Iâm always in the light? Itâs okay. Feels odd. I like real sun better. This sun not sun. Missing something.â
âI like the real sun, too.â Erick said, âRozeta has informed me that neither of us can stay down here, but if you want, she has offered a space outside the Core. Somewhere close and probably always full of light.â Erick said, âShe promised that you would like it. Would you like to be replanted out there?â
âYes.â Yggdrasil quickly added, âWe can leave together. Then you come build house in my branches at candle land and stay there. Okay?â
âI might have to go traveling again, to another land that is separate from the Surface.â Erick asked, âDo you remember the place in the Forest where your [Scry] eye could not follow?â
âNo. You come home and stay.â
Erick smiled as he tossed some onions and beef on the grill, saying, âAnd let you explore the cosmos while I canât move at all?â
â⦠I canât explore cosmos.â Yggdrasil said, âI like staying in one place.â
âThatâs what you say today. But what about tomorrow? Staying home is nice, but your home is going to be everywhere in the universe, as far as you can go, but to get there takes a bit of exploring of your own. One day youâll find yourself on completely alien planets, supporting the growth of light and life.â Erick asked, âOr do you not want to see the places I told you about?â
Yggdrasilâs leaves flickered with unsure brightness. â⦠I want to see other worlds, too.â
âAnd Iâll help you get there, but this means that I will have to leave sometimes, so that you may follow.â Erick added, âAnd sometimes you will go somewhere, so that I may follow. This is life.â
A gentle groan of accepted disappointment moved through Yggdrasil like a very large branch gently bending in the wind. It wasnât exactly a human sound, for it wasnât born of a human mind or physiological reaction, but it was an approximate emulation based on human emotional reactions. Erick wondered how, exactly, he was connected to Yggdrasil, and how that connection influenced Yggdrasilâs growth. From everything that Erick could tell, the big guy was basically a child, and while Erick gave âbirthâ to him, Yggdrasilâs other major âbiologicalâ donors were gods and magicâ
Huh.
Actually, magic was just possibility based on interpretations of mana as seen through the lens of a sapient mind, so perhaps Yggdrasilâs other major contributors were also orcols, and incani, and dragons, and monsters, and everything else that made mana on this world. Erick had never thought about it that way, but Yggdrasil had some rather radical genetic influences, didnât he? Actually, theyâd be âsoul influencesâ; nothing genetic about them.
Yggdrasil stopped groaning in thought, and said, âI want to see rest of universe, but not today.â
Erick nodded. âNot today.â
âYou can show the way, but I need you here most time.â
âI will be here for you, Yggdrasil. Forever and always.â Erick said, âAnd when Iâm not directly with you, you can follow, like Ophiel.â Ophiel chirped on Erickâs shoulder. âI canât support your body on my other shoulder, but I can support your sight.â
Yggdrasilâs small [Scry] eye set down on Erickâs other shoulder. With a small voice, he said, âOkay.â
A gentle wind blew across the inner world, and it was good.
Erick grilled beef and onions high in the sky, while Yggdrasil and Ophiel watched. Eventually, he added cheese, then he grilled some bread. The resultant cheesesteak sandwich was a bit different from what he normally made, but it was delicious and nutritious, and so Erick copied the other half of his sandwich so that he could have more.
When eating time was over, he was rested, and feeling goodâ¦
It was time to make [Renew].
Erick strode out of his put-together room upon Yggdrasilâs branches, up the slope to an empty area, saying, âIâm going to make some magic now. Okay? Watch how Ophiel looks over me, and donât interfere. Youâll probably see some blood, but I can handle it.â
âOkay.â Yggdrasil said, âI see you bleed before. I not worried.â
Erick smiled.
And then he focused. He walked a bit further, and then he was far enough. In another twenty meters, Yggdrasilâs main trunk turned upward again, breaking off into more and more branches the further up it went.
Erick looked around at the perfectly clean manasphere, and realized this land would either be great for spell creation, or absurdly difficult. He leaned toward the former, but expected the latter. Anyway, he needed some targets to [Renew], so he cast a few; [Force Wall], [Teleporting Platform], a small area of [Domain of Light], and finally, he summoned his rad-retrieving minion, Jewels. The quartz-shaped torso-sized summon of a hundred floating stone knives just stood there, waiting for instructions.
Erick told it, âDo nothing, Jewels.â
Jewels did exactly that.
And Erick organized his thoughts.
[Renew] was a complicated spell of a countless thousands of moving parts, but only because magic itself was as varied as imagination itself. Thus, [Renew] needed to be a key that could fit into any lock; to renew any spellwork it touched. But this was a failure state of the spell, for such a spell would require at least tier 4 Tricking Magic. Erick had considered going that route a few times, but⦠No.
Erick needed to make a basic tier spell that anyone could use, so that everyone could contribute to defense. Actual mages and archmages would provide the defense, but the common person could still dump their mana into those defenses, ensuring that their beacons of civilization remained strong against the dangers of the wilds and the monsters.
Erick had tried manually shoving Light Mana into Light spellwork, and that worked a little bit, but not nearly well enough to make a spell. It wasnât until he reached Enduring Forge, until he discovered how runes worked, until he saw how the Slime Spawner and Arcane Attuner turned normal mana into slimes and spellwork through a grand series of translation runes that he understood all the missing pieces of [Renew].
He had those pieces now.
He held out a hand and put those pieces together, speaking in Ancient Script, except for the last word,
âA bit of spell to start the drain.
âA flexing swell! Our mana trained
âand does like rain in lakes accrue
âtrans-forged through veins
âThe goal: [Renew].â
Erick flexed his lightform toward the floating [Force Wall], and though he opened his mana and prepared for the drain, for the channeling of magic into the pane of Force, reinforcing what was already present, he felt something break inside of him, instead.
