Chapter 552: Construction
Beneath the Dragoneye Moons
Six years after the Eventide Eclipse returned from the Phoenix Peaks
The Celestial Supper was just as good as the first time Iâd walked through its doors⦠by Ciriel, almost two decades ago. I was still slightly torn between âcomforting familiarityâ as the insides of the restaurant remained unchanged all this time, and âeerie stasisâ as it remained exactly unchanged. I had to wonder - would I change my mind in the future, and go straight to âcomforting familiarityâ? Only time would tell, and I was content to sit back and let it happen.
I flickered through the room, subtly flexing on everyone that I could just [Teleport] rapidly from spot to spot to get to where I was going. I stuck to the normal âwalkingâ path and tried to make it clear where I was coming from and going to - didnât want anyone jumping and losing their very expensive meal - but I could teleport eight times in a second, and I recovered enough mana to teleport just under every seven seconds.
Grinding out [Teleportation] levels was a bear.
Another fun little trick I could pull was scanning everyone as I flashed by them in a single burst of [The World Around Me] repositioning. I [Teleported] a few coins into one particularly empty purse, figuring it was my good deed for the day, and multi-tasking so many different things at once was novel enough for experience.
No dings though. I was all too aware a lifetime of levels usually ended up at less than half my current level, and most of those lifetimes were spent on their skills as well. Still, every little bit counted! Even an ant could eat an entire mango if they were determined enough.
And somehow avoided my attention for long enough to eat it. Some insects and animals in my orchard were good, improving things and generally net increasing the number of mangos I got, but not all of them. Part of the perfection of mangos included their thick skin, which meant even if they fell on the ground they were still perfectly edible. Truly, the gods and nature combined had outdone themselves when creating mangos.
With one last careful [Teleport] I snapped into the War Sentinelâs room, already sitting in my chair. Nobody blinked an eye at my abrupt entrance - moreâs the shame, I was hoping Iâd get one of them to jump one of these days. At the same time, nobody really managed to sneak up on a Sentinel. We all had our tricks, and the Sentinels who didnât have good situational awareness were in the graveyards.
I sniffed at the food, my mouth drooling at the scent of spices.
âDawn! Welcome! Weâre doing a meat barbeque today, thought itâd be fun.â Sentinel Tyrannus said. âNo pork for you, no fish because of Depths, and select dinosaurs are excluded due to Queen.â
I grinned as I [Teleported] samples of all the dishes onto my plate, piling it high, remembering the big favor Depths had done for all of us.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
Auri, the bird brain, had forgotten about her messenger capsule, but Iona had brought it back with her. Some careful questioning and investigation had revealed that there truly was an entire fucking ocean worth of real water inside the little capsule, which made it one of the deadliest items in the world. For various reasons, Iona couldnât simply offer it up to the Moon Goddesses, and Ciriel didnât want it. I wouldâve gotten a dozen levels as a [Loremaster] dealing with it, but Iâd moved away from that class. Instead, Depths had undertaken a perilous journey to the bottom of the ocean, where the great hole was. Sheâd dodged krakens and wrestled sharks, grabbed treasure between two leviathans fighting and tricked a siren before finally tossing it in, forever removing it from the world.
Sheâd gained three levels from all that, and yikes did vampires ever get a raw deal on the leveling front.
Made me wonder why we didnât deal with more threats that way, but a mental review of them gave strong reasons why we couldnât do that for most of them.
âHow do you classify a fish?â I asked her, curious. âWhat makes a fish a fish and not, say, an eel? Whereâs the line?â
The woman slowly blinked at me as Queen protested Tyrannusâs description.
âThe sharovipteryx is a noble creature! A complete marvel! It can both run on four legs and fly, thereâs nothing better as a kingdom icon!â
He snorted and Legion helpfully provided an illusion of what one looked like.
It was like a medium-sized salamander, except the hind legs were super wonky. Each hind leg was almost as long as the salamander was, with webbing between the leg and the tail. A worse combination of ugly and impractical I couldnât imagine - although I supposed they could glide, possibly even fly with the right skills. I imagined they were only still alive thanks to the divine decree against bumping off species.
