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He Who Fights With Monsters 9 A LitRPG Adventure by Shirtaloon Travis

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
62K views923 pages

He Who Fights With Monsters 9 A LitRPG Adventure by Shirtaloon Travis

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AARUSH SABOO
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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HE WHO FIGHTS WITH MONSTERS NINE

©2023 SHIRTALOON

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All rights reserved.


C O NT E NT S

ALSO IN SERIES

1. Don’t Show Up to the Fancy Party in Shorts


2. What She Was Willing to Do
3. More Than Just a Name
4. The Making of That Man
5. A Lesson of Days Gone
6. Dear John
7. This Doesn’t Feel Glorious
8. El Demonio Que Hace Trofeos de los Hombres
9. Occasionally Carnivorous
10. If You’re Going to Punish Someone
11. One More Loyalty to Balance
12. That Boy In the Tent
13. A Difficult Child
14. All Singer and No Song
15. Hefty Nuggets
16. Following Your Convictions to Your Death
17. The God in This Scenario
18. The Only Person Who Thinks It’s Obvious
19. Uncharacteristic Sincerity
20. The Only Wound You Can Truly Suffer
21. Mother’s Favourite
22. A Good Friend to Have
23. Put the Extraordinary Aside
24. A Chance For Some Relative Quiet
25. Surplus to Requirements
26. Bad at Crime
27. An Evil God Sitting on Her Shoulder
28. A Responsibility as Much as a Privilege
29. Fighting the Power
30. Make Jason Great Again
31. Neil’s Big Mouth
32. Rage, Authority and Otherworldly Power
33. Asset
34. The Thing You Practise With The Most
35. Just to Prove You Could
36. A Matter of What You Want
37. Where We End
38. People That You Didn’t Aggravate
39. Not You
40. Inventing a Man in Your Head
41. Doing Things That You Shouldn’t
42. Quiet Professionalism
43. A Man of Many Talents
44. The Same Thing as Telling the Truth
45. The Point of Sacrifice
46. What You Want Instead of What You Need
47. Settling Differences With a Nice Chat
48. The Sex Magic Thing
49. The Power and the Control
50. Distant Power
51. Who You Truly Are
52. The Genuine Article
53. Stories About Fungus
54. Vampire Monster Slaves
55. The Face of Insurmountable Power
56. Even Though You Fear
57. Mockery
58. Die Immediately Without Prompting
59. The Old Groove
60. Grisly Chore
61. Inferior
62. Apocalypse
63. Superior
64. Significantly More Powerful
65. Evil Lair
66. Imperfect Responses
67. Triage
68. Unquestionably Authoritarian
69. Voice of the Will
70. He Himself Does Not Become a Monster
71. An Egg Starting to Hatch
72. What the Swarm Came to Cure
73. A Mortal Perspective
74. Mr Asano Will See You Now
75. Hot Chocolate
76. Sadness Porridge
77. The Better Adventurer
78. Brave Because It Can Win
79. A Man That Will Inspire Courage
80. Luck That Good
81. Nice and Grunty
82. Breach
83. Gary Goes To Work
84. The Lady Shooting Hurricanes at People
85. Humphrey’s New Normal
86. Not Enough Monsters to Fight
87. The Difference in Conviction
88. Something to Turn the Tide
89. The Strongest Arrow in His Quiver
90. Win a Fight
91. King of the Sky
92. A Pretty Creepy Dude
93. Security Oversight
94. I Have to Go Fight Evil
95. Stray Thought
96. Heretic
97. An Extremely Annoying Catalyst
98. Teaching Moment
99. Rigid Flaws
100. Doubt, Fear and Hesitation
101. No
102. A Fight to the Pain
103. One Ludicrous Encounter to the Next
104. The Foolish Choice
Thank you for reading He Who Fights With Monsters, Book Nine.

About the Author


ALSO IN SERIES

HE WHO FIGHTS WITH MONSTERS


BOOK ONE
BOOK TWO
BOOK THREE
BOOK FOUR
BOOK FIVE
BOOK SIX
BOOK SEVEN
BOOK EIGHT
BOOK NINE
BOOK TEN

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1
D O N ’ T S H OW U P T O T H E FA N C Y PA R T Y I N
SHORTS

C ONVALESCENCE WAS NOT SOMETHING THAT PEOPLE WITH THE MONEY TO


afford healing magic often had to deal with. Jason Asano was wealthy, even
for an adventurer of his rank, yet had been experiencing a lengthy
convalescence. Some wounds ran too deep, and Jason had a habit of pushing
himself too hard.
Magical powers had limits, not just because they required practise to
master but because the body could only endure so much. It required years to
inure the body to the kinds of forces that high-ranking magic channelled
through it. Jason, however, was a man for whom events would not wait for
him to have the necessary strength.
On a rescue mission in a half-flooded mining complex, deep at the bottom
of the sea, Jason and his team had been sent to rescue civilians. The complex
had been raided by fanatical religious zealots, some of whom were
exceptionally powerful. When they were trapped in a room with no escape,
Jason had, characteristically, done something impossible.
There was power inside Jason that he was not ready to use. Tapping into
that power, he opened a portal he should not have been able to open, rescuing
his team and a large group of civilians, but the strain came exceptionally
close to killing him. Only the combined efforts of his team and his familiars
managed to keep him alive. The process had been so spectacular that
everyone in the city of Rimaros had felt it. Jason’s aura had blasted across the
city and the image of his personal crest had filled the sky.
Jason’s convalescence had not been uneventful either. The repercussions
of what he had done to himself had precipitated a meeting with some of the
most powerful entities in the cosmos. As this meeting was held in the open,
the people already watching Jason became all the more interested.
Rimaros, the City of Islands, was comprised of three main islands, along
with a series of artificial islands that floated in the sky atop columns of rising
water. The latest addition to the city was an island that had previously been a
flying fortress city, until being dropped into the ocean in a massive and costly
battle.
Jason lived on one of the three main islands, Arnote. On an island of
sleepy beach towns, his cloud house remained perched on a clifftop amongst
more conventional homes. Looking out over a pristine lagoon, it had been a
pleasant place to spend his convalescence.
The cloud house was currently in the state of a pagoda. Linked to Jason’s
soul, it had undergone some changes when he was close to death, including
taking the form of a sinister temple-like structure. Jason’s attempts to change
it while in a delicate state had led to an unsettling hybrid structure, but as he
recovered, he was able to restore a sensible form.
After a lengthy seclusion, Jason was finally open to meeting with some of
the people clamouring for his attention. There was no shortage of them, after
his series of ostentatious displays, ranging from the opportunistic to the
concerned, although that concern was less for Jason than about him.
Among those seeking Jason’s attention, the better-informed ones made
use of people Jason was already comfortable with meeting. This started with
Estella Warnock, with whom Jason was sharing lunch on a pagoda balcony
that overlooked the lagoon. One of the benefits of being unable to adventure
was that Jason had time to experiment with local ingredients, developing
variants of dishes he knew using local ingredients. On this day, he and Estella
were sharing one of his best results: a variant of shakshouka. He didn’t have
chicken eggs or tomatoes, which made eggs poached in a tomato sauce
challenging, but the local analogues had proven successful.
Though Estella was an essence user, she was not an adventurer and had
no interest in being one. When she had served as a scout to help Jason and
other adventurers protect the island from monsters during the Builder’s attack
on Rimaros, it had not been out of any sense of civic duty. It had been at the
behest of her grandfather, a former adventurer who did have the sense of duty
that his granddaughter did not share.
Warwick Warnock had been one of Jason’s neighbours until he died
assaulting one of the Builder’s fortress cities at the very same time Jason and
Estella were protecting the island. Estella had inherited his home and had
been at something of a loss after his death, having just given up her
profession of low-stakes spy-for-hire. She had been one of Jason’s few
allowed visitors during his convalescence, commiserating in a shared sense of
aimlessness.
“Havi Estos wants a meeting,” she told him.
“Lots of people want to see me. I didn’t think you were speaking to him.”
Havi Estos was a major middleman for semi-legal activities to whom
Jason had been introduced in his early days in Rimaros. In order to learn
more about Jason, he had hired Estella to observe him, not expecting her
powerful yet discreet perception abilities to be noticed. This was the very job
that prompted Estella to give up the work, as it was not the first job where she
got more than she bargained for. Estella had been quite nervous about
encountering Jason again until her grandfather smoothed things over.
“He sought me out,” Estella said. “He knows I know you and wants to
make amends.”
“With me or you?”
“Jason, everyone in the city is talking about you, and now he’s very
worried about having sent me to spy on you, and what you might do about it.
No one is trying to make amends with me.”
“They should. Smart, skilled, discreet people are valuable, and I’m one of
those three at best.”
“I’m not going back to work for Estos or anyone like him. They use
people like me to catch the trouble they want to avoid.”
“I wouldn’t use you like that.”
She gave him a long stare.
“Are you offering me a job?”
“Do you know the name Emir Bahadir?”
She thought for a moment before answering.
“Is that the guy who tried to rob the royal family a few years back?”
“He did more than try, which is why he’s not allowed back in the Storm
Kingdom.”
“Oh, I think they’d let him come.”
Jason laughed.
“Yeah, I imagine they would. Anyway, he’s the one who gave me the
cloud flask that produced the building we’re sitting in. When he did, he told
me that I should consider expanding my operation. Get some staff, the way
he has for his treasure-hunting operations.”
“You want to be a treasure hunter?”
“No, but have you ever heard of auxiliary adventurers? They join
adventuring teams as non-combat members, providing various specialty
services. My group will be doing a lot of travelling soon, and having
someone outside the team proper who could get the lay of the land quickly
would be valuable to us.”
“You want me to traipse around the world with you and your grab-bag of
lunatics who run around with diamond-rankers, gods and who knows what
else?”
“Yeah, pretty much. I think things will calm down for a while, though.”
“They would have to. I think you’re past the point where things can
escalate without the whole world getting destroyed.”
“Been there, done that,” Jason said. “I’m not helping my case here, am
I?”

Rick Geller and his team had been in Greenstone at the same time Jason was
first training as an adventurer, themselves being trained in the Geller
compound. One of his team members, Jonah, had been amongst the first to be
forcibly implanted with a star seed, during the same disastrous expedition
where Farrah had died. The attempt to extract the star seed had been a
gruesome and lethal failure. That spot on the team had subsequently been
filled by Dustin Kettering.
Dustin had once been part of a three-man team with Neil and Thadwick
Mercer. Thadwick’s own star seed implantation had caused that group to
fracture, with Neil going to Jason’s team and Dustin going to Rick’s.
Thadwick’s fate was considerably more tragic—he had become some kind of
energy vampire that was still at large somewhere in the world.
Although he was now silver rank, Rick looked as uncomfortable as ever
around high-rankers, being a good and obedient young man. Jason found
himself grinning at Rick’s uncertain expression as he watched him emerge
from a flying carriage with Princess Liara, stepping onto the lawn in front of
his pagoda.
Jason vaulted the balcony railing to land right in front of the pagoda’s
large main entrance. He conjured his cloak as he fell to slow his descent,
which wasn’t necessary to avoid damage to him, but to avoid dents in the
lawn from a superhero landing. The new look of Jason’s cloak arrested the
attention of Liara and Rick, who were both familiar with its previous
iteration.
“That looks creepy,” Rick said. “My eyes don’t want to look at it. It’s
wrong, somehow. Like you’re wearing a hole in the world.”
“It is quite unsettling to look at,” Liara agreed. “I’m not entirely shocked,
however, that your stealth ability is so attention-grabbing.”
“Why do people keep saying that?” Jason complained as he dismissed the
cloak.
“At least you’re draping yourself in weird magic instead of weirdly high
numbers of women,” Rick observed, drawing an odd look from Liara. “When
a beautiful princess attached herself to my meeting, I figured it would be the
same thing all over again. What is it with you and these Rimaros princesses?”
Liara gave Jason a querying expression.
“Rick was around when I first met Zara, but I am not always surrounded
by women… what’s about to happen notwithstanding.”
The doors behind Jason opened to reveal a group of women, including the
pink-haired Estella, Farrah, Sophie, Belinda and Autumn Leal. Autumn was
an adventurer whose acquaintance Jason had made, prior to his team arriving
in Rimaros. She had an exotic magical frog named Neil that had perished in
the defence of Rimaros from the Builder’s flying fortress city. This was
something Jason had discovered in the process of checking on people in the
wake of the casualty-filled battle, but he had largely left her alone.
Autumn had been in mourning for her bonded companion for some time,
but now, for the first time, Jason sensed at least an amount of hope from her
aura, along with a solid sense of resolve. It was not the time to explore that,
however, and he satisfied himself that she seemed better than she had in the
past.
Rick was oblivious to this; all he saw was Jason joined by five women.
“And there it is,” he said.
Jason opened a portal to Rimaros and the five women passed through.
Jason didn’t close it afterwards, and instead called out through the still-open
doors.
“Are you coming or what?”
“On my way,” a voice came from inside, shortly followed by a hustling
Taika. He looked around, seeing that the five women had already departed,
then his gaze settled on Liara. “Oh, hey, princess bro.” He then went through
the portal and Jason closed it again.
Liara shook her head.
“A bronze-ranker,” she muttered. “What happened to the respect for
rank?”
“It’s Jason,” Rick told her. “He’s a bad influence.”
Rick then remembered that he was speaking to a gold-rank princess and
his head dipped down as if yanked by a string.
Jason chuckled. “You’d best come inside,” he told them.

“Sit anywhere,” Jason said as they entered a casual lounge inside the cloud
structure. “I’m not really the conference table type.”
The lounge, like most of the pagoda, was designed in such a way that the
room had a flow leading out to an open wall balcony terrace. This particular
room was made up of undisguised cloud substance rather than being masked
as more ordinary material. The sprawling layout of plush couches and
armchairs fell outside of the meeting etiquette that Rick and Liara were
familiar with, so while they looked around for the most appropriate place to
sit, Jason moved behind the bar.
After taking out a selection of fruit and two magical wands, Jason started
waving the wands like a slightly confused orchestra conductor, and the fruit
rose into the air. After wobbling in place for a moment, the fruit peeled,
sliced, pulped and juiced itself into a pitcher. Liara and Rick gave up on
finding appropriate seats for the moment to watch.
“I could be better at this, I know,” he apologised. “It’s something I picked
up while I was recovering to practise my mana control. I know a guy who’s
way better at this than me, but he probably wouldn’t be great at saving the
world. We all have our areas.”
He paused, frowning.
“Wow, that was really braggadocious. Am I a braggart? When did I start
bragging about things I’ve actually done instead of making crazy stuff up?
Oh yeah; my life caught up with the most ridiculous things I could think of.
Damn, I’m great.”
Jason flashed his guests a grin as he resumed moving the wands. He
finished the pitcher of blended fruit drink with a bundle of ice cubes that
floated in on their own, and then came out from behind the bar, looking at
Rick and Liara standing around.
“Couldn’t find a seat?”
With a sweep of Jason’s arm, all the furniture outside of the bar area sank
into the floor. Three chairs then emerged from the floor, spaced equally
around a low, circular table. Jason plonked down into one of them and the
others sat down after.
“I think you forgot the drinks,” Rick pointed out.
“Crap, thanks.”
Jason reached out with his aura, grabbing the pitcher of juice and three
glasses, floating them across the room and onto the table. Liara was able to
sense the aura he projected to do so and looked at him, wide-eyed.
“I wouldn’t worry about it,” Jason told her. “This is pretty much how it
always goes. I almost die, come out of it with some weird new power, and a
god or some other ridiculous thing shows up. The order changes around, but
it’s a pretty reliable pattern.”
He filled the glasses from the pitcher.
“No exciting ingredients, just fruit. Bit early in the day, yeah?”
Jason leaned back in his seat and sipped at his drink, waiting for the
others to talk. Rick was waiting for Liara to speak first, but she was looking
around the room.
“Your cloud building has changed,” she said. “I don’t mean the shape;
that’s normal cloud house stuff. I mean whatever is under the surface. It feels
different. Focused, somehow. Solid.”
“I made some changes,” Jason acknowledged.
“How bad would it be? If someone came for you here?”
“For me? Not so bad. For them? Depends on who it was.”
Jason’s gaze turned to Rick.
“I have to apologise,” he said. “I didn’t realise you were still in town. I
thought you went back north after the Builder abandoned the Sea of Storms.”
“I had intended to be gone,” Rick told him. “You remember my sister
Phoebe, yes? She’s on my team but had to stay home to deal with family
issues. I don’t like having the team split up and wanted to head home, but we
were instructed to stay. Didn’t Neil tell you? He and Dustin have been
spending plenty of time together since then.”
“No, he didn’t.”
Jason looked to Liara, then back at Rick.
“Let me guess: the Adventure Society roped you in so I’d actually take a
meeting, and then Princess Adventure Pants here turned up, right as you were
about to set out. The royal family ‘convinced’ the Adventure Society to let
their local representative tag along, given that I’ve been willing to meet with
her before.”
Rick gave Liara a panicked look at ‘Princess Adventure Pants,’ his eyes
desperately trying to communicate that he wasn’t responsible for Jason.
“I’m very familiar with Mr Asano’s way of conducting himself,” Liara
assured him. “And yes, Mr Asano; that is a more or less accurate
description.”
She reached forward, took a glass and sipped at it, nodding
appreciatively.
“Not bad. But we have to talk about this,” she said, gesturing with her
glass.
“We have to talk about the juice?”
“More what the juice represents,” Liara said. “That is the gist of what you
were sent to propose, was it not, Mr Geller?”
“Uh, yes,” Rick confirmed. “Basically, Jason, everyone would be more
comfortable with your level of prominence going down for the immediate
future.”
“Precipitously down,” Liara added.
Jason looked at the juice Liara was holding, his mind ticking over what
she had meant. Then a huge grin spread over his face.
“I’m in,” he said.
“We haven’t even told you what the Adventure Society is proposing,”
Rick said.
“It’s a secret identity, isn’t it? Jason Asano, scary god-socialiser, leaves
his team for parts unknown. Then casual juice enthusiast, Bruce Wayne, joins
the team as an auxiliary member in charge of cooking.”
“Something like that,” Liara said. “There will be a lot of details to sort
out, but yes. The Adventure Society is proposing the creation of a more
discreet legal identity for you to inhabit. You’ll need to be more cautious
when working with your team, but it should be manageable. You generally
won’t be observed when you’re in the field, fighting monsters. It would help
a great deal if your team stayed on the move, taking ordinary contracts.”
“You know that won’t hold up to almost any scrutiny from someone who
knows enough,” Jason pointed out.
“It’s not intended to,” Rick said. “There’s no hiding you from anyone of
real influence. The idea is just for you to be a lot less loud for a while.
Preferably until you rank up, because the higher your rank, the more that the
crazy stuff you get caught up in becomes acceptable.”
“I won’t be ranking up for a long time.”
“The Adventure Society is very open to you spending the next decade or
five being nice and quiet,” Rick said.
“Fair enough,” Jason said with a chuckle. “So, barbecue-Jason is roaming
around with melodrama-Jason’s now-former team. Where is drama-guy while
this is going on?”
“He leaves with His Ancestral Majesty,” Liara said. “With everything he
has going on, it’s time for him to go out and see some of the cosmos.”
“Apprenticed to Soramir Rimaros,” Jason said. “Prestigious.”
“Obviously, this will work a lot better if your new identity isn’t the only
auxiliary joining your team,” Liara said. “Before she left, your friend Dawn
made some arrangements, but we can go over the specifics when we get into
the details.”
“The Adventure Society wants you to play up the scary adventurer before
you go,” Rick said. “A social event where you will need to be every bit the
impressive adventurer, rather than… the other thing.”
“You need to be what people imagine from a man who speaks to gods
and great astral beings,” Liara said. “Not the man you actually are when you
speak to gods and great astral beings.”
“You got a transcript from the spies floating around, then?” Jason asked.
“In fairness, you have to talk to Dominion like that or he won’t give you the
time of day. Unless you’re a king or something, I guess. Now that I think
about it, maybe I should suck up to him. He might leave me alone then. I
should remember to try that.”
Rick was looking at Jason with the wide-eyed expression Jason was
starting to think of as the ‘standard Rick.’
“Anyway,” Jason continued. “Don’t show up to the fancy party in shorts
and sandals, is what you’re saying.”
“That cloak of yours should do the job nicely,” Liara said.
“You want me to wear the cloak to a social event?” Jason asked. “The
Adventure Society is looking for me to go full chuuni, I see. I can do that.”
“I don’t know what chuuni means,” Rick said.
“I think we can figure it out from context,” Liara said. “Mr Geller, since
Mr Asano has already agreed—if your earlier acceptance wasn’t merely in
jest, Mr Asano?”
“I’m still in; I like this idea. And I did ask you to figure out how to reduce
my profile, after all.”
“Then let us take ‘yes’ for an answer and go, Mr Geller. Mr Asano, we’ll
discuss the details at a later date.”
“No worries,” Jason said.
“I would appreciate it if any public displays you make from here on out
are more of the dramatic Jason and less of the neighbourhood barbecue Jason,
if you please,” Liara said.
“Oh, I wouldn’t worry about that. Melodrama is kind of my thing.”
“Yes, Mr Asano. We’ve noticed.”
2
W H AT S H E WA S W I LLI N G T O D O

“N OW THAT D AWN HAS SCARPERED ,” J ASON SAID , “I’ VE HALF OF A MIND TO


do the same. Bottle up the pagoda, portal out and bunk off. No one would
notice, right?”
He and his friends were sitting around a long table on a pagoda balcony,
eating lunch.
“Of course someone would notice,” Rufus said. “There are twelve people
observing the building right now.”
“Seventeen,” Jason and Estella corrected simultaneously before glancing
at each other briefly.
“The point is,” Rufus continued, “that if you start making unexpected
moves, people will get worried.”
“He always makes unexpected moves,” Farrah said. “And they always get
worried.”
“I’m not that bad.”
“Bro, you went through a children’s ward and made everyone think
you’re an angel.”
“That was one time.”
“You had a rolling gunfight with a motorcycle gang hopped up on
vampire blood,” Taika said. “On TV. And I was driving. I’m not good at
dodging bullets, bro. I’m too big.”
“We do have some responsibilities here before we can leave,” Humphrey
pointed out. “I don’t feel bad about skipping this meeting with Estella’s
former employer, but we’ve agreed to help Miss Leal obtain a new familiar.”
As someone with a bonded familiar of his own, Humphrey was especially
sympathetic to Autumn Leal’s plight. Bonded familiars were actual magical
creatures that could die, compared to Jason’s summoned familiars. If Shade,
Colin or Gordon were destroyed, their spirits simply returned to the astral and
Jason could resummon them. When Autumn lost her familiar, Humphrey
could not help but think about losing Stash and how devastated he would be.
“I could go with skipping the celebration ball, though,” Sophie said.
“Why do the rest of us need to go?”
After months of monsters and extradimensional invasions, the
dimensional membrane that normally kept such problems away had finally
repaired itself, bringing the monster surge and the Builder invasion to an end.
The Magic Society made public announcements and Rimaros, like the rest of
the world, was in celebrations.
A lengthy festival was taking place, despite the devastation and loss the
surge had brought. If only for a short time, people needed some release after
monsters and death and mobile cities attacking by land, sea and air. This
monster surge had been the longest and most devastating in recorded history,
bringing with it not one but two interdimensional invasions, only one of
which had been dealt with.
Rural populations needed to leave the cities and fortress towns, returning
to what would often be monster-ravaged towns and villages around the Storm
Kingdom. Infrastructure would need to be rebuilt and industries built back
up. More than just the monster surge, the state of readiness the world had
been in for a good five years prior to the surge had hurt economies, closed
businesses and turned boom towns into ghost towns.
The repercussions would likely still be felt by the time of the next surge,
but now, the repopulation, rebuilding and the messengers that had hidden
themselves away could wait. The world would take a week for some much-
needed celebratory catharsis.
“The festivals on the streets are the real celebration,” Rufus said. “This
ball for the aristocracy is just a show. The first round in the next cycle of
political gamesmanship. With everything up in the air, a lot of power is up
for grabs.”
“So why should Jason put himself up for grabs with it?” Sophie asked.
“Anyone with real power will either know Jason isn’t genuinely leaving the
team or be able to easily find out. So why bother with the show?”
“It’s not about convincing them that I’m going off somewhere,” Jason
said. “It’s about giving them a sense of control. These are people used to
holding power, and there’s been a lot going on that they don’t understand and
have no influence over. A lot of that is centred on this pagoda and me sitting
in it. Normally, their response to something like that is to take or, failing that,
kill it. By jumping through some hoops for them now, I become more of a
known quantity, and demonstrate that at least someone can bring me to heel.”
“Except that’s total crap and you go berserk when people try to control
you,” Sophie said.
“Yes, but we won’t be telling people that. I told you: it’s a show. I don’t
want to spend the next few years fending off people who think that I’m some
kind of rogue threat.”
“You are some kind of rogue threat,” Sophie said.
“Again, please don’t tell people that at the party.”
“I hope you don’t think one party is going to put a stop to people thinking
that they can or should come after you,” Neil said.
“Of course not,” Jason said. “There will always be someone with too
much ambition, too much stupidity or both. But most of the people at this ball
are just concerned about a loose power running around during times that are
already uncertain. The Adventure Society and the royal family can parade me
around, showing everyone what a good boy I am. Then I’m no longer an
unknown threat to anyone’s ambitions or just the general welfare of the
kingdom.”
“You think any nobles care about the welfare of the populace?” Belinda
asked. “Good luck finding one.”
“There’s no shortage of selfish nobles,” Jason admitted. “But some, I
assume, are good people.”
“Nope,” Sophie said. “They all suck.”
“Based on your long history of robbing them?” Rufus asked pointedly.
“Yes,” Sophie said.
“You realise that Humphrey and I are both from aristocratic families,
right?” Neil asked.
“Yeah, but he’s pretty and you’re the healer. I’ve seen the things they
hide away. Mostly while stealing them. Your aunt Clarice has a hideous doll
collection, by the way, Neil. I have no idea why she locks it up, because no
one is going to steal that, trust me.”
“You broke into my house?”
“There’s no point breaking into poor people’s houses,” Belinda said.
“They don’t have any money. I suppose if you’re crap at breaking into
places.”
“The point is,” Sophie said, “that I’ve seen the things they hide. The
worse they are, the harder they work to make themselves seem good.
Humphrey and his mum might be nice and clean, but even Humphrey will
tell you that not all of his family are like them.”
“We all have secrets we hide,” Humphrey said. “Things we’re ashamed
of.”
Everyone stopped eating and turned to look at Humphrey.
“What?” he asked.
“What do you have to be ashamed of?” Neil asked.
“My entire point was that we don’t tell people those things,” Humphrey
said. “That’s why they’re secrets.”
“You keep saying ‘we,’ but I don’t think you have anything you’re
ashamed of,” Belinda said.
“Of course he does,” Jason said. “I bet it’s that one time, as a boy, he
secretly pilfered some condensed milk from the pantry.”
“No,” Gary said. “I bet he skipped out on training once to read a book on
how to maintain a humble demeanour when people won’t stop looking into
your sensuous eyes, like molten bowls of dark chocolate.”
“Sophie,” Belinda said. “What’s Humphrey’s deep, dark secret?”
Sophie finished chewing on a mouthful of salad as everyone looked at
her.
“He accidentally killed a baby,” she said casually. “This salad dressing is
fantastic. Can I get some of this on a sandwich?”
As she shoved another forkful of salad into her mouth, Humphrey looked
more and more like a boiling kettle until he finally boiled over.
“I DID NOT ACCIDENTALLY KILL A BABY!”
“You did say that not admitting it was the entire point,” Jason observed.
“Yeah, he definitely killed that baby,” Neil said.
“I did not kill a baby!”
“It’s a helpless little baby, bro. I know it was supposedly an accident, but
how could you?”
“Of course he had to say it was an accident,” Gary pointed out. “Plus, it’s
his word against that of a dead baby, so that’s probably how he got away with
it.”
Estella, watching the group continue roasting Humphrey, leaned towards
Clive, who was also staying out of it.
“Is it always like this?”
“More or less.”
“Aren’t you all meant to be some group of elite adventurers?”
“I’d consider our capabilities adequate.”
“I was expecting more… I don’t know. Dignity, I guess.”
“Admittedly, it’s more like this with Jason around,” Clive told her. “He
has a way of setting the tone. But it’s a good thing. Dignity is for outsiders; a
face we put on, as needed. We let Humphrey take the lead with that. But
we’ve seen some serious things. Lots of death, lives ruined. Adventurers
often meet people on the worst days of their lives. Being able to have a little
fun helps keep us sane.”
“Jason knows that better than most,” Farrah said from where she was sat
next to Clive. “He and I were trapped in another world for a few years, and
we saw some serious business. Sometimes you need people who understand
and accept you, and if you don’t have that, things can get extremely bleak.”
“He asked me to come work for him.”
“As an auxiliary, I know,” Clive said. “We try to avoid letting Jason
make major decisions for the team without discussing them first.
Unfortunately, they keep cropping up while we’re busy trying to not die. It’s
a good life, but even if you’re not fighting for us, spying for us will be far
from risk-free.”
Estella looked at the boisterous people loudly devouring their lunch.
Being risk-averse had always been important to her. Too much risk was the
very thing that had led to her falling out with her previous employer. As she
watched the group, saw their care for one other, having fun together, she
witnessed something she’d never had for herself.
Estella’s parents had been adventurers, dying when she was young. She
had been raised by her grandfather, who never pushed her towards
adventuring, not wanting to lose her the way he had his son. Estella had
always been solitary by nature, but the loss of her grandfather had changed
something. The absence of the one real connection she had to another person
left her feeling untethered. Perhaps it was time to start re-evaluating what she
wanted and what she was willing to do to get it.

“I don’t like you going to him,” Sophie said. “Smells like a trap.”
“Everything smells like a trap to you,” Neil said.
“That’s because anything we run into out there is likely to be a trap.”
Jason and his team, plus Rufus, Gary and Farrah, were tooling up for a
fight. While they kept most of their gear in dimensional spaces, Jason had
placed a ready room full of excess equipment they might need for any given
mission. Their gear was stowed on the second-highest level of the pagoda, in
what amounted to a locker room.
He had also installed more fireman’s poles, but these were hidden behind
a conspicuous bookcase that was opened by a hidden switch in an equally
conspicuous bust on a small table. The poles ran from the ready room down a
secret shaft to another hidden door in the atrium. Each pole was labelled with
the name of a team member, except for one—Neil’s pole was labelled
‘Robin.’
“The possibility of a trap is why I picked the location,” Jason said.
“Which Estella won’t be sharing with Estos until it’s time for him to head
there.”
“You should have picked here,” Sophie said.
“The only reason I agreed to this meeting is because of a name that Havi
Estos dropped, and the person belonging to that name has a lot of eyes and
ears. He’s already in hiding, and if he hears that Estos is paying me a visit, he
may disappear entirely. Again.”
“And who is this mysterious person whose name you’ve been declining to
tell us?” Sophie asked. She watched as Jason glanced at Belinda, who
shrugged.
“It’s Killian Laurent,” he said.
“Who is Killi… wait, isn’t he the guy that put a star seed in you and then
vanished?”
“With a good deal of the Silva crime family’s money and resources, no
less,” Clive said. “There was some concern you might get a little, uh,
enthused, once you found out.”
“Why would you think that?” Sophie asked.
“Because you tore half of Old City apart when Jason went missing,”
Belinda said.
“Well, now I can tear him apart, if we’ve found him.”
Jason’s kidnapping and star seed implantation was orchestrated by crime
boss Cole Silva and local Magic Society Director Lucian Lamprey, in
Greenstone. These were the enemies he had made by shielding Sophie from
them, which did not sit well with her. After a lifetime of everyone trying to
use her, the one person who helped change her life for no more reason than
she needed it had paid the price for doing so. For all her frenzied searching,
she had found nothing and failed to contribute to Jason’s rescue. Silva and
Lamprey had both been caught and punished, but the man who did their dirty
work had escaped.
As it turned out, Silva’s henchman, Killian Laurent, had been working
behind the scenes on his own plan. For him, Jason had been a conveniently
powerful distraction for Cole Silva, allowing Laurent to enact well-laid plans
to plunder the Silva crime family and escape the city.
“Are you sure we can trust Estella?”
“She can only hide her emotions from my perception if I don’t push,”
Jason said. “I pushed.”
“That’s not a guarantee,” Clive pointed out. “There’s a possibility that a
false aura was magically overlaid on hers. Admittedly, anyone who can do
that well enough to fool you, Jason, is probably more trouble than we can
deal with anyway. Someone like that could probably come down on us like a
hammer the moment we’re away from the safety of the pagoda.”
Jason moved to the bust on the table, depicting the Adam West Batman.
He unhinged the head to reveal the switch that moved the bookcase, revealing
the poles. Jason watched the bookcase move across with deep satisfaction.
“Jason.”
“Yes, Humphrey?”
“We’re portalling out of here.”
“We can portal from the atrium.”
“We can also portal from here.”
“This room is securely shielded against portals,” Jason said. “We need to
leave so we can portal out. Tell him, Clive.”
“He’s lying,” Clive said flatly. “He can portal us out of here just fine.”
“Bloke, why would you do me like that?”
“How about because you have a security system that involves an illusion
depicting my parents doing… things… in a giant tub of eels?”
“Hey, there was a clearly posted sign telling you to not go in there. And
why. You didn’t go in, did you?”
“No, I didn’t go in! What kind of idiot calls you on a bluff?”
The rest of the group nodded their agreement.
“I can’t help wondering about how active you had to be in creating that
scene, Jason,” Neil wondered aloud. “Did you sit down and write out how it
was going to go? How detailed was it? How long did it take to craft the
illusion of Clive’s parents and some eels, tweaking and correcting as you
went?”
“I can speak for all of us in saying that we don’t want to hear the answer
to that,” Humphrey said. “Jason, please just portal us out.”
“Actually,” Belinda said, “I’d like to hear—”
“I can speak for all of us,” Humphrey repeated, “in saying that we don’t
want to hear it. Portal, Jason.”
Jason grinned as he went to open a portal, then stopped.

[Astral Gate] has detected portal tracking magic. Spirit domain


prevents tracking within the domain, but external destinations
remain subject to tracking effects.
Backlash from using [Astral Gate] to reconfigure portal to avoid
tracking: low.

Would you like to reconfigure portal to avoid tracking?

“Huh,” he said.
“What is it?” Rufus asked.
“Someone is tracking portal use in the area. Not really a surprise.”
“All portal use on Livaros is tracked,” Farrah said. “The Magic Society
does it, in conjunction with the Adventure Society. Part defence measure,
part policing measure.”
“That involves a lot of infrastructure, though,” Clive pointed out.
“Infrastructure that doesn’t exist here on Arnote. Setting up a tracking blanket
without it is fairly high-end ritual magic.”
“It’s not news that it’s the top end of town that’s paying attention to us
here,” Belinda said.
“We don’t want to be tracked where we’re going,” Humphrey said. “We
should call it off.”
“It’s fine,” Jason said. “I can tweak the portal to avoid the tracking.”
“How?” Clive asked. “If it was that simple, why would anyone use
tracking magic?”
“Not everyone has the thing I keep behind the eel-porn doors.”
Jason opened a portal, which looked normal, but his blue and orange eyes
started glowing brightly and he grunted as pain racked his head. A small wall
of cloud material rose from the ground and he leaned back into it heavily.
“Ow.”
“Are you alright?” Farrah asked.
“Yeah. Just a minor backlash for overstepping my rank. Give me a
minute.”
Jason’s companions looked on with worry, and while Jason had been
optimistic, it was only a few minutes before the pain passed.
“Okay,” he said. “Let’s go.”
3
MORE THAN JUST A NAME

T HE STREETS OF L IVAROS WERE THRONGING WITH PEOPLE AS THE CENTRAL


areas were overtaken by a sprawling street festival. The market district was
the heart of the post-surge celebrations, but it extended into the boutique store
ward and even the Adventure Society campus. Tables had been brought out
and food stalls were everywhere, while the Magic Society had released
thousands of colour-changing paper lanterns that drifted over the streets,
illuminating everything in myriad colours.
Jason stood on a rooftop, his cloak dimmed down and blending into the
shadows of the late evening. Sophie stood beside him, significantly more
obvious. The rest of their companions were elsewhere, either waiting at the
meeting site or in place for other tasks, all connected through voice chat.
“Ooh, the food smells wafting up here,” Jason said with yearning. “I
could pop down there and grab us something real quick.”
“No,” Humphrey scolded. He, like the rest of the team, was positioned
elsewhere. “We talked about this, Jason. You agreed to play the ominous
harbinger, which means no popping down to check out food stalls.”
“It’s not like anyone would recognise me; I’d be completely anonymous.”
“That’s a lie and you know it,” Farrah said. “I’m betting that most of
these food stalls are run by the people who run the same stalls at the market.
Do not even bother trying to convince us that they won’t recognise you.”
“Not to mention that you have a very bad track record on staying
anonymous,” Clive added.
“Sophie could go down there,” Jason said. “No one’s looking for her.”
“Thankfully,” Sophie added. “I’ve had quite enough of that in my life,
thank you.”
“You want Sophie to go down there,” Humphrey said. “The most
beautiful woman in the city, dressed head to toe in white adventuring gear.
Very subtle.”
“You are such a suck-up,” Jason pouted.
“I think it’s sweet,” Belinda said. “But yes, she does rather draw the eye.”
Sophie stood out in her new armour of white with silver embellishments.
Figure-hugging yet utterly flexible, like Sophie herself, it focused on mobility
rather than protectiveness. She had acquired the armour while Jason was still
in recovery, through Neil’s looting power, from an unusual ooze-type
monster. She had not enjoyed fighting the silver-star jelly, but was very
satisfied with the spoils.
“There are lots of adventurers out there,” Jason complained, and Sophie
put a hand on his shoulder.
“I asked Belinda to go around grabbing anything that looked good,” she
said. “It’ll come out of her storage space nice and fresh. I know it’s not the
same as being down there, but it’s something.”
Jason turned to look at Sophie, pushing the hood back off his head.
“Thank you,” he said, his smile an uncharacteristic non-smirk. “That’s
really thoughtful of you.”
After a lifetime of mistrust, Sophie was still learning about
companionship, and her rare expression of bashfulness made Jason smile
wider.
“Belinda was meant to be intercepting the target,” Humphrey said.
“I can do both,” Belinda said. “Jason’s going to sense him long before I
can get eyes on him anyway.”
“How are we doing with that?” Humphrey asked.
“We left his warded compound in the warehouse district with a couple of
bodyguards,” Estella said through voice chat. “We took a carriage until we
hit the festival crowds and then started moving on foot.”
Estella was also included in the voice chat as she directed Havi Estos to
the meeting site.
“He doesn’t have a flight travel permit?” Neil asked.
“Temporarily suspended for the duration of the festival,” Estella
explained. “He’s not happy about it either.”
“Most of them have been suspended,” Rufus added.
“And the guilds aren’t thrilled, from what I’m overhearing,” Belinda said.
“You can tell a guild adventurer here more from their complaints than their
gear, although anyone fully tooled up to fight monsters at a festival is
probably a complete tool themselves.”

“I don’t like this,” Havi Estos said as he made his way through the crowd.
“It’s the perfect chance to get in some assassinations. This week will
probably see more of them than the rest of the year combined.”
“You’re worried about being assassinated,” Estella told him. “I can’t tell
if you think too highly or too poorly about yourself.”
“Being assassinated isn’t a matter of character,” Havi said. “It’s a matter
of being an obstacle to someone with no scruples.”
“Then maybe you shouldn’t surround yourself with people lacking
scruples. Look, no one is going to… oh, wow; that guy is definitely going to
assassinate you.”
“What? What guy?”
The two bodyguards went on alert. They had shortswords, as large
weapons were generally less effective in the city, as well as being more
attention-grabbing.
“That guy,” Estella said, pointing. “He’s hiding his aura fairly well, but
I’m, you know, me.”
The man in question started running.
“Don’t chase,” Havi ordered his bodyguards. “He might be trying to lure
you away.”
They carried on at a hustle, the bodyguards often rudely shouldering the
way through the crowd. Only Estella noticed Belinda trailing them,
occasionally changing her face.

Like the tentacles of an octopus, arms made of darkness emerged from


different shadows to drag people out of sight.
“That’s the fourth group that has been looking to kill this guy,” Jason said
as he dropped the last unconscious man onto the pile on the roof. “He’s got
more people after him than I do. Maybe he should be the one faking his
identity and skipping town.”
“The people after him are a little lower on the threat scale,” Rufus pointed
out.
“Still, four assassination attempts in one walk across town?”
“Not to mention the other two we stopped against unrelated people,”
Humphrey said. “And I know for a fact that the Adventure Society has people
quietly patrolling as well, so who knows how much is going on.”
“I wish you’d told me that earlier,” Jason said. “I almost tried to take one
of them out until I realised from his aura that he was watching for threats, not
being one. That would have been embarrassing.”
“Especially if you got your butt kicked,” Neil added.
“Yeah,” Jason agreed with a laugh.
“Estos was right about it being a prime chance for assassinations,” Estella
said.
“Not to mention robbery,” Belinda added. “I’ve spotted I don’t know how
many pickpockets. They know their business in this city too. The deftness
with which they dispel anti-theft wards is impressive. I might go find who
taught them, swap some tips.”
“You’re not a thief anymore, Lindy,” Humphrey pointed out.
“Uh, yep,” Belinda agreed. “Definitely not.”
“Belinda…”
“We’re approaching the destination,” Estella notified them.
“Site is secure,” Rufus said.
“I put up some extra anti-surveillance magic,” Farrah said, “but what was
already in place is surprisingly thorough.”

Havi Estos, Estella and the two bodyguards reached the boutique shopping
district where the festival was still going on, but was a bit more subdued.
This was where the festival-goers tended to be a little higher in the social
hierarchy, and letting loose too much could have political repercussions. It
was still a celebration, just more company barbecue than spring break in tone.
“Honestly, I didn’t think we’d get this far and only see one attacker,”
Havi Estos said. “Perhaps I overestimated the danger.”
“Exactly,” agreed Estella, who had shared none of her party interface
communication with him.
They arrived at a plain, cream-coloured storefront with no signage. There
was only a display window with a dummy draped in a linen suit and topped
with a Panama hat. The door opened at their approach, revealing a stern-faced
Rufus. Havi looked at the tall, leanly muscular adventurer in front of him
with midnight skin and striking good looks. The light of the colourful
lanterns overhead was reflected from the man’s bald head so well that Havi
absently wondered if he used some kind of wax polish.
“Havi Estos?” Rufus asked in a voice that made Havi wish he could just
run instead of answering. This whole night was the reason he liked
conducting business from his very secure home, but he felt he had little
choice. He knew enough about Asano and his associates to recognise the man
standing in front of him, and who that man’s grandfather was.
Havi was a very well-connected man, so he had become aware that Jason
Asano was now a person of significance. Perhaps Asano didn’t care that Havi
once sent Estella to spy on him—he certainly seemed to have settled things
with Estella Warnock. Havi didn’t have a respected grandfather to mend
fences, however. What he did have was information.
Like many in Rimaros, Havi had been tracking down every piece of
information on Jason Asano. He had a broader base of information gathering
than most, stretching from high nobility to base criminals. He was confident
that no one else had yet realised the connections between Asano and local
underworld figure Killian Laurent, but it was likely only a matter of time. As
such, Havi needed to exploit that knowledge before it lost its value to him.
“Yes, I’m Havi Estos. Is Mr Asano inside?”
“Jason Asano has been with you for some time,” Rufus said.
Havi and his bodyguard looked around and found Jason standing next to
Estella. Havi tilted his head, feeling a dissonance in his mind. He suddenly
realised that Asano had been walking with them for the last couple of streets,
but for some reason, Havi had been ignoring his presence.
The bodyguards moved their hands toward their swords, but their silver-
rank auras were suddenly annihilated and they froze, stricken with fear.
Asano’s presence was uncanny, almost part of the darkness as his cloak and
the twilight seemed to blend together, making what was shadow and what
was person unclear. How he did that while standing in the open Havi was
unsure. It was like an optical illusion, his eyes sliding off as he tried to make
out what was real and what wasn’t. It didn’t help that Asano didn’t register at
all to Havi’s aura senses. It was as if he were looking at a picture and not the
man himself.
“Jason,” Havi said. “You do prefer to be called Jason, right?”
“My friends call me Jason, Mr Estos.”
Asano’s voice had the icy hardness of winter granite, wholly unlike their
previous meeting. Havi found himself missing the man’s previously friendly
demeanour very much.
“Go inside, Mr Estos,” Rufus ordered. “Your employees can leave.”
Havi looked at the bodyguards that suddenly felt extremely inadequate to
his needs.
“I need to get home safely after this meeting,” he said.
“If you go home again,” Jason said, “you will be delivered safely.”
Havi paled at Jason’s use of the word ‘if’ rather than ‘when.’ Even so, he
dutifully followed Rufus inside. Waiting for them was a group of people
Estos recognised from his information gathering on Asano. Just looking at
the people around him was enough to know that Asano was not someone to
take lightly. From prominent members of the Geller and Remore families to
Clive Standish, whose relationship with the Magic Society would be a whole
other investigation. If they had been in Vitesse instead of the far side of the
world, no one in their right mind would dismiss the group.
The other person present was Alejandro Albericci, the proprietor of the
tailor shop in which they stood. Albericci had his own formidable
connections in Rimaros society and was not someone Havi would ever be
interested in getting on the bad side of.
“Thank you for the use of your property, Mr Albericci,” Rufus said.
“Consider it my apology for being used to political ends when you first
graced my establishment. I will go now, but be assured that no sound will
escape these walls. And, as Miss Hurin can attest, it would take formidable
effort to observe the interior magically.”
Alejandro departed through a rear door, leaving Havi surrounded. Belinda
and Sophie came in to stand by Jason, with Belinda closing the door behind
her. Havi steeled his nerve to speak.
“Jas— Mr Asano. I’d like to—”
“Killian Laurent,” Jason said, cutting him off. “That name is the only
reason any of us are here. I do hope you have more than just a name.”
“He was here, in the Storm Kingdom. After he plundered the wealth of
the Silva family in Greenstone, he came here and set himself up in Jaitari.”
The three islands that made up the city of Rimaros were not the most
populous regions of the Storm Kingdom. The largest concentrations of people
were on a landmass in the centre of the Sea of Storms. Comprised of what
was, in Jason’s world, Cuba, Haiti and the Dominican Republic, was a single
island, the largest in the Sea of Storms by far. Jaitari was the largest and most
populous city on the island and the Storm Kingdom overall.
“Why here?” Jason asked. “Of all the places in the world, why the one
that just happened to be where I arrived?”
“He was here long before you arrived,” Havi said. “I have no idea how
you arrived here, or why. I’ve heard rumours that Soramir Rimaros knows,
but even my ability to gather information has limits. But Laurent came here
because he has family. Someone in the Order of Redeeming Light. A priest.
The Adventure Society has him in custody, now. Maybe he can tell you
more.”
“You think the priest can give us Killian Laurent?”
“I can give you Killian Laurent. When your name started spreading
around, Mr Asano, Laurent heard about it and decided to get out. But that
was a bad idea during a monster surge, especially this one. Too many people
tracking too many things. Liquidating his assets and getting out of the region
without drawing the attention of people hunting for Builder cultists or Order
of Redeeming Light members meant relying on some extremely shady
people. The kind of people that won’t talk to the government or the
Adventure Society, but will talk to me.”
“You know where he is now?” Jason asked.
“No,” Havi said. “By design. If I went digging, word could get to him,
sooner or later. I’m not the only information broker out there, and he’s an
extremely cautious man. But I am certain I can find him, in fairly short order.
Then it will be on you to move fast enough to get him before he moves
again.”
Jason didn’t respond for a long time, leaving Havi to look at the alien
eyes that were all that could be seen from the otherwise-impenetrable
darkness of Jason’s hood.
“There’s something else,” Havi said. He hadn’t intended to share this. He
had planned instead to use it to build his own influence base, but Jason’s
silent stare had unnerved him. “Laurent was the one who hired the adventurer
that teleported the Order of Redeeming Light’s people off that island. The
new one that used to be the flying Builder city. He did it because his brother
asked. The priest I talked about.”
There was more silence. A line of dark flames moved along the ground,
from which a portal arch of dark crystal noiselessly emerged. The dark
flames rose to fill the arch, becoming an active portal.
“Go home, Mr Estos,” Jason said.
“Do you want me to start narrowing down Laurent’s location?”
“Soon. We’ll be in touch.”
Havi was uncertain about the wisdom of walking through a portal he
didn’t entirely trust, but he liked the idea a lot more than refusing to do so
and staying surrounded by these people. He stepped through and emerged in
his own home. The home that he had paid good money to be warded against
teleportation and portals. He turned to look at the portal he had just stepped
through and watched it descend back into the floor, leaving a line of dark
flames that vanished in turn.

Humphrey caught Jason as he collapsed, the moment Havi had vanished.


“Yeah, that was worse,” he croaked. “I have to stop using this astral
gate.”
“If you’d just let me study it,” Clive said, “maybe we could alleviate the
issues.”
“If Dawn said to wait for higher rank,” Farrah told him, “then it’s best to
wait.”
“I’m going to teleport Jason back to the pagoda,” Humphrey said. “Rufus,
please thank Mr Albericci again and let him know that we’re done.”
4
T H E M A K I N G O F T H AT M A N

H AVI E STOS WAS NOT USED TO FEELING INSIGNIFICANT . H IS CONNECTIONS


spanned from the very top of society to the very bottom, and he was valuable
enough to both that he had secured his position as the consummate
middleman. He was also a successful former silver-rank adventurer. Perhaps
not from a top guild, but certainly from a respectable one, and any adventurer
that could hold their own in Rimaros was worthy of note.
After emerging from Asano’s portal, Havi took an icy shower, then found
himself staring in his bathroom mirror. He was a sizeable man, with onyx
skin and gold eyes that matched his long hair. He looked at his expression
and could see for himself how shaken he appeared.
He had only met Asano once, when he dropped off a package from
Mordant Kerr, Havi’s old adventuring friend. Kerr had been in charge of a
fortress town during the surge and sent Asano with a package containing a
recording of Asano wiping out a monster wave threatening that town. Havi
had thought nothing of the ordinary-seeming man until he looked at the
recording after he was gone.
Kerr had wanted to connect Havi and Asano, recognising that Asano
could use Havi’s contacts and Havi would do well to get on good terms
before Asano’s rise to prominence. The disparity between the amiable man he
met and the slaughter machine in the recording had triggered Havi’s sense of
caution and he had begun investigating. Asano unexpectedly catching wind
of it had cost Havi the valuable services of Estella Warnock, whose
grandfather was another of Havi’s adventuring contemporaries.
Asano’s name came up in the course of Havi’s general practice of
knowing things that most people didn’t, in increasingly alarming ways.
Asano’s connections reached the top of Rimaros society, somehow coming in
a downward direction from an elusive upper echelon to which even the royal
family seemed to bend. It remained a mystery until the active presence of
Soramir Rimaros, the founder of the Storm Kingdom himself, became
known.
The more Asano’s name came to his attention, the more Havi had grown
concerned. Others were coming to him as an information broker for details on
Asano, which Havi had continued to gather, albeit much more carefully than
he had before. He had seen what Asano’s enemies looked like, what had
come of them, and worried that Asano might consider the slight of Havi
sending someone to probe his aura as antagonistic.
Asano’s enemies list was formidable, relative to his rank, and the
mysteries surrounding him were highly suggestive. What had come of those
enemies did not bode well for anyone who caught Asano’s ire. What did it
take to make a personal enemy of the dimensional being waging war on an
entire world?
Havi was wary of approaching Asano, even though it was possible Asano
hadn’t given Havi a second thought. Bringing himself back to Asano’s
attention could have been buying real trouble to avoid imaginary danger, but
it had not been something he was willing to risk. He didn’t want to be on
Asano’s enemies list, having seen Asano’s other enemies. But his enquiries
into Asano’s past had turned up one enemy that stood out from the others, for
having gotten away.
Killian Laurent was already known to Havi, but only by reputation. Havi
might work with some less-than-reputable figures, but Laurent was known
for having no depth to which he would not stoop. There were no lines he
would not cross, no villain he would not work with and no depravity he
would not exploit.
The more he looked into it, the more that targeting Laurent seemed like
the way to turn things around with Asano. He’d missed out on an opportunity
to make a connection with an adventurer with mysterious influence in the
corridors of power and whose rise to prominence seemed inevitable.
Delivering Killian Laurent on a plate could rectify that mistake in a big way.
Havi was still making preparations when Asano’s predicted leap into
wider attention came both sooner and more ostentatiously than Havi’s most
outlandish predictions. Asano’s display of his aura blanketing the sky and his
transforming house was something everyone became aware of. What came
next, though, didn’t just grab the attention of the powerful and well informed;
it scared them. Asano telling the Builder to pack up and go home was one
thing. The Builder actually doing it was quite another.
It was clear to the many observers that Asano was not just dealing with
gods and great astral beings but that he had been for some time. Where had
he gone during the mysterious period he was believed dead? What had he
done, and why was he back? Havi only had answers to some of those
questions, and unreliable ones, at that.
Getting on Asano’s good side had very much landed on the top of Havi’s
priority list, and he had accelerated his preparations to serve up Laurent. He
had not pushed so hard as to spook Laurent, or so he had thought. Leaving his
bathroom in a soft robe, Havi discovered that he had made two critical
underestimations. One was Laurent’s ability to realise he was being looked
into, and the other was Laurent’s ability to bypass the protection magic on his
house.

“Wow, that was fast,” Belinda said as she watched five men move an
unconscious Havi out of his house and into a carriage. It set off down the
street, in the direction of the docks. There was no shortage of drunken
revellers on the streets, but the warehouse district was fairly clear and the
docks weren’t a festival area. The vehicle would be able to pass through
without being blocked by crowds.
Jason’s voice chat didn’t have the range to extend from Livaros, where
Belinda was, to Jason at home. He was in the pagoda that Humphrey had
teleported him to, so he could recover from overstressing his portal ability
again. She relayed the information through Shade, hidden in her shadow.
“Already?” Jason complained when Shade reported the information. He
had barely lay down to rest. “Come on, I’m still wrecked from portalling
Estos through his damn house wards. It’s going to be a couple of hours before
I’m combat-ready again.”
“I told you it was the wrong move,” Neil said. “As the team healer, I
strongly advise against harming yourself just so you can show off an ability
that would be better kept secret anyway.”
“Agreed,” Humphrey said. “Shade, is Estos still alive?”
Most of the group was in a lounge area, gathered around the reclining
Jason, either portalled back by Clive or teleported in by Humphrey. Only
Sophie and Belinda had stayed to watch Havi Estos’ home on Belinda’s
hunch.
“He is alive,” Shade said. “Miss Belinda would also like me to iterate that
she was, indeed, correct.”
As they chatted in Alejandro’s store following Havi’s dismissal, Belinda
had voiced the opinion that Havi was underestimating his exposure to
Laurent.
“We already know he’s tipped off targets he’s been looking into in the
past,” she had said. “I’m guessing that Laurent might turn the tables, maybe
set a trap for Jason. I say we watch the guy and see if Laurent makes a move
in the wake of Estos meeting with us.”
“That would mean Laurent would have to know about Estos meeting with
us,” Humphrey pointed out.
“Yep,” Belinda had agreed.
The result was the team’s illicit activity specialists keeping a watch on
Havi’s place. They had barely arrived when five men moved an unconscious
Havi from his home into waiting transport.
“Tell Belinda to track the carriage,” Humphrey said. “Hopefully, it will
lead us to Laurent and we can jump on him before he lays a trap for us.”
“Unless this is the trap for us,” Jason pointed out. “You know, I think we
might be approaching this the wrong way.”
“How so?” Humphrey asked.
“I don’t think Laurent is going to be a big fan of playing fair, so why
should we?”

Havi was unconscious, bound to a thick metal pole by heavy chains. Even
with a suppression collar, the raw strength of a silver-ranker was no small
thing; both the poles and the chains had been strongly reinforced with magic.
Killian Laurent took the stopper from a small alchemical vial and waved it
under Havi’s nose.
He awoke with a start.
“Steal some mushrooms!” he yelled deliriously.
“What?” Killian asked.
“What?” a bleary-eyed Havi asked in return, head swaying as he blinked,
his senses slowly coming back. He looked around, seeing that he was in a
featureless room where the walls, floor and ceiling were all metal. It had no
windows but a pair of large doors, suggesting it might be some kind of
warehouse.
He had a groggy recollection of being woken in similar fashion and
threatened with unpleasantly specific forms of violence if he didn’t go
through a portal. As his senses somewhat cleared, he looked at the emaciated
and sickly white man standing in front of him. He had never seen Killian
Laurent, but the man perfectly fit Laurent’s distinctive description.
“Oh, crap.”
“Indeed,” Killian agreed. “You wanted to use me as a resource? To feed
me to Jason Asano? You should have stuck to information trading, Mr Estos,
because information gathering is not your area.”
“You won’t get away with kidnapping me right out of the city.”
“Oh, I know. Jason Asano has developed quite the remarkable team since
I last met him. I don’t know exactly how they’ll track us down. Maybe the
former thief secretly placed tracking magic on you during your meeting.
Perhaps the astral magic specialist will trace the portal used to bring you here.
My people made sure they left the city’s tracking area before portalling from
a boat at sea, but I don’t think that will stop them. They are quite the
resourceful group. Powerful as well, which is why I’ve taken the time to set
things up quite thoroughly. The only reason I’m keeping you alive is in case
there’s some tracking magic I can’t sense on you that will be negated on your
death.”
Killian moved close to Havi. He was shorter by almost a full head, but
grinned malevolently as he tilted his head back to lock eyes with the former
adventurer.
“Once I realised that you were looking into me, I started moving things
into place. I could have run, but that was not a convenient approach, given all
this monster surge unpleasantness. Instead, I made sure that it would look
like I was running to anyone who bothered to investigate. I need it to look
like I was being sloppy. I thought it was best to give you a little sense of
urgency, so you would be the one who got sloppy. Which you did. You’re a
good middleman, Estos, but your expertise lies in helping upstanding citizens
connect with not-so-upstanding citizens, without being seen with the riffraff.
This spider-at-the-heart-of-an-information-web thing you’re trying to expand
into isn’t going to work.”
“Laurent,” Havi said. “I know you’re evil. You don’t have to make a big
speech explaining your plan to prove it.”
Killian chuckled as he turned to put a little distance between Havi and
himself.
“Bravado. I like it. I have a client who enjoys breaking down the tough
ones, so you’ll be quite lucrative for me. Once Asano and his team are dealt
with, which is no small thing. You won’t sense them, with that suppression
collar on, but there is a coterie of gold-rank mercenaries here, waiting for the
arrival of Asano and his team. I know better than to take them on directly
with anything but massively overwhelming force.”
Killian shook his head.
“It’s unfathomably expensive to hire discreet gold-rankers who will work
outside of the normal channels, you know. Fortunately, the monster surge has
been very lucrative for me.”
“Tragedy often is, to bastards with no scruples,” Havi said, spitting out
the words like a curse. “You’ll work with anyone. Builder cult, Red Table,
those Purity lunatics.”
“Yes,” Killian agreed with a laugh. “It’s been working out quite nicely
for me. But if I’d known he would eventually cost me this much money and
attention, I’d never have left Asano alive. At the time, it seemed like a
worthwhile distraction, since I didn’t want his friends seeking me out in
anger. I’m not sure if you know who Danielle Geller is, but she’s not
someone you want motivated to hunt you down, believe me.”
“Neither is Asano,” Havi said.
“That’s certainly true now, which is why I’m going to all this effort. Who
would have thought that he would fight off a star seed, even if the ritual
powering it was left unattended? You know, I rather think I was the making
of that man. I could never have foreseen setting in motion a chain of events
that would have my dear brother helping the Builder arrange for him to arrive
here from another world. Asano lives an inconveniently outrageous life,
which I now need to put a stop to. Luckily, you aren’t the only one with some
impressive connections, and certain people are likewise eager to see Asano’s
demise. Otherwise, I might not have been able to arrange all these gold-
rankers, no matter how much money I threw around.”
“Boss,” one of Killian’s thuggish lackeys said. He had been monitoring a
magical projection floating over a ritual on the floor behind where Havi was
chained up, out of his line of sight. The projection displayed the intricate web
of alarm arrays placed around their location.
“Ah,” Killian said. “It seems like the guests have arrived. I assume Asano
brought his full team, plus the Remore boy and his team as well.”
“Boss, I’m not so sure this is Asano. The alarms are picking up a whole
bunch of gold-rankers.”
“What?”
5
A LE S S O N O F D AY S G O N E

I N THE AFTERMATH OF THE FIGHTING , A SMALL ARMY OF GOLD AND SILVER -


rankers swept the area for escape tunnels, traps and anyone who had managed
to hide away. The adventurers were a combined force of the Sapphire Crown
guild, who served the royal family, and Amouz family members. The Amouz
family had volunteered in numbers that surprised even Liara, whose husband
was born into it.
Killian Laurent had taken the place of Havi Estos in being chained to a
thick metal pole with a suppression collar around his neck. Even more
precautions had been added, in the form of a layered ritual array so
sufficiently complex that Clive, Belinda and Farrah were all studying it
enthusiastically. The gold-rank ritualist who had put it in place was looking
harried as they peppered him with questions.
Sound could not pass through the edge of the ritual circle, which was
currently empty save for Killian. Just outside it, Liara and Jason stood
together, talking quietly as they watched Killian, who stared back in turn.
“I’ve been obsessing over finding the portal user who helped the Order of
Redeeming Light for a while,” Liara said. “The order members themselves
still won’t talk, and we’ve had some of them for months now. Their god
wasn’t even their god and they’re still zealots.”
“Carlos says that we need to stop thinking of them as ideologues and start
thinking of them as victims,” Jason said. “Just as much as people turned into
vampires.”
“I’m well aware of what Carlos thinks,” Liara said. “The Adventure
Society turned all my prisoners over to the Church of the Healer. You think
this man will be more forthcoming?”
“He’s practical. Self-serving. He’ll be willing to make some kind of
deal.”
“And you’re alright with that? I know what he did to you.”
“Here’s something that won’t be in the Adventure Society’s file on me,”
Jason told her. “While I was in the other world, one of the very few gold-
rankers there killed my brother, my lover and my friend. When the time
came, and I had him at my mercy, I gave him to someone else for their own
revenge. I was burning so hot for vengeance at the start, but I came to realise
that it’s just empty.”
“You had a gold-ranker at your mercy?”
“Circumstances,” he said. “My whole life is exploiting circumstances to
stay alive when, by every sensible metric, I should die. Or stay dead; it
varies.”
“You made the right choice calling us in. Not just because of what was
waiting for you here, but it plays into the story we’re trying to sell about your
willingness to defer to the Adventure Society. Giving up personal vengeance
for the communal good will sit well with people who know your going off
with Soramir is just a charade. Some of them worry that you roaming around
in secret is worse than letting you do so openly.”
“Let,” Jason repeated, dissatisfaction in his voice as he zeroed in on her
word choice.
“Yes, Jason. Let. The point is to demonstrate that you’re not a madman
on the loose with unknown powers, answering to no one.”
“Team player, that’s me,” he grumbled.
“If you’re going to leave Killian to us, would you like to speak to him
first or walk away entirely?”
“I may be willing to walk away from revenge,” Jason said, “but I won’t
be giving up on villain banter. I don’t have it in me.”
She gave him a flat look.
“Yeah, I know,” he complained. “No-fun, stern-adventurer Jason.”

Cassin Amouz had not participated in the raid itself but had been the driving
force behind the Amouz family’s contribution to the operation. He arrived in
the aftermath, shown into the warehouse by some of his own people. He
spotted Liara speaking to a man wrapped in what looked like a portal; he had
to be Jason Asano. Cassin strode over to Liara as Asano stepped inside the
ritual circle and approached the prisoner.
“Princess Liara,” he greeted.
“Lord Amouz. Thank you again for your support of this operation.”
“Consider me motivated to root out all the people who have betrayed our
kingdom and our world. This sickly thing you have chained up knows the
traitor who helped take my son?”
Liara nodded as Cassin looked around.
“And the other thing?” he asked. “She’s here?”
Liara nodded to where Clive, Farrah and Belinda were still badgering the
ritualist with questions.
“Darker skin,” she said, to differentiate the fair-skinned Farrah from the
swarthy Belinda.
Cassin moved over to them. “Belinda Callahan?”
“I didn’t take it,” Belinda said, pointing at Clive. “I saw him doing
something; I’m pretty sure it was him.”
“What was him?” Cassin asked. Clive rolled his eyes and went back to
examining the ritual diagram on the ground.
“Nothing,” Belinda said. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
Farrah sighed, giving Belinda a look she normally reserved for Jason.
“I’m Farrah Hurin,” she said. “And yes, this is Belinda Callahan. You’re
Lord Cassin Amouz, are you not?”
“I am. I’ve wanted to take the chance to thank you, Miss Callahan. The
bold risk you took in infiltrating the Order of Redeeming Light’s stronghold
is the reason my son was brought home before they finished infecting him
with their heinous magic. You have the eternal gratitude of the Amouz
family, and me, his father, most of all. If you ever have need of anything at
all—”
“Ooh, free stuff!”
Farrah sharply nudged Belinda with her elbow.
“I mean, you’re very welcome,” Belinda corrected.
“How is Young Master Gibson?” Farrah asked.
“Yeah,” Belinda said, her tone suddenly less playful. “He wasn’t in the
best way, last time I saw him. I wasn’t in time to help him.”
“Yes, you were,” Cassin said. “The specialist from the Church of the
Healer is optimistic. Cautiously optimistic, as he repeatedly specifies, but it’s
hope.”
He settled his gaze firmly on Belinda.
“Hope that you have given me,” he told her. “And I meant it when I said
if you ever need anything. All the free stuff you can carry.”
“You may want to rethink that offer, Lord Amouz,” Farrah said. “She has
a storage space power and a lot of imagination.”
Belinda didn’t say anything glib, thrown by the sincerity of Cassin’s
gratitude. It was not something she was used to, and she suddenly felt
awkward. He recognised that and nodded.
“I have a lot to organise here, so I shall leave you now. But the door of
the Amouz family is always open to you, Miss Callahan.”
When Cassin left, Farrah nudged Belinda’s shoulder.
“Feels good, doesn’t it? Genuinely helping someone. It’s why you’re
better off being an adventurer than a thief.”
“You’re right,” Belinda said, holding up a pocket watch. “You should
probably have this back.”
Farrah frowned as she took it from Belinda’s hand.
“How did you even get this?”

Enveloped in a starry void, Jason looked more like he was floating than
walking as he moved, but he dismissed the cloak as he reached Killian. He
stood in front of the pale elf chained to a thick metal pole. Killian had a
narrow, bony frame and pallid skin, which was unlike the normally hale
appearance that even elves that weren’t essence users had. Jason took a small
device from his pocket and tapped it. A privacy screen manifested invisibly
around them, preventing anyone else from eavesdropping on their
conversation.
“You certainly look more impressive than the last time I saw you,
Asano.”
“You look about the same. I’m told that each time we rank up, we get
closer to how we are represented in our souls. That makes your soul pretty
damn ugly.”
“And yours tediously vain. You’re a lot prettier at silver rank, Asano.”
“I look more like my brother than I used to. That used to annoy me.”
Killian narrowed his eyes.
“He died, didn’t he? Your fault?”
“Not my fault. It was another selfish prick like you.”
“Ah,” Killian said. “My mistake was that I assumed that you would seek
me out in vengeance for what I’ve done to you. It never actually occurred to
me that you would be willing to bring in outsiders and let them take that from
you. But it seems you’ve tasted vengeance and found it not to your liking.”
“You seem rather calm, given the circumstances.”
“Oh, I have many secrets, many resources and contacts; knowledge and
insights that are very valuable. Especially to groups that cannot do what I
have done, yet desire what I have gained from doing them. Organisations
tend to make deals with people as useful as me, rather than killing us for our
many transgressions.”
“Which is what will happen here, I’m sure. So long as they’re adequately
fed, I imagine you’ll live long enough to finagle your freedom again, sooner
or later. We live very long lives.”
“And you can accept all that? I thought you were an idealist.”
“I was. Still am, I hope. But I’ve come to realise that taking the best that
things can be is better than lamenting the way they should be.”
“A man of compromise now?”
“Maybe. Sometimes it feels like I’m the only one willing to do what it
takes to turn what should be into what can.”
“You sound tired, Asano.”
“Actually, I’m better than I’ve been in a long time. I’m just tired of
compromising with people like you. That’s why the Adventure Society can
have you. Make a deal, kill you, let you go; I wash my hands of it. I was done
with you a long time ago.”
“Yet you couldn’t resist talking to me.”
“It’s true. I’m testing myself, I think. Can I let what you’ve done go and
leave you to the authorities and whatever slack they may cut you?”
“And how is the test going?”
“Unremarkably. I’m a little surprised, to be honest. Until I heard your
name again, I hadn’t thought about you in a long time. Turns out it’s because
I didn’t care.”
“Is the same true for your pet thief with the pretty silver hair? She’s been
giving me a look that says she wants to kill me.”
“That’s because she does want to kill you. But she didn’t spare you a
thought either, until your name came up. You’re a target of opportunity, and
that’s all. At the end of the day, you just don’t matter. You’re a lesson of days
gone.”
“Listen to you. You’re quite the big shot now, but I’ve seen you naked
and helpless. Not just without your clothes, but without that ridiculous mask
you use to hide away the malevolence inside you.”
“I don’t hide it, Laurent. Not anymore. I use it, as needed, and then I put
it away until the next prick like you comes along. But you know, if I asked
these people to let me take you away, they would.”
“I imagine so.”
“But I’m not going to do that. You’re responsible for enough stains on
my soul already; you aren’t worth another. I suppose this is the part where I
tell you all the terrible things I could do to you—and they are very terrible—
but I just can’t be bothered.”
“I believe you, Asano. I know a little about the forces with which you
seem to be involved, and they’re very intimidating. Why do you think I
wanted to kill you? If we meet again, I’m fairly certain that goal will be out
of my reach. In fact, you’ll probably be able to kill me out of hand.”
“You may be right. Would you be interested in garnering a little goodwill
for when that day comes?”
“You want something from me.”
“You secured the service of a portal user for your brother. A friend of
mine would very much like to know who that was.”
“And if you walk out of this ritual circle with it, it makes you look good
in front of all the fancy folk who are oh-so-scared of you right now. Helps
buy you the time to grow strong enough that you don’t have to care what they
think.”
“Pretty much. But it also signals to them that you’re amenable to working
with them. Given the reticence of your brother and his friends, that’s a
valuable signal to send.”
Killian and Jason looked at each other in silence for a long time.
“Despite my best efforts, I’ve underestimated how dangerous you are,
haven’t I?”
“Yes.”
Killian jerked his head, indicating all the people around them in the
warehouse.
“They don’t know that they’ve done the same yet, do they?”
“No.”
“And you need to become stronger before they realise. You aren’t afraid
I’ll tell them?”
“You don’t know enough to make more than baseless predictions. They
know I’m dangerous enough now that they won’t risk pushing. Not on your
word.”
“There are some who would.”
“There always are.”
Killian chuckled.
“Yes, there are. Esteban Galo is the name you are looking for, Mr
Asano.”
“Thank you, Mr Laurent. You’ll forgive me if I hope we never see each
other again.”
“Mr Asano, you’ll find my hope on that count to have significantly more
fervour than yours.”
6
DEAR JOHN

J ASON TOSSED THE LIST OF NAMES ONTO THE TABLE IN FRONT OF HIM .
“This is what Dawn was up to,” he said as he rubbed his temples. “She
could have told me. It’s not like I was doing much more than lounging about
recovering.”
He got up and moved out onto the pagoda balcony, leaning on the rail and
looking out to sea. In the distance, light flared as a magical storm was
absorbed by a windmill-like mana accumulator.
Farrah moved to stand next to him.
“She knew she’d have to talk you into it.”
“So, she left, knowing I’d go along because she wasn’t here to argue with
and I’m sentimental.”
“A mortal failing, she called it.”
“Then I guess I’m not that mortal. We are not taking Zara Rimaros as an
auxiliary team member. If nothing else, she’s a full-blown adventurer.
Auxiliaries are taken for their specialty skills, and her specialty is blowing up
a bunch of monsters with typhoon powers.”
Farrah took a recording crystal from her pocket and held it out for him to
take. Jason groaned.
“She left a recording crystal with you and bailed again?” he asked.
“These are starting to feel like Dear John letters.”
“What’s a Dear John letter?”
“It doesn’t matter,” Jason said.
“I’ll give you some privacy to watch it. Just remember that we’re going
out to help Autumn find a familiar this afternoon.”
“Yeah.”
Farrah went to the elevating platform and left Jason alone in his suite. He
moved inside and a crystal projector formed out of cloud stuff. It was a small
plinth, capped by a pyramid, atop which was a slot for a recording crystal.
Jason placed the crystal Farrah had given him and then dropped into a sprawl
across a couch. A large image of Dawn’s face flickered into place over the
projector, making Jason feel like he was looking at a hologram of Emperor
Palpatine.
“Sorry for the galactic emperor look,” the projection said. “I was hoping
it would make it feel less like a Dear John letter.”
“We could have just had a conversation,” Jason muttered.
“I know we could have just had a conversation,” the recording of Dawn
said, “but conversations with you always go awry from what the other person
intends.”
“Not always.”
“Yes, always.”
Jason looked at the projection, affronted. Dawn laughed.
“I wish I could see your face right now. You’re not as unpredictable as
you think, Jason.”
Jason’s mouth formed a thin line as he pressed his lips hard together in
frustration.
“Yes,” Dawn said, “I know you’re grouchy that you can’t talk back, but
that’s the point. This isn’t a discussion. You’re going to sit and listen, get
crabby about it, then accept what I’ve done because I’m not here to argue
with and it feels wrong to deny me without having me here to argue with.”
“I’m starting to hate this recording.”
“I’ve been discussing with the Adventure Society about this false identity.
Since you’ll be signing on with your own team as an auxiliary, it will be less
obvious if your team takes on multiple auxiliaries at once.”
“I know. I’ve seen the list.”
“You’re still passive-aggressively having a conversation with a recording,
aren’t you?”
Jason glared at the image.
“But here’s the good news,” Dawn said. “The list is fake.”
“What?”
“I knew you’d get cranky, so I made a list of names that would annoy
you, so that you’d be less angry with the real list.”
“I wouldn’t have to get cranky if you didn’t give me a fake list full of
people I’d never take. I bet you did this for laughs.”
“Also, I thought it would be funny.”
“I knew it! You knew you were just… and I’m still talking to a
recording.”
Dawn’s expression softened and the image zoomed out, showing that she
was sitting on the grass on a hillside somewhere, in a white summer dress. It
was decorated with images of a flower known as phoenix wing.
“This is going to be a new start for you, Jason. You’ve told me about
when you first came to this world and all the promise it held. This is your
chance to have that adventuring career you were imagining back then. Maybe
not exactly as you imagined it, but I suspect you won’t be too unhappy with
having a secret identity.”
Dawn’s image looked regretful, as did Jason’s watching it.
“I guess I should give you the real list of names,” she said. “Rufus,
obviously. He’ll fight with you, but strictly speaking, he’ll be listed as a
trainer. You still have a lot to learn from him, and your friend Taika could
benefit from his knowledge as well. Gary is another easy inclusion. Once he
finds out that you can just conjure up all the rare materials he could ask for to
practise his smithing, I’m certain he’ll jump at the chance, even if he can’t
take his results out of your soul space. Just make sure he does some work
where people can use the results as well. I imagine that diamond-rank mentor
of his will turn up regularly to keep him on the right path.”
Jason couldn’t argue with those picks.
“You should consider Estella Warnock as well. I think you would be
better than me making that approach, but she’ll work well with Belinda and
she seems a little lost. Also, I know you love her pink hair, so maybe try to
hide your celestine fetish at least a little.”
“I do not have a… I’m arguing with no one again. Also, I’m lying.”
“Yes, you do have a fetish,” Dawn said. “Stop lying to yourself.”
Jason grumbled at the projection.
“Those are the easy picks,” Dawn said. “Next come people you aren’t so
familiar with. There’s a man named Amos Pensinata. He’s a gold-ranker that
you’ve probably heard of. Like you, he’s had some experiences with soul
trauma that left him with a more capable aura than most. I’ve convinced him
to travel with you for a time and teach you some of the things he’s learned
about soul manipulation. Some of it will come from his own experiences,
while others will be things you would normally learn at or just before gold
rank. Fortunately, Mr Pensinata takes a more learn-as-need view.”
Jason was familiar with Pensinata by reputation. He was the man who had
defeated the same forces that had forced Jason to almost kill himself fleeing
in the underwater complex.
“Pensinata has one condition for travelling with you, which is that he
brings his nephew with him. The young man has a problem common to
adventurers in high-magic zones: he was sheltered through iron and bronze
rank and lacks independent experience. Pensinata wishes for his nephew to
get some seasoning, away from his overprotective parents.”
“He’s not going to kidnap his nephew, is he?”
“Carlos Quilido can tell you more about Amos, as they have known each
other for a long time.”
“That wasn’t a no.”
“Speaking of which, Quilido is also on the list. Your soul space will be a
powerful tool in researching what has been done to the Order of Redeeming
Light members. Which means bringing along the captured Order of
Redeeming Light members.”
“How many people do you think I can fit in the cloud flask’s vehicle
construct?” Jason asked the projection.
“I know that means a lot of people, but you should probably keep the
prisoners in your soul space anyway.”
“You can sod that idea right off. I’m not turning my soul into bloody
Arkham Asylum.”
“I’m assuming,” Dawn’s recording said, “that you just went on some kind
of colourful tirade because, apparently, the word ‘no’ is too efficient for
you.”
“It lacks emphasis!” Jason yelled at the projection.
“If you really can’t accept the idea, I have already discussed some
alternatives—less secure alternatives—with Priest Quilido.”
“Damn right. Carlos can buy a prison bus or something.”
“There is one more person who needs to go along, and this is the one
you’re not going to like. The Adventure Society wants a representative
attached to your team. Something of a personal liaison to you.”
“You mean a spy.”
“Yes, basically a spy.”
“Stop predicting what I’m going to say!”
“No.”
“Arrgh!”
Jason watched Dawn’s laughing figure, realising that being there, teasing
his future self was possibly the last piece of unadulterated fun she had before
heading off into the cosmos on Very Serious Business.
“I don’t know who they’re going to choose for you,” she said, “but I think
they know better than to make some foolish choice. They know you’ll flat-
out refuse if they don’t find someone acceptable and that pressuring you
won’t work. I made sure they at least understood that much.”
“Good,” Jason said.
Dawn’s image took on a sad smile.
“We said our goodbyes in your soul space, so I won’t retread that
ground,” she said. “I hope that when I see you again, you don’t think too
poorly of me.”
She made a gesture and the recording ended.

Jason still hadn’t emerged from his suite since Farrah gave him the recording
when Liara arrived at the cloud house. Shade led Liara to one of the
mezzanine lounges, filled with leafy plants and overlooking the atrium.
Although opaque from the outside, the atrium wall rising halfway up the
tower was transparent from the inside and let in plenty of natural light. Farrah
was waiting for her at a table, drinking a tall glass of iced tea. She poured
another for Liara from a pitcher as she gestured for the princess to join her.
“What brings you here?” Farrah asked as Liara sat. “We have an activity
soon and are pressed for time.”
“Assisting Miss Leal with her familiar ritual, yes. Quite a small-scale
activity, given surrounding events.”
“We’re looking for small, Princess. And we value friendship.”
Liara nodded. “Mr Asano knows about the Adventure Society liaison?”
“I gave him the message Dawn left behind, but he hasn’t emerged since. I
don’t know what his reaction will be. Dawn tried to manage him as best she
could, but there’s only so much managing you can do with Jason. And only
so much we’re willing to. He might need some rough edges shaved off from
time to time, but we’re on his side first. Not the Adventure Society’s and
certainly not your family’s.”
“I have no qualms with loyalty, Miss Hurin. Loyal people are reliable,
and I’ve found over the decades of my career that consistency is more
valuable than capability. If you find someone with both, you treasure them.”
“Has the society come up with a liaison they think Jason will accept?”
“I have a name, but whether he’ll accept it is still up in the air. But I’m
here for another reason. Related to your upcoming activity, in fact.”
“Oh?”
“There is a lot of talk related to Jason floating around, but the amount of
accurate information varies wildly amongst different circles.”
“And?”
“And when information is scarce, people have a habit of taking what they
know—or what they’ve been told, true or not—and adding in their own
assumptions to fill in the gaps.”
“And then those assumptions ferment into facts in their mind.”
“Just so, Miss Hurin.”
“And someone has made some assumptions about Jason?”
“There are certain sectors of the adventuring community—the bottom tier
guilds and other, less formalised groups—where information about Jason has
taken on a certain tone. Some rather drastic assumptions have been made and
are threatening to head in a less-than-ideal direction.”
“How so?”
“Information on Jason’s actual combat ability hasn’t spread nearly as far
as his name.”
“I see where this is going,” Farrah said. “Someone has convinced
themselves that Jason is all reputation and no power, and think that taking
him out is their pathway to fame and prestige.”
“More or less.”
“And they know what we’re up to today.”
“Yes.”
“Did you leak it so that these idiots would be coming after us and ruining
Autumn’s attempt to find a new familiar?”
“Of course not.”
“You know she lost her familiar defending Rimaros.”
“I do.”
“It’s been traumatic enough for her, without some idiots coming along
and ruining what’s already hard enough.”
“I know.”
“Do you, Princess?”
“Miss Hurin, I was in the bowels of that flying city. I had friends and
family convince me to let them sacrifice themselves. I would never do what
you’re suggesting to someone who made sacrifices for my city and my
kingdom.”
“But I’m not talking about you using her as bait. I’m talking about you
using Jason as bait, which you’ve done before. Autumn would just be
collateral.”
“I didn’t do this, Miss Hurin. It came from some Magic Society source.
No conspiracy, just some administrator who saw that Miss Leal had
registered she was going to go out and conduct a binding ritual, with a list of
who was going to stand watch for her. An opportunist sold some information,
we heard about it, and I came to warn you.”
A portal opened and Jason stepped out.
“You’re going to do more than warn us, Princess.”
7
THIS DOESN’T FEEL GLORIOUS

T HERE WAS A ROCKY OUTCROPPING ON THE SOUTHERN MAINLAND , WELL


beyond the border of Storm Kingdom territory. Towering over the jungle, it
overlooked a sweeping river and was an excellent landmark to portal to. A
portal opened as someone did just that, and adventurers appeared. Emerging
first were silver-rank guild adventurers, followed by Princess Liara and,
finally, a visibly nervous Autumn Leal.
Autumn looked around at the guild team assigned to watch over her
familiar ritual. They were from the Sapphire Crown guild, whose bronze-
rankers wouldn’t give her a second glance on the street, even with her silver
rank. They would be polite if they ever spoke to her, sure, but why would
they? And all of that was aside from the gold-rank princess.
Liara directed them to start descending the outcropping.
“Don’t think about them,” Liara told Autumn in a calming voice. “My
understanding is that if you aren’t looking to attract certain varieties of
carnivore, a calm mind is best for familiar rituals.”
“I don’t understand what’s going on,” Autumn said. “I mean, I
understand why I’m here, but why are you here?”
“Mr Asano was unhappy that people coming after him were going to
disrupt your familiar ritual, so he told me to take you to another site while he
explains things to the people in question.”
“He can tell you to do things?”
“No, but that doesn’t seem to stop him.”
She didn’t point out that he also told the Builder to do things, which was
really how they ended up in their current circumstances.
“Mr Asano’s aura is rather strong,” Liara continued. “Strong enough that
even I can’t read his emotions. So, when enough anger slipped through that I
picked up on it, it was worth paying attention to. It meant he was probably
going to do something drastic, and knowing there was no stopping him, I
thought it best to steer him as best I could. Fortunately, there are procedures
for this.”
“For what, exactly?”
“After every monster surge, there’s a lot of guild recruitment as quality
adventurers the guilds had previously overlooked demonstrate their ability.
Many great adventurers come from outside of the guild and aristocratic
families, and the surge is where a lot of them get noticed. Unfortunately,
every surge also brings adventurers that failed to distinguish themselves but
are unwilling to accept that. They pick someone who did and try to make an
example of them. Watching out for this very thing is how we caught wind of
what was happening with you and stepped in. Asano is, after all, such an
obvious target.”
“But even with moving my ritual, won’t they still go after Jason?”
“Yes. Standard procedure is to warn whomever they’ve targeted, and then
let them. We’ve found that letting people bite down on the rock is the most
effective object lesson.”
Autumn nodded.
“I know you’re only helping me because of Jason, but I’m still not sure
how I ended up here. How did I go from standing next to him in line for a
scutwork delivery job to all this?”
She gestured at the other adventurers and Liara herself.
“That was Asano’s choice.” Liara explained. “I’ve studied Asano’s
history as extensively as anyone can, I suspect. He has a habit of going a long
way for relative strangers, especially if he feels that they’ve been wronged on
account of his actions. You have met his team members, Wexler and
Callahan?”
“Sophie and Belinda? Yes.”
“They were thieves when they met Asano. He and Clive Standish caught
them on a contract, only to discover they were to be passed off into a fate
much worse than thievery warranted. It was quite political, very corrupt and
extremely unpleasant. Asano undertook actions I can only describe as
characteristically drastic, and two thieves went from a disastrous fate to elite
adventurers. Asano made some rather significant enemies in the process and
ultimately paid a hefty price. I don’t believe he regrets it, even when that
price was the scouring of his soul.”
“Is he going to pay a cost for helping me?”
“Not unless, as I said, he’s overestimated himself. You met Asano on a
fortress town delivery?”
“Yes, but it was clear things weren’t normal. There was a gold-ranker on
board, and not just an ordinary one. He said it was because of pirates, but you
don’t send the Siege Sword to guard a supply run from pirates that could be
anywhere. He was there to test Jason.”
“Yes, he was,” Liara agreed. “I’m afraid that I am ultimately the reason
for your acquaintance with Asano. I put him on that airship, although it was
His Ancestral Majesty who assigned Trenchant Moore. I was using Asano as
bait to catch some Builder cultists.”
“His Ancestral Majesty, as in…”
“Soramir Rimaros, yes.”
Liara looked at Autumn.
“I’m not helping you calm down, am I, Miss Leal?”
“Not really, no. Did you catch the Builder cultists?”
“We got Purity zealots instead. There’s no shortage of people willing to
go after Asano, which is what has brought us to this predicament. There are
only a handful of regions ideal for seeking out familiar-appropriate magical
frogs, which is why we had to portal you to a more distant one. The one you
were registered to visit is currently crawling with opportunists about to find
that their opportunity is eagerly awaiting them.”