A bit of his soul crunched in response to his voice; to his request of the mana.
The crunch spread outward like a shockwave that traveled down his arms and legs and struck his extremities like an interior explosion. Capillaries burst. Red spurted from toes and fingertips, spreading in all directions like Erick had been the center of a popped balloon of bloodâ
Gentle white light fluoresced from the wounds of his outstretched hands, which in turn became a gentle glow inside of his palm.
Erick relaxed as Ophiel hit him with a [Greater Treat Wounds] and blue boxes appeared, but he ignored the boxes for a moment and pressed his newfound power into the [Force Wall]. There hadnât been much degradation in the spellwork, since he had cast the Wall not a minute ago, but that didnât matter. Erickâs new spell turned to raindrops of light that soaked into the Wall like water into a sponge. He upped the channel, fully showering the Wall, seeing what would happen.
[Force Wall] normally cost Erick 5 mana, but as he dumped more and more mana through his new spell, into the Wall, it was like seeing a stone wall transmute from rock, to steel, then to something even stronger. But at a hundred mana poured into the magic, it could take no more. Erickâs white rain merely bounced off of the spell. The [Force Wall] was at full saturation.
Erick released the [Renew] in his hands. Light died. He breathed, and then he looked at his new blue boxes.
Congratulations!
You have created a new Basic Spell. Your spell has been added to your skills for free!
The spell you have created will appear in the Script after a year and a day.
Your spell is the alpha version, and will shift with time and use.
The spell that appears in the Script might be different.
Here is your spell:
Renew 1, instant + channel, touch, 5 mana + Variable
Rozeta thanks you for enriching the Script.
+3 ability points.
Congratulations, I suppose. Iâll be there to speak with you in person soon enough. We can talk more about this then, but know now that this spell will change how civilization functions the world over. But you already knew that.
Youâre a Wizard, though, so this much is expected.
Hereâs hoping for good changes.
Erick nodded, saying, âHereâs hoping for good changes.â
Yggdrasil asked, âDid you do it?â
âI did!â Erick happily cast his new spell and held his hand toward the [Teleporting Platform]. White magic guided bouncy mana through tiny raindrops until those drops struck the floating Platform. Magic guided mana inward, soaking into the spellwork, adding reinforcing bits here and there, strengthening the Platform. Conjured stone solidified into conjured steel. The Ancient Script symbol for [Teleport], brightly emblazoned in the center of the platform, glowed brighter, and deeper white. Erick moved on to the slightly degraded sphere of his [Domain of Light], asking Yggdrasil, âWant me to explain to you what Iâm doing?â
âYes. I want to hear you talk. What did you do?â
Erick laughed with joy and smiled wide, as he began explaining from the beginning, âSpells are cast with duration and other measures of strength, based on initial input of mana. Normally, spells end when those strengths break down. But with [Renew], I attune some of my mana with some âbounceâ and some âsoakâ to survive the âtranslationâ process from my own mana to the mana of the spellwork, and in this way, my mana can repair existing spells by finding the broken parts and remaking them. Itâs sort of like the opposite of [Dispel], but that comparison is a bit off, becauseâ¦â
Erick spoke for hours upon hours. Sometimes, he stopped, and asked if Yggdrasil wanted him to continue. Every time, Yggdrasil said to keep going. Erick appreciated that. He hoped Yggdrasil got something out of all these lessons, but even if not, it was still nice to be near the big guy. Erick hadnât done a lot of that, ever since he created Yggdrasil 5 months ago. He probably should have, but he had been busy with problems and [Gate].
A normal Arbor would have already turned real by now, too, which was its own set of issues that Erick didnât feel like touching right now, either. In his own opinion, Erick was lucky that he could spend more time with Yggdrasil before Yggdrasil outgrew him. Erick really should have done this sooner, though.
It wasnât long till Erick finished his talk on [Renew], but Yggdrasil asked for more words and more magic, so Erick continued, talking of gridwork. He eventually moved on to how he was going to make a [Renew] network that people could string through their houses, so entire cities could benefit from high-class spells inside their homes. The idea was that people could benefit from more than just the magics they could make themselves; they could hire out spell crafters and [Renew] those spells themselves, using the network.
âBut youâre making [Gate] network, first?â Yggdrasil asked.
âA lot of magic is connected to a lot of other magic, Yggdrasil.â Erick said, âExploring one side of magic can oftentimes help you to understand whatâs on the other side, or what might be right next to your current explorations and you didnât even know it.â
Eventually, though the sun never set, Erick got tired again and Yggdrasil was okay with more lessons later, because he was tired, too. Erick went to bed, and had some final thoughts for the day.
[Renew] would change everything, and more than how Erick had expected, too, because apparently his [Renew] strengthened existing spellwork. It didnât just repair to full; it repaired beyond full.
And that had a lot of unknown implications.
That effect probably wouldnât make it to the Open Script, though. Erick could already see this aspect of his magic being a major problem. You could turn [Fireball]s into [Perfected Fireball]s for damage, or strengthen [Ward]s far beyond full, or do any number of odd things that he hadnât thought about right then. The range of 'touch' would preclude a lot of interaction if the spell to be [Renew]ed was dangerous to touch, but aura control could get around that restriction.
... Those were problems for tomorrow.
Erick went to sleep inside a [Prismatic Ward] cast by Yggdrasil, with Ophiel looking over them both, and it was good. He dreamed right alongside Yggdrasil, witnessing visions of big fishes, skies of light, and flowing land.