Letâs see, big book of social rules⦠canât quite keep my mouth shut, we were all friends or coworkers, find some middle ground where everyone can be happy, be diplomaticâ¦
âThey donât look particularly tasty.â I said. âSo itâs no real loss to skip on them?â
Queen gasped in faux-horror while Calm started to laugh his ass off. The rest of the War Sentinels currently on duty slowly filtered in while we discussed the merits of various animals and how tasty they were, along with liberal praise for the staff and [Chefs] of the Celestial Supper.
It was good stuff!
âSince weâll never get there if I donât start it. To business! Next ten minutes are reserved for nothing except shop talk.â Tyrannus said.
It was a clever move that had taken me years - and Iona explicitly pointing it out - for me to notice. The ten minutes thing was a deception. Once a bunch of passionate people all started talking about their thing, there was no way weâd shut up until our time at the Celestial Supper was over.
âIâve got an issue thatâs been brewing for a while, and was hoping to get everyoneâs advice on.â I said.
âSure Dawn, whatâs going on?â Tyrannus pounced on my question like a tyrannosaurus rex spotting a pig.
âMy Legionâs basically stalled out fighting each other when Iâm around.â I said. âTheyâre honestly getting more experience drilling when Iâm not around than live fighting when I am. Pretty sure Iâm making it too safe for them, and Iâm torn on what to do. Iâm going to bring it to the Legata, but I wanted to check in with everyone here first.â
Flood nodded approvingly at the last line. It wasnât quite the first rule, but one of the most important rules of issues when being a War Sentinel - Did I talk with the Legate or Legata? The person in charge of running the Legion? Most issues could be fixed with clear communication.
âI think you need to step back a minute from levels, and look at real, tangible experience gained.â Flood ground out. âBarring that little jaunt in the Han a few years back, weâve had a lack of opportunities and fights to hone our edge. The Core Sentinels are busier and Iâve heard the Shadows are stretched thin, but weâre War. Drills only do so much. Since youâve brought it up, Iâve been meaning to ask. Mind if I ask Legata Katerina for a full Legion-on-Legion spar, with you overseeing it?â
I shot Flood an unimpressed look and folded my arms.
âYou know my answer to that. Yes I mind, but if itâs arranged, Iâll be there anyway.â
âYour [Oath] is weird.â Depths said. Legion and Tyranus both snorted into their cups - I was a bit of an airhead at times and a little out-there, but Depths was waaaaaaaay out there. People in glass houses and all thatâ¦
âTodayâs clearly Dawn day! An idea Iâve toyed with now and then. Calamityâs always working on new brews, so to speak, and Iâve been wondering. Field testing them is, hmmm, awkward, letâs say, and I was thinking. What if we picked out a nice city in Osmonpodenia or something, theyâre all a bunch of miserable snakes, and Calamity let rip there. At the same time, you heal them. Both of you are doing it live, and - alright, alright, I get the idea.â Tyrannus said.
Iâd been glaring open murder in Tyrannusâs direction ever since I realized his idea was âletâs commit mass murder on the down-low for levels!â
âCommand would murder us. Arachne would string us up. Night would murder us. The diplomats would murder us. The Senate, half the Sentinels, any Immortals hiding thereâ¦â
I kept going, ticking each group off my fingers, finishing naming various groups when I ran out of fingers. And toes, after placing my feet on the table.
A bunch of coins traded hands, along with a few grins.
âHey!â I protested, looking around. âYou were all just winding me up!â
âI mean, we did wind up Legion last week.â Tyrannus smugly reminded me, only for an untouched turkey leg to suddenly reposition itself from his plate to mine. I grabbed it, extended [Etheric Aegis] to protect it against shenanigans, and debated how to best clean all the blood off it. Good for vampires, way too strong a taste for me. Also, goblin was one hell of a choice. I had regrets.
Which⦠fuck, mightâve been in Tyrannusâs plan the entire time. Dude was canny, but rarely showed it, unlike Flood.
âThat was different!â I protested. âHe brought it on himself! It was actually funny!â
Legion groaned and threw himself back in his chair. Carefully - he could go through the chair and half the walls in this place like tissue paper if he wanted to.
âThatâs completely different! Idiot elven âhunting partiesâ deserve what they get!â
What scared me about the whole thing - I suspected if I said âyesâ, weâd be making plans right now. I was no naive idiot - I knew what my coworkerâs jobs and business were, and sometimes I felt out of place, being the one advocating for peace and not doing harm. It was an odd place for it, but someone had to do it.