Eleven people were moving through the jungle on the Storm Kingdom’s
western mainland. They were in a region hosting a major habitat for magical
frogs, around a dozen kilometres from one of the main roadways that Jason
had once travelled on a delivery contract. This was where Autumn Leal had
been registered as going to perform her familiar bond ritual. It was also the
place where two men, Rangel and Tellez, had led their teams.
“And to think you said this helmet wasn’t worth the money, Tellez.”
“It wasn’t worth the money, Rangel.”
“We aren’t the only ones out here searching for Asano. This helmet will
track him down.”
“Assuming he doesn’t have some way to block tracking magic. There are
plenty of items and abilities that can do that.”
“The artificer who sold it to me said it would penetrate those kinds of
protections.”
“People say all kinds of things, Rangel. My wife said she’d never leave
me.”
“Didn’t she leave that alchemy vendor for you?”
“What are you saying?”
“I’m saying there’s a pattern of behaviour.”
“What kind of pattern is leaving me for a guy who sells umbrellas?”
“Ella left you for an umbrella salesman?”
“During a monster surge, no less. And they aren’t even magical
umbrellas. They’re regular umbrellas!”
Rangel and Tellez were moving through the jungle with their team
members in tow. They were hunting Jason Asano, and, knowing he would
have his own team with him, had grouped together. They had learned that
Asano’s absurdly named Team Biscuit had six, giving them almost two-to-
one odds. Not everyone was on board with the plan, however, and the
singular woman in the group spoke up.
“Tellez, we could still back out of this,” she told her team leader.
“Escamilla, you were outvoted.”
“There’s a Geller on Asano’s team.”
“Not one of the local ones; I’ve never heard of him. And not every Geller
is so amazing. Their reputation is overblown.”
“I don’t know if that’s true,” Escamilla said. “And Gellers don’t usually
let just anyone on their team.”
“I haven’t heard of anyone on this one’s team,” Rangel contributed.
“Except Asano.”
“Who you hadn’t heard of before,” Escamilla pointed out. “Just because
they aren’t known locally doesn’t make them weak.”
“You’re just looking for reasons to not do this,” Tellez told her.
“You’re right. We’re roaming through the jungle, interrupting some poor
woman’s familiar ritual to beat the hell out of a fellow adventurer just for the
glory. This doesn’t feel glorious, Tellez.”
“Stop griping. We agreed to this as a team.”
“I did some checking around, Tellez. This woman lost her familiar
defending Rimaros from the Builder attack.”
“We all defended the city from the Builder attack,” Rangel said.
“Our teams were on standby on Provo,” Escamilla said. “We weren’t
exactly beating back the cult.”
“Which is why we’re here,” Rangel said. “To get the prestige that was
denied us when we were assigned away from the battle.”
“I don’t think it was prestige that we were denied,” Escamilla said. “I
think it was casualties. A lot of people died that day. Stronger people than
us.”
“That’s what you think, isn’t it?” Tellez asked. “That Asano’s team is
stronger than us?”
“I don’t know,” she said. “That’s kind of the whole point: we don’t know
what we’re walking into. I told you I did some checking around, and I spoke
to Team Work Saw.”
“Team Work Saw aren’t worth a damn,” Rangel said.
“They’re a guild team,” Escamilla said.
“Yeah, the worst guild team in Rimaros,” Rangel said. “We could take
them easy.”
“I don’t think we should go underestimating any guild team,” Tellez said.
“What did you get from them, Milla?”
“They’ve worked with Asano’s team. Said they’re a strange group, but
serious business.”
“What did they say about Asano himself?”
“The usual stuff. Don’t mess with an affliction specialist. They said he
was kind of an odd one, though. He—”
“It doesn’t matter,” Rangel said. “Affliction specialists are nothing. You
just punch past their protection and put them down fast.”
“And exactly how many affliction specialists have you ‘put down fast’?”
Escamilla asked.
“First time for everything.”
In a nearby shadow, Jason was starting to wonder if this entire
conversation was some kind of ruse to lure him into a false sense of security.
“That’s what makes this such a good plan,” Tellez said, gesturing at the
recording crystal floating over his head. Rangel had an identical one. “We
don’t have to fight Asano’s team. Not really. We have the numbers to tie
them up long enough to give Asano a beat down. He’s silver rank, so he can
take it. And then we disengage and get out. They’re looking for monsters and
magical beasts interrupting the ritual, not a sneak attack from two teams of
elite adventurers. We blitz, beat, and bolt.”
“Yes, because that’s what elite adventurers do,” Escamilla said. “They
record themselves attacking a fellow adventurer for no better reason than to
build their reputations. Do you think there won’t be any repercussions from
this?”
“We want the repercussions from this,” Tellez said. “With footage of us
kicking the goo out of the guy everyone is talking about at the top end of
town, the people they’ll be talking about is us. Recrimination from the
Adventure Society will only help raise our profile. He has a healer, Milla. No
one will be suffering anything that can’t be fixed with a few minutes and a
few spells. It won’t be that bad. We take our lumps and come out the talk of
the town.”
“Even assuming that this all goes the way you think it will,” Escamilla
said, “I’m not so sure I want to be the subject of that kind of talk. And don’t
think it will go just right. When has everything gone just right on a contract,
let alone this mess? If we want to end up in the upper echelons of
adventurers, Tellez, we can’t be stuck on basic monster hunts, which means
star ratings with the Adventure Society. Every famous team is full of two-
stars, and most have at least one member with three. We have one member
with two stars. Me. But when what we’re doing here comes out—however it
goes—my second star is going away. You aren’t afraid of getting demoted
because you’re already sitting on one star, but I’m the one with something to
lose.”
Tellez stopped walking and turned on Escamilla.
“And there it is,” he said. “Short-term thinking is one thing, but the real
problem is that it’s all about you, isn’t it? The unwillingness to sacrifice for
the team. The selfishness.”
Escamilla didn’t back off, getting in the face of the man, despite being a
head shorter.
“Don’t talk to me about selfishness, Tellez. This whole scheme is the
embodiment of selfishness. How many people are you willing to hurt to
advance yourself? This woman just trying to get a familiar? The team of
adventurers we’re attacking? They don’t know about your plan, Tellez, so
they won’t be playing for fun. When we hit them, they’re going to hit back.
Hard. And not just today either. We’re making enemies here that we don’t
have to.”
Rangel and Tellez loomed over the smaller woman.
“You don’t like it, Escamilla,” Rangel said, “then how about you turn
around and go home? We can live without one more damage dealer. If you
wanted to have people put up with your crap, you should have gone for
guarding or healing powers.”
Escamilla looked to Tellez, waiting, but he said nothing.
“Seriously?” she asked after a long, tense silence. “You’re going to let an
outsider tell a member of your team to go and not say a single word in their
defence?”
Tellez took on an awkward expression, but then firmed it with resolve.
“You agreed to go along with the team’s decision, Milla.”
“I never thought the team would be this insane!”
“Then why come along at all?”
“Because you’re my team! And I thought that maybe, just maybe, I could
convince you to give up on this idiotic plan of yours, Tellez.”
“Actually, it was my plan,” Rangel said. “Well, it was Maldonado’s plan,
but I’m the one who stole it. And if we’re going to find Asano before he
does, we need to stop standing around yelling at one another and get back to
the search. If Asano and his team are anywhere near here, they’ve heard us
coming.”
Escamilla glared at him but didn’t respond before turning her gaze back
to Tellez.
“If we want to make a name for ourselves,” she asked, “how about we do
it with accomplishments instead of stunts?”
“We don’t have enough accomplishments, Milla! The guilds are going to
be recruiting now the surge is over, but we didn’t do anything that will stand
out. We can’t get into a top guild if no one knows who we are.”
“Look at what we’re doing, Tellez! You think this—this—is what great
adventurers do?”
“Asano isn’t so great, and his name is on everyone’s lips right now.
That’s what makes him the perfect target.”
“We don’t know what Asano is,” she told him. “But what he’s not is out
in the jungle, targeting other adventurers to make some kind of point.”
In a nearby shadow, Jason winced, scratching his head awkwardly.
“All this has done is show us who we really are,” Escamilla said. “Every
other group that we’re racing to find Asano is the same as us; they’re either in
middling guilds or none at all. Maybe the reason we didn’t get the attention
of a big guild, Tellez, is that we’re not meant to be in one. Maybe what this
whole debacle is really telling us is that this is all we amount to.”
Escamilla felt the atmosphere change. She knew she’d made a mistake as
the auras around her grew hostile. For the first time since being empowered
by essences, she was acutely conscious of being a woman. She was the only
one on either team, leaving her in the middle of the jungle, surrounded by
men. She stood, tense, unease creeping into her mind when screams rang out
as a member of Rangel’s team was dragged into the canopy.
8
E L D E M O N I O Q U E H A C E T R O F EO S D E L O S
HOMBRES

T HE ADVENTURING TEAMS LED BY R ANGEL AND T ELLEZ WERE IN DENSE


jungle. With eleven members in the combined group, it was necessary to cut
a path, but magic was more than up to the task. One of Rangel’s team
members, Barrera, had been doing so with a conjured blade-whip that made
short work of anything, from thick scrub to entire trees.
Sunlight speckled in through the canopy above, leaving the two teams in
false twilight as they stopped to argue over their current endeavour. Both
teams had turned on a member of Tellez’s group, Escamilla, when Barrera
was suddenly hauled into the canopy, screaming. He was held in place by a
swarm of shadowy arms, but they were more numerous than strong. Barrera
wrenched himself free, despite more arms emerging to snatch at him.
Barrera’s panicked screaming turned into more of an intermittent yell
until he finally yanked himself free and dropped to the ground. The others
saw that he had wounds from a weapon scored into his back, sliced into the
weaker fabric around the stiffer panels of his armour. The cuts were shallow,
to the point that the natural recovery of a silver-ranker should have closed
them, but they were freely bleeding too-dark blood.
“Poison,” Rangel said bitterly. “Carilo, cleanse him.”
When no answer came, he looked around.
“Carilo?”

The silence magic that had been on the throwing dart that struck Carilo was
not especially sophisticated. It would not prevent spell chants from working,
which were about establishing a mindset in the caster, not making sounds that
triggered magic. Any properly trained adventurer could cast their spells while
underwater or otherwise muffled, even if that training hadn’t been with a big
family or fancy guild.
Casting a spell while being dragged by the face was another matter,
however. Right after the very localised silence, tough straps had wrapped
around his head, wet with the coppery stench of blood. Carilo didn’t panic,
trying to push out with his aura senses, only to find something pushing back.
He hadn’t even noticed the other aura until it started suppressing him,
which was a terrifying level of control. The strength of it was no less
concerning, given that he could tell it was silver rank, yet had strength more
like gold. It swiftly and mercilessly crushed Carilo’s aura, completely
suppressing him.
Carilo felt himself being swiftly dragged into thick scrub, plants whipping
at him as he was yanked across the rough jungle floor. Panic was now
kicking in, but Carilo steeled his resolve and reached up to pry at the straps
binding his head. He couldn’t get them off his head entirely, but at least
managed to peel them away from his eyes, restoring his sight. He grabbed at
a tree, halting his unwilling passage across the ground. He was in the midst of
heavy jungle growth, the canopy thick enough to turn daylight into near-dark.
Acting quickly, Carilo activated his shield ability. It was the common
force barrier that would stop projectiles, magical or otherwise, along with
powers that directly affected the target. Such direct powers were common
among affliction specialists, and if it was Asano that had attacked, it should
be a strong counter to his abilities.
What it didn’t stop were slow-moving physical objects, along with
anything already in place, such as the straps around Carilo’s head. He
wrapped his legs around the tree he had grabbed, bracing himself against the
straps still tugging at him. He then made a concerted effort to yank off the
straps. They gave way, but they didn’t pull away. The force yanking at them
halted and they thrashed like tentacles.
The straps looked like leather that had been saturated in blood, which
started raining off the flailing tentacles in thick gobbets. The blood splashed
on the rich soil, the lush jungle scrub and over Carilo himself. Each of the
gobbets rapidly transformed into leeches with horrific lamprey teeth. They
crawled over Carilo as he scrambled to his feet, hopping back away from the
straps. It wasn’t so easy, though, caught in the thick scrub, and many leeches
were already burrowing into his arms, legs and torso. His healer’s perception
power catalogued the poisons each bite pumped into him, many of which he
resisted, but fewer than he should. He suspected the aura keeping his own
locked down also had some means of suppressing resistance.
Carilo was no stranger to casting spells under harsh circumstances.
Though being devoured by flesh-eating leeches was harsher than most, he
didn’t let it distract him as he started to cast a spell that would send searing
light bursting out of his body.
“Bright heart of embers, burst for—”
Because it was about the mindset, a sword passing through the back of his
neck and out through his throat shouldn’t, strictly speaking, disrupt the spell
incantation. It was a fairly good way to distract the mind, however, and the
spell failed. The magic gathered inside Carilo, ready to burst out, instead
went wild in his chest. He wasn’t some weak iron-ranker, however, so the
damage was relatively minor.
It took more than a severed spine and a miscast spell to slow down a
silver-ranker; Carilo didn’t allow himself to be distracted for more than an
admittedly critical moment. He ignored the sword in his neck to move
forward and launch a backwards kick, just a moment after the sword slid into
him. He felt the kick connect, eliciting a surprised grunt from behind him, but
whirling to confront his attacker, they were already gone. Disturbingly, the
kick he landed had delivered some kind of retaliatory curse that was making
the leech poison worse.
He knew his attacker had hidden rather than fled as Carilo’s aura was still
unnervingly suppressed. Having a moment to look around, he had time to
consider the aura itself. It was overwhelmingly powerful and domineering;
being suppressed by it felt like being in a dark room where he could only
make out ominous shapes moving in the shadows. He reached up to push the
sword out of his neck, but it slid out on its own. Carilo spun to watch where it
went, even as he cast a healing spell on himself. Even for a silver-ranker,
powering through a severed spine on raw willpower would only work for so
long.
Trying to follow the sword to its owner was revealed as a trap as once
more Carilo was attacked from behind. This new attack was by two quick
dagger slashes that penetrated his light armour’s weaker areas. The cuts were
light and in non-critical areas, but Carilo knew that poison didn’t need them
to be. His resistance to various afflictions was quite high, but his perception
power showed him that these afflictions didn’t care as a terrifying slate of
them dug in with each attack.
Whirling around, all Carilo saw was a dark shape withdrawing into the
shadows. He didn’t try casting a cleanse, knowing that with the length of the
chant, it would get it interrupted without his team to cover him. The same
was meant to be true of an affliction specialist, but that didn’t seem to matter
to Asano. And that was who Carilo assumed he was facing, after being
swiftly layered with afflictions. Until that moment, he considered it might
have been some other enemy, as he had still not gotten a clear look at them.
Carilo knew there was a clock on what was happening; his team would
already be looking for him and the silence effect would not last long. Instead
of casting a spell, he went for a potion from his belt, the vials having endured
the drag across the jungle floor just fine. Belts that magically protected
potions from incidental damage were amongst the most fundamental of
adventuring gear.
As Carilo moved the vial towards his mouth, a dark arm emerged from
the shadows surrounding him and grabbed his arm. Many more shadow arms
shot out of the dark to wrap him up like a spider web. While he was able to
pull himself free, the vial was knocked from his hand.
As Carilo pulled himself free, an alien figure appeared above him,
hovering under the jungle canopy. It was a blue and orange eye-shaped
nebula inside an otherwise empty floating cloak. Around it floated orbs
containing smaller versions of the same nebula, all of which fired blue beams
that were blocked by Carilo’s shield.
Six beams savaged his shield, which vacuumed Carilo’s mana to maintain
itself. He realised the beams were disruptive-force damage, the bane of
magical barriers. Then he felt more of his mana sucked out, drained away
into the shadows around him, which were indistinguishable from one another
in the dark.
Carilo allowed his shield to drop, knowing that if he let his mana drain
completely, he was done. To his surprise, the alien entity floating above him
ceased attacking the moment the shield dropped. It turned into a cloud of blue
and orange light that dashed away, vanishing into the jungle.
In the wake of its departure, Carilo finally got a good look at his enemy.
Emerging from the shadows, the figure he assumed to be Asano looked only
vaguely like a person. It was wrapped in a starry portal, with eyes that looked
like nebulas in a distant void, identical to those of the departed entity. Asano
seemed unaffected by the thick scrub, as if space itself was warping around
him to permit easy passage.
Carilo suspected the figure he presumed to be Asano cast a spell, unheard
in the silence, as he felt more afflictions take hold. He turned to run, knowing
his team was his only chance, but again he found his enemy right in front of
him. Then he felt the sword that had flown off come back, stabbing right
back into the same wound it had left. The silence ended.
“Feed me your sins.”
Carilo’s perception power sensed all the affliction leave his body, only
for others to take his place. Sensing their nature and knowing afflictions
better than most, as a healer, he found these new ones terrifying. Holy
afflictions were notorious for not being subject to many cleansing powers.
Those powers that did work were often slower or less effective. Carilo knew
this well, the healer having such an ability himself.
Carilo couldn’t bring himself to call out, too shaken as the panic that had
been threatening to take hold of him finally dug its claws in. He also had a
sword in his throat. Then, to his staggering surprise, the holy afflictions were
drained into the sword. His perception ability briefly sensed some kind of
power-suppression affliction before that ability was cut off, along with all his
others.
Spent, he looked at the strange man in front of him as Asano’s hand
grabbed him by the face.

Escamilla was forgotten for the moment as Rangel and Tellez barked orders
at their teams. While the healer from Tellez’s team cleansed and healed
Barrera, the others shifted from alert to battle-ready, prepping items, drawing
weapons and initiating various defensive powers and buffs. They didn’t hare
off into the jungle looking for their missing team member, knowing full well
it could easily be a trap. They were cautious and methodical in their
approach.
They were all Storm Kingdom adventurers and very familiar with the
terrain around the Sea of Storms. That familiarity wasn’t necessary to find the
throwing dart that belonged to none of them, but it did help find a trail.
Traces of blood and a disturbed patch of scrub showed the way, although it
was a little worrying that none of them had heard Carilo get dragged away.
Unfortunately, hacking a passage through the jungle as they had before
would make it harder to follow the trail. They were forced to push through
the scrub at a more cautious speed instead of having Barrera carve a path.
Even so, the jungle could only slow down the physical power of silver-
rankers by so much, and in a short time, they found the signs of violence. It
looked to have been fairly contained, but there was no shortage of blood and
there were signs of physical and magical combat amidst the thick scrub.
“How did we not hear this?” Rangel asked. “Tellez, do you think it was
silencing magic?”
When no answer came, he looked around.
“Tellez?”
9
O C C A S I O N A LLY C A R N I VO R O U S

A SUPPRESSION - COLLARED ADVENTURER WAS TRUDGING THROUGH THE


jungle, but paused in a clearing. He looked around warily, seeing nothing but
lush jungle and dark shadows. His expression was conflicted for a moment,
then he turned to walk in a different direction.
“That’s not the way,” a cold voice said, sending a chill down his spine,
despite the sweltering jungle. He looked around again, still seeing no one but
himself. He turned again, resuming his original direction.

Jason opened his eyes as he stopped sharing senses with Shade, hidden in the
shadow of the latest prisoner. He was deep in the jungle, but moving with
caution.
“Thank you, Shade. This one took longer than the others to think about
trying to go find his team.”
“I believe you have them rattled, Mr Asano. That’s the fourth person
you’ve plucked from right under their nose.”
“Yeah, they’ll be watching for all my quiet tricks now, and they’ve been
way too careful about shielding their other healer. Maybe we should take a
run at that other pair of teams.”
“You may want to leave them for now, Mr Asano. They were already at
the periphery of potential sites for Miss Leal to conduct her ritual, and they’re
only getting further away.”
“They’ve gone in the wrong direction?”
“It is dense jungle, Mr Asano.”
“And dense adventurers, from the sounds of it.”
“In which case, it may be best to let them distract themselves.”
“Fair enough,” Jason said. “Moving them around with portals would be
so much easier, but one of the prisoners might call my bluff and refuse to go
through, even if I threaten to kill them. And then there’s this.”
He crouched down and looked at a thread so fine it was all but invisible to
even silver-rank vision. If he hadn’t sensed the thrum of aura connecting it to
a network of threads spread all through the jungle, he’d have never known it
was there. The scope of it meant it had been put in place over the course of
days, maybe a whole week, in preparation for the conflicts currently taking
place in this section of jungle.
The web worked by weaving tiny threads over a vast area, imbuing them
with a tiny amount of aura, to connect them to the user. Monsters, animals
and essence users could walk right through a thread without ever noticing, the
broken thread reconnecting itself even as the user picked up details of the
oblivious wanderer.
Logistically, setting up the web net was a huge pain, but there were
advantages to the laborious requirements. While wide-area tracking magic
was much simpler, it was also easy to foil. The web net was triggered by
contact, circumventing effects that foiled regular tracking magic. It did have
tracking magic woven into it as well, but this was designed to track portals
rather than people. Jason might have an ability that shielded him from
tracking, but his portals did not.
“This could have tripped me up if I hadn’t seen it before,” Jason mused.
Mr North, Jason’s foe from Earth whose true form was a rune spider, had
used a similar ability with significantly more finesse. Web essence abilities
were also in Dawn’s repertoire, which Jason had seen her silver-rank avatar
use on Earth. When it came to expertise in the execution of their powers,
Jason had never seen anyone come close to Dawn. Jason’s sharp aura senses
allowed him to navigate without tripping the thread network net unless doing
so served his purposes.
“The team led by Maldonado is better than the others in preparation and
ability,” Shade observed. “I am being careful of the main group, so I am not
always close enough to eavesdrop, but based on their activity, I suspect that
they deliberately lured the other teams into this endeavour.”
“They still haven’t taken the bait and gone after one of my prisoners
roaming around?”
“No. Perhaps if you appear on their web net in the location where you are
gathering them, they will believe it to be your base of operations and strike.”
“Maybe. They might think it’s a trap. I’d think it was a trap. Are they still
gathered at a base camp instead of moving around?”
“For the most part. The bulk of their group has vehicles ready for rapid
deployment while their scouts monitor the other groups. There may be
another scout moving to survey the prisoner gathering, but either they haven’t
gotten there yet or they are better at hiding than I am at finding.”
“They’re probably waiting for a confirmation of my presence. If my
moves against Rangel’s and Tellez’s teams are going to get more overt, I’ll
have to take out the scout from Maldonado’s team watching them first. She
almost caught wind of me when I nabbed that last one.”
“Mr Asano, you are kidnapping and hauling off their team members. If
that does not constitute overt to you, what does?”
“Having Gordon set off an orb explosion in the middle of them and
snatching someone in the chaos.”
“I see. Perhaps you should move on the group going the wrong way after
all,” Shade suggested. “Changing up your pattern will make it harder to
ambush you.”
“Agreed,” Jason said. “I’ll have to deal with them all eventually anyway.”
Jason looked up at a patch of jungle canopy. “What do you think?”
The air shimmered to reveal a celestine floating in the air with a recording
crystal drifting around over her head. Her hair and eyes were a pale sky blue,
compared to the rich sapphire of the royal family. Her skin was also very
pale, another contrast to the royal family’s typical caramel.
“Oh, it’s you,” Jason said.
Jana Costi was a gold-rank stealth specialist from Princess Liara’s team.
He had not seen her in months, since before the attack by the Builder’s flying
city. Her brother had sacrificed himself in that battle to detonate the designed
that brought the city down.
“I’m sorry about Ledev,” he said. “He was a dick, but so is everyone they
build a statue of, and he definitely deserves a statue.”
“Thank you... I think. How did you sense me?”
“I didn’t; you hid from me perfectly. You weren’t quite as perfect at
masking the recording crystal, though. Close, but that only counts in
horseshoes and hand grenades. Neither of which you have in this world, now
that I think about it. Heidel shoes and alchemy bombs? It doesn’t have the
same ring.”
“You’re still the same, then.”
“Well, I am fighting people alone in the jungle while you secretly follow
me around; we’ve been here before, haven’t we? I don’t suppose you want to
do a little light scouting for me?”
“Your familiar seems to be doing just fine on that front.”
“He is pretty great.”

There was a cave in one of the tracking web’s dead spots. To further shield it
from prying eyes or their magical equivalent, Clive and Belinda had
established several magic wards. They wouldn’t last long, but they wouldn’t
need to. This kind of magic was a speciality of Belinda’s, going back to her
days of setting up operation points when she and Sophie were thieves.
Jason’s team, minus Humphrey and Jason, were sitting on picnic furniture
conjured up by Belinda, eating from a sandwich platter set up on a table.
Along with the platter were two pitchers of iced tea and one of juice.
“Only two blends of iced tea,” Neil complained. “I hate roughing it on
contracts.”
“After three years of spirit coins, you adapted to Jason being back on the
team pretty quick,” Sophie pointed out.
“You know,” Neil said, “I quite like the idea of Jason being an auxiliary.
More sandwiches, less trouble.”
“I’ll believe that when I see it,” Clive said.
Humphrey wandered in with a confused-looking, suppression-collared
adventurer. He was peering at the floor, surprised at the lack of a need to
watch his footing. Not far into the cave, he had found where Clive and
Belinda had used some simple rituals to turn rough stone into smooth floor. It
made traversing the cave much less tricky, as the light stones weren’t set up
until far enough in that they couldn’t be spotted from the outside.
“Another one?” Neil asked, then jabbed a thumb at the corner. “Over with
the others.”
Humphrey shoved the prisoner towards a ritual circle that had three more
people sitting in it. The ritual circle caused only silence and did not restrict
the occupants from leaving it. What had happened when they made a break
for it did that. The others waited for him to enter the silence zone before
talking again.
“Should Jason be so blatant with using suppression collars?” Clive
wondered as he watched the prisoners. “I know that a lot of adventurers keep
them handy, but they are, strictly speaking, restricted tools.”
“It’s not like that’s ever enforced unless the Adventure Society is looking
to harass a member in poor standing,” Neil pointed out.
“The purpose is political,” Humphrey said, wandering over to the table
and taking a sandwich. “Showing that Jason has enough support from the
Adventure Society, or just enough influence, that he can flaunt the rules.
Even if everyone is flaunting that rule already, he doesn’t even have to
pretend to hide it.”
“Hey,” Neil said. “Did you just take the sandwich with willowcress and
boar chunks in spicy sauce?”
Humphrey looked at the sandwich in his hand.
“Yes. You’ve still got half a sandwich left to eat.”
“I was going to eat that one next,” Neil complained.
“You realise that you’re going to get fat again,” Belinda told him.
“I was never fat!”

Eric Maldonado was pacing back and forth in the ready site that had been set
up days earlier. It was a cleared section of jungle with a ritual-magic
perimeter to stop the jungle from growing back. In high-magic zones, plant
growth could be sudden, unpredictable and occasionally carnivorous.
Maldonado had sunk exorbitant amounts into this operation, from burning
favours to most of the money he had earned during the surge, but he was
struggling to see the value. The specialist tracker who had been so expensive
to hire was completely failing to track Asano, despite her assurances that her
net would work around tracking-magic countermeasures.
All she had found was the people Asano had taken from their teams and
sent roaming through the jungle alone. Maldonado even had a scout to check
on them as they moved through the jungle and they were, in fact, alone. As
for their destination, where other prisoners had already gathered, he was yet
to send a scout because it reeked of a trap. If nothing else, the tracker had
detected a portal some time ago, making it Asano’s likely entry point to the
area.
Asano himself was a stealth user, according to Maldonado’s research, but
the rest of his team was not. It was Maldonado’s guess that the rest of the
team were in that location, guarding Asano’s prisoners and preparing an
ambush.
It was increasingly clear that not only was Asano aware that he was being
hunted, but had cancelled the familiar ritual and was hunting them, in turn. It
was only the sunk cost of the operation that had stopped Maldonado from
calling an end to it.
One of the reasons Maldonado was willing to continue was that the most
expensive specialist on hand was a communications specialist. This was an
Adventure Society official and getting him to participate in such a shady
operation had been extremely pricy. His scout being able to feed him real-
time information had made Maldonado more confident in maintaining a level
of control. But the longer they operated without catching Asano’s tail, the
more that confidence eroded.
Asano had managed to take four people from Rangel’s group. Not only
did he do so under the nose of the rest of the group, but also under that of
Maldonado’s scout, watching them. Despite his assurances that he would not
let himself be distracted again, Maldonado was not confident.
“Mr Maldonado.”
The communication specialist, Constantin, approached him.
“I believe that Asano has decided to change his pattern and strike the
other group.”
“That makes sense. His attacks on Rangel’s group were becoming
increasingly untenable. What do you mean by ‘you believe?’ What did Piera
report?”
Piera was the scout observing the second group.
“Piera was removed from my communication group,” Constantin said.
“That she did so without reporting it suggests that the first target of the attack
was her.”
Maldonado ran a hand over his face.
“How long ago?”
“Moments.”
“You’re saying that a silver-ranker was taken out before she could even
report being under attack?”
“Unlikely. It is more likely that the communication was interfered with.”
“How?”
“There are spells and wards that can do so. Many dispel effects can cut an
individual out of a communication link. Also, such abilities work like auras
and magical senses, in that they are an expression of the soul. A sudden soul
attack could account for it. You said it was an ability of Asano’s.”
“An unconfirmed ability. Low probability of being true, according to my
source.”
Maldonado shook his head angrily.
“If Havi Estos hadn’t gone dark, I wouldn’t have been forced to use an
untested information broker.”
“Perhaps that was a sign that you should not have undertaken this at all,”
Constantin suggested.
“You were happy enough to take the money,” Maldonado said bitterly.
“It was a lot of money,” Constantin replied calmly.
Maldonado sighed and ran his fingers through his hair.
“Alright,” he announced loudly. “Everyone gather round.”
The rest of his team moved closer and he explained the situation.
“I know this isn’t what any of us wanted,” he said. “But the reality is that
Asano isn’t the soft target we thought. We knew he wasn’t going to be,
whatever that idiot Rangel expected, but this is more than we thought. By a
lot. He knew we were coming and the information we had about how he
fights was woefully inadequate. To the point that it might have even been fed
to us that way.”
“You think we were set up?”
“It’s clear that he knew we were coming, so it’s a possibility. It may be
that his connections aren’t all at the expensive end of town.”
“What about Piera?” asked Reyes, one of his team members. “We’re just
going to let him have her?”
“Either she’s dead or she’s not,” Maldonado said.
“She’s not,” the mercenary tracking specialist said. “I’ve just picked her
up walking in the same direction as the others Asano took out.”
Maldonado nodded.
“Pull out,” he instructed. “I’ll stay alone and approach where the
prisoners are gathering.”
“The damn ambush site?” Reyes asked. “Boss, you shouldn’t go up
against Asano by yourself, let alone his whole team where they’re set up
waiting.”
“It won’t be to fight. If Piera and the others are alive, it’s to make a
point.”
“I knew we should have hired a gold-ranker,” said Nuñez, another team
member.
“The whole point was to show that we could handle Asano,” Maldonado
said.
“Yeah, except you lured in a bunch of other teams and hired merc
specialists.”
“Silver-rank specialists,” Maldonado said. “This whole thing is about
perception, not facts, and what people care about is rank. Outside of
aberrations like Asano—which is why we targeted him in the first place—
people don’t play outside their rank. As long as we only use silver-rank
assets, we’ll just be looked at as resourceful. Getting a gold-ranker would
make us look inadequate.”
Maldonado hung his head.
“You’re all leaving,” he said. “I will go to Asano and negotiate Piera’s
return.”
“Boss,” Reyes said. “That will be giving Asano all the cards.”
“He already has them,” Maldonado said wearily. “We bet heavy and we
lost. It’s time to accept that with dignity and pay up. Make no mistake: we’re
in the wrong. We gambled our money and our reputations, and we didn’t win.
I’m not sure that we ever had a chance. The stacked deck is what drove us to
this in the first place, and I’m not sure we ever really did have a chance. What
comes next will be bad. How bad depends on Asano.”
“It won’t be that bad,” Jason said, stepping out of the jungle. “I respect
someone who knows when to cut bait.”
10
I F YO U ’ R E G O I N G T O P U N I S H S O M EO N E

M ALDONADO ’ S TEAM WHIRLED AT THE UNEXPECTED VOICE . A MAN WAS


walking out of the jungle and over the ritual line at the edge of the base camp.
He wore dark red combat robes, not voluminous like a scholar’s robe, but still
draping loosely. He was not tall, but he had the lean athleticism of an
adventurer. His features were sharp, with a pointed chin under a neatly
trimmed beard. His dark hair was glossy, shining in the sunlight.
His presence was unsettling for two reasons. One was his eyes, with black
sclera and irises that weren’t irises. They were made up of blue and orange
energy that was similar to an iris, but not quite the same. The result was an
uncanny-valley alienness, something inhuman wearing human skin.
Strange eyes were far from unheard of amongst adventurers, however.
What genuinely unnerved them was that they couldn’t sense his aura. At all.
Looking at someone and sensing nothing was something that almost all
adventurers had experienced at one point or another. It was what happened
when someone higher rank was about to make a point. They knew Asano
wasn’t higher rank than them; it just felt like it.
“He’s alone,” said Nuñez nervously. He was one of Maldonado’s team
members.
“Shut up, Nuñez,” Maldonado scolded. “You don’t walk out in front of
this many people without knowing something they don’t.”
A predatory smile teased at the corners of Jason’s mouth. A portal arch
rose up behind him and the rest of his team emerged, forming a row behind
him. Maldonado walked out from his team to meet Jason and they stopped in
front of one another. Maldonado was taller by half a head, with tan skin and
hawkish features. A celestine, his hair and eyes were onyx black.
“You’re him,” Maldonado said.
“I’m him.”
“It was never going to work, was it?”
“There’s always someone like you. Someone who fails to make a name
for themselves during the surge, then tries to make one on the back of a more
successful adventurer. They watch out for that kind of thing.”
Maldonado narrowed his eyes. “But they don’t stop it,” he realised.
“They let the successful adventurer demonstrate where their success came
from.”
“If it’s viable. You did a lot better than most, I’m told. You did
deliberately leak your plan to Rangel and the other group, right?”
“Yes. The idea was to soften you up. Draw you into the open and strike.”
“You made a lot of preparations. You don’t seem like someone who
needs to take this approach. I’d think you would do just fine playing it
straight as an adventurer. Why gamble on this?”
“Family,” Maldonado said. “A nobleman married into our family and—”
“That sounds like a long story,” Jason said, cutting him off. “I don’t care
that much. At the end of the day, what matters is what you did, what I did,
and where we go from here.”
“And where is that?”
Jason moved away from Maldonado, looking around their base camp as
he slowly meandered. There were skimmers designed to hover over jungle
canopy, crates full of resources and Maldonado’s team.
“You really went all out,” he observed. “There were people who
suggested that the authorities deal with this, instead of leaving it between
adventurers. That you’d pulled in too many people and used too many
resources for me to handle. Can you guess why I insisted on doing this
myself?”
“To prove that you can?”
“No,” Jason said, softly enough that only the sensitive ears of silver-
rankers allowed him to be heard. “That’s what the Adventure Society wants.
What the royal family wants. What all the people with a vested interest in me
not haring off and doing something drastic want. But I’m past the point in my
life where I care about proving things. It doesn’t change anything and it
doesn’t stop people like you or the Builder or gods from interfering in my
life, even though they fall short. Every damn time.”
Jason paused. Despite not needing to breathe, he drew in a slow, calming
breath. He turned to look at Maldonado.
“The reason I came out here myself—why I started putting people down
with my own hands—is because you brought trouble to my friend to get to
me. That made me angry. I wanted to punish you, no points to make or
reputation to build. Just visceral self-satisfaction. My first instinct was to
make sure the only part of you that left this jungle was the part I washed off
my hands, after.”
Jason’s face took on a sincere, friendly smile as Maldonado was finally
able to perceive Jason’s aura. To Maldonado’s senses, Jason’s aura seemed as
authentic and amiable as his expression. It sent chills down his back.
“I’ve been in this situation before,” Jason said. “I spent a lot of time in an
emotionally dark place because of people like you. People who thought they
could get something from me and didn’t care who they hurt in the process. I
don’t, strictly speaking, regret all the killing, but I regret that I had to do it.”
Jason let out a little laugh.
“Listen to me,” he said affably, as if every person in the clearing wasn’t
completely focused on him. “I sound like a domestic abuser. As I said: an
emotionally dark place.”
His smile turned sad, his aura radiating regret, but also hope.
“But I’m better now. I think. I’m trying to be, so I don’t do that kind of
thing anymore. It’s just hard, you know? Avoiding the harmful patterns of the
past. Take you, for example. You saw a pathway to something you wanted
and didn’t care about going through the people around me to get it. For, that
is what, in my world, they call a trigger. Something that might cause me to go
back to old, destructive habits. To regress.”
Jason walked into Maldonado’s personal space. Close enough to smell his
fear, if it hadn’t been plain in his aura.
“You don’t want me to regress, do you, Mr Maldonado?”
Maldonado shook his head.
“Great,” Jason said, beaming a bright smile as he backed away. “You saw
the attention I was getting and thought it was the people watching me that
made me important. That if you humiliated me, they would be watching you
instead, making you important. You believed that I was vulnerable. Soft.”
“And he’s not soft,” Belinda called out. “He’s harder than a fifteen-year-
old boy getting a titty massage.”
Every person in the clearing turned to look at her.
“What?” she asked. “I’m helping.”
“Remember the discussion we had about setting a tone?” Humphrey told
her.
“Belinda,” Jason called out to her, pinching the bridge of his nose.
“Please refrain from using the word ‘titty’ while I’m attempting to
monologue.”
“I told you that serious Jason was never going to work,” Neil muttered,
earning him a glare from Humphrey.
“Well, that’s ruined,” Jason said. “I had this whole speech about
consequences and the choice between ruthlessness and mercy. Humphrey,
should I just cut my losses and kill them all? It’s not exactly the point I was
going to make, but it’ll do.”
Maldonado’s team had already been on a knife’s edge, and Jason’s
offhand comment had them reaching for weapons.
“Everyone stand down,” Maldonado called out. “He’s not going to kill
us.”
“Try and kill us, you mean,” said Reyes, a member of Maldonado’s team.
“You heard him talk about the authorities,” Maldonado said. “They won’t
let him just massacre a group of adventurers. He kept the prisoners alive,
remember? Whatever is going to happen, he can’t kill us.”
Jason stared at Maldonado for a long time as both teams looked on, ready
to spring into action.
“That’s sound reasoning,” Jason said finally. “What do you think, Jana?”
The gold-ranker revealed herself with a shimmer.
“What I think,” she said, “was that the point was to prove you could deal
with them without calling on a gold-ranker. That makes this somewhat
counterproductive.”
“I don’t need you to deal with them. I need you to tell them what happens
if I kill them all.”
“Well, Princess Liara is going to yell at you.”
Jason gave her a flat look.
“Fine,” Jana acknowledged. “She’s going to yell at me. And the
Adventure Society won’t be happy. Or His Ancestral Majesty. Actually, I
don’t know about him; he lets you get away with everything. You will
certainly be disinvited to the celebration ball. Well, almost certainly. There
are things that need to be… okay, you’ll probably still be invited, but you’ll
get some moderately disapproving looks.”
“Jason,” Humphrey said. “You’re trying to give up killing adventurers,
remember?”
“Fine,” Jason unhappily conceded. “I’m not just letting this slide, though.
These people have to pay.”
“It was me,” Maldonado said. “This was all my idea. My team, my plan. I
pushed them into it. If you’re going to punish someone, punish me. I’m the
one behind it.”
“That’s noble,” Jason said, looking around at Maldonado’s team. “But
they’re all here and they knew what they were coming for. They made that
choice. And you didn’t come just for me, did you? Or did you forget that the
only reason I was meant to be here was to help my friend?”
Maldonado grimaced, glancing at his team.
“What will you do?” he asked.
Everyone waited in silence as Jason looked at Maldonado with a
contemplative expression.
“The right choice,” he said, “is to wash my hands of you and leave your
fate up to the Adventure Society. If it were up to me, I’d have all your society
memberships revoked. It would probably happen, in different times, but
while the surge is over, the need for adventurers is not. But I’m tired of
people’s crappy actions being overlooked because they’re going to be
needed.”
“You’re wrong,” Jana told him. “The Adventure Society needs people,
but they turned on their own. The society can forgive a lot of sins, but not
adventurers turning on one another. How did you think you got away with
killing those adventurers in Greenstone? They’d given up adventuring and
went after an adventurer in good standing. If you hadn’t dealt with them, the
society would have.”
Jason turned to her. “Really?”
“Oh, yes,” she said, gesturing at Maldonado’s team. “These people were
gone the moment they even attempted this plan. I imagine the society will
recruit the smart ones as functionaries, though. Very closely monitored, and
with crap raining down on them from a very great height. If they can take that
and keep their noses clean long enough, they’ll get a pathway back to being
adventurers. Until then, they’ll be scooting around after actual adventurers,
cleaning up messes like someone with a new puppy. The rest will have to
find their own way in life. Where do you think the noble houses get their
high-ranking house guards? Dregs that were kicked out of the Adventure
Society, usually.”
After Jason had ratcheted up the tension, the appearance of a gold-ranker
had wound things down. Unlike Jason, the vast majority of adventurers were
very respectful of rank, and the appearance of an authority figure gave them
confidence that things would be settled, if not well, then at least non-
violently.
Jason’s team moved from where they were lined up in front of the portal
to join him.
“It’s time to let it go, Jason,” Clive assured him, putting a hand on his
shoulder. “They’ll get what’s coming to them, and they aren’t worth our
time.”
“Alright,” Jason said and moved towards the portal. “Jana is surprisingly
good at monologuing.”
“Hey!” Maldonado called out. “You have one of my team members.”
Jason stopped and turned around.
“So?”
Maldonado looked to Jana.
“Don’t expect me to help you,” she told him. “You sent people after him.
The condition you get them back in is none of my business.”
Jana then vanished in a shimmer.
“I’m willing to negotiate her release with no further harm,” Maldonado
said to Jason, who turned and walked away.
“You don’t have anything I want.”

“You’re not going to the party,” Liara told Belinda.


“Oh, come on. You’re going to make me miss the big fancy party?”
“Jason, against all odds, was actually doing what he was told for once and
playing the—admittedly melodramatic—serious adventurer.”
In the cloud pagoda, an angry Liara, with a nervous Rick Geller beside
her, was in the middle of reaming out Team Biscuit for going off-message.
Sitting with them was Jana, sharing wincing side-glances with Jason.
“Don’t even get me started on you,” Liara told her. “You weren’t meant
to be seen at all, let alone doing a double act with Asano.”
“It’s not like you’ve never been to a big fancy party before,” Sophie
consoled Belinda.
“Yeah, but this time, I was invited. I was hardly going to steal anything.”
“What?” Liara said, wheeling on her.
“I mean, I’m not going to steal anything. Please let me go to the party.”
“You should probably let her,” Clive advised. “If you don’t, she’ll just try
and sneak in.”
“It’s in the royal palace,” Liara said. “I’m sure she’s a fine thief—she’s
certainly an enthusiastic one—but there’s no way she won’t get caught.”
“And would her getting caught make things better or worse?” Jason
asked. “Your best bet is to let her in the door.”
Liara closed her eyes and groaned.
“My preference would be that you skip this ball and leave right now,” she
muttered through gritted teeth.
“Done, we’re bunking off,” Jason said, jumping to his feet. “Everyone out
of the building; I need to turn this place into a magic school bus.”
“Stop!” Liara commanded. “Sit down, Mr Asano.”
“Boo,” he jeered as he dropped back into his seat.
“I’ve been telling everyone this wouldn’t work,” Neil said.
“Look,” Liara said. “There are a lot of people doing a lot of things to
make this dual-identity scenario work. I’ve seen plenty of follow-up plans if
it doesn’t, but they aren’t approaches that you’re going to like. They aren’t
approaches that I like, if for no other reason than you’ll disagree with them
and I’ve seen how that works out. Just stay in the pagoda, don’t make trouble
and we’ll see to it that no one else makes trouble for you.”
“Autumn got her frog familiar?”
Liara’s expression turned evasive.
“What happened?” Jason asked, narrowing his eyes.
“She has her new familiar,” Liara assured him. “She’s still out there, in
her familiar’s own environment as she gets to know it. She’s strengthening
their bond before she brings it back to civilisation.”
“Is there a problem?” Humphrey asked.
“Well, I imagine you’re aware that if someone gets an essence ability for
a frog familiar, such as Miss Leal with her frog essence, that ability covers a
wide range of creatures. Any kind of magical frog or frog-like magical
beast.”
“I’m getting the impression Autumn’s new familiar is more on the frog-
like than the actual-frog end of the scale,” Clive said.
“Her original familiar was from the region where you were all just
operating,” Liara said. “There were also frog-type magical beasts where we
took her, but it was a different region, with different creatures. She ended up
with a familiar not quite like her original one.”
“How not quite like her original one?” Jason asked.
“It’s a long-tongue jumping hydra,” Rick said. “It’s roughly the size of a
two-storey house.”
“Cottage,” Liara corrected. “It’s the size of a two-storey cottage.”
11
O N E M O R E L OYA LT Y T O B A L A N C E

J ASON AND L IARA WERE IN THE PAGODA , TAKING TEA IN A PARLOUR AS THEY
discussed the Adventure Society liaison to his team.
“Vidal Ladiv,” Jason said. “It’s kind of an inspired choice. Someone I
like and respect—when I don’t, that becomes clear very quickly. But he’s not
someone I’m close to, who will be biased in my direction. It’s a smart
choice.”
Vidal Ladiv was an Adventure Society official who had done very well
out of the monster surge, reaching silver rank and receiving multiple
promotions. Jason had only encountered Vidal a couple of times, but had
been impressed with his sharp observation skills and the careful manner
Jason himself could never manage to cultivate.
“He’s acceptable, then?”
“I’ll want to meet him again, and discuss it with the team. But
provisionally, yes.”
“Good,” Liara said, then placed her empty teacup down and stood up.
“Then I’m going to go before something ridiculous happens.”
“Oh, you shouldn’t have said that.”
“It wasn’t a challenge, Asano.”
“I’m just saying that tempting fate like that is buying trouble you could
have avoided for free. Use the pole if you’re looking to get out faster.”
“The elevating platform is fine, thank you.”
She descended to the atrium and walked across it towards the open doors.
She heard loud sounds of splashing from the river outside, along with
laughter and yelling. Leaving the pagoda, she spotted two giant hydras
splashing around in the water, to the delight of onlooking children.
One of the creatures was the long-tongue jumping hydra that Autumn
Leal had bonded with, while the second was almost identical. They were
enormous and they sent water everywhere, only half-submerged even in the
deepest part of the river. Rather than scales like a normal hydra, they had skin
like frogs, patterned in shades of green, blue, teal and yellow. Liara looked at
the difference in the second hydra, slowly blinked, then looked again,
confirming that she wasn’t imagining it. The second hydra had what was
definitely—and extremely incongruously—moustaches on each of its five
heads.
Two adults stood on the riverbank, one of whom was yelling.
“No! You do not get more biscuits because you have more heads. And
you don’t get bigger biscuits because you’re bigger. We’ve had this
discussion before, so if you want the biscuit to seem bigger, turn into
something smaller.”
“It can’t hurt to indulge him just this once,” Autumn told Humphrey.
“Oh, it’s not just this once,” Humphrey said. “It’s never once with him.
He’s a biscuit bandit.”
“Well, you do what you like,” Autumn said. “I’m giving Brian one biscuit
per head.”
“Excuse me, Princess,” a voice came from behind Liara. She turned
around to see Rick Geller approaching where she stood in the doorway. He
was pushing a wheelbarrow full of biscuits the size of dinner plates through
the atrium.
“Rick, where are the parents of these children?”
“Oh, they’re used to it. Humphrey’s familiar is always shape-shifting into
giant monsters, apparently. Turns out kids love monsters that aren’t
attempting to eat them. If you don’t mind, milady, can I scoot past?”
She moved out of his way, and he wheeled his burden outside.
“Rick,” Humphrey scolded on seeing the wheelbarrow. “What did I say?”
“That you wanted a wheelbarrow full of giant biscuits? That’s what Jason
told me you…”
Rick hung his head in shame.
“I see where I went wrong now,” he said.
“It’s not like he’s going to get fat,” Autumn said.
“I’m not going to let him get greedy. It’s a problem with dragons, and I
promised his mum.”
Liara shook her head, looking around for her flying carriage, which she
had left on the lawn.
“Where’s my vehicle?”
“I have no idea,” the moustachioed hydra said. “It’s definitely not at the
bottom of the river.”

As her rental carriage had become a hydra toy, Liara had to go to the
compound of the royal family branch living on Arnote and borrow one. She
then returned to the sky island that contained the royal palace, along with
residences for the majority of the royal family and some of the most
prominent diplomats.
Entry to the sky island was via the column of water that reached up from
the sea like the trunk of a tree. Her flying carriage, coming from the royal
family, was designed to produce a bubble shield that was carried up by the
column until it passed through the bottom of the island and surfaced on a
small lake. The lake was in the middle of the sky island, with the royal palace
constructed around it.
Leaving the carriage where the palace stewards would deal with it, she
passed through the mandatory security checks that even the Storm King had
to undergo on returning to the palace. Finally, she was allowed to move
through the most public and least secure section of the palace.
After leaving the sprawling palace and entering the residential outskirts,
she was finally allowed to move unescorted. With the festival ongoing,
security at the palace had been stepped up. The end of the surge was an
unofficial end to the moratorium on political intrigue, and with so many
changes, some might be tempted to do something bold and stupid. Jason
Asano wasn’t the only one subject to such attention, and when the noble
families went at one another, the stakes were always high.
The princess moved quickly through the wide, tree-lined boulevards, not
caring about decorum as she used her gold-rank speed to flicker through the
streets. She could have hidden with her prodigious stealth abilities, but on the
royal sky island, that would trip alarms, rather than avoid attention.
Liara slowed down on reaching a park that many townhouses backed
onto, including her own. She followed a path right up to her back door, from
which delicious smells wafted the moment she opened it. She went inside and
tension left her shoulders as she relaxed in the way that only arriving home
made possible. It was nice having a full house again, with her husband home
and her daughters still staying with them. Only her son was not living back
home, having his own house on the most populous of the three Rimaros
islands, Provo.
Liara was royal family, as were her children, but theirs was a minor
branch of the Royal House of Rimaros. Compared to Vesper or Zara, who
came from the main branch, Liara was barely royalty at all. Although
technically a princess, she shouldn’t even be referred to as Her Royal
Highness. Outside of formal events, though, she would never be dinged for
failing to correct that common mistake of protocol.
Liara’s closeness to the dealings of the royal family proper came from
one minor factor and one major one. The minor one was that her hair and
eyes were the full, vibrant sapphire that was the signature of the royal family.
Many branch family members lacked it, so it made others instinctively
connect her with the main family line.
The major factor contributing to Liara’s importance in matters of state
was her accomplishments. She had a long and successful career, both as an
adventurer and an Adventure Society official. She was known as a woman
who got things done, and her accomplishments and importance within the
Adventure Society made her a useful asset to the royal family. Her ability to
straddle the line of her various obligations without violating any lines of
loyalty was also highly valued. When holding seats in multiple camps,
integrity went from desirable to necessary.
Inside the back door of her townhouse was a mudroom, where Liara
slipped off her shoes and placed them on a rack. There was a laundry basket
where she dropped her outer garments as she stripped down to slim pants and
a simple shirt before going into the house proper. It was her husband and
eldest daughter cooking, rather than using the servant automaton. Baseph
insisted the food was better when cooked themselves, and while Liara could
never tell the difference, she didn’t point that out.
Liara and Baseph had an arranged marriage in their youth, which was
normal in their society, and neither resented it. They had liked each other
well enough and loved their children, and their relationship had grown into a
comfortable friends-with-benefits arrangement.
Then came the death of Vesper Rimaros, who was only a distant relative
but a close friend, and her team member, Ledev Costi. They had died
together at the heart of the Builder’s floating city, their bodies never
recovered before they turned to rainbow smoke and vanished. The Church of
Death had been needed to confirm that neither had made a miraculous last-
minute escape.
After that came Baseph’s ordeal with the underwater complex he had
been managing being raided by the Order of Redeeming Light. With gold-
rank threats literally hammering at the door, only another of Jason Asano’s
impossible absurdities had seen him escape safely. Asano had paid the price
of that, not just by nearly dying but in drawing attention to his many secrets,
now being eyed-off by the powerful and ambitious. Liara would always be
grateful for that sacrifice, though it gave her one more loyalty to balance.
The result of these trials was that, in their wake, Liara and Baseph’s
marriage had become much more of a loving one after decades of casual
relations. The losses and dangers that they faced made them confront how
much they had come to mean to one another over the years.
Liara entered the kitchen, snaked a slice of vegetable and popped it into
her mouth before kissing her husband on the cheek. He held his hands, wet
and sticky from mixing ingredients, away from her.
“Have those hands been washed?” he asked her. “In the blood of the
wicked does not count, by the way.”
“Your father thinks he’s funny,” Liara told Dara, her eldest.
“You think I’m joking.” Baseph went back to mixing stuffing in a bowl.
“Hands off my chopping board until those hands have been cleaned, wife.”
“Will Joseph and Zareen be joining us for dinner?” Liara asked as she sat
at the kitchen table. Baseph and Dara shared a look, and Liara narrowed her
eyes at them, resisting the urge to peek at their emotions through their auras.
“Joe is on his way,” Dara said as she chopped vegetables. “Zareen wasn’t
sure if she’d be back in time or not.”
“Back from where?” Liara asked. Zareen had been close to Vesper,
picking up her relative’s taste for the politics that Liara disdained but could
never seem to escape.
“She went to see someone,” Baseph said. “I’m sure she’ll be back soon.”
“Someone,” Liara repeated, latching onto the word. As an investigator
with decades of experience, she could recognise when a word was hiding
multitudes of sin. “Please tell me that this has nothing to do with Jason Asano
and the kind of kingdom-sized mess that follows him around like a hydra
with five moustaches.”
“I wouldn’t say—” Baseph said before stopping short. “Wait, what did
you just say?”
“I’ll tell you about it later,” Liara promised. “Where is Zareen?”
“Hydra with moustaches?” Dara mused. “Maybe I should be spending
more time with Asano.”
“Don’t even joke about that,” Liara said. “I do not want you getting
involved with Asano and his nonsense. You remember meeting Rick Geller?”
“The one from up north,” Dara said. “Has those elf twins on his team that
keep teasing him?”
“I don’t know about that second part, but yes,” Liara said. “I saw him
today with a wheelbarrow full of giant biscuits.”
“What do you mean?” Baseph asked.
“I mean I watched him pushing a wheelbarrow full of enormous baked
goods,” Liara said, holding her hands up to indicate the size.
“Why?” Dara asked. “Something to do with that hydra?”
“It wasn’t actually a hydra; it was a dragon,” Liara said. “But I’ll tell you
about that later too. Where is Zareen?”
“Just so you know, Lee,” Baseph said, “you’re doing a really bad job of
not of making a visit to Asano’s pagoda sound anything but fascinating.”
“Baseph. Where. Is. Our. Daughter?”
“She went to see someone. I told you that. Just to talk.”
“And we’re back to this. Who is the someone?”
“Look,” Baseph said. “Zareen came to me with something she wanted to
talk about, and she knew you wouldn’t like it.”
“What did she want to talk about?”
“An idea she had.”
“That I wouldn’t like.”
“I think that’s safe to say, yes.”
“Was it something political?”
“I’d say so.”
“And you told her to give up on the idea, firmly and thoroughly
dissuading her?”
“Of course,” Baseph said unconvincingly.
Liara looked at him from under raised eyebrows.
“I may have phrased it badly,” he admitted.
“How badly?”
“He told her that if she wanted to pursue it,” Dara chimed in, “she should
go see Trenchant Moore.”
Liara gave her husband a flat glare.
“Trenchant Moore is not a political man,” she said.
“See?” Baseph said. “It’s not so bad.”
“With the single exception,” Liara continued, “of being the contact point
for His Ancestral Majesty.”
“Oh, is he?” Baseph asked in a voice that might have sounded innocent if
not for being an octave higher than normal.
“I think you had better tell me all about this idea of our daughter’s,
husband,” Liara said.
“Ooh, you’re in trouble now,” Dara said. “That’s her ‘I caught you selling
death essences on the black market’ voice.”
12
T H AT B OY I N T H E T E NT

J ASON WALKED ACROSS THE ATRIUM OF THE PAGODA AND LOOKED AT THE
doors leading outside with a frown.
“Why do these swing open?” he mused out loud.
The doors and the section of wall around them dissolved into cloud-stuff,
revealing Zara Rimaros standing outside them.
“I’ll be with you in a sec,” Jason said. “I’m just doing some home
renovation.”
The cloud-stuff re-solidified into sliding doors made of dark crystal,
containing swirling blue and orange light. They slid open, revealing Zara
again, but this time with a wry expression and raised eyebrows.
“Can’t do just one eyebrow?” Jason asked.
“You have a very political mind, don’t you, Mr Asano?”
“I have no idea what you’re talking about,” Jason said innocently.
“Vesper used to do that too. Provoke people socially because their
reactions told her something about them, regardless of what the reactions
were.”
“She never did that with me. I think she just kind of hated me.”
“She didn’t hate you, Mr Asano. She was irked by you. I think she saw
more of herself in you than she would like. It didn’t help that you were a lot
more brazen about it. She couldn’t be as brazen because she wasn’t as free.
The Rimaros name has a lot of weight, and while that can be useful to throw
around, we still have to carry it.”
“You can call me Jason. I told you that back in the tent where we met.”
“We’ve both come a long way since that tent.”
“I suppose we have.”
“You aren’t as… volatile as the last time we met. You felt dangerous
then.”
“That’s because the one I was most dangerous to was myself. I’m still
dangerous to everyone else. More so than ever, in fact.”
“I remember your habit of enduring tribulation and coming out stronger
for it. We met when you were on the way to see the gods, remember? They
pushed you, and you suffered, but they knew that once you recovered, it
would make you stronger. The next time I saw you, your aura was almost that
of a different person. I realise now that what I saw then was only the
beginning.”
“They didn’t know I would recover. It was a test as much as a gift. If I’d
crumbled, they’d have moved on without sparing me another thought.”
“Ours is not to question the gods.”
“Ours might not be, but mine is.”
“You’re casual with blasphemy.”
“Yep. Are you going to come in, Princess, or are we going to keep talking
where all the eyes and ears watching my house can eavesdrop?”
“Your home is a little intimidating.”
“Only from the outside.”
Zara nodded and moved through the doors that slid shut behind her.
Compared to the blank space it had been to her senses from the outside, the
interior was just the opposite as Jason’s aura flooded the place with a strength
that even Jason at full power could not project himself. Only the fact that it
was not hostile to her at all stopped her from running for the door. The
exterior of the building was a literal looming tower, while the inside was a
metaphorical one.
Jason actively dialled back the amount the aura of the pagoda imposed on
Zara. She wasn’t a gold-ranker that could shrug its influence off as easily as
Liara or Carlos. Zara’s lack of hostility meant that the aura of the place did
not attack her, but neither was she one of Jason’s friends, from whom the
aura always withdrew to a benevolent background presence.
“You said it was only intimidating from the outside.”
“I said it was only a little intimidating from the outside,” Jason corrected.
Zara looked around at the open atrium, from the waterfall spilling off the
mezzanine to the lush plants dividing the area into sections. The exterior wall
was translucent from the inside, letting light spill in. There was a reception
desk by the entrance with an alien receptionist: a cloaked shadow figure with
one large eye made of energy instead of a face.
“What is this place?”
“It’s a cloud house. Technically, it’s a cloud palace, at this size. A fairly
vertical one, but a palace. I couldn’t have managed a tower this big at bronze
rank.”
“Jason, I am a princess of one of the most prominent kingdoms in the
world. I’ve seen cloud palaces, and that is not what this is.”
“Yes, Princess, it is. It’s just not all that it is.”
She looked at Jason.
“Do you ever wish you could go back to being the person you were in
that tent where we first met?”
The amusement dropped from Jason’s expression.
“I spent a long time wishing that. Long enough that the desire to go back
turned into poison, taking me even further from who I was back then. You
saw the result of that.”
“I remember.”
The last time Zara had seen Jason, he had been a raw nerve. Angry,
violent and distrustful, using his mysterious powers to lash out at the world.
“I had to learn to accept who I’ve become,” Jason said. “And who I’m
becoming. That boy in the tent died because he wasn’t ready for the path
ahead of him.”
“And what about the path ahead of you now?”
Jason took a long, contemplative look around at the atrium before
answering.
“We’ll see.”
He set out through the atrium, along a pathway defined by plants potted
directly into the floor. Jason’s adjustment of the doors was only the latest of
the changes he had been making as he renovated the place to his liking. The
atrium was much more garden-like than it had started out, with pathways
leading to what was now an array of elevating platforms, as well as the
fireman’s pole. One pathway led to the wall behind which the array of poles
for his team was hidden.
Following Jason, Zara looked at the brassy pole with curiosity. It ran up
to the ceiling, where it passed through a hole sealed by a spiral aperture.
“What’s that for?”
Jason was walking in front of her and couldn’t follow her gaze, but he
didn’t need to. He could sense where her attention was through her aura.
“Sliding down from the upper levels.”
“You have a problem with elevating platforms?”
“I might not be the boy I was when we met, Princess, but I haven’t
entirely lost my sense of fun.”
“You can call me Zara.”
They moved onto an elevating platform that rose through the mezzanine
level overhead. At each floor, the aperture that the platform passed through
was sealed by mist that allowed passage from below while serving as a solid
floor from above. This dynamically solid-gaseous cloud-stuff was something
Zara had seen in other cloud constructs, not just Jason’s. It was the solid
spiral doors sealing the holes for the fire pole that needed to open and close
that came across as strange. Jason’s cloud palace possessed strange traits and
seemed exceptional, so the less elegant choice for the pole had to be
deliberate. Like the pole itself, it spoke to a whimsical choice that had more
meaning to Jason than practicality.
Despite the oppressive aura pervading the space around her, seeing that
kind of indulgence from Jason made Zara feel a lot more secure. His angry,
violent intensity during their short expedition together had been disturbing.
He had left the party behind, not just annihilating Builder forces but
somehow making them turn on one another. He had barely been less hostile
to his fellow adventurers than the enemy.
The arrival of his team had mellowed him, but Zara had not been in
contact since. Vesper’s plans for re-aligning her in relation to the Irios family
were overtaken by the war with the Builder and Vesper’s death. It had made
her nervous about the choice to see him, especially as he rejected her
invitation to visit Vesper’s memorial.
“I apologise for not joining you in paying respects to Vesper,” Jason said.
“There was a little too much attention on me for that, but I would like to do
so before I go. I would be happy for you to join me, if you’re open to some
spontaneous scheduling.”
She wondered how much he was picking up from her aura. There was
clearly a profound connection between Jason and the pagoda, given that it
was radiating his aura as if it were a temple to him.
They arrived at the top mezzanine level, which was a lounge area that
continued the pagoda’s theme of abundant plant life. Washed in sunlight
passing through the huge translucent walls, Jason sat on a couch and directed
Zara to an armchair.
“I’m sure you didn’t come here for a raincheck on a private memorial,”
he said. “What brings you to my door, Zara?”
Zara looked at Jason for a moment before speaking.
“The Adventure Society is assigning you a liaison,” she said.
“If by assigning, you mean looking for someone we won’t dump in the
ocean inside of a week, then yes.”
“There has been an idea floated,” she said, “of another such position.
Your group is growing and the royal family would like to have a
representative in it. No authority, just someone who can be a genuine
auxiliary, offering specific skills that could be useful to you.”
Jason narrowed his eyes as he looked at Zara.
“What we—”
He held up a hand to cut her off.
“Allow me a moment to think,” he told her.
“I know you can see through my emotions. This isn’t a trick.”
“I didn’t think it was. But I’m also not reading your emotions. I could,
you’re right, but my aura manipulation isn’t as sloppy as it used to be. I’ve
had time to work on it while I’ve been convalescing.”
“You can’t stop yourself from reading the emotions of others when their
auras overlap with yours. Not if they can’t mask them properly.”
A smile crept onto Jason’s face.
“You’re telling me what I can’t do, Princess? That, historically, has not
been something people have done accurately, and things don’t tend to go well
for them after. My aura strength means that I’ve been passively intruding on
the privacy of the people around me for a while. That made things hard for
someone close to me and made it harder to come together. It prevented us
from having more time together than we ultimately did.”
It wasn’t hard to see there was an unhappy story there; Zara didn’t
enquire further.
“Removing the unmasked emotions of others goes beyond ordinary aura
manipulation,” she said. “You would effectively have to partition a section of
your mind to assess the incoming information and decide whether to process
it into your conscious mind or ignore it. That’s deft mental self-manipulation
and aura manipulation.”
“There are aspects of our silver-rank attributes that I think go overlooked.
The agility of the speed attribute is leveraged nowhere near as much as the
strength of the power attribute. Even less so is what the mind can accomplish
with a silver-rank spirit attribute. It’s something I’ve been delving into as I
explore combat trances, but it seemed to me that there were further
applications. Every silver-ranker can multitask quite well, but how many of
us work on those aspects? Fortunately, I have a friend whose family trains
adventurers. He was at least able to give me some foundational training
techniques.”
“I’m vaguely familiar. Mind puzzles and observational tasks that require
multiple threads of attention, yes?”
“Yes, but sometimes focus is important too, or we miss details. For
example, I asked for a moment to think, which you appeared to completely
miss as you launched into another conversation.”
Zara smiled in awkward embarrassment. “Sorry.”
Jason stood up, walked to the edge of the mezzanine and leaned on the
railing with his hands, looking out through the clear wall. Zara stayed where
she was, not wanting to interrupt his thought again.
“Why are you here?” Jason asked without turning around.
“I wanted to talk about placing someone from the royal family in—”
“I know what your purpose is. Why are you here? Why not Liara? Your
family has been wise in letting her be their face in this. She’s someone I
know, and the lingering presence of Vesper engenders my sympathies. I
suppose the same is true for you, but it’s more complicated.”
He turned around.
“Liara didn’t want to do this,” he realised. “She refused to be a part of it.
Why?”
Zara opened her mouth, but Jason forestalled her with a gesture.
“Not actually asking,” he said. “I’m just thinking at you. If Liara is
against it, that means either your family is trying to do something stupid and
she knows better, or she’s fine with doing it but doesn’t like something about
the way it’s being done. Soramir would stop anything too idiotic, so…”
He grinned.
“Zareen,” he said. “There’s no way Liara would go with us, and who else
would we put up with? They wouldn’t put her eldest in that position because
she’s pure adventurer. She doesn’t have the political sensibilities for it or any
interest in cultivating them. But the other daughter was more intrigued when
they came to visit us. And she was close to Vesper, I recall. Playing on those
sympathies again. The only other real option would be you, Zara, and that’s
obviously never going to happen. There’s too many complica…”
He trailed off with an awkward wince.
“Oh,” he said, moving back to sit opposite her, on the edge of his couch
seat. He leaned forward to look her in the eye. “You did want it to be you.”
“I thought you weren’t reading my emotions.”
“I wasn’t. Now I am. I’m sorry, Princess, but you don’t get a ride on this
bus. Why would you even want that? Aren’t you trying to be the next queen
in whatever competition thing they do here?”
“That chance died the moment I tried my idiotic plan with Kasper Irios.
Vesper was trying to salvage my reputation so that I might not be completely
pushed aside, but now she’s gone and the relationship with the Irios family
she was using as a pretext means her plan will never happen. I’ve already
withdrawn from the contest, and with it, my title as Hurricane Princess.”
“Won’t that contest be going on for years? There’s time to make a
comeback.”
“There are no comebacks. The monarch is the person who went beyond
expectation without making mistakes.”
“Mistakes are how we grow.”
“And the people who made them will be fine advisors to the monarch
who didn’t.”
“Ah.”
“In any case, that’s not my path anymore.”
“I’m sorry about that, Princess. But I’m not your new path. You made
some choices that caused me trouble I very much did not need.”
“I thought mistakes were how we grow.”
Jason opened his mouth to respond, only for nothing to come out. He
closed his mouth, looking confused.
“I find myself forced to acknowledge the point.”
Zara stood up.
“Zareen would be a strong addition to your group,” she said. “She was
already planning to move from adventuring to Adventure Society service, the
way her mother did years ago. It seems she wants to pivot, however. This
whole thing was her idea.”
“And Liara knows my background better than most. She wants her
daughter nowhere near me, and I can’t say I don’t empathise.”
“I’m not going to try and sell you more than I already have,” Zara said.
“Whether you choose Zareen, myself, someone else or no one at all, I’ll leave
it to you. Now, if you don’t mind, I’d like to try that pole.”
Jason blinked his surprise, then grinned.
“I don’t think your father would want that.”
“My father is not as protective a parent as Liara.”
“You say that, but most fathers try very hard to keep their daughters off
the pole.”
“Why? What’s wrong with it?”
13
A D I F F I C U LT C H I LD

T HE TAILOR , A LEJANDRO A LBERICCI , HAD COME TO THE PAGODA TO MAKE


final adjustments on the formalwear of Jason’s companions in advance of the
celebration ball. They were situated in a medium-sized parlour with a
transparent wall that let in natural light. Alejandro was also a fully capable
dressmaker and had arranged the gowns for the female members of the group
—some of whom were more open to the experience than others. Sophie
glowered as Alejandro checked over Belinda’s gown.
“Why would anyone wear this?” Sophie asked.
“Because maybe I’d like to enjoy myself and feel pretty every once in a
while?” Belinda said. “It wouldn’t kill you to let yourself be a little feminine
every now and again, Soph.”
“It might kill me. Stuff tries to kill me a lot.”
“Can’t you relax for once in your damn life? Instead of complaining, how
about you just tell me I look good?”
Sophie’s expression was grumpy but apologetic. She looked up and down
Belinda’s salmon-coloured gown.
“You do look very nice, Lindy.”
“Thank you. It’s kind of fun preparing to attend a ball instead of
preparing to rob it. Oddly enough, the time and expense is much the same
either way.”
This drew an odd look from Alejandro, who was crouched down,
checking her hem. He stood up in front of Belinda, giving her a firm nod.
“Miss Callahan, you are perfect.”
“See?” Belinda said, leaning to address Sophie around Alejandro. “People
like you a lot more when you don’t have to drag compliments out of them
with a block and tackle.”
“It was not a compliment,” Alejandro said. “Just a simple statement of
fact.”
Belinda shoved a finger into his face.
“You can take your sexy hair and back off,” she warned him. “I’m spoken
for.”
Alejandro held up his hands in surrender, giving her a charming smile.
“My loss,” he said. “Now, for Miss Wexler.”
Alejandro opened the lengthy garment bag where he had left it hanging
on the rack he had brought with him. Sophie braced herself as he slid the bag
off her outfit. She was surprised to see a formal pantsuit rather than a gown.
“Mr Geller made it quite clear,” Alejandro said, “that anything you could
not comfortably kill people in was unacceptable. As I pride myself on
fulfilling the needs of my clients in style, here we are. The magical
augmentations are focused on defensive properties, with a more robust self-
cleaning system than normal. This means that after any excitement, you can
return to the party without having to explain away any awkward viscera
stains.”
“See?” Belinda said. “Now, put on your damn clothes so we can go get
our hair fixed.”
“What’s wrong with my hair?”

“Mr Williams,” Alejandro said. “Just between you and me, I appreciate your
custom.”
“No worries, bloke,” Taika said as Alejandro telekinetically adjusted a
seam. “I just like finding someone that works in my size. Getting good
clothes can be a struggle back home.”
“That,” Alejandro said, “is precisely the point I was looking to make. I’ve
worked with a lot of leonids, but their fashion proclivities have given me
pause on more than a few occasions. No offence intended, Mr Xandier.”
“No, I’m right there with you,” Gary said. The two largest members of
Jason’s group were being fitted at the same time.
“Your lot have clothing issues?” Taika asked. “Is it because of the fur?”
“Yeah,” Gary said. “Most leonids wear clothes that aren’t much more
than a few straps, strategically placed for the bare requirements of modesty.
I’ve even seen some isolated all-leonid communities where they don’t bother
with clothes at all.”
“Nudist towns?” Taika asked. “Not sure I’d be up for that.”
“Nor should you be,” Alejandro said. “As a purveyor of fine apparel, I
protest nudity in the strongest possible terms.”
“I like a nice, loose coverage,” Gary said. He had taken to the local
fashion in Greenstone, which was free-flowing and colourful, with decorative
tassels featured heavily. His current outfit was very much a loose drape,
almost in the combat-robe style that Jason favoured, but the colours and cut
were neat and sober. The colours were light, as was the local fashion, with
Taika in white and Gary mixing cream with grey to flattering effect.
The door to the men’s dressing room slid open and Jason came in.
“Hairdresser is calling for you,” he said.
“Bro, Shade is the hairdresser, and he’s got like thirty bodies.”
“He’s mostly after Gary,” Jason said.
“Why me?” Gary asked.
“Bro, you’re a lion man. You’ve got a mane.”

Amongst magically propelled carriages, the class of grand carriage was more
akin to a bus, ranging from smaller ones with seating for ten or twelve
through to triple-decker tour bus sizes designed as mobile homes for entire
groups of people. The one that arrived on the lawn in front of the pagoda was
around the size of a school bus, with ornamentation that marked it as
belonging to the royal family. Jason was already waiting when a gowned
Liara emerged.
“Let’s go inside,” she told him. “Still too many ears out here.”
The atrium doors slid open to grant them passage and slid shut behind
them.
“Are your people ready?” Liara asked.
“Just about. I get the feeling you want to talk about Zareen first, though.”
Liara glowered, but not at Jason.
“She’s a grown woman and I can’t make her choices for her,” Liara said.
“In this case, though, you can.”
“Are you asking me to say no to Zareen as the royal family liaison?”
“Are you thinking about saying yes?”
“I haven’t decided to accept anyone, let alone considered who it would
be. The Adventure Society representative I understand. They’re going out of
their way with creating a fake adventurer identity for me, and want to keep an
eye on how that goes. And me, of course. But what reason do I have to let the
royal family insert themselves into my affairs? Again. I don’t know if you
recall, but my involvement with the royal family was never something I went
looking for.”
“I’d be perfectly happy if you didn’t take anyone. The family sees the
way His Ancestral Majesty treats you and thinks that a relationship now will
reap benefits in the future. When you’re gold, even diamond rank.”
“I’m uncertain on this,” Jason said. “Having Rimaros royalty could open
some useful doors for us. But it could also draw unwanted attention,
especially if it’s someone like Zara. But this decision isn’t just mine. It’s the
whole team’s, and when I don’t have a real leaning on an issue like this, I’m
inclined to defer to them. Maybe you should take the chance at this party to
make your case to them individually.”
“I might just do that,” Liara said. “There are some things you will need to
know before the ball begins.”
“This is the political part?”
“This is the political part,” Liara confirmed. “This ball is essentially a
starting flag for the resumption of political manoeuvring. The surge is over
and there’s plenty of power, influence and money, all on the table. No one is
exactly sure when the conflict with the messengers will start and we’ll be
back on a war footing, so the noble houses are eager to grab what they can,
while they can.”
“Oh, great. You know how much I love being treated as a tool for
someone else’s ambitions.”
“Then don’t.”
Jason looked at Liara with suspicion. “What are you saying?”
“Your recent endeavour with those adventurers demonstrated that quite
amply. You didn’t put up with their games, or ours.”
“What do you mean, yours?”
“I know that roping in Jana to your little game was improvised.”
“She did very well.”
“But the way Miss Callahan impulsively yelled about… well, you know
what about. It wasn’t quite as smooth as you might have hoped, and even if it
were, do you expect me to believe she did so on the spur of the moment?”
“Yes?” Jason said optimistically, earning him a wry frown from Liara.
“You wanted to show that while you might be willing to play the game,”
she said, “you’ll always play it your way. And that’s fine. Trying to stop you
from being you is an exercise in futility. We would appreciate it if you
brought the right version of you to the right situations, however.”
“You’re not just speaking generally,” Jason said. “You want me to do
something at this ball.”
“There are factions on factions,” Liara said. “We’ve been very carefully
looking into what various groups will be trying to do tonight. We’re fairly
confident that someone will challenge you to a duel.”
“You’re kidding. Over what?”
“They’ll find a pretext. It will be someone young. Silver rank, like you.
From one of the lesser houses that a greater house is using as a mask.”
“What does anyone involved hope to get out of that?”
“The lesser house gets the favour of the greater one, and if their scion can
make even a decent showing against you in a mirage chamber, it will bring
him key prominence. As for the greater house, they’re likely looking to see
who will step up to support you, maybe even make hay of the situation to
draw them out.”
“Echo-sounding the political landscape.”
“Echo-sounding?”
“Something people on Earth do to map out specific environments.”
“Earth. That’s the name of your world?”
“Of the other world. You don’t know a lot about my time there, do you?”
“Not much more than what you’ve told me. Any time you would like to
tell me more, I would be open to that.”
“Another day, maybe. Today, I need to know what you expect me to do
about this duel. Since you haven’t taken steps to put a stop to it, I assume
you’re leaving it to me.”
“I’ve learned that expecting things from you is not a sensible approach,
Asano. Just deal with it however you see fit.”
“Seriously?”
“Just remember what I said about the right version of yourself in the right
situation. We’ve discussed fun Jason and the other Jason in the past. You
keep referring to this ball as a party, but it’s not. We don’t want to see fun
Jason. We want the other Jason.”
“You’re giving me open slather?”
“If I’m correctly guessing the meaning of that from context, then yes.
Trying to tell you what to do never works out, Asano, be it because of you or
some madness you’re caught up in. I’ve come to realise that the best
approach is to accept that and work around it accordingly.”
“Huh,” Jason said, his expression nonplussed. “Now you say that, I feel a
bit like a difficult child.”
“Really?” Liara asked lightly. “That comparison never occurred to me.”