At others, I felt completely at home and in harmony with them. Broadly, we all wanted the same thing, we just saw many different ways of getting there. I could hold my nose up in the air and refuse to work with them at all, or I could do the most good possible in the position I held, and do my best to temper them.
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âAny new ones?â Flood growled out. Iâd swear her throat was damaged if I hadnât subtly tried healing it a few thousand times by now. I added one to my mental count as I briefly poked [Universal Cure].
Legion flicked a finger, and a detailed map of Exterreri overlayed our table. A few new red dots pulsed.
âHere, here, here, and here.â He said.
I frowned and leaned forward. Flood beat me to asking the question.
âIn the last week!?â
The weekly War Sentinel meeting was always a nice time, and I took the chance while I was in Sanguino to swing by [Quartermaster] Harperâs office, grabbing several rolls of paper from [Repository of the Archmage].
âDaaaaaaaaawn! Oh my gosh, hi! Itâs been, like, FOREVER since youâve last been here! Howâs my favorite girl doing? You look TOTALLY amazing, as always! You have style! I am so jealous, and we have so much to catch up on! Iâve missed you like crazy!â
I grinned at the bubbly [Quartermaster]
.
âHeya Harper! Sorry I havenât been around as much, but I think Iâve got something super interesting for you.â
âOOOOOooooh, Dawn, you always bring me the best stuff. Hit me with it girl! I am totally ready for this!â
It turned out - going to the moon was fucking difficult. Magic made it possible for us to even consider it, but the sheer calculations and logistics were⦠yeah. Weâd been spending years working everything out, and I was pretty sure we were still missing stuff. Weâd spent four years planning and calculating before showing our work to Arachne, whoâd loved the idea and was intrigued. Sheâd then poked more holes in our plan than a spiderweb, and mentioned Night had known a few people whoâd taken the trip before us. We hadnât quite needed to go back to the drawing board, but more calculation and planning was needed.
When Iâd asked Night about it, heâd simply smiled and said he looked forward to what my solution was. Ughhhhhhh I understood why he did it, but it didnât make it any less infuriating.
Naturally, there was my work as a Sentinel, and eight years of vacation had gone by too quickly. I was back on duty before weâd even finished calculating the raw estimated trajectories needed, and I couldnât leave for two months on a trip. Hopefully in the sixteen years I was âon dutyâ weâd figure it out, and be able to launch shortly after.
I unrolled the plans weâd made on the desk, Harperâs endlessly bubbly personality sliding away to a serious face.
âWhat isâ¦â She muttered to herself, eyebrows scrunching up as she flipped the pages over. âGlass? Ah, alchemically treated⦠itâs a single object. How⦠oh, I see. But whyâ¦?â
Harper looked up with a confused look on her face.
âWhat is this supposed to be?â She asked.
âWeâre going to the moon!â I explained, delighting in her fishbowl expression. It slowly morphed into one of delight.
âThe moons!?â She jumped up, clapping her hands. âOh Dawn darling, you really do bring me the most wonderful things!â
âMoon. Singular.â I gently corrected. âWe thought itâd be too difficult to visit both of them.â
Harper went back to the designs with feverous abandon, flipping through them all again.
âOkay girl, Iâve got you! Got, like, a million questions though. Why glass?â She asked.
âSo we can see what weâre doing and where weâre going.â I answered. Harper tapped the plans.
âYeah, but youâre pulling out all the stops to harden it. Instead of trying to harden glass, I know an [Alchemist] whose made a potion to make steel clear. Much easier to work than pure glass, plus we canât source that here. It would have to, like, be a super-special commission from Tympestshard. Thereâs one[Glassblower] I know of that could do it and not, like, accidentally kill you all halfway through.â
Harper dramatically shuddered.
âThe size of this thing, combined with overland transportation costs⦠whoof, I donât want to think about it. Doing it in steel though? Youâre sooooooo much more flexible, you donât need to cast it all at once. Whereâs a quill? Ah, okay, so like, seeâ¦â
Harper bent over the diagrams, starting to cross out alchemical processes and substitute in new ones, tiny drops of ink splattering as she cross-checked numbers and rewrote half the process from the ground up.
Given how long itâd taken us to come up with the design and iterate over it, I felt vaguely offended. But I wasnât a material sciences and armaments girl - Harper was. This would be like someone without the needed classes, skills, or education bringing me a set of biomancy plans. I was no genius, but I could probably improve it quite a bit on the spot.