Jason and his team were far from alone on their trip to the ball. The grand
carriage made a number of stops to pick up people on the way to the palace.
Liara’s family was already inside when it arrived at the pagoda, which was
clearly for the sake of appearances. It was far from practical, given their
home’s proximity to the palace, to fly all the way to Arnote only to fly back.
At the pagoda, it took on Jason and his team, Rufus and his, plus Taika
and Travis. In Livaros, they stopped at the Temple of the Healer to pick up
Arabelle and Carlos, and from the Temple of Knowledge, they picked up
Gabrielle.
Jason had barely seen Gabrielle since his first arrival in Rimaros. There
was contention between them, not to mention that she was Humphrey’s
former lover. Jason was surprised to find that Sophie had no interest in the
woman, but Travis did. Jason knew that Travis had been meeting extensively
with the Church of Knowledge to determine what he could and could not
bring to this world from Earth’s magitech, but only now discovered that
Knowledge’s representative had been Gabrielle.
Arabelle sat with Jason and her son, Rufus, so that they could have a
quiet discussion during the trip.
“We need to have a discussion about Callum,” Arabelle said. “He has
become increasingly agitated about your prisoner, especially after finding out
that you’re leaving. To the point that I have finally managed to have him tell
me the real reason he is so emphatic about getting to her.”
“Oh?” Jason asked.
“Not here,” Arabelle said. “I’ll find you tomorrow.”
Their carriage was one of many that entered the column of water rising
into the royal sky island. It docked at the side of the lake and their rather
large contingent was led to the ballroom by palace stewards.
There was a lengthy process of their each being announced, during which
time they stood around and waited, looking over a ballroom the size of a
sports oval. Over them, the roof was domed crystal, showing off the evening
sky, with light coming from levitating chandeliers.
Jason, Travis and Taika stood together, looking out at a room where most
of the people were high-ranking celestines. It was a sea of beautiful people
with brightly coloured hair and sculpted, athletic bodies. The three of them
shared a look.
“Does anyone else feel like…” Travis said.
“…we just walked into an anime,” Jason finished.
“Bro, I feel like I’m going to do something not very sensible tonight.”
The other two nodded their agreement.
14
A LL S I N G E R A N D N O S O N G

T HE ARENA - LIKE BALLROOM WAS SET UP IN VARIOUS ZONES , EACH OFTEN


repeated in different places around the room. Along with long buffet tables,
stewards roamed with trays of food and drink. There were dining tables and
small lounging areas, each with its own high-end privacy screen. The dance
floor was expansive and mostly filled with young members of society in the
delicate game of courtship. The privacy screens kept any sound from getting
out, but did not prevent it from getting in, and there was no shortage of
people using them to politic. Aura etiquette was very strict, with auras
tamped down.
The Storm King and Soramir Rimaros were in one such private lounge
area, but theirs was elevated, allowing everyone to see them and them to see
everyone. They sat with other core members of the royal family, chatting
quietly. It was clear from the body language that the presence of Soramir, the
founder of the kingdom they ruled, was not helping his descendants to relax.
Liara instructed Jason’s group to not roam in a giant pack like
adventurers stalking a monster. She needn’t have bothered, as not only did
they not pay attention to her, but they immediately split up. Clive took off in
the direction of a group wearing formal versions of scholarly robes. Gary,
Farrah and Neil toured the food tables while Sophie and Belinda wandered
off together, looking suspiciously like they were casing the joint. Gary wasn’t
waiting on the palace staff and their tiny trays, having liberated a large
serving tray from somewhere. He was at the buffet tables, loading it up like a
giant plate.
Humphrey and Rufus, the two socialites among Jason’s friends,
accompanied Liara’s daughters to circulate. Liara’s husband and son, Baseph
and Joseph, moved in the direction of the Amouz family. Baseph had come
from that family before marrying into the royal house, and both men were
high-ranking administrators in the family’s business interests.
Rufus’ mother, Arabelle, was playing guide to Carlos, a priest of the
Healer who was not comfortable at fancy social events, while also riding herd
on Travis and Taika. As for Jason, Liara was leading him to circulate,
introducing him to a chain of prestigious citizens in rapid sequence. Most
were nobles, but some, like the Remore family, held prestige and influence
without holding titles.
“Jason Asano,” Liara said, “I present Lady Ileana Irios. Lady Ileana,
Jason Asano.”
The ball had, thus far, been a rather tedious sequence of Liara introducing
Jason to people and Jason not saying much as he did his best to look passive
and mysterious. His usual air of general amusement at the world was not in
evidence in his face or voice, both of which were blank and cold as he met
person after person.
“When we were having our little reputation problem with young Kasper,”
Ileana said, “you suggested a meeting with our family. Perhaps we could
have that meeting in the near future?”
While Jason was still embroiled in the aftermath of Zara using his name
when she thought he was dead, he had run into Kasper Irios. The encounter
had been engineered by Vesper for political reasons and Jason had made an
overture to the Irios family that they had not taken up.
“I’m afraid my near future is occupied,” he apologised. “While I had the
time before I became so prominent, you unfortunately never found the chance
to seek me out. My window of availability has now closed, so I’ll have to
accept it as a missed opportunity.”
Following Jason’s diplomatic rebuke, Liara quickly hustled him on,
moving into the privacy screen of an empty standing table.
“If you could refrain from making personal jabs at an ally the royal
family only just managed to reaffirm their ties with, that would be
appreciated,” she told him.
“I know you’ve been treating me as one since I arrived in town, Princess,
but I’m not an asset for the royal family to play around with as they like.”
“I know that this is all a show, Asano. You only need to play stern Jason
with others.”
“You’ve been talking about ‘fun Jason’ and ‘stern Jason’ as if they were
both personas and neither was actually me. What you need to understand,
Princess, is that they both are very real. I don’t have multiple personalities;
like anyone else, I act differently in different company. I use certain parts of
myself to keep a lid on other parts where maybe I shouldn’t be left to my
urges. You should be very careful about asking for anything but fun Jason,
Princess. He’s the lid.”
“Jason, the royal family is your ally.”
“Yes. But I don’t much care for allies, if I’m being honest. I consider you
a friend, Liara, so I don’t count favours. But House Rimaros is an ally, and an
alliance is just a measure of relative benefits. It’s a cold relationship and
everything comes at a price. Yes, I’m here because looking like I’ll answer to
the royal family, even if that is a lie, is of value to each party.”
“You don’t like being paraded around like livestock at an agricultural
fair.”
“It doesn’t matter if I like it because I agreed to it. But if you want me to
do tricks, Princess, you’ll need to feed me a treat.”
“What kind of treat?”
“That’s on you to figure out. I’m not looking to do tricks.”

The two noblewomen moved away with wary expressions on their faces.
“Bro, stop talking about sailor uniforms.”
“It just came out,” Travis sobbed. “I’m not good with women.”
“No kidding. You’re so bad with women that now I’m bad with women.
This is a new experience for me; I’m a delicious chocolate drop.”
At that point, Arabelle found them again.
“You’re the size of a house,” Arabelle told Taika. “How do you keep
sneaking off?”
“I’m like a jungle cat; lithe and stealthy.”
“I thought you were a delicious chocolate drop,” Travis said.
“I can be both. I’ve got depths.”

After their discussion, Liara left Jason to his own devices for the time being.
He spotted Rick Geller and wandered over to speak with him. They found a
couple of quiet seats with a privacy screen and sat down.
“You really are carrying yourself differently,” Rick said.
“How so?” Jason asked.
“You’re not surrounded by beautiful women.”
“Rick, this is a party where the serving staff are cored-up silver-rankers.
Everyone around us is beautiful.”
“Yes, but you don’t have a personal barricade of them,” Rick said. “Or
your sparkly cloak, for that matter. I thought you would be using it to
accessorise.”
“That was your idea,” Jason said. “It would be a little lacking in decorum,
and Alejandro would be disappointed if I covered up his excellent
formalwear.”
“There’s no shortage of people using their more flamboyant powers to
add a little flash. Something I recall you not being above.”
“Back in Greenstone, maybe. Not here.”
“Didn’t you paint the sky with your personal crest and blast your aura
across the city? As I recall, you did that here and in Greenstone.”
Jason expression took on a warning that Rick did not miss.
“In Greenstone, Richard, I was being tested to make sure I wasn’t a slave
of the Builder after being kidnapped and implanted with a star seed. And
here, I was unconscious when that happened, and my friends were
desperately trying to save my life. I hope you haven’t been telling people that
was some kind of display designed to grab attention.”
Rick shook his head. Jason’s aura remained sealed away behind a polite
facade, yet Rick still felt pressured by the sudden intensity coming off Jason.
Jason saw the effect he was having and relaxed his body language.
“Rick, people who have power don’t need to flaunt it. Look around at the
people in here showing off. They’re young, trying to stand out. Back in
Greenstone, I was just like that—all singer and no song. Desperate. Always
making a spectacle of myself; blustering my way through like a pufferfish.
That worked in Greenstone because it’s a whole town full of empty bluster.
But now we’re on the opposite end of the world, literally and figuratively.
This room contains some of the most powerful people on the planet, and they
know that the more you have, the less you need to show.”
“No big stunt from you tonight, then?”
“I didn’t say that. We’ll see where the evening takes us.”
“Zareen,” Jason said. He had been sitting alone with a plate of food,
periodically rebuffing social overtures when Liara’s daughter approached
him. He waved her to a seat.
“Mr Asano, it almost feels like my mother has been shepherding me away
from you since we arrived.”
“Your mother has other issues on her mind, I’m sure. And call me Jason.”
“No, she doesn’t. Not at the top of her mind anyway. She hates this aspect
of being royalty, but she inherited House Rimaros’ interest in you from
Vesper. There was a sense that there aren’t too many people you would
tolerate, and that you would be unsubtle in making that clear.”
“Which neatly brings us to the topic you really want to talk about,” Jason
said.
“I can be an asset to your team. I’m not as prominent as Zara, but I can
offer almost as many benefits. More, without the parts of her reputation that
aren’t the best.”
“I don’t doubt it,” Jason said. “But I don’t like how you manoeuvred me,
Princess.”
“I didn’t manoeuvre you.”
“No? You positioned me as the person who has to say no to either you or
your mother. That way, the ultimate decision was mine and not a conflict
between the two of you. Whichever one of you ends up disappointed,
something external is the crux of it, making reconciliation between you
easier.”
“You can benefit from thinking like that.”
“I’ve tried playing politics before,” Jason said. “I have a good eye for
spotting political issues in time to react, but every time I try to actively
participate, it goes wrong.”
“It doesn’t have to.”
“It goes wrong,” Jason reiterated, “and people get hurt. People who don’t
deserve it. Politics has a way of doing that. For example, I’m now caught up
in the family politics between you and your mother. I don’t like being in that
position, Zareen. You made a bold move instead of talking to your mother
about it because you knew she would be against it. I would have done that
too, once upon a time. I wouldn’t anymore.”
“You’re not going to take me.”
“Do what you should have done in the first place: convince your mother.
Excise me from your family politics and we can have the discussion again.”
“Will you take Zara instead?”
“I don’t know. Right now, I’m short on compelling reasons to take her,
you, or anyone else the royal family may or may not have suggested.”
“The family proposed other names? Who?”
“I never said they proposed any names. Go talk to your mother, Zareen,
because you and I are done discussing this.”
Zareen frowned but knew when to cut bait. She rose and left the privacy
screen.
“The royal family hasn’t suggested any alternative names,” Shade pointed
out from Jason’s shadow.
“I never said they did.”
“But Miss Zareen is clearly convinced otherwise because of what you
said.”
“Is she?” Jason asked innocently.
“You can be quite mean sometimes, Mr Asano.”

“You’re those thief girls trailing around after Asano, aren’t you?”
Sophie and Belinda turned to face the brash young nobleman, flanked by
three of his fellows. Their auras were clean of cores and Sophie could tell
from the way they were standing that they were trained to fight, and trained
well. She looked the boy up and down before turning away again without
bothering to respond.
“Hey, I was talking to you.”
“Do you think someone put him up to this to provoke us?” Belinda asked
Sophie. “I can’t imagine them letting anyone in here dumb enough to make
the kind of scene they seem to be heading for on purpose.”
“Look at you, all sophisticated,” the boy said. “Not bad for someone who
crawled out of the gutter.”
“I know,” Belinda said. “We started with nothing, and here I am at the
same place, at the same rank as you, without all the money, time and effort
they spent on you. Does that mean that we’re amazing, or that you’re just
kind of a waste?”
“Don’t bother,” Sophie told her. “Boy, if you want to make trouble, you
don’t need a pretence. I’ll be happy to punch your teeth through the back of
your head.”
“Let’s go, Soph. You know Jason is the one who was going to be
provoked into a duel. These idiots have obviously been sent to make trouble,
so don’t play along.”
“Why is Jason the only one who gets to beat the blood out of someone?”
Sophie complained. “I have healing potions to put the blood back in, after.”
“Is that a challenge?” the boy asked.
“Y—”
“No,” Belinda firmly spoke over Sophie. “It’s a social event and we have
no interest in socialising with you. Leave us alone.”
Belinda directed Sophie away and the boys followed until the women met
up with Liara coming the other way and veered off.
“Thank you,” Liara said after the three women moved into a privacy
screen.
“It was obvious that they were the end of someone else’s stick when they
made that approach outside of one of the screens,” Belinda said. “They
wanted an audience.”
“It seems that whoever is looking to provoke Asano has realised that the
best way to do it is to start with his companions,” Liara observed. “You
aren’t the only ones being approached by less-than-polite individuals, but you
all seem to be handling it well. I saw some young fool looking like he was
going to cry while slinking away from Arabelle Remore.”
“I’m not sure that’s going to hold for everyone,” Belinda said. “We might
want to go find—”
A gong-like sound rang out. All eyes in the room looked to Gary, holding
a dented serving platter as he stood over a man on the floor.
“And I only waited that long so I could finish the food on it,” Gary said
loudly. “You’re worth hitting over the head with a lump of metal, but you
aren’t worth wasting good crab puffs. Bad crab puffs, maybe, but the catering
here is excellent.”
“I guess it’s starting, then,” Liara said, and moved to join her daughter,
Zareen.
15
HEFTY NUGGETS

U NSURPRISINGLY , THE COMMOTION IN THE MIDDLE OF THE PALACE BALLROOM


drew attention from across the room. After glancing at Gary standing over
some nobleman he had dropped with a serving platter, Jason’s attention
moved to everyone else. He watched body language and looked for aura
spikes, as much as he could without pushing out his senses more forcefully.
Most of the obvious reads came from younger members of the nobility, as the
more experienced and high-ranking ball attendees had well-trained self-
control.
Seeing Rufus making a beeline for Gary, Jason instead moved to join
Princess Liara and her daughter Zareen inside a privacy screen. He asked
about several people he had picked out as potentially being involved from the
way they watched the scene. Some they ruled out immediately, as there was
no political gain for them to prompt things from behind the scenes. Others
they gave him quick introductions of, no more than name, house and known
political factions.
Jason noticed that Gary and the man he hit were standing back, while
Rufus and another man were talking.
“Why aren’t the people involved the ones talking?”
“The etiquette, in matters of personal offence, is to have others stand for
you in the discussion,” Liara explained. “The idea is to maintain cool heads
and allow diplomacy to rule passion.”
“Does that work?”
“Not really. The real reason is to use such provocation as a political tool,
as is being done here. The person standing for the ‘aggrieved’ pushes for a
duel and stands for the person in that too.”
“We have something similar in my world,” Jason said. “Or we used to
anyway. When we still had duels. There was a second who stood in if one of
the participants didn’t have the bottle to front up.”
“Does that mean when they got scared and didn’t show for the duel?”
Zareen asked.
“It does,” Jason said. “So, who is that standing for the guy Gary
clocked?” Jason asked.
“I’m not sure,” Liara said. “He’s wearing the symbol for House de
Varco.”
“It’s Lancet de Varco,” Zareen said. “He’s a tournament duellist; well
known if you follow the mirage arenas, but they haven’t been operating for
months. He’s also a sometime adventurer. His guild uses him for public
recognition, and in return, they help rank him up with controlled monster
encounters, the way aristocratic families do with their scions. He’s one of the
rare arena fighters to not use cores.”
“Do you know where he was when the Builder cities attacked?” Jason
asked.
“Most of his guild fought the city attacking Livaros,” Zareen said. “All
their ‘special’ members were assigned to monster watch on Provo.”
“That’s not so bad,” Jason said. “I did that too.”
“Yes, but while you were taking on gold-rank monsters by yourself, he
was securing the inside of a bordello.”
“It was just one monster,” Jason corrected. “I’m not a madman.”
Zareen and her mother shared a glance.
One of the people standing by was a gold-ranker, Quint de Varco, in the
same dark maroon house colours as Lancet. He was amongst the people Jason
had asked Liara and Zareen about. He stood out for having the same house
colours as the man talking with Rufus, along with body language that Jason
read as more anticipatory eagerness than the curiosity displayed by most of
the onlookers.
“I think I’d better get in there,” Jason said.
He didn’t use his usual trick of aura manipulation to smoothly move past
people; this was not a crowd it would work on. As such, it took him time and
a little rudeness to move past the gathering onlookers. He arrived to find that
the situation had been escalating.
Gary was still holding a serving tray with an almost cartoonish dent. The
head responsible for that dent belonged to a sullen young nobleman, now
back on his feet. Separating the two as they stood off against one another
were Rufus and Lancet de Varco, whose dark maroon outfit had the symbols
of his house and his guild stitched in gold. It was very flattering, matching
the gold of the celestine’s hair and eyes.
The adventurer facing Rufus was speaking.
“From the look of your friend, Mr Remore, I would be quite confident in
presuming that no apology will be forthcoming.”
“Let me guess,” Rufus said. “You aren’t willing to let this go
unresolved.”
“Your friend has humiliated mine. If no restitution is offered, then I am
afraid it must be taken.”
“A duel,” Rufus said, blank-faced. “I assume you intend to stand for your
friend.”
“I am. Will you be standing for yours?”
“No,” Jason said, stepping out from amongst the onlookers. “He won’t.”
Lancet turned to Jason.
“The storied Jason Asano.”
“Yep. Don’t know who you are, sorry.”
“Then allow me to introduce myself. I am Lancet de Va—”
“I don’t care,” Jason said. “Someone put you on the end of a stick and
poked you in the direction of my friend. I’m going to be honest, Lancet: I
know there’s been a lot of talk about me, and I’m only here so the fine upper
crust of Rimaros can finally get a look at me. Get a sense of who I am. Which
I suspect you’re about to firsthand. I don’t know if someone put you here to
give me that chance or because they have some agenda, but it was the right
move. When you go after me through my friends, you get to see exactly who
I am.”
Lancet laughed.
“You barged over here because you somehow thought this was about
you?”
“I did.”
“You’re quite arrogant, aren’t you?”
“It’s kind of my thing. So, as much as I would like to watch you find out
what happens when you challenge Rufus Remore, you’re getting me.”
“So be it,” Lancet said. “We can make arrangements after the ball is
finished.”
“No need,” Jason said. “It’s a nice big room.”
Lancet frowned in confusion.
“Big room?”
“For the duel,” Jason said. “We’ll knock it out quick and let these fine
people go back to their celebration.”
“Are you talking about fighting right here? We’ll duel in a mirage
chamber, you savage.”
It was Jason’s turn to laugh.
“Oh, no. You asked for a duel, not a dance. I hate to break it to you,
bloke, but whoever put you up to this made you the pointy end of the stick.
That’s the end that gets blood on it. A duel is about putting yourself on the
line for your principles.”
“Putting your reputation on the line.”
“And you think pretending to fight is where your reputation will come
from?”
“I am an experienced arena duellist, you thug. I can assure you that it is
very far from pretend and there is plenty of reputation to be had.”
Jason grinned as he saw the gold-ranker from House de Varco wince.
While there was no doubt that many knew Lancet’s background, that was
very different to making a point of it himself.
“An ‘experienced arena duellist’ wound up here, challenging someone to
a duel in a mirage arena?” Jason pointed out, voice filled with scepticism.
“It’s almost like someone planned it.”
Lancet blanched as he realised he’d broken the cardinal rule of the
political setup by making the setup transparent. Everyone would continue to
play along, but it was a minor humiliation for House de Varco. Jason wasn’t
going to leave the knife just sitting there and gave it a twist.
“Mirage chambers are for training. Arena duelling is a sport. I’m sure it
requires a great deal of skill, but this social event is celebrating the people
who put themselves on the line in the jungles and fortress towns. Who went
into the depths to fight underwater monsters and stood their ground against
Builder cultists and Purity loyalists. Reputation comes from what you do, not
what you pretend to do in a magic playhouse. How do you fight for your
principles when the fight isn’t real? If you want a duel, you put blood on the
line. If you don’t have the courage of your convictions, you’re just a coward
playing pretend. So, what will it be, Lancet? Courage or cowardice?”
“Your words are just sounds of a beast, howling for blood because it’s all
his brutish mind understands.”
“Cowardice it is.”
“Refusing to participate in a backwards blood ritual does not make me a
coward!”
“No,” Rufus said, stepping up next to Jason. “Calling for a fight and then
backing out when you actually have to risk something is what makes you a
coward.”
“You expect me to have a real fight with an affliction specialist?”
“What does his speciality matter?” Rufus asked. “I thought this was a
matter of principle. Oh, are you worried that an affliction specialist can’t face
you without a team to support him? That’s considerate, but unnecessary. He’s
an affliction skirmisher, not a traditional specialist. He’ll hold his own against
you, don’t worry.”
“I apologise,” Jason said. “I mistook your concern for my wellbeing for
cowardice. Now that it’s settled, we can commence the duel. It looks like the
dance floor has been cleared. Is that space enough for you?”
Lancet’s smug expression was now pure bile.
“Rimaros is the heart of civilisation, not some frontier town. We settle
our affairs like gentlefolk, not drunkards brawling in an alley.”
“You’re the one who picked this fight,” Rufus said. “You can refuse to
fight it and crawl off if you like, letting all these people know exactly what
you are. That’s the benefit of being in the heart of civilisation. The people in
that alley you talked about? They don’t get that choice. They win or die; they
aren’t free to be cowards.”
“Stop calling me a coward!” Lancet snapped.
“Or what?” Jason asked. “You’ll challenge me to a duel in a nice, safe
mirage chamber?”
Jason could sense Lancet’s feeling of being cornered as the young
nobleman channelled his fear into anger. Jason knew that if he could sense it,
so could many others in the room, which itself sealed Lancet’s fate. The
entire encounter was about putting on a show, and they had seen what Lancet
was. As the one who had lost control of his aura, letting his emotions spill
out, Lancet knew it as well.
“I guess you were right,” Jason told him. “You do put reputation on the
line. Your mistake was pretending to be something you’re not. If you aren’t
willing to go all the way, you’ll always come up short against someone who
is.”
“You’re just a brute,” Lancet shot back. “Everyone in here knows it.”
“I don’t deny it,” Jason said. “Which leaves you the choice between
fighting the brute or running from him.”
“Refusing to spill blood in the middle of a royal ball isn’t running.”
“Fair enough. I’m sure we can find a training hall somewhere. Probably
best.”
“We don’t have to find a training hall, you lunatic. That’s what mirage
chambers are for!”
“Mirage chambers are so you can do things without facing the
consequences,” Rufus said. “Duels are all about consequences, which means
that, by definition, you cannot hold a duel in one. All you can do is spar.”
“So, what’s it going to be?” Jason asked. “We have all these people
watching.”
“Perhaps,” a new voice interjected, “everyone can take a step back.”
The crowd parted like the Red Sea to permit passage of the Storm King.
The tall man had broad shoulders with bright sapphire hair spilling over in
waves, a match for his gemstone eyes. He moved with absolute confidence, a
vision of power both political and personal. Unlike many royal families,
House Rimaros forged their scions in fire and not a scrap of monster core
energy was detectable in his aura. He exuded authority, even amongst the
elite of society, who scrambled to move out of his way.
“Young Master de Varco,” the king said, “is here representing a powerful
house and a powerful guild. I wonder if, in the spirit of celebration and
reconciliation, he would be willing to withdraw his duel request. And that
you, Mr Asano, Mr Remore and Mr Xandier, would be willing to accept that
without blame or recrimination. No victors, no cowards and no grudges.”
“I would,” Lancet said, grabbing the lifeline.
The king looked to Jason and his companions.
“Will you accept the withdrawal of the challenge without prejudice?” he
asked them.
“We would be willing to do so,” Jason said, giving a short bow. “As a
favour to you, Your Majesty.”
They all felt the wave of whispers move through the onlookers; the
favour of a monarch was no small thing, and the king would not be the one in
debt. That would be Lancet and the forces standing behind him—whom the
king had chosen to mention specifically.
“Then I will count it as a favour, Mr Asano. And as someone who has
seen recordings of what you do to people, I’d appreciate your refraining from
further attempts to do it in my ballroom. We pay our stewards well, but some
things I would still feel bad about making them clean up.”
“I’ll do my best, Your Majesty. But some days people won’t let you end
it with clean hands.”
The king let out a chuckle, like the parent of a naughty child.
“I think it’s safe to say, Mr Asano, that after this display, anyone who
comes to you looking for trouble will get exactly what they asked for.”
The Storm King turned to leave, but paused as his gaze fell on Travis.
The lanky, nervous Earthling had come to prominence by building the
magical nuclear device that had been critical in ending the Builder’s attack on
Rimaros.
“Travis Noble,” he said. “House Rimaros would like to again extend our
thanks for designing the weapon that brought down the Builder’s flying city
and saved Rimaros, perhaps the entire Storm Kingdom.”
“Er, you’re welcome,” Travis said, not sure whether to nod or bow. He
ended up trying both, failed and almost fell over, drawing an amused smile
from the king.
“Our door will always be open to you, young man. House Rimaros
remembers the debts it owes.”
He panned his gaze over the room.
“As well as the debts owed to it.”
Once the king returned to the royal family’s seating platform, Lancet
moved off in the direction of his house members.
“It just feels awkward standing here after that,” Jason said.
“We could go get food,” Gary suggested.

Jason and his team received a wide berth after the incident. While he made a
very distinct impression in Rimaros society, that wasn’t the same as a good
one. He was sat at a table with Liara and Zareen, sharing a large plate of food
that Gary had left behind while he went to get a larger plate of food.
“That could have gone worse,” Jason said. “It could have gone better, but
on balance, I’d say I was happy. I’ll call it a solid win.”
“You would?” Liara asked. “Everyone thinks you’re dangerously volatile
now.”
“Which matches with what they’ve been assuming, based on all the
rumours floating around about me. I was never trying to ingratiate myself
with the nobility. I was trying to cement myself as an unpredictable factor
with the favour of the royal house. Between the king and people seeing us
here, sharing snacks, that’s coming along nicely. No one wants to interfere
with me until they know more, but I’ve also demonstrated that I can be reined
in. I’ve established myself as a factor best avoided, but that can be managed.”
“Did you plan for the king to step in?” Zareen asked.
“That wasn’t part of any plan I was told about,” Liara said.
“I didn’t plan it,” Jason said. “It was one of several scenarios I gamed out,
however. Royal intervention, the people behind Lancet popping out. I was
surprised they didn’t send someone more capable. I saw he was an empty
shirt and ran with it.”
“He’s far from an empty shirt,” Zareen said. “Being a successful arena
fighter in Rimaros means that his skills are real.”
“Yeah,” Jason said, “but his spine’s imaginary. He never had to scramble
for his life with nothing but his own skills and tenacity marking the line
between life and death. He smelled so green, it’s like someone just mowed
the lawn.”
Liara thought back to the time she watched Jason fighting against the trio
of Purity loyalists. They had been sent after him with powers and items
specifically to counter him. Even so, he struggled far longer than she would
have expected before they finally pinned him down. Even then, he never gave
up, ultimately dragging her into it. It was as desperate a fight as she’d seen,
but he treated it almost like any other day.
“I don’t think they anticipated you asking for a blood duel during a royal
ball when they chose him. What would you have done if he’d accepted the
duel on your terms?”
“Drank the life out of him until someone made me stop.”
They turned to look at a man marching in their direction. He was wearing
the same outfit as Lancet de Varco, but Jason could immediately spot that
this was a different kind of man. He hadn’t honed his abilities in the safety of
a mirage chamber. He came right up to the table, planting his feet firmly as
he stood in front of them. He started with a bow to Liara.
“Your Highness.”
“Strictly speaking, the correct form of address is ‘milady,’” Liara told
him.
“Apologies, milady,” he said, then turned to Jason. “My name is Hector
de Varco, and I challenge you to a duel. Right here is fine.”
“Huh,” Jason said. “You realise the king just stopped me from doing this,
right? Bloke, you might want some looser pants if you’re going to haul
around hefty nuggets like those.”
16
F O LL OW I N G YO U R C O N V I C T I O N S T O YO U R
D E AT H

J ASON , L IARA AND Z AREEN WERE SITTING AT A TABLE , WITH H ECTOR DE


Varco standing in front of them. The confrontation was already drawing
attention, even if people couldn’t hear through the invisible privacy screen.
Hector was a larger man than his relative, Lancet, and less polished. His hair
was trimmed short instead of a sculpted coiffure, and he had broad shoulders
and an outfit that, while tailored, lacked the same flatteringly painstaking fit.
Hector also lacked the gold hair of Lancet, instead sporting a deep, shining
copper in his eyes and hair.
Jason and the princesses shared a look.
“Young Master de Varco,” Liara said. “The king personally and
specifically asked Mr Asano to refrain from duelling in his ballroom.”
“Then we can take it elsewhere, milady. I am happy to let Mr Asano
choose the venue.”
“That is only the beginning of our concerns,” Liara told him.
“Indeed,” Jason agreed. “I was just telling the princesses here that I was
quite satisfied with how things turned out. I’m not going to accept a duel just
because you aren’t happy with how your family came out after they came
looking for me.”
“You did nothing, Mr Asano,” Hector said. “Lancet is the one who hurt
the reputation of our house. I wish to show you, and all the people who saw
his shameful display, that the de Varco family knows how to stand, be it in
victory or defeat.”
Jason narrowed his eyes. “You don’t expect to win.”
“I am confident in my abilities,” Hector said. “But I do not fear defeat. A
failure you survive is but a stepping stone to the next success.”
“Your motivations are irrelevant,” Liara said. “There’s no way—”
“I have conditions,” Jason said.
“No, you do not,” Liara told him.
“Princess,” Jason said, “while I ever value your counsel, the challenge
was made to me. The decision is mine.”
There was a delicate reverb of his aura in Jason’s authoritative tone,
giving it a weight that even the gold-rank princess could not ignore.
“Firstly,” Jason said to Hector, “it has to be tonight. I don’t have time to
be running around after every noble house that wants to put me in a fight. I
have gods and great astral beings lining up for that already. Second, you need
the king to approve. I’ve already caused one commotion and I have no
intention of forcing him to take things in hand a second time. I’m aware that
adventurers of non-elite backgrounds are given leeway in etiquette, but I’m
not that bereft of courtesy. Thirdly, I’m going to need some incentive. What
you’re proposing is a one-sided game. So long as you take your lumps
without wetting yourself, you get the good showing for your house that
you’re looking for, win or lose. I, on the other hand, get nothing, win or lose.
I don’t need to prove myself to the people here. The only reason I showed up
is to demonstrate that I’m not some lunatic who’s going to start an
interdimensional invasion again.”
“Again?” Zareen asked.
“Pretend you didn’t hear that,” Jason told her, then turned back to Hector.
“In short, mate, what’s in it for me? And don’t say pride or honour,
because I have no interest in either.”
Hector frowned in thought for a moment before his eyes snapped up to
meet Jason’s. “Mr Asano, how familiar are you with House de Varco?”
“If I was counting the minutes since I heard about you, I’d run out of
fingers and toes, but not by much. Princess Liara said you were traders.”
“At the risk of contradicting the princess, Mr Asano, while we do an
amount of trade, it’s a corollary to our primary endeavour, which is the
construction of vehicles. Everything from wagons to ships to airships; even
exotic flying vessels for private buyers.”
“I’m already good for transport, mate.”
“Yes,” Hector said. “You possess a cloud flask. But as I said, my family
creates all manner of transport.”
“You’re offering me another cloud flask?”
“No. While the creation of such a vehicle is an ambition my family is
working towards, we are not there yet. We have managed some more limited
cloud constructs, although a true cloud flask remains in the realm of
ambition. But our progress has produced a by-product that you may find
appealing.”
“Oh?” Jason prompted.
“A cloud flask can take a vehicle form,” Hector said. “But those forms
are basic. That’s fine for a static construct, like a cloud house, but vehicles
are more dynamic. The inherent property of a cloud flask is to take on
materials to expand its capabilities. In their studies of cloud flasks, my family
had developed the means to harness that effect. With the right materials and
design matrix, a cloud flask can replicate the finest vessels that my family
produces. And they, Mr Asano, are some of the finest vessels in the world.”
Jason looked to Liara, who gave him a confirming nod. He then turned
back to Hector and leaned forward in his chair.
“I’ll admit that sounds interesting.”
“I know for a fact that we have several such design matrices sitting
around as the results of our ongoing experiments into cloud constructs. If you
agree to this duel, I will offer you the design and materials for a land vessel.
If you win, I will offer you the same for an air vessel.”
“How much material are we talking about here?” Jason asked.
“I’m talking about the raw materials to build an entire airship from
scratch, Mr Asano. A small one. My understanding is that you won’t be able
to produce the kind of massive skyships cloud flasks are known for
producing until gold rank.”
Jason remembered his first look at Emir’s cloud ship, the size of a
massive ocean liner.
“That is acceptable,” he said, “but I have one more condition: It can’t just
be you. You have to bring three companions.”
“You want to fight four of us alone?”
“No, I’ll be bringing companions of my own. If I take a second
opportunity to kick the crap out of someone and don’t invite my friend
Sophie, she’ll kick the crap out of me.”

“Miss Hurin,” Trenchant Moore said, approaching her at the buffet table.
Farrah looked at the tall, lean, pale man with dark hair, angular features
and bright blue eyes. A little too blue, in fact. She guessed that, like Jason,
his eyes had diverged from their original state.
“Mr Moore,” Farrah said. “Is there something I can do for you?”
“I have heard that you will be staying with us in Rimaros after your friend
and his team have all left.”
“For a time.”
“I am… that is good.”
“Wow,” Farrah said. “You’re really smooth with the ladies. Come on,
Stretch. I don’t think Jason is going to kill anyone on the dance floor, so
we’re probably fine taking a spin.”
She grabbed his hand and dragged him in that direction as he trailed
behind.
“Stretch?”

Jason and Hector approached the platform atop which was a lounge area for
the core members of the royal family. There wasn’t a lot of lounging taking
place, however; the presence of Soramir plainly reduced the family’s ability
to relax. Hector was even more nervous as they approached, only four people
looking unperturbed. Two were diamond-rankers: Soramir and Zila Rimaros.
One was Jason, who would not have looked out of place strolling a market
with his easy-going stride. The Storm King was neither relaxed nor
intimidated, playing up the stern-but-benevolent monarch rather than taking it
easy with family.
There were no guards at the platform. Anyone who made trouble there
would either be a peer of Dawn’s or swiftly scraped off the polished floor by
palace stewards. Even the most casual observer noticed that no one
approached the platform without a very distinct purpose. Jason reflected on
the contrast between that and the people approaching him earlier at the event,
before he started talking about blood duels in the middle of a society ball.
Jason didn’t hesitate as he entered the platform’s privacy screen, which
started at the short steps leading to the platform. Hector had been rather bold
earlier, but the pinnacle members of the royal family intimidated him in a
way that even the gold-rank Princess Liara did not.
“Come on, bloke,” Jason encouraged as he made his way up the steps,
turning his attention to Soramir and the Storm King, whose name he still
didn’t know. He just knew that he was Zara’s father.
“G’day again, your kingness,” Jason said, then nodded to Soramir.
“G’day, Soramir; it’s been a minute.”
Hector, who had already dropped to one knee, had the look of a man
trying to figure out how to shuffle very quickly on one knee away from the
madman next to him.
“I had rather expected,” the Storm King said, “that our last conversation
would be the end of you making commotions at this event, Mr Asano.”
“Then you might want to skip my invite next time,” Jason said. “The
more I try to have a nice, quiet time, the more it ends up being one thing after
another. I tried to have a simple barbecue to meet the neighbours when I
moved into town, and these two showed up. Uninvited, no less.”
Jason gestured at Zila and Soramir with a pointed finger. Jason hadn’t
seen Soramir in some time, since he was hurt escaping the underwater
complex. It was plain that many members of royalty looking on were not
happy about Jason’s insouciance, but they were not going to speak up when
the king and the diamond-rankers were willing to tolerate it, even if they
failed to understand why.
“Would it hurt you to show a little deference, Jason?” Soramir asked
lightly.
“Would it hurt you to offer a bloke a seat?” Jason returned. “Addressing
the deference issue would involve delving into my thoughts of the relative
merits of different forms of governance. I don’t think this is the time and
place for that particular debate.”
“While I genuinely would find that fascinating,” the Storm King said,
“you’re right that this is not the place. Which begs the question of why you
have approached me, along with this much more respectful young man from
House de Varco. Given our last conversation, you make for an unexpected
pairing.”
Jason prodded the still kneeling Hector with his foot.
“This is your show, bloke. Maybe stand up and tell the nice king what
you want for Christmas?”
Hector was a silver-ranker and didn’t sweat, but he felt like his body
might figure out how from pure nervousness. As Jason conversed with the
royals, Hector realised that his assumptions about the man he had challenged
were way off. Not only was he speaking with His Majesty and His Ancestral
Majesty in a way that Hector would only describe as suicidal, but he was
getting away with it.
How was Asano not wilting under the attention of all that power? Just the
passive aura interactions from having two diamond-rankers pay passing
attention to him were making the hair on his arms stand on end, and they
were restraining themselves. Anxiously, under the now focused attention of
the king and royal family, Hector got to his feet. He steeled himself, planting
his feet as he raised his eyes to look at the king.
“Your Majesty, after my house failed to comport itself in a manner that
reflects well on its place in your kingdom, I took it upon myself to rectify the
circumstances.”
“And how did you seek to go about that task?”
“I challenged Jason Asano to a duel, Your Highness. However, Mr Asano
refused, citing his respect for you and your desire that this gathering remains
a peaceful one. He said he would not accept unless my challenge could be
made with your approval.”
“And why would I give that approval? You want to have a bloody fight in
the middle of my ballroom, in the middle of my ball?”
“Perhaps you could suggest an alternate venue, Your Majesty,” Jason
suggested. “Somewhere roomy, since it’s actually going to be four duels.
Should you approve.”
“Four duels?” the king asked.
“I thought that if we’re going to do it, why not put on a show? So, if you
have a big room somewhere that maybe you don’t mind us breaking some
bits off of, we could just quietly bunk off and leave your guests to their
lovely evening.”
“And who else would be participating in this series of duels?” Soramir
asked.
“The guy who’s better than me with swords, the woman who’s better than
me with fists and the guy who’s better than me at talking to people like you.”
“Those first two would be Rufus Remore and Sophie Wexler,” Soramir
said. “Not to put too fine a point on it, Mr Asano, but that last description
does little to narrow it down.”
Jason let out an easy laugh and pointed. There was no shortage of people
watching, despite not hearing anything, having seen Jason and Hector
approach the king.
“It’s the tall, broad-shouldered bloke suddenly very aghast that I’m
pointing him out to you.”
“Perhaps,” Soramir said to the king, “we can make some entertainment of
it. The old duelling arena has seating for an audience.”
“Wait, you guys have a duelling arena?” Jason asked. “You should have
brought that up when the other guy was crying about mirage chambers and
saved us some trouble.”
“It has gone unused for many years,” the king said.
“It was installed only a century or so after the kingdom was founded,”
Soramir explained. “Back when I still ruled the Storm Kingdom, mirage
chambers were yet to be invented.”
“Duelling was on the decline at that time,” the king continued, “but the
safety they offered resulted in something of a resurgence.”
“I happen to agree with Mr Asano that there are no duels in mirage
chambers,” Soramir said. “They’re just performances for people pretending
to have courage.”
“Performances that let the hot-headed young members of the houses play
their little games without starting blood feuds,” the king countered. “Not
everything has to be about following your convictions to the death.”
“As Mr Asano has done exactly that several times,” Soramir said, “I don’t
think you will have any more luck of having him agree than you would me.
So you might as well reopen the arena and let the ball attendees enjoy some
sport.”
“Explain to me,” the king said, “how failing to convince you and Mr
Asano of anything means I have to allow duels to take place.”
Jason opened his mouth to respond and then stopped, frowning.
“What the…”
“Is there a problem, Mr Asano?” Soramir asked.
“I figured someone would try and break into my house while everyone
was off at a party, but it just had to be while I was talking to the king, didn’t
it? Sorry, Your Maj; I better take a look at this.”
“Your Maj?” Hector failed to stop himself from dumbfoundedly asking.
Jason dug a hand into his shirt and pulled out a necklace. It had two
amulets on it: his Amulet of the Dark Guardian, and his shrunken cloud flask.
Cloud stuff came spilling out of the tiny flask and formed a vertical ring the
size of a portal. It wasn’t portal energy that shimmered into being, however,
but an image of Jason’s pagoda. Four people dressed in black were on one of
the lower floor balconies, where they had laid down a board and were
drawing a ritual on it.
“Mr Asano?” the king asked.
“Yes?” Jason absently answered as he watched the image.
“How are you maintaining any connection to your cloud building through
the very significant defences around this sky island?”
Jason went still, then turned his head to look at the king with a friendly
smile.
“Uh… I’m not.”
“Then what exactly is this?” the king asked, gesturing at the floating ring.
“Art?”
17
THE GOD IN THIS SCENARIO

“I CAN ’ T BELIEVE H IS M AJESTY WENT ALONG WITH THIS ,” L IARA MUTTERED


as she rode an elevating platform into the bowels of the sky island.
“Dinner and a show,” Jason said. “What’s not to like?”
A vast amount of infrastructure was in the underground portions of the
flying island on which the royal palace and residential sectors for royalty and
foreign diplomats were located. A large part of that was underwater docking
stations where vehicles could arrive in an airlock where the water was
pumped out, allowing the passengers to disembark. This was where most of
the royal palace traffic arrived, comprised of supply deliveries, palace staff
and government functionaries.
The lake at the heart of the royal palace was more naturalistic on the
surface, but underneath, it was a perfect ring. The sections of it not occupied
by docks offered magically reinforced glass walls that made for interesting
office spaces and other rooms that abutted the lake below the surface.
One such room was the old duelling area, which was, like the ballroom
they had just left, a stadium-scale space, both horizontally and vertically.
People were swarming down from the ballroom for a chance to watch the
upcoming duels, but most were heading for the audience seating. Those
heading for the main area were the royal family, various key attendants, the
actual duellists and a few attendants.
“The duelling arena has been used as a training hall by the Sapphire
Crown guild for years,” Trenchant Moore explained. He was on the elevating
platform with Jason and Liara, as well as Sophie, Humphrey, Zareen, Rufus
and Rufus’ mum.
“You’re sure Callum isn’t behind the people breaking into my pagoda?”
Jason asked Arabelle.
“I’ve been very clear with him on this,” Arabelle said. “Also, he received
quite the impression last time he tried.”
“That doesn’t mean he didn’t send someone else to try,” Jason told her.
“People do things that are stupid and make no sense all the time. Myself very
much included.”
“Jason, my job is helping people with their mental issues. You think I
don’t know what people are like?”
“You help people because they need it and come to you,” Jason said. “I
get the ones who lack that much self-awareness. Instead of going to you, they
try to murder me. Or kidnap. Honestly, if you discount monsters, I see more
attempts to kidnap than kill me. Does that make me popular?”
“Are you sure you shouldn’t be going to deal with the people breaking
into your house?” Liara asked.
“I’m a silver-ranker,” Jason said. “What am I going to do to a bunch of
gold-rankers?”
“You’re sure they’re gold-rankers?” Arabelle asked.
“I am,” Jason said.
“How?” Arabelle asked.
“They’re still alive. Okay, that’s just me being dramatic; I can sense
them.”
“You shouldn’t be able to,” Liara said. “The defences around this sky
island are as powerful as any in the world. It should cut off everything.”
“Does it prevent gods from speaking with their servants?” Jason asked.
“No,” Liara said.
“Then it doesn’t cut off everything,” Jason pointed out.
“Between you and the cloud house, who is the god in this scenario?”
“I refuse to answer on the grounds that I may incriminate myself. And it’s
not like they’re good gold-rankers. They’re all core users.”
“All of them?” Zareen asked. “At gold rank, core users are less common
than people who trained up properly. Are they a bunch of craftspeople or
something?”
“I’ll ask them when I get home,” Jason said. “I have something to be
getting on with first… oh, it looks like they’ve decided to cut their losses and
get out. They’ve started breaking through walls.”
“Then you won’t be talking to them when you get home,” Liara said.
“Maybe, maybe not. They haven’t realised yet that I keep moving the
room they’re in to the middle of the building.”

Four men forcefully broke through a wall, arriving in another of a series of


empty square rooms.
“What did I tell you?” Jedrin asked as the wall they just broke through
reformed behind them. “No one pays four gold-rankers to come a quarter of
the way around the planet to rob some silver-ranker’s house.”
“Shut up, Jedrin.”
They were all uneasy. Their senses failed to extend beyond any of the
walls and they had stopped finding furnished rooms. Each wall they broke
through led them to one empty box after another. There was a pervasive
sense that they were trespassing and there seemed to be formidable power
behind it. They couldn’t even be certain that power was real, however. Their
senses barely brushed against it and it was not something that belonged in a
silver-rank construct. It could easily have been their imaginations, except that
they had each felt it.
They quickly found themselves unnerved, and it only got worse. Once
they had broken into the house, they had moved through a series of ordinary
rooms until they found themselves in a room that was just a plain box. There
were no windows and even the door vanished, sealing them in. That was the
point they decided to call it quits and started smashing through walls to
escape, but each new room was a new empty box.
“Get bent, Kirk,” Jedrin said. “I should have told you to shut up when you
wanted to take this job. It’s not like we’re some infiltration experts. The only
reason to go that far for us is that it’s how far you have to go to find someone
who doesn’t know how stupid an idea it is.”
“I said shut up.”
“And I asked why anyone would go that far and pay that much for us?
And now we know it’s because the people paying attention clearly looked
into this job and said no.”
“How about you both shut up,” William said.
“Exactly,” Ray said. “Arguing won’t get us out of here.”
“Neither will breaking through walls,” Jedrin said. “We’ve gone further
than the width of the entire building, yet here we are. Either the rooms are
moving or there’s dimensional manipulation going on.”
“Which we can’t tell because our senses won’t go through the damn
walls,” William said.
“If you have a better idea, let’s hear it,” Ray said.
“I have a better idea,” Jedrin said. “Remember when I said that getting
portalled in right before the job was a bad idea because it didn’t give us a
chance to do any research into the target?”
“That’s not a better idea,” Kirk said. “That’s you passive-aggressively
bragging—again—about how you didn’t want to do the thing that you did
right along with the rest of us. Again.”
“Maybe let me finish?” Jedrin asked. “My point is that I did do a little
research.”
“We were told not to, specifically to prevent alerting the target,” Kirk
said. “And now we’re stuck in a trap. Good job.”
“Do you seriously think that me doing some research on a different
continent was enough that all this was set up specifically to deal with us?”
Jedrin asked.
“He’s right, Kirk,” William said. “I’m pretty sure that they just didn’t
want us finding out why no one else took the job.”
“They just didn’t want to use locals so it didn’t come back on them,” Kirk
argued.
“If you’ll stop interrupting,” Jedrin interjected, “I can get to what my
research uncovered.”
“Then stop flapping your mouth and get to it,” Kirk said.
“What did you find?” William asked.
“Not much,” Jedrin said. “It was short notice and I wanted to be careful.
What I did find was that the guy who owns this place won a cloud flask from
Emir Bahadir in some contest in the middle of nowhere. It was a big deal,
with nobles sending a bunch of their young people to compete.”
“Emir Bahadir the treasure hunter?” William asked.
“That’s the one,” Jedrin said. “The point is that I found out that the house
we were hired to rob was a cloud construct.”
“Oh, that’s really helpful,” Kirk said snidely. “I hate to break it to you,
Jedrin, but we already knew that.”
“Now that we’re here, sure,” Jedrin said. “But I knew before. Long
enough before that, I knew we’d be breaking into a cloud house, and
therefore had time to bring a contingency plan.”
“What kind of contingency plan?” Ray asked.
Jedrin reached into the dimension bag at his hip and pulled out a box the
size of a small suitcase, complete with handle. It was made of pale grey
ceramic with dark metal covering the corners. A complex array of sigils was
engraved into the surface of the ceramic, on each side of the box.
“What is that?” Kirk asked.
“It’s a thaumic cohesion impedance device,” Jedrin said.
“A what?” Ray asked while William backed away from it.
“What in the sweet gods are you doing with that thing?” William asked.
“They are very, very illegal.”
“We’re breaking into someone’s house, William,” Kirk said. “We’re
already doing crime.”
“We’re doing the kind of crime that means our families have to pay a fine
if we get caught,” William hissed. “Jedrin just turned it into the kind of crime
where the Adventure Society crawls into our backsides and builds a rustic
cottage.”
Ray looked at William, then the device.
“I think you need to explain what this thing is right now.”
“It’s—” Jedrin began, only for Ray to cut him off immediately.
“Not you,” Ray said, pointing at Jedrin before moving his finger to point
at William. “You.”
“It’s a device for breaking down things made of magic. Not things that
are magical, but things actually made of manifested magic. Conjured objects,
spirit coins.”
“It’s the perfect thing for trashing a cloud construct,” Jedrin said. “Which
you all know that we could very much use right now. That’s my better idea;
you’re welcome.”
“You know what else is made of magic?” William asked. “We are. We’re
gold-rankers, so our bodies are made of magic. It’s why we don’t die when
we get stabbed in the head.”
“If it’s going to affect us,” Ray said, “then I think that more specifics on
exactly what you mean by ‘breaking down’ would be something worth
hearing.”
“It means,” William said, “turning manifested magic—magic that’s taken
solid form—back into non-manifested magic. Like when a monster dies and
it turns into rainbow smoke.”
Ray backed off alongside William.
“I’m not interested in turning into rainbow smoke today.”
“I didn’t bring something that would kill us, you idiots.”
“I’m sure you didn’t,” William said. “That’s why they made them
incredibly illegal. How did you even get one?”
“I know a guy,” Jedrin said.
“What guy?” Kirk asked.
“Sak.”
“Sak?” Ray explained. “That guy definitely sold us out.”
“To who?” Jedrin asked.
“To anyone he could,” William said. “It’s Sak. Why would you ever
consider buying something that illegal from him? And where did he even get
it?”
“He knows a guy too.”
“What guy?” Ray asked.
“I don’t know,” Jedrin said, increasingly defensive. “He had a hat.”
“A hat?” Kirk asked.
“Yes, a hat. A big hat.”
“Oh,” William said, his tone suddenly convinced. “You should have said
that he had a big hat. That makes it perfectly alright to buy VERY ILLEGAL
MAGIC DEVICES FROM A COMPLETE STRANGER RECOMMENDED
BY THE LEAST TRUSTWORTHY PERSON IN THE ENTIRE
COUNTRY!”
“Just so I’m following this correctly,” Ray said, “you bought a massively
illegal device that will melt us, assuming that the random man with a big hat
you bought it from wasn’t lying about what it is. A man you went to on the
advice of a person most famous for selling out the people he works with.”
“It sounds bad when you say it like that,” Jedrin said. “And it won’t melt
us. These things are optimised to break down amorphous substances
replicating rigid structures. Heavy conjured armour and cloud houses. Will it
sting us a bit? Yes. But right now, we’re trapped on the wrong continent for a
job we never should have taken in a house of infinite boxes. A house that I’m
fairly certain hates us. So, we can stay here, waiting for someone to find us
with this incredibly illegal device, or we can set it off to get us out of here
and wipe out the evidence in the process.”
The four men looked at each other and the box they were trapped in.
After more back-and-forth arguing, they finally agreed to set off the device,
but not in the room they were in. They would set it to activate and breach
another room, putting a wall between them and the device.
Their precautions meant little as the device detonated. The room around
them was disintegrated, and plenty more besides, walls dissolving into
rainbow miasma. Suddenly, there was a massive sphere-shaped absence of
anything in the middle of the pagoda, everything in the space having been
utterly annihilated. Partly destroyed rooms were exposed, sending furniture
tumbling through levels. There was a magical reverberation thrumming
through the air that left them trembling and disoriented where they had
landed, several floors blow their initial position. There was an acrid stench
that pressed on them, coming from the rainbow haze they could barely see
through.
“I feel tingly,” Kirk said.
All four men had closed their eyes, wincing as it felt like sandpaper had
been rubbed all over their skin. They had fallen as the room they were in was
destroyed and they opened their eyes to see the destruction. The hole the
device had ripped in the place had dropped them into a mezzanine level with
access to a large open atrium with a wall that let them see outside. The air
was filled by a hazy mist that was the dissipated remains of what had
previously been walls, floors and ceilings.
“Okay, we can get out,” Jedrin said. “I told you that… Kirk, where are
your clothes?”
“I wear conjured clothes,” Kirk said. “Just from a magic item, nothing
special. Easier than owning a bunch of different stuff.”
“Do you have the item on you?” Jedrin asked.
“Yes.”
“Then how about you put on some damn pants before we make a run for
it?”
“I think it’s a little late for that,” William said.
The others joined him in looking around. Dark figures, each with a large
alien eye instead of a face, were swarming out of the rooms that had been rent
open.
“They’re silver rank,” Jedrin said. “We can fight our way through.”
The haze suddenly coalesced in the centre of the space forming a giant
blue and orange eye. Then the four men’s flesh started to rot.
18
T H E O N LY P E R S O N W H O T H I N K S IT ’ S
OBVIOUS

O N ONE SIDE OF THE DUELLING AREA , THE ENTIRE WALL WAS MADE UP OF
reinforced glass, behind which was the lake at the heart of the sky island,
Rimaros. Specially reared aquatic creatures, unfazed by the regular water
traffic, swam around in the water. It was an impressive backdrop for anyone
viewing from the seats that made up the other side of the area, also behind
reinforced glass.
There were VIP viewing booths into which the palace stewards were
expertly guiding the more prestigious attendees, dealing with the etiquette
protocols on the fly. There were also ready areas at each end, behind massive
doors. In the one set aside for Jason, Rufus, Sophie and Humphrey, they were
accompanied by their friends and several others. Trenchant Moore, Zareen
and Liara were all in attendance.
Jason was staring into the middle distance, his expression blank.
“Mr Moore,” he said. “I’m going to go see Young Master de Varco about
final details. If you would be kind enough to lead my friend to that viewing
booth you mentioned.”
“Of course, Mr Asano. And Princess Liara, His Majesty has asked after
you.”
“What about the men in your pagoda?” Zareen asked Jason.
“They’re contained,” he said, his tone matter-of-fact.
“What does that mean?” Liara asked. “We’re going to need to talk to
them. I know your pagoda is intimidating, but it’s still a silver-rank construct.
Four gold-rankers will be able to break out if they’re determined enough.”
“I’ve calibrated the house to keep rotting their flesh at roughly the same
rate as their gold-rank recovery attributes will heal it,” Jason said. “It will
keep them debilitated until I attend them myself.”
“Jason…” Rufus said in a worried voice.
“Rufus, you remember the joke back in Greenstone, right?” Jason asked.
His voice held the whimsy of a man certain the police wouldn’t find where
the family was buried in time. “It turns out I am the man with the evil
powers. I’ve already taught one world that.”
As Jason strode out of the room, Humphrey followed to talk to him, but
Arabelle gestured him to stop. She looked to Farrah, who left to trail Jason.
“Am I missing something?” Zareen asked. “Or is he remotely torturing a
group of gold-rankers? From here.”
“Your mother once approached me about the gap in Jason’s Adventure
Society records during his time away,” Arabelle told her. “I refused to share
what I knew, but I advocated against Jason participating in political games. I
told her that he should be sent away with his team, which I believe she agreed
with, to her credit. The choice was made at higher levels within the
Adventure Society and royal family both, if I’m not mistaken.”
“You’re not,” Liara confirmed.
“You may get your wish of learning about Jason’s time away after all,
milady,” Arabelle said. “If you put Jason in a political mess, try to exploit
him and then make moves on him behind his back—”
“We didn’t,” Liara said.
“Someone did,” Arabelle said. “And that’s what happened in that missing
time. It happened a lot, and now you’re seeing what Jason does when that
happens. Put him in that mindset and his instincts are to trust no one and kill
everyone. To put aside his principles whatever it costs him because that’s
what it takes when the world is against you and everyone coming for you has
more power.”
“It’s not like that,” Humphrey said. “This is a different world. And he has
us.”
“Which I strongly advise you to remind him of before his duel,” Arabelle
said. “Especially if you’re interested in de Varco still wanting to be an
adventurer after.”

Farrah followed Jason into the hall, which was a plain brick tunnel. To those
who didn’t know how expensive the bricks were, it lacked the opulence of a
royal palace. To those who did, it was practically a treasury. Entering the
tunnel, Farrah was ready to rush to catch Jason, but found him leaning his
forehead against the wall.
“I thought I was better,” he said.
“You are.”
“I’ve been sitting around in the tropics, thinking I wasn’t the same. But
when push came to shove, it took one day. One day, and I’m back to the same
savage, reactionary violence I was doing on Earth.”
“You are better, Jason, even if you don’t see it.”
“I’m torturing a bunch of strangers as we speak.”
“Then stop,” Farrah said lightly.
Jason pushed himself off the wall and turned to look at her, expression
cold. “No.”
She flashed him a smile. “You know what you remind me of right now?
You, back in Greenstone. Getting some kills under your belt and wondering
what was becoming of you.”
“And now we know what became of me. I wouldn’t have been willing to
do what I’m doing back then.”
“No, you wouldn’t. But on Earth, you wouldn’t have been beating
yourself up over it either. On Earth, you killed without a moment’s
consideration of whether it was right because you didn’t have the luxury. You
didn’t have time for right or wrong, only for what was necessary.”
“I took it too far, Farrah. You are what you do, and what I did was put
aside my principles.”
“But now you’re pondering them again, and that’s good. Keep
questioning. But that brutal part of you, that part that can do what’s
necessary, is just that: necessary. Some days you’re going to need it. But you
can also put it back in the box, and that’s the difference. On Earth, you were a
diamond knife, sharp but brittle. You were never soft, and every time you got
a little sharper, you also came a little closer to breaking.”
He bowed his head. “You kept me from breaking.”
“Barely. But you have more people now, and you are different, Jason. I
see it, even if you don’t. You’re not as soft as you started out, but also not as
hard as you became. Right now, you have a balance; you can do the hard
things without losing yourself in doing them. I know you’re still getting the
hang of maintaining it, but we’re here to help you. You just have to let us.”
“Crap. I’m the fragile, high-maintenance one, aren’t I?”
Farrah laughed. “You’re only just figuring that out? Look, if you deny
what you learned about yourself on Earth, it’s going to devour you from the
inside out. But you can’t let it dominate you either. Compartmentalise. Keep
it in the box where it belongs and pull it out when you need it. I’m not telling
you anything you don’t know.”
“You’re sounding a lot like Arabelle.”
“We talked about you a lot. She wanted to know about your world and
our time there from someone other than you, so she could better help you.
And she did, even if you maybe don’t see it right now. But I see it, so you’ll
just have to trust me.”
Jason smiled.
“I can do that. Are you sure you won’t come with us when we leave
Rimaros?”
“You have a portal power and I’m inventing the magic phone. It’s not
like you’re going back to Earth and I won’t see you for a decade. Which
means you’ll be getting plenty more advice from me, starting with this: Don’t
make this Hector guy quit being an adventurer due to mental trauma. He’s
not the one who broke into your house.”
“They set off some kind of bomb in there,” Jason said. “Blew a giant hole
in the middle.”
“They’re gold-rankers. Even if they’re crap gold-rankers, they could still
throw a garbage truck like a basketball.”
“Did you watch a lot of sports on Earth?”
“No, Jason. There was a bunch of giant, athletic men running around in
tight outfits and I thought to myself, ‘that’s not for me.’ Of course, I watched
a lot of sports. Is the pagoda intact?”
“Not really. I’m going to have to return it to the flask and reproduce it.”
“Don’t,” Farrah said. “Pack up and go tonight. Be gone by first light. It’s
past time you hit the road and had those adventures we promised you back in
Greenstone.”
“There’s still stuff to do. People to collect. I haven’t even decided if the
royal family get to—”
“They don’t. As for the people who are going with you, I’ll let them
know to get ready. If they don’t, go without them; they’ll catch up or they
won’t. You’re the high-maintenance one, remember? Let them work around
you.”
The arena was a vast, empty room with translucent sides shielding rows of
stadium seating. The private boxes were at the top, looking down on the
action. Inside the arena, Sophie was undertaking the first duel. She dashed
into a forest of swords that danced through the air on their own, seeking to
strike her down. Some missed, others were deflected away with a push on the
flat of the blades with a hand, foot, forearm, knee or shin. Space warped in
subtle but important fluctuations, making strikes that should have landed
slide past Sophie harmlessly.
Sophie’s opponent was an elf with the sword, shield, myriad and arsenal
essences. Her fighting style combined mobility with conjured swords and
shields that floated around her to fight the enemy on their own. Using quick
abilities to conjure the weapons bought time for her to cast more powerful
spells.
The many shields, conjured over and over, moved into Sophie’s path as
she attempted to slip through with her speed. At the same time, Sophie was
bombarded with swords that she needed to smash out of the air. They would
just keep hunting her, making it harder and harder as more swords were
conjured.
Fortunately for Sophie, her Radiant Fist and Immortal Fist powers gave
her disruptive-force and resonating-force damage respectively, ideally suited
for crushing rigid, conjured tools. Even so, they were accumulating faster
than she was breaking them down.
The early advantage was with the elf. Sophie initially dodged through the
conjured defenders multiple times to attack her, but Sophie’s strikes simply
didn’t do enough damage and she was repeatedly forced to back off from
counterattacks. The elf was more of a ranged than melee combatant, but no
one with the sword essence was a slouch up close. With floating swords and
shields harassing her, Sophie wasn’t able to push the attack for long.
The count of swords and shields slowly accumulated, making it harder for
Sophie to reach the elf with raw speed, but Sophie had tricks of her own as
well. Her Cloud Step power allowed her to run on air as if it were solid
ground and, for brief moments, take on a mist form that made her near-
impervious to most forms of damage. Her Mirage Step power allowed her to
make short, blinking teleports, leaving behind afterimages that sent out
dimensional blade attacks to alleviate the pressure.
Sophie also used a space-distorting power. She could manipulate space to
dodge seemingly unavoidable attacks, but where Jason also used his power to
obscure and deceive, Sophie incorporated the distortions into her ever-
flowing movement. Adding staccato shifts to her prodigious speed made it all
the harder to predict and intercept her, while incongruously never seeming
erratic or disjointed.
Jason had joined the Storm King, Soramir, Trenchant Moore and Liara in
a viewing booth, at Soramir’s request. The king had already levied some
pointed questions about how Jason was communing with his cloud house
through the palace’s defence magic, but to Jason’s surprise, Soramir had shut
him down.
“That space-distortion ability she’s using,” Soramir said as he observed
Sophie. “That’s Between the Raindrops?”
“Good eye,” Jason said.
“Her mastery of it is formidable. In fact, her entire power set is
dangerously skill-oriented, yet she makes it look easy. You found this girl
stealing in some provincial city-state?”
“There was an open contract to catch her,” Jason said. “Oddly enough,
we’d met before, briefly. Friend of a friend. Once it became obvious that
there was some ugly politics involved, turning her into an adventurer seemed
the obvious way to get it settled.”
Liara let out a snorting laugh, despite the august company.
“You’re the only person who thinks it’s obvious to break the thief you
caught yourself out of an Adventure Society holding facility, stash her with
Emir Bahadir, of all people, and then turn her into an adventurer.”
“Bahadir?” the king asked with a scowl.
“He’s a friend,” Jason said. “I know he’s not super-popular around here.”
“She’s quite the find,” Soramir said. “I’m starting to see why Roland has
always been so avid about scholarships.”
“You’re talking about Roland Remore?” Jason asked, referring to Rufus’
diamond-rank grandfather.
“Yes. His family runs a school. He won’t stop talking about it.”
“Try turning it into a drinking game,” Jason suggested. “It won’t stop
him, but it makes it a lot more fun.”
As they talked, the duel below was escalating. Sophie blurred as the
Eternal Moment power accelerated her personal time stream. She used the
brief moment of subjectively frozen time to create a storm of wind blades that
erupted when time resumed. Each blade exploded on impact, smashing many
of the conjured weapons apart. It brought her precious breathing room after
they had threatened to overwhelm her.
“This match is shaping up to be quite interesting,” Soramir said. “Miss
Wexler is getting stronger as she goes, and I believe she’s inflicting
escalating retributive damage. Is that something from her balance essence?”
“That’s right,” Jason said. “She used an awakening stone of karma to pick
up that particular power. Legendary stone, but it didn’t disappoint. Her
opponent is interesting, though. It seems like she’s being increasingly pushed,
but it looks like she’s using all those conjured swords and shields to set up a
combat ritual. Something to flip the match in a moment, I suspect.”
“You noticed that?” Soramir asked, mild surprise in his voice.
“A member of his team uses combat rituals quite heavily, Ancestral
Majesty,” Liara explained. “It is quite likely that Miss Wexler has likewise
recognised the tactic.”
“Yet, she hasn’t started taking greater risks to try and close the fight out
early,” Soramir observed. “She should be racing to finish the battle before her
opponent completes the ritual, even at the risk of taking greater damage. Yet
she maintains her slowly escalating tempo.”
“For all her speed,” Jason said, “Sophie does things at her own pace.”
“Meaning she either doesn’t know about the ritual, or she has something
ready herself,” Soramir observed.
“Sophie used a couple of awakening stones of the moment,” Jason said.
“One of them gave her that self-accelerating power she used to produce all
those wind blades at once. The other gave her a power she hasn’t shown off
yet.”
Soramir tapped a finger to his lips thoughtfully, considering the powers
such a stone could produce from Sophie’s essences. It was a long list, even
off the top of his head, but the circumstances gave him clues as to what it
could be. His eyes sparkled as he made a guess.
“Moment of Oneness?”
“You know your essence abilities,” Jason said.
“It will take courage and timing to pull off,” Soramir observed.
“I’m not worried,” Jason said. “Courage and timing are kind of her
things.”
The combat ritual suddenly triggered and the arena was immediately
filled with so many conjured swords, it was impossible to see the combatants
with the naked eye.
“Fog of Swords,” Soramir said. “Dedicated combat ritual essence ability
spells are extremely rare.”
“Levelling that thing must be a real prick,” Jason said. “The effort shows,
though; she timed it well. Sophie’s time-acceleration power could maybe
have let her dodge it all, but her enemy made sure it was on cooldown.”
The swords plunged in, too thick and too numerous for any amount of
spatial distortion to let Sophie avoid. Countless swords slammed into her,
each one exploding as it did. They moved with blinding speed, designed
specifically to catch out even someone as fast as Sophie. In the wake of the
force explosions that distorted the air, Sophie was left standing unharmed, not
bothering to dodge. Her opponent’s eyes went wide as Sophie blinked,
arriving right behind her. Sophie’s fist was a blur as it arrived at the back of
the elf’s head, only to be stopped dead as it was caught in a hand. The impact
caused their clothes and hair to whip as if caught in a gale.
Up in the booth, Jason looked down at Soramir, blocking Sophie’s punch,
then to the diamond-ranker’s now-empty seat.
“Miss Wexler,” Soramir said. “Unless Young Mistress Draglund here
objects, I am going to declare you the victor.”
The elf was shaken, both from the sudden arrival of Soramir Rimaros and
the blast that had gone off right behind her head.
“No objection, Ancestral Majesty.”
“Excellent,” Soramir said. “It was a fine match indeed. I can honestly say
that you are as excellent a pair of warriors as is to be found at your rank.”
The elf bowed.
“Thank you for your kind words, Ancestral Majesty. This is the honour of
my life.”
“You are a credit to your house, Mistress Draglund. Have you ever
considered switching over to the Sapphire Crown guild?”
“I am very satisfied where I am, Ancestral Majesty.”
“Well, you can’t blame an old man for trying,” he said, then turned to
Sophie.
“I won’t bother trying to recruit you,” he told her. “I imagine you’re at
least as much trouble as your friend Asano.”
“I do my best.”
“From what I’ve just seen,” Soramir told her, “your best is very good
indeed.”
19
U N C H A R A C T E R I S T I C S I N C E R IT Y

S OPHIE ’ S MOTHER , M ELODY J AIN , HAD BEEN SUBJECTED TO THE MIND -


warping effects of the Order of Redemption. She had led the local faction of
the order until she was captured and locked away in the cloud palace while
they sought a way to undo her behaviour modification. Her months of
boredom came to an explosive end when the room she was locked in
violently disintegrated.
She woke up in a small pond, her head pounding. She opened her eyes
and saw massive amounts of destruction above her. She was still indoors, but
something had ravaged the inside of Asano’s cloud building. It had destroyed
the room she was being held in and dumped her all the way down into the
mostly intact atrium.
She found herself in the waterfall pond that was the atrium’s centrepiece,
but the damage meant the water no longer fell into it from the higher level.
As she got to her feet, dripping wet, she saw the water was currently spilling
from a hole in the lowest mezzanine level.
Melody had only briefly been in the atrium before this, accompanying her
daughter as they talked in spaces more pleasant than her cell. Her
accommodations were far from uncomfortable, but there was something
about open space and natural light that even the plushest of beds couldn’t
make up for. She looked around, her eyes lingering on the transparent wall
that showed a wide expanse of sky. Her gaze then drifted down, to the doors.
“That would be a less than ideal decision, Ms Jain,” a prim voice said.
Asano’s shadow familiar emerged from her shadow.
“Looks like your employer is having a rough day,” she told Shade.
“This is hardly a rough day for Mr Asano,” Shade told her. “The day you
met him was a rough day. Not in his top five, but perhaps top ten.”
“He almost died that day.”
“Yes,” Shade said. “Almost. Now, if you’ll follow me, please?”
“What’s going on in here?” she asked as she followed the shadow man.
“Some gold-rankers broke in and detonated some manner of device.”
“Where are they now?”
She was answered by pained screams coming from above.

“Oh dear,” Soramir said as Rufus’ opponent entered the arena from the large
doors at the end.
“What is it?” the Storm King asked.
“If I’m not mistaken, that young man is using the classic sword master
combination of sword, swift, adept and master.”
“Ah,” the king said.
Jason noticed that Liara looked confused.
“It’s the combination used by arguably the world’s greatest swordsman,”
Jason explained.
“What’s the issue with that?” Liara asked.
“This fellow is about to duel with that swordsman’s grandson.”
“Oh, dear.”

Different magical abilities led to different physiques amongst adventurers,


although they showed up in different ways. There was something of a default
—the lean athleticism of a track and field champion. The variations came
with the powers that gave essence users physical prowess above their
baseline attributes, and they didn’t always present in the same way.
Gary, Farrah and Neil all had comparable levels of strength, yet each
looked different. Gary was built like a furry powerlifter, while Neil was more
like a bodybuilder who didn’t know how to dress himself properly. Farrah’s
physique was bulked out more than the average essence user while remaining
lean enough that she could hide it under the right clothes. She had nowhere
near the bodybuilder physique that Neil sported.
Essence users more focused on speed maintained a healthy athleticism,
but trended more sleek and lithe. Sophie’s lissom body was somewhere
between a nymph and a knife, and the swordsman facing off against Rufus
had a similar feel. His clothes and physique were both light, and while the
sword at his waist was a sabre, his body felt as sharp and pointed as a rapier.
Rufus had the standard physique for an essence user, which still made
him look like an Olympic decathlete. Like his opponent, he wore light
armour, but with stiffer panels over areas that could afford less flexibility.
The magical materials still provided the mobility to make full use of his
speed and silver-rank attributes, but forewent the absolute freedom of
movement that more acrobatic power sets required.
The pale grey tones of Rufus’ armour contrasted with his midnight skin
and the sword he conjured into his hand. It was a golden scimitar with ornate
red scrollwork etched into the blade. He held it down by his side where the
air around it combusted into golden flames that flared for a moment before
settling to wreath the blade.

“I wonder if he’s ever set his pants on fire doing that?” Jason wondered,
observing the duel from the royal viewing booth. It was rather like an
owner’s box at a sports stadium, with a mix of standing room, seating and a
loaded buffet table. “I bet he has. What’s this other guy’s name?”
“Glenn Twenhey,” Liara said.
“Glen 20?” Jason asked. “Where I come from, that’s stuff you spray after
taking a poo.”
The royalty surrounding him all looked in his direction.
“What?” Jason asked. “There are fewer essence users where I come from,
so toilets are a much bigger deal. Unlike you lot, even rich people need to be
aware of poo-related infrastructure.”
“Jason,” Liara hissed. “Stop saying ‘poo’ in front of the king.”
“Why? Does he have a weird fetish or something? Your Majesty, I’m just
assuming you have a good crystal wash supplier.”
“Perhaps, Mr Asano,” Soramir said, “you could focus on the duel before
us.”
“They’re still just staring at each other like anime characters.”
“Then how about you stop talking about poo, shut your damn mouth and
show a modicum of respect while you wait quietly?” Liara said softly but
through gritted teeth. This drew all the gazes to her, but Jason quietly moved
to the front of the booth, standing next to Liara as he looked out. He activated
a small privacy screen to incorporate just the two of them.
“Is that better?” he asked lightly.
“You are not helping my standing in the royal family, Asano. You’re a
bad influence.”
“Yet, here you are, alongside the king and his great-great-whatever
grandad.”
“Stern Jason, remember?”
“Yeah, I gave up on that. Stern Jason is for murdering people, so you
really shouldn’t ask for him. Also, he’s kind of a prick, although regular
Jason is talking in third person, so there’s pros and cons either way, I guess.”
“Why are you always like this?”
“Why do people participating in oppressive systems of governance
always act like being too casual is some grave transgression?”
“Oh, just shut up.”
“Yes, Mistress.”
Liara glared at him.
“You and Baseph,” he asked. “Is that an open relationship thing?”
“Asano, I was an Adventure Society investigator for longer than you have
been alive, so when I tell you that I will hide your corpse where magic won’t
find it, you would do very well to believe me.”

Like Rufus, his opponent was human. Glenn was leaning forward, almost like
a sprinter on a block. He and Rufus stared at one another in a silence that
extended for an entire minute, then a second and a third, neither moving so
much as a tremble. Then a voice resonated through the arena.
“…just touch this crystal, right?” Jason’s voice boomed.
“Get away from that,” Liara’s voice followed.
“They’re just standing there! Get on with it, Rufus, you dill pickle! I
don’t have all—”
Jason’s voice was cut off, but the audience and Rufus’ opponent were all
looking in the direction of the royal viewing booth. Stewards were escorting
Jason out, with an angry-looking princess trailing behind.
“That’s the man everyone’s been talking about?” Glenn asked Rufus.
“Yeah,” Rufus said with a grin. “It’s good to have him back.”

“…defeated the entire point of the exercise and ruined my reputation while
you were at it,” Liara railed as she led Jason into the booth where his
companions were.
“I said it wouldn’t work,” Neil said, turning at their entrance along with
the rest of Jason’s friends. “I kept saying it, but did anyone listen to me? No,
they did not. We should have just snuck off in the night.”
“He’s not wrong,” Farrah said.
“Not wrong?” Neil asked. “Can’t you just say that I’m right?”
“It feels like that would set a bad precedent,” Farrah told him.
“Did they start fighting yet?” Jason asked, looking out the glass viewing
wall.
“No,” Farrah said. “And what have you been doing to Liara?”
“How he treats me is secondary to how he keeps disrespecting the royal
family.”
“I’m not feeling like it’s a positive relationship from their end either,”
Jason said.
“Do you have no respect for the concept of royalty at all?” Liara asked.
“Nope.”
“No.”
“He does not.”
“Not even a little.”
“I’m a republican, bro.”
“You’re a Republican?” Travis asked Taika incredulously.
“Australian republican,” Taika explained. “It means I want to stop using
someone else’s queen as a loaner.”
“What they said,” Jason agreed. “Didn’t you read my file front to back? It
should have been in there.”
“It mentioned problems with authority,” Liara said. “Not some kind of
anti-monarchical bent.”
“That’s about as significant an understatement as I’ve ever heard,” Farrah
said.
“Gods and great astral beings make him their personal enemy,”
Humphrey pointed out. “What does he have to do, hire a town crier?”
“I respect people one at a time, Liara,” Jason said. “I respect you. But if
your family had left me alone, I’d be in my house that hadn’t been blown up
right now and wouldn’t give your family a second thought.”
“Asano, this isn’t just some game.”
“Yes, Liara,” he said, the amusement in his voice turning to weariness. “It
is.”
“We’re talking about one of the most prominent kingdoms in the world,”
she said.
“Yes,” Farrah agreed. “And while your aristocracy was fighting over
scraps of influence, Jason was fighting to save his world and blunt the
invader coming for this one. What is one kingdom to him?”
Liara sighed, her shoulders slumping.
“Asano, would it really hurt you to keep your mouth shut and do what
you’re told for one damn night?”
“Yes,” Arabelle said, turning from where she had been sitting quietly,
watching her son in the arena below. “Yes, it would. Tell the good princess
why, Gareth.”
“From the moment he was pulled into this world,” Gary said, “Jason has
been told to bow to power. If he ever did, he’d be dead, I’d be dead and most
of the people I love would be dead. If you ever see Jason bow, Princess, you
should start running because he’s probably about to kill everybody. And I
think we all know by now that only being silver rank won’t stop him.”
“I’ve seen him do it,” Taika added. “The killing everyone part, not the
bowing. He did it on TV.”
“That’s like a recording crystal that everyone in the world can watch,”
Farrah explained. “And everyone did watch.”
“He’s super famous in my world,” Taika said. “Controversial, sure, but
famous.”
“You asked for a certain version of Jason,” Arabelle said, “as if he were a
different person. But he’s not. That part of him that is holding those men in
his cloud house right now is a part of him, the way that Liara Rimaros and
Princess Liara are parts of you: different, yet part of a whole. Which is why
Princess Liara is unhappy about how this is going, while Liara Rimaros
recognises that Jason would have been a lot better off if you and your family
had left him alone. Perhaps you should do that now, and let cooler heads
prevail so we can talk this through later.”
“That… is sound advice,” Liara acknowledged. “I will find you at your
pagoda after this is all done, Asano. I want to see who these people are
coming after you.”
Jason nodded his acknowledgement and she left.
“Thank you,” Jason said, his voice breaking a little. “I’d almost forgotten
what it felt like to have people stand up for you.”
“Just to be clear, I didn’t,” Neil said from the buffet table. “I think you
should have kept quiet and gone along for once.”
“Weren’t you the guy who’s been saying this wouldn’t work the whole
time?” Travis asked him.
“Someone on this team has to be the sensible one. That’s why I let
everyone know that I was going to be right—which I was—and then accepted
the reality and made the most of this buffet.”
“I’m surprised they got it set up so quick,” Jason said. “Those palace
stewards don’t muck about.”
“They are very admirable,” Shade agreed from Jason’s shadow.
“I suppose the rush is why there isn’t much food, compared to the tables
in the ballroom.”
“Oh, there was plenty,” Farrah said, looking at Gary.
Jason let out a sigh. “If you’d all permit me a moment of uncharacteristic
sincerity, I’d like to thank you. On Earth, it was me and Farrah against the
world, more often than not, and I barely made it through intact. I’m still not
completely sure I did. We were both on the ragged edge.”
“You more than me,” Farrah clarified and Jason laughed.
“Yes, me more than you. I forgot what it was like to have a whole family
who would stand up for you against anyone, whatever the circumstances. I
guess I’m trying to thank you all for reminding me of that tonight.”
Gary moved away from the food table to embrace Jason in a bone-
crushing hug.
“Oh, hey,” Clive said. “Rufus finally started fighting.”
“Oh, the duel,” Taika said. “I totally forgot why we were here.”
20
T H E O N LY WO U N D YO U C A N T RU LY S U F F E R

J ASON ’ S COMMANDEERING OF THE ARENA ’ S PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEM HAD


broken the tension between Rufus and his opponent, Glenn Twenhey. After
they saw Jason escorted off, however, they went right back to staring at one
another. It was more than just assessing the other by physique, clothing and
body language. Their auras clashed like fencers. Each sought an opening that
would make for an advantage as the fight began, or even uncovered a little
extra information that could be the difference between victory and defeat.
“I should have moved when your friend provided the distraction,” Glenn
said.
“Wouldn’t have helped,” Rufus said. “And I’m sorry for what’s about to
happen. But you knew who my grandfather was when you picked me as an
opponent, did you not?”
“I did. Hector tried to talk me out of it, but I insisted.”
Rufus nodded. “I know that feeling. The need to prove yourself, only to
be dismantled by an opponent you underestimated.”
“Who says I’m underestimating you?”
Instead of answering, Rufus used his speed-accelerating power.
Everything seemed to freeze as his subjective time stream outpaced the world
around him. He used that time to close the distance between them, leaving a
trail of light behind him. Time unfroze and he smashed Glenn with a head
butt, without even raising his golden sword. Glenn realised that Rufus had
burned a long cooldown power to effectively just flex, as a head butt was
nothing to a silver-ranker. The simple surprise of it had staggered him more
than the damage.
Glenn activated his own time-accelerating power, but he didn’t need it to
close the gap, since Rufus had done it for him. Rufus seemed to freeze,
standing with his silver sword at his side, and Glenn used a trick just like
Sophie’s. Attacks made during the accelerated time-stream would be all but
harmless, so he generated a large number of blade wave projectiles which
were ready to launch as soon as normal time resumed. It was only as the
acceleration was about to end that he noticed a problem.
“Wait, silver sword?”
Rufus had the eclipse confluence essence. It informed the way he fought
both with specific powers, like the gold and silver swords he could conjure,
along with the general theme of his combat style. He shifted between three
combat modes based on the sun, the moon and the eclipse. The sun state was
built around speed and offensive ability, while the moon was about
elusiveness and stealth. The eclipse state offered powerful but short-term
buffs or powerful finishers.
Each state was a combination of how he fought, the way he moved and
the powers he used, some of which offered different advantages, depending
on which state he was in.
His Light of the Sun, Shadow of the Moon ability was one of several that
offered different effects based on his current state. In the moon state, it could
make him intangible for a brief moment. When Glenn’s mass of blade waves
shot into Rufus, they passed right through him. The intangibility only lasted a
few seconds, but Rufus triggered it right before Glenn had slowed time,
guaranteeing it would be up when Glenn’s ability ended and his attack
launched.

“That was nicely done,” the Storm King observed. “Luck?”


“Hardly,” Soramir said. “The swift essence is a favourite amongst skill-
focused melee adventurers. Personal time-acceleration powers are very
common, even when not hunting for them with specific awakening stones.
Even magic swordsmasters who go for other essences get them. The Remore
boy gets his from the sun essence.”
“And I get mine from lightning,” the king said. “You’re saying that
Remore predicted both that his enemy would have that ability, and that he
would use it in that moment.”
“Yes.”
“Then it was luck. He could have easily been wrong.”
“Yes, but his odds were not as bad as they seem. This is a battle for
reputation. By burning one of his most powerful abilities to make an attack
that was nothing more than a statement, Remore was baiting his opponent. It
began when they spoke before they fought. Then Remore disregarded
Twenhey with his opening move. He was essentially telling his opponent that
he could throw away key abilities and still win.”
“I see,” the king said with a nod. “Twenhey wanted to show up Remore
by using the same ability to show him—and all of us—that he deserved to be
taken seriously. Especially by the grandson of the man who stands as the
pinnacle of Twenhey’s essence combination.”
“Exactly,” Soramir said. “Instead, he was outplayed again, which appears
to have set a tone.”

Glenn was a human and his essence abilities were reflective of that. His
power set was very strong on offence, particularly special attacks. This fit
very nicely into the Rimaros adventurer ethos of ultra-specialisation, as he
was a pure striker. Having so many aggressive options at his disposal meant
that he could tailor the approach of his offence to the enemy he was facing. If
one approach didn’t work, he could pivot to another. What he had never
previously encountered was a situation where none of his approaches worked.
The advantage of using one of the most common and well-researched
essence combinations on the planet was that it was easy to optimise.
Strategies to develop more specific power sets and synergies were more
readily available. Tailoring a power set was never a perfectly reliable
endeavour, but with a common combination made up of common-rarity
essences, it was more reliable than most.
The disadvantage of this approach was that it had the weaknesses of its
strengths. An opponent who was familiar with these strategies and techniques
would, sight unseen, have a solid grasp of at least the general approaches
such an essence user would take.
Rufus talked a lot about how his family ran a school, but Jason had never
understood the totality of what that meant, or why it was such a source of
pride. The Remore Academy studied adventurer methodology from across
the globe. This helped them to educate students that came from around the
world, as well as prepare their students for what they would encounter in
their travels.
Remore Academy students were scions of international mercantile guilds,
famous adventuring families, aristocrats and even royalty. The academy
prided itself on preparing those students for whatever they might face. That
could be a tricky diplomatic situation in a palace, a grim assassination
attempt on a remote roadway or a pitched battle against sky pirates.
Rufus was more than just the beneficiary of the teachings of his family’s
academy. He had seen all kinds of adventurers from when he was old enough
to be carried around by his father. Most importantly for his current situation
was that Rufus had been trained in swordsmanship personally by the greatest
swordsman in the world.
Glenn was exceptionally skilled. His proficiency was not just with sword
technique and his essence abilities, but using them in conjunction for results
greater than either would achieve alone. His efficiency was tight and his
tactics were built on centuries of refinement, passed down by the masters of
history. It wasn’t enough. Every tactic Glenn used, every ability he pulled
out, was not only something that Rufus had seen, but also had practised
against extensively. Rufus knew the methods of sword masters and he knew
how to counter them.
Glenn was very good and deserving of his place in a prestigious guild, but
the more they clashed, the less Rufus saw him as an opponent. Glenn, in
Rufus’ eyes, increasingly became a collection of flaws in need of correction.
Since his family ran a school, Rufus did what he knew: he put on a class.
Using his sun state, Rufus applied pressure on Glenn, baiting out
techniques and provoking counters that he dismantled one by one. When
Glenn shot blade waves that tracked their opponent, Rufus shifted to a moon
state where he couldn’t be tracked. The blades shot forward blindly, hitting
walls or the floor. When Glenn incorporated special attacks into his
swordsmanship, Rufus spotted the indicators and dodged, blocked or
countered as appropriate.
Glenn grew increasingly frustrated as his tactics were pulled apart in front
of the high society of Rimaros. Guild masters and the heads of noble houses
were watching as Rufus disassembled his abilities like a watchmaker taking
apart a faulty timepiece. He was on the greatest stage in his life, only for
every aspect of his prowess as an adventure to be pulled out and found
wanting.
As a final, desperate stratagem, Glenn drew back from Rufus and paused.
“Would you be willing to try something a little different?” Glenn asked.
“I’ve been waiting for something a little different this entire fight,” Rufus
told him.
Glenn sheathed his sword, untied the dimensional pouch bound tightly to
his potion belt to avoid it flapping around, and pulled out two collars. They
were comfortably padded, but still plainly suppression collars.
“Pure swordsmanship,” Glenn said. “No powers. How good you are
against how good I am.”
Rufus blinked in surprise.
“I will say this,” he said. “That is the first time since we walked out here
that you’ve done something that I truly did not anticipate.”
Rufus held out his hand and Glenn tossed him a collar. Rufus opened his
own dimensional pouch and took out a sword, since he would be unable to
use his conjured ones. It was a scimitar, but plain compared to those he could
create through magic.
“If you want something better, I can loan you one,” Twenhey offered.
“This sword was crafted especially for me by my best friend in the world.
You don’t have anything better.”
“Friendship is all well and good, Mr Remore, but you shouldn’t let it
blind you to the fact that your friend is a worthless smith.”
Rufus smiled.
“My grandfather has given me all manner of good advice over the course
of my life,” he said. “For example, he once told me that if someone provokes
you, then let them. But instead of getting angry and letting it cloud your
judgement, let it take away your mercy as you calmly take them apart. I was
only going to take this so far, Young Master Twenhey, but I suddenly find
myself short on mercy.”
Glenn smiled back as he clipped on his suppression collar and Rufus did
the same.
“Just so you know, Mr Remore, my sword instructor studied at your
academy. He was trained personally by your grandfather and spent decades
developing counters to his fighting style.”
“Would that be Ayer Wick you’re referring to?” Rufus asked, eliciting a
surprised expression from Glenn.
“You know of him?”
“It was a guess. A lot of people develop counters to my grandfather’s
style, and Wick is about right in terms of age and location. My grandfather
rather enjoys that they do, since it’s hard to refine his style as the centuries
roll on. He showed me the counters your sword instructor developed. They
were… well, it’s best to not be rude. I noticed you trying them in our earlier
clashes, which was why I was so surprised you chose this path.”
“That was with powers mixed in,” Glenn said. “We’ll see how you do
when all you have is technique.”
“Yes,” Rufus agreed, his eyes glancing over the audience. “I’m going to
make a point of it.”
He raised his scimitar.
“With this sword.”