âThis hereâs for an armor skill, yeah? Yeah, canât imagine any other reasonâ¦â She muttered as she tapped the âhalf-chairâ part of the design.
In order to best keep our spaceship intact, we wanted it to be classified as armor. The best way we knew of to make the System recognize it as armor was to have a âcontrol seatâ that was basically half a suit of armor for Iona to sit in, where she could then have the whole thing as âarmorâ. Since it was a single piece, the protection would then extend to the âhamster ballâ all around us.
Harper threw down her quill.
âArgh! Okay, this is hard, and itâs good. Solid. Yeah. Dawn, do you mind if I consult with some of the dwarven clans on this project? They like their fancy toys, and I think they could give me a hand.â
Hmmm.
âOn one hand, itâs not exactly a state secret, on the other, itâs kinda⦠our project? We donât want a bunch of other people coming in and telling us what to do, and how to do it.â
Harper nodded and flipped to the page where weâd listed out all of our gems we wanted. Most of them had a cheery little checkmark next to them, indicating weâd gotten them, and Amber was on the lookout for more.
âI totally get you! This is your baby, not some greybearded dwarf who hasnât seen the light of day this century! They wouldnât know what to DO with something so cool, and no worries on them copying your designs! I can see that itâs tailored for both of your skills combined to make it work. Now! Like, the awkward part. The cost. I knoooow you know itâll be expensive, buuut this is super speciality work. Molten steel and gemstone? NOT a good look. You ready for this?â
I nodded.
âYouâre not sitting down, I donât know if youâre ready⦠well, here goes.â
Harper named a seven-figure price. I sat down.
âThat much!?â I squeaked out. Iâd known it was going to be expensive, Iâd just⦠expected one zero less. And it was a high seven figure price. Iâd thought the gems were going to be the most expensive part of this, but that was clearly horribly naive.
She tapped the sheet.
âSorry girl! The raw material costs alone, before the gems? Eeeeesh. Then as I said, weâre going to need a major artisanâs workshop. Now⦠thereâs a few things I can think of to help out.â
I wasnât interested in cutting corners, but Harper knew better than to cut corners. Cut corners in gear killed Sentinels and Rangers.
âWhatâs the idea?â I asked.
âWell! This is going to be like, totally flashy, yeah? It could be a Big Deal. Poke the stuffy vampires in the Senate, maybe even the [Empress] could be interested, and boom! You bring an extra standard on the trip, they finance a third of it, everyone wins, yeah?â
I frowned. Iâd need to talk with Iona. Sheâd discussed consecrating the trip to Selene and Lunaris, and when Iâd bugged Ciriel about it, the Goddess of Healing wanted nothing to do with it.
Itâs not that Iâm uninterested Sheâd said. Itâs that the Moon Goddesses are already involved, and this is their domain. Theyâd get pissed if I infringed on this rare opportunity. If it was Edor, the watery old fool, Iâd say yes in a moment, thereâs no contest. This is their domain, their bragging opportunity, their chance to gain big. The moment they need to split it even a little, they lose a lot of the power of the trip. Nah, Iâll sit this one out, and probably get a little token of thanks from them for staying out of their way. I win anyway!
âI have to check with Iona, but assuming sheâs alright with it, sure!â I said.
Harper jumped up, clapped her hands and squeeeed, then wrapped me in a tight hug.
âOh my gods! Thank you SO MUCH Elaine! This is going to be THE BEST PROJECT EVER!!!â
Home was my next destination, and I managed to break out from the permanent Ashen cover over Sanguino before sunset, letting me enjoy some of the dusk. Skye was waiting for me in the front hall when I arrived.
âTrouble?â I asked our [Chief of Staff]. Honestly, everything ran so much smoother with her around, it was great! Didnât have to worry about most of lifeâs woes and problems with her fixing everything ahead of time.
She even got one up on the [Tax Collector!]
Skye shook her head.
âA child came by looking for you by name. Iâve seated him in the blue room with some snacks while we waited.â
I frowned and paid a hair more attention to my senses, getting an idea of what I was working with.
âAny ideas?â I asked.
âHe said he wanted advice. If heâd been looking for healing, I wouldâve directed him to the Guild, but advice was novel enough that I thought you might want to take a look.â
I nodded.