Jason had become very, very good with the sword. Rufus had helped him to
take the skill books containing the Way of the Reaper and make the technique
his own. After the incredible number of battles Jason had been through, wild
and desperate and strange, experience had truly allowed him to become a
master of the sword.
Technique to technique, Glenn would have beaten Jason. There was only
so much time to practise, and martial techniques were not as central to his
abilities as they were to Sophie or Rufus. Jason’s combat style intricately
wove his magical powers with his martial arts, along with mobility and
skirmish techniques. He was a ninja warlock, not a swordsman. Glenn’s
strategy of removing powers from the equation would have gotten him a win
against Jason without question.
Rufus was not Jason, and there was a reason that Rufus was considered
the future of the Remore family. They knew talent and had nurtured his, with
training and opportunities they carefully engineered so that he would see
success and failure both. When he went his own way, Rufus had setbacks.
Although they didn’t push their expectations on him, Rufus knew his
family anticipated great things. Responsibility weighed heavily on him, and
the loss of Farrah and Jason had somewhat derailed him. But the life of an
adventurer was long and his family was patient. They did not intervene as he
turned to teaching over adventuring. Only his mother stepped in, and even
she was a light hand.
The return of Jason and Farrah brought with it a slow change in Rufus.
He wasn’t sure what his future held, be it teaching or adventuring, both or
neither, but he knew one thing: he wasn’t letting his friends down again.
During his time in Rimaros, Rufus had taken the fundamentals of training he
taught Jason and followed them with relentless determination. He honed his
skills, pushed his body and took contract after contract, which the monster
surge offered in plentiful supply.
The weight of what Rufus had been through was different to what Glenn
had done. He was not dissimilar to what Rufus would have been if he had
never left Vitesse, never felt true desperation and never felt the consequences
of abject failure. The pride and ambition that drove him was a gentle breeze
before the raging gale of Rufus’ determination.

“What’s he doing?” Clive asked. “Why doesn’t he finish it?”


“I don’t know what you call it here, if you have even have the practice in
any of this world’s cultures,” Jason said. “Where I come from, it’s usually
known as counting coup. You touch the enemy without harming them, to
prove that you could have beaten them. It’s a way to gather prestige or
humiliate an enemy into accepting defeat. Rufus was already making a show
of how much better he was than this guy, but I think slagging off your sword
pushed him over the line, Gary.”
“Good,” Gary said. “There’s nothing wrong with a plain, reliable weapon.
You don’t have to make it all fancy.”
Jason glanced down at the scabbard on his hip.
“That one is your fault,” Gary said, following Jason’s gaze. “Your soul
bond made it go weird.”
“Making things go weird is kind of my thing,” Jason said, prompting
agreeing nods all around.

“I yield,” a crestfallen Glenn said. He was standing in front of Rufus,


shoulders sagging and stance marred by exhaustion as his sword dangled
from his hand. Rufus stood casually, his sword pointed at the ground.
“I haven’t even touched you with the edge of my blade,” Rufus said.
“You’re going to quit without a scratch on you?”
“You didn’t have to do it this way,” Glenn told him.
“You’re not going to fight on? What about the pride of your guild? Of
your sword instructor? Of your house? Are you going to throw it all on the
ground?”
“Why are you doing this?” Glenn asked, his voice pleading.
“We didn’t ask for this,” Rufus shot back coldly. “I didn’t bring us here.
Hector de Varco’s challenge turned us into a whetstone for his house and
guild to hone their reputation. Defeating you wouldn’t hurt you. Humiliation
is the only wound you can truly suffer. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need to go
have my sword repaired.”
Rufus held up his blade, peering as he inspected it for nicks and dents.
“Oh. It looks like I don’t have to.”

Jason and his companions were waiting, sitting around calmly as Rufus
returned to the viewing box.
“That was awesome,” Travis said. “I know we haven’t known each other
very long, but you totally educated that guy. And Jason was telling me your
whole family fights like that? You should open a school.”
Rufus frowned in confusion.
“My family does run a school,” he said. “I thought I told you tha…”
He trailed off as Travis took a shot glass from the dimensional bag at his
waist. Everyone else in the room but Rufus himself did the same and drained
their glasses. Rufus took on an aggrieved expression, his eyes landing on
Arabelle and the empty glass in her hand.
“Mum, you too?”
21
M O T H E R’ S FAVO U R IT E

“H UMPHREY IS THE LEAST - SUITED TO DUELLING OUT OF YOU FOUR ,” N EIL


assessed as they watched Humphrey enter the arena.
Jason had a lot of training and experience in the five years since his first
arrival on Pallimustus, allowing him to master his own power set. But when it
came to group tactics, Jason could not match the lifelong education people
like Neil, Humphrey and Rufus had gone through. That big-picture
understanding required exhaustive instruction on essence abilities, roles,
tactics and strategy that couldn’t be replaced by skill books or combat
experience. It took active guidance and tutelage that Jason never had neither
the time nor opportunity for. His time training with Rufus, Farrah and Gary
had been a desperate rush to cram him with the fundamentals of being an
adventurer.
Neil, on the other hand, was one of the handful of adventurers in
Greenstone that had enjoyed that kind of training. The Davone and Mercer
families had colluded to team him with Thadwick Mercer at a young age,
giving Neil the same opportunities afforded to Thadwick and his sister,
Cassandra. Neil had made the most of those opportunities, like Cassandra,
rather than squandering them, like Thadwick.
As the healer, Neil was always watching over the team in a more holistic
manner than any other member. This made his understanding of the team’s
strategies and tactics as comprehensive as that of Humphrey, who was the
driving force in developing them. He was, therefore, fully qualified to assess
the chances of his team members in different circumstances.
“Humphrey has set himself up to be very team-oriented,” Neil explained
to the people in the viewing box that weren’t on their team. “He’s developed
his combat style, his tactics and his equipment around working with the
group. Belinda’s cooldown reductions, my buffs, Clive’s mana
replenishment; many of our core tactics centre on supporting Humphrey,
while he has increasingly focused on making the most of those advantages.
Not to say he isn’t strong alone, but he has given up an amount of solitary
strength to be the solid anchor of our team.”
“He’s the black lion,” Jason said.
“A black lion?” Neil asked. He and the rest of the team were confused
and would have ignored Jason like usual, if not for Taika and Travis nodding
in agreement.
“That makes sense, bro.”
“You’re saying that he’s strong on his own,” Travis said, “but he’s no
Voltron.”
“That’s it,” Neil said. “No more people from Earth, or this will turn into a
disaster.”
“I think the problem,” Belinda said, “is that Humphrey isn’t selfish
enough. He’s not a glory hound, unlike some other team members
participating in these duels.”
“Hey,” Jason complained.
“Oh, please,” Farrah said. “Your first idea on how to investigate magic in
your world was to pretend to be an angel and faith-heal your way through a
children’s hospital. Don’t even try to pretend you aren’t a big, prancing
attention seeker.”
“And I remember how you were, back in your cage-fighting days,”
Belinda said to Sophie.
“Theatricality is a part of arena fighting,” Sophie said. “No one loves a
boring gladiator. But I wouldn’t go underestimating Humphrey just because
he doesn’t care for putting on a show.”
“She’s right,” Rufus said. “Jason, your skills have exploded in the
handful of years since we met, but you don’t understand just how deep Geller
family training goes. Humphrey has been training for longer than he can
remember. He’s an adventurer down to the bones, and the depth of that only
comes out when you start pulling away at the layers. When the Geller family
train their people to handle the unusual situations, they are just as diligent as
with their training for everyday activities. Perhaps even more so. They know
it’s the edge cases that will get you killed.”
“Not to mention that our entire team is built around handling those edge
cases,” Clive pointed out.
“That’s not a coincidence,” Rufus said. “Your entire team reeks of Geller
family methodology, and that’s far from unique. There’s a reason people
scramble to be on a team with a Geller who went through their Greenstone
training program. If Rick Geller announced at this ball he was recruiting a
new team member, he’d be mobbed with applicants from the best families in
Rimaros.”
“And don’t forget that the Geller family is crazy rich,” Gary pointed out.
“He has entire gear sets to recalibrate his strategies. Not as many as Lindy,
but a lot. I made some of that gear myself.”

Humphrey stood in his conjured armour that looked increasingly like Stash’s
natural form, compared to the lower-rank version of the power. The scale
armour was glorious with iridescent rainbow scales, like a quilt made of
opals. Five blue crystals floated around him, lit up with internal light as they
replenished his mana. He had yet to call up either of the swords he could
conjure.
“Humphrey Geller,” he said, introducing himself.
His opponent was dressed in strange clothes with numerous folds that
looked awkward to fight in.
“They call me the Smoke Hunter.”
“Okay,” Humphrey said, unfazed. He was getting a vibe of early Jason
from the alchemist’s sense of melodrama. “You hunt smoke? I didn’t realise
it was that hard to find.”
“That’s not what it means.”
“Some people use smoke as signals. Because of how easy it is to see from
far away. In fact, most people avoid using smoke when they’re being hunted,
specifically because of how easy that would make it to track them down.”
Humphrey was not big on banter. He liked fighting monsters, not people,
but his mother had still drilled into him the advantages of making an
opponent emotional. So, now that he found himself in a duel, he did his best
Jason impression.
“Let’s see what you think of my smoke when you’re choking on it!”
The Smoke Hunter plucked a syringe from the air and jabbed it into his
leg. His body immediately changed and Humphrey understood what he was
up against. His body was growing, the purpose of his unusual clothes
revealed as they expanded to accommodate his growth. Folds unfurled and
straps slipped through buckles as the loose, bunched-up outfit became fitted
light armour. He became twice as tall and half again as wide as he had been
moments before.
Humphrey’s opponent was an alchemist, although a very different one
from Belinda’s boyfriend, Jory. This was a full-blown combat craftsman who
sought to beat Humphrey at his own game of burst-damage in the high-
damage, low-endurance mould.
Combat alchemists were rare, especially non-support variants that
engaged in direct combat, so it was unusual to see one in a duel. Humphrey,
by contrast, was the most orthodox member on his team, with only Neil
coming anywhere close. This meant that Humphrey’s power set, like that of
Rufus’ opponent, didn’t pack a lot of surprises in his toolbox. He did have a
few, though, and he would need to use them well. Otherwise, predictability
would be as much a defining factor in this duel as it had been in the previous.
The alchemist’s proportions became less human and more hunched over.
His hands grew bigger and his arms longer. His skin became leathery, taking
on the lumpen green of crocodile hide. Reinforced patches on his armour
looked strikingly similar to his new skin. He did not look awkward for the
transformation, however. Humphrey assessed that he was still limber for his
size, like an animal ready to pounce.
Alchemy-fuelled transformation was a rare speciality, but also a famous
one. It stood out from all the warrior, wizard and assassin variants, and made
for popular villains in stories. It was centred on powers that required
alchemical catalysts to produce extreme transformations, with the nature and
potency of the catalyst defining the result. Humphrey had no doubt that his
opponent had gone for maximum power at the cost of maximum side-effects
in the aftermath.
The alchemist had bet everything on a short-lived burst of power, which
was pure Rimaros-style ultra-specialisation. It was a fantastic choice in a
duel, or as a trump card for a team large enough to not miss their absence
during downtime.
Contrasting the Rimaros approach was Humphrey, who was a dedicated
and practical adventurer. His Vitesse-style training was focused around
covering all his bases, so as not to be caught out. It worked much better in the
versatile tactics his team favoured than Rimaros teams that liked to build
around supporting a single specialist.
While Humphrey’s team could use a similar approach, usually focused on
Humphrey himself, they would never match up to the Rimaros standard in
that regard. In that way, they were like Jory compared to this alchemist—it
was something they could do, but not as well as those who truly focused on
it. Humphrey’s duel was a microcosm of the Rimaros versus Vitesse styles of
adventuring, and his opponent held the advantage.
Humphrey’s approach served him well in day-to-day adventuring, which
was what he cared about. In the artificial circumstance of a duel, however, it
placed him at a disadvantage. He didn’t have to think about secondary
enemies that might be lurking nearby. He didn’t have to worry about
watching out for his team or reserving anything for later fights. All the time
and resources he had spent on training and equipping himself for those things
were useless to him here.
Combat mutagens, especially the powerful ones, were known for two
things: their immense potency and their immense backlash when they ran
their course. The strategy to combat them was to retreat when the alchemist
was at their strongest, wait out the mutagen and strike again when they were
at their weakest. But in a duel, there was no retreat. There was nowhere in the
arena to hide, and no extra enemies or later fights the alchemist needed to
reserve himself for. He could throw everything he had into one challenge,
knowing that his opponent had to take it up.
Humphrey was aware that his opponent’s enhanced body would have
formidable power, resilience and regenerative properties. He had not geared
himself up to maximise his offensive strength and he was now grateful for it.
That was more Farrah’s speciality, and while she might have had the punch
to beat the mutagenic monstrosity through all of those enhancements, he did
not, even with his most aggressive gear. While his attacks were powerful,
they weren’t lava cannon powerful.
Instead, Humphrey had selected to forgo enhancing his attack. His attacks
were quite strong on their own, so he focused on defence and endurance.
Hidden under his conjured armour were amulets that enhanced the resilience
of his conjured objects, be they his swords, armour or wings. Enchanted
armbands, rings, anklets and others all offered simple and passive, but
effective, boosts to his mana recovery, stamina and certain essence abilities.
Seeing his opponent hulk out in front of him, Humphrey knew that he had
made the right choice. His path to victory was holding on long enough that
the power of his opponent petered out. Once the mutagenic cocktail the
alchemist had taken lost its effectiveness, the backlash would leave
Humphrey the victor—assuming he could last that long.
Humphrey hadn’t wasted time as his opponent was transforming. He
could have used that moment to launch into an attack and try to end the fight
before the alchemist’s transition was fully complete. That was an all-or-
nothing gamble, however, and one he knew he’d lose. Any adventurer who
had reached the level this Smoke Hunter had would have traps prepared for
anyone looking to exploit such an obvious weakness.
The moment the alchemist injected himself and Humphrey realised what
he was up against, he sprang into action himself. He pulled a gourd from his
storage space, spilling bone ash from it in a circle with practised speed. He
then tossed a pair of twelve-sided dice into the circle, and illusions projected
from their top faces as they came to a stop. Above one die was the image of a
fish, while the other showed a very pale, blue swirl.
Humphrey didn’t stick around to look at the results, as the alchemical
bulk of his transformed opponent was already lunging at him. He dashed to
the side, the dice leaping through the air to return to him. He shoved them
into his storage space while on the move, skirting away from the circle and
around his opponent.
Humphrey’s initial assessment of the Smoke Hunter’s abilities under the
effect of the mutagen proved accurate. The alchemist was not slowed down
by his large body, giving Humphrey no advantage in speed. All that silver-
rank speed had a lot of mass behind it, however, which was great for
ramming an enemy but not for quick changes of direction. This was
something Humphrey understood well, having spent years swinging a giant
sword where the key was balancing mass and leverage. With every rank,
Humphrey had grown stronger and stronger as his sword grew heavier and
heavier, so his grasp of weight and momentum was drilled into his most
fundamental combat instincts.
This innate knowledge was something Humphrey called on, not to fight,
this time, but to evade, as he led the alchemist on a merry chase around the
arena. It didn’t take long for the alchemist to realise that Humphrey was
buying time, with Humphrey still yet to pull out a weapon. He stopped in the
middle of the arena and Humphrey paused, carefully out of reach.
“Coward,” the monster spat in a growling, inhuman voice.
“Fighting the way you want me to would make me a fool, not a coward.”
If his opponent was willing to waste time, Humphrey would accept that
gift with graciousness. He did not share Jason’s love of combat banter, but
his mother would growl at him if he didn’t use every tool available. In a
demonstration of Geller indoctrination that Rufus was not familiar with, it
never occurred to Humphrey that his mother might not know what he was up
to at any given moment.
Sadly, the alchemist gave up on talk when his provocation failed and
plucked two orbs from a dimensional storage space, each large enough to fill
his giant hands. One he threw in a flat trajectory, high above Humphrey’s
head. Humphrey didn’t know what the alchemist was up to and dodged so
that it didn’t pass directly over him. The other orb was tossed over the
alchemist’s shoulder.
Each orb was a sphere swirling with mist, both of which smashed against
the large doors at each end of the arena. The strength of the monstrous
alchemist was enough that even a casual toss let them cross the distance.
Thick smoke started filling the arena from each broken orb, slowly expanding
towards the combatants in the middle.
“What will you do when you’re out of room to run away?” the alchemist
taunted.
“Well,” Humphrey said, “the first thing I’ll do is realise that your
transformation has drawbacks to go with its advantages. It’s heavy, and
apparently, your aura senses aren’t great. I’m not sure if it also affects your
intelligence or if you’re just naturally dim, but either way, you haven’t
realised that the way I was leading you around was specifically so you
wouldn’t look back at the circle I left behind.”
The alchemist turned to see that the circle of bone powder had turned into
a pale circle of light from which strange creatures were now emerging, one
by one. Rising silently into the air was what looked like air elementals, made
of condensed air that was hard to spot but created a visible distortion. Easier
to see were the skeletons inside them, which were like that of a shark except
for being somewhat draconic in shape, mostly in the skull. The wind dragon
sharks were also wearing ethereal armour, easier to spot than their airy bodies
but still not as obvious as their floating skeletons.
Humphrey’s summoning ability, Spartoi, called up dragon bone warriors,
but his summoner’s dice replaced the ordinary soldiers with more exotic
forms. One die changed their shape, while the other infused them with
elemental or even more exotic energies. The results were rather random, but
added some much-needed unpredictability to Humphrey’s orthodox combat
style. The summons were then further bolstered by Humphrey’s power to
equip them with conjured magical gear.
A dozen of the wind dragon sharks were already floating silently in the
air, gathering above and behind the Smoke Hunter as he focused on chasing
Humphrey. Knowing that more extreme mutagenic shifts almost always
traded off various things for greater power, and aura sensitivity was a
common one, Humphrey had tried to distract his opponent as his summons
emerged. To his great satisfaction, it worked, clawing back at least a little of
the alchemist’s advantage.
With an angry growl, the alchemist resumed his chase, moving the duel
into a second phase. This time, Humphrey had much less room to move as
the sickly green smoke filled more and more of the arena. He had new
advantages, though, as what eventually became twenty wind sharks started
harassing his opponent. They weren’t a danger to the Smoke Hunter, but they
were a frustrating annoyance. The flying creatures clamped onto his limbs,
forcing him to smash them off or ram into the walls to crush them, whittling
down their number.
Unfortunately for the sharks, their ethereal armour offered little protection
against brute force attacks. Unfortunately for the alchemist, destroying that
armour inflicted an affliction that left chaotic winds clinging to him and
buffeting his body. The affliction was too weak to impede his monstrous
strength at first, but the effect grew stronger with each destroyed wind shark,
disrupting his movement, coordination and balance. Even so, the alchemist
continued destroying them, as it was easier for his strength to power through
some wind than deal with sharks hanging off his arms and legs.
Although he was rapidly destroying the sharks, the alchemist was aware
that too much time was slipping away. He chose not to completely dedicate
himself to eliminating the summons. Instead, he continued to charge after
Humphrey, sharks still swimming through the air to harass him.
Humphrey tried to remain evasive and stretch out the battle further, but
his free space was ever-diminishing. He finally pulled out his massive dragon
sword, which wreathed itself in fire, adding defensive strikes to his dodging.
Although strength was one of the defining traits of Humphrey’s power
set, being on the defensive against a larger, stronger opponent was not a
novel circumstance. While he was usually the adventurer with the biggest
stick, most silver-rank monsters towered over him. The Smoke Hunter was
more monster than adventurer at that moment, and Humphrey fought
accordingly.
Humphrey’s strength might not equal the absurd levels that the alchemist
currently possessed, but it was still well above the silver-rank baseline.
Added to his array of special attacks, the Smoke Hunter was startled at the
power behind them, becoming more wary. The long arms and huge hands
reaching for Humphrey were blasted away by Humphrey’s sword, even as
Humphrey continued to dodge. One strike carved off three of the alchemist’s
fingers, eliciting a howl, even if they quickly grew back.
Despite the impedance of the sharks, it was increasingly difficult for
Humphrey to stay out of the alchemist’s grasp as the green smoke further
boxed him in. That did not mean that his small box of tricks had been
emptied out, however. As he was about to get pinned against the wall, he
teleported behind his opponent and a mass of spider webbing slammed into
the alchemist’s back, pinning him against the wall instead. The massive
spider that spat it then turned back into a tiny bird and flittered away,
vanishing amongst the remaining sharks.
Humphrey didn’t bother to attack the entangled alchemist. He was
holding a massive sword, but his true weapon was time, and cutting the
alchemist free himself would be counterproductive. Even so, the Smoke
Hunter made relatively short work of the webs, even pinned face-first to the
wall. He wrenched his limbs free and leveraged them against the wall, steel-
like webbing giving way to prodigious strength. The alchemist, now draped
in webbing and the few remaining sharks, turned angrily to face his
opponent. Humphrey opened his mouth, but instead of words, fire spewed
out.

In the viewing room, Arabelle looked at the remnant wind sharks, the shape-
shifting dragon, the enemy covered in burning webs and asked a question.
“Didn’t you say he was the most orthodox member of your team?”
The spider form Stash had taken was called a greater firelight spider. It was
known for producing sticky, inflammable webs that clung to its targets, even
as they burned. The remnant webs still draped over the Smoke Hunter did
exactly that under Humphrey’s Fire Breath power, which itself left burning
residue behind. Humphrey was under no illusion that it would take out the
alchemist, but being covered in what amounted to magic napalm made it
rather hard to focus.
As the fight resumed, Stash started participating more following his initial
ambush. None of his silver-rank monster forms were a match for the dosed-
up alchemist. Instead, he used hit-and-run attacks to harass. He shifted from
one form to another, too quickly to be pinned down unless the alchemist
turned his attention from Humphrey. That was something the Smoke Hunter
could not afford, as while even the burnt-off skin might grow back, every
passing moment was a different kind of wound. Each second ticking by
brought the duel closer to a victory for Humphrey, and chasing his familiar
would just be another distraction.
Humphrey continued to use every trick and tactic available to avoid being
pinned down. He conjured his wings to shield him from attacks, de-conjuring
them to escape when the alchemist grabbed them. But in the end, he came up
short. With almost no space left to avoid the green smoke, he’d already been
forced to dip into the billowing wall to avoid the alchemist and felt the poison
seeping through his skin. Along with eating away at his flesh, it slowed him
just a little, but just a little was enough.
With a shout of triumph, the alchemist’s massive hands wrapped around
Humphrey, pinning his arms to his sides. He slammed Humphrey with a pair
of head butts before hammering him repeatedly into the floor. This continued
until the cooldown of Humphrey’s teleport allowed him to vanish, but the
alchemist was ready.
There was only so much space left for Humphrey to teleport into and the
Smoke Hunter predicted Humphrey’s destination. He leapt up, even as
Humphrey was reappearing above him and conjuring his wings to stay aloft.
The alchemist snatched him out of the air. Before even dropping to the floor,
the Smoke Hunter threw Humphrey deep into the noxious green gas that now
almost filled the arena.
The alchemist grinned at his victory. Even if Humphrey came right out,
the smoke would have done enough work to make the result a foregone
conclusion. If Humphrey was foolish enough to try and wait out his
transformation in the cloud, the poison would finish him off. Before that
happened, one of the powerful attendees, no doubt monitoring Humphrey’s
condition, would step in as Soramir had in Sophie’s fight.
The alchemist waited, revelling in his triumph. And he waited. And
waited. Why wasn’t anyone stepping in? He hunted down the last of the
sharks as he looked around for Humphrey’s elusive familiar, but saw nothing.
It had to be somewhere, and maybe it could turn into a monster with
invisibility. Or, he realised as his eyes went wide, it could shapeshift into
something immune to his smoke’s poison.
The alchemist snarled as he pulled an orb from his storage space,
immediately throwing it into the smoke. The counteragent dispersed the
noxious gas almost as swiftly as a gale, revealing not Humphrey but a giant
frog with bright red and green skin.
The frog opened its mouth and Humphrey staggered out, clearly having
caught a sharp dose of the smoke before hiding inside the frog. He was also
dripping with the frog’s viscous saliva, stumbling with weakness. His skin
was marked by the toxin, splotchy with green and black marks.
“Yield,” the alchemist growled.
“I accept your yield,” Humphrey croaked.
“What? No, you yield! You’re about to drop dead!”
Humphrey grinned. “Would you like to see my mother’s favourite of all
my abilities?”
The alchemist had a bad feeling and charged at Humphrey, but the frog
sprang into his path. Despite having more mass, the frog was sent flying
while the alchemist was only brought to a stop, but that was all the time
Humphrey needed. In an earlier fight on Earth, Jack Gerling had frustrated
Jason with the Immortality power, which cleansed all afflictions
unconditionally, ignoring any and all effects that would normally impede or
prevent cleansing. It was also one of the most powerful healing abilities in
existence. When he activated it, Humphrey shone with golden light. His body
was restored to near-full health in an instant, with a potent ongoing recovery
effect on top. The cooldown of the power was a full day, but it was
Humphrey’s turn to take advantage of their fight being a duel.
The alchemist looked at the restored Humphrey and all the room he now
had to evade in with half of the arena cleared of smoke. He could already feel
his strength fading and knew that the backlash would soon kick in. That
would leave him effectively helpless against a fully recovered opponent.
“I yield.”

Palace stewards came in and cleaned the walls with magic, removing the
poison residue left behind by the alchemist smoke. They also used some
rituals to repair the damaged portions of the brickwork floor, although it had
held up remarkably to the rigours of battle. The observation glass was
undamaged, although rather in need of a clean. Once the stewards cleared the
area, the doors at each end opened to admit Hector from one end and Jason
from the other. The massive doors closed ponderously behind them.
Hector had changed from his formalwear into a formfitting light outfit.
The material was recognisable, with woven black and blue fabric. Mimicloth
was noted for its ability to endure various methods of shape-shifting and
matter alteration by its wearer. In the case of Hector, Jason had already been
warned of his ability to transform into living stone.
Jason was already in his conjured robes, his sword at his hip. Hector was
somewhat taken aback by the strange, portal-like appearance of the cloak
draped over him. With his poised gait and the cloak obscuring his legs, Jason
almost seemed to float as he walked towards the centre of the arena. He and
Hector both stopped when they were around ten metres apart.
“I feel it’s only right to warn you,” Hector said, “that this arena offers a
strong advantage to me. One of my evolved racial gifts allows me to modify
my earth abilities with the properties of any nearby magical stone. This arena
is built of core-heart lattice granite, which is resilient and easy to repair with
the right rituals. Those properties will make my stone abilities much harder to
break through, and give me some abilities that will be almost like healing to
me.”
Jason said nothing. His aura was invisible to Hector, as was his face in
the dark hood. Only his alien eyes were visible to his opponent.
“Well,” Hector said, “if you have nothing to say, I’m going to begin.”
Hector fell over, foaming at the mouth as his body thrashed in a seizure
until Soramir’s aura pushed Jason’s back, cutting off the soul attack. Soramir
appeared, glaring at Jason.
“That’s quite enough, Mr Asano.”
Jason turned and walked back to the doors, which slowly opened to
accept him.
22
A G O O D F R I E N D T O H AV E

E STELLA W ARNOCK STILL THOUGHT OF IT AS HER GRANDFATHER ’ S HOUSE ,


even though he was now gone. After the death of her parents, Warwick
Warnock had retired from adventuring to raise Estella, never pushing her to
adventure the way he had her father. Warwick had learned that lesson at the
price of his son’s life, and had been determined to avoid the same mistake
with his granddaughter.
Warwick had only ever pushed Estella to find her passion, whatever that
might be. If it turned out to be adventuring, he would have supported it, but
to his relief, it had not been the case. The death of her father had strangled in
the crib any desire to follow that path.
Warwick hadn’t loved the path that Estella did eventually choose, as a
spy for hire for shady people in the city, but he never tried to dissuade her
from it. What he did do, from time to time, was nudge her toward using her
skills for something a little more responsible. That was how she ended up
scouting for monsters that Jason Asano or other adventurers were sent after
during the Builder attack.
At the same time as she was doing a rare bit of civic duty, her grandfather
had gone off to fight one of the fortress cities attacking the kingdom, but
never came home. They told her he had died like a hero. It was the same
thing they said about her father.
All of this came at a time when she was realising that her chosen
profession was not working out. She enjoyed the challenge of it, but her
sketchy clients always wanted more challenge than she did. To them, she was
a cheap option for spying on those that would otherwise require an expensive
and troublesome high-ranker to keep tabs on.
She had left the job after several hours playing cat and mouse with
Asano’s damnable shadow familiar. She had been uncertain whether or not to
go back to that work and what changes to make. The loss of her grandfather
had left her uninspired to return at all, and she’d been languishing in
aimlessness after moving back into his empty house.
Of all people, Asano had been something of a comfort. He was
neighbourly and it was refreshing that he didn’t want anything from her, at
least until he did. His offer of employment had sounded suspiciously like
adventuring by proxy. On the other hand, it would be nice to work for
someone at least partially invested in her wellbeing, compared to Havi Estos
and his ilk. They were all about benefits exchange, where her interactions
with Asano and companions had shown that they genuinely cared for one
another.
That kind of genuine companionship was something she’d never had. Her
parents died before she really gained an appreciation of trust, and only her
grandfather had ever earned it. There was a distinct appeal to becoming part
of a group where that trust wasn’t just a factor, but the norm. For all that they
regularly jabbed one another, Asano and his friends breathed in camaraderie
like air.
She’d been considering Asano’s offer for some time, but remained
undecided. It was a path forward at a time when she felt directionless, but
should she jump at the first thing that came along? Her instincts told her that
it was what her grandfather would want. Despite his nudges in how she
should utilise her skills, his only outright complaint was how solitary her life
was.
Late one evening, she was mulling the issue over, checking if anything
from her grandfather’s expensive liquor collection would help resolve her
indecision. It hadn’t any of the other times she tried it, but she prided herself
on professionalism. She had to be thorough in checking.
She turned her head, looking at the wall as her magical senses moved
beyond it. Something almost undetectable was approaching: one of Asano’s
shadowy familiars. She’d regularly felt the shadow-being’s many bodies
roaming around within the scope of her prodigious senses since moving close
to Asano’s home, and was beginning to suspect that the familiar was using
her for practise.
On this occasion, Shade made his way to her front door. He knew she was
aware of his presence and did not knock, and instead, waited outside her
doorway. She got up, moved to the door and opened it.
“Something I can do for your boss?” she asked the shadow man in her
doorway. “Isn’t he at some big fancy party?”
“He is, indeed, Miss Warnock. I have come to discuss the offer of
employment he made you.”
“I’ve been deliberating.”
“You have, by my estimate, one hour and forty minutes to conclude your
deliberations or the offer will be revoked.”
She frowned.
“Tell your boss that I don’t like being pushed.”
“He is not pushing, Miss Warnock; he’s leaving. Our full entourage will
be gone within the next two hours.”
“Did something happen at the party?”
“Mr Asano was attending,” Shade said. “So, yes, but my understanding is
that was tangentially related at best. He informed me that the decision to
leave tonight was centred on a friend helping him to remember that which
mattered and that which did not.”
“Sounds like a good friend to have.”
“Quite so, Miss Warnock. If you are willing to tolerate a piece of
unsolicited advice, I would point out that you should perhaps consider
transitioning to a position where you can make friends of your own.”

The arena ready-areas were essentially large locker rooms, with projectors on
one wall so anyone inside could watch the duels. Liara was alone in Jason’s
ready room, having just watched him not so much win a duel as look at it
sternly until it slunk away in shame. She knew enough about him to know he
had used a soul attack, but even her gold-rank senses had failed to pick up the
spike of aura he used to do so. The sheer power and precision of it, at his
rank, was almost as terrifying as the attack itself.
Fully as terrifying was Asano’s willingness to make soul attacks not just
in public, but in front of a prestigious and attentive audience. Soul attacks
were extremely rare, almost never coming from essence abilities. They were
most notoriously associated with the kind of villains that Liara had spent
most of her adventuring career hunting down.
She had asked Jason to be serious and demonstrate that authority could
rein him in. He had told her that it was a bad idea, and now she finally
believed him. She had never imagined that he would fulfil her request by
attacking someone with an attack of such sudden, violating brutality that
Soramir Rimaros had to step in and stop him.
The arena doors opened to admit Jason, still in his sinister blood robes
and uncanny cloak. The doors closed behind him as Jason moved towards
her.
“The way you move using the cloak is unusual,” she observed. “Like
you’re gliding.”
“When I was iron rank, I spent no small amount of time developing
movement techniques that incorporated various minor aspects of my powers,
methodologies taken from the Order of the Reaper. It helped me to travel
quickly through the Greenstone delta on foot while navigating difficult
terrain and maximising my endurance. Over time, it became habitual while I
was wearing my cloak.”
A dark mist shrouded Jason, dispersing after just a moment. When it did,
his robes and cloak had been replaced by his previous formalwear. The
absence of his sinister adventuring attire did not alleviate the heavy air
surrounding him. He wasn’t projecting the polite subdued aura that etiquette
called for. His aura was barely detectable at all, and that was by a gold-ranker
standing right in front of him.
“Miss Hurin told me that you are leaving tonight.”
“Yes.”
“You were meant to leave with His Ancestral Majesty. Make a show of
you going off into the cosmos together.”
“He can come to the cloud house and put on a show if he likes.”
“Soramir Rimaros doesn’t go to you, Jason. You go to him.”
“That hasn’t been my experience.”
As much as she might want to, Liara couldn’t argue the point. She had
been raised to venerate the absentee figure of the Storm Kingdom’s founder,
but meeting the real thing had upended her expectations. He was a lot more
casual and relaxed than the figure depicted in history books, which, she
supposed, was something you could do when you didn’t answer to anyone.
The fact that Soramir and Jason were quite alike in this regard was not lost on
her.
“I’ve been making arrangements as best I can to facilitate your
departure,” she told him. “Vidal Ladiv is bringing everything you’ll need
from the Adventure Society to us here. Amos Pensinata and his nephew have
been notified and are en route to your building. Carlos Quilido is also making
rushed preparations, with no small number of complaints over the short
notice. I was not sure if you had decided to take someone from the Rimaros
family with you, be it Zara or… my daughter.”
“I’m taking neither; we have complications enough. From almost the first
moment I arrived here, House Rimaros has been pushing itself into my affairs
or pulling me into theirs. Now that I’m leaving your family’s kingdom, you
will find my patience for that kind of intrusion has sharply declined.”
Despite the heaviness of the moment, Liara couldn’t help herself. “This
was you being patient?”
Jason broke into a laugh, breaking the tension. “Believe it or not, yes.
You’re probably better off without me.”
“No,” Liara said. “You’re trouble in a clearly labelled box, Asano, but
you may just be worth that trouble. Without you, my husband would be dead.
If your friend Belinda was still in Vitesse, the Order of Redeeming Light
would still be a threat. If not for your friends Travis and Dawn, the battle
with the Builder’s city-fortresses would have gone very differently. If you
hadn’t somehow made the Builder pack up and leave, the invasion would
have continued for as much as five or six more weeks.”
“Princess, that’s just how things go for me. The reason I’m leaving is in
the slim hope that maybe it won’t be, if even for a little while. I do have to
save my home planet again, but I’m hoping I can do that on the down-low.”
The door leading into the hallways around the arena opened and Vidal
Ladiv came in.
“Good evening, milady. I apologise, Mr Asano; I didn’t want to interrupt
your duel preparations. They told me it was about to start, so I thought it
would be underway by now. I didn’t want to come in until the duel had
begun, and I didn’t sense anyone but you in here, Princess.”
Seeing someone who was visibly in front of them but absent from their
magical senses was unnerving to most essence users, and a large part of the
mystique high-rankers held. Vidal showed no sign of being perturbed on his
face, although both Liara and Jason could feel it in his aura.
“It’s fine, Mr Ladiv,” Liara said. “The duel is already over.”
This time, surprise did show on his face.
“I would have expected it to take longer,” he said. “Hector de Varco can
turn himself into stone, isolate afflictions into small parts of his body and tear
them off, replacing them with stone from the environment. It’s a rather
unusual form of regeneration that works very well against affliction
specialists. Or is supposed to.”
“Mr Asano decided to forgo afflictions for another approach,” Liara said.
“You can ask him about it later, if you have the courage. Right now, he needs
the documentation from the Adventure Society. Did you get everything in
order?”
“I did, milady. Rodney was a great help.”
“You know my assistant?”
“Yes, milady. Very well, in fact.”
“He never mentioned,” Liara said.
“You’re a princess,” Jason said. “He didn’t think you’d care.”
Liara looked at Jason, then back to Vidal, whose face gave reluctant
confirmation. She frowned unhappily.
“Mr Ladiv,” Jason said to the man who increasingly looked in need of
rescue. “What do you have for me?”
“Give him what he needs, Mr Ladiv,” Liara said. “I’m going to go help
extract Mr Asano’s companions, so they don’t end up in any further political
messes after the duels.”
Vidal nodded, moving to Jason and taking a file folder from a
dimensional pouch as Liara departed.
“This is the documentation relating to your Adventure Society
memberships,” Vidal said, and handed over the folder. “The paperwork for
your real identity and your new identity, with the alias you have chosen, is all
here. By the time the sun comes up, these will all have been updated in the
Adventure Society central record.”
Vidal then took out a small box.
“These are your new badges, with the updated rank for your real identity
and the false identity.”
Vidal opened the case to reveal two silver-rank Adventure Society
badges, sitting on the padded lining of the box. The badge on the right had a
single star while the one on the left had three. In both cases, however, they
differed from the solid five-pointed stars that Jason was familiar with. The
single star on the right badge had a circle around it, while the three stars on
the left badge were not solid stars, but pentagrams.
“What’s going on here?” Jason asked, pointing them out.
“This,” Vidal said, indicating the single star, “is the standard marker for
an auxiliary adventurer. It means that they can’t take solo missions; they have
to be attached to a team. It’s for auxiliaries that can hold their own in a fight,
if necessary, and means they qualify for a share of contract awards if they
participate in combat or, more frequently, other dangerous activities. An
intrusion expert might need to join the team if they’re breaking into some
fortified lair, for example. They might not fight the things in there, but
they’re still going into the dangerous place to open locks and bypass traps.”
“So, it’s for when the cook is secretly super combat guy and there’s a
naked lady asleep in the cake.”
“I’m afraid you’ve lost me there, sir.”
“Don’t call me sir. Call me Jason, or Asano, if you’re more comfortable
with that. Call me H.R. Pufnstuf if you like, but not sir. I’m not in charge of
you.”
“No, you’re definitely in charge of me, sir.”
“You’re an independent liaison from the Adventure Society.”
“Sir, I’ll be with your team and your friends in your cloud construct.
While I’m confident that most, if not all, of the rumours I’ve heard about that
building are wrong, there are people I’m very scared of who are scared of it.
Add that to you being suspicious of me as an outsider and I’m not entirely
certain you won’t kill and dispose of me if I stumble onto the wrong secret.
You’re in charge of me, if only from the perspective of my not being an
idiot.”
“That’s fair,” Jason acknowledged. “Alright, tell me about the other
badge.”
“Well,” Vidal said in the tone of someone familiar with the term ‘shoot
the messenger,’ “you’re definitely a three-star adventurer. Three stars means
dealing with contracts related to high-level politics. If Soramir Rimaros is
asking about your star rating, that pretty much answers the question right
there. But, the Adventure Society is also aware that you sometimes feel
compelled to act against your own best interests when your principles are
involved. While that is certainly admirable, the society wanted to de-
incentivise you flashing a three-star badge that, officially, is in another
dimension.”
“You were told to say that pretty much word for word, weren’t you?”
“I was, sir, yes.”
“So, what do these modified stars mean?”
“They don’t, strictly speaking, mean anything. This star design was made
for you, and you alone.”
“Oh,” Jason said. “That’s kind of clever. If I go trying to use the authority
of a three-star as a shortcut for my team, the idiosyncratic badge will mean
that an Adventure Society branch will dig deeper, opening up the whole can
of worms where I’m meant to be off in another dimension. Basically, they
guaranteed that any time I use my badge, it will be a whole mess, reducing
my temptation to use it. If it’s a sufficient pain, I’ll seek out more nuanced
methods first.”
“Very astute, sir, which I imagine to be how you got those three stars in
the first place.”
“Don’t patronise me, Ladiv, or I’ll throw you overboard while we’re in
the middle of the ocean.”
“I have the water essence, sir, so I would be quite fine in that scenario.”
“Of course you would; I’m not going to murder you for patronising me.
I’ll just make you run alongside the vehicle for an hour or two.”
23
PUT THE EXTRAORDINARY ASIDE

A LARGE FLYING CARRIAGE LANDED ON THE LAWN IN FRONT OF J ASON ’ S


pagoda. Jason and his companions emerged, along with Liara. Jason
immediately walked up to the pagoda doors, which opened at his approach.
As soon as they did, water came spilling out onto the grass. It was far from a
flood, but enough to demonstrate that the massive atrium floor had been
flooded to at least a couple of centimetres deep.
Like the night outside, the interior was dark. That did not obscure Jason’s
vision, but he still conjured his cloak, from which a swarm of tiny star lights
emerged. They swept up into the building, growing brighter as they went.
The massive destruction that had taken place on the building’s interior
became plain for all to see. It was clear that some force, not explosive but
annihilating, had essentially deleted a sphere almost as wide as the building
itself. Several floors were all but absent while others were damaged to
various degrees, including the mezzanine levels. The waterfall was now
spilling through a hole rather than over an edge into the pool, which was the
source of the shallow flooding.
“Damn,” Gary said. “Are you going to deal with the guys who did this?”
High above, one of the intact sections of floor opened and a small group
of rot-black meat lumps dropped out, falling some seven storeys to smack
wetly into the floor.
“No,” Jason said. “These people were idiots being used by someone else.
Liara, you’re better equipped to investigate the man behind the curtain than I
am, and a revenge spree is a little public for someone who’s meant to be in
another dimension.”
“Now you hand over prisoners,” Liara said. “I don’t suppose you want to
throw in Melody Jain? Assuming she didn’t take the opportunity to break
out.”
“Definitely not,” a voice came from above. Melody dropped from a high
floor, forgoing slow fall abilities to make a superhero landing before standing
up and gesturing at what was left of the gold-rankers on the floor. What was
left did not include limbs.
“Asano did this to people while attending a party, portal distance away,
behind what has to be formidable communication-restricting magic. I decided
then and there that not only was I not going to make a break for it without a
lot of confidence in my plan, but also that Asano probably wasn’t in the best
of moods, based on what he did to these poor saps anyway.”
“That was a good choice,” Sophie told her mother. “He soul-attacked a
guy in front of the king until Soramir Rimaros stepped in to stop him.”
“And what did the king do about that?” Melody asked.
“Not sure,” Sophie said. “Had another drink?”
Melody looked over at Jason, still shrouded in his cloak.
“You just keep getting scarier, don’t you? Is that a deliberate thing, or
does it just happen?”
Jason pushed back the hood to reveal his face, which left him looking like
his head was sticking out of a portal.
“That’s creepy, bro. I’m into it.”
“Everyone get packing,” Jason said. “I’m reconfiguring the house to a
vehicle, so there’ll be less room to play with.”

Liara directed Adventure Society personnel to put the beleaguered gold-


rankers into a secure transport carriage. Once they were clear of the cloud
house, its defences stopped ravaging them. The potent recuperative strength
of their gold-rank recovery attributes turned them back into recognisable
people by the time the magical flying paddy wagon arrived to collect them.
They were all collared as they were placed inside, completely docile. None of
them were acting out or speaking at all, which was remarkable for any group
of gold-rankers. They just looked relieved, even eager, to be taken away from
the pagoda.
Suddenly, Soramir Rimaros was standing next to her. If she’d been silver
rank instead of gold, his diamond-rank speed would have been
indistinguishable from teleportation. He turned on his formidable privacy
screen, cutting off the various observers still watching the pagoda.
“He’s still trouble,” Soramir said.
“If I might ask, Ancestral Majesty, why do you let him run so rampant? I
know that there’s no way the king would have put up with his antics without
you telling him to.”
Soramir thought about it for a moment.
“The healer from Asano’s team, Neil Davone,” he said. “He’s a capable
enough mid-rank adventurer from a minor noble house in some city-state no
one would ever have heard of if not for the Geller family. Under normal
circumstances, would I even know the name of the person I just described?”
“Unlikely, Ancestral Majesty.”
“Out in the cosmos, that’s me. There is no reason I would ever come to
the attention of the First Sister of the World-Phoenix. That’s who Jason’s
friend Dawn is. Or was. She’s moved on to some more nebulous rank. In the
cosmic realms, I’m just a face in the crowd and she is a blazing sun. But just
as I know who Young Master Davone is because of Jason, she knows who I
am because of Jason as well.”
“You’re saying that he operates in prestigious circles. We knew that from
the great astral beings and gods visiting him. Just about where we’re
standing, in fact.”
“I’m not sure you understand how prestigious. He’s already at a level
where he needs to deal with me instead of the king for his actual objectives,
because the king isn’t enough. The only reason he’s dealing with any of our
family is that we dragged him into our politics. And we still failed to marry
any of ours off to him; I knew we should have focused on that more heavily.
Actually, now that I say it, I heard that your daughter—”
“No.”
“No?”
“No, Ancestral Majesty.”
“You know I meant your younger daughter, Zareen?”
“And you know I meant that while you can order my family members as
part of House Rimaros, you were also acknowledging that you cannot give
orders that intervene in my family dynamic. Ancestral Majesty.”
Soramir chuckled.
“Asano is a good influence on you. You’re an important part of the
family, with your position in the Adventure Society, but you let your
peripheral position in the royal family make you timid. You’re going to need
to hold your ground more and more, Liara. I expect to see more of that in the
future.”
“I’ll do my best, Ancestral Majesty.”
“My point,” Soramir said, “is that the troubles of a royal family are
significantly below the level Asano is operating at. There are things I won’t
tell you, secrets that belong to Asano that would cause him no small
consternation should they come out. What I will say is that Asano isn’t really
a silver-ranker. He’s a very dangerous diamond-ranker that hasn’t caught up
to his natural rank yet. I’m confident that he’ll be younger than you are now
when he reaches diamond rank, assuming he survives that long.”
“I need to go, Ancestral Majesty,” Liara said, indicating the security
carriage about to lift off.
“Of course. Please attend to your duties.”
As Liara departed, Jason emerged from the building, entering Soramir’s
privacy screen.
“You know you don’t need this thing,” Jason told him. “You could just
pop inside.”
“I’ll decline, thank you. And you should be careful about who you let in
there, given what you’ve become.”
“I wondered if you realised, given your experiences in the wider cosmos.”
“The vast majority of astral kings are messengers, Mr Asano. With a war
against the messengers in the offing, that’s not going to make you a popular
figure if people find out.”
“I imagine it won’t. But laying low is the plan, so I’ll do my best to avoid
standing out.”
“And how good is your best in that regard?”
“It’s probably best you don’t ask,” Jason said.
“Once you send your friends on their way, Mr Asano, come to the palace.
Officially, we’ll be in seclusion until our departure is announced. In reality, I
will have you portalled to them.”
“Rather than that,” Jason said, “you can take one of my familiar’s bodies
back with you. He can wear my conjured cloak and occasionally be spotted in
the palace after I’m gone.”
“That will work?”
“He can mimic my retracted aura well enough that anyone who can see
through it will have to be either rudely focused with their senses or someone
like you or Amos Pensinata.”
“That should suffice, then.”
“Which makes this the last time we’ll see each other for some time. I
hope our next meeting will be as equals instead of my stature being propped
up by association with the people around me.”
“And by the ones that aren’t people.”
“Gods and great astral beings are people, Soramir,” Jason said firmly.
“They’re just weird and powerful.”
Soramir laughed.
“I said something funny?” Jason asked.
“Oh, yes, Mr Asano. I think I just understood how you came to be where
you are a little better. It’s one thing to say that these vast entities are
fundamentally the same as us when you’ve never felt their power pressing
down on you. I know from experience that once you have, that perspective is
harder to maintain.”
“Almost everyone I deal with dwarfs me in power,” Jason said. “Look at
you and me. You get used to it.”
“If I’m not mistaken, neither of us ages anymore. I’m curious about how
your point of view has shifted the next time we meet.”
“If I reach that point, I’ll call it a win. I seem to go from one desperate
attempt to cling to life to the next.”
“Which is the point of our current efforts, is it not? To put the
extraordinary aside for a while and live as much of an ordinary life as you
can, given secret identities and secret agendas?”
“It is. But I’ve had hopes like that before.”
Soramir nodded. “What you’ve faced all came around two ranks too
early.”
“Tell me about it,” Jason said, then looked up at an approaching flying
carriage, massively oversized and covered in metal plating.
“Preparation continues unabated, Ancestral Majesty; we should go, which
means it’s time to drop the privacy screen.”
Soramir nodded. Once it was once again possible to eavesdrop, Jason
started the show.
“My cloud flask isn’t developed enough to be useful where we’re going,”
he said. “I’m going to leave it here with one of my shadow familiars, because
he can use it. He’ll essentially be another auxiliary, in charge of transport and
accommodation.”
Jason plucked the cloud flask’s shrunken form from his necklace and it
grew to normal size. A Shade body emerged from the pagoda and Jason
handed it over.
“It won’t do anyone any good to steal it,” Jason told Shade, “but some
idiot probably will try anyway, so don’t let them.”
“Of course, Mr Asano.”
“I left the materials to fix it up after the damage inside, so use them
before you break down the pagoda.”
“Yes, Mr Asano.”
After a handful of other instructions, Jason wrapped himself completely
in his cloak, such that no one noticed him shadow jump and leave a Shade
body in his place.
“Have you said your goodbyes?” Soramir asked.
“I did that away from prying eyes,” Jason’s voice came from the
disguised Shade.
“Then we’re done here,” Soramir said.

Carlos watched them leave, having disembarked from the heavily modified
vehicle that landed during Jason and Soramir’s conversation. It looked like a
mix of double-decker, oversized tour bus and prison transport. After Jason
refused to house the Order of Redeeming Light in his soul space, Carlos had
been forced to make custom arrangements. The vehicle was part mobile
prison, part hospital and part accommodation for Carlos and his research
assistants.
The Shade that had accepted the cloud flask led Carlos into the pagoda.
“I still don’t understand why Jason wouldn’t just accommodate the Order
of the Redeeming Light people himself,” Carlos complained. “He’s already
holding Melody Jain.”
“Ms Jain is a special case,” Shade informed him as they reached the
doors. “Holding hostiles in his own home can have…”
Shade paused as the doors opened and they went inside.
“…ramifications.”
Carlos craned his head back to look at the destruction to the pagoda’s
interior. Jason’s cloak lights had been replaced with an array of floating glow
stones so that no one stumbled off any ledges.
“What did this?”
“Hostiles in Mr Asano’s home,” Shade said. “Do come along, Priest
Quilido.”
24
A C H A N C E F O R S O M E R E L AT I V E Q U I E T

I N THE ATRIUM OF HIS PAGODA , J ASON HAD SET THE CLOUD FLASK ON THE
floor and placed a funnel into the neck. He had a large box of quintessence
gems that he tipped into the funnel.

You have added silver-rank [Air Quintessence] to the cloud flask.


Remaining materials required to replenish cloud construct
fundament:

274 silver-rank [Air Quintessence].


311 silver-rank [Water Quintessence].
2648 silver-rank [Cloud Quintessence].

After the destruction wreaked in his pagoda, Jason needed to top off the base
material the cloud flask used to generate constructs. Fortunately, the
quintessence types required were extremely common in the Sea of Storms.
His current notoriety had uncharacteristically proven more help than
hindrance as he contacted a trade hall broker and, in less than an hour, had
crates of quintessence waiting when he portalled to the Adventure Society
campus.
That had been one of Jason’s last jobs before pretending to go off with
Soramir. He was now operating under his assumed identity and would not be
emerging from the cloud house again before leaving Rimaros. Amos
Pensinata arrived, along with his nephew, Orin. Estella Warnock showed up,
not having believed for a second that the figure departing with Soramir was
actually Jason.
Jason was in his soul space while Shade returned the pagoda to the cloud
flask and replaced it with a vehicle construct. Estella, on her arrival, insisted
on seeing Jason and, after some deliberation, went through the white archway
to Jason’s soul space.
Estella was immediately wary of the strange realm. Anyone who entered
could feel its uncanny nature, but her senses were much stronger and more
developed than most. She looked around the beautiful but unsettling
landscape, unsure of not just where she was, but what manner of reality she
had found herself in.
“Strange, isn’t it?” Jason asked, suddenly standing beside her.
She could sense that this was not Jason as she knew him, as he was part
of this place. Or maybe it was part of him.
“Your senses will give you more insight than most into this place,” he
said. “I would take it as a kindness if you would keep any such insights to
yourself. Maybe tell Clive. He’d like that.”
“I wanted to talk to you. Before I finally accepted your offer.”
“I hope coming in here hasn’t put you off.”
“What is this place?”
“It’s a space that belongs to me. Sadly, it doesn’t translate into power
outside it, except in a few specific ways.”
“Like making a defence specialist fall like a chopped tree in an instant?”
“You heard about that? But no, that wasn’t because of this place. I
suppose you could call them fruit from the same tree.”
“I want some assurances before I sign on.”
“No,” Jason said.
“No?”
“No. All I’m offering you is friendship and trust. Where we go from there
is something we have to work out together.”
“Does friendship and trust come with a salary?”
Jason burst out laughing.
“Officially, we’ll both be auxiliaries,” he said. “Since I’m just the cook,
you’ll get paid more than I will.”

The pagoda dissolved into cloud stuff that swept into the flask over the
course of several minutes, like a genie slowly returning to its lamp. Shade
then produced from the flask a new construct, this one a vehicle. It was
different from what the team was already calling the Carlos Crime Wagon,
which was a massive bus in plain shades of khaki and grey, dominated by
heavy bolted plates.
Until it reached gold rank, the cloud flask wouldn’t be able to produce the
ocean-liner-sized vessel that Emir could, but it could still manage something
the size of a superyacht. It had similarities to a large leisure craft in design,
but instead of tapering to a sleek hull to cut through the water, it spread out
like a massive hovercraft.
Being made of magic clouds, it didn’t require the engineering and storage
spaces of a yacht from Earth. Along with magical propulsion that did not
require an engine room, Jason had fed enough low-rank dimensional
quintessence into the cloud flask that it could make modest dimensional
storage cupboards. This meant a lot more internal space for accommodation
and leisure, and less for cargo and space-eating cabin wardrobes.
There was still a bridge, from which Shade would pilot the vehicle. It was
on the top covered deck, along with the owner’s cabin, with only an open
roof deck above. Open areas featured at the front and rear of the two main
decks as well, set up for lounging or launching smaller vehicles. Both Clive
and Belinda had obtained skimmers that were parked in dimensional bays by
the lower starboard deck.
Most of the cabins were below deck, while the two main decks were
defined by purpose. The lower main deck was dominated by a sprawling
dining bar lounge, which was the main congregating area on board. It also
contained a generous galley. The upper main deck was more for the business
of adventuring, mostly taken up by a spacious training room, but also with
conference and briefing rooms. It was a small command centre for the two
adventuring teams that would be aboard.
Arriving shortly before the cloud yacht’s departure had been Arabelle and
Callum Morse, whose visible agitation was a long way from his familiar
stoicism. Like Carlos, they were relegated to their own transport, with a more
modest vehicle. It was a skimmer designed for both land and calm waters,
with seating for two and some compact bunks. Jason wasn’t going to allow
Callum in the cloud yacht, even if Arabelle insisted that Jason hear the man
out, sooner or later. Jason had chosen later, leaving the pair to trail behind.
Arabelle was going to be part of Carlos’ team anyway, but she didn’t trust
Callum left to his own devices. For that reason, she stayed with him in their
own vehicle instead of joining Jason on the yacht or Carlos in the crime
wagon. It wasn’t like she and Callum hadn’t shared close confines before, in
their days on the same adventuring team.
The final arrivals were the remainder of Orin Pensinata’s team. Jason had
been reluctant to accept their presence at first, as had Orin’s uncle, Amos.
Orin had proven intractable on this, however, and Jason had sympathy for
someone not wanting to be separated from their team. Using the Shade body
he had left with Liara for communication purposes, he had her run
background on the team before accepting their presence. He had worked with
the team before, and knew that while their experience was limited, their
training and discipline—at least while on the job—were respectable. They
were guild elites, and he’d seen their power and teamwork firsthand.
Finally, not long before the sun was due to rise, the procession of vehicles
set out. They left Arnote and headed south, moving over a quiet sea to the
mainland. Jason’s and Carlos’ vehicles could both fly in the high-magic zone,
but neither did. The crime wagon and Callum’s skimmer van hovered a few
metres over the water, which consumed the spirit coins they used as fuel at a
much more economical rate.
Jason had the advantage of feeding the cloud yacht magic from his soul
space, but he had no interest in rushing. He had played enough open-world
games to know that once you unlocked flying movement, the wonder of
exploration became greatly diminished. As such, he let the cloud yacht rest
on the surface of the water like a hovercraft, only hovering up to remain level
in the face of larger waves.
As the vehicles moved away from Rimaros, Jason sat on the upper rear
deck, under an awning, while most of the group was on the roof deck. He sat
on a couch to watch out the back window as the island shrank from view.
Farrah joined him.
“Not worried about anyone seeing you?” she asked. “There are still a lot
of eyes on us.”
“There are invisible screens all around the yacht that only kick in as
necessary. They let in a nice breeze, for example, but keep out the rain. It’s
also how people can have private conversations, since they act as privacy
screens as well. I added that function to the cloud flask after seeing their
ubiquity in Rimaros. From the outside, anyone trying to see us will only see a
blur while the privacy screen is active. And because it’s part of my spirit
domain, even gods can’t see through it, so anyone who can spot me deserves
to.”
“Fair enough.”
Farrah would only be joining the trip to the limits of his portal range.
Once they reached that distance, he and she would portal back, where he
could collect the promised rewards from House de Varco for winning the
duels. While Jason and his companions set off, Liara would collect the
rewards to hand over to Jason.
“How are you feeling?” Farrah asked.
They watched the island shrink in their wake. They were both thinking of
their arrival in Rimaros half a year ago. They were now at the start of the wet
season in the tropics, and as monsoon rain started coming down, Jason’s
ability to see through the dark was no longer enough to keep sight of the
island behind them. The rain ran off the invisible screen, but with a thought,
Jason let the rain through. It pounded onto the deck and off the awning,
which shifted from cloud-stuff to mimicking canvas. The canvas started
thrumming as the rain hammered it.
“I always liked that sound,” he said. “When I was a kid, we went on a
holiday once where it rained every day. I spent the whole time living on
snack food and reading as the rain fell against the tent.”
“Does it help? I know that you’ve set off on a lot of journeys that weren’t
what you wanted them to be.”
“It’s nice, but I’m just fine,” Jason said. “I’ve got a luxurious magic boat,
good friends and maybe even a chance for some relative quiet, at least for a
while. Also, if I can avoid getting killed too often, I might just live forever.
That doesn’t suck.”
Most of the cloud yacht’s occupants were on the open roof deck until the rain
started. It spilled off the invisible dome over the deck that still somehow let
in the wind, but most of the people took the stairs to the lower decks. Orin
Pensinata and his team did not, remaining outside.
The leader of Orin and Kalif’s team was Korinne Pescos. They had first
encountered Jason in a mixed-force expedition. It was a strange group
centred around their team of guild elites, but also included non-guild
members and a pair of princesses. Kalif had been prodding the non-guild
members to see if they had any spine to them. That included Jason after Kalif
noticed that the princesses seemed to at least recognise him.
“What have you gotten us into, Orin?” Kalif asked. His brief history with
Jason Asano was making him uncomfortable. Kalif had first caught Jason at a
bad time. It had been at the height of Jason’s volatility from the continued
absence of his team, even as the Builder, Purity forces and local politics all
sought to harass him. His response to Kalif’s provocation had been to sharply
demonstrate their difference in soul strength.
Kalif and his team had worked with Asano twice. There was the
expedition where they met, during which time Asano went off alone and
mind-controlled a bunch of Builder constructs through means still unknown.
Asano had been a savage, solitary figure at that time, barely talking and
rushing off alone, with no sense of teamwork.
The next time they worked together was very different. Kalif’s team
leader, Korinne, had been in charge of coordinating the underwater complex
rescue. Asano had been critical to portalling people in and had been with his
team at that stage. Although they barely interacted, Asano had been
noticeably different. He was more like an ordinary adventurer once he had his
team around him.
That day, in the aftermath of the underwater complex raid, was the
beginning of Asano’s public notoriety. Rumours abounded, ranging from the
unusual to the outright insane. Finding a way to portal past magical barriers
was one thing, but who would believe that a god would visit Asano for a
casual chat, like an old friend?
For many, the previous evening’s ball was the first time they had caught
sight of Asano while Princess Liara paraded him like a prized pet. It had
deflated many of the rumours about the man until people started causing
trouble. The culmination of that was Asano dropping Hector de Varco, famed
for his defensive prowess, like he was culling a helpless animal. Kalif
couldn’t help but think of the time he provoked Asano and was stopped dead
with an aura technique. In that moment, he realised how lightly Asano had let
him off.
At that point, Kalif wanted nothing more to do with Asano and was
relieved to hear the man would be leaving Rimaros. Then he discovered that
their team would be going with him. Orin just looked at Kalif, who repeated
his question.
“I’m not joking, Orin. What have you caught us up in?”
“That’s enough, Kalif,” Korinne cut in. “You know that this isn’t Orin.
It’s his uncle. Our choices were to abandon our team member or to come
along. Are you suggesting we should have let him go alone?”
“Of course not,” Kalif said. “Of course we go. That doesn’t mean we go
blindly, and you know that Asano and I have bad blood.”
“Then why don’t we cleanse it?” a new voice said.
The team turned to look at Jason climbing the stairs. He moved in front of
Kalif and looked up at the taller man.
“We didn’t start off on the best foot, did we?” Jason asked. “I was in a
bad place and neither of us were our best selves that day.”
He held out his hand as a peace offering.
“How about we start over, and put what came before behind us?”
Kalif looked at Jason’s hand for a moment before shaking it.
“Alright.”
Jason flashed him a grin and moved over to the railing. The rain was
thick, cutting off visibility, but he looked out anyway. Kalif and his team
watched him, warily.
“I enjoyed Rimaros,” he said winsomely. “I’d like to come back during
quieter times. I never even met all the Al brothers.”
25
S U R P L U S T O R EQ U I R E M E NT S

J ASON AND HIS TEAM , PLUS R UFUS , WERE SITTING AROUND THE CONFERENCE
table on the cloud yacht, looking at a projection of a map.
“We’re freer now to make our own decisions than we’ve been in a
while,” Humphrey said. “That means literally charting our own path. We
have a general plan of moving south, down this continent, before crossing
over to the Great Southern Continent. We’ll move across there, then cross
north again to reach Hornis on our way to Greenstone. From there, we’ll
continue up to Vitesse and then Cyrion, where the other outworlders from
Earth are located.”
As he talked, Humphrey pointed with his finger and a line appeared on
the map. The Earth equivalent of the path he drew out would be going from
the Caribbean through South America to Antarctica, then back up to Africa
before reaching Europe. The Pallimustus version of Antarctica was
apparently much more hospitable than the Earth version, while the local
version of Australia was just the opposite. The most notorious high-magic
zone in the world, it was mostly a haven to diamond-rank monsters and
anyone fool enough to hunt them.
“It’s not a wildly efficient route,” Rufus pointed out.
“Efficiency is counter to our purpose,” Humphrey said. “It’s time for this
team to start seeing the world.”
“Even if it means wandering over most of it like a drunkard who can’t
walk in a straight line,” Neil added, raising a fist in the air. “I’m all in. Team
Drunkard!”
Humphrey’s eyes went wide and he let out a loud groan. “I forgot to
change the team name after the administrative restrictions came down after
the surge!”
“I think that die is cast, my friend,” Jason said. “I think we’re all pretty
happy with the team name.”
“Yeah!” cheered the moustachioed mouse dragging a biscuit the size of
his entire body from the plate on the table.
“I’m afraid that battle is lost,” Rufus comforted Humphrey. “Perhaps we
should just move on to the specifics of our journey.”
Humphrey nodded resignedly before resuming the discussion.
“The first leg of our trip is to move south. There is a great road network
connecting the population hubs, whichever way we go, and our general
options are the east coast, the west coast or the central regions.”
“What are the differences?” Jason asked.
“The east coast is what you might call the standard route. It’s the most
populous, the most developed and the most stable, magically speaking. Magic
strength there is in the mid-range, meaning primarily silver-rank monsters,
with some large packs of bronze and the occasional gold. That’s a very good
starting range for where we are right now, looking to rank up long-term.”
“The problem with that path,” Rufus said, “is that the surge just ended.
There will be a lot of adventurers hitting the road, just like us, and that will
be the road most of them take. That means more competition for the best
contracts at every branch we run into. Also, the locals in each branch can get
resentful of all the outsiders coming in to snake the most lucrative jobs.”
“The next option,” Humphrey said, “is the central region. This, I think we
should avoid. There’s more wilderness and fewer developed areas, which
isn’t inherently bad, but the magic levels are. The central region is notorious
for inconsistent magic levels, so one day, you’re fighting iron-rank monsters
and the next, gold rank.”
“And the west coast?” Jason asked.
“It varies between low and medium ambient magic levels. Not
Greenstone low, for the most part, but sometimes it is. There are a couple of
areas that, like Greenstone, are major sites for low-rank spirit coin farms.
Mostly, though, the monster level is around bronze or silver.”
“That’s a little too low for us,” Sophie said.
“I agree,” Humphrey said. “On the other hand, there will be less
competition for the best contracts.”
“I think east,” Jason said. “We don’t need the most lucrative contracts. I
know the only real experience I have of standard adventuring was in
Greenstone, but what I saw there was that the people who needed help the
most were often overlooked. They couldn’t sweeten the contract rewards over
Adventure Society standard rates, so their contracts tended to languish until
the society assigned them as punishment contracts.”
“You want to take the worst contracts?” Neil asked.
“Worst by what metric?” Jason responded. “The unpopular contracts tend
to be the ones that deviate from the standard. To me, that sounds more fun.”
“Of course it does,” Neil said.
“We should also look at our wider objectives,” Clive said. “This is an
adventuring tour. If we’re going to see the world, let’s see it. New towns,
new people. There’s more to meeting other adventurers than competing for
contracts. If we want to spend the whole time slogging through unpopulated
areas, we might as well fly over them.”
“I’m really liking the sound of this,” Jason said. “Coast roads and food
markets. Yeah, I’m sold.”
Humphrey looked around the table.
“If there are no objections then, east we’ll go.”

The door to Jason’s cabin opened as Korinne Pescos approached. It was the
only cabin not below decks, sharing the upper deck with the bridge. The
cabin was spacious and ringed with windows, aside from the wall it shared
with the bridge. Jason sat on a couch that faced starboard to enjoy the
panoramic view, watching the vehicle’s wake cut through the waves.
“Please join me, Miss Pescos,” he said, neither getting up nor turning
around. She moved slowly through the spacious cabin, which was more like
an open lounge. There wasn’t even a bed, but she had seen him manipulate
the structure of the ship by changing the cloud-substance it was made of, so
knew he could make one at need.
Korinne moved around the long couch and sat, the impossible plushness
of it slightly leaching the hard edge from the attitude with which she had
entered. She wondered if this was incidental or something Asano did
deliberately to engineer his interactions. She had been warned that his
seeming frivolity would often hide deceptively deliberate manipulation.
“What can I help you with, Miss Pescos?” Jason asked. “Refreshments?”
“No, thank you. Spirit coins are food enough for me. The plainness helps
keep me sharp. It fosters an efficient mind.”
“I can’t argue with the results,” Jason said. “I’ve seen you in action. I’d
been told about the strength of guild elites for some time, but yours was the
team that truly showed me what that meant, when we went on that expedition
together. It was deeply impressive. If I’m being honest, even with my full
team around me, we couldn’t match the overwhelmingly comprehensive
speed and power with which you tore through that pack of monsters. It was a
large pack too, yet you were clean and controlled the entire time. The benefits
of an efficient mind, I imagine.”
“You don’t consider your own mind efficient?”
“Oh, I don’t think anyone does, so I might as well indulge.”
With a gesture, a low table of cloud stuff formed in front of him, and he
pulled items from his storage space to place on it: a tray of assorted baked
goods and a pitcher of iced tea. He took out two plates and two glasses, but
only filled one, which he sipped from appreciatively. He then picked up a
plate and served himself one of the colourful baked slices from the tray.
Korinne watched in silence as he went through the slow and deliberate
motions of setting out snacks. Finally, Jason bit into his slice with an
appreciative moan.
“I’m so glad this world has coconuts,” he said. “I do hope you won’t
begrudge me indulging.”
“It’s fine.”
“So, what brings you to my cabin?”
“Do you genuinely not know?” she asked. “I was warned by your team
that you know everything that happens on this ship.”
“I’m not a god who can pay attention to every follower at once, Miss
Pescos. I might realise that your team is discussing something, but unless I
give it my direct attention, I don’t know what you’re discussing. Think of it
like looking down from a tower. I can see what the people below are doing in
general, but without paying closer attention, I can’t see the details. Did my
team also tell you that they’ve started using privacy screens in their cabins for
private moments?”
“They did, but also that they couldn’t be sure if the screens actually
blocked your power to observe. Do they?”
“I don’t have an answer that can satisfy you, Miss Pescos. Be it yes or no,
I have reasons to lie either way, which means that you can’t trust what I have
to say.”
She nodded, acknowledging the point.
“This was all very last-moment, Mr Asano. If I’m being honest, I would
prefer that my team had our own, separate transport.”
“That is between you and Amos Pensinata. My understanding is that you
are here because his nephew is here, and Orin being here was the condition of
his uncle being here.”
“And why exactly is Amos Pensinata joining you?”
“A friend of mine asked him to teach me some things. He agreed, in
return for help giving his nephew some seasoning as an adventurer.”
“And what makes your team qualified to instruct mine?” Korinne asked.
“By your own admission, we are guild elites that can outstrip your team.”
Jason smiled with infuriating self-indulgence, but didn’t answer
immediately. He took another bite of coconut slice, then washed it down with
a sip of iced tea.
“Are you sure I can’t tempt you, Miss Pescos? These refreshments are
quite, well, refreshing in this humidity.”
“Your boat does a fine job of keeping the humidity outside, Mr Asano.”
He nodded his acknowledgement of the point, which did not stop his
continuing indulgence.
“Your question was what my team has to teach you,” he said, finally
getting back to the point. “As your tone so clearly implied, we have nothing
to teach. What I would like to correct is your claim that I have admitted the
inferiority of my team. What I said was that we could not equal the speed and
power you demonstrated in destroying the large pack of monsters that
attacked our expedition. That is not the same thing.”
Korinne let out a snort. “You’re going to talk about Rimaros-style
adventuring versus Vitesse-style, aren’t you? Specialisation versus
generalisation.”
“Of those two cities, I’ve only ever been to Rimaros. Once we reach
Vitesse, it will be my first visit, so I won’t go speaking to the way they do
things there. For that, you should seek out Rufus Remore. He trained me, and
is steeped in the Vitesse approach. You know his family runs a school there?”
“He mentioned.”
He grinned, although she was unsure at what.
“What Amos Pensinata wants for you is not training, but seasoning. Be it
in Rimaros or Vitesse, the problem with training low-rank adventurers is that
their experiences must be heavily curated or the local monsters will kill them.
Forgive me if I’m mistaken, but my understanding is that you and your team
were quite orthodox in that regard.”
“We spent the majority of our iron and bronze ranks under gold-rank
supervision,” Korinne conceded. “But we’re silver rank now. We operated
alone through most of the surge.”
“And that’s what Lord Pensinata wants more of. Experience, away from
the safety of your guild. Facing the consequences of your choices with no
recourse but yourselves. He will be there if you truly are in need of rescue,
but he won’t be following you around and is unlikely to make it in time if
you find yourselves in truly desperate straits.”
“We’re hardly free of gold-rank supervision, Mr Asano. There are four of
them in just this tiny convoy.”
“Yes, but the only one you need to concern yourself with is Lord
Pensinata. Carlos was never an adventurer, and while Arabelle Remore
certainly was, she’ll only help my team, and even that’s a maybe. I think
you’ll find both she and Pensinata are giving us all enough room to live with
our mistakes. They have the resolve for that; ask Arabelle’s son.”
“Even accepting that we are on our own, or close enough to it, how
exactly does being with your team benefit us? Why does Lord Pensinata see
value in bringing Orin on this journey?”
“It’s a matter of experience.”
“And why do we need your experience? You already said you aren’t
going to teach us.”
“And we won’t. Don’t look at me and my team as instructors.”
“You don’t have to be concerned on that front,” she said, prompting a
good-natured laugh from Jason.
“We are peers,” Jason told her. “Avail yourself of us as such, and expect
us to do the same. Advice from those who already have experience is always
valuable when going out to have those experiences yourself. I met Rufus
Remore because he and his friends realised that they needed experience they
could not get in Vitesse. He ended up founding a satellite school in a low-
magic zone based on that very principle.”
Korinne didn’t respond for a long time as she processed what Jason had
said. For his part, Jason ate baked goods and watched the rain pouring down
outside, heavy enough that he could barely see the other vehicles.
“I’ve heard things about you,” she said finally. “The veracity of what I’ve
heard seems spurious at best.”
“Try living through them,” he said, shaking his head. “I can’t speak to
what you’ve heard, and telling my own story doesn’t seem helpful. Words are
easy, after all. All I’ll say is that my team and I have faced situations where
we had no one but ourselves to fall back on, even when the stakes were
high.”
“That’s what Orin intimated.”
“Intimated?”
“He’s not a big talker. But he said he saw into your aura once, unfiltered.
He said it told a story that he believed.”
“Right,” Jason said. His first encounter with Orin was when Vesper
Rimaros had arranged a ‘coincidental meeting’ with Kasper Irios. It was part
of her political machinations that, like Vesper herself, died when the Builder
conflict reached Rimaros. Orin had been a friend of the man and Jason had
picked him out as the sensible one of the group, showing him a glimpse of his
real aura so they would back off quietly.
“Actually,” Jason said, “I didn’t show him the full thing. But if you’d like
to see it, I can show you.”
“You’re a skilled aura manipulator,” she said. “That much I’ve heard and
believe. You could put up a façade to impress me.”
“I don’t need to impress you, Miss Pescos. Not to put too fine a point on
it, but your team’s presence is a favour for a favour for a favour. Surplus to
requirements. Officially, I’m going off with Soramir Rimaros, but you and
yours can’t be here without knowing that’s a lie, so you’ve been brought into
that circle.”
He grimaced.
“I didn’t want you here, Miss Pescos, but to get Amos we needed Orin,
and to get Orin, we needed you. Apparently. Someone who means a lot to me
left this world recently. Literally left; not a death metaphor, but I won’t see
her again for some time. She was the one who wanted to connect Lord
Pensinata and myself. Otherwise, I’d cut my losses and take none of you. I
don’t need what Pensinata has to teach that much.”
“Then why put up with us? Why not stash us in the bottom of the ship in
our cabins instead of letting me in here to question you like this?”
“Because you’re on my boat, which makes you my guests. If you’re more
comfortable buying a vehicle of your own as soon as we reach a place that
will sell one, you are welcome to do so. I might recommend it, in fact.”
He leaned back into the plush couch, laying his arms along its back and
letting them sink in.
“Cloud furniture can be hard to give up,” he told her with a grin. “And if
your team will be eating spirit coins, watching what the rest of us enjoy will
be bad for morale.”
Korinne looked at him thoughtfully, then picked out a baked slice, put it
on the other plate and took a bite. She contemplated the taste for a moment.
“You’re right,” she said. “I don’t want my team getting used to this.”
26
B A D AT C R I M E

T HE SMALL CONVOY CARRYING J ASON AND HIS FRIENDS TURNED EAST AS SOON
as it hit the coast, hovering along the wide and well-maintained network of
roadways. The immediate turn east was to Belinda’s disappointment; she was
interested in heading further south. That way led to the famously sketchy
nation of Girlano and all the opportunities it offered to an enterprising and
open-minded young lady.
“I officially retract my endorsement of you and Humpy,” she told Sophie.
“This whole ‘being a better person’ thing has sucked the fun right out of
you.”
The pair sat on the cloud yacht’s open lower foredeck. There wasn’t
much to see, with the wall of rain still running off the invisible cloud screen.
“And by fun, you mean elaborate schemes to steal things?” Sophie asked.
“Schemes? Now you’re sounding like Jason. This whole team is a bad
influence.”
“In that they are against robbery?”
“Exactly.”
“Lindy, we’re not street rats anymore. We’ve met the king of one of the
most powerful nations in the world.”
“But I never got close enough to lift his watch, though, did I?” Belinda
asked, taking out a pocket watch and turning it over in her hands.
“What’s that?”
“It’s a watch.”
“Whose watch?”
“Remember that guy who tried to provoke us at the ball, not long before
Gary bent a tray over some other guy’s head?”
“Kind of. He wasn’t exactly memorable. Wait, that’s his watch?”
“Yep.”
“Well, that’s fine. Screw that prick.”
“Exactly. I lifted his watch while he was busy being a turd.”
“You didn’t touch him. You didn’t even get close.”
“I know, right?”
“Damn, Lindy. That’s a good lift.”

“Is this rain ever going to let up?” Jason asked, looking out the window of the
bar lounge.
“It is,” Humphrey told him.
“It doesn’t look like it. How long is it going to take?”
“About four months.”
“Bloody monsoon weather.”
“One of the reasons Rimaros is situated on those specific islands, instead
of the larger ones, is that they see the least rain in the Sea of Storms.”
“I thought those windmill-looking things were meant to stop all this
nonsense.”
“The storm accumulators only affect storms with a heightened ambient
magic level. Regular weather is unaffected. Look at it this way, Jason: we
picked a great time to get out of the tropics.”
“That’s why I like you, Humphrey. You look for the best in everyone,
even this bloody rain.”
“My homeland is a bone-dry desert, remember?” Humphrey said. “If not
for the magical river creating the delta, we wouldn’t get rain at all, so the
goddess Rain is always welcome. She’s heavily worshipped in the delta.”
Belinda laughed at Humphrey’s words as she and Sophie came inside.
“Remember that time Sophie didn’t know what rain was?” she said.
“It doesn’t rain in the city!” Sophie said.
“I knew what rain was.”
“You didn’t tell me.”
“Well, maybe if you actually talked to people instead of punching or
porking them, you might have heard about things.”
“I talked to you.”
“Why would I tell you things? It’s hilarious when you don’t know about
stuff that children do. Remember the whole woollen sweater debacle?”
“We grew up somewhere very hot! Why would I know about those?”
“Again, you would if you talked to people.”
“I talked to you!”
“You said that.”
“You’re a bad friend.”
Jason and Humphrey watched the pair go below decks, still bickering.
“You did well, there,” Jason said.
“I was worried,” Humphrey said. “When we heard you were coming
back, there was all these unresolved—”
“They’re resolved now,” Jason cut him off. “She latched onto me because
I was the first guy who wasn’t a piece of crap to her.”
“Except for Jory.”
“Yeah, well, that guy was far gone for Lindy from the start. But Sophie
didn’t just need just good, mate; she needed stable. I’ve been called a lot of
things, Humphrey. I was called ‘a small tin of marrowbone jelly’ once, but I
don’t recall ever being called stable. You’re the anchor on this team. You
should have gotten a healing power set.”
“That’s what my mother said. The power set thing, to be clear; not about
the tin of whatever that is you said. But she got a good deal on those two
wing essences, and the idea of Henri and me getting the phoenix and dragon
confluences appealed to her.”
“How is Henrietta?”
“She was fine last I saw her in Vitesse. She made silver rank, but she’s
never fallen into a permanent team. She ran around with Cassandra Mercer
for a while.”
Humphrey frowned.
“I’m not sure how that turned out, now that I think about it. Henri always
had kind of a crush on Cassandra.”
“I heard about her brother,” Jason said. “After the Builder possessed
Thadwick, he turned into some weird vampire?”
“We’re fairly certain he devoured that loose soul around the sword we
found. No one at the Magic Society was ever able to figure out what was
going on with that whole sword and soul thing, since Thadwick made off
with the sword as well. Not a lot left to study, although Clive said something
about rare magic that sent them into a frenzy. Rufus’ parents were chasing
Thadwick for a while, but the trail went cold.”
“I imagine he’ll pop up somewhere. Causing trouble for us, probably.
Thadwick was always fixated on me. I think he might have had a sister
complex.”
“I don’t know what that is, and I’m confident I don’t want you to tell
me.”
“Fair enough,” Jason said with a chuckle.
“Mr Asano,” Shade said from Jason’s shadow. “We will be approaching
Rajoras in around five minutes.”
“Thank you, Shade.”
Shade, along with piloting the cloud yacht, was using vehicle forms to
scout the way ahead for trouble that might otherwise be hidden in the rain.
Rajoras was one of the larger cities on the southern mainland coast, making it
one of the southernmost centres in the Storm Kingdom’s territory.
In the wake of the monster surge, Rajoras was a major hub of activity.
People needed to return home after far too long boxed-up in fortress towns
and often found destruction waiting for them. Every town and village needed
repair, while some had to be rebuilt entirely. That was true in a normal surge,
that lasted a fifth as long as this one. People and materials were already
streaming through Rajoras like a river, and the road grew increasingly busy
as the team drew near, despite the weather.
The massive vehicle that was the cloud yacht did not make for practical
city travel, so the trio of vehicles in the convoy stopped outside of Rajoras.
They needed to visit the city, as their sudden departure from Rimaros had left
them somewhat undersupplied, and the guild team were hoping to find a
vehicle of their own. The convoy pulled off the side of the road, with Shade
floating the cloud yacht up and over the jungle so as not to obstruct the
thruway with the giant vessel.
Jason’s team and the Rimaros team assembled on the lower starboard
deck, rain bouncing off an invisible dome overhead. That open deck was
where the vessel would dock when acting as a boat, while doubling as a
launch platform for the two skimmers in dimensional storage. Clive and
Belinda pulled the skimmers out, each vehicle equipped for travel over land
and water, with magical spray screens that would handle the rain. Each
skimmer was a decent size, able to seat eight.
“I know that Belinda and I are the designated drivers,” Clive said, “but
we both need to go with the Rimaros team. Sorry, I didn’t catch your team
name.”
“Team Storm Shredder,” Kalif said.
“That’s so much better than ours,” Humphrey muttered, to the shaking
heads disagreement of his teammates.
“Anyone can drive these skimmers, though, so long as we’re not in a low-
magic zone,” Clive said. “They’ll run on spirit coins, so you just need some
of them. And a local driving permit, obviously.”
“A what?” Belinda asked.
“The license I told you to get,” Clive said, turning to frown at her. “You
did get that license, right?”
“Uh, yep.”
“Can I see it?”
“I don’t have it on me right now.”
“You don’t have it on you?”
“I do not.”
“You have dimensional storage space where you keep all your worldly
possessions.”
“Not all of them. And I have a cabin. Some things are unpacked in there.”
“Then you might want to go get it,” Clive said. “They may be checking
them at the city gate. This soon after the surge, they’ll probably be doing
extra monitoring.”
“Yeah?” Belinda asked, her voice only a slightly higher pitch than
normal. “I’ll take that into consideration. On an unrelated note, does anyone
know how local low-level officials respond to bribes?”
“Why do you two need to go with Team Storm Cutter?” Jason asked.
“It’s Storm Shredder,” Korinne corrected.
“Storm Cutter was already taken?” Jason asked.
“Yep,” Kalif said, earning him a sharp glance from Korinne.
“Anyway, Clive, why do you and Lindy need to go with them?”
“We’ll all be heading to the same part of the city for vehicle stuff,” Clive
said. “They’re looking to buy a proper transport, and since we’ll be here a
few days, Lindy and I need a dry dock to disassemble—”
Belinda slapped him on the arm.
“…we need to buy some skimmers,” Clive pivoted. “And that is all.”
Clive’s team all stared at him.
“We already have skimmers,” Sophie pointed out, gesturing at the two
vehicles resting on the deck. “These skimmers.”
“We need different ones,” Clive said.
“You are so bad at crime,” Belinda muttered.
“We’re not meant to be good at crime!” Clive hissed at her.
“Speak for yourself,” Belinda hissed back.
“Whatever happened with that submarine Belinda stole?” Neil asked.
Clive opened his mouth and Belinda slapped his arm again.
“What submarine?” Clive asked unconvincingly.
“The one you took when you broke out of the Order of Redeeming
Light’s hidden base,” Neil said.
“That sank,” Belinda said. “Or I lost it. Or both. I think it was both. Yeah,
I told you that it sank and I don’t remember where, right?”
Kalif leaned closer to Orin.
“It’s your fault that we’re travelling with these people?”
Orin didn’t say anything.

Korinne’s team was with Clive and Belinda in a skimmer, in a queue waiting
to move through the city gate checkpoint. The city walls loomed ahead, still
bearing the scars of monster attacks from the surge. Clive was in the driver’s
seat, with Belinda beside him at the front.
“Can I ask you something?” Kalif said, leaning forward to speak. “Do
you find it unnerving that Asano’s aura is everywhere in that vehicle? I mean,
everywhere. It feels like he’s watching your thoughts.”
“Different auras feel different to different people,” Clive said. “To me,
it’s benevolent. Overbearing, yes, but benevolent, which is very much Jason.
It’s reassuring, though, after having thought we’d lost him to the Reaper.”
“You get used to it,” Belinda said. “There’s an assurance to his presence.
Like a guard dog. You can feel how far he’d go if someone came for us, and
we know that feeling is real. We’ve seen it.”
“That’s what it feels like to us,” Kalif said. “Except that we’re the ones
the guard dog is watching. It’s unsettling. Makes it hard to relax.”
“I don’t know,” said Rosa Liselos, the scout from Korinne’s team. “I
don’t think it’s so bad. I can definitely live with it if it means cloud beds and
giant dinner spreads. That lunch looked amazing. How often do you all eat
like that?”
“That’s just normal lunch when we aren’t in the field,” Belinda said.
“Jason has always kind of been the auxiliary member in charge of food. Why
didn’t you all join in?”
“Korinne,” Orin said, with no more explanation than that.
Korinne’s five teammates all turned to look at her, to which she didn’t
react.
“Discipline,” Korinne answered Belinda. “Indulgence dulls the wits.
Sharp, efficient minds are what we need.”
“Well, I need sandwiches the size of my forearm,” Belinda said. “But
whatever works for you, I guess.”

Jason ended up staying behind when his team went into the city. Humphrey,
Sophie and Neil went in search of supplies, but Jason gave them a food
shopping list instead of going himself. Between the business and the weather,
it wasn’t an ideal time for sightseeing, and they were close enough to
Rimaros that it wouldn’t offer a fascinating new culture to interact with. It
also meant that Jason knew enough about the local food that most, if not all,
of his list should be obtainable.
Arabelle came aboard the cloud yacht, still hovering over the jungle
canopy beside the road. She found him brewing tea and they sat by the
window, watching the traffic below trudge along the road, through the
downpour.
“It’s past time we had a talk about Callum,” she told him. “I wanted to do
this back in Rimaros, but you decided to leave very suddenly.”
“Where is Callum?”
“He took our vehicle and went into the city. It’s not the smallest, but it’s
not that much bigger than a large skimmer. Nothing like this monstrosity.”
“I’m quite happy with this monstrosity, thank you very much.”
He sipped his tea, then set it down on a side table.
“You mentioned some time ago,” he said, “that you had figured out the
real reason that Callum was so obsessed with Sophie’s mother.”
“Yes.”
“And?”
“He’s in love with her.”
“I’m sorry, what?”
27
A N E V I L G O D S IT T I N G O N H E R S H O U LD E R

“T HE FULL EXPLANATION IS SOMEWHAT COMPLICATED ,” A RABELLE SAID .


“It’d bloody well want to be,” Jason told her. “If there’s a simple
explanation for how your team member ended up chasing around my team
member’s evil brainwashed mum because he’s in love with her, a lot of
people have been very, very oblivious.”
They were sitting in the cloud yacht as it hovered over the jungle beside
the road leading into the city of Rajoras. They were drinking tea and
watching traffic go past in the pounding monsoon rain.
“I’ll take you through what happened, as I understand it,” Arabelle said.
“But know that all I have to go on is Callum’s account.”
“And Callum isn’t at his most reliable right now.”
“Just so,” Arabelle said. “It’s disconcerting, seeing him like this. He’s
never been good at dealing with people, but he’s always been stoic and
reliable. Now he’s anxious and unreliable, and chasing around after a woman.
Seeing him so different to when we used to work together is downright
startling.”
“Have you considered letting Carlos have a look at him? Make sure
there’s nothing affecting Cal beyond stress?”
“That was the first thing I did once I realised how far from normal Cal
had become. I had him checked for signs of the Order of Redeeming Light’s
‘purification’ ritual, then anything else Carlos could find. This wasn’t any
outside influence that he could dig out, which means that it’s all but certainly
not outside influence. Finding and dealing with soul influences is his
specialty; he’s at the top of his field. From star seeds to vampirism to plain
soul trauma, he’s the best there is.”
“Which is why he’s so obsessed with helping the Order of Redeeming
Light members, I assume?”
“Yes. And why the authorities are giving him leeway to handle this. Not a
lot of people would be allowed to put a group of important prisoners in stasis
and haul them around in a bus.”
“If he doesn’t fall under Carlos’ specialty,” Jason said, “then he falls
under yours. Good old-fashioned mental health problems.”
“Yes,” Arabelle said. “Strictly speaking—ethically speaking—I shouldn’t
be treating him, because he’s too close to me. The Church of the Healer gave
me special dispensation because he refused to even speak to anyone else and
they thought he’d open up to an old team member.”
“And he did.”
“Of course he did. And it took me a while, but I teased the whole story
out of him. At least, the story as it happened in his mind. I’ll be interested to
hear Sophie’s mother’s version of events, but having them meet now would
be a disaster, given the states they’re both in.”
“Melody seems fairly together,” Jason said. “Her aura doesn’t match her
body language, though. She’s masking a lot of fear and confusion.”
“Exactly,” Arabelle said. “Too many unknown factors to bring them
together yet, even if it would answer a lot of questions. The goal is to help the
both of them get better, after all, not satisfy our curiosity.”
Jason nodded. “Let’s start with how things went from Cal’s perspective,
then, shall we?”
Arabelle nodded. “We’ll start with context. Callum is part of the Cult of
the Reaper. It didn’t impact his day-to-day life when we were a team, so it
never really mattered.”
“Like Clive,” Jason said. “I don’t think he’s formally part of whatever
organisation they have on this world, but he venerates the great astral being
called the Celestial Book.”
“Cal’s membership in the Cult of the Reaper is now very much a factor.
At the same time, Melody Jain was part of the Order of the Reaper. Do you
understand the difference between the organisations?”
“The cult is the ones who follow the Reaper’s principles. The order is an
offshoot of the cult that became an order of assassins interested in cultivating
backroom political power. They split off from the cult as they increasingly
moved away from its core principles.”
“Yes,” Arabelle said. “The story begins with Melody Jain, around a
quarter of a century ago, in the city of Kurdansk. This part comes from what
Callum claims Melody told him herself, from before Melody and Callum
knew one another. They were each members of their respective organisations,
both of which operated in secret. The Order of the Reaper was in the midst of
bringing centuries of planning to fruition, and they were very particular about
whom they brought into the fold. Melody was highly capable and from one of
the old order families, so she was completely welcome. The man she chose
for herself was not, however.”
“This isn’t Callum we’re talking about, is it?”
“No. We’re talking about Sophie Wexler’s father, although his name was
not Wexler then. Melody kept him a secret from the order, along with the fact
that they had a child. But when the child was still small, they were
discovered. The Order of the Reaper specialises in infiltrating people into
organisations unnoticed. With religions, it’s essentially impossible to fake,
but many religions have low-level administrative staff for their endeavours
that aren’t required to be deeply faithful. Someone working for the Church of
Fertility in their record-keeping discovered the details of how the church had
helped Melody have a child without her order overseers realising.”
“What were the repercussions?”
“According to Callum, Melody was certain that the order would kill her
secret husband and child. This was especially true if they discovered that
Melody had been teaching him the order’s method of fighting for years.”
“A method he eventually passed on to Sophie.”
“Yes. Melody was warned that the order had discovered her family by a
woman named Marta Fries, a fellow member and Melody’s best friend.
Melody had Marta smuggle her husband and daughter away; even Melody
herself didn’t know where they went. She did not want to be captured and be
forced to divulge where her family was so that the order could tie up loose
ends. Even Marta Fries wasn’t certain, having supplied the secret husband
with just enough information and resources to disappear on his own.”
“Thus, Sophie and her father wound up in Greenstone. Sophie doesn’t
have many coherent memories before adventurers found her in that
shipwreck.”
“She was young. Didn’t even know that her real name is not Wexler, but
Jain. It’s possible her father muddled her memories, somehow. Alchemy can
be effective on children that young. There are potions used to help children
move past traumatic events, although I try to avoid using them. When
treating children, some horrors are best put aside, but the effect of the missing
memories can linger, and be harder to deal with for their absence.”
“I have to wonder how much of this, and what version of it, that Melody
has told Sophie,” Jason wondered. “They’ve been talking for weeks, and I
imagine it must have come up.”
“You didn’t ask her?”
“If Sophie feels like there is something I should know,” Jason said,
“she’ll tell me.”
“It has all been happening inside your cloud house. Couldn’t you listen
in?”
“I could, but I don’t. I know they’re talking, but I put my attention
elsewhere.”
“I’m not sure I could resist that temptation.”
“It’s not hard. You just have to decide if you want to be the person that
encroached on the most private moments of a close friend.”
“Ah,” Arabelle said. “Letting the realisation that you would be a terrible
person douse the curiosity.”
“Exactly. Now, you’ve told me about how Sophie ended up in
Greenstone, but not where Callum comes in.”
“After getting her family out,” Arabelle explained, “Melody knew that the
Order of the Reaper would not let it go. They were obsessed with not leaving
threads that could cause problems for them later, especially with their plans
within decades of going into motion.”
“And of all the places Sophie and her father could end up, they went to
Greenstone? A place where a part of the Order of the Reaper’s plan was set to
play out?”
“Callum didn’t know why they went there. It might have been an attempt
to hide where the order wouldn’t look. It could have been coincidence. The
order was initiating their re-emergence in locations all across the world, after
all.”
“So, after getting her family out, she ran?”
“Yes. And this is where Callum finally appears.”
“She went to the Cult of the Reaper.”
“Yes. But the cult was not going to just take her in. The order was known
for its painstaking infiltration of other organisations over the last several
centuries, after all. They faked the demise of their entire order as part of a
plan more than half a millennium in the making.”
“But that secret isn’t so well hidden anymore.”
“No. Their plan was always to return to their original status of being an
open secret, playing tool to those in power while pulling the levers of power
themselves. The first time, they were too crude and got crushed. This time,
they are being more patient, and planning things out for the start. In just the
few years you were absent, they’ve made massive strides in this regard. And
the way they’ve been trying to establish themselves is through making
themselves invaluable. They’ve made critical strikes against the Church of
Purity, the Cult of the Builder and other imminent threats.”
“Meaning that when the rest of the world was scrambling after these
enemies that blindsided most of us, the Order of the Reaper had already
infiltrated them and knew what they were up to. But instead of warning
people, they allowed these groups to become threats, so that they would look
good by striking against those threats.”
“Yes.”
“But surely people saw through that?”
“Of course. But the fact remains that it was an impressive display of
power. Who is to say how many infiltrators the order has, in what
organisations? Anyone moving against them could easily find that someone
they trusted is suddenly putting a knife in their back. We also believe that
they knew about the messengers and are going to make moves against them
to further cement themselves.”
Jason shook his head as he refilled their teacups from the pot.
“This all sounds like trouble.”
“Yes. And the Cult of the Reaper was amongst the first to realise that
their former offshoot order was once again on the move, although they
themselves were difficult to infiltrate. Like religious orders, authentic
veneration of a great astral being is a requirement in the astral cults. It’s not
as reliable as faith for a god, but it’s impossible to get around, long-term. Too
easy to get unlucky.”
“But the order was trying to infiltrate the cult anyway, yes? And then
comes Melody, with a seemingly convenient offer to defect. But the cult
didn’t trust her.”
“They did not. This is the point where she met Callum. Our team had
stopped actively adventuring. Emir became a treasure hunter, while Gabriel
and I took on less active roles while we raised our son. I moved from a field
healer to a mental health specialist, and Gabriel started teaching at the
academy. Callum, we thought, was off hunting monsters in the drive to reach
diamond. That isn’t the usual path, but it made sense for him.”
“Hunting monsters isn’t the way to rank up at gold?”
“It’s a part, but not everything. You will learn more as you draw closer to
gold rank. For now, such questions are a distraction. The point is that while
Callum was, indeed, out hunting dangerous prey, it was not occupying
anywhere near as much of his time as we thought.”
“He became more active in the Cult of the Reaper?”
“Yes, as it turns out, and he was made Melody’s handler. They worked
together for years, both investigating the order she came from and using the
skills they taught her for the cult’s purposes. The cult never truly accepted
her, however, always wary of the patience and long-term planning of the
order. They kept her at a remove, with Callum being her only real
connection. She would have left, except that, by that point, she would have
both the Order of the Reaper and the Cult of the Reaper coming after her.”
“And that was when she and Callum got together?”
“No,” Arabelle said. “According to Cal, it was one-sided. Melody herself
wanted to go find her husband and daughter, but she couldn’t while under the
cult’s thumb. So, Callum agreed to help her, despite his feelings. He made a
connection between Emir and a diamond-ranker friendly to the cult. A
historian who had been digging up details of the Order of the Reaper,
unaware they were still active. This man’s patronage is why Emir has been
looking for Order of the Reaper remnants for years, around his other treasure-
hunting activities. It’s why he largely employs external forces, like
contracting adventurers. It leaves him to use his own people for other
projects.”
“Adventurers like Farrah, Rufus and Gary,” Jason said.
“Yes. He knew they were looking for some independence, and the low-
magic of Greenstone seemed perfect.”
“That’s fine, but how would all that help Callum and Melody?”
“Because Emir and his patron were looking for traces of the order,
including their martial techniques, the Way of the Reaper.”
“Yeah, he was collecting the skill books. I thought he just wanted them
for his granddaughter.”
“It was more than that. The skill books are the methodology of the Order
of the Reaper we know the most about. The order’s members use skill books
to inculcate its vast array of techniques, then training to naturalise that
information.”
“Exactly what I did with Rufus’ help.”
“Yes. It was just a part of what they were doing, but it was what Callum
and Melody actually wanted. Cal knew that between the diamond-ranker and
Emir, they would have people scouring the world for traces of the Way of the
Reaper. Skill books were one thing, but Melody never had the opportunity to
teach her husband that way. If some random guy not attached to the order
was found using their techniques, that would stand out. Callum was regularly
keeping in contact with his old team member, so he could learn all about
what Emir was up to.”
“That’s a terrible search method,” Jason said. “That’s knowing that
somewhere in the world is a haystack with a needle in it and getting someone
to check haystacks for something else, in the hope they’d stumble onto a
needle.”
“Yes,” Arabelle agreed. “It was a terrible plan, but one that they could
carry out without either the cult or Emir realising what was going on.”
“Cal didn’t trust Emir?”
“Melody didn’t. So, they did what they could, knowing full well that they
might never find them, and even if it did, it would take years. Even with the
formidable search resources that Emir and his diamond-rank patron were able
to put into play.”
“Oh,” Jason said with sudden realisation. “Melody didn’t have many
options beyond what she could get Cal to do. And Cal was in love with her,
so he wasn’t wildly invested in finding her long-lost husband.”
“No. Cal said that he did genuinely attempt to find the man, but had no
real expectations of finding him.”
“Then Sophie must have come as a shock.”
“Yes, but Callum didn’t realise what Emir had found until Emir started
using her as bait for the order. Sophie and Emir had managed to find Marta
Fries, Melody’s friend, who had helped her and her family escape the order’s
grasp. That was when he intervened to keep Sophie and Humphrey away
from her. Emir’s now-wife, Constance, had been off training with Cal to
reach gold rank, and her concerns over Emir using Sophie as bait made a
good cover for Cal’s own intentions. He tracked down Fries himself after she
fled Humphrey and Sophie arriving at her door.”
“But Melody was already in the Order of Redeeming Light by then,
wasn’t she? She’s been in the Sea of Storms for years, and other places
before that.”
“Yes,” Arabelle said. “Going back to when Callum first hatched this plan,
using one of the Cult of the Reaper’s diamond-rank contacts drew the
attention of the cult. They decided it was time for Melody to make a
sufficiently momentous gesture that the cult would be willing to accept her,
and finally let her move from the Order of the Reaper to the Cult of the
Reaper.”
“Infiltrate the Purity church?”
“Yes. Callum was against using her to infiltrate the Order of Redeeming
Light, but it was what the cult required. The cult had been looking into the
Order of Redeeming Light for some time and suspected that despite serving
Purity, they were using necromancy to raise undead. Part of the Order of
Redeeming Light’s mandate to repurpose the tools of the unclean to serve
Purity.”
“That sounds like a bunch of crap. The whole redeeming light thing only
came along after the real Purity was given the boot, right?”
“That is our understanding, but the cult doesn’t care who is behind it,
only that undead are being used. The cult often works with the Church of
Death in this regard, as they are closely aligned. The church does more
public-facing things for the cult, while the cult can be the church’s hidden
dagger.”
“So, the Order of Redeeming Light was known for accepting people
outside the Purity faithful.”
“They did so exclusively, in fact. It seemed like a rare chance to get a foot
in the Purity door.”
“Except that Melody was subjected to this ‘cleansing fire’ or whatever it
was they called it. She became an artificial zealot.”
“Yes. Callum lost track of her when she stopped reporting in and has
been trying to find her ever since. Sophie and Emir leading him to Melody’s
friend Marta Fries was the first real clue he had. Fries been doing the same
thing as him in seeking out Melody’s trail, while trying to avoid the Order of
the Reaper’s suspicions about her. Ever since Melody’s defection, she had
been under scrutiny. Together, pooling their information and resources, they
were able to trace Melody to the Sea of Storms. Then you arrived and we’re
all caught up.”
Jason leaned back in his chair.
“Well,” he said. “You did warn me it was going to be complicated.”
“And that is only Callum’s side. I’ll be interested in hearing Melody’s. I
confess, however, that I am unsure how to proceed with the wellbeing of both
in mind. Melody isn’t truly capable of making informed choices while still
under the influence of whatever was done to her. Perhaps we can’t move
forward until we see if Carlos can figure out how to undo this mess.”
“On Earth,” Jason said, “when you are unable to make your own
informed decisions for whatever reason, that power generally falls to the
closest family member.”
“It works much the same here, although house politics often comes into
play with nobility. You’re saying that we bring in Sophie to see what she
thinks.”
“It’s her mother. It seems only right that she make decisions until Melody
can make her own without an evil god sitting on her shoulder.”
28
A R E S P O N S I B I LIT Y A S M U C H A S A
P R I V I LEG E

J ASON AND A RABELLE CONTINUED TO CHAT AS THE MONSOON RAINS BORE


down outside. Jason brought out scones to go with the tea.
“There is an option,” Jason said. “Something I’ve discussed with Carlos
before. There is a place where things that aren’t usually possible become
possible. Somewhere I can turn off what’s been done to Melody, so long as
she is there. Removing it would kill her the moment she left that place, but
suppressing it should be safe enough.”
“You’re talking about your soul space,” Arabelle said.
“Yes.”
“I know there have been changes. And I know that we’ve barely talked
about them.”
“Some things I’m not even sure how to talk about. I’ve seen glimpses of
some higher society that exists in the wider cosmos. Soramir Rimaros, and
presumably other diamond-rankers, have seen it. Dawn is someone important
there. She’s told me snippets, tales of a great city with visitors from a million
universes. That wider cosmos has reached into the worlds in which I exist,
changing me in different ways. Mentally, physically, magically. I’ve been
annihilated and remade multiple times. My soul is unrecognisable from what
it was.”
“You’re describing changes,” Arabelle said, “but how changed do you
feel? Do you find yourself to be a fundamentally different person from when
you were human?”
“I’ve changed, but everyone changes. We all become different people
over time.”
“Then it’s a question of whether it’s you that has changed or if you’ve
been changed by outside forces.”
“It’s not a question. The answer is both, and that’s still true for everyone
else. I just think that my ratio might have been tipped a little in favour of
external forces. But the closer I come to those forces, the more I realise that
I’ve barely caught a glimpse of a realm to which I increasingly belong. There
are aspects of myself that belong to that greater cosmic society. I’ve got one
foot out into the cosmos, with no idea what I’m stepping into.”
“And with the departure of Dawn, the closest thing you have to a guide is
gone.”
“Yes. The next closest thing is Soramir Rimaros, and I don’t trust him. I
don’t distrust him, but he’s not Dawn. Or Farrah, or you, or anyone else that I
truly trust and rely on.”
“How much does Soramir know?”
“I’m not sure. Enough to hurt me, although I think he seems well-
meaning. It’s hard keeping secrets around diamond-rankers.”
“Why did you bring this up?” Arabelle asked. “Are you concerned about
stumbling into something by using these cosmic aspects of yourself? By
which I assume you mean the changes to your soul space.”
“Yes. I don’t know if my concerns are valid or if I’m jumping at
shadows.”
“Are you considering leaving your soul space alone until you know
more?”
“No. One thing I’m very certain of is that I need to use every advantage I
can, even if that sometimes comes with a cost. Right now, that means using
my soul space to try and help Carlos.”
“You think you can help him heal Sophie’s mother and the others?”
“I hope so. If he can reach a certain point in his understanding of their
condition, I might be able to help develop a treatment.”
“But you think you can help Melody now, if only temporarily.”
“I believe I can help the real Melody to emerge, so long as I can get her
through the portal to my soul space.”
“I thought the restrictions on that portal were gone?”
“Yes, the trust restrictions are gone, but it’s still a portal. You can’t force
anyone through without consent.”
“So, will Melody concede to go through some strange portal?”
“We’ll see, assuming Sophie even wants that.”
“I would advise you to consider this more carefully before moving
forward, especially before taking this idea to Sophie. If you build her hopes
up beyond what you can deliver, it could do real damage.”
“I’m not rushing into anything.”
“Good.” Arabelle nodded her approval. “Even if this is something that
you can do, it doesn’t mean you should. You cannot expect to suppress the
malicious magic affecting Melody and have her just be fine afterwards,” she
warned. “You know better than most that after the soul trauma is repaired, the
mental trauma lingers. Especially since she will know that to leave your soul
space is to return to her afflicted state.”
Jason winced. “That’s a horrible thought. Knowing that you’re about to
be taken over by something else.”
“Thus, I counsel caution.”
“I was going to discuss this idea with Sophie. Would you help me figure
out how to do that? Even do it with me?”
“I will.”
“We don’t need to rush into it,” Jason said. “We can take the time to
make considered choices, even if we’re left with nothing but hope that
they’re the right ones.”
Arabelle narrowed her eyes at Jason.
“You’ve embraced the idea of moving forward slowly, haven’t you?”
“Should I not have?”
“You absolutely should. But you’ve been running from one crisis to
another for long enough that I thought it would take more adjustment.”
Jason chuckled.
“Slowing down is what I’ve been dreaming of for a while. I was so ready
for this.”
“Alright,” Arabelle said, standing up. “Try to maintain that attitude;
you’re not getting any older. Ever.”

The giant bus Carlos was using for the trip was not as big as Jason’s hover
yacht, but it was still inconveniently bulky. Even so, space inside was at a
premium. Despite placing most of the Order of Redeeming Light members in
stasis and efficiently racking them, space was still required for Carlos and his
three assistants, also from the Church of the Healer, to live and conduct their
research.
A large consumer of usable area was Gibson Amouz, whose father had
supplied the vehicle to facilitate his son’s recovery. Gibson was inside a
large, specialised containment tank, floating unconscious. Carlos had
managed to prevent Gibson’s degradation following the half-complete
‘purification’ ritual the Order of Redeeming Light had performed. He hoped
that Gibson was the key to helping the others and, in a perfect world, many
more besides. Gibson Amouz was potentially the key to unravelling such
seemingly permanent curses as lesser vampirism, if Carlos could crack the
nature of his affliction.
Carlos was sat at a desk covered in intricate notes. He ran his hands over
his exhausted face, stood up and grabbed an umbrella on his way to the door.
He opened it, seeing the pounding rain he’d been listening to strike the
vehicle’s rigid panels all day. The only windows were for the driver at the
front, so this was his first time seeing the wall of falling water.
Unlike Jason’s yacht, his vehicle couldn’t fly using power drawn from the
astral, so it was parked between the road and the jungle. Carlos chose not to
walk, and instead floated out over the mud. Levitation was easy enough, so
long as he wasn’t disturbed, being easier for a gold-ranker than a silver. His
umbrella generated a water-repelling field and floated on its own, like one
Jason once owned, before he had left his with his niece on Earth.
The air outside was wet and heavy in the pounding rain, rather than fresh
as Carlos wanted. He breathed it in unnecessarily anyway, trying to clear a
mind caught up in his project. He needed to untangle his thoughts before
proceeding, his head feeling like a clogged pipe. The importance of his
current project was adding an extra layer of pressure.
Amos Pensinata floated down from the cloud yacht, apparently not caring
as he was drenched in rain. He landed next to Carlos, his heavy boots settling
in the mud that Carlos was avoiding. They stood side by side, watching the
traffic backed up from the city gate, which had only gotten worse as the day
progressed.
Carlos absently wondered what the stoic man had been like before Carlos
had met him all those years ago, in a lunatic’s dungeon. Probably the same, if
his equally stolid nephew was anything to go by. Now that they were away
from Rimaros, Amos was no longer projecting a politely restrained aura, and
was instead hiding it away completely. Asano’s friend Dawn had done well
in recruiting Amos, as Carlos knew very few others who even could teach
Jason about aura manipulation. There were people with stronger auras at the
high end of gold rank and beyond. Strength was a different thing from skill,
however, and like Jason, Amos was more than raw power.
“Have you started working with Asano yet?” Carlos asked.
Amos shook his head.
“You think you can show him some things?”
Amos nodded.
“You and I should sit down and discuss some things about Asano and his
aura. There are some quirks that you’ll need to know. His body and soul are a
single entity, like a messenger’s. It means he has the potential to do the same
things they can.”
Nod.
“You’ve fought messengers?”
Amos nodded, looked contemplative and then turned to look at Carlos.
“I don’t have time for day-drinking,” Carlos said. “I’m just clearing my
head. I need to complete this first stage of my research as quickly as possible.
If we can start working out how to treat the Amouz boy, that opens up a
world of possibility.”
Carlos looked out from under his umbrella at the rain hammering on the
road, on the vehicles traversing it, and on Amos.
“This rainy season came out of nowhere,” Carlos said. “It feels like it’ll
never let up.”
Amos shrugged, prompting Carlos to lean towards the edge of his
umbrella’s coverage and look up.
“This afternoon? I don’t see it.”
Amos made an uncertain gesture with his hand.
“It’d be nice, even if it was a little break,” Carlos said. “This rain feels
oppressive. Makes a break like this not so refreshing.”
Amos shrugged.
“Booze won’t help, as you damn well know.”
A smile teased at the corners of Amos’ mouth.
“Fine, booze won’t help me. If you want to get sauced in the middle of
the day, that’s your business. I suppose you’re living a bit of a lazy life at the
moment. Any time you aren’t teaching Asano or looking out for your
nephew, you’ve got nothing but time, in a luxurious boat made of clouds.
What are you going to do with yourself?”
“There’s always work to be done,” Amos said in his gravel-slurry voice.
“What work will you do on a luxury yacht?”
“Read. Train. Drink.”
“In that order?” Carlos asked with a grin.
Amos’ friendly chuckle was the sound people heard in dark alleys in their
nightmares.
“You’re going to get back into a training routine? Chasing after essence
revelation again?”
Amos nodded.
“I suppose you’ve got the time to focus on meditation. I don’t think I’ll
ever shoot for diamond. It’s too hard when you came up using cores; I’m
lucky I got to gold.”
Amos gave him a look.
“Don’t give me that,” Carlos complained. “I know that anything you
don’t try is impossible, but I’m trying to cure vampirism here. Maybe let me
attempt one impossible thing at a time.”

The city of Rajoras sprawled inland from the coast, built around the estuary
of a broad river, the Rajo. It was a major manufacturing hub for water and air
vehicles, and the seat of House de Varco. This made it the perfect place for
Korinne and her team to find a vehicle of their own for their time on the road.
They needed something that could serve as a true world-traveller, up to the
rigours of intercontinental travel, along with being a robust home for
adventurers.
Korinne’s team was gathered in a vehicle warehouse the size of a sports
stadium, filled with various bus-like vehicles. They had been looking over
different vehicles that various members of the team had been excited about
for one reason or another. Korinne was yet to find something she was
satisfied with, matching Orin’s taciturn expression.
Whether or not Orin found something exciting remained a mystery to his
team. He might not have the enhanced aura strength of Jason or his uncle, but
Amos had trained his aura manipulation skills personally. Unless someone of
higher rank started poking his aura, it revealed no more emotions than his
blank face.
The staff member guiding the team around showed no distaste at the
team’s lack of unity in what they wanted from a vehicle.
“When looking for a vessel that will not just be a vehicle but a home,” he
said, “it’s important to take your time to make the right choice. Have you
considered something larger, with the capacity to meet all of your needs?
There are many excellent options that fall well within your stated budget.”
“No,” Korinne said. “A soft environment fosters a soft will. We’re
travelling to train as adventures, honing ourselves to a knife’s edge. We need
a scabbard, not a cushion. This isn’t a leisure tour.”
“Couldn’t it be both?” asked Rosa, the team scout.
“No,” Korinne said. “Orin, what do you have to say on the issue?”
“My uncle is a hard man,” Orin said.
“Exactly,” Korinne said before the slow-spoken Orin could continue.
“Amos Pensinata is an exceptional role model. A hard adventurer needs hard
surroundings. Flint and steel. Oh, what about this one?”
The vehicle she was pointing at was the size and shape of a bread truck.
“Ah,” the salesman said. “The War Band model, from House de Varco. It
was designed as a budget-conscious troop transport, but it does have the
option of a long-term travel configuration, with accommodation features and
enhanced long-distance travel features, such as more efficient flight. It’s an
excellent choice for one or two adventurers, but can, strictly speaking, be set
up for as many as eight. This is by replacing two bed-and-cupboard
configurations this one has with racks of what aren’t bunks so much as
shelves. It’s workable if you’re silver rank and can float into the higher slots.
You just can’t stand more than about three people plus, plus two seated in the
driver station.”
“What do you mean, can’t stand?” Kalif asked.
“You have to remove the seating room and the storage to fit the bunk
racks,” the salesman explained. “We put in a rack for hanging dimensional
bags. Or we will; we haven’t actually sold any of that configuration, yet. But,
as I said, two people can sit in the driving station at the front.”
“Oh, that’s fine, then,” Kalif said. “There’s only six of us, and two can
even sit in comfort.”
“I didn’t say comfort,” the salesman hurriedly corrected. “You can’t hold
me to that.”
“I want to see inside,” Korinne said.
“I don’t,” Rosa said.
“Are you kidding?” Kalif asked.
“It costs nothing to look,” the salesman said. “Let me just open it up. The
current configuration is for two, and it’s probably best to avoid more than
two or three in there at once. It’s a little snug.”
“I think it’s perfect,” Korinne said, once she was inside. “All business, no
indulgence.”
“I’m not above a little indulgence,” Rosa said, crammed in with Korinne
and the salesman. “Somewhere to sit down, for example. Somewhere to eat.”
“Indulgence makes you weak,” Korinne told her. “If you have time to sit
down and eat, you have time to consume a spirit coin while you train.”
“You do realise the monster surge ended, right?” Kalif said, poking his
head in from outside. “We made a pretty good showing for ourselves.”
“Pretty good,” Korinne said. “You think the messengers will let you live
because you put up a pretty good struggle?”
“Korinne,” Kalif said, “you’ve been extremely militant ever since the
Builder attacked Rimaros. While I agree that diligent training and discipline
is good for us, so is getting to relax from time to time. If a rope is constantly
pulled taut, it’s going to fray.”
“I agree,” Rosa said. “I know you’re the team leader, Korinne, and we’ve
been following your lead, but Kalif is right. The monster surge is over, so it’s
time to loosen up and enjoy what we’ve earned. Even if it’s only a little bit.”
“Adventuring is a responsibility as much as a privilege,” Korinne told
her.
“Exactly,” Rosa said. “We’ve had almost half a year of responsibility and
it’s time to enjoy a little privilege. The occasional hot meal won’t turn us into
lazy degenerates.”
“Actual food,” Kalif said longingly.
“Having a place to sit down won’t turn us into failed adventurers,
Korinne,” Rosa continued, gesturing at the vehicle around them as much as
she could in the available space. “This is a can for storing food, not
adventurers.”
“Orin,” Kalif said. “Would your uncle stay in Korinne’s tiny metal box?”
“My uncle is a hard man,” Orin said again, “but he likes soft beds.”

Clive and Belinda watched as a submarine was disassembled at a dry dock by


a team of professional shipwrights.
“We’re not going to feed the components to the cloud flask here, are
we?” Clive asked.
“No,” Jason’s voice came from Clive’s shadow, courtesy of Shade hidden
inside it. It was the Shade body that had driven the stolen submarine upriver
and into the dock.
“We’ll need to make sure that no individual part exceeds our storage
space limit, then,” Clive said. “You’ll need to take the bigger parts, Belinda.”
Each storage space power differed in size and weight allowance for any
given object. Clive’s power had the lowest capacity on the team but also the
strongest other functions. Its bronze-rank effect was to open portals, while at
silver, it could fuel rituals in areas normally too low-magic for them.
Belinda’s storage was the largest, and while its other abilities were useful,
they weren’t portal useful.
“Shade,” Clive asked. “How did a familiar sneak a submarine stolen from
the Order of Redeeming Light through the river checkpoint without the
Magic Society or the Adventure Society getting up in arms about it? And
where did you get the paperwork for this job to be approved?”
“Miss Belinda made the arrangements.”
Clive turned to Belinda.
“What?” she asked.
“How did you manage that?”
“Do you remember when I asked about how easy it was to bribe the
people here?”
“Yes.”
“It was an act. I already knew.”
“But we hadn’t even gotten here yet?”
“You’re right,” Belinda agreed. “We hadn’t.”
29
F I G HT I N G T H E P OW E R

K ORINNE GLOWERED , COMPLAINING . “T HIS IS A BUNCH OF LIZARD SHI —”


“We took a vote,” Rosa said, cutting off her latest complaint. “You’re the
team leader, Korinne, not the team queen.”
“I don’t feel like the leader when you all mutiny like this.”
“We didn’t mutiny, Korinne. We just bought a vehicle that we actually
want to live in.”
They were riding out of the city in a House de Varco designed Outpost
Rover. It was a vehicle model that the very happy salesman described as the
premier choice for the adventuring team that looking to travel in spacious
luxury. What he meant was the choice for the adventuring team that could
afford it.
While unquestionably comfortable for six, it was no pleasure barge, as
Rosa and Kalif kept pointing out to Korinne. It had powerful defensive
measures to withstand monster attacks, features designed to facilitate training
and even a prison cell that could be expanded externally to the vehicle to
contain a relatively large monster of up to silver rank.
Due to the impressive size of the vehicle, which would match that of the
Carlos Crime Wagon, they took the salesman’s advice and obtained the
required temporary permits to fly it out of the city. That came at a further and
considerable expense, but was worth it to avoid having to navigate the
massive vehicle through the streets, let alone the gummed-up traffic around
the city gates.
The entire endeavour was extremely expensive, but this was a team of
silver-rank guild elites, fresh off a monster surge. They were a long way from
the only adventurers making hefty investments in their future. Successful
teams often took the approach of using their success during a monster surge
to set up their next decade of adventuring until the next one.
The Adventure Society bonus system rewarded those who stepped up
during the surge, and Korinne’s team had very much done that. With the
monster surge lasting five or six times longer than normal, the rewards for
active adventurers had climbed to never-before-seen heights. Fortunately, the
massive number of monsters meant more loot than ever before from which to
distribute those awards. Adventure Society loot teams were always deployed
as part of after-action teams, cleaning up after adventurers without loot
powers themselves.
Jason’s team had done fairly well in terms of bonuses, although Jason
himself was a bit of an oddity. While he did have some outrageous
contributions, he also had lengthy dead periods where he was doing nothing
but recovering. In the end, he’d been given a special assessment, which he
used to claim some useful quintessence to feed into the cloud flask.
The convoy remained at Rajoras for a few days as the new vehicle was
customised and a certain submarine was discreetly broken down into parts
and brought to Jason, who fed them into the cloud flask. Jason never went
into the city himself, although he debated it during the breaks in the rain. It
wasn’t likely he’d be recognised, but it was still the playground of House de
Varco, so he decided to remain on the yacht until they were further from
Rimaros.
The three-vehicle convoy had become four as Korinne’s team eschewed
the yacht for their own vehicle. They left Rajoras not by road but upriver,
joining the water traffic on the way to their next destination. The short-term
plan was to follow the river that curved through a valley just inland of the
east coast, moving out of the Storm Kingdom’s territory. Eventually, they
would leave the river to head for the coast proper.
Jason and his companions were gathered in a briefing room on the yacht,
along with Carlos, Arabelle and most of Korrine’s team. Only Kalif had been
left behind, to drive their new vehicle. He was starting to get a handle on it,
and had run it into very few other vehicles on the river all day.
Humphrey was going over the convoy’s immediate plans, with a map
behind him showing their river route and intended path east. Korinne stood
beside him. Humphrey used a thin rod to indicate their disembarkation point
from the river.
“We’ll be landing here,” he said. “Prior to the monster surge, this was the
location of the river city of Cartise. Unfortunately, the Builder cult managed
to claim a nearby astral space, causing widespread destruction as the astral
space separated from our world. When a diamond-rank monster manifested
shortly after, the city was overwhelmed.”
“Most of the population was evacuated to the large towns nearby and
along the river,” Korinne said, picking up the narrative. “But Cartise was the
major hub in this area for trade and travel. Its absence increases the logistical
strain on surrounding centres as they start rebuilding after the surge.”
“Especially now that they have overpopulation issues with the Cartise
refugees,” Humphrey added.
“In short,” Korinne said, “we’re saying that there is a lot of adventuring
work. The surge may be over, but that doesn’t mean our jobs are done. While
the monster numbers won’t be as high, the problems will become
increasingly about logistics. Securing supply routes, escorting specialists
rebuilding infrastructure. Utility powers will be increasingly at a premium,
with storage and portal powers both in high demand. It may not be glamorous
work, but it’s essential. People need our help just as much now as they did a
month ago; it’s just not about constantly killing monsters anymore.”
“We’re from one of the best guilds in the world,” complained Polix, from
Korinne’s team. “You want us doing delivery runs and escorting
craftspeople? That’s trash adventurer work.”
“Trash adventurers,” Korinne said, “are defined by their attitudes, not
their combat ability. Our duty as adventurers is to do what people need, not
what we want.”
“Exactly,” Rosa agreed. “Don’t be a turd, Polix.”
Jason felt old as he watched Korinne’s team bicker briefly amongst
themselves. Like Humphrey and Neil, they were roughly the same age now
as he had been when he first arrived in Pallimustus, but he wondered if he’d
ever been that much of a young little prick. He thought back for a moment
and then shook his head. He’d been worse.
“We’ve moved out of the high-magic Sea of Storms, so gold-rankers will
be a lot less common,” Humphrey said, continuing the briefing. “As silver-
rankers, it falls to us to step up and not just do our duty as adventurers, but to
set an example. With our behaviour.”
Korinne’s team looked sheepish. They were each from major adventuring
families in Rimaros, and had been lectured their whole lives about the
standards they were meant to set. But most of their adventuring careers had
been under strict supervision, where they were never expected to represent
adventuring as a whole to the public. They were now heading into exactly the
kind of experience this self-directed tour was designed to give them.
After the briefing, Humphrey found Jason and they headed in the
direction of Jason’s cabin as they talked.
“Thank you for expanding the cabin sizes,” Humphrey said.
“Well, with team Rain Chopper—”
“Storm Shredder,” Humphrey corrected.
“With team Wet Stabber moving into their new ride, there was room to
expand.”
“How would you like it if people were deliberately getting our team name
wrong?” Humphrey asked.
“I’m fine with that. What would they go with, though? Team Scone?
Ooh, that’s not bad. Maybe we should formally change the name to Team
Scone.”
“We are not changing it to Team Scone!”
“See, I knew you’d come to love Team Biscuit.”
“We should change it to something sensible.”
“You mean like team Damp Jabber?”
“Storm Shredder.”
“What would we go with, using that name as a model?”
“I don’t mean to copy their name.”
“Team Moist Crevice? Seems a bit risqué.”
“I get it,” Humphrey surrendered. “We’re sticking with Team Biscuit.”
“Hey, Shade,” Jason said. “Tell the others that Humphrey is talking about
changing the team name again.”
“Please don’t.”
“Tell them he wants to go with team Moist Crevice.”
“Shade,” Humphrey said, “please do not do that.”
“Mr Geller, I am afraid that I am but a humble familiar, bound to my
summoner’s commands.”
“You should tell that to Stash,” Humphrey grumbled.
“Hey, since I’m changing up the cabins,” Jason said to Humphrey, “did
you want me to merge yours and Sophie’s instead of adjoined cabins with a
connecting door?”
“No, Sophie values having her own space and time to be alone. Also, if
she and Belinda don’t get enough private time together, Lindy starts giving
me looks that worry me a great deal. Farrah’s started joining them as well.
I’m beginning to suspect they talk about me in there.”
“Beginning to suspect? Mate, they’re definitely talking about you.”
“You’ve been listening in?”
Jason put a comforting hand on Humphrey’s shoulder as they arrived at
Jason’s cabin.
“I don’t have to, mate. They just are.”
The cloud door disappeared to grant them entry. Humphrey moved to sit
in an armchair while Jason moved to a cooling container.
“Can I talk you into a refreshing fruit drink?” he asked.
“Please,” Humphrey said. “This endless rain and heavy air is worse than
back home.”
“The delta is a geographical oddity, because of an astral space spewing
out water,” Jason said. “It’s got the heat and the humidity, but it’s too far
south for a monsoon season.”
“You know a lot about the natural world,” Humphrey said as Jason
started preparing fruit for juicing. “You know a lot in general.”
“Those statements are both false,” Jason said. “Especially here, where
magic changes rules. Back on Earth as well, now it has magic too.”
“I think it’s a matter of perspective,” Humphrey said. “I suspect your
education system is much better than ours. The Church of Knowledge does
what it can, but they get a lot of pushback. At the risk of supporting your
thoughts on aristocracy as a system, a lot of the nobility is resistant to
widespread education beyond the reading and writing programs the church
managed to make standard.”
“Honestly, my home culture isn’t any better. My education was good
because we had money.”
“Wait, after all the complaining you had about nobility this and nobility
that, your way isn’t any better?”
“Yeah, well… you didn’t come up here to discuss school funding
disproportionately being funnelled into private schools.”
Jason used a pair of magic wands to juice the fruit and put it in a pitcher
before taking it over to Humphrey on a tray with some tall glasses containing
ice cubes. They sat in armchairs facing one another, with the drinks on a table
between them.
“It’s about what we were talking about in the briefing,” Humphrey said.
“Setting an example. And also, perspective.”
“Oh?” Jason prompted as he poured drinks.
“Jason, your perspective is extremely skewed. In Greenstone, you were
an iron-ranker regularly dealing with silver and even gold-rankers. That isn’t
normal. Then you went to Earth, where things were even more
disproportional, if my discussions with Farrah are anything to go by.”
“You’ve been talking with Farrah about my time on Earth?”
“Taika and Travis, as well. We all realised that talking about it with you
wasn’t a good idea,” Humphrey said. “We left that to Arabelle. When we first
arrived in Rimaros, you were an open wound, Jason.”
“You’re not wrong,” Jason conceded. “And yes, I wasn’t exactly a face in
the crowd.”
“Then you arrive in the Sea of Storms, and suddenly, it’s princesses
everywhere, diamond-rankers and whatever Dawn is.”
“She’s diamond rank. Technically. I’m still not entirely clear on what
half-transcendent means.”
“You shouldn’t have to be,” Humphrey said. “My mother has indicated
enough times that there are things about gold rank that I don’t know, let alone
diamond. Diamond-rankers are more legend than reality in low-magic zones
like Greenstone.”
“What’s the point you’re meandering around?” Jason asked.
“Jason, you’ve been conditioned to interact with the world in a certain
way. You’re used to the people around you being far more powerful, and
needing to be more than a little outrageous for them to take notice. You’ve
always had to make bold moves so you weren’t dismissed out of hand.”
“But?”
“But now, you’ll be meeting a lot more people to whom you are the
powerful one. If you run around doing outrageous things when you’re the one
with all the power, that’s not bold; it’s maniacal. These aren’t people you
need to go all out with. If you treat them like you did Elspeth Arella or
Vesper Rimaros, you’re going to turn their worlds upside down. To ordinary
people, an unhinged silver-rank adventurer is far worse than a silver-rank
monster.”
“Unhinged?”
“Jason, most of the people in this world are just ordinary folk, going
about their lives. Silver-rank adventurers coming in and acting wild have all
the power and destructiveness of a hurricane. In the places we’ll be going
from now on, you won’t be fighting the power anymore. You’ll be the
power.”
“You know that I was always good at interacting with normal people
back in Greenstone.”
“And are you the same person you were back then?”
Jason grimly nodded, conceding the point. He looked thoughtful as he
sipped at his drink.
“I suppose I’m not,” he said. “Since then, it’s been a series of
increasingly powerful people trying to yank me one way or the other, and
I’ve become more and more extreme to face that. Now that you say it, I’m
not sure I know how to be anything else anymore. But now I’m the powerful
one, so I’ve become the thing I was always struggling against. You may be
right that I don’t know how to handle that.”
“Yes. It’s hard to see what’s happening to you when you’re dealing with
Soramir Rimaros or you’re the most famous essence user in the world. But
you’re probably stronger than anyone who was in Greenstone back then.
Except for Thalia Mercer and my mother, but they weren’t really Greenstone
residents. They were just back for the monster surge that kept not coming. At
least now we know why.”
Jason frowned and took another sip of his drink.
“I’m not sure what to do about that. How to deal with regular people. I
never wanted to be that guy so removed from regular people that he becomes
detached from ordinary life.”
“Maybe think of this as a chance to reconnect with that. I’m just warning
you to be mindful of the power you wield, and the fact that many people
don’t.”
Jason nodded. “Thanks, Humphrey. I appreciate you looking out for me.”
“Of course.”
“No, I mean it. You’ve helped me get over a huge hump in my mindset.”
“Please don’t.”
“It’s just good to know that I can rely on the team, instead of humping
this issue alone.”
“Just stop.”
“The same goes for you. You don’t have to hump the burden of looking
out for me by yourself.”
“You are my least favourite team member.”
30
M A K E J A S O N G R E AT A G A I N

“T HIS VALLEY WOULD BE GORGEOUS IF WE COULD ACTUALLY SEE IT THROUGH


the rain,” Jason complained as he looked out the window. The convoy was
floating on or just over a rather busy river, with water traffic heading in each
direction. The vision-obscuring downpour slowed progress as boats,
skimmers and hover vehicles cautiously navigated the waters and each other.
The banks were dangerous to any vehicle with a draft as the river was
swollen with the fresh rains. It made the river’s outer reaches a dangerous
and murky trap for unwary boats, but freed up space for floating vehicles.
The monsoon rains had continued, with breaks in the weather lasting an
hour at most. It was as if the rain, like the people it fell on, had been waiting
out the monster surge that went on for far too long. By the time the river trip
moved into the second day, Humphrey had pushed the team into training.
The training room did more than provide magically enhanced weights,
courtesy of the various materials and quintessence Jason had fed his cloud
flask. On top of the weights, the training room could have the gravity
enhanced, either across the whole room or in specific sections. The team were
acclimatising to this when Jason was approached by Amos Pensinata.
“Time to get started?” Jason asked.
Amos nodded, then immediately walked off.
“I guess it’s aura training for me,” Jason told the others.
He followed Amos out of the training room.
“What exactly did Dawn give you that you’re willing to do this?” Jason
asked. “If you don’t mind me prying.”
“Insight,” Amos rumbled.
Jason waited, but no further explanation was forthcoming.
“Enlightening,” he said.
“Yes,” Amos agreed.
Amos led Jason to the stairs that went up to the roof deck, and stopped.
“I saw you using your aura to deflect the rain.”
“It seemed like a good way to practise.”
“Lazy.”
“Uh, okay. What do you want me doing?”
“You know ritual magic, yes?”
“Yes.”
“Use your aura to draw a ritual circle with the rain. Get it right. Precise.”
“You know I won’t be able to perform a ritual doing it like that, right?”
“You don’t need a ritual. Just need complexity.”

Jason was floating just over the roof deck in a meditative pose, completely
drenched as rain pounded down on him. He was mentally exhausted after
hours of painstaking concentration, which was something he hadn’t
experienced in a while. His silver-rank spirit attribute enhanced his mentality
in various ways, including focus, concentration and multitasking. All of those
had been pushed to the limit by the exercise.
Before undertaking the task from Amos, Jason had been convinced that
his aura manipulation skills had been pushed to their limit. He suspected a
key purpose of the exercise had been disabusing him of that notion, which it
had quite thoroughly done. Using his aura to manipulate physical objects was
still something he was getting used to. Shielding an area from the rain wasn’t
too taxing, but pulling in small amounts of water and shaping it into an array
of lines and sigils very much was. Even going for the simplest ritual circle he
knew was like trying to closely observe every bee in a hive simultaneously.
His early attempts had involved the simpler method of creating invisible
force moulds with his aura for the water to settle in, but he had given up on
that. It felt like not only was he getting more precision by manipulating the
water directly, but it was better for developing control. The purpose of the
exercise was training, after all. The goal was to improve his skill, not learn to
cast rituals using the rain. If nothing else, water made a terrible platform for
ritual magic without specialised abilities to support it.
Jason overexerted his concentration over and over again, causing even the
basic rain shield to collapse, which was how he ended up soaked to the skin.
But after each failure, he took a moment to recentre himself and then started
over.

Amos gestured to Rufus, who was exercising with Jason’s team in the large
training room. Rufus was doing a flexibility exercise, which involved
swinging across the room while dangling from rings, flipping through the air
as he launched from one set of rings to the next. After dropping to the floor,
Rufus moved over to speak with him.
“Something I can help you with, Lord Pensinata?”
“You trained Asano.”
“When he first arrived in our world, yes. I gave him his start in
adventurer training, primarily in combat techniques. I’ve also been helping
him with combat trances since he came back. My companions taught him in
other areas, though. If you want to discuss his early aura training, you should
speak with Farrah. She took that portion of his training and is stronger in that
area than me, but she’ll freely admit that Jason has moved past us both in that
regard.”
“It’s not about his previous training. How hard can I push him before
he’ll balk?”
“As in, how much training you can shove him into before he quits?”
Amos nodded.
“I honestly don’t know,” Rufus said. “It’s part of what made me realise
early that he was going to be great. He has a voracious appetite for training.
However hard I drove him, he was always grateful. He never asked questions
about why he needed to train so hard; he kept pushing to get stronger, like
any weakness inside him is a poison. So long as he believes that you have a
way to push him forward, he’ll take all the pushing you’ve got.”

Amos and Clive arrived on the roof deck to find Jason sitting under an orb
around which the pounding rain curved. Inside it, he was sat cross-legged,
hovering just off the deck. Around him was a floating ritual circle comprised
entirely of water. Jason opened his eyes at the arrival of the newcomers who
were standing dry under an awning.
“I have to thank you for this, Lord Pensinata. I haven’t felt anything push
me this hard in a while. In training anyway.”
Amos looked at Clive, who peered at Jason’s fake ritual circle.
“That’s pretty close,” Clive said.
“Show me,” Amos rumbled.
Clive pointed with his finger and started drawing a ritual circle with
glowing light, overlapping with Jason’s own diagram made of water. As he
finished, it became evident where Jason’s circle had minor imperfections.
“Let me guess,” Jason said. “I have to keep going until I get it right.”
“No,” Amos said. “When you get it right, you pick a harder ritual.”
Jason grinned, and his water circle fell to the deck in a series of tiny
splashes. Droplets filtered into the orb instead of around it and started
forming a new ritual circle as Jason closed his eyes.

Clive yawned as he trudged out onto the roof deck. The rain finally had a
proper break as they continued south and the dark sky was lit up with stars.
There was still plenty of water sitting on the deck for Jason to float into
complex ritual shapes. He’d moved onto a second, slightly more
sophisticated ritual after mastering the first.
“Jason, it’s the middle of the night.”
“Check me.”
Clive overlapped Jason’s ritual circle in lines of glowing light,
highlighting the many inconsistencies.
“Alright,” Jason said, looking around and mentally noting the problem
spots.
“This is the last time, Jason. I’m going to bed.”
“Good night.”
“You should be going to bed as well.”
“We arrive at Cartise tomorrow,” Jason said. “Maybe even overnight. I
need to get in my training while I can.”
“Jason, didn’t you say you’re fairly sure that you’ve stopped ageing? You
have time?”
“So long as no one kills me, sure. And while I might have forever, I don’t
have Lord Pensinata forever. The great thing about a reliable instructor is that
you know that so long as you put in the work, you’ll get the results. No luck,
no privilege. Just work for reward. There’s a comfort in that reliability.”
“There’s also a comfort in comfort, Jason. I’m going to bed.”

The dark did not obscure Jason’s vision as the yacht approached the ruins that
were, until recently, the city of Cartise. He looked out from the roof deck and
was reminded of old pictures of London after the Blitz. Nothing was
undamaged and entire blocks of buildings were reduced to chunks of rubble
no bigger than a fist.
The old docks had been destroyed, and the remains had been fished out to
prevent obstructions. Jason could see the detritus that hadn’t been salvaged
for the new docks, piled up further along the shore. The new docks served the
Adventure Society camp that had been set up to handle operations in and
around the fallen city.
With the rest of the group asleep, it fell to Jason to go meet the
dockmaster and secure a berth. Shade appeared and pulled the team’s
documentation from his dimensional space, and Jason transferred it to his
own. He then took a running leap off the roof deck, sailing over the docks,
and landing in a crouch on the shore, next to a stone cottage. He didn’t
lighten his fall, as that would require calling out his distinctive cloak.
Jason’s mode of arrival did not faze the grizzled man who came out of a
stone cottage. He was the dockmaster for a camp that was exclusively host to
adventurers and Magic Society field agents, so he found Jason’s approach
downright tame. His cottage was simple and square, all of a single piece. It
had the plain, rough texture of a child’s clay art project, the distinctive tells of
a building hurriedly stone-shaped out of the earth with magic. Jason
approached the man and handed over the team’s documentation and the
dockmaster looked it over.
“Two silver-rank teams and an assortment of gold-rankers,” the
dockmaster muttered. “We can certainly use that.”
“I only speak for one of the teams, Team Biscuit,” Jason said. “The others
you’ll have to arrange with separately.”
“Are you saying they came here where there’s nothing but work and
aren’t interested in working?”
“Not at all. I’m just saying that I can’t speak for them,” Jason said. “I’m
just a team auxiliary. You won’t catch me going around giving orders to
gold-rankers.”
In Jason’s shadow, Shade was grateful for his inability to choke, as it
would have revealed his presence.
“You’re the auxiliary,” the dockmaster said, leafing through the
documents. “John Miller, that’s you?”
“It is.”
“Your team feels the need to take around a silver-rank cook?”
“Just between you and me, I have a few other utility tricks up my sleeve.
We just keep it quiet to avoid poaching attempts.”
“You’re not open to someone making a better offer?”
“I trust the people I work with. Who can make a better offer than that?”
“That’s a good attitude,” the dockmaster said. “It’s four vehicles?”
“Yeah, the dimensions are listed there.”
“That’s fine. Give me a moment to copy these documents and I’ll find
you somewhere to put them.”

“John Miller,” Farrah said, pausing with a forkful of pancake. Jason and his
companions were sitting around the breakfast table. “We’ve been wondering
for days what crazy name you picked for yourself, and you went with John
Miller.”
“The point was to not stand out,” Jason said. “That’s a pretty ordinary
name, even in this world, right? Vidal, you said it was normal.”
“I did, yes,” Vidal Ladiv said. The Adventure Society liaison was still
somewhat nervous around the group, rarely speaking up unless directly
addressed.
“We’ve been bugging this guy since we set off to tell us the name,”
Belinda complained, “and all he’ll say is that you told him not to tell us.”
“I figured you’d all have some fun with it. I assume you all made
guesses.”
“Captain Handsome Boatman,” Neil said.
“Buck Stone, Bounty Hunter,” Belinda guessed.
“Action Fighter,” Travis added. “Or maybe something inappropriately
exotic, like Enrico de la Fuente.”
“That doesn’t fit at all,” Sophie said. “I can see him going for that.”
“What about Karl Marx?” Humphrey suggested.
“How do you know about Karl Marx?” Travis asked him.
“Jason and I used to have discussions about aristocracy a lot. This was
back before we formed the team. I’m not sure who he is, but Jason seemed
very enthused.”
Travis turned to look at Jason. “You don’t seem like much of a socialist,
having a massive buffet breakfast on your magic superyacht.”
“Everyone has things they’re good and bad at,” Jason said defensively.
“I’m a socialist, I’m just… not great at it.”
“Not great?” Farrah asked. “You can create infinite amounts of money.”
“What?” Vidal asked.
“Don’t worry about that,” Farrah said. “I was guessing on some name
from Earth. Bruce Banner. Bruce Wayne. Bruce McAvaney.”
“You seem obsessed with the name Bruce,” Jason said. “I’m actual
Australian, not a Monty Python Australian. I didn’t think you’d like Monty
Python.”
“What kind of maniac doesn’t like Monty Python?” Farrah asked.
“People who were oppressed by the British,” Jason said. “There’s a
woman I know who used to work for my dad, and her dad wouldn’t let her
watch any British television growing up. She missed out on Monty Python,
The Goodies, Fawlty Towers.”
“Even I’ve seen Fawlty Towers,” Farrah said. “And I’m from another
universe.”
“How much Earth culture did you absorb?” Jason asked her.
“You kept going into transformation zones and leaving me twiddling my
thumbs.”
“I was saving the world.”
“And I was watching internet videos. The name doesn’t have to be Bruce;
there are plenty of other choices. Clark Kent, Ahmet Zappa, Man-E-Faces,
Carlos Danger, the Artist Formerly Known as Ringo Starr. Pol Pot.”
“Pol Pot?” Jason exclaimed. “You seriously think I’d go with Pol Pot?”
Farrah continued reeling off guesses.
“Maximilien Robespierre, Rolf Harris, Mother Theresa, Joseph Stalin.”
“Now you’re just listing terrible people,” Jason complained.
“Gonk,” Gary said.
Everyone at the table turned to look at him.
“What?” he asked.
“Gonk?” Rufus asked.
“As a name,” Gary said. “I thought Jason might go for a mononym.”
“And you thought that if I went for just one name,” Jason said, “that the
name I’d go for is Gonk?”
“Why not?” Gary asked. “There’s no telling what you’re going to do.”
This drew general nods of agreement around the table, which in turn led
to an affronted expression from Jason.
“I was hoping for Manny McManface,” Taika said, “but I thought you’d
go with Michael Long.”
“I thought you had it with that one, actually,” Farrah told Taika. “I was
sure he’d try for some obscure alias that someone on Earth used where no
one would get the reference.”
“Actually,” Taika corrected, “Michael Knight was the alias and Michael
Long was his real name.”
Farrah reached out—and up—to put a hand on the shelving unit that was
Taika’s shoulder.
“Taika,” she told him. “I’m not sure I can fully express the degree to
which I do not care.”
“Not all of your many terrible guesses were aliases,” Jason told Farrah.
“And John Miller is an alias, thank you very much. And none of you did get
the reference.”
“An alias for who?” Farrah asked.
“Oh,” Travis said. “I just figured it out.”
31
N E I L’ S B I G M O U T H

J ASON WATCHED FROM THE ROOF DECK AS R UFUS , F ARRAH AND G ARY
headed upriver on the skimmers they kept stored on the yacht. With them was
Estella Warnock, whom they were escorting from the Adventure Society
camp to an actual population centre. Estella would be fulfilling her role of
scouting out such places, for opportunities and danger. She didn’t need the
escort, but it was a chance for Rufus, Gary and Farrah to work together again
as a team.
Letting out a sigh, Jason couldn’t help but reflect that just as his team was
coming together, theirs was coming apart. It was not long after Humphrey,
Jason and Clive had done their first job together that Farrah had died, which
had profoundly impacted Rufus and Gary. Even though Farrah was now
back, none of them had a taste for full-time adventuring anymore.
Rufus was increasingly interested in training adventurers over being one,
while Gary and Farrah were focusing on their very different crafts. Gary was
seeking to master the old ways, chasing perfection in the smithing of
weapons and armour. Farrah, by contrast, was chasing the future, pushing
magic into new fields.
This trip was an opportunity to relive the old days when all they had was
ambition and each other. It was also a chance to say goodbye to those days,
and fully appreciate that their futures followed paths they had not anticipated.
Even when they should have because they wouldn’t shut up about their
family running a school.
Jason chuckled at the thought and pushed himself off the railing. He had
his own team and his own adventures to have, even if he was playing the role
of secretly awesome cook. He wondered again if he should have named
himself after a similar character from the Steven Seagal movie.
“No,” he muttered to himself. “Even my rose-tinted nostalgia has limits.
A man has to have standards.”
“Mr Asano, are you thinking about Steven Seagal again?” Shade asked.
“No.”

Jason’s team was tasked with heading into Cartise to clear monsters out of
the ruined city. They were one of several teams tasked with doing so, and
were being guided through their assigned sweeping route by Vestine, an
Adventure Society functionary. Jason himself wasn’t with them, because why
would you bring the cook?
“Not to be ungrateful,” Neil said, “but why do we need a guide?”
“There have been some issues,” Vestine told him. “Teams getting a little
over-enthused, roaming into another team’s territory, and suddenly, they’re
fighting duels instead of monsters. We don’t have time for that.”
“So, you’re guiding teams away from making stupid choices,” Belinda
said.
“I hardly think that’s necessary,” Clive said.
“Then you should pay more attention,” Neil told him.
“I completely agree,” Belinda said. “That should be the policy for all
teams.”
“You want someone hanging around all the time, observing what you
do?” Neil asked her, and Belinda’s expression went stiff.
“I formally rescind my suggestion.”
“We prefer to think of it as helping the teams stay focused,” Vestine said.
“I bet that’s because they’re already trying to ditch you and cause
trouble,” Belinda said. “You outright tell them you’re babysitters and they’re
going to throw a tantrum.”
A smile crept onto Vestine’s face, despite her best efforts, but she didn’t
respond.
As they moved through the ruins on foot, the team made swift progress.
Having once spent months in a city not just ruined but overtaken by jungle,
the terrain was no obstacle to them. They traversed the city, alert but relaxed,
Sophie only occasionally visible as she scouted around them. The team took
the chance to learn more about conditions in the area by questioning their
guide.
“Just so I’m getting this right,” Neil said, “something is attracting
monsters to the city, and we’re not meant to stop it?”
“That’s right,” Vestine told him. “When the diamond-rank monster died
here in the city, it left behind spots of magical resonance that still linger, and
will for weeks to come. Monsters normally fear their diamond-rank
contemporaries, but this resonance seems to draw them in, from a hundred
kilometres away or more.”
“Then why not get rid of it?” Clive asked. “Eliminating magical
resonance isn’t that hard. Even from a diamond-rank monster, it should be
easy enough. You just have to align a purgation ritual with an amplification
ritual with a—”
“How many rituals would it take in total?”
“Four, maybe five,” Clive said, then shrugged. “Diamond-rank, so let’s
call it five. Six at the absolute most.”
“And these would all be in a sequence?” Vestine asked.
“They would have to be, yes,” Clive said.
“You just said it would be easy.”
“Yes?” Clive asked, confusion in his expression.
“I think the lady’s point,” Belinda told Clive, “is that not everyone thinks
that running half a dozen rituals in a unified sequence is easy.”
“Really?” Clive asked.
“Yes, really,” Neil told him.
“Oh,” Clive said, his tone suggesting he was not entirely convinced.
“I believe that Clive’s original question,” Humphrey said, “was why not
eliminate this resonance. The difficulty or ease of doing so aside, I imagine
the reason is that the Adventure Society wants the monsters here.”
“Exactly,” Vestine said, still giving Clive odd looks. “The surge is over,
but there are still many monsters that manifested in the wilderness that
weren’t dealt with because they didn’t pose an immediate threat. This city is
an empty ruin, while the towns and villages around it are not. Better to draw
the monsters here than have them attack the over-populated and under-
resourced locations that are bursting with refugees.”
“Rebuilding the city isn’t a priority, then?” Neil asked.
“It can’t be,” Vestine said. “The monster surge was five years late. Five
years of the economy being strained by everything being in a state of
readiness for a surge that kept not arriving. Then the surge itself lasted six
times longer than it should have, and that’s not even accounting for the
Builder invasion. Now there’s a conflict with the messengers, and who knows
what trouble that will bring.”
“That is a lot,” Neil conceded. “I suppose you have to do what you can
instead of what you want to.”
“I know that story,” Belinda said.
The team heard the high-pitched shrieking of monsters in the distance and
rushed in that direction. They sensed auras as they drew nearer, but the auras
blinked out, one by one, and by the time they arrived, the monsters were
gone. There were signs of combat, claw marks raking stone, but no corpses
and no blood.
“Again,” Vestine muttered.
“Again?” Humphrey asked.
“The Adventure Society functionaries guiding the teams are keeping
contact through a communication power,” Vestine explained as she crouched
to examine a claw mark. “This mark is from a skittering raker, which matches
the sounds we heard. They’re ambush predators, a common monster in this
region. This is the third instance in the last couple of hours of monster packs
disappearing before adventurers could get to them.”
“Almost like someone was running around, killing and looting them,”
Neil said innocently, earning him a slap on the arm from Belinda.
“Maybe,” Vestine said. “If so, I wish they’d report to the Adventure
Society camp. Someone running rogue means that we’ll have to expend time
and people we desperately need to use elsewhere on a false threat. But we
suspect it’s another monster, though.”
“Oh?” Humphrey asked.
“One of the teams reported seeing some strange butterflies near where
one of the monster packs vanished. The butterflies themselves fled before
anyone could get a closer look, though. They were reportedly extremely
fast.”
Humphrey caught Clive’s eye.
“Vestine, please excuse us for a moment,” Humphrey said. “I need to
consult with my team member.”
Humphrey and Clive walked a little way from the group and Humphrey
activated a privacy screen. Clive pulled out a blue marble tablet, the
engravings on which started shifting as he moved his fingers across it.
“Shade,” Humphrey said. “Is this Jason?”
“No, Mr Geller,” Shade said from Humphrey’s shadow.
“Are you sure?”
“Quite certain, Mr Geller. Mr Asano discovered just how desperate the
Adventure Society efforts in this region are for resources and decided to
volunteer himself as an actual auxiliary. He’s been looting monster remains
brought in by other teams for materials and meat, which he is cooking in
ways friendly to long-term storage. He’s quite busy.”
“Oh,” Humphrey said. “I thought he’d gone off marauding on the sly.”
“Jason’s butterflies aren’t fast, the way our guide described,” Clive said,
then held up the Magic Society monster almanac in his hands. “I think I know
what this monster is.”
“You just looked it up? Those almanacs are a pain to sort through. My
mother used to make me go through them for practise.”
“I may not be part of the Magic Society anymore, but my ability to
efficiently search through their record system remains intact.”
“You think it’s a butterfly monster, then?”
“Yes, but let’s go back to the group so I’m not explaining it twice.”
Humphrey nodded and disabled the privacy screen. They returned to the
others and Clive explained what he suspected to be the culprit.
“There’s a kind of butterfly monster called the glorious harvester,” he
told the group. “It’s rare, and normally shows up a decent way south of here,
but there are a handful of records of them showing up almost as far north as
Rajoras. It’s a swarm-type monster with a few distinctive traits. One is their
appearance, which is green, blue and yellow, with a golden glow. Another is
that they are one of the rare monsters that hunt other monsters and mostly
avoids anyone else. They produce dust that triggers a rapid breakdown in
monster bodies. This breakdown continues after death, dissolving them as a
looting power would. The glorious harvesters then consume the magic as it
returns to a raw state. I’m more or less saying that they eat rainbow smoke.”
“So, it’s really a monster, then?” Neil asked. “I was sure it would turn out
to be—”
Belinda slapped his arm again.
“Turn out to be what?” Vestine asked.
“You are so bad at this,” Belinda told Neil, shaking her head. “And I
mean Clive bad.”
“Hey!” Neil and Clive exclaimed simultaneously, then glared at each
other.
“This dust that the butterfly monster produces,” Belinda said, drawing
attention away from Neil’s big mouth. “It dissolves monster bodies, right?”
“Yes,” Clive confirmed.
“High-rankers, and even well-trained mid-rankers, have bodies that are
basically the same as that of monsters,” Belinda said. “Wouldn’t that make us
vulnerable to this dust?”
“No,” Clive said, shaking his head. “Well, not as much. The almanac
noted that it doesn’t affect essence users the same way, which is why glorious
harvesters are one of the rare monsters that hunt other monsters. I’m not sure
why it’s less effective on essence users; the almanac didn’t say.”
“There’s a reason we say our bodies are ‘basically’ the same,” Neil said.
As a healer, he had the best understanding in the group of how their magical
bodies worked. “There are key differences between the very similar makeup
of an essence user and a monster’s body. The big one is that, barring essence
ability intervention, monster bodies are a lot more resilient. That’s because
monster bodies don’t have to contain an actual soul, like an essence user, or
an actual spiritual entity, like a summoned familiar. Because their bodies
don’t need that spiritual reinforcement, they can focus on physical
reinforcement.”
“Then it sounds like this dust targets whatever makes monster bodies
tougher than ours specifically,” Clive said. “It will affect us to some degree,
but not to the same degree. It won’t be as severe as… someone else’s
afflictions.”
Belinda shook her head.
“So bad at this,” she muttered. “Clive, he went off into the cosmos with a
diamond-ranker, not a mystic land where saying his name will levy a curse.
You can say his name.”
“Ah, yes, right,” Clive said. “He went off with a diamond-ranker.”
Belinda groaned.
“Yeah, real convincing, Clive,” she complained. “I take it back. You’re
not allowed to talk about him.”
“Who are we talking about?” Vestine asked.
“It doesn’t matter,” Humphrey said. “We should get moving again if we
want to complete our sweep on…”
Sophie dropped to the ground next to the group.
“I found some weird butterfly monster,” she said. “It was more yellow
and green than Jason’s.”
“Who is Jason?” Vestine asked.
“Some guy we used to work with,” Sophie said. “He went off with a
diamond-ranker for being an extra-special boy or some nonsense.”
“Callously abandoned us,” Belinda confirmed.
“Did you see which way the butterflies went?” Vestine asked.
“They didn’t go anywhere,” Sophie said. “They weren’t very fast, so I
just dealt with them.”
“Wait,” Vestine said. “You’re saying they were slow?”
“Yeah,” Sophie confirmed. “Not you people slow, but slow.”
“You probably shouldn’t fly around,” Vestine warned. “Monsters might
see you and end up following you back to us.”
“Exactly,” Sophie said. “You people are slow, so I rounded some up. You
should sense the first group any second.”
“Sophie!” Humphrey scolded. “What did I tell you?”
Sophie’s face took on an expression of exaggerated uncertainty.
“That you like it when I tickle your—”
“I said stop rounding up monsters because you think we’re too slow!”
“Oh, that makes more sense,” she acknowledged. “The other thing is kind
of private.”
32
R A G E , A U T H O R IT Y A N D O T H E RWO R LD LY
P OW E R

J ASON MOVED THROUGH THE NIGHT - COVERED CITY , FLICKERING UNSEEN FROM
shadow to shadow. There was no shortage of them under the light of the twin
moons, allowing him to make a blistering pace. With the blanket of stars, the
city was relatively bright, given the early hours, making it a shadowy realm
that was perfect for Jason.
He didn’t expand his senses too far, as his magical senses were an
expression of his aura. Pushing them too far would broadcast his location to
any aura-sensitive being in a wide area. He wasn’t worried about nocturnal
monsters but the adventuring teams patrolling at all hours that hunted them.
He neither wanted to explain his presence nor be mistaken for one of the
monsters being hunted.
Even retracted, Jason’s senses were still excellent over shorter distances,
allowing him to avoid any teams he encountered. Unlike him, they were
blasting their senses out to detect monsters and attract the aggressive ones.
That made them easy to avoid by withdrawing the moment his senses
encountered theirs; their perception was weakest at the limits of their range.
He was careful, nonetheless. Not only was letting himself get sloppy a bad
habit, but there was every chance an elite scout would notice him, despite his
caution.
Jason’s goal was the inland side of the city, the opposite end from where
his ship was docked. His day spent working as an auxiliary had proven
fruitful in terms of information gathering for the simple reason that if you
show up, get to work and don’t be a tool, people will talk to you. He had
spent the day surrounded by Adventure Society and Magic Society
functionaries, along with a few other auxiliaries as well. This had given Jason
plenty of opportunities to learn about the situation in the camp.
Estella Warnock’s job was to scout out civilian locations for the team, but
she was a bad fit for a work camp at a ruined city. Instead, she had gone
ahead to the team’s next destination. Jason himself was much better suited to
the specific circumstances, having always been good at getting along with
people without the power to use or oppress him.
It took Jason very little time to fit in with the primarily low-ranked
workers organising resources, logistics and food. With conditions tight,
essence users were mostly getting by on spirit coins. The food Jason and his
new co-workers produced was being shipped off to the surrounding areas.
Jason’s looting ability was useful for producing fresh meat from monster
carcasses, along with other materials. His cooking magic took that fresh meat
and turned it into preserved meat.
There were already resources on site that allowed Jason to get a lot of
work done quickly, with smokehouses and salting sheds designed for use
with cooking magic that massively accelerated the process. While Jason’s
mastery of such magic came from skill books and was fairly basic, it was
perfect for the setup in place. The learning curve was low, and by the time he
was pumping out preserved meats, the people around him had gotten chatty.
The bulk of what Jason learned wasn’t wildly useful to the team, although it
would help them. Knowing who to go to and who to avoid in camp leadership
was always valuable.
The most important information was not about the base camp but the city
the camp was set up to manage. One of the tribulations that had brought the
city low was the wide-scale destruction following a local astral space getting
torn off the side of reality. Such devastating events had been the end-goal of
the Builder; when a cell of cultists managed to accomplish this task, they
usually evacuated their bases in the area.
Usually, cult evacuations would be carried out quickly and quietly, as the
local adventurers were generally on the warpath by that stage. As a result,
there were frequently Builder cult lairs hidden in the area that contained large
and dangerous construct creatures that the cult had been forced to abandon.
From what Jason picked up, there was likely an undiscovered Builder
base somewhere beyond the city’s inland border. Late in the night, Jason had
moved to investigate in secret, to preserve his secret identity. Jason Asano
was not meant to be on Pallimustus anymore, and a cook shouldn’t be able to
find what teams of adventurers had not.
After reaching what should be the right general area, Jason directed his
senses down, careful not to let his aura spread in any other direction. Aside
from his superior aura strength fuelling his senses, Jason was also sensitive to
Builder-related energy. Since losing the Builder’s magic door, he could no
longer manipulate that energy. His ability to sense the touch of the Builder,
however, predated Jason’s acquisition of the door by some time. He had been
sensitive to it ever since the Builder tried to steal his soul with a star seed.
Jason turned himself into a magical ground-penetrating radar as he swept
the area. He moved from the outer city into what had once been farmland, but
was now a mix of withered crop remnants and bare soil. The land bore the
marks of the destructive shockwave that had swept over it in the wake of the
astral space being removed. The force had pushed everything out and away
from the epicentre in a violent blast that had thrown boulders, flattened
portions of the city and uprooted trees. And this was just the shockwave area,
not the blast zone.
The dimensional scar was something that Jason could sense clearly. Even
more intimate than his sensitivity to the Builder was his perception of
dimensional forces. The closer he drew to the former site of the astral space
aperture, the more he was horrified by the gaping wound in reality left
behind.
“This has left a scar on the side of reality,” Jason said. “It’s already
starting to warp the ambient magic seeping through the dimensional
membrane. I don’t think this city will be liveable for a long time.”
“It will have to be rebuilt from the ground up.” Shade agreed. “There is
almost nothing left to repair.”
Magic came into the world through the dimensional membrane that
separated their physical reality from the astral. A monster surge was the result
of temporary damage to that membrane, but the damage always—eventually
—recovered itself. That had already happened, ending the monster surge, but
to Jason’s perception, an ugly scar had been left behind.
“This is going to impact the magic in this area for some time,” Jason
judged.
“You believe the effect will linger?” Shade asked him.
“Without intervention, yes,” Jason said soberly. “It’s going to affect the
monsters here, I suspect, and the people using magic too. It’ll be slow, over
time, like a taint in the groundwater that slowly accumulates toxins in the
people using the land.”
Jason had a unique insight into this. His connection to dimensional forces
allowed him to recognise the wound in a way that others did not, and his
increasing proficiency in astral magic allowed him to at least partially
understand it.
“Will you warn the locals?” Shade asked. “They may not recognise the
danger.”
“There are Magic Society representatives here,” Jason said. “They likely
know what’s happened and what to look for. But I’ll have Clive double-check
with them.”
Clive was not on good terms with the Magic Society, but he was an astral
magic specialist whose expertise exceeded Jason’s, despite Jason’s insights
into dimensional forces and being tutored by Dawn herself. Jason was
already sharing his unique insights with Clive and seeing Clive make leaps
that Jason himself never realised. Without his advantages, Jason wouldn’t be
close to Clive’s level in astral magic studies.
Jason pushed his senses as far as he was willing to risk, but one hour
turned into two and then three without results. The sky was starting to lighten
when he finally felt a twinge. There was something below him that prevented
him from getting a proper sense of what it was due to some magical
screening. Only the strength of his perception and sensitivity to the Builder
allowed him to detect anything at all.
“Good,” said Amos, whose sudden presence behind him startled Jason.
Very few people could get that close to him undetected.
“What are you doing here?” Jason asked. “You liked how I managed to
find the place, did you?”
“No,” Amos said. “It’s good that you have so thoroughly demonstrated
your shortcomings. There will be new exercises, once you’ve rested.”
With that, Amos walked away.
“You know,” Jason said after watching Amos leave. “He could have at
least helped us find the entrance. Shade, spread out and take a look, if you
please.”
Shade bodies spilled out of Jason’s shadow to search the area. The fact
that the lair hadn’t been found yet by someone else suggested that the
entrance had been permanently collapsed. Only with a narrow area to search
was it worth grid searching, even with Shade’s cohort of bodies. In the end,
the opening was under a cluster of heavy rocks that looked like they had been
piled up by the shockwave. Instead, they had been placed to obscure a shaft
that had been deliberately caved in.
While he knew the right move was to bring in the team, Jason felt a
temptation to act on his own. He wanted to send Shade down so he could
shadow jump into the base, keeping all of the Builder constructs to himself.
He could take his time, buried and hidden under the earth. Pull each construct
apart with his own two hands, stripping them down to parts, one by one.
Grinding every last trace of the Builder’s power out of them.
“Mr Asano,” Shade said. “I remind you that it is a time for discretion, not
rage.”
Jason hadn’t noticed the aura pulsing out of him or the growing
luminescence of his alien eyes as he stared at the ground, fists balled at his
sides. He drew back his aura, frowning in self-admonition at the loss of
control. He concentrated his senses and felt one of the patrol teams moving in
his direction.
“Time to go,” he said.
“Might I suggest, Mr Asano, that you seek out Mrs Remore tomorrow, in
addition to Lord Pensinata?”
“Yeah,” Jason said. The ferocity that clouded his mind had passed. “I’m
starting to think that I might have some unresolved issues.”
“I may have noticed something of the kind myself, Mr Asano.”