âThank you, Skye. Iâll take it from here.â
I flickered over to the blue room, teleporting in right in front of a lanky and awkward teenager. He jumped satisfyingly at my entrance, half-choking on some of Auriâs excellent cookies. I carefully and gingerly - didnât want to break his spine or paste him across the room - patted his back, helping him out.
âS-Sentinel Dawn! Sir! Uh, maâam!â
He scrambled up, throwing a piss-poor salute in my direction. I suppose he was pretty young.
âHi! Thatâs me! Skye said you knew me, and were looking for advice?â
He suddenly started sweating.
âWell, err, kinda? Maybe? Not really? I donât think you remember me, but I remember you. You helped out the Maple Orphanage six years ago? I was one of the orphans then. Nameâs Nix. Pluvius Nix.â
I squinted. His age - early teens, but puberty had clearly started to hit him - looked vaguely right to be one of those tiny orphans whoâd run around helping me resort my [Tower] back in the day. After six years, even with a perfect memory, it was hard, given how much people changed.
Hells, it was half his lifetime, wasnât it? That was a hecking long time to remember me.
âAdvice! Sure, what can I do for you?â I asked.
âWell⦠Iâm thinking of joining the Legions. Becoming a soldier, then maybe a Ranger one day. Like you?â He asked.
Hmmm.
I didnât want to recommend anyone join the Legions, but then again, I wasnât exactly in a position to talk. Iâd done exactly
that, at almost exactly the same age. Nix was an orphan, so it wasnât like he had a ton of choices in life, and basically no social safety net. At the same time, I knew the money Iâd given was enough for an apprenticeship anywhere, so he did have more options than usual.
âIs there a reason working as an [Apprentice] wonât work?â I asked. On one hand, if the money had vanished or been embezzled, Iâd be pissed. On the other, I had Fenrir and Skye to sic on the problem.
âI⦠donât really see myself going that way.â He said.
Ugh. Idiot teenagers and the propaganda machine.
âMy advice, in the strongest possible words, is donât join. If you have to join the Legions though, Iâm attached to the Sixth, and Iâll do my level best to keep you alive.â
Fuck.
That spark that lit up in his eyes?
The entire first half, the important part of my advice had just gone out the window, and I was sure I was going to see a familiar new recruit in a couple of years, when heâd finished his training period.
Damnit, I hope I hadnât killed him.
[Name: Elaine]
[Race: Chimera (Elvenoid)]
[Age: 44]
[Mana: 7,695,490/7,695,490]
[Mana Regeneration: 16,393,330 +(50,591,044)]
Stats
[Free Stats: 0]
[Strength: 49,689 (Effectively: 397,512)]
[Dexterity: 74,104 (Effectively: 789,059)]
[Vitality: 237,472 (Effectively: 3,710,500)]
[Speed: 224,704 (Effectively: 4,422,849)]
[Mana: 769,549]
[Mana Regeneration: 1,833,424 (+ 5,059,104)]
[Magic Power: 1,007,359 (+ 45,381,523)]
[Magic Control: 1,006,513 (+ 45,343,411)]
[Class 1: [The Arbiter of Life and Death - Celestial: Lv 901]]
[Celestial Mastery: 901]
[Aurora Curialis: 901]
[The Stars Never Fade: 102]
[Luminary Mind: 722]
[Universal Cure: 901]
[Etheric Aegis: 388]
[Event Horizon: 680]
[Zenith Everlasting: 701]
[Class 2: [Seraph of the Dawn - Radiance: Lv 883]]
[Radiance Mastery: 883]
[A Light Shining in the Darkness: 350]
[The Rays of the First Dawn: 883]
[Radiant Angel's Spear of Obliteration: 311]
[Celestial Dew: 883]
[Sunrise Halo: 883]
[Wings of the Seraphim: 883]
[Six Wings, Six Million Feathers: 883]
[Class 3: [Erudite Archmage - Spatial: Lv 760]]
[Spatial Authority: 540]
[Cozy Reading: 760]
[Teleportation: 310]
[Repository of the Magus: 600]
[Tower of Knowledge: 228]
[Reality, Writ As You Will: 570]
[Astral Archives: 397]
[Endless Pursuit of Knowledge: 710]
General Skills
[Long-Range Identify: 580]
[Handy: 277]
[Companion Bond between Elaine and Auri: 901]
[The World Around Me: 343]
[Oath of Elaine to Lyra: 901]
[Sentinel's Superiority: 901]
[Persistent Casting: 710]
[Tender Gardening: 299]