The patrol team reached the location where they had sensed the strange aura.
The archer, the swordswoman and the guardian specialist watched the
darkness around them while their scout hunted for the aura. She pushed out
her senses, looking for any trace. Their Adventure Society guide also kept an
eye on their surroundings.
“I’m not sensing anything,” the scout said. “It’s like it flared up and then
vanished.”
“What was it?” the team ritualist asked as he examined the ground around
them. “I’ve never felt a monster like that, but it didn’t feel like a person
either.”
“A priest, maybe,” the guardian said as he watched the moonlit terrain.
The relatively bright night and flattened terrain made watching for trouble an
easier task than it might have been. “They sometimes use divine power that
feels strange.”
“That makes sense,” the guide said. “I saw a priest of Wrath in combat
once, and he felt kind of like what we sensed. Rage, authority and
otherworldly power.”
“There’s something here,” the ritualist said, crouched over a patch of
ground. He pointed out the rocks scattered around “These rocks were moved,
and not long ago. I think they were piled over this.”
The guardian and one of the damage dealers stayed on watch while the
others gathered around.
“Some kind of filled-in tunnel,” the scout said. “You don’t think…?”
“The Builder cult lair,” the ritualist said. “I think whatever that aura
belonged to was looking for this, sensed us coming and made itself scarce.”
“Good,” the guardian said. “I’ve never felt a silver-rank aura that strong.”
“It’s probably just some ability to scare off other monsters,” the
swordswoman said. “Some kind of aura flare, more performance than
power.”
“More scared of us than we are of it,” the archer suggested.
“I’m not so sure,” the scout said. “That aura didn’t feel scared.”
“Wouldn’t that be the whole point?” the swordswoman asked. “What
kind of power to scare people off would let you know it was the scared one?”
“She’s got you there,” the guardian said.
“I don’t think assuming it’s afraid is the right move,” the scout said.
“What if the idea is to make us think that it’s gone so it can stalk and ambush
us?”
“Well, isn’t that a cheerful thought,” the ritualist said.
“We should go,” the guide said. “We’ll report this in, get someone
watching the site and see if it really is the cult lair once the sun comes up.”
“Shouldn’t we check it now?” the archer asked.
“It’s been here for a good long while now,” the ritualist said. “I don’t
think we have to worry about constructs spilling out unless we start digging
down. If we hadn’t come along, whatever we sensed might have and set off
gods know what trouble.”
“I’m worried about what that thing was,” the scout said. “It’s still out
there somewhere.”
33
ASSET

H AVING RETURNED IN THE PRE - DAWN , J ASON EMERGED FROM HIS CABIN WHEN
it was almost time for lunch.
“Oh, thank the gods you’ve come out,” Neil said, rushing up to him.
Jason narrowed his eyes, about to probe his aura to confirm his identity as
Neil continued.
“Clive made… I suppose we have to call it breakfast,” Neil lamented.
“Taika threw him into the river.”
“Taika’s only bronze rank,” Jason said with a laugh.
“He’s strong,” Neil said. “The monster surge got him pretty close to
silver. He also had the element of surprise, and Clive was very surprised.”
“We probably shouldn’t be wasting food when people are putting in so
much effort to feed people in this region.”
Jason remembered the food rationing on Earth during the monster waves
when refugees were crammed into the largest urban centres for safety. Food
production and distribution had broken down as even the smaller cities were
abandoned due to a lack of people to protect them, let alone rural areas. Jason
went for almost two years without eating anything but spirit coins.
“It was fairly basic in the first place,” Neil said. “Just cereal and bread.”
“He messed up cereal and bread?”
“It turns out that all Clive knows how to cook is eel,” Neil explained. “I
can assure you that adapting those recipes to a simple breakfast does not
work.”
Jason winced. He could sense Taika in the yacht, his aura strong and
steady. The proto-spaces and then monster waves on Earth, plus Farrah’s
training, had allowed him to rocket through the ranks, especially with being
human as an accelerating factor. Between that and the monster surge after
switching worlds, Taika had rarely seen the less hectic conditions that most
adventurers faced. His progress was faster than Jason’s, whose lower rank
progress was met with lengthy delays.
Taika’s human abilities had been replaced with outworlder ones, but
Jason had never sat down and taken a good look. He’d shared his party
interface and let Rufus and Farrah manage his training and advancement, as
they were both better teachers than Jason. Taika’s power set was very much
in line with Humphrey’s, from his role as a high-mobility brawler to his mix
of powerful and varied attack and defence options. They even shared the
might and wing essences leading to a confluence based on a mythical
creature.
In Taika’s case, it was garuda rather than Humphrey’s dragon confluence,
which made Jason wonder. Was the garuda a real creature in Pallimustus? If
so, which of the various myths, legends and RPG flying monsters was it
closest to?
“Neil,” Jason asked. “You ever heard of a garuda?”
“Sure,” Neil said. “Big flying creatures. Lots of variants, like griffins and
dragons, spread across the ranks. They aren’t real garudas, though, the way
drakes aren’t real dragons. The proper garudas are a big deal. Most of the
lesser variants fall in the silver-gold range, I’m pretty sure, but I’ve never
seen one. Never been to the right part of the world. I think Pranay might have
them.”
Pranay was a city that Jason and his team had visited after their first trip
to the Order of the Reaper’s astral space. They hadn’t left the massive urban
centre, so the only magical beasts they had seen were familiars.
“You’re thinking about Taika’s abilities?” Neil asked.
“Yeah. I’ve never really seen him in the field since he was iron rank.”
“He’s got some impressive powers. Similar to Humphrey, but he’s a
better initiator where Humphrey has the edge as a sustained attacker. You
know, with another fast and tough frontliner, and if we brought in Rufus,
we’d have a monster of a team, here.”
“Isn’t it hard to train up in a team of eight? Don’t you need to take on
larger-scale contracts, which means expeditions, which means other teams
which means more restrictions?”
“It doesn’t have to be like that. Our team is built around different
synergies. Remember when Humphrey’s sister was training us? We took that
road contract and she kept pushing us into different small group
combinations.”
“It’s an interesting idea,” Jason mused. “Mixing things up is always good
as a training exercise. You know that Rufus and Taika are only with us
temporarily, though. Rufus will go off to Greenstone, eventually, and Taika
might end up with the other Earth people. I’m going to need someone to
wrangle the pricks.”
“What makes you think they’re pricks?”
“They’re from Earth.”
“Not a lot of love for your own world, then.”
“My old world. This is my world now.”
“Well, we’re glad to have you,” Neil said, slapping Jason on the back.
“So long as you make lunch. We need to go on afternoon patrol soon, and
Belinda said that Clive was eyeing off the bread again.”
“Oh crap,” Jason said. “I’d best get on it, then.”

The base camp for Adventure Society and Magic Society activity in the area
was laid out carefully into sections, somewhere between a school campus and
a military base, but all the buildings were magical tents. The tents were
reinforced against the weather and included drainage, plumbing and other
amenities. Many were the size of full buildings, with a few even reaching as
high as four storeys. For the most part, they were all square or oblong, the
rigid frames visible under the drape of the fabric.
Jason’s team moved across the open marshalling area, although Jason’s
place in the group was taken by Rufus and Farrah. Leading them was
Vestine, their assigned Adventure Society functionary. They moved towards
a tent the size of a small aircraft hangar. It was the main vehicle pool for the
camp, managed by the Magic Society but primarily used by the Adventure
Society.
The marshalling area was a mix of adventuring teams and groups from
the two societies in charge of the camp. Some were coming and going on
foot, while others were using skimmers, making the yard’s massive size a
necessity to handle all the activity.
“This afternoon, we’re heading for the other side of the city,” Vestine told
them as they approached. “The far side of the city is the most dangerous zone
in the area. It’s where the diamond-rank monster fell, making it the most
concentrated source of the lingering power that’s drawing in the monsters.
We haven’t had a gold show up yet, but we’ve seen silvers come in very
large waves, so be ready to fall back and regroup with other teams at all
times.”
“Yesterday, you told us we wouldn’t be assigned to the far side of the
city,” Sophie pointed out.
“The situation changed overnight,” Vestine told them. “A Builder cult lair
was found and multiple teams that normally patrol the far side of the city are
currently engaging in a suppression action against lingering Builder
constructs. We had to dig our way down using rituals to access the lair, as the
access shaft had been completely sealed. There were so many rocks in there,
it wasn’t worth clearing them out, and so we dug straight through the earth.”
“I remember that ritual,” Humphrey said. “You could have warned me it
was going to spray mud everywhere, Clive.”
“It was a digging ritual in a swamp,” Clive said. “Do you want me to
warn you that dumplings are available in a dumpling shop?”
Humphrey shook his head.
“We were aware of the cult lair,” he told Vestine.
“Word gets around a camp like this very quickly,” Vestine said, her tone
disapproving. “On a related note, be aware that there is an unknown,
potentially hostile entity in the area, but we have little information on it. We
can’t even be sure if it’s a monster, magical beast or essence user. It’s
potentially a priest from one of the dark gods, so be wary. Its aura is very
distinctive, being silver rank, extremely powerful and extremely sinister.”
“I don’t suppose this entity happened to be found where the cult lair
turned out to be?” Belinda asked.
Vestine stopped walking across the marshalling yard and turned to look at
Belinda.
“Do you know something you should be reporting?”
“I’ve never known anything I should be reporting,” Belinda said. “That’s
how they get you.”
“Your patrol sensed a particular asset to which our team has access,”
Humphrey said. “It reported finding a Builder lair, but it left when it sensed a
patrol approaching. Since the patrol found the lair, we didn’t report the
discovery ourselves.”
“You’re claiming this asset found the lair. Are you trying to claim
credit?”
“We don’t care about credit,” Humphrey said. “I’m only telling you this
so you don’t have the patrol teams jumping at shadows.”
“And what is this asset of yours? Why is it a secret?”
“It’s not a secret, strictly speaking,” Humphrey told her. “Our team has
access to a certain special asset that people often find confronting, sinister or
outright evil. It’s not. But this asset is known to the Adventure Society, and
the branch in Rimaros decided to keep our asset mostly off the books. If
anyone were to go digging, contact the Adventure Society branch and ignore
their polite suggestions that you leave it alone, you’ll find the answers you’re
looking for. You can check all this for yourself, of course. I noticed the
temporary water-link chamber that’s been set up for communication,
although I know those devices are extremely resource-intensive. You likely
only use it when strictly necessary, which means that you can either take my
word for it or not.”
“The water link we have is expensive to operate,” Vestine acknowledged.
“We only use it when truly necessary. Lacking ready access to the Adventure
Society administration in Rimaros, the best solution is that you brief me and I
determine how much needs to be shared with the officials here.”
“No,” Humphrey said.
“And if I march a few teams onto that boat of yours to find out for
myself?”
“Then that would be unfortunate,” Humphrey said. “It’s always sad when
bad things happen to good people.”
“Are you threatening me, Mr Geller?”
“No, Miss Calhoun, I am not. Imagine a mysterious pit of monsters.
Imagine that anyone who manages to jump in the pit and survive will be
punished by the Adventure Society, in the unlikely event of their survival. It
is not a threat to warn someone of the dangers of the pit, Miss Calhoun. It is
well-meaning advice that, I will admit, could easily be misconstrued as an
attempt to intimidate an Adventure Society official. But I will remind you,
Miss Calhoun, that all the information concerning you about this situation
came from a single source: me. I could have said nothing, but I did you the
courtesy of warning you in the hope that you would not waste any time and
resources.”
Vestine looked at Humphrey for a long time.
“Wait here,” she said finally. “I’m going to consult with the chief official
of the camp.”
The team watched her turn and march off.
“How big a problem will this be?” Neil wondered aloud.
“Not very,” Rufus said. “The Adventure Society has many secrets. She’s
going to ask someone in camp leadership what to do, and she’ll be told to be
quiet and go along. If there’s no imminent threat, then anyone smart enough
to be left running this place with minimal oversight knows better than to buy
trouble they could avoid for free.”
“And if she decides to push?” Clive asked.
“Then they’ll use the water-link, regardless of the cost,” Farrah said. “At
which point, they will be sternly instructed to abandon their line of inquiry.
They’ll assume Geller family interference and leave us alone.”
“And you’re okay letting people think your family is engaged in
corruption?” Clive asked Humphrey.
“With politics,” Rufus said, “you need a little corruption. Just a little, or
no one else will trust you.”
“Well, that’s just backwards,” Clive said. “I’m really starting to detest
politics.”
“There are upsides,” Sophie said, bumping her hip against Humphrey. “I
like it when you go all officious and stern.” Her voice then turned to a low
whisper. “You want to get out of here?”
“No!” Humphrey said, stepping away from her. “This is not the time. Or
the place. Or the circumstance.”
Sophie’s expression turned vulnerable and hurt.
“So,” she said, her voice a trembling whisper, “you don’t really like me?”
“What?” Humphrey asked, taken aback. “Of course I do.”
“It doesn’t sound like you do.”
“It’s not that! I just…”
The tension in his bunched-up shoulders relaxed as he gave her a flat,
admonishing look.
“…realised that you’re teasing me. Do we have to have the talk about
professionalism again? There is a professional space and a personal space,
and you shouldn’t be bringing the personal space out on the job.”
“There are lots of things you shouldn’t do on the job,” Belinda
interjected. “You shouldn’t steal your Adventure Society guide’s watch.”
“Lindy,” Humphrey asked through gritted teeth, “did you just steal her
watch?”
“No,” Belinda said, the picture of innocence. “I didn’t just steal her
watch.”
34
T H E T H I N G YO U P R A C T I S E W IT H T H E M O S T

I T WAS RAINING AGAIN AS A LAND SKIMMER MOVED OVER THE RUBBLE THAT
was once a city. It hovered only a metre over the ground, but that was enough
to float over almost every part of the city’s inland reaches. A few buildings,
once magically reinforced strongholds, had left remnants in the form of a
partial wall or two.
“This side of the city was where the shockwave hit after the astral space
was taken,” Vestine said. She was driving the skimmer but had been quiet for
most of the trip from the camp. Many adventurers had secrets, but when she
stumbled on them, she did not like being told to back off. That she very much
had been.
“That pond seems strange,” Rufus said, pointing out a large body of
water. “It’s an odd shape, and doesn’t fit with the surroundings.”
They weren’t going through a park that might be expected to have such a
pond. Despite the city’s annihilation, the original location of roads could be
determined from the relative lack of rubble, and the pond crossed multiple of
them.
“It’s an indent left behind by the diamond-rank monster,” Vestine
explained as she redirected the skimmer to run along the shore. “The monster
rampaged through this part of the city, but most of the damage was covered
up. The shockwave turned a damaged city into a levelled one. That
indentation was one of the few signs that remained, and it was filled in by the
rains.”
“So, this is where the monster fell?” Neil asked. “It was big enough to
leave a crater that big when it died?”
“The monster didn’t die here,” Vestine told him. “That’s a footprint.”
Amos and Jason were floating just above the deck, cross-legged in meditative
poses. They were on the training deck as it was raining heavily outside.
“What I am going to show you is the method of expanding your senses
without your aura alerting the senses of others,” Amos said in one of the
longest sentences Jason had heard him speak. Amos was taciturn by nature,
but Jason was learning he didn’t fetishise silence, not hesitating to speak
when it was called for.
“You are already familiar with retracting your aura,” Amos said, “but that
retracts your senses as well. You need to learn how to mask your aura’s
presence without withdrawing it. You have aura stealth techniques?”
“I have one I’ve developed,” Jason said. “Partly, it’s retracting my aura,
but I have more subtle methods as well. One that I’m proud of lets me blend
into crowds by adapting my aura to those of the people around me, and
incorporating subtle aura suppression to make the perceptions of others pass
over me. Basically, I can make people ignore me if there are other people
around.”
Amos nodded and unfolded his legs, dropping them to the floor he had
been floating over.
“We’ll go to the camp,” Amos said. “You can show me.”

While Jason was aura training, his team moved beyond the city ruins. The
wall that had once held off monsters was now just a demarcation line
between city and jungle, no taller than a speed bump. The jungle itself was
little better off than the city, with trees uprooted and scattered like dandelion
blossoms. Despite the flattened jungle, this was not the area designated the
destruction zone.
They arrived at the official destruction zone, where the astral space
aperture had been, it was clear why this place had earned the name. It was a
crater, but not a concave in the ground. It looked more like someone had
attempted to replicate the Grand Canyon with a giant cake tin, creating a
circular hole that stretched kilometres across and hundreds of metres deep.
The skimmer stopped and the team disembarked, lining up along the edge
of the crater. It was a neat and round hole, with a dark green, glassy surface.
The rounded wall and flat floor were polished-marble smooth, but scattered
with debris. Rocks, trees and massive clumps of earth lay on the floor, along
with what was left of animals and magical beasts devoured by monsters. It
was large enough that, in spite of the rain, the water collected inside was not
deep enough to consider it flooded, but merely wet.
“That is a big hole,” Neil said. “What does it count as? A canyon? A
crater?”
“To think that this is only a fraction of the size it would have been outside
of a monster surge,” Clive said, shaking his head in wonder. “If not for the
damaged dimensional membrane, this could have covered ten times the area.”
“It makes me think of the astral space you stopped the Builder from
taking near Greenstone,” Rufus said. “If you hadn’t, I’d be dead, along with
everyone else in Greenstone and every desert village and delta town around
it. This place shows just how great the deed you all did that day was.”
“Well, it wouldn’t have affected me,” Farrah said. “I was already dead.”
“You were dead?” Vestine asked, turning to look at her.
“For about a year,” Farrah told her.
“Then how are you alive now?”
“I know a guy.”
“What does that mean?”
“We know a guy who views death as less of an end than as a hobby,”
Farrah told her. “We’re not really meant to talk about it, though.”
“Like that asset of yours.”
“Exactly,” Farrah said. “The asset is something he left behind.”
“It’s horrifying to think that this has happened all over the world,”
Humphrey said.
“Most of the Builder cult’s attempts to steal astral spaces were stopped,”
Vestine said. “But most isn’t all. We were lucky here, in that we managed to
evacuate the bulk of the population. The explosion erased a town and
flattened several villages, but their people had left for fortress towns long
before, thankfully. There are places where people had it much worse.” She
spat aggressively over the edge. “You’re all moving south from Rimaros,
right?”
“That’s right,” Sophie said.
“Did some guy really convince the Builder to leave early?”
“That’s what we heard,” Belinda said.
“Well, why did he take so long?” Vestine asked angrily. “We lost
everything here. Our homes. Our pride. We might have saved most of the
people, but we still lost many lives.”
“You lived here?” Humphrey asked Vestine, who nodded.
“I wasn’t just stationed here,” she said. “I grew up here. It was my city.
And now they’re saying that they might not even rebuild it.”
“I can’t even begin to imagine,” Humphrey said. “I won’t even try. I’ve
never been through what you have. Lost not just a home, but the home of
everyone I know. Whole communities. All I can say is that I’m sorry.”
Vestine turned and marched towards the skimmer.
“You’ve seen it now,” she said bitterly. “We need to get back on patrol.”

“Are you sure about this?” Jason asked Amos as they stood on the dock at the
outer edge of the busy base camp. “There are a lot of silver-rankers here, and
if they notice a cook wandering around under a sophisticated stealth
technique, it’ll draw attention that we don’t want.”
“Do you lack confidence in your ability?”
“No, I’m quite proud of the ability. It’s probably the most intricate in
execution that I have, and it was self-developed. But it’s designed to help me
pass unnoticed through crowds of lower-ranked people, not to fool people of
my own rank. I’ve got it to the point that it can, if they’re not paying
attention, but if they are, the technique will draw attention rather than deflect
it. It’s not a matter of confidence; it’s about the right tool for the right job.”
“Good,” Amos said.
“Good?”
“Your aura manipulation skills are barely adequate, but at least you
understand the value in cultivating a breadth of nuanced techniques, even if
you haven’t, yet.”
“Barely adequate?”
“The greater the potential, the greater the expectations should be to fulfil
that potential.”
“I think I get it,” Jason said, still frowning over ‘barely adequate.’ “My
skills are well above the silver-rank standard, but every rank scales, not just
in power but the proficiency of those considered to be the best. The ones
living up to their potential. You’re saying that if I want to be great instead of
just good once I hit gold rank, I need to push the limits of my capabilities.”
“Good, instead of adequate,” Amos corrected. “Master the basics before
you start claiming greatness.”
“Aim low, got it,” Jason said. “This is why Dawn came to you
specifically, isn’t it? She knew you could get me ready for the future, at least
in this regard.”
“Yes. Now, show me your technique.”
“But what if some silver-ranker pulls me up?”
“Then use the thing you practise with the most.”
“What’s that?”
“Your mouth.”
“I can’t tell if that’s an insult or a compliment. Probably a bit of both,
now that I think about it. Actually, examining it further, I’m increasingly
impressed at the nuance you managed to incorporate into a simple statement
and the way you both layered meaning and prompted a more in-depth
exploration of the ramifications of your—”
Amos flicked Jason on the forehead.
“Ow!”
“Aura technique, not mouth technique.”
“You just said—”
Amos flicked him again, his gold-rank reflexes too much for Jason, even
though he was watching for it.
“You’re training an essence user, not a dog,” Jason pointed out, rubbing
his forehead.
Amos responded only with a flat look.
“Fine,” Jason grumbled as he set out into the camp, initiating his aura
technique. “Woof bloody woof.”

As Vestine had promised, the inland side of the city was more active in terms
of monster activity. Humphrey and the others soon found themselves working
alongside Korinne and her team, as well as one more group, in wiping out a
massive pack of silver-rank monsters.
Arc lizards were among the weakest of silver-rank monsters, individually.
Alone, they were weaker than upper-tier bronze-rank monsters, making them
a popular choice when high-rankers were curating battles for their bronze-
rank trainees. As such, the local adventurers all had experience fighting them
in small numbers.
An arc lizard looked like a cobalt-blue iguana, with a rough, milky white
crystal emerging from its back. Their only real form of attack was an arc of
lightning they could shoot from the crystal, but it wasn’t dangerous to a
silver-ranker. Even bronze-rankers didn’t have to be too worried if they were
prepared and careful or had solid defensive abilities.
The problem with dealing with arc lizards was that they never manifested
alone and they became exponentially more dangerous in number. Their
electrical arcs could jump from one to another, growing in strength with each
link in the chain, even splitting once they grew powerful enough. Too many
arc lizards gathered in one place became very dangerous indeed.
Arc lizards were monsters that commonly spawned in this part of the
world, and were normally a negligible threat. During a monster surge,
however, they spawned in greater numbers than normal—often much greater.
This meant that arc lizards went from a minor threat into a major problem,
and while the monster surge was over, some monsters had appeared in
wilderness areas and were still finding their way to population centres.
Unlike short-lived iron-rank monsters, those of silver rank could easily last
until the next surge, if not dealt with in the interim.
With multiple packs of arc lizards congregating, they posed a major threat
to the three teams sent to eliminate them. The key was to strike hard, strike
fast and deliver definitive damage. The earliest parts of the battle were most
dangerous, with the lizards at their strongest. The healers on each team
proved their mettle in the face of the prolific and powerful attacks, although
the teams had gone in prepared.
Knowing what they were going to confront, their Adventure Society
guides had prepared potions to resist electricity for each of the teams. Even
so, the potions only went so far in the face of multitudinous powerful attacks,
which overwhelmed magical shields and burnt through armour to scorch
flesh. Only as their numbers reduced did the attacks of the lizards diminish in
potency, making things easier after the harrowing start to the battle.
Korinne’s team was the unquestionable star of the show, clearing out
enemies faster than either of the other teams. Their specialisation was built
around a pair of high-damage members with the rest of the team assembled
around maximising their effectiveness. This made them something of a
reflection of the lizards themselves as they focused all their efforts on
unleashing powerful attacks. They even used the same chain lightning, with
Kalif firing electric arrows that split and split, amplifying their power with
each enemy struck.

“You’d think that electric arrows would be a bad choice against electric
monsters,” Sophie said as the teams rested in the aftermath of the battle.
“Silver rank is where power sets start to cover their own weaknesses,”
Farrah explained. “Take mine, for example. I have an ability called Child of
Fire that helps me penetrate resistance to heat and fire, and even affect things
that are immune. I’ll need to be higher rank before I start burning fire
elementals to death, but I’ll get there.”
“The same goes for me,” Humphrey said. “I don’t use fire as much as
Farrah, but my Dragon Might aura transforms my regular fire into dragon
fire, which is much more effective.”
“It’s the same for anything,” Farrah said. “Korinne’s lightning is the
same, I imagine, but look at Jason: he can make a golem bleed now.”
“This is part of what makes essence users stronger than those with
inherent magic,” Rufus said. “With so many powers, our abilities have
breadth and synergy, but they also grow to cover our weaknesses. Very few
of those with inherent magic can compare to a high-rank essence user. Of
those that come close, it usually requires years of training and practise.”
“Like the blood magic of the intelligent troll tribes,” Clive said. “Even
then, they’re mostly working with variant ritual magic. That’s hard to use
practically in combat; take it from a combat ritualist.”

Korinne’s team were having their own discussion of the battle’s context.
“I don’t see what’s so special about their team that we need to follow
them around and learn things,” Polix said. “We showed them up today.”
“This isn’t the fight we need to learn from them in,” Korinne said. “This
battle was exactly the right kind of fight for us. A simple, if powerful, enemy
in a large group setting. I hope you noticed how the other teams saw that we
were the cornerstone of the group and pivoted their strategies to let us work
uninterrupted. They shepherded the lizards away from us so we could
maintain our offence without needing to beat back counterattacks.”
“That’s what I’m saying,” Polix said. “They are the ones who saw that we
were the stronger team.”
“Polix,” Korinne said, “you need to listen to everything I say, not just the
parts you agree with. We were strong today because it was our kind of fight.
What Geller’s team has is experience with things going wrong and working
just as a team, instead of as part of a group expedition.”
“The difference between adventuring approaches in Rimaros and
Vitesse,” Rosa said.
Polix groaned. “I’m sick of hearing arguments about one being better
than the other,” he complained. “It’s obvious.”
“I thought so myself,” Korinne said. “I was taught that the Rimaros way
is the superior option as well, but I’ve been discussing this with Orin’s uncle
since we came along on this journey. He pushed me to look past my own
biases.”
“You talked with Lord Amos?” Kalif asked. “Did he use words? With his
mouth?”
“He’s not a mute, Kalif,” Korinne said. “He just doesn’t believe in talking
when it isn’t necessary. An all-too-rare virtue.”
“What did he say about the difference between adventuring in Rimaros
and Vitesse?” Rosa asked.
“He told me that it’s a difference in wider doctrine,” Korinne explained.
“The Sea of Storms and its surrounding region has massive tracts of
undeveloped jungle and deep water. Vast leviathans and whole colonies of
monsters can disappear for decades, often finding one another and grouping
up before they ever move on a populated area. Because of this, the threats
encountered in this region are massive, like this pack of arc lizards. As such,
adventuring doctrine in this part of the world accommodates the nature of
those threats by putting a large emphasis on multi-team expeditions. And
when people work together but in multiple teams, it makes sense that each
team has a speciality.”
“You’re saying that it’s the Vitesse approach, but scaled up?” Kalif
asked. “Instead of a team where the individual members do their own thing,
we have expeditions where each team does its own thing.”
“Precisely,” Korinne said. “Vitesse is a much more developed region,
which means the monster detection coverage is more comprehensive. Threats
building up in the wilderness before being detected is rare, so teams are much
more likely to operate independently, and there are even people that work
alone. They don’t have other teams to cover them while they focus on just
one thing. They have to rely on themselves, which means they need the
ability to adapt. Working with another team that covers their weakness isn’t
an option. They have to be able to cover their own, even if that comes at the
cost of focus.”
“I don’t see the point,” Polix said. “If the threat is smaller, then our teams
can just kill it before it does anything tricky with our overwhelming power.
No versatility required.”
“And that attitude,” Korinne said, “is the exact reason we need to follow
them around and learn things.”
35
J U S T T O P R OV E YO U C O U LD

“N OPE ,” G ARY SAID AS B ELINDA APPROACHED HIM IN THE YACHT ’ S DINING


and barge lounge. He was sprawled back in a chair reading a book with a
mug on the table beside him, steam rising from the piping hot contents. His
vantage allowed him to look out as the hover yacht proceeded down the river
toward its next destination.
“You don’t even know what I’m going to ask,” Belinda complained.
“I’m not making you another set of lock picks.”
“Alright,” she conceded, “you apparently do know what I was going to
ask.”
“Well, don’t bother,” Gary said, not looking away from his book. “The
answer is no.”
“Why not?”
“Because I know who broke them and under what circumstances.”
“I can explain that.”
“You tried to steal Amos Pensinata’s watch,” Gary told her. “The only
thing you need to explain was what was going through your head that made it
seem like a good idea.”
“I wanted the challenge.”
“And you got the challenge,” Sophie said, walking in. “Then you got the
consequences.”
“What’s this about?” Humphrey asked, having come in with Sophie.
“Lindy tried to steal Lord Pensinata’s watch,” Gary said.
“It was a bit of fun,” Belinda complained. “And his response was
disproportional. I was going to give it back, not smash it.”
“How did he even end up breaking your lock picks when you were trying
to take a pocket watch?” Humphrey asked.
“Most high-end magical clothes have protections against it,” Lindy said.
“They aren’t hard to negate, in most cases, but some clothes makers are
different and know what they’re doing.”
“You learn to recognise the clothes of designers who cater primarily to
adventurers.” Sophie said. “And aristocrats who like wearing outfits from
designers that cater to adventurers.”
“If your target is wearing an Alejandro Albericci suit in Rimaros, or a
Gilbert Bertinelli suit in Greenstone,” Belinda said, “it’s time to bring the tool
kit.”
“Shouldn’t you just go for an easier mark?” Gary asked.
“Or no mark at all?” Humphrey suggested.
“Yes,” Sophie said. “Lindy, this new habit of yours is going to get you in
trouble.”
“It already has,” Jason said as he arrived with the rest of the team, plus
most of the yacht’s occupants. Travis, Taika, Rufus and Farrah, plus Estella
and Vidal Ladiv, were all present, although Amos was not. Korinne, Carlos
and Arabelle had also joined from their respective vehicles. The dining
lounge occupied most of the yacht’s largest deck with space enough to
accommodate them all comfortably. There were enough plush seats and
couches to go around, even without Jason reconfiguring the space to remove
the dining and bar areas.
“What do you mean by saying it already has me in trouble?” Belinda
asked Jason warily. “I don’t think you’re talking about having my lock picks
smashed. Which he had to search me for, by the way.”
“I don’t control your actions off this boat,” Jason told her. “That’s for the
team leader to do.”
“Stop stealing things,” Humphrey added, no amusement in his growl.
“But while you live on this boat,” Jason continued, “there are rules. I
don’t actively monitor you all to check if you’re breaking them, but Shade
does.”
“No one told me about the rules,” Neil said.
“That’s because he’s making them up as he goes,” Sophie said.
“I prefer to describe it as actively learning about boundaries together,”
Jason said. “But yes, I’m making them up as I go. And now we have our first
hard rule: no one on this boat steals from anyone else on this boat.”
“It was more like a game,” Belinda argued.
“I have a lot of games, Lindy,” Jason said. “They were left to me by a
friend of mine. None of them involve involuntary and unknowing
participation. Admittedly, some have roll-and-move mechanics, which is
arguably worse.”
“Try and stay on topic,” Farrah suggested.
“Sorry, yes,” Jason said. “So, Belinda, for violating the rules of the ship
—”
“That I didn’t know existed,” Belinda cut in.
“Lindy, don’t steal is always a rule,” Clive said. “You can’t plead
ignorance on that one.”
“For violating the ship rules,” Jason continued, “your cabin will be set to
winter climate settings for a week.”
“What are winter climate settings?” Belinda asked.
“Full insulation,” Jason said. “Drawing in as much heat as it can from
outside and letting none of it out.”
“Are you kidding?” Belinda asked. “We’re cruising down a tropical
jungle river in summer.”
“You’re silver rank; you’ll be fine,” Sophie told her. “Have you already
forgotten some of the places we lived? The places we hid out? Are you
unwilling to put up with anything but luxury anymore?”
“Extremely unwilling!”
“Also, Belinda,” Jason added, “your shower will only work for four
minutes a day.”
“Oh, come on.”
“And you can’t access the ship’s crystal wash supply.”
“Now you’re just being vindictive.”
“And the furniture will all replicate plain wood.”
Belinda’s section of couch turned into an unpadded, straight-backed
wooden bench. Sophie next to her was still on soft cloud material.
“What next?” Belinda asked. “Are you going to cut me off from food and
make me eat spirit coins for a week?”
“Not yet,” Jason said. “I’m reserving certain options for repeat
offenders.”
“You, Jason Asano, are a tyrant,” Belinda said as if she wasn’t already
planning to hoard food just in case.
“So Dominion keeps telling me,” Jason complained, shaking his head. “I
hate that guy.”
Vidal, their Adventure Society liaison, narrowed his eyes and asked Jason
a hesitant question. “Do you talk with him enough that it comes up a lot?”
“No, but every time I see him or one of his priests, they always smugly
imply that he’s happy with my progress on the path to iron-fisted autocrat.”
“Because you are,” Belinda said.
“How about we shift the topic to our next destination?” Humphrey said.
“Miss Warnock, what did you learn in the course of investigating the town?”
“That we should probably accelerate our progress and not bother with the
towns and villages in this region.”
“Oh?” Humphrey said. “They don’t have a lot to offer us?”
“No,” Estella confirmed. “More importantly, we don’t have a lot to offer
them. From what I learned, they are all in more or less the same state, which
is too many people and not enough resources. A lot of places that would
normally see minimal damage during the monster surge were wiped out
entirely. Between the length and the severity of the surge, many people
returned to find entire towns that were levelled to the ground. They were
forced to turn around and go back to the fortress towns they had just left, or
to other towns that weren’t as hard-hit. Add that to the refugees from Cartise
who fled the city before its destruction and every place still standing is
overflowing with people.”
“They’ll need protection from monsters, though, right?” Taika asked.
“One thing they aren’t short of is adventurers,” Rufus said. He, Gary and
Farrah had accompanied Estella in her forward scouting. “Cartise had a lot of
adventurers who are now protecting the fortress towns.”
“I think we all saw the same was true, even at Cartise,” Humphrey said.
“The Adventure Society had supplied no shortage of adventurers, so while
they were happy to use us, they weren’t desperate for our services. I think
they were more appreciative of Jason and Vidal’s efforts, frankly.”
While Jason was playing butcher and/or cook, Vidal had lent his
administrative expertise to the logistical efforts of distributing food and
resources through the region.
“Circumstances are similar throughout this region, based on everything
I’ve heard,” Estella said. “What these places need is more of what Jason and
Mr Ladiv were doing; people who can help with resources and logistics, not
combat specialists.”
“We do have some of that, between us,” Humphrey said. “Maybe not
enough to be worth the trouble, though. We’d get in the way as much as
help.”
“Stella is right,” Farrah said. “The things we can do, those people don’t
need. We should just hit the road and stay there until we find people who do
need a boatload of adventurers.”
“It would be nice to get far enough from Rimaros that I don’t have to be
so careful,” Jason said. “Even with what little I’ve done here, it wouldn’t take
that much poking around to put the pieces together. The biggest advantage is
that no one cares that much.”
“The people here just want things to get sorted out with as little extra
trouble as possible,” Humphrey said.
“I do have one cunning plan, should I get caught out and need to convince
someone I’m not me,” Jason said.
“I may regret asking this,” Neil said, “but—”
“Then don’t ask,” Humphrey told him. “Please don’t ask.”
“Okay, now you have to ask,” Gary said.
“I hate this so much,” Humphrey grumbled, leaning forward and looking
at the floor as he shook his head.
“Jason,” Neil said, “what exactly is this cunning plan of yours?”
“I can just tell people I’m my own evil twin.”
“What?” Rufus asked, voicing a confusion that was reflected on the
group’s faces. Another Jason came in, this one with a moustache. He stood
next to the original Jason, who took out a bushy fake moustache and affixed
it to his top lip. Then both Jasons flung out their arms like they’d just finished
a performance and were waiting for applause.
“I don’t get it,” Carlos said. “This is your shape-shifting familiar, is it not,
Master Geller? Is your familiar meant to be evil?”
“He didn’t mean literally an evil twin,” Travis said. “It’s a story trope
from our world that probably should have been explained for context.”
“Oh, he did a Jason,” Clive said. “I’m with you now.”
“What do you mean, ‘a Jason?’” Jason asked.
“A Jason,” Neil explained, “is where someone says some nonsense with
no expectation that anyone will understand it because the people they’re
talking to lack the cultural context to be able to. It’s oratorial masturbation.”
“Masturbation is kind of my th—”
Jason put a hand over Stash’s mouth to muffle it, then handed him a
biscuit. Stash turned into a moustachioed African swallow and carried it off,
flying out a window that turned to mist briefly as he passed through.
“Look what you did,” Jason scolded Neil. “Stash is a pure and precious
boy, and you’ve tainted his mind with filth.”
“Lady Pescos,” Humphrey said quietly to Korinne, leaning closer to his
fellow team leader. “Is your team, by any chance, accepting applications to
join?”
“Is this how your team operates?” Korinne asked him.
“Yeah, pretty much,” Neil said.
“I’d call it a standard team meeting,” Clive agreed.
“How do you get anything done?” Korinne asked.
“Dashing heroics?” Jason suggested.
“How about we put aside Jason and any idea he’s ever had for a
moment,” Humphrey said, “and return to our actual agenda of determining
our next move. Miss Warnock, you’ve pointed out what we should avoid, but
do you have any suggestion for what we should do?”
“Actually, yes,” Estella said. “I talked with a few Adventure Society
officials and it seems that while their resources are understandably being
deployed to the regions worst affected by the monster surge, it’s left a minor
shortfall of adventurers in areas where the damage was less severe. These
areas still need to deal with the monsters left from the surge, though, so the
arrival of some temporary assistance would be very welcome.”
“You’re suggesting we skip over the areas in this region swiftly and head
straight for lesser-affected ones?” Humphrey asked.
“It’s not out of our way,” Estella said. “It just means going past a few
towns instead of stopping.”
“They aren’t great places to resupply anyway,” Rufus said. “These towns
won’t have anything to spare unless we start bribing people, and then we’re
just hurting those who would have gotten what we take.”
“Not only does this plan avoid the chaotic and overpopulated messes that
all the local towns are reported to be,” Estella said, “but we’ll find locations
where your team will be a welcome arrival.”
“I like it,” Jason said. “Let’s plot out some new destinations and I’ll give
them to Shade.”
“Jason.”
“Yes, Humphrey?”
“Take off the fake moustache.”
“Belinda,” Humphrey said, catching her alone on the side deck outside her
now-stifling cabin. He put up a privacy screen so no one would overhear. He
joined her in leaning against the railing, looking out over the river. There was
still plenty of other traffic, moving supplies between the hard-hit towns.
“Is this the part where you give me the serious talk about not stealing
things?” Belinda asked wearily. “Instead of Jason turning it into a comedy
show?”
“Yeah,” Humphrey said. “This is that part. He always gets to be the fun
one.”
“I suppose you have a speech about how this is hurting me more than the
team?”
“No, it’s definitely going to hurt the team more,” Humphrey said. “I get
that you’re revelling in a freedom that you never thought you would have
before becoming an adventurer. But when you and Sophie agreed to join us,
that came with a caveat. Namely, that the consequences of your actions now
fall on all of us, not just yourself.”
“I don’t think Sophie ever really wanted to be like me,” Belinda said.
“She always stood out. I mean, she always looked like she does, but she was
far from the only beautiful girl on those streets. It was her attitude that drove
creeps like Cole Silva and Lucian Lamprey to obsess over her. She’s always
had this… nobility to her, even under all the crime and the violence. They
wanted to tame her, like a prize animal. Crush that defiance out of her, to
prove they could.”
Humphrey bowed his head, saying nothing.
“I think she was always meant for someone like you,” Belinda continued.
“I have a hard time thinking of anyone else good enough to deserve her.
Which you don’t, by the way. You’re just the best we could find.”
Humphrey turned to look at Belinda with narrowed eyes.
“Lindy, are you—”
“It doesn’t matter what I am,” she said, cutting him off. “Things are the
way they are.”
Humphrey let out a sigh and they stood together, watching the water go
by for a long time.
“You’ve got more speech,” Belinda said finally. “I know you do.”
Humphrey nodded.
“You’ve been stealing things, just to prove you could,” he said, Belinda
flinching as her own words were used against her. “If you keep doing things
like this, it’s going to hurt our reputations and get us all demoted. I won’t let
that happen. But even if I managed to remove you from the team, that would
irrevocably break it. We both know that Sophie will leave with you instead of
staying with me, even if she disagrees with what you’ve been doing.”
“It’s not that bad.”
“Not yet,” Humphrey said softly. “But if you keep putting fissures in this
team, they will widen until one day it breaks. Clive would go with Jason, to
whatever his next descent into dimensional absurdity is. I would too. We
might be able to rope in Rufus and Farrah. We’d need to find a new healer.
Neil has had his team break apart on him before, and I suspect that if it
happens a second time, he’ll give up on adventuring. A good silver-rank
healer will have plenty of opportunities, especially with the Church of the
Healer backing him.”
“Damn,” Belinda said. “Stop talking about the team falling apart like it’s
a set deal.”
“I’m not worried about the team falling apart. I’m worried about it
breaking apart. I’m the team leader, Lindy. That means more than just failing
to keep Jason on-topic in group discussions. It means that I have to look to
the future, to the dangers that we can’t fight off with swords and magic. Your
behaviour threatens to become the most existential danger to our team.
Maybe not now, but somewhere down the line.”
“You’re overstating it.”
“Am I? What happens when you play the wrong game at the wrong time
on the wrong person? The team gets blowback at a time when we need to be
discreet, or what passes for it on this team. What happens when we let what
you’re doing slide and the thrill isn’t there anymore? Are you going to
escalate? Bigger jobs, more challenging targets? You could get all our society
memberships revoked.”
“They are never going to pull your or Jason’s memberships.”
Humphrey’s hand came down on the railing hard enough that it broke,
turning into mist before reforming back into its original shape.
“Belinda, listen to yourself. You’re talking about the Adventure Society
refusing to revoke a third of the team’s memberships. Is that what you want it
to come to?”
“Hey, you brought all this up. And what about Jason? He’s been doing
insane stuff since forever.”
“Jason and I had discussions like this when we first met and neither of us
knew how flimsy our principles were before the winds of practical reality.
But since we formed this team, Jason has always kept the team in mind. Yes,
he might have some wild ideas, but he’s learned to pull back when we tell
him he needs to. He trusts us for that, and that’s all I’m asking for here,
Belinda. Trust us.”
“I don’t know what you expect me to say,” Belinda said. “Am I meant to
break down and admit my mistakes in the face of your wisdom? That’s not
how it works.”
“I know,” Humphrey said. “I just need you to think about things. About
your team and what you want your place in it to be. Maybe talk to Arabelle.
She knows how to listen without having any personal stake in our team.”
Belinda gave Humphrey a side glance before returning her eyes to the
river.
“I’ll think about it,” she said.
36
A M AT T E R O F W H AT YO U WA NT

T HE CONVOY LEFT THE RIVER , PASSING BY SEVERAL TOWNS ON THEIR WAY TO


the coast. From there, they followed the coast roads for the most part, but
they increasingly needed to find alternatives. Compared to the excellent road
network maintained by the Storm Kingdom, these were not as wide or well-
maintained as those to the north. Sometimes, the hefty hover yacht needed to
float over the rainforest canopy. Other times, they would ride along the
beach, skim over a bay or take to the water, running under a shoreline of
cliffs.
Jason found the variety to be welcome. Their progress was not fast, but if
they needed that, they could have simply flown. Jason enjoyed the days of
travel as the team interspersed training with the simple joys of luxury travel.
They spent large amounts of time on the roof deck for both, especially as they
left the monsoon rains behind in their continuing journey south. Jungle and
rainforest continued to dominate the terrain, but they escaped the worst of the
oppressive humidity.
Delays were made for day trips. If they spotted an interesting mountain,
they would often pause to climb it. They explored town markets and misty
gorges; even the urbanite Belinda, sullen from her punishment, was unable to
keep from enjoying herself. Only Korinne managed to maintain a frown on
the leisurely expeditions, muttering ‘traitors’ and ‘mutiny.’ The rest of her
team were utterly won over by the relaxed approach of Team Biscuit.
Towns and villages started welcoming their arrival. Less resource-
starved, their main issue was keeping up with remnant surge monsters
wandering out of the wilderness. The overworked local adventurers were
grateful for the relief that two elite teams brought. After several welcome
receptions, Jason and Humphrey were up on the roof deck, watching the
latest town seem to shrink as the convoy pulled away.
“We’re doing alright,” Humphrey said, “but the extra monsters from the
surge are starting to thin out. We’re running into the reason most adventurers
find their advancement slowing down after reaching silver. It’s harder to find
regular challenges, which makes other interests all the more enticing.”
The teams led by Humphrey and Korinne were having no trouble with the
monster packs they encountered, as both teams were elite. Only the most
powerful of silver-rank monsters posed any real threat, so both groups had
started using only parts of their rosters for individual encounters.
“You want to change things up?” Jason asked. He too felt the urge to
push his abilities forward, and not just because Dawn had told him to. His
advancement had been stagnant since long before his return from Earth, and
the monster surge had only done so much to help. He’d spent large portions
of it in recovery.
Jason was conflicted, however, as he was quite enjoying their current
pace. Travelling around in luxury, helping people who very much needed it.
It was the adventuring life Rufus had promised him all the way back in
Greenstone, and it didn’t disappoint. Humphrey was fully aware of those
feelings on Jason’s part, making him hesitant to suggest a change.
“I don’t want to push you,” Humphrey said. “But I think we both know
what we need to do to find a greater challenge. I know you’ve been looking
forward to this travelling for a long time, though, and I’m not looking to get
you caught up in larger messes all over again.”
“I appreciate that,” Jason said, “but I’m also past ready to push my
powers to new heights. These contracts for silver-rank monsters aren’t
enough. Only a few of them have posed any real challenge at all; not enough
to go around if we want the team to grow stronger, let alone the other team.
But we aren’t ready to go hunting gold-rank monsters either. Not unless it’s a
matchup in our favour, and the Adventure Society won’t let a group of silver-
rankers pick and choose gold-rank contracts.”
They were both aware they could likely finagle special treatment by
leveraging the Geller name and Jason’s unusual status with the Adventure
Society, but neither man suggested it. They both wanted to move away from
politics and do some good, honest adventuring work.
“You know that even if we try and act like any other adventuring team, it
probably won’t work out that way,” Humphrey said. “It never does with you.
Once we start taking contracts related to the messengers, this may well
escalate.”
“If it does, it does,” Jason said. “We were always going to have to go
after the messengers, sooner or later. Sooner, really; I need to get something
from them. Now that the surge is over, I have a job to do, and it’s become
more complicated now that I don’t have the magic tools from the Builder and
the World-Phoenix. I need the advanced astral magic from the messengers to
finish building the bridge between worlds.”
“Clive will be happy,” Humphrey said. “I’m bringing it up now because
there’s something in Estella’s latest report. She just got back this morning.”
Estella was taking her job seriously. She spent a lot of time away from the
convoy, roaming ahead to investigate their upcoming destinations. She spied
potential threats, scouted potential opportunities and gave an overall
assessment of the value of any given stop. Estella delivered an initial report
to Humphrey and Korinne before making a broader presentation to the full
teams.
“Messenger activity?”
“Reports of,” Humphrey said. “Maybe two days out of our way, at our
current sedate pace. A little way inland, in a magic zone at the high silver
level. Even discounting the messengers, we should get stronger silver-rank
monsters there. The occasional gold, although I wouldn’t expect us to scoop
those contracts up. The locals will get priority there.”
“What kinds of activity?”
“Estella didn’t get much, since she was working with third-hand
information. There’s a small holy army in the area, though. Goddess of
Knowledge.”
“Worth finding out more, at the very least,” Jason said. “How about I
notify the teams for Estella’s briefing, and we can discuss taking the detour?”
“Very well,” Humphrey agreed. “Let’s go hunt some messengers.”

Following Estella’s presentation, Korinne’s team returned to their vehicle


while Humphrey’s went off to pursue their own activities, elsewhere in the
yacht. Korinne remained behind in the briefing room to talk with Humphrey.
“Do you object to a course that brings us into conflict with the
messengers?” Humphrey asked.
“No. Given the choice, I’m confident that we would make the same one
you have. My only issue is that we weren’t given the choice. The thing I like
the least in this arrangement is that our team lacks self-determination. We are
stuck following you around.”
“I understand,” Humphrey told her. “But while I’m willing to hear you
out on any issue, I won’t surrender any amount of authority to you and your
team. You are, ultimately, passengers. Passengers we will accommodate as
we can, but decline when we can’t.”
“Or won’t.”
“Or won’t,” Humphrey conceded.

Farrah found the white archway leading to Jason’s soul space on the yacht’s
bridge, beside the door connecting the bridge to Jason’s cabin. She stepped
through and felt Jason’s aura wash over her. It did the same on the yacht, but
here, it didn’t feel like an external force. It was more part of the fabric of the
world around her, as inherent as the gravity holding her to the ground. The
archway deposited her in an open square, amidst estate buildings centred on a
towering pagoda.
“You’ve been spending a lot of time in here lately,” she said, despite
being alone.
“Just when I’m doing my meditation training,” Jason said, suddenly
standing next to her. “When I’m not doing specific exercises because of
Amos anyway. I’m still coming to grips with this place and what I can do
with it, and I’m chasing something specific, at the moment.”
“Oh?”
He gestured, she nodded, and they started walking. They left the square
and entered the sprawling gardens of Jason’s soul space.
“I’ve barely touched on what the astral throne and the astral gate are
capable of,” he told her. “I need more power before I can truly tap into them,
especially the astral gate.”
“Didn’t Dawn tell you to leave the astral gate alone for now?”
“And I have been. Mostly. I’m concentrating on the astral throne, for the
moment. I’ve come to realise that I’m going to need time as much as I need
power. There is so much to learn about the nature of these items and what I
can do with them.”
“Do they affect anything outside of this soul space?”
“Yes,” Jason said. “My spirit domains—the regions on Earth and
anything I make with the cloud yacht—are directly affected by not just my
power here, but also my understanding. The domains on Earth I manipulated
subconsciously. I was able to actively change things, but that was all surface-
level alterations.”
“I’m not sure what you mean.”
“It means I could change a house, not the laws of thermodynamics.”
“Is that an option?”
“I think so. Eventually. When I meditate here, it’s like this whole place is
meditating, because it is.”
“Because it’s you.”
“Exactly. But this place is its own physical reality. Kind of. When I
meditate here, my senses expand in a way that reflects that.”
“Meaning?”
“That I’m starting to understand physical reality on an intrinsic level. I
only recognised it because of all the time I spent in the space opened by the
Builder’s door. It was an introduction to how the building blocks of reality
work, and I can feel that, sometimes, when I’m meditating here. I don’t know
if that’s because I used the authority that used to be in the door, and affected
this place, but the astral throne is definitely part of it. It’s designed to govern
physical reality, after all, compared to the astral gate, which governs
dimensional forces.”
“It’s not a wild surprise that you can sense the space you accessed with
the Builder’s door, is it?” Farrah asked. “You obtained the astral throne when
the door broke down, right?”
“Yeah.”
“Do you think you’ll be able to access that underlying physical realm
again at some point?”
“Not out in the world, no. I can glimpse it, but it’s not mine to change
anymore. I can feel that. What I’m looking for now is a more conscious
ability to change things on that level here. Right now, I have control, but lack
understanding. If you think of this place like a car, I know how to drive a car.
I need to learn how to build one.”
“And how are the results so far?”
“Preliminary. Not enough to make me confident of successfully helping
Carlos or Sophie’s mother. I’d say the biggest change is in my ability to
control constructs from the cloud flask. They respond to me by design, and
that control has become immensely more refined. I deepened the soul bond
with my cloud flask, infused it with authority and turned the material it
produces into extensions of my spirit domains. The flask has undergone a
fundamental change, in more ways than is readily apparent.”
“Oh?”
“Let me change the subject for a moment before I come back to it,” Jason
said. “While I have been focusing on the astral throne, the astral gate has
brought some surprises of its own.”
“I thought you weren’t meant to be messing with that yet. Dawn told you
to leave it alone.”
“Dawn’s guidance is valuable, but she’s not an astral king. There are
some roads she can’t guide me down, but it doesn’t mean I shouldn’t walk
them. That being said, I haven’t been fiddling around with the astral gate. It’s
just that its power has allowed me to notice something. Bonds.”
“Bonds?”
“Magical bonds. I can feel the bonds between myself and my bonded
items now. I feel the bonds spanning off into the astral that connect me to my
spirit domains on Earth, even if I’m too weak to feel the other end. But these
are deliberate bonds. They’re strong, firm and don’t disconnect. I’ve noticed
other bonds as well, that I suspect have formed incidentally.”
“Such as?”
“Such as between you and me. Farrah, you and I formed a special bond.”
“I don’t care how powerful you are here,” Farrah told him. “I’m not going
to sleep with you.”
“What? No. I wasn’t talking about that. I’d sleep with Humphrey before
you.”
“It did always seem like there was something there,” Farrah said.
“I know, right?” Jason asked. “He’s the upright, uptown boy, and I’m the
sassy girl who restores classic cars. He gets talked into borrowing a car from
his dad’s collection without asking by one of his gadabout friends and gets in
a fender-bender. I agree to fix it without his dad finding out.”
“You’ve put a lot of thought into this.”
“No.”
“What’s the title of this little story you’ve got going on?”
“It doesn’t have a title. This isn’t something I think about.”
Farrah gave him a flat look.
“Humphrey’s Big Engine,” he mumbled sheepishly.
Farrah burst out laughing and Jason joined her. The path they were on led
into a cave, running alongside an underground river. Their way was lit by
luminescent fungus and flowers, growing out of crevices or on creeper vines.
“I think the bond between us is a remnant of when you came back to
life,” he explained. “The Reaper somehow bound your soul to mine, but I
don’t think the bond was intended to last, like string around a delivery
package. When our souls entered Earth, that bond broke, by design. It’s why
we didn’t arrive in the same place. But the remnants of that bond are there,
even now, but the connection is intermittent. Now that I can sense it, I feel it
link us, sometimes, and fall away at others.”
“What does this bond do?”
“Not a lot, from what I can tell. I’ve been using the astral gate’s power to
examine it, but I’m even less well-versed with that than the astral throne. All
I’ve managed to figure out thus far is that I can use the bond to treat you, in
terms of my abilities, in a similar way to my familiars.”
“You’re saying I’m your familiar?”
“No,” Jason said. “But it means I can treat you like one in certain
respects, while the bond is active. Things like having you use my portals
without consuming extra energy beyond what it takes for me to go through. I
think it’s been going on ever since Earth, but I’ve only just realised it was
happening, and why. As for what else the bond can do, that’s something we’d
have to explore. I think that, potentially, we could use it for effectively
infinite range with my group chat ability. The only limits would be
dimensional barriers, although the results would vary by circumstance, I
suspect. The same way that Shade can sometimes connect to his other bodies
through an astral space boundary and sometimes not, depending on the
specific nature of the astral space.”
They paused in an underground grotto, sitting on a bench that overlooked
an underground pond.
“You can manipulate this bond?”
“I think that I can restore the bond to full strength,” Jason said. “Make it
permanent. I can also eliminate it entirely. It’s a matter of what you want.”
Farrah nodded absently.
“You know why I’m here,” she said.
“If we’re going after messengers, it means that I’m getting down to
business,” he said. “Which means it’s time for you and Travis to head back to
Rimaros and get to your own business.”
“I worry about you, Jason. We’ve been constant companions ever since
you finished your walkathon on Earth.”
“Walkabout.”
“Whatever. Are you going to be alright without me?”
He let out a chuckle.
“I wouldn’t have gotten this far without you. Not even close. It’s why
they sent you to me, and if nothing else, I’ll always be grateful to the Reaper
and the World-Phoenix for that. But I think I’ll be okay. It’s not just us
against the world anymore, and it’s past time we stopped acting like it is.”
“Oh, I’m fine,” she said. “You’re the wobbly one. We’re here in your
magic god realm and you’re still anxious.”
“I am not anxious.”
“Of course you’re not.”
“I’m not!”
“Uh-huh.”
37
WHERE WE END

F ARRAH AND J ASON EMERGED FROM HIS SOUL SPACE , THROUGH THE ARCHWAY
located on the bridge.
“I can kind of feel the bond, if I go looking for it,” Farrah said. “It’s way
more subtle than my power bond ability, though. To be honest, I was
expecting more.”
“I know that story,” Travis said sadly from the doorway. “Women tell me
that all the time.”
“Oh, bloke…” Jason commiserated. “You need to work on that self-
confidence.”
“That’s never worked for me,” Travis said. “You may recall the pistol I
was trying to use when we met was called the compensator. That’s what it
was compensating for: a lack of self-confidence. Not, you know… the other
thing.”
“You shouldn’t worry about it,” Farrah told him, jabbing a thumb at
Jason. “Everyone has their mindset problems. My primary job of the last few
years was making sure this guy didn’t murder everyone—or refuse to murder
anyone—because he was a sad boy.”
“Hey…” Jason whined.
“I was looking for you, Jason,” Travis said, giving Farrah an odd look.
“Since you intend to start seriously going after messengers, I have something
I’ve been working on to give you.”
“Oh?” Jason asked. “Alright, come into my cabin.”
They moved into Jason’s cabin, the cloud furniture reconfiguring as they
entered. The cloud material flowed and reshaped itself, eliminating the bed
and pushing back the lounge area in favour of a round table and chairs.
“Iced tea?” Jason offered and the others nodded. He took out a tray and
three glasses from a cabinet, then a pitcher from a refrigerator that emerged
from the wall.
“What do you have?” Jason asked as he sat the tray down and waved the
others to seats.
“Well,” Travis began, “I know that when you portal us back to Rimaros,
you’ll be picking up the designs and materials from House de Varco to spice
up the vehicle forms your cloud flask can produce.”
“That’s the idea,” Jason said. “Not sure how much they’ll bring to the
table, but it can’t hurt.”
“I was thinking about supplementing those designs,” Travis said. “As you
know, my specialty is magitech guns. I can work with any kind of gun or
large ordnance, but great big guns are my sweet spot.”
“You’re talking about putting some guns on my yacht?” Jason asked.
“I know your cloud house can use magic to replicate complex technology
like live televisions screens,” Travis said. “I also know that you have internal
defence systems, but thought that you could benefit from something more
externally-focused. Didn’t you wonder why I was asking all those questions
about how your cloud flask worked?”
“You mean the point-zero-zero-three percent of the number of questions
that Clive asks? After him, a Magic Society interrogator would just seem
naturally curious.”
“The Magic Society has interrogators?” Travis asked.
“It’s complicated,” Farrah said. “The interrogators are specialists that are
part of the Magic Society, but there are rules against the Magic Society using
them. They work for the Adventure Society and civilian authorities, not the
Magic Society itself.”
“Liara was using them to try and make the Order of Redeeming Light
prisoners talk,” Jason said. “Having their souls coated in vampire gunk
repurposed for hardcore zealotry made them tough nuts to crack, though.”
“Yeah, I’m not really interested in the whole brainwashed fanatic stuff,”
Travis said. “I’ll stick to giant guns and trying to invent the magic phone,
thank you very much.”
“How are you going to do that?” Jason asked. “This world already has a
few different forms of distance communication, right?”
“Yeah,” Farrah said. “There’s the water link system, but that’s
complicated, expensive and requires access to a body of water connected to
all the others. Inland lakes that don’t feed into an ocean or river anywhere
can’t support a water link station, for example. Then there’s the record
systems that the Adventure Society and Magic Society use to keep their
records updated across branches. That system is too slow for real-time
communication, though.”
“It also can’t transmit enough information,” Travis said. “I looked into it,
and while it is used for communication, it’s like an inefficient telegram
system. It’s to the point that most communication that isn’t regular record
updates are shared through the water link.”
“Our plan,” Farrah said, “is to leverage the bones of that magic and
enhance it using Travis’ understanding of magitech. We’re taking inspiration
from the Earth’s magical detection grid to set up relays to extend the range.”
“Magical cell towers,” Travis said. “Maybe even satellites.”
Travis took on an expression Jason knew and feared from interactions
with Clive.
“Did you know that each of this world’s moons has very different magic
levels?” Travis asked enthusiastically.
“I vaguely recall,” Jason said. “The magic one is called the Mystic Moon,
right?”
“Yeah,” Travis said. “I’ve been looking into it ever since I started
thinking about satellites. It has a weird regulatory effect on the tides of this
planet.”
“You know, I keep wondering about that,” Jason said.
“I know, right?” Travis said. “The tides here are a bit more complex than
on Earth, but nowhere near the level they should be with two moons…”
Once Jason and Travis started enthusiastically discussing tidal forces,
Farrah went to the drinks cabinet and found something to spice up her iced
tea. Jason watched her topping up her glass from a liquor bottle and mixing it
in with a stirring rod.
“You don’t think it’s a little early?” he asked.
“Hey, I’m not the one going off to fight evil,” she told him, completely
unrepentant. “If you don’t want to see day drinking, maybe don’t make your
headquarters a pleasure yacht?”
“That’s a fair point, I guess,” Jason said as Farrah experimentally sipped
at her drink and immediately poured in more booze.
Farrah and Travis made their farewells on the roof deck.
“It looks like you’ve found a place for yourself here, bro,” Taika told
Travis as he enveloped him in a huge hug.
“There’s not a lot waiting for me back on Earth,” Travis said. “My family
were never entirely reconciled with the choices I made and what that meant
for them. I think that maybe it’s better for all of us if I’m just gone.”
“If that’s what you feel is best,” Taika told him. “But Earth is still home
for me.”
“I hope you get back. Mate.”
“Don’t use New Zealand slang. It always sounds wrong in an American
accent.”
“Isn’t that Australian slang?”
“Do you want a smack, bro?”
After the more general goodbyes, Farrah, Gary and Rufus gathered
together at one end of the deck.
“So, this is where we end,” Rufus said, looking and sounding uncertain.
“We came together in a town overrun by zombies, fire lighting up the dark,
the air filled with ash and smoke. Now we’ve come to the end, on a magic
land-boat on a sunny day.”
“Better that than steel and blood,” Gary said soberly. Their minds all
drifted back to Farrah’s death in an astral space years earlier, Rufus and Gary
helpless to stop it.
“This way,” Gary continued, his voice growing more cheerful, “we can
still get together and tell stories, have a few drinks. And a few more. Now I
find myself wondering why I ever thought I needed adventuring to be able to
do that. All it added was the need to kill things and the chance to die.”
“There’s the travel,” Farrah said. “You can do that without adventuring,
sure, but I don’t think I ever would have seen another world without it. The
price was high, but here we are, more-or-less intact.”
“It’s a long way from what we expected when Emir asked us to go to
Greenstone,” Rufus said. “I’m not sure any of us expected to be on the paths
we’re taking from here.”
“I don’t know,” Farrah said. “Gary was always going to be a craftsman,
and I’ve always wanted to do some real magic study in between blowing
things up. The only real surprise is you, Roo.”
“You know I don’t like it when you call me that,” Rufus said. “And what
do you mean, that I’m the surprise?”
“We never imagined you running a training centre for adventurers,” she
said, Gary nodding in agreement.
“Why would that surprise you?” Rufus asked. “My family runs a… oh,
gods dammit.”
Farrah and Gary both took shot glasses from their dimensional pouches
and downed the contents at a gulp.
“Are you ever going to let that go?” Rufus complained.
“I’d say not until the day I died,” Farrah said, “but even that didn’t stop
me.”
“Don’t worry,” Gary said. “A couple of centuries from now, when you’re
dead from old age and your memorial plaque reads ‘his family runs a school,’
we’ll be there, having a drink.”
“Why am I the first one to die of old age?”
“We just have healthier diets,” Gary said.
“You’re constantly eating your body weight in anything warm and dead,”
Rufus complained. “Your idea of salad dressing is anything not worse than
mildly poisonous.”
“Exactly,” Gary said. “I’m robust.”
“You can’t argue that’s not the case,” Farrah said to Rufus, who shook his
head.

Rimaros in general had excellent defences, along with tracking systems for
any teleportation or similar means of travel. This was even more true on the
island of Livaros, and the Adventure Society campus itself had defences
second only to the royal sky island. They were not as obvious, but no less
formidable.
One of the most magically sophisticated arrays in Rimaros was a room
deep in the Adventure Society campus. Setting up a place where all the
defences and detection of dimensional travel did not take effect was more
complex than the defences themselves. The room was also one of the most
secure in the Storm Kingdom, with layers of physical and magical defences.
Various fail-safes could be enacted in emergencies, from collapsing the room
to exposing it to all the defences and tracking it otherwise avoided.
Just portalling into the room was tricky, requiring both magical devices
and specific rituals. Jason had been supplied with both, allowing his portal
arch to appear in the room. The arrival room was an empty cube, with neither
doors nor windows, only flat, unbroken surfaces. After stepping out of the
arch, Jason recognised the dark metal the room was built from. It secured
various underground portions of the Adventure Society campus against
intrusion by magic perception. As with the first time he encountered the
enclosed feeling, he was tempted to push out with his senses and test how
strong the sense suppression was, but he suspected the consequences would
not be worth sating his curiosity.
The cube room was entirely blank, without any lighting. That didn’t
bother Jason or Farrah, who followed him out with her eyes glowing like
embers. Travis pulled out a glow stone and tossed it into the air, but instead
of floating and lighting up, it fell to the floor like a normal pebble.
Curious, Jason pushed out not his aura senses but his magic senses,
paying more attention to the suppressive effects permeating the room. It
occurred to him that he should ask Amos about training them as well. Their
strength was fine, but their active uses were far less developed than his aura
senses.
Jason used his aura as a platform to reach out to the inert glow stone. He
suspected that it was not a normal expression of aura projection, as it felt
rather like using his aura to produce physical force. Adapting the method he
used to disable suppression collars, he pushed back against the suppressive
effect of the stone and it lit up, floating into the air.
The moment it did, openings appeared in the walls. Portions of the hard
metal turned to liquid and flowed through the gaps left as it did. This left
doorways through which a small army of silver-rankers poured through to
surround the trio, led by a gold-ranker. Each was dressed in practical black,
with the crossed sword and rod emblem of the Adventure Society stitched in
gold.
Jason held up his hands.
“We surrender?” he said casually, just before Liara marched in.
“Please don’t poke at the society’s defences for fun, Mr Asano,” she told
him wearily.
“Hey, I was trying to fix a busted glow stone,” Jason said. “If the
Adventure Society is that afraid of a little light illuminating the darkness, you
might want to consider what that says about it, as a metaphor.”
“And I wanted to check if I missed your presence at all,” Liara said.
“Unsurprisingly, the answer is a resounding no.”
“That’s a little hurtful,” Jason said.
Liara sighed, then made a sharp command gesture. The guards wordlessly
started filtering out of the room.
“Come along then, Mr Asano,” she said primly. “Let’s get this done so
you can be back on your way.”
“How’s the family?” Jason asked.
“Fine,” Liara said curtly.
“So stern,” Jason said. “Trying to keep things professional in front of
your work friends?”
Liara looked around as the guards finished filtering out and all the doors
but one were resealed. Her mouth crinkled unhappily.
“Baseph and the children asked me to say hello,” she said, like a prisoner
in a hostage video.
Jason let out a laugh.
38
P EO P LE T H AT YO U D I D N ’ T A G G R AVAT E

A SPRAWLING , MULTI - LEVEL , SUBTERRANEAN COMPLEX EXTENDED BENEATH


the entirety of the Adventure Society campus. Large portions of it were
restricted, with potent protections, including the ones through which Liara led
Jason, Farrah and Travis.
“There are two things on your agenda before you go,” Liara told Jason.
“One is collecting your winnings from the duels, along with the additional
materials from Mr Noble’s list.”
While Jason had been gone, Liara continued to keep one of Shade’s
bodies hidden within her shadow, which allowed her to communicate with
Jason. He had used this link to send her a list of materials he wanted
procured, mostly related to Travis’ weapon designs for the cloud flask.
“I appreciate you putting in the effort to collect these things since I can’t
go out on a shopping trip,” Jason told her.
“What makes you think I did this personally?” she asked, then looked
suspiciously at her shadow.
“Shade doesn’t tell me what my allies are up to while he’s in their
shadows,” Jason told her. “Not on my boat, not in my house and not out and
about.”
“It was one of the earliest rules Mr Asano established,” Shade said. “He
said he wanted to be more ethical.”
“I’m pretty sure I said more than that,” Jason told him.
“That was the part I felt worthy of admiration,” Shade clarified.
“What was the rest of it?” Jason wondered aloud. “Shade, do you
remember?”
“My memory is sometimes disadvantageously thorough in cataloguing
my experiences.”
“What was the rest of what I said?”
“I believe that the selectiveness with what I chose to include and omit
will present you in a better light than the unabridged version, Mr Asano.”
“Not being in the best light is kind of my thing,” Jason told him.
“It involved the Goddess of Knowledge, a respect for privacy, a tub of
Togetherness Jelly and a sack of raisins,” Shade said. “On a personal level, I
would prefer not to expound on the details.”
“Fine,” Jason acceded. “But you know that excessive and outlandish
descriptions of things is part of my charm.”
“You have charm?” Farrah asked.
“Are you kidding?” Travis asked. “Back on Earth, he’s a sex symbol.”
Jason and Farrah both stopped dead. They turned to look at Travis,
brought up short by their stopping.
“What?” Travis asked.
“A sex symbol?” Jason asked sceptically.
“Yes.”
“Me?”
“Him?” Farrah asked, prompting Jason to turn to her.
“You know, I’ve got the incredulity covered,” he told her.
“No, this much incredulity is a two-person job.”
“That’s a little hurtful. People are attracted to power.”
“I shoot lava!”
“You’re a sex symbol too,” Travis assured her. “Not as big as Jason, but
that’s just an exposure thing. You’re frequently paired together, especially if
you do an image search with the safe search off—”
“NOPE,” Jason boomed, cutting him off.
“Are you sure it’s him more than me?” Farrah asked.
“It depends on the specifics,” Travis said. “I know his body pillows sell a
lot more.”
“Body pillows?” Jason asked. “You seem suspiciously well-informed on
this topic.”
“If you don’t mind,” Liara cut in, “we’re on a schedule.”
“We are?” Jason asked.
“I told you that there were two things on the agenda,” Liara told him.
“One is the materials provided by us and House de Varco. The other is a
scheduled water-link call.”
“With whom?” Jason asked.

Despite her exhortations for the group to keep moving, Liara led them to
collect materials before the scheduled remote meeting. She guided them to a
secure storage centre on the first basement level, just underground. They saw
no one along the way, which was not strange in the lower levels, based on
Jason’s previous visits. Once they reached the first basement level, the
absence of people was more notable, and the lack of sense suppression
allowed Jason to detect others in a wide area. Based on the pattern of people,
he was certain that Liara had their path cleared for them.
Liara, walking beside Jason, gave him an assessing look.
“What?” he asked.
“Your senses. You’re projecting them very cleanly.”
“I’ve been working on it, but it’s still early days. It’ll be years before I’m
even approaching a silver-rank version of Lord Pensinata.”
“You realise that most people would find the idea of anyone comparing
themselves to Amos Pensinata’s aura abilities quite laughable.”
“If I worried about what people thought was and wasn’t possible, my
world would have been annihilated. Next to that, what is some aura
training?”
Liara’s thoughts drifted to her husband being trapped in an underwater
complex with gold-rank enemies pounding on the door. If Jason hadn’t found
a way to portal from a place where portalling was impossible, she would be a
widow.
“Thank you, Jason,” she said quietly.
“No worries,” he said with a smile. He didn’t need to ask what her thanks
were for.
As they approached their destination, Jason sensed a presence he
recognised and stopped.
“Hector de Varco?” he asked Liara.
“You were warned that any family with enough power and influence
would find out what you were really doing if they looked hard enough. Did
you think the de Varco family wouldn’t be looking at you hard after what
happened?”
“I suppose not,” Jason said.
They entered the basement warehouse where crates, sacks and barrels
were piled up. There were two people present: Hector de Varco and a gold-
rank woman. She had the look shared by many gold-rankers; she appeared
around thirty years old at a glance, but with an uncanny agelessness,
especially in the eyes. She wore practical adventuring leathers, with a sword
on her hip. She reminded Jason of Sophie with her tied-back hair and sense of
readiness to spring into lethal action.
The woman moved to meet the group while Hector remained where he
was, looking slightly cowed. Jason could sense Hector’s wariness of him and
the woman.
“So, this is Jason Asano,” the woman said.
“And this is some random lady,” Jason shot back. “We meet at last.”
“Do you think that your childish antics impress anyone?” she asked him.
“No, they’re just for fun,” Jason said. “I don’t much care what random
people think about me.”
“You are not here to vent your frustration, Lady Astasia,” Liara said.
“You are here to fulfil a wager.”
“There is something that needs to be settled first,” Astasia said. “This boy
may have won his duel, but by the means of necromancers and soul-warpers.
Who knows what foul tricks he knows and where he learned them?”
“I know,” Liara said. “That should be sufficient to lay any concerns you
have, if not to rest, then at least into a discreet silence.”
“We never saw what he can do outside of his illicit powers,” Astasia said.
“What assurance do I have of his true strength? If he gets bested by some
worthless fool, what does that say of my son, who lost to him? That is the
perception, even if the duel was hardly legitimate.”
“I didn’t seek out you or your family,” Jason said. “Your son came
looking for trouble, so you have no grounds to blame me for his ability to
find it.”
“You didn’t have to handle the fight the way you did,” Astasia said.
“No,” Jason agreed. “But your son came to me because he had a point to
make. It turns out that I had a point to make as well. I made mine better.”
Jason’s and Astasia’s auras clashed as they stared at one another.
“I will test you,” Astasia said, her hand drifting to the sword at her hip.
“We shall see if you should be left free to roam about with the potential to
harm my son’s reputation.”
Jason knew, that for all his aura strength, he was only equal to the
trashiest of gold-rankers. He still fell short of true elites, which he
immediately understood as he felt Liara’s aura unleashed in full force for the
first time. Cold and sharp, it made the conflict between his and Astasia’s
auras look like the squabbling of children.
“Lady Astasia,” Liara said, her voice carrying the same knife-edge
warning as her aura. “This is not your house. This is the Storm Kingdom and
this is the Adventure Society, which means that it is my house. You were
allowed to come here as a courtesy, and my courtesy is now exhausted. You
will give Mr Asano what you owe him and Mr Asano will keep his mouth
shut and not provoke you or your family any further. Isn’t that right, Mr
Asano?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Astasia looked at Liara for a long time before finally speaking.
“People were starting to talk about you going soft, Liara.”
Liara walked up to Astasia until they were face to face, almost touching.
“Do you think I’m soft, Asta?” Liara said, her voice barely a whisper.
“No.”
“Then leave what you brought and leave this room. And say hello to
Gregor for me.”
Astasia snorted a surprised laugh.
“We should have dinner sometime, Liara. It’s been too long.”
“Call my assistant, Rodney. He’ll set something up.”
Astasia stepped back, turned and nodded at Hector. He moved forward
and handed Jason a dimension bag. Jason held out his hand for the other man
to take. Hector looked at Jason’s hand for a long moment before hesitantly
shaking it.
“You didn’t lose,” Jason told him. “You were caught up in something
bigger than yourself and got hammered. It happens to us all.”
Hector gave Jason a little nod before backing off without saying anything
and he followed his mother out.
“Well, that was fun,” Jason said when they were gone. “I assume you
knew that she would react like that.”
“Astasia was the driving force behind House de Varco’s contributions to
resource distribution during the monster surge, which were not small. She’s a
good person who genuinely did her part during the surge, and pushed her
house into doing so as well. But she’s very protective of her children, and
you spiked one of them in the soul.”
“So, you let her in here to vent?” Jason asked, then shook his head. “No,
maybe a little, but that’s not enough. You let her in here so that you could
stop her when she did vent on me.”
“My reputation needs some rehabilitation,” Liara said. “The family wants
me taking on some of Vesper’s old responsibilities, which means more of a
public face.”
“And people think you’ve gone soft since your necromancer hunting
days. You do seem to have changed a mind, there. She’s looking to get on
your good side before everyone else realises that it’s a good place to be.”
“People think that some silver-ranker that I was meant to be in charge of
made me look like a buffoon in front of the king and His Ancestral Majesty.
Your behaviour in the royal viewing box reflected very poorly on me.”
“Yeah, I blew it there,” Jason said morosely. “Getting involved in
Rimaros politics meant so much to me as well. The effort I put in to insert
myself into the affairs of the royal family, all wasted. What was I thinking? It
was me who wanted to get involved in—”
“Fine,” Liara said. “Your point is taken. You should collect all this before
your scheduled call.”
“This is all for me?” Jason said, looking around at the crates and sacks
and barrels. “Then what’s in this dimensional bag?”
He rummaged through and pulled out some orbs, handing one each to
Farrah and Travis.
“This is interesting,” Travis said, pulling out a device to examine the orb
with.
“Is that a tricorder?” Jason asked him.
“No,” Travis said unconvincingly, before changing the subject. “This orb
is some kind of design matrix. The biggest challenge when I designed the
guns for your cloud flask was making sure that it would be able to infer the
designs from the materials fed into it. These things allow for significantly
more sophisticated outcomes, which I guess you need. Reworking the whole
boat is more complex than running out the cannons.”
“You should talk to House de Varco if you’re interested,” Farrah said.
“Maybe they’ll be willing to trade some secrets. I’ll bet you they’ll climb
over themselves to learn some magitech tricks.”
“Sounds like you two will be having fun here in Rimaros,” Jason said.
“I think the biggest challenge,” Farrah told him, “will be getting anyone
to work with us. We need to find some people that you didn’t aggravate.”
“What are you talking about?” Jason asked. “People love me.”
“Can we please just go?” Liara asked.
“Liara,” Jason said. “People love me, right?”
“Well,” Liara said, “I’ve comprehensively studied your activities and
you’ve done a lot of impressive things for many, many people. Yet, all the
evidence points to everyone wanting to kill you, have you killed, kidnap you,
ostracise you, hand you over to the Builder to get your soul taken over…”
“You could have just said no,” Jason said sullenly, then raised his hand,
palm up. Blood seeped out of his skin, coagulating into the form of a leech
with terrifying rings of lamprey teeth.
“You love me, don’t you, Colin?”
The leech unleashed a hideous screech that sounded like a clothes hanger
shoved into an overcharged garbage disposal.
“That means yes,” Jason said.

While the Magic Society operated the water-link infrastructure and the
majority of the water-link chambers, major families all had chambers of their
own. The Adventure Society likewise maintained several chambers with
additional security measures to prevent eavesdropping. The Magic Society
regularly assured the Adventure Society that they had no way to tap into
those calls.
Jason entered one of the Adventure Society’s chambers, which was a
large, tiled booth. The floor was divided in half, with one side a dry floor and
the other a pool of water. The dry side had a low, round platform onto which
Jason stepped. He waited for around a minute until the water in the pool
floated up, taking on a human shape. Once it had, the water started filling
with colour, like ink had been spilled into it. The colours swirled and became
more complex until Jason was standing in front of a water clone of Emir
Bahadir.
“Jason,” the clone said with a grin. “I hear you’ve been renovating that
cloud flask I gave you.”
39
N O T YO U

“T HAT ’ S THE FIRST THING YOU ASK ABOUT ?” J ASON SAID . “M Y CLOUD
flask? After I go off into your astral space and die?”
“You’re going to talk to me about causing trouble?” Emir asked. “There
are about a hundred outworlders who arrived in the wake of you coming
back, and you’ve just left them on the other side of the world while you’re
playing with your great astral being friends. Since you keep not showing up,
who do you think people bother about it? Anyone in the area who knows you,
that’s who. Vitesse isn’t even that close.”
“The great astral beings are not my friends. They’re… business
acquaintances.”
“I’ve been hearing something about a diamond-ranker you’ve been
running around with. Doesn’t she work for one of them?”
“You mean Soramir? No, he doesn’t work for them.”
“You know full well I do not mean Soramir. You remember that Arabelle
is one of my closest friends in the world, right?”
“I also know that Callum is one of your closest friends, and that guy has
been all sorts of trouble. And Arabelle has strict rules about confidentiality,
so don’t try to goad me into spilling the beans that way.”
“There are beans to spill, then?”
Jason laughed. “What are you reaching out for?”
“Something that is better discussed in person,” Emir said. “There’s a few
too many ears on these water-link chambers, whatever they tell you. There’s
a city called Isart that you should arrive at on your procession south.”
“Yes, although we’re about to detour, so we won’t be racing down there.”
“Detour?”
“Messenger activity,” Jason said. “We’re going to take a look at what
we’re up against.”
“Just be careful. I’ll meet you in Isart when you’re done and we can talk
about a job.”
“I don’t have a job for you,” Jason told Emir. “Still, I’ll keep your
application on file, and if anything comes up…”
“I see that going up a couple of ranks hasn’t managed to instil a reverence
for higher-rankers. I imagine that was inevitable, given the stories floating
around about you.”
Emir smiled, but there was a grimness to his eyes.
“Do me a favour and don’t take too long to get to Isart,” he told Jason.
“Oh, bloody hell,” Jason complained. “I’m getting that fate-of-the-world
feeling again. Does it really have to be me?”
“Nothing that drastic,” Emir said. “But there’s something out there that
will cause a major shift in some of the foundational elements of society. We
need to find it before someone who shouldn’t does, and they’re already ahead
of us in the search.”
“Emir, that sounds exactly like what I’m trying to avoid. I just want some
good, honest adventuring.”
“That’s exactly what this is. It’s not about you, Jason. It’s a good old-
fashioned race to the magical treasure. You and your team just happen to be
the best people for the job.”
Jason perked up. “Okay, now I’m more interested.”
“Then meet me in Isart. I’ll be arriving there in about two weeks. Also,
I’ll have the person who made our cloud flasks with me. She’s very interested
in what we’ve been hearing about what you did to yours. I think.”
“You think she’s very interested?”
“No, I’m certain about the interest; I’m just not certain she’s a she. She
keeps changing it up on me.”
“Gender fluid diamond-ranker? That is interesting. Having some trouble
with your pronouns, Emir?”
Emir’s water clone looked surprised.
“I thought I was going to throw you off with that.”
Jason laughed.
“You have no idea how many people back where I come from would
appreciate having magic to help them transition,” he said, then frowned.
“Actually, that’s probably becoming more of an option now, which will be a
giant political garbage fire. I bet they find some way to blame me.”

Liara returned Jason to the room in the Adventure Society campus from
which he could portal out.
“Any word on those idiots that broke into my cloud house?” Jason asked
Liara.
“Yes,” she said with a nod. “As far as we can tell, they’re a bunch of idle
rich kids from extremely wealthy families. Too important to not foster, thus
getting them to gold rank on cores, but too incompetent to give any actual
responsibility. It seems that they got it into their heads to prove themselves
and started taking work for hire, as a group.”
“And, despite their idiocy, they’re gold rank,” Jason mused. “People will
overlook a lot if it lets them hire a gold rank team on the cheap.”
“Yes, but we don’t think the person that sent them after you was
concerned with their ability. We haven’t determined who it was yet, but the
motivation seems related to their local politics, not you. You were chosen
because you were far enough away that the fools wouldn’t know they were
jumping into the shark’s mouth while being important enough that it would
be an embarrassment to their families.”
Jason groaned as he ran his hands over his face.
“Is this going to be yet another thing I’m caught up in?”
“Actually,” Liara said, “if you’re willing to let this go, you’ll find some
powerful families owe you a favour if you ever find yourself in that part of
the world.”
“Let this go, meaning walk away and not have anything more to do with
it?”
“If you’re willing to give up revenge, yes.”
“Yeah, let’s do that,” Jason said hurriedly. “Just warn me before any
blowback from this hits me, yeah?”
“As best as I am able,” Liara said. “I handed it off to the royal family’s
political specialists once we knew that your involvement was peripheral.
They will keep looking into the situation.”
“You talk about the royal family a lot, as if you weren’t a part of it.”
“A peripheral branch. And I need to keep my perspectives separate, given
that I do a lot more in my role as an Adventure Society executive than as a
royal.”
Jason drew out the ritual circle required to circumvent the protections and
open his portal arch. He didn’t go through immediately, and instead turned to
face Travis and Farrah. He shook Travis by the hand and shared a hug with
Farrah.
“Just don’t go off and die the second I’m not watching over you,” she
said. “You have the life expectancy of a friend of Jessica Fletcher’s who is
visiting from out of town.”
Jason chuckled as he went through the arch, which then vanished into the
ground.
“Who’s Jessica Fletcher?” Travis asked.
“From Murder She Wrote,” Farrah said. “How can you not know that
show?”
“When was it on?”
“1984 through 1996. They made twelve seasons. It’s a cultural
touchstone.”
“Before I was alive, maybe. That bond ability of yours that lets you take
information out of people’s heads; I’m not sure you should have ever used it
on Jason.”

Jason stepped out of the portal arch in his cabin on the cloud yacht and it
closed behind him. He could have spoken to Farrah, their new bond allowing
him to open up a voice chat over large distances, but he resisted the urge. The
bond was there if he went looking for it, but was otherwise unnoticeable. He
let out a sigh.
“Are you alright, Mr Asano?” Shade asked, emerging from Jason’s
shadow.
“Yeah. It just feels like… I don’t know. Like a clean cut has been made.
Farrah and I have been running around together for a long time now. I guess
the ground just doesn’t feel as stable without her here. Even with the bond,
her absence seems palpable. I know I’ve always got you, but, no offence,
you’re a spirit of darkness and death older than the human race. On Earth, at
least. Your perspective isn’t something a flickering candle like me can always
relate to. Even if I end up living for millennia, right now, I’m not even
thirty.”
“I understand, Mr Asano. I have found that there is a strange dichotomy
between existing for epochs, yet living moment to moment, like everyone
else. My perspective, as an ancient entity, puts me at a separation from most
beings. I suspect it is what has driven me to become a familiar. To insert
myself into the lives of the short-lived and immerse myself in their cultures
and interests. You will find, Mr Asano, that even when you can survive for
millennia, you have to live day by day, just like everyone else.”
“You know what, Shade? I take it back. You are relatable. Thanks for
sticking with me through so much nonsense.”
“Immortality can be hard sometimes, Mr Asano. I hope that you will live
long enough so that I can help guide you through it. It becomes isolating as
you find yourself slipping further and further from the concerns of mortality.
Miss Dawn understood this. You have put her on the start of a journey I
began a long time ago.”
“Shade, have I ever told you that you are amazing?”
“Many times, Mr Asano.”
“Good. Because you are.”

One of the reasons that the Storm Kingdom stood out on the global stage was
that there were very few regions with a celestine majority, and it was the
largest of them by far. Having moved south of there, the convoy found itself
increasingly in elf-held territories. This excited Jason less because of the
elves themselves, of whom he had known many, and because of the
differences in culture that came with encountering them on home turf. Instead
of having their own enclaves in places where they were a minority, this was
the elves in their element, and Jason was not disappointed.
The smaller towns and villages hadn’t been a lot different to what he had
seen elsewhere, but as the convoy approached a small city, Jason watched
from the roof deck in wonder. To Jason’s eyes, the architecture poking up out
of the rainforest was a mix of ancient civilisation and absolute modernity,
with ziggurats built from the shining glass of skyscrapers and gothic towers
of gleaming metal.
The city materials seemed dominated by metal and glass from a distance,
although only the uppermost building areas could be seen above the
rainforest. Much of it had a green tint, reminding Jason of Greenstone. Here
the shades were much darker than that city’s signature stone, but the bright
sunlight drew out gorgeous colours.
From what Jason could see, the city was not exclusionary of the
rainforest, which was let into the city and incorporated into the city planning.
He presumed it was in a carefully controlled fashion and he looked forward
to going in and looking around for himself. Before that, however, he had a
task ahead of him.
The convoy split up at the city outskirts. Arabelle continued forward with
her relatively modest vehicle, while Carlos and Korinne left their vehicles
behind. Carlos cadged a ride with Korinne’s team on the more manageable
skimmer docked on the roof of their new vehicle.
The passengers of Jason’s hover yacht all exited, including Melody under
Sophie’s watchful eye.
Jason plucked the tiny cloud flask from his necklace and sat it on the
ground as it grew to its regular size of a large chemistry flask. The hover
yacht dissolved into wispy cloud that flowed into the flask. Everyone stood
around watching the process, which would take around ten minutes. In that
waiting time, Jason started pulling out the crates, sacks and barrels he
acquired in Rimaros from his inventory. Melody approached him while he
did so.
“My daughter tells me that it was your idea to add windows to my cabin,”
she said.
“Your daughter said you were getting a little antsy.”
“Do you expect me to be grateful? That amenities and little luxuries
you’ve provided will win me over? Do you think I don’t see that it’s an easy
way to build up a sense of thankfulness that makes up one of many steps to
you having me open up and give you what you want?”
“I don’t want anything from you, Mrs Jain. What I want is relaxing days
spent visiting interesting places, with no hassles. You are a hassle. I’d be
happy to throw you in a box and forget about you, or hand you over to any of
the many people that want to get their hands on you. As we speak, my
familiar is scouting the area in case someone is following us, waiting for the
chance to pounce and take you away. You got those windows because it
makes your daughter happy. I couldn’t care less about you. I checked.”
“Do you practise these little speeches in case the right situation comes up,
or is it all off the top of your head?” Melody asked. “I’m not sure which one
is worse. They both require a profoundly pompous mindset.”
Jason laughed. “I won’t argue with that, Mrs Jain. Now, if you’ll excuse
me, I have to put a very large number of things into a very small bottle.”
Once the flask had been refilled, Jason started opening containers full of
materials. Sheets of metal, bags of powder, magically crafted crystals and
barrels of alchemical liquids were tipped into the flask. Some went in via a
funnel, like powder and water. For solid objects, Jason poked them at the
flask and they slowly dissolved into a mist that the flask then sucked into
itself.
This went on for several hours as Jason pulled the many containers Liara
had prepared from his inventory. Belinda and Clive took out all the
disassembled submarine parts they had as well. Once all the materials were
finally consumed, Jason was about ready to test out the new potential of his
cloud constructs. Before he began, he turned as he sensed Korinne’s team
returning from the city.
On their arrival, Korinne’s team found Jason waiting with a scowl. They
disembarked from the skimmer, which had all eight seats filled. There were
the six members of Korinne’s team, plus Carlos and one more person.
“Care to explain yourself?” Jason demanded of Korinne, not looking at
the newcomer.
“We found a new team member,” Korinne said.
“I’ll remind you, Lady Pescos, that while you are operating as a part of
this convoy, you are under certain restrictions that you would otherwise not
be, should you be operating alone.”
“I’m well aware of the need for secrecy,” Korinne said. “But she already
knows your secrets, so there isn’t a problem.”
“Explaining the full inaccuracy of what you just said will take no small
amount of time,” Jason said. “For now, go back to your vehicle and we’ll
discuss this later.”
“This convoy might be built around you, Mr Asano, but you don’t tell my
team what to—”
Korinne stopped talking as she felt the pressure of an aura she had
thought Jason could only produce with the aid of his massive cloud construct.
It carried the cold anger of an icy hell and had Korinne’s team reaching for
weapons until it receded after a short moment.
“Go back to your vehicle, Lady Pescos,” Jason repeated softly.
Korinne and her team looked to Amos Pensinata for support but saw
nothing beyond his usual stoicism. Orin was the first to follow Jason’s
directive, but the others soon followed. Korinne was the last to move, none of
the fear in her aura showing in her expression or body language. The
newcomer moved to follow.
“Not you,” Jason said, turning his gaze on her.
He looked her up and down, his expression fierce. Her adventuring gear
was plain and practical, mostly covering her smooth, caramel skin. Her
milky-teal hair spilled down past her shoulders and her matching eyes stared
back at Jason. Despite himself, Jason couldn’t help but reflect that the young
woman in front of him was more beautiful than the nineteen-year-old girl she
had been when they met in a tent five years earlier. She might have changed
her distinctive sapphire hair and eyes, but there was no hiding the exquisite
beauty of Zara Rimaros.
40
I N V E NT I N G A M A N I N YO U R H E A D

R AINFOREST ENCROACHED ON BOTH SIDES OF THE WIDE ROAD LEADING OFF


towards the elf city in the distance. Glass ziggurats and polished towers of
dark metal poked up over the canopy; Jason had been looking forward to
exploring such a large city built into, rather than over, the environment.
He had stopped outside the city first, after finding a rare clearing by the
side of the road. While other members of the convoy moved forward, he had
loaded up his cloud flask with materials brought back from Rimaros. He was
about to check the results when some members of the convoy came back
from the city early, having acquired a new member.
Zara Rimaros was someone with whom Jason had a complicated history.
They had met early in their adventuring careers, before the traumas that had
come to define Jason. She had used his name, thinking him dead, for political
purposes that complicated things for them both when he turned up alive. It
embroiled him in machinations he had no interest in, at a time when he
desperately needed to be left alone, eventually bringing him to the edge of
breakdown.
For her, Jason’s resurrection finalised a fall from grace that began when
she used Jason’s name in an ill-conceived attempt to help a friend. As the
king’s daughter, she had been in a prime position to vie for the crown of the
Storm Kingdom, one of the most powerful nations in the world. That was
never going to happen now. Instead of staying in Rimaros, she had gone
south alone. Now, she found herself standing in front of Jason Asano once
again, against his express desire to be done with the royal family.
Jason looked Zara up and down, his gaze lingering on her hair and eyes.
As a celestine, hers matched, but the royal family’s signature sapphire she
once sported had become a milky teal. As Jason looked over her new look,
the people around them watched as they stared at each other. The princess’
return had come as most of the convoy was waiting on Jason to remake their
mobile accommodations using the cloud flask. It was no secret that Zara had
requested a place amongst them, or that Jason had refused, leaving her behind
in Rimaros.
The people watching knew that Jason was still volatile, despite his
ongoing mental recovery, and the tension was thick as both they and Zara
waited for his reaction. They had felt the power and fury in the aura spike
Jason had used to dismiss the team to which she had attached herself as a
pretence. As the moment dragged on in an increasingly weighty silence, Zara
finally spoke up herself, launching into an explanation.
“You need to know that—”
“Copper,” he said, cutting her off.
“Copper?”
“Your hair and eyes. It will stand out less than the teal.”
“I’ve adopted into my mother’s family. This is their colouration.”
“I don’t care. Change it.”
A portal arch of white stone rose from the ground, filling with rainbow
light.
“Jason, I—”
“My friends call me Jason, Princess.”
“I’m not a princess anymore. I’m Zara Nareen now.”
“Then call me Mr Asano, Miss Nareen. Even better, don’t call me
anything at all.”
Jason stepped through the portal to his soul space and the rainbow light
flickered out, leaving the arch standing empty. The nearby cloud flask started
spewing out cloud stuff as it began the process of forming a new vehicle.

There was an awkward atmosphere in the wake of Jason’s departure. Zara felt
isolated and scrutinised as the assembled people split their attention between
her and the cloud vessel taking shape nearby. Scrutiny was something she
was used to as a former princess of the Storm Kingdom, but she felt the
absence of the usual support that role offered. She moved towards Jason’s
team, who were not looking on her with kindly expressions.
“Keep walking, lady,” one of them said.
Zara knew from her investigations into Asano’s team that the speaker was
Belinda Callahan, a thief turned adventurer. Zara turned her gaze to
Humphrey Geller, the team leader. She had met him back in Greenstone and
knew he had the trained manners of high society.
“You heard her,” Humphrey said coldly. “You’d best join your new team,
Miss Nareen.”
Zara moved to the vehicle into which her new team had gone. It was a
large vehicle designed for overland travel as well as flight, with room enough
for privacy. She was admitted by Korinne Pescos, who took her into a
kitchenette with a dining booth. Zara sat down at an inviting gesture from
Korinne, who started brewing tea.
“I think we need to have that longer talk now, Your Highness.”
“It’s not ‘Your Highness’ anymore, Lady Pescos. It’s Lady Nareen or,
preferably, Zara.”
“I think you may have understated what Asano’s reaction would be, Zara.
I always knew that there was history between you and him, but I never put
much stock in rumours. I saw the two of you interact when we were all on
that expedition together. It had the feel of a show to me, a political game your
aunt concocted.”
“It was.”
“Then it’s time you told me the truth, if you genuinely want to be a part
of this team. I welcome your presence, as do the others. Your wide-area
damage specialisation is a good fit for our team and, princess or not, having
you on the roster will open a lot of doors when we go back to Rimaros.
Assuming you want to stay with us at that stage.”
Zara thought back to Asano’s team outside. The unified front they put on,
defensive of their friend and teammate, resonated with her. Her political
upbringing always upheld the idea of compromise with both allies and
enemies, who could easily switch from one day to the next. The idea of
genuine commitment felt forbidden and enticing.
“I’m looking for a place to belong,” she told Korinne, after thinking about
it long enough that Korinne brought the tea and sat it on the table before
sitting opposite Zara in the booth.
“Are you sure we’re not a way station until you can talk Asano around?”
Korinne asked as she poured the tea. “I’m not saying that’s unacceptable, but
I need to know where you stand in relation to my team.”
Zara nodded as she held her cup, waiting for it to cool. While it was hot
outside, the temperature and humidity inside the vehicle had both been set
low.
“Honestly,” she admitted, “I don’t know. Unless my rushed approach and
less-than-terrific reception here didn’t make it clear, I’m somewhat
floundering. I have to find something new. A new way to live my life.”
“And you think Asano is the answer? Are you in love with him?”
“No,” Zara said, shaking her head. “I’ve only ever met him a handful of
times, which may be part of the problem. I’ll confess to a certain fascination,
and the mysteries surrounding him is a big part of that. Perhaps if I knew him
better, I wouldn’t be so compelled.”
“You’re drawn to trouble.”
“No. Yes. I don’t know, probably. Have you ever felt completely lost,
Lady Pescos?”
“Korinne. If you’re going to be in our team, you should call me Korinne.
But no, sorry. I don’t think I can empathise. I’ve always known my direction,
ever since I was a girl. Even through detours like this, it doesn’t derail me.”
“I remember that feeling,” Zara said with an envious smile. “That
comforting certainty of where every foot forward was going to fall. I’ve been
wondering a lot where I lost that, even though I knew the answer the whole
time.”
“Oh?” Korinne prompted.
“It was my first time far from the Storm Kingdom. The other side of the
world. My aunt Vesper was the chaperone, but it was really me and some
other iron-rankers from the Sapphire Crown guild. Royal guards my father
assigned as a team, but not like yours. There was no camaraderie there. They
were servants, but also minders. They weren’t even companions, let alone
friends. I’ve never actually had a team.”
“So, it’s true? You met Asano on the other side of the world and—”
“No,” Zara said. “I met him, yes, but only a couple of times. We certainly
never…”
Zara smiled.
“I was a girl. I don’t think I’d ever felt like one before. I was always a
princess. And an adventurer. A future leader. Then this man came bursting
into my tent, all swagger and rakish charm. Exactly the kind of man my
father would never let get anywhere near his precious daughters.”
“Your guards wouldn’t stand for that, surely?”
“They didn’t, but he was unfazed and I told them to stop. He had no idea
who I was. It was the first time I’d ever been treated as anything but a
princess. He was this wild, crazy man, a few years older. He gave me a plate
of baked slices. My guards destroyed half of them testing for toxins. I’ll
confess that my head was turned. Then I heard that he ran into me on his way
to meet a whole group of gods, who had asked for him specifically.”
“Why?”
“It doesn’t matter. That just seems to be the circles he moves in.”
“That is an absurd thing to say.”
“He’s an absurd man. I saw him again, at a party, but nothing came of it.
I’ve been trained my whole life to handle politics and relationships, so I was
aware of what was driving my feelings. I kept my distance and returned to
Rimaros. Then I heard that he died. After that, he occupied this strange place
in my mind. Or a version of him did anyway; one who was at least as much
my own invention as true to the man.”
“It’s easy to idealise the dead. The living can never compete with a story
in your head.”
“No, they can’t. When I came up with my terrible plan to get Kasper Irios
out of our arranged marriage, I invoked Asano’s name, which was an idiotic
thing. He just fit so well. There was so little information about him and he
had died on the far side of the world, in a sufficiently heroic fashion to
impress. He also had impressive connections, but no family. He was exactly
what I needed in a dead fiancé.”
“And did you come up with this plan and he happened to fit, or did you
come up with the plan because he fit? And which Asano was it? The real one
or the one in your head?”
Zara let out a self-mocking chuckle.
“I think you know the answers, although I’d have denied it flatly at the
time. Even to myself. Of course, it was a massive mess.”
“I remember. Royal scandals get around, although how much of it is true
is a very different question.”
“It had all just about died down and my fake period of mourning was
about to end,” Zara said. “That’s when he came back, but he came back
different. Not like the way he was in my head, of course, but also not the way
I knew him. The first time I saw him again was the day you first saw him as
well.”
“The expedition.”
“When I met him, he was playful. Roguish. He was also ordinary in his
power. But you saw what he was like that day. Angry, powerful.”
“He wasn’t powerful when you knew him?”
“No more than any capable adventurer. But you’ve felt what he’s like
now. What he can do with his aura. And I’ve heard other things. Things I
can’t talk about. And he certainly wasn’t playful. His anger at me was
genuine, whatever political show we put on.”
“Why would he even agree to that?”
“Because of the damage my mistake would cause if he didn’t. Whatever
his flaws, he’s a good man.”
“So you say.”
“Yes, I do say. I’ve looked into everything I can find about him, since he
came back. And I could find more than most, as you’d imagine. There are
sharp edges to him, but he’s a good man. Willing to sacrifice.”
“Are you sure you’re not inventing a man in your head again?”
“No,” Zara admitted. “I know that coming here was foolish. The attempts
to rehabilitate my reputation were overtaken by events. The last hope I had
was joining Asano as a royal liaison. He’s always in the middle of something,
and if I could be a part of that…”
She shook her head.
“When I was rejected, I knew it was time to move on. I was the last
person to accept that I was long out of contention to be the next queen, but
once I did, it was oddly freeing. Putting down a kingdom’s worth of
responsibility opened a world of possibility. I adopted into my mother’s
house to signal my withdrawal from the contest for the crown.”
“If you have a whole world of opportunity, what are you doing here?”
“You’re completely right,” Zara said, nodding. “This was a terrible
choice. I should have run far from Rimaros and far from Asano to find…
whatever it is I’m looking for. A new way to live, I guess. I have this idea in
my head that Asano is at the centre of things in a way that might let me find
it.”
Korinne shook her head. “I do not see the appeal of that man.”
“That’s not what this is.”
Korinne drew a long breath and let it out slowly, then stood up.
“Temporary member or not, Princess, you’ll be valuable to our team. But
you are in desperate need of getting your head straight, and that’s dangerous.
There’s a healer in this convoy who specialises in the mind. Seek her out.
Until she tells me you’re up for it, you can travel with our team, but I won’t
let you fight with it.”
41
D O I N G T H I N G S T H AT YO U S H O U LD N ’ T

T HE ASTRAL REALM THAT J ASON ’ S SOUL SPACE HAD BECOME WAS AN ESTATE
of cloud buildings that sprawled through strange and varied gardens. It all
centred on a dark crystal tower in a pagoda style that loomed over everything.
Completing the dark lord motif was the giant blue and orange eye floating
over the tower that regularly prompted unwelcome Sauron comparisons.
In a garden that looked something like an English country pond, Jason
had created an avatar of himself. The avatar was floating cross-legged over
the pond while Jason sat on a wooden bench on the shore. He alternately
probed and bombarded the avatar with aura attacks and aura probes. The
exercise itself had been devised by Amos as part of his training, serving
several purposes. It helped him develop his aura defences and aura masking
techniques, but these were areas where Jason was already strong.
The training method Amos had shown him was also designed to teach
him how to do radically different things with his aura in rapid succession or
even simultaneously. Jason had thought himself quite adept at manipulating
his aura, which Amos quickly remedied by showing him how much he had
left to learn. Rather than be disheartened, Jason had been excited at all the
new possibilities laid out before him.
For the training method to be effective, Jason had initially required the
more powerful Amos to switch between probes and bombardment to apply
sufficient pressure. But inside his soul space, Jason had far more power than
he did outside it. Once he figured out how to accurately replicate his outside
power levels with an avatar, he was able to use the method through self-
study, attacking his own avatar. As the avatar was still a part of himself,
everything it learned, he did as well.
The training Amos was giving him, this method included, was
comprehensively advancing Jason’s aura manipulation skills, and the results
were already showing. When Jason had first arrived in Rimaros, he’d
attempted to create an identity mask by manipulating his aura. He was only
now realising the many reasons his sloppy attempt had aroused the suspicion
of even someone of lower rank than himself, cringing at his crude, earlier
attempt.
Jason sensed the presence of Arabelle standing in front of his portal and
he opened it to let her inside. He opened an arch next to himself so she would
arrive next to him. She looked around before sitting down beside him on the
wooden bench, joining him in observing the avatar.
“It unsettles me, coming here,” she told him. “The Healer is one of the
more hands-off gods, but I’m still used to his presence in the back of my
mind.”
“And here I was thinking that having someone taking up residence inside
your mind would be the unsettling part.”
“There’s a comfort in faith, Jason. For some. Not those favoured by
Dominion, of course. He likes the ones who refuse to kneel.”
“Ugh, don’t talk about that guy. And who said I won’t kneel? I’ll take
scuffed knees over a severed neck.”
“Is that a lie or selective memory?”
“I was younger then.”
“How long ago did Shako kill you for your insolence?”
“About a year. And I wouldn’t describe it as insolence. If some prick is
telling you what to do for no better reason than they have the power to do so,
they need mouthing off to.”
Arabelle turned to look at him from under raised eyebrows.
“I’m aware of the irony,” he said, not turning to meet her eyes.
“You told her to change her hair and eyes? You shouldn’t be trying to
take away people’s body autonomy, Jason. Especially as a punitive measure.”
“I know. I was angry. It’s why I walked away.”
She nodded.
“Your friends are concerned that you’re moping in here. You shut them
out, literally and figuratively. I was a little surprised you let me in, but it’s a
good sign that you did.”
Jason let out a sigh.
“I know. Back in Greenstone, this was the part where I’d go off and clear
adventure board notices until I’d worked through my problems. Keep busy
doing something worthwhile as I was getting my head straight. I can’t just
leave everyone now, though. So, I’m just taking some time while I do some
training.”
Arabelle turned her gaze back to the avatar.
“One of Lord Pensinata’s training exercises?” she asked.
“Yes.”
She nodded her approval. “Separating yourself as you process emotions
in your own time has always been one of your healthier defence mechanisms.
Just make sure not to cut yourself off from your support structure. Too much
separation has turned poisonous on you before, as you well know. Don’t
recreate your conditions on Earth for yourself.”
“I know.”
“Knowing something and using that knowledge for self-improvement are
very different things, Jason.”
“I know that too.”
“I’m not sure that girl does. She clearly has some kind of fixation on
you.”
“Are you telling me that I should be happy I have a pretty stalker?”
“You know that I’m not. I find it interesting that you chose to point out
that she was pretty.”
“Anyone with eyes can see that.”
“You’re avoiding a response to my observation. We’ve talked about
that.”
Jason grumbled.
“Are you interested in this woman?”
“I don’t know her.”
“That isn’t what I asked. It’s plain that there is some manner of
compulsion there. She’s no prettier than Miss Wexler, yet Zara Rimaros gets
under your skin in a way that Sophie never has.”
“It’s not Rimaros anymore. It’s Nareen.”
Arabelle turned to look at Jason again, this time her eyes narrowing in
suspicion.
“Jason.”
“Yes?”
“Are you spying on the other team?”
“What do you mean?”
“Have you been observing the goings-on inside their new vehicle?”
“I’m claiming this conversation under the confidentiality of a healer
consultation. You can’t tell anyone about the things I tell you.”
“It’s between you, me and my god.”
“They don’t count, the privacy ignoring... that doesn’t matter. I just want
to know you won’t tell people what I tell you.”
“I won’t. Even if I think that you’re keeping secrets and doing things that
you shouldn’t.”
“I had Farrah and Belinda take a look at the defences of the other team’s
vehicle when it first joined the convoy. I had the girls put a hole in the
protections so Shade could slip in and out to observe them.”
“You’ve been spying on them.”
“Shade operates under certain strictures, you know that. He won’t tell me
anything unless there is a security threat or something else I need to know.”
“Or unless you ask him.”
“Yes.”
“And have you?”
Jason didn’t answer for a long time. Arabelle waited him out.
“I listened in on a conversation between Zara and Korinne.”
“That’s a wildly inappropriate use of the power you have over the people
in this convoy. It’s a violation.”
“I know,” he said softly. “I have a bad habit of becoming the thing I hate,
the moment I get the chance.”
“Your actions towards this woman are setting up a power imbalance,
Jason. The kind of imbalance that you described between yourself and Asya.”
The avatar over the pond dissolved into nothing.
“I’m not in a relationship with Zara Rimaros.”
“You weren’t with Asya for a long time, from what you’ve told me. She
was a young woman chasing you around in a position where you held all the
power. Does that sound familiar?”
“She wasn’t chasing me around. I never said anything like that.”
“Farrah did. I learned more about your time on Earth from her than I did
you, Jason. Even after all this time, you are more withholding than you
should be.”
“You shouldn’t be talking to other people about me.”
“I wasn’t. I was listening.”
“What’s going on here is nothing like what happened with Asya.”
“Not yet.”
Jason stood up, storming back and forth. He didn’t seem to notice when
his sharp pacing took him onto the surface of the water, which held him like
solid ground. Suddenly, he stopped, his back to Arabelle.
“My fears have always been narcissistic,” he said, not turning around.
“I’ve been confronted with them magically, more than once, and they’re
always about myself. Fear of what I’ll become. Fear of how I’ll fail, and what
my actions will cost. Frankly, they’ve all been very well-founded. And now I
have a new fear.”
“And that is?”
Jason turned, holding out his arms to indicate the space around them. “Do
you understand what this place is?”
“Not really. Some kind of astral space created by your soul.”
“This isn’t a place I created. This place is me. I’m as much geography as I
am a person.”
“Ah.”
Arabelle nodded, having realised Jason’s issue.
“You’ve finally returned to your friends, but you’re afraid that your path
will take you away from them again.”
“They’re essence users. It defines their power and their path forward.
Even if they manage to follow that path to the end, it makes them like
Soramir. That’s not where my path leads. Many of the gold- and diamond-
rank secrets are still hidden from me, but I’m an astral king. I’m still not sure
exactly what that means, but I do know it puts me on a different path from
anyone I care about. Even Dawn.”
Arabelle nodded again.
“Sit down, Jason.”
He did as instructed.
“Your fears aren’t as self-involved as you seem to think.”
“The nightmare hags I’ve met say differently.”
“And you think some monster you met understands you better than I do?
Such creatures latch onto the fears closest to your sense of self-identity. Of
course, what they dig up is about you.”
“That’s not what I was told.”
“And when did you, of all people, start believing whatever you were told?
How many times have we discussed what happened to your brother, your
friend and your lover over the last few months? About your fear of losing
other people close to you?”
“A lot of times,” he begrudgingly acknowledged.
“You seem to have gotten it into your head that losing them is inevitable,
and you’re mentally preparing for that severance by distancing yourself from
them emotionally.”
“That’s not what I’m—”
“Yes, it is. You’re convinced that you’ll become so alien that you won’t
care about them anymore.”
“What if that is what’s going to happen? What if it’s inevitable?”
“What you do is obvious: you choose for it not to happen.”
“I just choose?”
“Since when has impossible or inevitable stopped you from doing
anything? Are you, of all people, going to tell me that powers on the level of
a great astral being are too much to fight against?”
Jason blinked.
“Huh.”
“Yes.”
They sat side by side for a long time as Jason realigned his thoughts.
Arabelle felt his body language shift as he nodded to himself.
“What are you going to do about your pretty young stalker?” she asked.
“It’s clear that she’s in a very uncertain place with her own self-identity. You
could potentially do some real damage there.”
Jason nodded his agreement. “She seems to have latched onto the idea
that I can somehow show her what’s next for her.”
“And what will you do about that?”
“I’m not ready to be anyone’s purpose, or even to show them theirs. I
think only Shade has a better understanding than you of what a mess I am
right now.”
“That doesn’t change the question. What will you do about her?”
“She’s gotten it in her head that I can do something for her, but the person
she needs is you. Do I send her away to take myself out of the equation?
Point her at one of your colleagues? Or do I let her stay and confront
whatever has gotten her fixated on me? This is not rhetorical, by the way. I’m
genuinely asking you as a mental health professional.”
“You should not be the one to handle her situation if she stays.”
“Oh, I completely agree. I think regular sessions with you should be the
condition of letting her join the convoy. I’ll stay well out of it.”
“I’m surprised you’re willing to tolerate her presence at all.”
“I’m sympathetic to her personal brand of damage, even if we came to it
from opposite directions. I understand doing reckless things because it seems
like the only path forward, but I let her stay for Korinne’s team. They got
kind of a rough deal in terms of determining their own fate. They didn’t ask
to be stuck dealing with me lording over them.”
“Then perhaps you should give them some more autonomy.”
“No. But having Zara on their team will be a boon for them when this is
done with and we part ways. I can give them that much.”

When Jason and Arabelle emerged from his soul space, no one else was
around, barring the traffic moving down the road they were parked next to.
Jason found his new cloud vessel had completed its formation and his
companions had already boarded to explore their new home.
The result of the House de Varco’s purpose-built design looked more akin
to Earth design than it had before, being something like a sleek white
pleasure yacht sitting on top of a giant hovercraft. Jason could feel the
changes through his connection to it having been produced by the soul-linked
cloud flask.
In terms of speed and manoeuvrability, there were only minor
enhancements. The larger differences came from the protective properties of
the exterior and the integrity of the structure. The materials that had been
added to the cloud flask had been selected to enable the vessel to produce
specialised defences that optimised both the protective properties of those
materials and the cloud vehicle’s ability to dissolve and reconstitute its
structure. The result was both resilient to attack and able to repair itself in
real-time during an attack.
The other new feature, also oriented towards combat, was the speciality
weapons designed by Travis. Large ordnance was his speciality and he had
developed an array of weapons that would enhance Jason’s cloud vessel
should they find themselves in combat. As they were heading in the direction
of a potentially large conflict with the messengers, Jason was happy to have
potent new weapons in his arsenal.
Certain design elements in the reformed vessel were similar to those in
the vehicle recently purchased by Korinne and her team. Like the
modifications to the cloud vessel, its design came from House de Varco,
although the end results were very different. The cloud vessel was larger and
a visibly hybridised vehicle. The other was made entirely from conventional
materials and was only as big a vehicle as Korinne’s team could convince her
to buy. Even then, she had only capitulated since the team had all supplied
funds in equal measure.
The door to the vehicle Korinne’s team now called home opened. The top
of the door came out and down, extending to form a ramp. Zara emerged, her
hair and eyes now looking like polished copper. Her hair was loose, parted in
the middle as it fell to her shoulders, framing the caramel skin of her face.
Jason clamped down his aura, but he gave Arabelle a side glance, knowing
she’d caught his reaction to Zara’s dark beauty.
“This is Arabelle Remore,” Jason introduced coldly. “She will ask you
some questions and decide if you can remain as a part of this convoy. If you
lie to her, you’re out. If you evade or refuse to answer her questions, you’re
out.”
Jason turned and marched up the ramp leading into his own vehicle.
“Mr Asano,” Shade said once they were inside the vessel. Another
innovation from the de Varco designs was an automated privacy screen in
corridors and cabins for soundproofing. That made the entry foyer they were
in secure against prying ears.
“Yes, Shade?”
“You seem to be having an outsized reaction to Lady Nareen.”
“I noticed that myself.”
“Perhaps you should have yourself tested for external influences.”
“If something was affecting me, I’d know.”
“Perhaps. On the other hand, you and your abilities are well known
enough that an enemy could have designed a subtle attack with properties to
avoid detection, allowing it to bypass your system notification ability.”
Jason frowned, considering the idea.
“I think if there was anything, I would have realised it in my soul space.”
“Perhaps it is related to your soul space, and not necessarily malign. The
lingering effects of such a different state of being could still be affecting you.
Or the link with the avatar you created could potentially have left you more
open to altered emotional states.”
Jason frowned.
“That sounds dishearteningly plausible.”
“Perhaps you should seek out Mr Standish and Mr Davone, to see if they
can find anything.”
“I don’t like that idea.”
“An astral magic specialist and a healer would be the appropriate people
to consult, Mr Asano.”
“Yeah, but I don’t want to go to Clive and Neil to ask if my private god
realm is making me horny.”
42
Q U I E T P R O F E S S I O N A LI S M

T HE ORIGINAL DESIGN OF J ASON ’ S CLOUD CONSTRUCTS ALLOWED TWO MODES .


One was overtly made of cloud substance, while the other looked
traditionally constructed by the vessel replicating ordinary materials. This
could be a false façade or truly mimic the properties, so long as the materials
had been fed into the flask.
Over time, the binary nature of the constructs had become more fluid as
Jason made many alterations to the cloud flask that produced them. Between
deepening his bond to it, filling it with myriad new materials and altering it
using authority stolen from the Builder, the cloud flask had undergone
extreme changes.
The culmination of this was a third form of cloud construct that used a
hybrid of replicated materials and cloud substance in equal measure. The
inclusion of House de Varco’s modification designs had made it possible,
allowing the vessels to use the best of both worlds. Not only could it enjoy
the exceptional properties of any materials it reproduced, but also the mutable
and self-repairing properties of cloud substance.
Belinda ascended stairs that were rigid platforms that seemed like white
marble, both to the eye and to the touch. They floated on cloud-stuff that
offered just a tiny bit of give, balancing comfort and support. That support
modulated itself automatically, whether the person walking it was as heavy as
Gary or as light as Belinda. Light was a relative term, however, as high-
rankers weighed more than normal people of identical builds. Belinda’s small
frame looked very light, while her actual weight was more than Taika’s had
been, pre-essence.
Belinda made her way up the stairs to the top deck, where a cabin door
opened at her approach. Jason’s master cabin looked different every time she
went inside as he frequently shifted it around, and this time, it was empty
save for Jason himself. He was standing in front of the window, back to the
cabin as he looked out at the city in the distance. Dark structures of glass and
metal poked through the rainforest canopy in the distance to gleam in the
harsh summer sun.
“I have them,” Belinda said, stepping into the cabin. “They’ll stop
working if you use your more overt magical abilities, but that shouldn’t be an
issue for you. Humphrey would have more to worry about in that regard.”
“What about using my aura?” Jason asked without turning around. “It’s a
little more forceful than the norm.”
“I’ve never tested this kind of device with an aura like yours. I’d keep it
tamped down, just to be safe. That shouldn’t be a problem if you’re laying
low, right?”
Jason turned around, flashing her a smile.
“Exactly right,” he agreed as she handed him a pair of blue coins. “I just
put them in place?”
“I like to keep devices like this one simple. It’s important to be able to
change appearances quickly and easily when you’re avoiding pursuit.”
“I’m not looking to steal anything,” Jason told her, a hint of good-natured
scolding in his voice.
“I’m just saying that you should keep your options open.”
“Is this what the princess uses to change her appearance?”
“I’m fairly certain she uses some ritual magic designed especially for
celestines. Not quite as convenient, and needs regular reapplication, but it
will hold up under stress in a way that these won’t. But as long as you avoid
your big finisher spells or any of your wide-area powers, these should be
fine.”
“I’m not looking to get in any fights,” Jason said.
“You never are,” Belinda said.
“You didn’t see me back on Earth,” he said, then placed the blue coins
over his eyes. The coins immediately vanished, revealing not Jason’s alien
eyes but ordinary dark brown ones, much as they’d been when he was
human. “I wasn’t mellow the way I am here.”
“Are you sure you don’t want your eyes to be a piercing, icy blue or
something?” Belinda offered. “I can tweak them very easily.”
“No, thank you,” Jason said, prodding around his eyes. The coins had
truly disappeared, not just turned invisible.
“They’ll reappear if you use too much magic,” Belinda said. “Just
channel mana into your eyes if you want to take them off.”
Using most magic items was a fairly instinctual process of feeding them
with mana to form a magical link. Jason did just that with his eyes and they
went back to normal as the coins reappeared.
“That will do nicely,” he said. “Thank you, Belinda.”

The city of Yaresh was relatively small in terms of population, having only a
few tens of thousands. The design, deeply accommodating the natural
environment, led to a small population density, however. Geographically,
Yaresh had the footprint of a much larger centre.
Humphrey, Clive and Neil had gone ahead to the Yaresh Adventure
Society branch to gather information. The information they brought back
spoke to a situation more complex than originally anticipated, which they
gathered everyone together to explain.
Almost every member of the convoy was present in the cloud vessel’s
briefing room, even the gold-rankers, including the less-than-stable Callum
Morse. Absent were the Order of Redeeming Light prisoners, all in magical
stasis save for Melody, locked in her cabin in the cloud house. Carlos was
present, but his assistants were not, leaving only two last absentees.
Humphrey, Clive and Neil stood at the front of the briefing room, the
others sitting in rows watching them.
“Where’s Asano?” Korinne asked from the first row, the team leader
sitting alongside the gold-rankers.
“Jason and Estella Warnock,” Humphrey told her, “have headed for the
city, where they will remain for what we estimate to be two weeks. For the
duration of that time, our teams will be working in close cooperation with
other teams in the area. That means avoiding questions about why the cook is
killing so many monsters, or why a mysterious figure keeps slaughtering
monster packs before we arrive. Until we can operate more independently,
Jason will be working in the city.”
“Warnock I understand,” Korinne said. “Scouting out urban areas is her
job. Asano doesn’t strike me as much of a spy.”
“Jason will surprise you when it comes to blending in with regular folk,”
Gary said. “When he doesn’t have to get involved with kings and gods and
high-rank adventurers, he can blend in just fine. Especially for someone from
another world. He doesn’t run around doing outlandish things around normal
people because he doesn’t have to.”
“Mostly doesn’t,” Rufus qualified. “Depending on your definition of
outlandish.”
“He’s far more normal around regular people,” Gary said. “Remember
that village, right after we met him. He was just meeting people and being
social. While gathering information, I’ll remind you. Completely sensible.”
“Are you talking about the village where he was blasted off the side of a
mountain by a malfunctioning waterfall before saving the village from a
bunch of shabs?” Rufus asked him.
“It’s not his fault the waterfall wasn’t working properly.”
“Standing in front of it when it wasn’t working was.”
“Jason isn’t going into the city to spy,” Arabelle spoke up, cutting them
short. “He presented a new idea for refining his aura control to Lord
Pensinata, who approved of his exploration of the concept.”
“What concept?” Korinne asked.
“Integrating aura-echo interrelation with interpersonal magic,” Clive
explained.
“What does that mean?” asked Kalif, a member of Korinne’s team.
“Interpersonal magic?”
Clive took on an uncomfortable expression.
“Interpersonal magic is known by a wide variety of colloquial terms,” he
said. “One of which is carnal magic.”
“Wait,” Kalif said. “We’re going to be working for the next two weeks
while Asano is off knocking boots with the cute pink-haired woman?”
“Miss Warnock and Jason will be operating separately,” Humphrey said.
“Miss Warnock will fulfil her role as a spy while Jason undertakes his own
endeavour.”
“Plus, Stella likes girls,” Sophie added.
“So much for that, then, Polix,” Kalif said to another member of his team
who had a disappointed expression. “Hold on, if Asano isn’t taking someone
with him, how is he going to use rumpy-pumpy magic?”
“Firstly,” Clive said, “please don’t call it that. And secondly, I imagine
he’ll seek out volunteers.”
“Meaning he’ll have to pick up women himself?” Kalif asked. “Who’s
going to go for that guy? If he had his Rimaros reputation to play off, he
might get a pity rub, but he’s playing a cook now, right? He’s going to spend
the next two weeks going home alone.”
“I completely agree,” Belinda said. “What woman will go for a guy with
laid-back charm, absolute confidence, a mysterious dark side and hidden
secrets? Plus, he can cook and dance, which are traits that famously repel
women.”
“I bet he doesn’t go for those stuffy society dances,” commented Rosa,
the scout from Kalif’s team.
That earned her a glare from Kalif.
“I mean, who cares?” Rosa covered lamely.
“I think that’s quite enough about Jason,” Humphrey said. “We need to
focus on our own activities in the coming weeks and potentially months. The
conflict with the messengers in this region has proven significantly more
complex than anticipated.”
“The Adventure Society more or less told us to shut up and do the
contracts we’re told,” Neil said. “They’re on a war footing and are looking
for soldiers who will obey, not adventurers causing trouble.”
“Fortunately,” Humphrey said, “we were contacted by a priest of the
Church of Knowledge. He gave us a much more thorough appraisal of the
situation and background to how it reached this point. He also told us that if
we can, not to make a fuss and follow the Adventure Society’s orders for a
couple of weeks, at which point the Church of Knowledge will requisition us
for the main conflict. They already know about Jason, so they’ll set us up on
missions where he can work with us almost openly. They regularly
requisition teams, so it won’t look too out of place if we’ve proven ourselves
reliable.”
“Why would it look outlandish if they just call us up now?”
“Because there are plenty of teams that have already proven themselves
and want a place in the big fight,” Neil said. “If we come in out of nowhere
and take a slot, people will start looking at us closer than we want to be
looked at.”
“The Church of Knowledge reached out because of Jason’s relationship
with the goddess,” Clive said. “But Jason is also the reason we don’t want too
many eyes on us.”
“Relationship with the goddess,” Belinda repeated. “And this guy thinks
he’ll have trouble picking up women.”
“It’s not that kind of relationship, Belinda,” Clive said. “Also, I’m fairly
certain that implying it is counts as blasphemy.”
“So?” she shot back. “Gods and their churches never did a damn thing for
me.”
“You do know that I’m a priest of the Healer, don’t you?” Neil asked.
“You’ve got an imaginary friend; we’re all very proud,” Belinda told him.
“Get on with it.”
“The Healer is not imaginary! And you’re the one who interrupted in the
first place.”
“Belinda,” Humphrey admonished, his tone making it plain that he was
not willing to brook further nonsense. “If silence is as much professionalism
as you can muster, then do so. Clive, please explain what is going on.”
Clive nodded as Belinda gave Neil a smirk but held her tongue.
“Some of what we’re about to tell you is information we had already
gathered from various sources,” Clive said. “Some of it comes from the priest
of Knowledge we just met. As you should all be aware, the Church of
Knowledge has been mustering forces in certain areas around the world.”
“What most of you won’t know,” Humphrey followed on, “is the scale
and scope of the church’s activities, and how long they’ve been going on.”
“The groundwork for the church’s activities,” Clive picked up, “turns out
to have been going on for decades. Large troupes are being established
piecemeal, so as not to attract attention. Monster cores have been used to
create expansive forces of essence users, under the command of more
conventionally trained adventurers. Each and every one, faithful to the
Church of Knowledge. Only the god War was aware of the magnitude of
Knowledge’s plans, and remained silent for reasons unknown, at least to us.”
“A number of years ago,” Humphrey said, “they started to mobilise and
gather at locations around the world, chosen by no means anyone could
determine. It took a while to realise what was happening and on what scale,
but if you track the activity back to when the forces that Knowledge had built
up started moving, it was all on a single day. A day after which the Church of
Knowledge apparently no longer cared about being noticed.”
“Given that you’ve made such a point of it,” Korinne said, “I assume
there is something significant about that day.”
“It was the same day Jason Asano first arrived in this world,” Clive said.
“Knowledge knows more than even the other gods. She knew the messengers
were coming, and she knew that Jason would be the one that opened the
window through which they would come.”
“Are you saying that Asano is responsible for the messenger invasion?”
“No,” Humphrey said. “Jason and Farrah were the ones who triggered the
monster surge.”
“The monster surge that had been artificially delayed for years,” Clive
added. “The longer it was stalled, the worse the surge that came with it would
be when finally unleashed. And the longer the Builder would have to plunder
our world. Jason and Farrah put an end to that delay and prevented it from
getting worse, but some amount of damage was inevitable. It was a plan that
came into effect years before Jason ever encountered magic.”
“And the same window used by the Builder,” Humphrey said, “allowed
what we thought was the Church of Purity to help the messengers in coming
to our world. And that is where everyone learned what Knowledge had been
preparing for.”
“Where Knowledge had gathered, other forces gathered in reaction,” Neil
explained. “And in every region where that happened, messengers were
summoned. Knowledge has been preparing to defend this world for decades,
building the force we would need but have no time to establish once the
threat was revealed.”
“This brings us to what the priest in Yaresh told us,” Humphrey said. “A
few hours from the city, Knowledge’s military force set up a camp. The God
of War did the same, and then the messengers came. The government in
Yaresh as well as the Adventure Society were both concerned about each of
these developments, and then things got worse.”
“There is an extremely rare natural magic event that can happen,” Clive
said. “It’s called a natural array. To excessively simplify, it means that, over
time, essences, awakening stones and quintessence manifested, undisturbed,
in a very specific pattern. The convergent magical energies within that pattern
combine to create unconventional effects. The nature of those effects is
defined by the size and nature of the pattern, as well as the elements that
make it up.”
“Can someone simplify that some more?” Kalif asked.
“It means that sometimes magic stuff happens,” Clive said, exasperated.
“If you can’t follow more than that, then I recommend staying quiet and
asking your team leader after the briefing.”
“I’m not an idiot,” Kalif said sullenly.
“Then do the smart thing and be quiet,” Clive said, “or we’ll be here all
day.”
“I don’t like how you’re speaking to my team member,” Korinne said
warningly.
“And I stopped caring what you liked the moment your new team
member arrived,” Clive shot back. “Shut up and listen or get out.”
Humphrey put a hand on Clive’s shoulder.
“Clive—”
“No,” Clive said, shrugging off his hand, and turned on Amos Pensinata.
“You were brought on to help Jason, not make things worse. But your
baggage…”
He waved a hand at Korinne’s team.
“…has only made things worse. So, fix it or get off this boat and take
them with you.”
With that, Clive stormed out, Humphrey wincing as he watched him go.
“What about the briefing?” Neil asked. “Clive was meant to cover the
magic stuff.”
“We’ll postpone,” Humphrey said. “We’ve covered what we need for the
next couple of weeks, which is that we’ll be given contracts that we should
carry out with the kind of quiet professionalism that we have failed to
demonstrate today. We can reconvene the briefing once we’re in the city and
everyone has cooled down.”
At the back of the briefing room, Zara shrank into her chair, trying to
make herself as small as she felt.
43
A M A N O F M A N Y TA LE NT S

A FTER INCREASING DELAYS , THE CONVOY WAS FINALLY PREPARING TO HEAD


down the last stretch of road leading into the city of Yaresh. Part of the delay
was making sure they had a place waiting to stow their large vehicles for the
duration of their visit. They had settled on a fairly low-end camping ground
as space was currently at a premium. Many travelling adventurers had already
arrived in Yaresh, looking to join the conflict with the messengers.
Humphrey’s and Korinne’s teams were far from the only ones to travel in
what amounted to ambulatory houses.
Before they left, Humphrey approached the vehicle used by the other
team, stopping at the bottom of the ramp that led inside. He waited, knowing
that the magic defences would have already alerted the occupants to his
presence. He was left standing for several minutes before Korinne appeared
at the top of the ramp.
“What can I do for you, Master Geller?”
“After the failed briefing, I thought it would be a good idea for us to
discuss the friction between our teams. May I come in?”
Shortly thereafter, Korinne was sitting across from Humphrey in a booth.
Unlike when she had been there with Zara, she did not make tea.
“I think it’s clear that our teams are having some issues operating
together,” Humphrey said. “As the leaders, I thought you and I should figure
out together if this is something we can remedy, or at least ameliorate, or if
the differences are irreconcilable.”
“Your team members seem to be blaming us for Asano running off to get
his dongle wet instead of working with his team.”
“That is not your fault and they know it. But your decision to take on
Zara Rimaros has got them riled.”
“Are you telling me to kick her out?”
“No. Jason decided that she stays. He’s aware that you and your team are
not in ideal circumstances and that your involvement with the princess will
serve as some manner of compensation.”
“He said that, did he?”
“Yes. I’m not putting words in his mouth to try and make you think he’s
less difficult than he actually is.”
“Why is it his decision to make in the first place? Which one of you is the
team leader?”
“On our team—our team, not my team—we each take the roles we need
to take.”
“That’s a good way to get yourselves killed, dithering when everyone
tries to take control in the heat of battle. Command structures agree for a
reason.”
“And we’ve found what works for us. I won’t claim it will work for your
team any more than yours will work for mine.”
“Why are we even talking about this anyway? Didn’t Asano leave the
decision about the princess to Lady Remore?”
“It’s Mrs Remore,” Humphrey corrected. “And you’ll find that Jason
does things to achieve the outcome he wants, not to say what he means or
speak the truth.”
“You’re saying he’s duplicitous.”
“We each have our roles. I already told you that.”
“Fine. But how are we supposed to trust someone who lies to us?”
“We don’t want your trust, Lady Pescos. We want your cooperation or,
failing that, for you to stay out of our way. Zara Rimaros used Jason’s name
dishonourably, and it dragged him into the exact trouble he wanted to avoid,
at the time he most needed to avoid it. That is why having her on your team
has put my team at odds with you. We are sensitive about losing Jason
because we’ve done it before. He can be fragile in certain regards, and if
something happens because of your princess, you’ll find that we are bad
enemies to have.”
“Then why let her stay in the convoy at all?”
“Because Jason told us to, and he’s the one she makes trouble for. You
wanted to know why Jason gets to choose? That’s why.”
Korinne sighed. “My team is resentful of yours. It feels like we’re
secondary. Tacked on.”
“You are,” Humphrey said. “Do with that what you will.”
Korinne started pacing in thought, a scowl plastered on her face.
“Genuine contention will only drag us both down,” Korinne said. “But a
rivalry could be a push that moves us all forward.”
The smile that spread across Humphrey’s face made Korinne suspect he’d
been waiting for the suggestion all along.
“I couldn’t agree more,” he said. “And Jason’s absence might just give us
the breathing room to find a balance that is beneficial to us all.”

The city walls of Yaresh were a line of massive trees with walls of glossy
black stone filling the gaps between them. Tunnels passed right through the
trunks, allowing passage from one section of wall-top to the next. A black
land skimmer arrived at the wall where vehicles were queued up at the gate,
awaiting inspection. In the driver’s seat was Jason, with Estella Warnock
beside him.
Most of the vehicles were hauling cargo on magically powered wagons,
some of which were almost the size of a semi-trailer truck. Bulk land freight
was inefficient compared to the alternatives magic offered, but was cheap and
seemed common locally, based on the vehicles lined up at the gates.
“That’s a lot of land transport,” Jason pointed out.
“I was thinking the same thing,” Estella agreed. “Could be something
about local magic conditions that makes other methods less viable. The
magic is more than high enough to support airships, though, so I don’t know.
I’ll look into it and see if there’s anything going on we need to concern
ourselves with.”
“I have to say, Miss Warnock, I am increasingly satisfied with the choice
to bring you aboard.”
“Don’t be too happy,” Estella said. “I’m calling dibs on your princess.”
“What?”
“You heard me.”
“You’re talking about Zara?”
“Yep. Come down in the world, low self-esteem. That’s my zone.”
“That’s pretty despicable.”
“You had your chances.”
“I don’t mean calling dibs. I mean preying on someone at their lowest.”
“Oh, yeah, she’s really hurting, with all her money and connections. Not
all of us can just adopt ourselves into one of the most prestigious families in
the kingdom because being a princess was harshing us out.”
“It doesn’t sound like you want to chase after her.”
“I’ll admit I’m not great at pursuing relationships.”
“Have you considered maybe trying charm? Getting to know them
honestly? Basic decency?”
“None of those are my strong areas.”
“Then maybe figure out what your strong areas are and find someone
who finds those appealing.”
“As it turns out, I’m not really into the people who are into my strengths.
My standards are too high to include anyone who’d settle for me.”
“You weren’t kidding about low self-esteem being your zone, were you?
Watch out for the landing.”
The skimmer turned into a cloud of swirling darkness that was drawn into
Jason’s shadow. Jason moved from sitting to standing with practised ease
while Estella fell on her rear before getting up and brushing road dirt off her
pants.
“I did say watch out for the landing,” he told her.
“I didn’t know that meant the vehicle would disappear out from under
me.”
There were two queues for people wanting to enter the city. Rather than
joining the vehicle queue, they moved to the shorter queue for those with
other means of transport, usually mid-to-high-rank adventurers. These were
people that flew under their own power, rode familiars like Jason did or
portalled into a nearby open area designated for that purpose.
Jason and Estella produced their Adventure Society badges and identity
papers. Like Jason’s current identity, Estella was registered as an auxiliary
that was not required to mobilise, despite the city’s adventurers being on a
war footing. They were told that the team they were attached to would need
to report to the Adventure Society by the end of the day after their arrival.
After that notification, the pair were allowed through a tunnel that brought
him into the city proper.
“Oh, yeah,” Jason said as he emerged from the tunnel and looked around.
“Travis won’t be happy about missing a proper elf city.”
They were in a warehouse district centred around the city gate. A four-
lane boulevard ran from the gate into the city, but didn’t follow the plumb-
straight line typical of urban areas. It was instead split into a pair of double-
lane streets, each following one side of a mostly straight creek. The sides of
the street were lined with trees and the space around the buildings was filled
with grass.
The buildings were all made from brick in various shades of black,
yellow, grey, red and brown, suggesting a wide variety of local stone. Vines
crawled up the walls of every building and the roofs were gently sloped and
covered in live grass, bushes and other small-to-medium plants. The air was
thick with rainforest smells, damp and earthy. Looking down the boulevard
and further into the city, they saw much taller buildings in the distance where
stone gave way to glass and metal.
Panning his gaze around, Jason saw very little lumbered wood. What
wood he did see looked either natural, with the city accommodating its
growth, or having been shaped into highly specific forms as it grew. The
buildings were spaced out, with rainforest growth burgeoning up in between
them.
The street was busy with vehicles entering through the city gate next to
the tunnel from which they had just emerged. Taking more of a look, Jason
noticed that many of the vehicles were made from more of the specifically
grown wood. Metal-wheeled carriages had wooden frames that not only
looked to have been grown that way but also had the faint aura of living
plants. The frames were filled out with metal and draped cloth. Other vehicles
had similar designs, from three-wheeled single-seaters to bus-like
contraptions that had a dozen massive wooden legs instead of wheels.
Other vehicles that Jason was more familiar with were also in evidence.
Land skimmers, more conventional carriages and personal floatation discs
were all on display. They were minimally present, however, and never driven
by the elves that made up the bulk of the population. The local elven ethnicity
had skin tones ranging from almond to milk chocolate, while their hair
ranged from honey to rich brown. Straight hair was either out of fashion or
not natural, with styles ranging from cascading waves to ringlets to
explosions of frizzy waves.
Jason and Estella moved out of the way of others emerging from the
tunnel and Jason closed his eyes. He took a deep breath, letting it out slowly
with a huge grin.
“Do you still have lungs?” Estella asked him.
“No.”
“Then how are you breathing like that?”
“I just do. Doesn’t your body just do the things you want it to?”
“No. My grandfather showed me some techniques for body manipulation,
but if I wanted to breathe, I’d have to concentrate to make it work.”
“You should practise those techniques some more. It’s nice to be able to
sigh sometimes. Studies have shown that sighing is an important component
of personal well-being, helping to alleviate stress and recalibrate your mood.”
“I’m going to go now. See you in two weeks.”
“Don’t forget that Shade is there if you need to signal for help.”
“You thought I’d forget the person you left hiding in my shadow?”
“You might have.”
“He watches me sleep.”
“Yeah, he mentioned that you snore.”
“What?”
“Mr Asano,” Shade said from Jason’s shadow. “I will thank you for not
impugning my character. Miss Warnock, I can assure you that I told Mr
Asano nothing about your snoring.”
“I don’t snore.”
“I acknowledge that you assert that, Miss Warnock.”
“You two are as bad as each other,” Estella said. She stormed off, leaving
Jason standing at the side of the street.
“Does she really snore?” Jason asked.
“Mr Asano, you were the one who told me not to divulge personal details
unless relevant to security. Even if those details sound like someone sawing
lumber in a tunnel.”

Jason spent the day walking through the city, taking things in. Beyond the
unconventional architecture, the warehouse district had little to offer and he
didn’t tarry. The neighbouring entertainment district proved much more
interesting, even early in the day, with bars, cafes and places offering delights
ranging from the chaste to the downright saucy. Jason was looking for the
place he could sample the local cuisine when he spotted an elf rubbing out
the menu board from the outside wall of a small pub.
“Food’s off?” he asked.
“Most of the kitchen crew got in a brawl playing tri-ball,” she said
without turning around. “The city militia threw both teams in the cells until
tomorrow. Chef’s still in, but unless you know of four at least halfway-decent
cooks who’ll work for cheap on short notice, there won’t be enough hands to
do food service.”
Still with her back to him, she didn’t see the huge grin overtake Jason’s
face.

Bellory had been sceptical of the strange human, but she stood transfixed as
she watched the bustle of activity in the kitchen. As the chef issued
directions, a forest of shadow arms poked out from under shelves, out of
cupboards or anywhere else a shadow could be found. They also reached out
from her new temporary employee, chopping up ingredients, working the
grill and frying with pans or plating meals.
“Are you sure it’s okay for those things to touch the food?” she asked the
chef, Kellance. He was her cousin.
“The conjured arms are very sanitary,” Jason said.
“Also, I have an active sanitation ritual,” Kellance said. “More sariantes,
please, Mr Miller.”
“Call me John,” Jason told him. “Which ones are the sariantes? Oh, the
shallot-looking things, no worries. They taste good.”
“Have you been sampling ingredients, Mr Miller?”
“Er… no.”

The rainforest-riddled city offered little in the way of light pollution, making
it easy to see the stars shine once the sky grew dark. After the evening rush
died down, Jason and Kellance retired to the roof of the pub, in lounge chairs
with naturally grown frames slung with light, comfortable fabric. Between
them was a side table with a bottle and two glasses. Once the pub closed for
the night, Kellance went home and his spot on the roof was taken by Bellory.
The bottle was emptied, followed by two more.
“I didn’t realise that elves could put away so much liquor,” Jason said.
“I’ve got poison resistance and this stuff still has a kick.”
“Do you know a lot of elves?”
“I haven’t done a lot of drinking with them, it’s true,” Jason said.
“Although I’m just realising that I might have and don’t remember it because
they drank me under the table. I did make some elven friends, though, when I
was living in a port city a few years back.”
“And now you’re following adventurers around?”
“Strictly speaking, they’re following me. They haven’t even arrived yet.
Or maybe they have; I’ve been here all day. And I think I just drank all my
wages.”
Bellory laughed, a tinkling water sound.
“You don’t mind just being an auxiliary?” she asked. “Waiting back at
camp while the others go off and do the fighting?”
“Well, for one,” Jason slurred, holding up a slightly wobbly finger, “have
you ever seen adventurers fight monsters? You’re best off staying away from
that, believe me. And for a third thing, I serve an important function.”
“You do seem like an important man,” Bellory said unconvincingly.
“Do you know what a bulvrath is?”
“I don’t.”
“It’s a bog monster. Likes to ambush travellers on roads that go through
swamps and mangroves. Very good at hiding, very cautious. Good at telling
the difference between a wagon full of juicy victims and a wagon full of
adventurers coming to kill it. Takes days to pin them down, and that’s when
you know what you’re doing.”
“And what’s that got to do with cooking? Are they delicious?”
“I haven’t checked. They make nests out of their own poo.”
“I don’t think I’d check either.”
“The point I’m making is that after hunting down a bulvrath, an
adventuring team has spent days roaming around a filthy bog, living on spirit
coins, for the chance to kill a monster while wading through waist-deep filth.
When they come back from that, do you think they’d rather wash themselves
off with soap potion, eat a spirit coin and go to bed, or have a nice, crystal-
wash-infused shower followed by a delicious hot meal?”
“You provide showers as well as cook?”
“I’m a man of many talents. I cook, I dance, I provide amenities and I…”
He frowned.
“…I’m a man of three talents.”
Bellory laughed again as she emptied the last bottle, splitting the dregs
between their glasses.
“So, will you be going back to your amenities?”
“I don’t, strictly speaking, know where they are right now,” he said, not
exactly lying. Knowing the precise direction and distance wasn’t the same as
knowing what the location in question was. “I’m sure they’ve arrived
somewhere. My friend Hump said something about a camping ground.”
“You have a friend named Hump?”
“You wouldn’t like him. He’s definitely not super-handsome. I’m sure I
can find my way back to them.”
“You know,” she said, her voice growing husky. “It’s awfully late to go
looking for your friends, especially in your condition.”
“I’m fine,” Jason said, his sing-song voice not assisting his plausibility.
“I’m fine to go roaming the streets at night, as surely as I’m standing here.”
“You’re sitting.”
“You might have a point, then. Are you inviting me to stay?”
“Maybe.”
“I’d best take this off, then,” he said, reaching under his shirt collar to
unclip a small suppression collar.

Multiple resistances have increased. All relevant afflictions will have


their duration reduced according to new resistance levels.

Poison [alcohol (silver rank)] has ended.


Poison [alcohol (silver rank)] has ended.
Poison [alcohol (silver rank)] has ended.
Poison [alcohol (silver rank)] has ended.
Jason shook his head to clear it, then turned to Bellory, who was giving the
suppression collar a flat look.
“I told you I had poison resistance,” he said. “Does this mean I’m
uninvited?”
“No,” she said, climbing out of her chair and on top of him in his, making
the frame squeak. “It means you better remember what that fourth talent is.”
44
T H E S A M E T H I N G A S T E LLI N G T H E T RU T H

J ASON WAS COOKING BREAKFAST IN THE PUB ’ S KITCHEN WHEN THE CHEF ,
Kellance, arrived through the door leading directly into the kitchen from the
alley. In Yaresh, alleys were much nicer than the norm, usually having more
in common with a garden. In this case, a gravel path meandered through long
grass and around a couple of trees with long leaves of lush green.
Jason had learned the day before that the elven chef was the cousin of
Bellory, the pub’s owner.
“Morning, bloke,” Jason said as he entered, only briefly glancing from
the frypan in front of him.
“John, you’re still here,” Kellance said. “I had a feeling you might be.”
“Oh?”
“Bell likes men she knows for sure won’t stick around longer than it takes
fruit to go bad. Her husband running off, leaving her with this place and a
pile of debt did some damage. She’s scared of opening up again, you know?”
“I can imagine. She glossed over it last night, but I got the impression that
there was a wound there. I hope you don’t mind me plundering the kitchen to
make breakfast.”
“That depends. Did you make enough for three?”
“As a matter of fact, I did. If you want to grab some…”
Jason trailed off, frowning as he looked at the wall.
“What is it?” Kellance asked.
“Three men are coming this way, and I don’t think it’s for a breakfast fry-
up.”
The pub, like most buildings in the area, was made of dark grey stone.
The door to the alley was a rectangle of wood that looked to have grown into
that shape, with some kind of light ceramic used to fill it in. There was a
window in the top half that Kellance looked out through, swearing under his
breath.
Almost immediately after, a trio of elves moved in front of the door. They
had looks typical for the locals and wore neat casual suits that Jason
recognised as fitting the local fashion. They looked something akin to
business suits but worn loose, with long, tapered sleeves and coattails. He had
seen the pub’s more upscale clientele wearing similar outfits the night before,
although most of what he’d seen had been in light colours. These three wore
significantly darker shades. The one in front was clearly the leader, flanked
by the others. He grinned at Kellance through the window before pushing the
door open.
“Hello, Kell,” he said, his voice snide. “Something smells good.”
It was clear to Jason that the newly arrived elves were local thugs that
delighted in the petty power they held. If their body language wasn’t enough,
their auras reeked of insecurity and glee at holding power over anyone. Jason
tapped the crystal that turned off the stove’s heat stone and moved the frypan
onto a wooden board.
“And who do we have here?” the lead elf said, looking over at Jason.
“A temporary cook,” Bellory said as she came down the stairs. Jason
noticed that the pub owner had quickly tossed on the same clothes she’d been
wearing the night before.
“And here we have it,” the lead thug said. “Bell and Kell. Why would you
need new kitchen staff, Bell?”
“The rest got caught up in that tri-ball brawl yesterday.”
“Oh, I heard about that. It’s the very reason my father sent me along.
Wanted to collect early, make sure that you didn’t come up short after having
to cancel food service.”
Jason had been wondering how a sports punch-up had led to arrests when
Pallimustus was usually so open to violence. He had put it down to local laws
or culture, but now he realised that there had been outside intervention. He
guessed the thug’s father was some local boss, shaking down Bellory’s pub
and other local businesses. For whatever reason, he wanted extra pressure put
on Bellory.
“I’ve got your loan repayment, Emresh,” Bellory told the thug. “Just give
me a minute to get it together.”
“Take your time, Bell,” Emresh said as he sauntered up to Jason. “Gives
me a chance to get to know your new employee.”
“He’s just a drifter passing through, Emresh,” Kellance said as Bellory
left for another part of the pub.
Emresh got right up in Jason’s face, sniffing him like an animal. Like the
thug and his offsiders, Jason’s aura was silver rank with a heavy mark of
monster core use. He’d been practising his aura masking a lot, and Amos
Pensinata had especially helped him refine it.
“Silver rank, not bad,” Emresh said. “Is that right, kitchen boy? You just
passing through?”
“I’m an adventuring auxiliary,” Jason told him. “I’ll only be around as
long as my team.”
“Well, look here, boys. We’ve got ourselves a big-time adventurer. You
fight any monsters, adventurer?”
“I’m a cook.”
“And how’s your cooking?” Emresh asked. “Good enough that your team
will come looking for revenge when we make an example of you?”
“If you want to try my cooking, it’s right there,” Jason said, nodding at
the frypan on the bench.
Emresh laughed.
“I like this one.”
He plucked a piece of fried vegetable from the pan with his fingers and
popped it into his mouth. His eyebrows went up and he laughed, turning
around to look at his flunkeys.
“You know what? He’s pretty good. Shame, really.”
Emresh turned back to Jason, the insincere friendliness dropping from his
face.
“You think my father is afraid of some wandering adventurers?”
“I don’t know,” Jason said. “I haven’t met him.”
“Oh, you’re funny,” Emresh said.
“I have my moments.”
Emresh drove a fist into Jason’s gut and he doubled over. He leaned
down to speak into Jason’s ear.
“Is this one of your moments, adventurer?”
“Sorry, what was that?” Jason croaked. “I couldn’t hear over the sound of
how small your dick is.”
One of the lackeys snorted a laugh, earning a glare from Emresh.
“You should not have done that,” the other flunkey said.
Emresh stamped his fist down on the back of Jason’s head, dropping him
to the floor. He then followed up with a savage boot to the gut. Jason let out a
retching sound, but pushed himself and got to his feet.
“You should have stayed down,” Emresh said.
“You were going to kick the crap out of me either way,” Jason said.
“Most people would have run if they figured that out.”
“You’d only beat me harder if you had to chase me down first.”
Emresh let out his snide laugh once more.
“That’s true,” he said. “But do you know what I hate more than someone
that makes me chase them before a beating?”
Jason theatrically sniffed the air. “I’m going to say soap.”
Emresh gave him a malevolent smile.
“Someone too smart for their own good.”
“I can see how you’d resent smart people.”
When Bellory returned with a bag of spirit coins, Emresh and his lackeys
were repeatedly kicking Jason who was curled up on the floor.
“I’ve got the money,” she yelled. “What are you doing?”
“Call it an object lesson,” Emresh said, not pausing from the assault. “If
my father decides your kitchen is closed, then your kitchen is closed.”
Bellory bit back her retort. There was no point asking how she was meant
to meet her loan payments—the answer was that she wasn’t. She wanted to
intervene, but the attempt would be as pointless as the repercussions would
be severe. Finally tiring of their game, the thugs admired their handiwork as
Jason was left moaning softly on the ground. His face was red from the
pummelling and his skin abraded from their boots; the damage to the covered
parts of his body was likely far worse.
“Silver-rankers,” Emresh said. “They can take much more of a beating, so
you have to put more effort in. Still, they don’t accidentally die on you, so
there’s that.”
He pointed a finger in Bellory’s face, snatched the bag of money from her
hands and roughly opened the door before swaggering out. Bellory looked to
the still-moaning Jason but was surprised to see him looking up at her,
waggling his eyebrows. He tapped a finger to his lips so she’d stay silent
even as he continued letting out light moans.
Bellory and Kellance watched him, seeing the injuries on his face swiftly
healing. He stopped moaning and sprang to his feet.
“Bloody silver-rank hearing,” he said cheerfully. “Had to make sure they
were out of earshot.”
“John, are you alright?” Kellance asked.
“I’ve had worse than that, believe me,” Jason assured him. “That was
practically a massage.”
Bellory cupped a hand to his face where the most visible damage had
been, now completely unblemished.
“Why would you provoke him like that?”
“He was here to make a point, one way or another. Best if it’s on
someone who can take his lumps.”
Jason turned his gaze to the door.
“I gather that he’s the son of whoever holds your loan? Someone not
above interfering so he can use that loan to snake this whole place out from
under you?”
Bellory nodded, bowing her head in shame, resting a gentle hand on
Jason’s arm.
“I pulled you into my troubles,” she said, her voice filled with self-
recrimination.
“I’ve pulled myself into worse, believe me. It’s kind of my thing. But you
should tell me who that bloke’s father is.”
She looked up sharply. “Don’t get your adventurer friends to go after
him.”
“I’m not looking for revenge. I know that will just bring trouble down on
you.”
“You could have taken those guys apart, couldn’t you?” Kellance asked
as he gave Jason an assessing up-and-down look.
“It doesn’t matter,” Jason said. “I’m only passing through. Anything I did
today, you’d pay for tomorrow. But I need to know who I’m dealing with, so
I can at least stay out of their way until I’m gone.”
“Thank you,” Kellance said. “That was Emresh Vohl. His father, Urman
Vohl, is a major figure in the entertainment district.”
“Crime lord?”
“Not exactly,” Kellance said. “The city administration doesn’t let crime
bosses grow too strong without slapping them down. Vohl is legitimate in his
actual business interests, even if the way he conducts them is criminal. So
long as he doesn’t trample on the interests of anyone who can match or
exceed his influence, he can run his legitimate interests in a less-than-
legitimate way.”
“That’s pretty much what I guessed,” Jason said, then sighed as he looked
at the cooling food in the pan. “So much for breakfast. I should go.”
“I feel bad just letting you leave after that,” Bellory said. “But you’re
probably right.”
“Are you sure you’re alright after all that damage?” Kellance asked.
Bellory reached out to Jason’s face again, running a delicate thumb over
the scar on his chin. Her thoughts went to his other scars, revealed to her the
night before.
“He is,” she said. “He’s not just a cook.”
“Yeah,” Kellance said. “I’m getting that impression.”
He looked at Jason’s blood on the floor.
“I’ll go get a mop.”
Jason smiled after Kellance left.
“Tell him to keep the mop outside for an hour or so,” Jason said. “My
blood will dissolve and leave the worst stench you’ve ever smelled behind.”
“We get a lot of scarlet-comb beetles here.”
“Beetles?”
“I kill lesser monsters with my broom a couple of times a month. I know
to air it until the rainbow smoke clears. Your body is that magical?”
“You tell me,” he said with a sly grin. “You checked pretty thoroughly.”
She failed to stop her snort of derision from becoming a laugh as she
withdrew her hand from his face.
“John,” she said, “if I went looking into that tattoo on your back, would I
learn who you are?”
“Yeah,” he said softly. “I’m not hiding anything you can’t figure out if
you try. I’m hoping you won’t, though. I like the idea of living in your
memory as a mysterious stranger who passed through one day.”
“Oh, you think you’re worth remembering?” she teased.
“I don’t imagine you forgetting someone who can conjure that many
magic hands.”
She gave him a beaming smile, but with a hint of sadness in her eyes.
“How many lies did you tell me?” she asked.
“Two. But not telling lies isn’t the same thing as telling the truth. The
things I didn’t say have hidden a lot.”
“I don’t need your life’s story. Your name was one of the two lies, wasn’t
it?”
He nodded.
“And the other one was about only having four talents.”
“I only have four that I like.”
He leaned in for a lingering kiss that tasted like goodbye.

Jason wandered down the street, letting his feet guide him as he explored the
city.
“Shade,” he said. “Estella will be looking into local power brokers as part
of her work, right?”
“She already is, Mr Asano.”
“Do me a favour and have her take a closer look at Urman Vohl, will
you? As much detail as she can get without alerting them to her interest.”
“I shall let her know, Mr Asano.”
“How do you think she snores if she doesn’t have her body control
techniques completely down? Something to do with half-learned
methodology?”
“I never told you that she snored, Mr Asano. That would be an invasion
of privacy.”
“Maybe she has a secret familiar and that snores.”
“I do not think she has a secret familiar.”
“Like a gerbil. A gerbil that snores like a lumberjack choking on a peach
pit.”
“What relevance would a person’s profession have on the sound they
make while choking?”
“I don’t know,” Jason said, rubbing his chin thoughtfully. “It feels like a
lumberjack would snore worse than a ballet dancer, though. Am I
subconsciously conforming to gender norms or am I just thinking about the
difference in diet? Diet’s a factor in snoring, right?”
“I don’t know, Mr Asano.”
“Could you find out?”
“Yes, Mr Asano.”
Jason stopped and stared accusingly at his shadow.
“Will you find out?”
“No, Mr Asano.”
45
T H E P O I NT O F S A C R I F I C E

O N E ARTH , THE A SANO CLAN HAD A DEFICIT OF SILVER - RANKERS . T AIKA HAD
been amongst the first trained in Farrah’s methods that did not use monster
cores, placing him in the first wave of non-core essence users. The monster
waves and proto-spaces were both outstanding places to grind out experience,
working alongside the Network, before the factions fragmented and his
association with Jason became a problem.
Once magic came out into the open, Taika had moved his family, first to
Asano Village, and then to Jason’s spirit realm in France. He had already
blazed into bronze rank by that time and continued pushing towards silver.
The revelation that the US and Chinese had cracked non-core training long
ago and had hidden their elites from the rest of the world only pushed him
harder, especially with Jason’s departure.
Advancement slowed down once Jason stabilised the Earth’s dimensional
barrier and left. This brought an end to both proto-spaces and monster waves,
and instead caused ordinary magical manifestations. Monsters could
randomly appear anywhere, along with essences, awakening stones and
quintessence. They had none of the concentrated numbers of a monster wave
or proto-space, however, and were considerably weaker in most zones. Only
a handful of places had sufficiently high magic to produce genuine threats.
Opportunities to use combat for advancement became more scarce. That
changed when Taika was drawn through the anomaly into Pallimustus, but
not in an entirely welcome manner. Suddenly, the level of everyone around
him, bar his fellow Earth refugees, was higher than ever before. After
reuniting with Jason, his training stepped up, guided once more by Farrah, as
well as Rufus. Humphrey also made a helpful guide.
Taika’s power set fell under the same broad category as Humphrey’s.
They were both high-mobility brawlers, even sharing similar essence
combinations. Not only did they both have the might and wing essences, but
also confluence essences of magical flying creatures. For Taika, it was
garuda, with dragon for Humphrey. They even had abilities that were alike,
such as conjuring wings, and both possessed the potent survival power called
Immortality.
Taika’s biggest issue was finding appropriate challenges. With all his
friends and allies at silver rank, he’d been stuck in Rimaros taking what
bronze-rank contracts he could. Given the team and multi-team approach
favoured in the Storm Kingdom, as a teamless bronze-ranker, Taika regularly
found himself sidelined and stuck as a guard or a lookout.
It was only late in the monster surge that it started to change. As Jason
rose to prominence, suddenly, Taika found himself getting contract after
contract that seemed custom-made to give his advancement the push it
needed. Combined with the training from Rufus and Farrah, Taika pushed
himself achingly close to silver while Jason was variously unconscious or
healing after his latest insane feat.
By the time the monster surge ended, Taika was on the very cusp of
silver, but had not quite made it. As the convoy made its way south, Taika
was on the lookout for opportunities to get over that line, finally becoming an
asset that Jason’s team could make use of.
During the convoy’s first night in the city of Yaresh, Taika found himself
alone on the roof deck, lying back in a lounge chair. In the cheap camping
grounds on the city outskirts, there was little to look at, aside from the
enclosing rainforest and other large vehicles, no few of which belonged to
other adventuring teams. That left the stars above as the only appreciable
vista.
Rufus made his way up the stairs, taking a lounge chair next to Taika, but
not lying back. Instead, he sat on the edge, looking at Taika.
“Humphrey’s a pretty good adventurer,” Rufus mused, as if the thought
had just struck him. “He’s dedicated. Like me, he has that human advantage
of his essence abilities advancing a little faster than most. Not much good at
low ranks, but it really starts to shine at silver. But he made silver rank in
good time.”
“Okay,” Taika said, unsure of what Rufus was leading up to but knew it
was something.
“Jason and Humphrey reached bronze rank close enough to
simultaneously as to not matter,” Rufus continued. “And as I said, Humphrey
made silver in good time. Jason beat him by about a year and hit the wall fast.
He’s been sitting there ever since, waiting for the rest of us to catch up, which
most of us have, more or less. The ridiculous duration of the monster surge
helped, especially given how much of it Jason spent lying around healing
up.”
“Jason did a lot of fighting back on Earth,” Taika said. “A proto-space or
a monster wave is like monster surge concentrate. That’s even without a
ghoul army, hundreds of thousands of zombies or whatever weird stuff he
went through in those transformation zones.”
“So Farrah has told me. At length. Adventurers manage their risk, but that
wasn’t an option for him, from what I can tell.”
Taika sat up, turning so that he was also sitting sideways to his lounger,
now face to face with Rufus.
“I know all this, bro. What’s your point?”
“At this point, Jason has probably faced more exotic and deadly combat
situations than anyone of his rank that I’ve ever heard of. I don’t think
anyone with less than a half-dozen years of experience has come that close to
death so many times without falling off. Not even Jason himself.”
“I’m still waiting on that point.”
“We’re all chasing him now, and it’s not just about rank. He’s run a
gauntlet and come through it hurt. He’s with us now, but not completely,
because we haven’t seen what he has. None of us but Farrah.”
“She seems pretty strong.”
“She seems that way, yes. But she’s not here, is she? Jason is dramatic,
and the way he handles damage is too. Farrah’s quiet about her wounds, but
they run deep and are hidden well. She needs time, but only limited guidance,
at least according to my mother. As you said, she’s strong. But Jason needs
coddling, or he might break. Have you noticed how he’s withdrawn? How he
spends more and more time with the higher-rankers?”
“The ones who’ve been around enough to see the kind extreme situations
that he has,” Taika realised.
“Exactly. So we’re all chasing Jason, not just in powers, but in
experience. I know it’s been rough, being bronze when everyone around you
is silver. That feeling is the reason that Farrah, Gary and I left Vitesse. But
you’re just about ready to cross that threshold into silver now, and I want you
to be ready for the change.”
“The change?”
“You’ll be able to fight with us, but that feeling of trying to catch up
won’t go away. The power difference won’t be so great, and you’ll reach the
advancement wall before any of us have put much of a dent in it. Instead,
you’ll be chasing something more ephemeral: a sense that you’re just as
ready to face what’s out there as the people around you.”
Rufus smiled, but his eyes were staring at the floor without really seeing
anything.
“The pursuit never ends,” he continued, “even when the thing we’re
chasing is imaginary. You chase us, and we chase Jason. I can’t even imagine
what Jason is chasing. But we never feel ready, not really. Not unless we’re
willing to stop moving forward.”
“What if I do want to stop?” Taika asked. “I never wanted to come here,
and I want to get back to my family.”
Rufus nodded.
“Perhaps you’re closer to catching Jason than the rest of us,” he said. “He
never asked to come here either, and found himself scrambling for power to
survive. He has talent, and so do you, but it was desperation and challenge
that let him grow so strong so fast.”
“I don’t think I can come back from the dead, bro.”
“You’re an outworlder,” Rufus said. “You’ve done it once. But don’t
worry about that. Keep putting one foot in front of the other and you’ll get
where you’re going eventually. The next step is silver rank, which is why I
wanted to have this talk.”
“You think I’ll cross over here in Yaresh?”
“I do. The magic here is lower, and the Storm Kingdom’s ways aren’t as
prevalent here. High-end bronze and low-end silver monsters are the bread-
and-butter contracts here. It’s perfect for someone looking to cross the line.
Go hard while we’re here. We want you standing beside us when we wind up
fighting the messengers.”
“I don’t… you said I might be closer to Jason than the rest of you, but I
don’t want to be the next Jason. I like him, bro, I really do, but he’s damaged.
Even when I first met him, there was something about him. I saw him let it
out once, not long after we met. I saw him cow a room full of the hardest,
cruellest people I’ve ever met, just by not hiding what he was underneath. He
didn’t show me, though, and I sometimes wonder if I wish he had.”
Taika shook his head.
“I’ve seen his family look at him and be afraid,” he continued, “and I’m
not sure they were wrong. I don’t want power or to be important. Not if it
leads to my family looking at me like that. Yes, they were sorry when he was
gone, but he was gone. It’s easier to be sorry when they aren’t right in front
of you.”
Taika let out a sigh.
“I’ll stand by Jason to the end,” he said. “He’s more than earned it. But I
don’t want to make the sacrifices he made.”
Rufus grinned.
“That’s good,” he said. “The point of sacrifice is that others don’t have to
make it. You seem to have figured out that you don’t have to walk the path
life puts you on. It took me a lot of failure and loss to realise that. I guess
you’re wiser than I am.”
“So, what now?” Taika asked.
“Well, you can step off the path, but you have to find the right spot.
Otherwise, you’ll end up in the weeds, and some of those weeds are prickly.”
“Bro, if I hear one more metaphor, I’m going to stab you in the eye.”
Rufus chuckled.
“I’m saying get to silver. We’ll find your way home, but you have to live
long enough to see it.”

The revelation of a sprawling underground beneath the city was an enticing


lure for Jason. He was shoulder to shoulder with young elves dressed in
garish colours, some kind of punk trend, as they shuffled through tunnels
where cheap plaster sealed the walls and ceiling between the roots of the trees
above. The floor was hard-packed dirt, pressed almost to a stony firmness by
countless feet. Cheap glow stones were embedded in the walls, some
flickering, others fading and some missing altogether, pry marks around the
indentations left behind.
The tunnel sloped down sharply and drunken young people slipped
regularly, stirring confrontation as they tumbled into the people ahead of
them. Eventually, the tunnel led out into a large subterranean chamber that
looked to be one of several connected together. The walls and roof were
made from sturdier brickwork, although patches of plaster with root systems
poking through were still present. Brickwork columns supported the ceiling,
placed regularly through the chamber.
Four of the columns marked out a square in the middle of the chamber,
the sides of the square being metal cage walls. People crowded around the
walls, cheering and jeering at people fighting inside. Amongst the crowd, it
was easier for Jason to watch the fight with his magical senses than with his
eyes, and he quickly took stock. The combatants were bronze rank but
wearing suppression collars, fighting it out with only their enhanced
attributes.
Jason was using the crowd to practise extending his senses without a
commensurate extension of his aura, which he was still only beginning to
learn. As such, he could only just sense similar spectacles in other chambers,
all of which seemed to have bronze- or silver-rank combatants.
There seemed to be some order to the proceedings that the locals knew,
while the non-elves like himself seemed lost and confused. Jason didn’t rush;
he used his aura senses, along with his ears to make sense of the madness.
The first thing he found was a bar, where he discovered that cheap elven
hooch had a sickly sweet nature that he was completely on board with.
From there, he got a sense of the fights, how they were bet on and how
they were organised. Eventually, he realised that hapless outsiders were
regularly recruited into fights, relying on bravado and drunkenness to lure in
the punters. The fighters were amateurs, for the most part, judging by their
skill and the auras he sensed once the fights were over and the collars came
off. It was in the deeper chambers where he found the real fighters.
The deeper chambers were less crowded, courtesy of the need to pay for
entry. They were also better organised, with an audience that was both older
and more conservatively dressed. The security staff could have passed for
fighters themselves in the other chambers, where the standards were lower,
but not here. Jason could tell that the people in these cages were trained,
experienced or both, and he guessed many of them were adventurers. There
was even assigned seating, where the other areas had been standing room
only. Jason discovered that most of the audience here did not come in with
the rabble as Jason had, and had some manner of exclusive entry.
Jason froze, startled as he sensed something extremely unusual: an aura
belonging to a species called the valash, who were not native to Pallimustus.
Jason had only seen them when humans had been turned into them by
transformation zones on Earth. He had needed Shade to give name to them.
They were a comical-looking species to human sensibilities, with skinny
bodies and Chihuahua-like heads. Jason sensed the valash navigating the
crowd in his direction, wondering if he had somehow seen through Jason’s
aura mask. What truly startled Jason about the valash wasn’t his species, but
something that made sense, given he should not have been present in this
world. The valash was an outworlder.
46
W H AT YO U WA NT I N S T E A D O F W H AT YO U
NEED

J ASON HAD ACCESSED THE RESTRICTED SECTION OF THE FIGHTING DENS WITH A
payment that was outlandish to the rebellious youths packed shoulder to
shoulder in the main area, but negligible to any mildly successful adventurer.
The restricted area was the largest of the subterranean chambers, with four
cages surrounded by chairs. It was less crowded than the open areas, due to
the exclusivity, while still being relatively packed.
The clientele wasn’t any kind of city elite, based on what Jason could tell
from their clothes, auras and the general presence of thugs. He suspected this
was where the mid-to-high-level members of the local underworld
congregated. Jason made his way slowly and carefully, even using some of
his aura tricks for moving through a crowd, although he was careful about
that as well. He didn’t notice anyone that would be able to sense his
manipulations, but that didn’t mean they weren’t present. They could be
better at hiding themselves than he was.
Jason’s attention was drawn to a valash, a skinny sapient species not
native to Pallimustus. The male was not just lean but downright skinny, even
shorter than Jason and with a chihuahua-like head. He wore a pristine white
suit, not in the local style but more fitted. Compared to the flowing, tapered
lines of local elf fashion, this outfit would have been more at home in a
Miami nightclub in the eighties.
The valash slipped through the crowd with practised ease. He was
obviously familiar with the environment and making the most of his small
stature. Despite being diminutive, he was not pushed, shoved, or disrespected
by the people around him. His silver-rank aura meant more than shoulders the
size of a park bench, especially as it had no signs of core use. Arriving in
front of Jason, he looked him up and down.
“How do, new meat? Did the burly fellows at the entrance tell you the
rules, or just take your money and usher you through?”
Jason was surprised on hearing the smooth, deep voice that came from the
tiny man, suddenly imagining him and Taika in a body swap movie.
“They didn’t tell me anything but the price of entry,” Jason said. “Which
makes me wonder if they were negligent or if you’re trying to lure me into a
game that isn’t real.”
“Disappointed as I am that you’re not the ever-pleasant conglomeration
of money and stupidity, I’m afraid you really do have some issues you’ll
need to work through.”
“I already have a mental health professional for that.”
“Not those kind of issues.” The valash held out a hand for Jason to shake.
“I’m Zolit. Zolit Kreen.”
“John Miller,” Jason said, shaking the man’s hand. “How did you pick me
out as a first-timer?”
“There’s only so many silver-rank auras floating around in here,” Zolit
explained, “and I know all the others. Plus, they don’t come in through the
public entrance, especially without an entourage.”
“I should have people with me?”
“I told you about those rules, right? Rule one is that if you’re new, you
either put up a fighter or you fight yourself.”
Zolit looked him up and down.
“Human, core user, but your body language tells me that you aren’t some
wilting leaf. You know where the boot goes if it comes to it. Adventurer
auxiliary?”
Jason nodded.
“Sharp eye. I’m the cook for a team passing through the city. They want
in on the messenger fight.”
“Them and every other team in this town. You know where glory leads?
A glorious death.”
“I know that better than most,” Jason told him with complete sincerity.
“So, a cook, huh?” Zolit asked.
“Yep,” Jason said. “Cooking, grocery shopping. Knife skills.”
Zolit grinned; Jason was surprised at how easy it was to read expressions
on the small man, despite his unusual appearance. He suspected that Zolit
was very good at showing exactly what he intended, especially given the tight
rein he had on his aura. Jason wouldn’t be able to read the man’s emotions
without pushing hard enough that someone would notice.
“You don’t have anyone with you, do you, Cook? That means you either
need to get out fast or get in a cage. You’ll need a fight organiser for that.”
“Which you just happen to be?”
“One of life’s funny little coincidences,” Zolit said with another grin.
“And what if I say no?”
“One way or another, you fight. Do you think you can carve your way out
past everyone here, with those knife skills you mentioned?”
“No,” Jason lied.
“Then you need to secure a slot in the fight slate. Single-round
elimination, matched by rank and collared so no one gets killed.”
“Do I get paid if I win?”
“You get a slice of the betting take, so you want to put on a good show.
Silvers can take a lot of punishment and no one wants to watch two of them
slapping each other pointlessly for an hour. But something tells me you’ve
got something ferocious inside, even without your knives. To be clear, you
can’t take your knives, and don’t worry so much about winning. Some proper
adventurers fight here; mostly locals, but some outsiders come too, looking to
make extra cash. You manage to make a decent showing against one of them
and you can make some good money, even on the losing end.”
“So, how does it work?”
“Sixteen fighters, four rounds, single-round elimination. You fight until
you lose. Come with me and I’ll get you set up.”

Jason was in a chamber underneath the cages. It was a changing room with a
shower made of partly tiled-over brick. It also served as a waiting room for
the fights above, with stairs leading up to a sliding panel that went directly
into a cage. The only other exit was a heavy sliding door, also made of brick,
opened and closed by a touch crystal on the wall.
With Jason and Zolit was an elf that worked for him. She was a silver-
rank core user with plain, dark brown clothes and a big duffel bag.
“This is Bennie,” Zolit introduced.
“Benella,” she corrected with an annoyed shake of her head.
“Bennie will help you find your look since you don’t want to fight in your
regular clothes,” Zolit said. “Unless you want to end the night dressed in
bloody rags, although maybe that’s a look you want to go for. The savage
brute who lives only to fight can be a good angle, especially for a walk-in
like you. I’m not sure you have the size to sell it, though.”
“Let’s try something else,” Jason said.
“Alright, then,” Zolit said. “Bennie?”
Jason was given a variety of options, pulled from Benella’s duffel. Her
offering ranged from gi-style outfits to things closer to regular athletic wear,
as well as combat robes and flashy lucha-libre style costumes, complete with
masks. There were far more clothes than would fit in a non-dimensional bag,
which made Jason wonder why it was so big. He guessed that making it that
large was less expensive, as opposed to the extravagant dimensional coat that
Emir possessed.
Jason went for shorts and a top made from clingy, slick fabric that would
resist being grabbed. The result made him look like a professional bicyclist.
As he was changing, he did not miss the looks shared by Benella and Zolit
when they saw his scars, but he kept the soul crest on his back out of their
sightline.
“Okay,” Zolit said after he changed. “We’re going to head back upstairs
and watch how you do. Just wait until that panel opens and go on through.
You can figure out what to do from there.”
“What are the rules of the fight?” Jason asked.
“You’ll get stopped before anyone dies,” Zolit told him.
“The crowd usually doesn’t like eye-gougers unless things get desperate,”
Benella added. “They have no problem with a little brutality, though. They
want to see a fight.”
“Or a lot of brutality,” Zolit said. “Once the fight is done, the panel will
open back up so you can come back down. Or get carried down, depending
on how it goes. You can’t have familiars up there, by the way; the magic in
the cage will sense them. If you have any, leave them behind in here until you
come back.”
Zolit and Benella made their way to the large stone door that slid open or
closed with a touch crystal set into the wall.
“Zolit,” Jason called out.
“Yeah?”
“I don’t like it when people run around asking questions they shouldn’t.”
“Is that so?” Zolit asked lightly.
“It inclines a man to start asking questions of his own.”
Zolit laughed, touching his face.
“You wouldn’t be the first to wonder what I am, Cook.”
“I know what a valash is, Zolit. My questions would be significantly
more pointed.”
Zolit’s face went blank as Benella looked between the two men with
curiosity. Zolit left, Benella in tow, the door closing behind him.
“A cook, my narrow ass,” he muttered.

For Jason, it was refreshing to practise his unarmed techniques against


someone other than Sophie, who regularly disassembled him without
hesitation or mercy. His first opponent was clearly a cage fight veteran, given
his theatrically aggressive tactics and use of the space. The cage walls, as it
turned out, were barbed chain links. As the other fighter slammed Jason into
it, his flesh was gouged when the opponent pushed him along it.
Jason’s slick, flexible clothes didn’t rip, their frictionless surface helping
him as it slid across the razors. Only his exposed arms and legs were slashed.
For Jason’s part, he played possum at the start, feeling out his enemy. He
made the most of his silver-rank resilience to tease out his opponent’s
weaknesses, which quickly became evident.
From the way the man fought, Jason guessed he was more cage
experience than trained technique. Of the two, the experience was the better
to have, but he also had weaknesses that Jason was able to exploit. After
taking the time to feel out his opponent and let the bets stack up against him,
Jason began his counterattack.
The critical strength of Jason’s fighting style, the Way of the Reaper, was
the versatility that allowed it to be adapted to different circumstances and
different approaches. Sophie used it in a domineering fashion, relentless
hammering on an enemy’s weak point. Jason took a very different approach,
employing deception and baiting his opponents into exposing themselves to
counterattack.
Soaking damage, Jason set up rope-a-dope counterattacks that inflicted
injuries that would have crippled an iron-ranker and debilitated a bronze.
Baiting his enemy into an overreaching lunge, Jason stomped hard on the side
of his knee. If he was going to take down a silver-ranker, it would take that
level of attack over and over, which he proceeded to do.
It slowly dawned on Jason’s opponent that his hits were landing less and
less often, and not hitting as hard when they did. Jason was no longer letting
himself get rammed into the cage, and the aggressive assaults exposed
opportunities for Jason to counter with brutal hits to knees, elbows or bell-
ringing head strikes.
The audience watched as the initially aggressive cage fighter became
more and more cautious, as if he were fighting a trap golem instead of a man.
He didn’t realise that he was instinctively backing off as Jason walked slowly
across the cage until he heard the jeers of the crowd.
Knowing he needed to turn the momentum back in his favour, the fighter
resumed his aggressive attacks, but, by this point, Jason had his measure.
Experience had taken the man a long way, but his range of attacks was
limited and Jason had read them all. That was not to say that it was
completely one-sided; the man certainly landed hits, but they weren’t hard or
repeated enough to take down a silver-ranker. Jason’s counters, by contrast,
involved bending wrists, knees and elbows in directions they weren’t meant
to, and hammering other joints to slow down the opponent.
Jason had to admire the man’s tenacity to keep attacking, but by the
culmination of the fight, it was like watching someone charge into an
industrial wheat thresher over and over, coming out more broken and bloody
each time. Finally, it became a one-sided beatdown of a man broken in body
but not in spirit, refusing to surrender. As he demolished the man, blood
painting his forearms, Jason absently thought back to a time his actions
would have filled him with horror.
“Yield,” Jason said coldly, getting only a snarl in return.
He repeated the offer before he broke each limb, at which point the fight
was called in Jason’s favour. The floor panel opened and he glanced at the
other three cages before descending. He had been ignoring the familiar
presence in one of them, even though it meant he had no chance of winning
overall. The Nightingale’s grace, speed, beauty and expertise put every
fighter to shame.
Jason shook his head and descended to where his familiars were waiting
for him. He stopped in front of Shade, blood dripping from his hands.
“Am I broken?” he asked, more curious than fearful.
“Everyone is broken, Mr Asano, and anyone in that cage has chosen to be
there. Life is about working around the damage. You don’t have the luxury of
showing mercy to those who choose pride over wellbeing.”
“But I want to be the guy that does. I like mercy.”
“There is a reason I called it a luxury, Mr Asano. If you do what you want
instead of what you need to, it all goes wrong.”
47
S E T T LI N G D I F F E R E N C E S W IT H A N I C E
C H AT

T HE BRICK LOCKER ROOM UNDER THE FIGHTING CAGES WAS SMALL , AS THERE
were two for each of the four cages. They weren’t much different from
domestic bathrooms in size and layout. Jason emerged from the shower
having washed off the blood, of both himself and his opponent. His
regenerative abilities had already healed his injuries, the biggest factor being
Colin.
Jason’s clingy cyclist-style outfit was surprisingly resilient and hadn’t
ripped, so after washing it off in the shower as well, he yanked it back on,
ignoring the wetness of it. He didn’t bother with crystal wash for himself or
his clothes as they would soon be bloodied again. Just as he was awkwardly
yanking the wet top into place with sharp tugs, the door opened to admit the
chihuahua-headed outworlder Zolit.
“Not bad, Cook,” Zolit told him as he strode inside. “The bookmakers let
people keep betting into the start of the fight because there are always those
chumps who think they can read how it goes from the opening moves.”
“Does that mean I get a bigger slice?” Jason asked, not bothering to look
at the skinny man in the white suit.
“Sure does. Of course, being your first fight, there’s only so much going
around.”
Jason turned to stare at the little man.
“Hey, I’m not responsible for the betting, and the later rounds are where
the real money is. Everyone is paying attention to this Nightingale girl, and
that’s where all the money is going. Even putting aside what she looks like,
which is just… wow, she’s really good. I mean, no offence to your
respectable skills, but she is just plain better than you. You get a lot of
travelling adventurers trying their hand in the cages, and most don’t do that
great. In a box, with no powers, it’s a different fight. But this girl knows her
way around a cage.”
“I’m well aware of her competencies.”
“You know her?”
“I’m a cook for an adventuring team. She’s on that team.”
“No kidding. Think she’ll go easy on you if you get matched up?”
“I do not.”
“Good thing you weren’t matched up until the final round, then. You’re
up against some adventurer next, but people saw you both fight and the odds
are pretty even. Maybe take a few hits early so the bookies can roll up some
chumps? Keep up the turnaround fights if you want to fatten up your piece of
the pudding. I know that means taking an extra beating and I was even
bringing you a potion to kick that healing into action. You don’t appear to be
having any problems in that regard, though.”
“Isn’t it about time you left so I can get in the right headspace?”
“Okay, I’ll go. I think you’ve got this next fight, but try and make it look
like a struggle. It’ll help shift the betting odds for the fight after, and that’s
where you’ll make your money.”
Jason didn’t respond and Zolit left. The small man concerned Jason in
that his aura showed nothing but what Jason would expect from a mid-tier
underworld fight promoter. Since he was an outworlder like Jason, it was
more strange for him to be ordinary than not, especially given his unusual
appearance. Jason’s Eurasian features didn’t match any of the human ethnic
groups he’d encountered on Pallimustus, but there were enough variations
that he didn’t especially stand out. The little chihuahua-faced man would
have had much more trouble blending in.
The upcoming fight was not preying on Jason’s mind. Win or lose, it was
just an experience for him. More pressing was the question of what to do
about Zolit. While it wasn’t a rule that outworlders had to get involved in
exceptional events, it was his understanding that it was almost always the
case.
There had been another outworlder in Rimaros when Jason arrived, but
they had never gotten to meet. From what he discovered, she had become
embroiled in a conflict between some lesser elemental gods and had left the
city early in the monster surge in an attempt to broker peace. The monster
surge was bad enough without a holy war involving powerful elemental
forces.
She had apparently achieved results, as some of the priests in question
had been on hand to help shield coastal communities from the backlash of the
Builder’s flying city crashing into the sea and causing a tsunami. The
outworlder herself had not returned and Jason hoped to meet her in the future.
Compared to that, Zolit was a more curious proposition. On one hand,
Jason wanted to reveal his full identity and learn all about the man’s
experiences. On the other, he seemed a relatively ordinary and not wildly
trustworthy person. His instincts told him not to break cover, as flimsy as his
false identity was. There was a big difference between a mysterious stranger
who quickly moved on and hanging out his secrets for the world to see.
Jason pushed the small man out of his mind, shifting his concentration to
the fight ahead. Zolit could wait, although Jason wondered if he was letting
the other man make the choice for him. The emotions he read in the man’s
aura held disproportionately more curiosity than caution.

Zolit returned to his reserved seating, mildly annoyed at its location. The four
cages were placed in a square, with seating around and in between them. He
was on the opposite side from the fight everyone wanted to watch,
anticipating the Nightingale again making absolute brutality seem graceful.
Instead, he was stuck watching the cook with his strange scars and air of
mystery.
Plonking down next to Benella, Zolit sat with a sullen expression as the
panels in the cage floor opened to admit the fighters. It went about as Zolit
had predicted, with the adventurer’s inexperience operating without his
powers showing in his messed-up rhythm.
The cook fought a little differently, to Zolit’s mild surprise, although the
start was quite similar. The opponent was aggressive but lacked the same
mastery of the cage that the cook’s previous opponent had. This new one had
more skill, but failed to make use of the confined space and sharp boundaries
of the cage.
Rather than unveil a countering strategy that slowly increased the
wariness of his opponent, the turn in the fight came suddenly. After feeling
out his opponent for a while, the cook aggressively leapt on every mistake his
opponent made. Those pacing issues became glaring weaknesses as the cook
used each one to launch not just attacks but entire attack sequences. Caught
on the back foot, the opponent was pounded repeatedly; it was the kind of
hammering it took to deal with a silver-ranker.
Zolit observed as the cook’s style went through subtle changes
throughout the fight, shifting his approach to keep his opponent off-balance,
every time the adventurer started adapting to the cook. He wondered if the
cook had been playing possum long before Zolit suggested it.
As the fight continued, Zolit was joined by an unexpected guest.
Claiming the seat next to his was a prestigious figure of the underground
fight scene, a priest of the Warrior called Kraysch. The priest was an elf, who
were naturally slender as a people. Like Neil and Lucian Lamprey, however,
Kraysch was unusually bulky for his kind. He was tall but not towering,
broad-shouldered but not hulking. His loose clothes, the standard informal
outfit of his church, looked similar to martial arts training gear.
“What brings you by, honoured priest?” Zolit asked, straightening his
posture.
“My god is very happy with this place, Mr Kreen. Battle is rarely fair, so
places like this, which are as close to fair as you are likely to find, fall under
his favour.”
“We are blessed,” Zolit said, his tone almost a question as he tried to
figure out what the priest wanted.
“Being under my god’s favour means that he doesn’t like things
disrupting it.”
“Apologies, honoured priest, but I am not a man of political mindset. I’m
not sure what you’re getting at.”
Kraysch sighed.
“There is a certain kind of story,” he said. “I’m sure you’ve heard some
variation. It’s about a man whose true skill in life is killing, so he kills and he
kills and he kills until all that he is is a killer. Until all that he has is killing.
So, he gives it up, in search of something else. Anything else. He becomes an
unremarkable man doing an unremarkable job.”
The priest gave Zolit a smile that didn’t reach his eyes.
“Of course,” Kraysch, “he’s not really an unremarkable man, and he gets
remarked upon. Someone notices something and starts digging deeper. And
stories being stories, the man gets dragged into something he shouldn’t, and
is forced to resume all the killing he tried to leave behind. Are you familiar
with this kind of story?”
“I am, Priest Kraysch.”
“And are you a smart man or a wise man, Mr Kreen?”
“I aspire to each of them, honoured priest, but fear I fall short of both.”
“Then perhaps you would be open to some spiritual guidance.”
“Of course.”
“When an ostensibly unremarkable man, with an unremarkable job—say,
a cook for instance—tells you that he doesn’t like questions, you have a
smart path and a wise path. The smart path is to ignore him and learn all you
can, as there are dangerous secrets lurking about. The wise path is to let go of
your curiosity and leave it be.”
“The Church of the Warrior is interested in the cook?”
Kraysch bowed his head, saddened. “Curiosity it is, then.” He stood just
as the cook’s opponent fell, too beaten and exhausted to continue.
Zolit stood as well. “Priest Kraysch, I wouldn’t want to do anything that
would frustrate your deity.”
“I have already told you of my god’s feelings. But since you have already
asked the question, then no. The only interest the Church of the Warrior has
in your fighter is not getting involved with him. Faith does not always need to
be smart, Mr Kreen, but it should be wise whenever possible.”
The priest walked away leaving a confused Zolit behind. The hitherto
silent Benella, Zolit’s aide, only spoke once he was gone.
“Do you believe him? That the church isn’t involved with your cage-
fighting cook?”
“I think it’s likely he’s telling the truth, if only because I’m not important
enough to lie to. But it’s not just that. I think he came to me like this because
the church isn’t involved and doesn’t want to be.”
“You think the cook is some secret super-warrior? That he’s hiding his
real skills?”
“No. I think the danger is if he starts using his powers.”
“You think he would start using his powers and go on a rampage here?”
“How would I know? I met the guy, what? An hour ago? And I’m already
starting to hate this guy. If you want people to think you’re a cook, maybe
don’t join a fighting tournament and flash your scars, you stupid…”
Zolit let out a little growl, and Benella successfully hid her reaction to the
tiny-dog adorableness of it.
“What are you going to do?” she asked. “This fighter is starting to sound
like trouble.”
“Starting? A church full of combat fanatics doesn’t want him making a
mess at an underground fighting area. That isn’t the way trouble starts,
Bennie. That’s how trouble ends.”
“Then I’ll ask again: what will you do?”
“Did you notice what Kraysch said about the cook not liking questions?
That was something he said in the prep room, which has a privacy screen. A
good one.”
“Meaning?”
“His god has blessed this whole place. Warrior probably directed his
priest to come over here and talk to me. I do not want gods paying attention
to me, for a variety of reasons. I’ve already got a bad feeling that the cook is
better at reading me than he should be. And if this guy is a big enough deal
that gods are moving, I’m moving out of the way. I’m going to take the
advice of my fine local clergyman and not ask any questions. I’m going to
pay the cook what he earns and send him on his way, in the hope that he
takes the money and leaves. If someone else wants to make trouble, that’s
their problem; I just want to avoid anyone blaming me for it, be it the top
fight organisers or Warrior, the god of not settling differences with a nice
chat.”
48
THE SEX MAGIC THING

J ASON ’ S SECOND OPPONENT IN THE UNDERGROUND CAGE FIGHTS HAD BEEN


capable enough, but suffered from a critical flaw in his fighting techniques.
This was due to an absence of the essence abilities he normally had access to,
and Jason completely sympathised. Combat styles interacted with essence
powers on a spectrum, with one end having the fighting style as the skeleton,
with the essence powers building off of it. This was Sophie’s end of the scale,
and when deprived of their powers, such adventurers fared the best.
At the other end of the scale was Jason, whose essence abilities were the
fulcrum of his combat style. He had developed his martial arts specifically to
work around his powers, rather than his powers working around them. When
deprived of his essence abilities, such as in the cage fights he was
undertaking, he was forced to heavily adapt his normal style.
Jason had the good fortune to have enjoyed Rufus as a teacher and Sophie
as a sparring partner, which meant he had the practise adapting his style.
Rufus, as a magic swordsman, fell in the middle of the spectrum, where skill
and powers both needed to be mastered in order to thrive.
Rufus had been adamant about preparing for the worst-case scenarios,
such as being forced to fight while power-suppressed. Given that Jason had
met Rufus in that exact situation, he understood why Rufus had been so
emphatic about it.
His second opponent clearly fell on Jason’s end of the spectrum, but
without the benefit of having his training under Rufus Remore. He also
lacked the time sparring with Sophie, who relished hammering every gap in
Jason’s techniques caused by the absence of his powers. After feeling out his
opponent, Jason dished out the same treatment. When he was done, he looked
over at where Sophie had already finished her opponent and was watching
him from her own cage.
“Took you long enough,” she called out to him.
“I’m a lover, not a fighter,” he called back.
“And how’s that working out?”
“Well, I’m fighting, so… not great.”
Sophie let out a laugh that startled Jason by how free she seemed.
Although she was using the Nightingale name again, as she had in the
fighting pits of Greenstone, she was a world away from the prickly creature
he remembered. He flashed her a grin and then walked down the stairs
revealed by the opening floor panel, into the changing room below.

“You really do know the Nightingale, don’t you?” Zolit asked.


“I already told you that,” Jason said as he emerged from the shower with
a towel around his waist, using a second towel to dry his hair. Zolit ignored
his nakedness, but his aide did not, her eyes wandering over Jason’s scarred
torso. The lean, sculpted muscle was unremarkable for a silver-ranker, but the
permanent marring of his flesh was not.
“My eyes are up here, lady,” Jason told her.
“I’m not looking at your eyes.”
“Bennie,” Zolit hissed sharply, and she sullenly stalked off.
“You seem worried, Zolit,” Jason said. More than his body language,
there was a change in Zolit’s aura since their last encounter. Someone or
something had put a proper scare in the little man.
“I’m just nervous about your next match,” Zolit lied. “Two rounds are
enough to make sure no one is left standing through luck.”
Jason’s ability to read the complex emotions of people through their auras
had rapidly grown over the years. On Earth especially, where most people
had little to no power to shield it, he had learned to dig through the nuances
of what their auras revealed. Jason had a feeling that Zolit had some inkling
of either Jason’s real identity or had become aware of how dangerous
learning it could be.
Underneath that surface concern, though, was a deeper worry. He was
repressing it well, leaving Jason with no sense of what it was, but there was a
fear that any trouble coming from Jason would bring it to light. Odds were
that it was just some criminal activity making Zolit nervous; the cage fights
were literally underground, but not against the law. If there was something
shadier going on as a side business, that would explain the small man’s
wariness.
Zolit left and Jason’s familiars re-emerged. His gaze lingered on the door
that had closed behind the fight promoter.
“Do you think Mr Kreen is related to our real purpose here?” Shade
asked.
“It’s worth checking, but probably not.”
“An outworlder might be more aware of how dangerous the messengers
could be than the people native to this world,” Shade suggested. “Such
knowledge could make them more amenable to being an agent for the
messengers, should they come calling.”
“That’s good enough for me. Have Stella look into him, but have her
focus on the aide more than him. What did you make of her aura?”
“It seemed easy enough to read,” Shade said. “You noticed something
suspicious?”
“The thirsty vibes she was giving me seemed a little performative. I
haven’t been paying that much attention, focused as I’ve been on Zolit, but
that may be the point.”
“You think she is masking her aura and using Zolit as a distraction, so no
one looks too closely at the ordinary elf standing behind him?”
“Anyone with halfway decent aura senses will mark him as an
outworlder, and that draws attention. It certainly drew mine. But I think
whatever spooked Zolit may have worried her a little and she
overcompensated. I’m not saying that means she’s what we’re looking for,
but she seems a better candidate than Zolit. I think that guy really is just an
outworlder who found his calling as a small-time crook.”
“Do you want me to surveil her?”
“Let’s hold off on that for now. If she is masking her aura, then she’s very
good at it. And if she’s that good with her aura, she might spot you. Let’s
give Estella time to do some professional spying before we make any more
moves.”
“Are you implying that I’m an amateur, Mr Asano?”
“I’m saying that I’m an amateur and you’re stuck with me.”
“Very astute, Mr Asano. Self-awareness is the path to enlightenment.”
“You are terrible at giving compliments, you know that?”
“I work with what I have.”
Above them, the panel at the top of the stairs slid open.
“Alright,” Jason said, looking up. “Time to go beat up a girl.”

Jason groaned as he tried to get up, only to have a foot on his torso shove him
back to the floor.
“You know,” he croaked, “I could probably keep this up for a while. I’m
in a lot of pain, it’s true, but being in pain is kind of my thing.”
“You’re a masochist, are you?” the woman looming over him asked. She
was an unusually tall elf, muscular, like Neil, but she wore it a lot better, at
least in Jason’s opinion. Proportionally, she was similar to other elves he’d
seen but fifteen percent larger, like looking at her through a zoom lens.
“I prefer to think of myself as open to new experiences, but looking back,
I can see how—”
Jason yanked on the leg pressing into him as his hand pushed the back of
her knee. His body spun like a top and flipped away from her in a display of
acrobatics only available to silver-rankers or people bitten by radioactive
spiders. His opponent was already moving, a foot catching him in the gut as
he landed on his feet.
Jason let the momentum carry him, softening the blow as he started a
one-handed backflip but then shoved himself into the air. She had predicted
the backflip with her follow-up lunging kick that hit nothing but air. She
threw out a punch as Jason pivoted in the air, twisting to catch her in the
chest with a kick. It did no damage, having been launched from the air with
no leverage, but it shoved her away long enough for him to land.
Jason held up his hands.
“Can we just pause for a moment to appreciate how awesome this fight
is?”
He failed to block her straight punch to the face and he reeled back.
“No,” she said and kept coming.
The level of the training and experience his opponent possessed was
thoroughly imprinted on Jason as the fight continued, lasting well past
Sophie’s match. In most cases, a drawn-out match was not enjoyed by the
crowds, but this fight had the audience fully engaged. The elf’s relentless,
efficient attacks clashed with Jason’s shifting styles and tricky counterattacks.
There were wild acrobatics and frenetic exchanges of strikes, punctuated by
lulls as they felt each other out. Jason attempted distracting banter in such
moments, usually followed by his receiving a sharp blow to the head.
Jason had trained to adapt his skills for when he didn’t have his powers,
but the results were not flawless. Slowly but surely, the elf picked him apart,
the way Jason had done with his previous opponent. It was just a much longer
and more even affair, where Jason landed more than a few brutal attacks of
his own.
Both combatants were heavily pummelled, but Jason’s stamina was the
first to give out. Even so, he desperately clung on, used to fighting on the
ragged edge. He even managed to surprise his opponent, who had previously
broken apart every trick and tactic Jason had thrown out and baited her into.
Back to the wall and giddy from a merciless pounding, Jason’s not
entirely lucid mind put him into fight or flight, and he drew on old
experiences. The cage fight didn’t have much in the way of rules, but he had
still been treating it as a sport, albeit a brutal one. The savagery that came
from Jason entering survival mode startled the elf.
Taken aback, a fist to her face included a knuckle to the eye. Jason
yanked her arm straight and twisted it before bringing his elbow down on
hers, bending it the wrong way. Jason almost turned the fight around through
raw aggression before she countered. His onslaught was vicious but also
sloppy, both from the mindless approach and his still-exhausted body. Even
so, he didn’t stop until she hammered his body so badly it would no longer
move. She stood over him, staggering, blood dripping from her mouth and
fists.

The door to the changing room opened, admitting not Zolit but Sophie. Jason
was already healed, largely due to the recuperative powers provided by Colin.
He was still painted red, however, as he had not yet taken to the shower.
“I can’t believe you cheered for the other person,” he groaned.
“I have no idea what you’re talking about,” she said innocently.
“I heard you yelling ‘kick him in the bits, random lady!’”
“That could have been anyone.”
“Uh-huh.”
“She was pretty okay, I’ll admit. It took me a lot less time to handle her
than for her to handle you, but still, not bad.”
“Oh, that’s how it is?”
“You couldn’t even make it to the final round.”
“Oh, you want to go find a mirage chamber and see how that goes?”
“Absolutely.”
“Ugh, I forgot I was talking to someone who kicked me in the face the
moment we met.”
“I could have kicked you in the face again today if you hadn’t lost to a
girl.”
“You’re a girl.”
“I’m a woman.”
“So was she, believe me.”
Sophie narrowed her eyes.
“How is the sex magic thing going?”
“It’s mostly been me getting the crap kicked out of me.”
“That wasn’t the first time?”
“It was not.”
“How about the other thing? Stumbled across anything yet?”
“I might have something. My promoter’s aide tweaked my spider-sense.”
“Your what?”
“Never mind. Estella will look into it.”
“Then you’re free to come drown your sorrows. All the arena big nobs
are throwing a party for the fighters who managed to avoid embarrassing
themselves.”
“And that includes me?”
“No. You kept getting punched in the face midway through a pathetic
banter attempt. But I can get you into the party.”
“What do you mean by pathetic?”
49
T H E P OW E R A N D T H E C O NT R O L

J ASON HAD YET TO ENTER ANY OF THE TOWERING GLASS AND METAL
structures he had seen from a distance while approaching the city. This would
soon change as the clientele of the underground arena departed, Jason
amongst them. As he had speculated on finding the VIP area, there was a
private entrance aside from the tunnels he had shuffled in through himself,
shoulder to shoulder with the crowd. Rather than just a less crowded set of
stairs, the private exit was an underground tram station.
Two lines connected the arena chambers to the city’s underground tram
network. As Jason let Zolit guide him, the fight promoter answered Jason’s
questions about the tramway. Jason listened closely, careful not to give his
aide, Benella, any undue attention. The entertainment district was the most
outlying section of the tram network, which mostly serviced the affluent
inner districts. The lines out to the entertainment district were restricted to at
least the semi-elite, so they didn’t have to mix with the rabble. Jason’s silver-
rank adventurer badge, even being an auxiliary one, was enough to get him
aboard.
The ride had Jason reminiscing about the submerged subway in
Greenstone, which was more impressive than the dark tunnels of the
tramway. By leveraging the property of the region’s unique magic stone,
Greenstone’s city founders had created a fascinating train made up of
submarines. Absently, he wondered how long it would be until he saw it
again.
Jason missed those early days of admittedly repressed fear and panic, but
also wonder at a world full of magic and possibility. He carried so many
responsibilities now, but he also longed to travel the world and find all the
things his imagination had conjured. He hoped that this was just one of many
experiences to come.
The station they eventually arrived at was disappointingly similar to a
subway station on Earth, even to sporting plain white tiles covering the walls.
The main difference was that this station was cleaner than what he would
have expected on Earth.
“Private station, for the building above us,” Zolit explained to Jason. “It’s
the biggest hotel in the region; lots of mercantile river barons.”
They stepped onto an elevating platform, crammed in with other lesser
lights of the underground fighting scene. Sophie was nowhere to be seen; she
had been taken on one of the earlier tram rides that were less crowded. Zolit’s
aide begged off for the night, leaving him and Jason to ride the platform
together. It moved swiftly up through the building until it arrived at a floor
that appeared to be a private club.
It was not as raucous as a nightclub but was more vibrant than a country
club. There was a small section where a slew of attractive young people
danced. They were generally low rank and in clothes that were fashionable
but not expensive, akin to what he had seen in the entertainment district. The
people watching from the mezzanine floor above were dressed in more
expensive and conservative attire, and the way they looked at the dancers
reminded Jason of people eyeing a buffet.
Masking the distaste in his aura, Jason panned his gaze slowly around the
room, taking it all in. There was a double-wide spiral staircase leading up,
next to the elevating platforms at the centre of the room. Music that was an
odd mix of classical and old-school electronica to Jason’s ears came from
oversized recording crystals floating in the air. They served double-duty, also
shedding the light that illuminated the room. The light was bright over the
bar, dim over the sitting areas, with shifting colours over the dance floor.
Columns, booths and tables made the room an obstacle course, which
patrons traversed to reach the four bars, each placed against one of the four
walls. The room was a perfect square, with walls made entirely of glass. The
dance floor was likewise square, in the centre of the room. The four bars were
situated such that the walls behind the bartender offered panoramic views
from the tall building, obscured by various colourful bottles. Jason intended
to investigate them shortly.
Before that, he made his way to the south wall to take in the view, Zolit
trailing behind. It was Jason’s first real look at the heart of the city, having
only seen the dark metal towers and glass ziggurats from afar. It turned out
the club was in one of the ziggurats, with Jason’s floor being the lowest level
of the cube sitting atop the building.
Just to the south of the building, a wide river flowed toward the west. The
river docks were lit up, operating through the night, but the river also had
more decorative stretches. Many sections had trees lining the banks, with
multicoloured lights painting them with rainbows. Jason couldn’t help but
wonder about the value of riverfront property left undeveloped for the sake of
aesthetics, but could not deny his appreciation of it. The outer reaches of the
city, visible from the height of the building he was in, only showed sporadic
lighting. The inner districts, however, were lit up like an Earth metropolis.
“I have to say, Zolit, you’ve found a pretty nice place to call home.”
“Yeah.” Zolit moved to stand next to Jason as they both looked out over
the city. “We endured the monster surge better than most, but this mess
upriver…”
“The messengers,” Jason said.
“Right now, it’s only the adventurers getting worked up,” Zolit said. “The
Adventure Society is talking about war, but it hasn’t affected the rest of the
city quite yet. If anything, people are scrambling for lucrative contracts to
supply the conflict.”
“People ignore disaster in the face of profit,” Jason said. “I’ve seen it in
my homeland.”
Zolit opened his mouth to ask where that was, then restrained himself.
“I think the government and the Adventure Society are trying to shield
the populace,” he said instead. “People aren’t ready for another conflict when
they aren’t done recovering from the last.”
“That’s what the Adventure Society is for, right?” Jason asked.
“Protecting people?”
“That’s what they say,” Zolit scoffed. “You know the society controls all
the suppression collars we use in the arena?”
“They are regulated magic,” Jason pointed out.
“Regulated my bony rump,” Zolit said. “I could find someone to sell you
an unregistered suppression collar without leaving this room.”
Jason didn’t argue. The person Zolit found could even have been Jason
himself, having accumulated his own notable collection of suppression
collars over the years.
“The Adventure Society makes a big show of bringing in auditors to
make sure none of the collars have gone missing, as if the arena was where
they all leak from. What they really want is to remind everyone who has the
power and the control.”
“I thought power and control were the Church of Dominion’s, er…
dominion.”
“I don’t see them speaking up. The Adventure Society has been telling
everyone what to do for years now. Surge readiness, then the surge, then the
Builder and now these guys with wings? There’s always a new reason they
get to tell everyone what to do. The society has been encroaching more and
more, and I’ve never even met a priest of Dominion.”
“You’re better off,” Jason said. “Their boss is annoying.”
“Boss?” Zolit asked before stopping himself.
Jason could feel in the small man’s aura him forcibly staunch his
curiosity. Zolit couldn’t entirely help himself, though, for all the good it did
him. The penetrating look he gave Jason was spoiled by his big chihuahua
eyes.
“If a man was looking to stay out of trouble, he’d move along nice and
quick,” Zolit said. “If he stays in a place like this, it could be the man is just
telling himself he wants to stay out of trouble when what he really wants is to
find it. However much damage it does.”
Jason glanced at Zolit and chuckled.
“Someone put the wind right up you, didn’t they, mate? I’ve got no
problems with you, Zolit. But I’m not the danger you should be watching out
for.”
“And what should I be watching out for?”
“Best you don’t watch out at all, lest you draw its attention. If you are
what you seem, then the safest move for you is to stick to your normal
routine. Just avoid any uncertainty as much as you can.”
“Avoiding uncertainty is my normal routine. But normal is in short
supply these days.”
“Isn’t it just?” Jason agreed with a chuckle. He then turned his gaze from
the window to the bar. “I think I might get myself a drink.”
“Stick to the bar down here or one floor up,” Zolit said. “Higher than that
is for the big-timers, not the likes of us. Maybe your Nightingale friend can
get you up there. They like winners, and they love big-time adventurers, and
she’s both. She’ll be enjoying a sickening amount of adoration right now.
The top end of this club is still the bottom end of high society, and important
adventurers are famous for opening doors.”
Jason could feel Zolit’s frustration, which was causing him to prod at
Jason, even knowing that anything he learned was trouble. Jason mercifully
left the man behind and made his way to the bar, flashing the elven bartender
a smile.
“What’ll it be?” she asked.
“I don’t know the local beverages very well. Something colourful and
sweet?”
“What rank, and how fancy do you want to go?”
“Silver,” he said, “and as fancy as it’ll go.”
“You should go one floor up,” she said. “That’s where they keep the stuff
the people down here can’t afford.”
“Good to know, thank you.” He climbed off his stool as he flashed
another smile. “Shame, though. What I’ve seen down here seems quite
enticing.”
Jason made his way to the stairs, following them up to another level. The
only overt difference from the floor below was the additional bouncers in
front of the stairs leading further up, as well as at the elevating platforms.
None of the bouncers were elves, and instead were mostly imposing leonids,
plus one of the rarely seen draconians.
Jason headed for one of the bars and his eyes landed on the bartender,
who looked identical to the one below. Peeking closer with his aura, he
sensed they were definitely different people, but with a subtle bond between
them.
“Oh no,” he muttered as he wandered over.
The bartender came to serve him.
“You have a familiar face,” he told her.
“You met my sister downstairs? She’s Isabelle, and I’m Mirelle. But
everyone calls me Elle.”
“There aren’t eight of you, are there?”
“Just twins, sorry. You’re an ambitious one.”
Jason laughed.
“On the contrary; I’ve been having trouble keeping up.”
“I’m not quite sure what that means,” she said, narrowing her eyes as she
looked him up and down. He noticed her gaze paused on the scars on his
face, as well as the larger one at the base of his throat.
“Adventurer?”
“Sort of.”
“Sort of?”
“I cook for adventurers. There’s still stabbing, but it’s safer.”
“You don’t look like someone who avoids danger. You came in with the
cage arena crowd?”
“I did.”
“You’re a fighter?”
“No one told me the rule about needing a flunkey to fight for you. I
fought, but I’m not sure that makes me a fighter. A fighter would end up with
sore fists instead of a sore head.”
“Get dropped in the first round?”
“Third.”
“At silver rank? That’s suspiciously good for someone who got pushed
into a cage for not knowing the first rule.”
“I had it on good authority that the first rule was to not talk about fight
club. I don’t suppose you have something for a sore head?”
“Not a problem,” she said. “Everything I’ve got back here will give you a
sore head if you drink enough of it.”
He snorted a laugh. “I’m going to have a rough morning. Alright, set me
up with something colourful, sweet and expensive.”
“It’s not that kind of establishment, fighter boy,” she said with a cheeky
smile.
He flashed her a grin. “I’m just looking for drinks; I’ll make my own
arrangements for the other thing.”
“Good to know,” said a handsome man with midnight black skin and
colourful beads woven through his hair. He slid onto the stool next to Jason.
“Are you going to be monopolising this lovely young woman all night?”
“That’s up to her,” Jason said, holding his hand out for the other man to
shake. “John Miller, nice to meet you.”
“Emir Bahadir.”
“I think someone like you belongs on the higher floors, Mr Bahadir.”
“I was looking for my friend Jason. We were meant to meet in a couple of
weeks, but then I heard he was running off to hunt a species of dangerous and
aggressive birds.”
“I have it on good authority that he won’t be available until the end of
next week. Maybe you should take that time to visit other old friends.”
Emir stood up, sliding a gold spirit coin onto the bar that only lasted a
moment before vanishing into the barkeeper’s hands.
“I’m confident that John here can more than cover his own drinks,” Emir
told her, “but it’s always nice to give a gift when making new friends. I’ll see
you again, John.”
Jason shook his head.
“You know who that was, right?” Mirabelle asked once Emir was gone.
“He did just tell me his name. Emil something?”
“That’s Emir Bahadir. The treasure hunter. You know him, don’t you?
Don’t play dumb.”
“Oh, I’m not playing. We may have crossed paths in another life. Since
he already paid you, let’s go ahead and rack up some drinks.”
Mirelle gave him another assessing look.
“Colourful, sweet and expensive, was it?” she asked.
“It was indeed. I’ll trust your judgement.”
“Oh, you probably shouldn’t do that,” she said with a sly grin. She turned
around to pull one colourful bottle after another from the shelves behind her.
“You know, a lot of the out-of-towners like that awful, throat-burning
stuff,” she said. “I like amber as much as the next girl, but who needs a
hundred varieties of throat fire?”
“I have always enjoyed elven liquor, ever since I first discovered it,”
Jason told her. “A sweet rainbow of drunkenness for me, thank you.”
“I can arrange that. A lot of the fighters like to one-up each other with the
nastiest drinks anyone will sell them.”
“I’ve had to drink quite enough bitterness in my time.”
Jason watched as she poured out a row of expensive drinks. The kind of
specialised ingredients that went into high-rank liquor, at least anything that
was more drink than boat polish, cost the kind of money that regular people
used to renovate their homes. High-end spirit coins were not used for
ordinary transactions. They were used to buy things like buildings and
skyships, or the kind of indulgences that powerful adventurers enjoyed.
“I’m making what we call a rainbow wave,” Mirelle told him. “There are
countless variations, based on price and availability, but the idea is for each
drink to be enhanced by the one that came before it. A good rainbow wave is
how you tell the difference between a real bartender and someone just
handing you drinks for money.”
“Well, you certainly ain’t that,” a voice slurred from a few seats along the
bar and Jason glanced over at the drunken leonid. “I’ve been waiting for you
to serve me, but you just keep talking to rich pricks.”
“I’m not the only bartender,” Mirelle said, gesturing at the other staff. “In
fact, I watched you wave one of them off. Also, you seem to have had quite
enough.”
“I want to be served by you. I like pretty elf girls.”
“Well, if you want them to like you back,” she told him, “I suggest
spending less on drinks and more on soap.”
The man bared his teeth with a snarl until a massive hand covered in dark
green scales arrived on his shoulder. It belonged to a bouncer who was all the
more intimidating for being a draconian. Jason had only seen a few of them
before, but they were as big as leonids, if not bigger, with swept-back faces
and tiny scales instead of skin.
“There are three kinds of people in this club,” the draconian said with a
deep hissing voice. “Those important enough that they can be obnoxious and
those that aren’t. You’re coming with me.”
“Is the third kind the ones who aren’t obnoxious at all?” Jason asked.
“It is,” Mirelle said.
“Well, that’s not me. I think I’ll have these drinks and then get thrown
out. Will you put in a good word for me?”
“Drink up and we’ll see,” she said as she went to serve another patron.
As Mirelle moved away, a tall elf claimed the barstool to Jason’s left.
Jason looked over and then up at the woman who had beaten him in the third
round. Unlike Neil, whose bulk shifted his proportions from the elven norm,
this woman looked like a normal elf but scaled up.
“This yours?” she asked, nodding at the yet-untouched row of drinks.
“It is,” Jason said. “You like a rainbow wave?”
“Gods, no,” she said, then nodded at Mirelle, who was coming back.
“Give me a hursketh claw.”
Jason watched as Mirelle mixed a drink that smelled like aviation fuel.
“I’m Avale,” the large elf said.
“John Miller.”
“You fight well, John Miller.”
“You fight better.”
“That’s why I came and found you,” she said. “I like drinking with good
fighters, but I also like being the best.”
“Then this might not be your night,” Jason said, leaning forward to look
past her. “Hello, Sophie.”
Avale turned to watch Sophie slide onto the barstool on her left.
“Damn it.”
50
D I S TA NT P OW E R

W ITHIN THE RELATIVELY CONFINED AREA OF A CITY , SWIFT TRAVEL WAS A


simple matter for Jason. Being able to shadow jump respectable distances
through Shade’s bodies meant that Jason could deploy his familiar around the
city and jump to those locations, sight unseen. Because of this ability, Jason
had never gone the long way to the camping grounds just inside the city wall
where merchants, adventuring teams and other travellers left their sizeable
vehicles. In his brief visits to his team, he would slip in and out using a Shade
body.
In the kitchen of Jason’s hover yacht, he emerged from a Shade body to
find Taika and Gary assembling a hillock of slices and pastries.
“That is not the basis for a healthy breakfast,” he scolded.
“Bro, it has to be this way. Rufus threatened to cook again, and you were
off making whoopee with twins. Congratulations on that, by the way.”
Jason scowled and flung out his arm in an angry gesture. The floor
opened up and Sophie passed up through it on a moving section of floor. She
had a confused expression and a magically enhanced dumbbell in one hand.
“Firstly,” Jason said, “it wasn’t twins. It was one woman who happens to
have a twin. Her twin was not involved.”
“I’m sorry, bro. You must be disappointed.”
“That I didn’t lure sisters into sharing a sexual encounter with one
another?” Jason asked. “That’s not okay.”
“Oh,” Taika said, his brow creasing in thought. “It’s kind of creepy when
you think about it like that.”
“It’s extremely creepy when you think about it like that,” Jason said
before wheeling on Sophie. “What are you telling people?”
“What makes you think it was me?”
“Because you were there.”
“So was Emir.”
“We all have our flaws,” Jason said. “I imagine that Emir’s makes for a
fascinating list that does not include a lack of gentlemanly decorum.”
“What’s he even doing in Yaresh?” Neil asked, walking in with a
dumbbell in his hand. “And why did Sophie just pass through my cabin?”
“Why weren’t you wearing a shirt?” Sophie asked him.
“Because I was in my cabin. You dropped this, by the way.”
He tossed the dumbbell lightly through the air and Sophie staggered as
she caught it. Unusually for a healer, one of Neil’s elf abilities had evolved to
give him strength akin to Gary’s.
“I think if we’re going to discuss Emir’s presence, we should include him
in the conversation,” Humphrey suggested as he also entered the kitchen.
Being Jason’s kitchen, it had plenty of room to accommodate the increasing
population. “Also, Jason, what’s this I hear about you making sisters do
inappropriate things to one another?”
Jason turned a flat glare on Sophie.

The camping grounds where Jason’s cloud vessel was parked had a panoply
of other vehicles occupying space. The magical vehicles varied widely in
size, design and colour, with the result looking like a wizard shantytown.
Jason hadn’t reconfigured the cloud vessel to a cloud palace form, despite
the stationary nature of the team’s current activities. It had a much larger
footprint in that form, and he felt it would be obnoxious to take up even more
of a space already crowded with vehicles. They already stood out enough
with the hybrid cloud vehicle, although it was far from the only exotic means
of transport on display. Jason especially admired an artificial beetle even
larger than his own vehicle.
Emir did not share Jason’s compunction about overt ostentation. His
massive cloud palace required a large enough space that it had to go hard up
against the city wall, some way from Jason’s vehicle.
While Jason’s cloud vessel had gone through extreme changes since
Greenstone, Emir’s was almost exactly as Jason remembered it. The only
differences were minor ones, mostly around the base where it rested on land
instead of sea. Emir’s palace was larger than Jason’s, even when it was on
full display.
Emir’s preferred design was a castle with five grandiose towers, topped
by shimmering domes and connected by bridges. It made no attempt to hide
its nature, and the cloud material it was made from flaunted brilliant sunset
colours.
“I guess I don’t need to ask where he parked,” Jason said as he and
Humphrey walked down a ramp from Jason’s vessel. Emir’s palace loomed
over everything else in the grounds, even obscuring the wall behind it. They
looked at the maze of vehicles between them and Emir’s palace, then up.
“Fly?” Humphrey suggested.
“Fly,” Jason agreed.
Humphrey conjured his dragon wings, air surging as they launched him
into the air.
“I shouldn’t pull out the cloak,” Jason said. “Let’s just do a flight suit.”
“Are you certain, Mr Asano?” Shade asked from Jason’s shadow, his
voice tinged with concern. Since leaving Earth behind, Shade had not taken a
single form based on the vehicles there, even when it was more convenient.
Jason had never asked him to either.
“It’s fine,” Jason said, not entirely convincingly, but darkness swirled
from his shadow to surround him in a hover suit. Jason immediately thought
back to his niece flying around over the water, giggling like a fool.
“Mr Asano?”
“It’s fine,” Jason repeated and took to the air, quickly catching
Humphrey’s slow progress. They weren’t the only ones eschewing ground
travel through the grounds, and everyone moved at respectful speeds.
“What is that thing?” Humphrey asked.
“It’s something they make on Earth to let people fly without magic.”
“That works without magic?”
“Shade does the magic version,” Jason said. “It’s a lot more convenient
and a lot less loud.”
They passed over the grounds before arriving at the massive double doors
to Emir’s front tower, their flight aids disappearing as they landed. The doors
opened to reveal Emir standing behind them in a cavernous atrium.
“Hello, boys,” he said with a grin. “Come on in.”
“Has Arabelle spoken to you about Callum?” Jason asked Emir as they rode
up an elevating platform.
“She’s kept me apprised,” Emir said. “I never realised he was already
deeply involved when I invited him to join me in Greenstone. He’s always
kept so much hidden, even when we were at our closest. You’re still deciding
whether to give him access to Miss Wexler’s mother?”
“Yes, although that comes down to what Sophie wants and Arabelle
thinks is best. It’s for them to decide, not me.”
Emir nodded.
“I know that story. You get a cloud flask and start accumulating people,
but you have to realise that your roof doesn’t always mean your rules.”
“He needed help to finally figure that out,” a melodious voice said as the
platform arrived at the top of the tower. Under the translucent dome was
Emir’s sprawling office of mutable cloud furniture, subtly shaped to draw the
eye to a massive desk at the back. Sitting behind it was Emir’s chief of staff
and now wife, Constance.
Emir and Constance had been moving around each other for years, but the
power imbalance had sat between them like a wall. Not only was Emir her
employer, but also gold rank to her silver. Over the years, she had become
more and more indispensable to Emir’s operations, more partner than
employee. Her ascension to gold rank had signalled the final boundary
between them falling away, and they married during Jason’s time on Earth.
She rose and crossed to meet them, looking contrite in front of Humphrey.
“I owe you and Sophie an apology, Master Geller. I genuinely believed
that Callum was trying to protect you, not act on an agenda of his own.”
Constance had been training with Callum to finally reach gold rank,
returning just as Sophie and Humphrey discovered that Sophie’s mother was
still alive. Callum had let their best lead get away, ostensibly to shield them
from dangers they were too low-rank to confront.
“Yes,” Jason told her solemnly. “I hope you learned your lesson that
teenagers are always right and you should let them do whatever they want.”
Emir snorted a laugh as Constance shook her head. Humphrey gave Jason
a flat look.
“Sophie is your age,” he pointed out.
Jason frowned, looking Humphrey up and down.
“That’s a good point,” Jason said. “She’s bit of a cradle-snatcher, isn’t
she?”
Constance gave Humphrey an amused smile.
“If it makes you feel any better,” she said, “the difference between Emir
and myself is more than the full age of either of you.”
Jason and Humphrey both turned to give Emir disapproving looks.
“Oh, come on,” he said. “I knew her for twelve years before anything
happened.”
“Humphrey,” Jason said.
“Yes, Jason?”
“Does your world recognise and condemn the concept of grooming?”
“Yes, it does,” Humphrey said.
“Now, that’s not fair,” Emir said jabbing a finger at them. “She was an
adult when we met.”
“Uh-huh,” Jason said.
“I’m sure everything was fully completely legitimate,” Humphrey
unconvincingly added.
Constance chuckled at Emir’s scowl. He threw out an angry gesture and
all the office’s cloud furniture dissolved. It reconstituted around them as a
series of comfortable chairs with a table in the middle. A hole opened up in
the table and a drinks tray rose through it, much as Sophie had done earlier in
Jason’s cloud vessel. They sat down around the table and Emir poured
himself a glass of amber liquid as the others looked at him.
“I’m not sure that’s what I’d go for this early in the morning,” Jason said.
“The greatest joy of power,” Emir told him, “is not having to conform to
what anyone else wants from you.”
“Put it away,” Constance told him.
“Yes, dear,” Emir said without missing a beat.
The drinks tray, complete with Emir’s poured drink, descended back into
the cloud table that reformed over it.
“I think we should put aside the issue of Callum for the moment,” Jason
said. “As I said earlier, that is the decision of people not currently with us.”
“Which leaves the question of what brought you here,” Humphrey said. “I
didn’t think you’d be in the region for another week and a half.”
“Once we heard that you were going after messengers,” Emir said, “we
felt that it was best to see you immediately.”
“This is about the mysterious job you have for us?” Jason asked. “Is it
related to the Order of the Reaper?”
“No,” Emir said. “That has taken on some complex and political elements
that I am very wary of wading into. Especially until I figure out just how
much trouble Callum’s meddling has caused. For which reason, I would like
access to both him and your prisoner, Melody Jain.”
“Again, that’s up to Sophie and Arabelle,” Jason said. “I won’t help or
hinder you in that regard. But Sophie remembers that you gave her shelter
when she needed it most. At the very least, she’ll be willing to hear you out.”
“I can’t ask for more than that,” Emir said, which prompted a cough from
Constance.
“Well, I won’t ask for more than that,” he corrected. “What I will ask you
for is help with something new. You may recall that the scythe that you,
Jason, ultimately brought to me, was the culmination of a years-long search
that involved dozens of teams contracted to search remote reaches and fallen
ruins the world over.”
“I do.”
“I have something similar in the works. A treasure hunt for something
even more elusive and valuable, with no idea where in the world it is.”
“Or if it even exists,” Constance added.
“It doesn’t matter whether it exists or not,” Emir said. “It matters if we
get paid to look for it.”
“That sounds ethical,” Jason said.
“Being serious,” Constance said, “if this thing is real, then it could change
the course of history.”
Jason went very still.
“No,” he said, his voice icy.
“Jason,” Emir said. “You don’t even—”
“I said no.”
Jason leaned forward in his chair, rubbing his face in his hands and then
staring at his feet. His aura retracted until even Emir could barely sense it.
Constance, who had only been gold rank for a couple of years, couldn’t
detect his aura at all.
“Jason,” Emir said again. His voice reflected that he realised he’d stepped
on a landmine. “Arabelle gave me some indication of what you’ve been
through. She didn’t give me specifics, but instructed that I was, under no
circumstances, to put you in the middle of important events. And I’m not.
This is important, yes, but I only intend to put you at the periphery. You and
your team will just be one set of adventurers amongst many. It’s how I
operate. I hire teams of adventurers and send them out. It’s an ordinary job.”
Jason looked up at Emir, his eyes no longer masked by the magic coins
Belinda gave him. It was the first time Emir had seen their true state, and
though his senses didn’t pick up anything strange about them beyond their
appearance, his instincts made him flinch. Jason’s expression was cold, and
his nebula-like eyes with their black sclera felt like a mercifully distant power
in an unfathomable abyss. When he spoke, his voice was gravel being poured
over a winter grave.
“An ordinary job?”
“Yes,” Emir said.
“Tell me.”
51
W H O YO U T RU LY A R E

E MIR HAD KNOWN J ASON BEFORE MANY OF THE TRIBULATIONS THAT RESHAPED
him from the soul out. Gods marking his soul, in the way overbearing deities
would see as a reward. The Builder, using a star seed to try and force Jason
into accepting slavery. The long, slow recovery from that, and his struggles
against powerful political forces.
Emir himself was responsible for placing Jason into situations he should
not have been. It was Emir’s search for the Order of the Reaper that
ultimately sent Jason into the astral space where he died. Now Jason was
back, not just from another world but from death itself. Despite having seen
Jason’s formative experiences, Emir had been startled by how different Jason
was.
At a glance, Jason was much the same; when they spoke over a water link
connection, it was little different to the past. But water links did not transmit
auras, and a brief conversation did not reveal that damage, waiting just a
scratch beneath the surface. It was their short encounter in the club that had
changed Emir’s perspective.
Emir’s intention had been to have a little fun with Jason, who was clearly
terrible at maintaining a cover identity. Flashing his scars and proving his
skills in a cage fight was the opposite of how to sell himself as an
unassuming cook. When he met Jason, however, he had been startled. The
strength and clamp-tight control of Jason’s aura had meant that even Emir, a
veteran gold-ranker, could not see through him at all.
Even so, Emir had not realised the degree to which he no longer
understood the manic, plucky outworlder he had once known. Jason had
always put on a good front of being unconcerned about the powerful people
around him. The gold-rank Emir had always known, though, that Jason’s
feelings were consumed with worry over that power imbalance. Jason was
always in a manic scramble to somehow level the odds, be it through
nonsensical behaviour or bold, unexpected moves.
From the way he strode through Emir’s imposing cloud palace to his utter
disregard for gold-rankers, Emir could tell there was no façade at play
anymore; Jason was genuinely unintimidated. It was sitting across from
Jason, looking into eyes that spoke of power waiting in the void, when Emir
truly realised he no longer knew the man in front of him. Jason’s aura was
politely restrained, yet an ominous feeling teased at Emir’s senses. It was like
knowing there was a predator hidden somewhere in the bushes, waiting for a
moment of vulnerability in which to strike.
“Tell me,” Jason said in a voice of stone closing over a tomb. “Tell me
about the messengers, Emir. Tell me what you want.”
Emir suddenly felt that telling Jason anything was a terrible idea. Arabelle
had warned him, but Jason’s reaction was much worse than he imagined. He
glanced at Humphrey, whose face revealed nothing. He reached out with his
senses to explore Humphrey’s emotions, only for a hard wall to spring up in
his way.
Jason’s face showed no change for having blocked Emir, who suspected
that Humphrey hadn’t even noticed the high-level aura clash. Emir was
startled that Jason was even capable of the feat. Blocking the senses of others
in such a way was normally only taught to gold-rankers. It wasn’t an
especially difficult technique for someone of that rank, if they had the right
skill foundations, but the power, confidence and precision with which Jason
executed it was intimidating.
“I’ve clearly approached this very wrong,” Emir said. “We can do this
another—”
“I said tell me,” Jason commanded. His voice was soft but with an
inexorable force at its core.
Emir pushed down his anger at being told what to do in his own house,
knowing that it wouldn’t be productive. He was not used to being the
responsible one, which was Constance’s job, but he was the older man and
the higher-ranked one. He glanced at his wife, who nodded her approval.
Emir then turned back to Jason, who was watching him with those unsettling
eyes.
“You’re aware of the problems surrounding the Church of Purity,” Emir
told him. “People all over the world are trying to figure out exactly when and
why the original Purity was sanctioned by the other gods. The churches either
haven’t been told by their gods or are telling us they haven’t. I do know the
diamond-rank community has been looking into it.”
“There’s a diamond-rank community?” Humphrey asked.
“Diamond-rankers are powerful,” Emir said. “Their numbers are limited,
and things like distance and money are almost irrelevant as problems. They
keep in contact with one another, most of them, and they barter in favours
and rarities rather than money. I have more contact with them than most, but
I’ve only seen glimpses and don’t know exactly how they operate. What I do
know is that they’ve been digging into what happened with Purity, and I
know what they’ve found.”
Jason didn’t react, still watching Emir with a silent, unblinking stare.
Emir waited only a brief moment for a reaction before giving up and
continuing.
“They’ve asked me to leverage the networks that I use for treasure
hunting to seek something out. I’m not the only person they deployed, not by
any measure, but they want to cast as wide a net as they can without causing
a commotion. For that reason, people like me aren’t telling the adventurers
we hire what they’re looking for. When we get a lead, we give them the
details we have and send them out without knowing what they’re truly
looking for, or why.”
“That seems dishonest,” Humphrey said. “Not to mention, inefficient.
Adventurers deserve to go into any contract knowing everything they can.”
“That’s true when hunting monsters,” Emir said. “Hunting treasure is a
different game, and what I’ve just described is standard. Ask any teams that
specialise in treasure hunting, and they’ll tell you the same.”
“How do they know what to look for?” Humphrey asked.
“They don’t,” Emir told him. “Even I don’t know what to look for. I’m
just a middleman, passing on what clues I’ve been given.”
“That doesn’t sound reliable,” Humphrey said.
“I’m not oblivious to that fact,” Emir said with a chuckle. “All we can do
is throw as many trustworthy adventurers at this as we can. I’m just asking
for your team to be amongst them, and knowing more than the rest, at that.
We’re not even talking about sending you somewhere. It’s just that if you
happen to converge on a point of interest, I may ask you to make a slight
detour to check something out. From time to time.”
“And now is one of those times,” Jason said, finally speaking. “Because it
involves the messengers, doesn’t it?”
“Yes,” Emir admitted. “As I said, I’m not telling anyone what we’re after.
But I’ve received permission to tell you.”
“From whom?” Humphrey asked.
“Diamond-rankers,” Jason answered, pre-empting Emir. “Someone told
Emir, here, that I have some business with the messengers. He wants me to
see what I can find about his mysterious goal while I’m at it.”
“Yes,” Emir said.
Jason continued to look at him, blank-faced, but at least with Humphrey,
Emir could see his words having an impact. Jason felt more like another
gold-ranker, and a hostile one at that.
“Even the diamond-rank community doesn’t have an answer for exactly
what happened to the God of Purity,” Emir said. “Not one they’re telling me
anyway. But there is a belief that it was related to something. A device, a
substance, a process; we don’t know its nature. But whatever it is, it can
achieve a goal as old as essence magic: cleansing the effect of monster
cores.”
Humphrey rocked back in his chair, eyes wide. Jason didn’t move.
“You think this is what the messengers are here for,” Jason said, less
question than statement.
“Yes,” Emir said.
“Why?” Humphrey asked. “Don’t messengers look down on essence
users as belonging to inferior species?”
“Power,” Jason said. “Power and control. If you have a monopoly on
turning core users into regular essence users, you’re holding a hand down
over the entire essence-using world.”
“You could have all the people who regret using cores become able to
train like adventurers again,” Humphrey said in hushed tones.
“That’s only the beginning,” Emir said. “From an objective perspective,
the difference between core and non-core users is negligible. But the idea of
that difference being real is a cornerstone of society’s upper reaches.
Something like that could throw the levers of power into disarray, and that’s
assuming whoever controls this cleansing power is benign. If this power is
real, the world will change, one way or another. The nature of that change
will depend on where this power comes from, what is it and how it works.
And, most importantly—”
“Who controls it,” Jason finished.
“Exactly,” Emir said.
“Jason,” Constance said, speaking up for the first time since the
discussion began. “We’re just looking for adventurers. Lots of adventurers, of
which your team would be one of many. That is what Emir meant when he
said you would be on the periphery. Resolving this is not your responsibility.
We’re just looking for people we can trust.”
“That might not be me,” Jason said. “My judgement can be compromised
when it comes to the dissemination of power. If I find something like that, I
won’t just obediently hand it over to whoever hired me. I’ll do with it what I
decide is best, and I haven’t always been right about that.”
“That’s why it won’t be you making that choice,” Humphrey told him. “It
will be us.”
Jason turned to Humphrey, his expression finally softening.
“Are you making the call, team leader?”
“I am.”
Jason nodded.
“Alright then.”
Jason got to his feet, Humphrey following suit.
“Always a pleasure,” Jason told Constance and Emir, but it was
unconvincing since his tone still sounded like a threat. “I’ll see you again at
the end of next week.”
“I’ll show you out,” Constance said.
“It’s fine,” Jason said. “I’ll portal directly.”
“You won’t be able to portal out of the palace,” Emir said.
Jason pulled the necklace holding his two amulets from under his shirt.
One was his Amulet of the Dark Guardian, while the other was his shrunken
cloud flask. Cloud stuff spilled out and formed a portal that filled with
darkness that Jason stepped through. Emir watched the darkness vanish and
the cloud stuff disperse, his eyebrows attempting to climb off the top of his
head.
“How the fu—”

Unsurprisingly, the city of Yaresh had no shortage of parks. They featured


expanses of thick, soft grass, dotted with lush plants, and vibrant flowers.
After getting riled up by Emir, and then angry at himself for getting riled up
and treating his friend like crap, Jason found a park and started meditating to
resettle himself. It also gave him a chance to rest after he tapped into his
astral gate to punch a portal through Emir’s cloud house defences. While his
cloud flask absorbed most of the impact from tapping into that energy, even
the little left over had shaken him.
Jason lost track of time as he allowed his mind to quiet into an empty
peace. He had learned many meditation techniques, but he ignored them for
the moment, seeking only pure calm. When he opened his eyes, the sky was a
gorgeous sunset orange. In equatorial Rimaros, the sunset had been like
flipping a switch off. They were now far enough south that it was still quick,
but offered fleeting moments of glory at the end of the day.
Rather than leave in search of accommodation as the city passed into
night, Jason closed his eyes again, returning to meditation. This time, he
practised a technique Amos had taught him, expanding his senses such that it
didn’t project his aura in an easily detectable way. It was the most difficult
form of aura manipulation he had learned, representing a more advanced
technique than anything else he knew.
Learning the technique involved simultaneously concentrating his focus
and a meditative relaxation of the mind, which left him feeling like he needed
two heads. The spirit attribute enhanced the mind in certain ways, including
improved multitasking, but this was pushing his silver-rank abilities to the
limit.
Much of the aura manipulation Amos was teaching Jason was normally
reserved for gold rank. When those techniques relied heavily on raw power,
Jason picked them up easily. When it was more about skill and he couldn’t
lean on his strength, it was much more of a struggle. Even if he couldn’t
master the techniques through a limitation in his rank or just his aptitude,
grasping just the fundamentals would be a massive boon once he ranked up.
Jason slowly and carefully expanded his senses, making sure that his aura
was undetectable to all but the most sensitive. In almost every adventuring
scenario, moving so slowly would be fairly useless, but Jason continued to
act with patience. Even if he didn’t use what he was practising in the field for
a decade, after he’d ranked up, he knew he was building the foundations of
something amazing.
One of the things Amos had taught him was to pay more attention to the
differentiation of his various senses. Most adventurers, Jason included,
lumped their senses into two boxes: natural and magical. Neither of these was
strictly correct, as even the ‘natural’ senses of sight, hearing, taste and touch
were powerfully enhanced by magic.
The physical senses were also increasingly refined with each rank, as
Jason could expand them into spectrums unavailable to normal humans.
Mostly, though, he used that refinement to filter input. His mind didn’t
actively perceive things on the limits of the visual and audible spectrums
unless they stood out for some reason, and he didn’t process the bulk of the
tastes and aromas wafting on the air. That saved him from nauseating
experiences that normal people were mercifully spared from.
Magical perception was made up of two senses: the ability to sense magic
and the ability to sense auras. All essence users understood there was a
difference between them from an absolute perspective, but treated them as
one from a practical perspective. This was as true for Jason as it was for
most, although he did have an advantage in differentiating them, as his aura
sense was much stronger than his magic sense.
Even so, Jason had rarely utilised them separately until Amos pushed him
to do so. It was the first step in increasing what Jason thought were already
highly refined senses. As he became increasingly proficient at using them
separately, he discovered that doing so made them much more sensitive. This
was the key to expanding his senses without what he now thought of as
crudely shoving them with his aura. There was a lot of practise ahead of him,
but even his early results had him excited.
Once again, Jason lost track of time. He fell into a meditative cycle as his
senses expanded at a crawl, moving out centimetre by centimetre. His
perception glacially expanded to encompass the park and he could sense the
few people in it, late into the night.
This was the point where he realised it was the early hours of the
morning, as everyone left in the park was engaged in behaviour he would
rather not pry into, be it sketchy or amorous in nature. He sensed a familiar
aura, though, and that had his eyes snap open.
“Mr Asano?” Shade asked.
“It’s the outworlder’s aide, Benella. She has some other silver-rankers
with her.”
“You think she is here for you?”
“Yep.”
“I am somewhat concerned that she was able to find you.”
“I may be practising at hiding my aura as my senses expand, but my
efforts are still sloppy and crude. To someone with sufficiently sensitive
perception, I was closer to being a beacon than being hidden.”
“How are you going to react?”
“Well,” Jason said, “I see us as having three options. One, scarper before
they get closer. Two, try to turn it around and sneakily follow them. Three,
fight.”
“The second option offers the greatest benefits,” Shade pointed out. “We
could learn who this woman truly is. But the sufficiently sensitive perception
you just mentioned would be a threat.”
“Agreed.”
“Of the remaining options, Mr Asano, escape is the more sensible
approach. Fighting gets you nothing except showing this woman who you
truly are.”
“I’m not going to lie,” Jason said. “That holds a certain appeal.”
“But it only holds consequences with no upsides, Mr Asano.”
Jason grumbled, but nodded. “Alright, but we are officially hunting this
woman back.”
Shade emerged from Jason’s shadow and Jason stepped into him,
vanishing.
52
T H E G E N U I N E A R T I C LE

B ENELLA WAS ANXIOUS AS SHE RODE A SKIMMER BIKE CAREFULLY THROUGH


the rainforest. There were no roads to her destination and she wouldn’t risk
being observed flying out over the canopy, so she took a small bike and made
her cautious way along the animal trails. Fortunately, there were enough large
magical beasts amongst the local fauna that the trails were generously wide,
if quite meandering. Early morning light only partially broke through the
canopy, drenching everything in a beautiful twilight she was unable to
appreciate, with her mind occupied by what was coming next.
She reached her destination, a small clearing with a creek babbling past a
rocky outcropping. She parked the bike in the shadow of the rock and leaned
up against it herself. As she waited, she nervously checked her watch over
and over, wondering how time seemed to tick over so slowly.
Finally, there was a shimmer in the air and a glorious being became
visible. Descending slowly, he looked like a celestine with alabaster skin and
long hair of spun gold. It spilled down the back of his shirtless, hairless torso
and gleamed under the sun. His eyes were solid gold orbs. He was too tall to
be a celestine, however, standing some eight feet high, as well as having a
pair of wings spread out behind him. His legs were covered in loose teal
pants with gold trim.
He descended, stopping to float in place just before his bare feet reached
the ground.
His wings were pristine white, aside from yellow and orange feathers
along the bottom.
They were clearly not responsible for his flight, at least not by physically
holding him aloft. As he floated magically in the air, the wings were open
behind him, gently undulating.
When he spoke, his voice was deep and resonant, to the point of having
an almost unnatural reverberation to it.
“I sense your fear, elf. Why are you here alone?”
“Haresh refused to come.”
“What failure makes him unwilling to face me?”
“There is a man in the city. I suspect that he noticed the mask placed over
my aura.”
“A gold-ranker?”
“Only silver.”
“That should not be possible.”
“I was uncertain. But there are other indicators that the man is unusual.
Certainly more than what he claims. He is attached to a group of adventurers,
and not inconsequential ones, I discovered by making some discreet
inquiries. But Haresh insisted on eliminating the threat, and he is the one you
gave final authority.”
“ARE YOU QUESTIONING MY JUDGEMENT?”
The messenger’s voice went off like a bomb, shaking the trees and plants
around the clearing and causing loose stones to tumble down the outcropping.
Benella stumbled back, putting a foot into the creek and tripping, landing on
her back. She was disoriented for a moment, and when she looked up, the
messenger was floating over like the blade of a guillotine.
“I would never, Lord Fal. I only sought to clarify, believing that my
explanation was flawed. I acknowledge my failing.”
Fal scowled, floating back.
“Tell me of what happened.”
“Haresh insisted that we eliminate the threat, but this man proved hard to
find. He is resistant to tracking magic and seems to have some means of
teleportation. We only got lucky and found him at all because he was
practising an aura technique of some kind in a public park at night. His aura
was almost completely different from the mask I had seen when I first
encountered him.”
“Then how did you know it was him?”
“The aura mask you gave me. It reacted to his aura the same way both
times.”
“Reacted how?”
Still sprawled, half in the creek and too scared to move, Benella winced,
looking away.
“Tell me!” Fal demanded, his voice reverberating like a command from
the heavens, projected into the clearing through some magical channel.
“A different way to the other servant races,” she said, dragging the words
out of herself. Her head was still turned from Fal, her eyes clenched shut like
a child anticipating a beating.
“I did not ask what it was not like, servant. I asked what…”
He paused, his eyes narrowing as they focused not on Benella but her
shadow. He moved in a flash, reaching into her shadow and pulling
something out.
“Reaper spawn,” he said as Shade dangled from a massive fist. Benella
scrambled out of the way. “Who do you serve, familiar?”
“You will learn soon enough,” Shade said calmly. “He has business with
your kind.”
“He’s watching, isn’t he?”
“Yes.”
Fal then did something that neither Shade nor Jason realised was possible,
launching a soul attack on Jason through his connection to Shade. Then it
was Fal’s turn to be surprised as Jason not just easily fended it off but
retaliated, pushing the messenger’s aura away from Shade.
The messenger tossed Shade aside.
“You should stay out of our affairs, shadow. The Reaper does not govern
my kind; we do not grow old and die like the lesser races.”
“You may not age, but you do die,” Shade told him. “You claim to be the
superior beings, yet you all seem to meet someone stronger eventually, and
find your way to my progenitor.”
“The Builder was of my kind, shadow. You think he will die too?”
“Have you ever wondered why he has been so obsessed with building his
own world? What has been done once can be done again, or undone entirely,
and he is not the only one creating a universe. The Builder has enemies, and
one of them is right here. Do you believe that the likes of you can face
someone that the Builder acknowledges as a personal foe? I suggest you run
from this place, lest your time to meet my progenitor comes soon.”
Fal moved in a blur and was once again clutching Shade, this time
squeezing hard. Shade retaliated by draining mana; the alabaster skin of the
highly magical messenger grew dull, starting with the hand and slowly
crawling over the wrist and up the forearm.
“I am of the greatest people in the cosmos,” Fal snarled. “We are without
equal, let alone superiors. Your words are simply the bluster of the helpless.”
Power surged down Fal’s arm, and while the blackening from the mana
drain accelerated, it did not stop Shade’s body from being destroyed.

Jason was sitting in an office in the Yaresh Adventure Society branch, high in
a tower of dark, glossy metal. Most of the Adventure Society campus in
Yaresh was actually buried underground, with one tower for public-facing
operations. With Jason was Humphrey, Estella and a high-level Adventure
Society official named Fiora Luth. Like Jason and Humphrey, she was silver
rank, although she had gotten there entirely through cores.
Fiora was a lifelong administrator, rarely seeing combat outside of a
monster surge, and even then, it was usually indirect. She had been a logistics
officer during the latest surge, whose risks weren’t confronting monsters but
getting supplies through monster-infested areas. While waiting for Benella to
arrive at her destination, she and Jason had shared their experiences of
supply-running during the surge.
Once Jason saw the interaction through Shade’s perception, he confirmed
that a messenger was present and the room fell silent. He had seen false
messengers before, created by a transformation zone or summoning ability.
He had to admit that they paled in comparison to the genuine article, even
just a silver-rank one. Although it was the lowest rank at which adult
messengers were to be found, it still made quite the impression.
As soon as Jason confirmed there was a messenger, Fiora sent a signal.
Adventurer teams moved on the network of associates Estella had managed
to dig out since first investigating Benella at Jason’s instigation. It had barely
been a day and a half since then, but Estella had been quick to map out her
key associates. The fact that Benella had called them together right after she
parted from Jason and Zolit had been a help.
Jason opened his eyes after his link to Shade’s body was cut off by its
self-destruction.
“It’s over?” Humphrey asked.
“He found Shade,” Jason said. “We expected as much. It was a gamble
sending him in Benella’s shadow.”
“It was the right move,” Fiora said. “The messengers now know that we
know they have agents in the city, but they’ll have to be more circumspect.
Hopefully, we can root them out while they’re laying low by following the
trail from this Benella woman.”
“It was quick thinking to have the Shade body in your shadow jump to
Benella when you saw she was leaving the city,” Humphrey told Estella.
“I wasn’t sure if it was the right move,” she said.
“I agreed with it,” Jason said.
“As did I,” Shade agreed from Jason’s shadow. “Consulting Mr Miller
was the correct instinct.”
“And in the days you’ve spent in large social gatherings,” Fiora said to
Jason, “you haven’t seen anyone else that you suspect?”
“No,” Jason said, “but I could easily have missed someone. The aura
mask she was wearing was incredibly good. It took multiple direct
interactions before I even noticed it, and even then I wasn’t certain. The most
worrying part, though, is that it wasn’t even her aura mask. I always
suspected that the messengers would outclass us when it came to auras, but
not to this degree. Whether it’s an item or a technique, their aura-related
magic beats us out handily.”
“Why would you suspect that they had superior auras?” Fiora asked.
“Because of their nature,” Jason said. “Most entities are living beings
with souls inside. For messengers, their bodies and souls are one thing, not
two. Since auras are projections of the soul, their gestalt nature gives them
access to abilities those with body-soul duality do not have.”
“Are there any vulnerabilities to this nature?” Fiora asked.
“Only if you can convince them to be self-destructive,” Jason said.
“Surely we should explore this more,” she said.
“My understanding is that the topic is already being studied,” Jason said.
“There is a gold-rank healer in our convoy, Carlos Quilido. He knows more
on that topic than I.”
Humphrey was watching Jason warily. Jason’s reaction to Carlos asking
Jason to be a test subject for how to harm body-soul gestalts had ended
violently. No sign of disturbance appeared in Jason’s expression, body
language or aura, but Humphrey kept a close eye on him.
Jason not only noticed Humphrey doing so, but also saw Fiora notice the
dynamic. She didn’t ask, despite the curiosity Jason felt from her. Jason
sensed Fiora’s self-control as she pushed her curiosity aside to refocus her
attention.
“I’ll admit I was sceptical when the director suggested you might be able
to dig out some of the agents working for the messengers in the city,” she
said.
“I was lucky,” Jason said. “She made a mistake and drew my attention.
The odds of finding another by just randomly going to places with lots of
people are slim at best. Chasing down the people associating with Benella
will result in much better leads.”
“What was her objective?” Humphrey wondered. “Working as assistant
to some mid-tier fight promoter doesn’t seem to have much in the way of
benefits for the messengers.”
“I imagine that many of their agents are low-level people placed in roles
where more powerful people are around them,” Fiora said. “Assistants,
housekeepers, low-level bureaucrats. The ones that powerful people pay no
more attention to than a lamp or a chair.”
“It could be the person she’s an aide to,” Jason said. “He seems
innocuous, but he’s an outworlder. That’s not something to ignore when
dealing with a big dimensional mess. A bunch of messengers turning up, for
example.”
“I did know there was an outworlder in the city,” Fiora said. “The society
keeps track of people like that. I’ve glanced through the report logs on him,
but the only thing that stuck out was that, for an outworlder, he’s been
unusually sedate. Some minor criminal activity that we let go. We’d rather he
stick to that than look for something more exciting. My investigators are
looking closer now, of course, and I have analysts combing these reports for
any less-obvious indicators that he’s been up to something.”
Fiora leaned back in her chair.
“We’ve been lucky that the messengers are fighting on multiple fronts,”
she said. “You’re aware of the natural array?”
“We are,” Humphrey said. “Our magical researcher is downright eager to
see it. He’s been a little cranky since his intended lecture about it to my team
and the other group with us was derailed.”
“We’re currently invested in keeping the fighting centred on the
messenger strongholds and away from the city. They’re keeping us from the
only access to the array, deep underground. The people here, behind the
walls, don’t understand how bad the fighting is. If the messengers can cut off
the supply lines coming out of the city, though, our forces will have to pull
back. Then the fighting will be at our walls instead of theirs.”
Jason felt her lock down her emotions, and she stood up. Humphrey and
Jason did the same, and she shook both of their hands.
“I will confess that you have left me quite curious, Mr Miller. The
director said that if I looked deeper into your identity, I would find it, so he
asked me not to. I wouldn’t ordinarily let that stop me, but you’ve done us a
service, so I’ll respect that.”
“I appreciate it,” Jason said. “But it’s the Adventure Society, Mrs Luth.
Service is the point.”
53
STORIES ABOUT FUNGUS

U RMAN V OHL HAD PULLED BACK TO THROW THE FOLDER FULL OF PAPERS
across the room when he stopped himself, closed his eyes and put the folder
back down on his desk. His sons, Valk and Emresh, stood anxiously in the
middle of the office.
“Another one,” Urman snarled. “That’s two in the time it’s taking the
broker to get here. You are certain he’s coming, aren’t you, Valk?”
“Yes, Father,” the older brother said.
Urman’s office was midway up one of the inner-city towers, prestigious
but not overreaching. Understanding where to headquarter oneself was an
important part of maintaining a reputation in Yaresh. It demonstrated a self-
valuation that could hurt one’s interests if they were to over- or under-
evaluate their position in society.
A knock at the door was followed by some of Urman’s less thuggish men
escorting a small elf in a well-made but not ostentatious suit. Like Urman’s
office, his clothes were carefully aligned with his societal position. Despite
being in Urman’s office and surrounded by his people, the elf looked
unperturbed. He was a silver-rank core user, but his aura was sharply
controlled, giving away none of his emotions.
“Mr Vohl,” the small elf said. “Your people bringing me here is pushing
quite firmly against the boundaries of propriety.”
“Jasich Tovill,” Urman said with a glower. “You’re going to stand there
and talk about pushing boundaries when you have been interfering with my
business?”
“I have nothing to do with your business, Mr Vohl.”
“In the last three days, no fewer than nineteen of my debtors have paid
their loans in full, immediately after getting loans from you.”
“You are incorrect in two regards, Mr Vohl. Firstly, the loans facilitated
by myself have nothing to do with your loans, simply because they went to
the same people in several instances. If you disagree, you will find my legal
advocates downright eager to explain the difference before a civil magistrate.
Secondly, they are not my loans. Loans have been executed through me, but
it is my client from whom the loans are issued, not me.”
“And who is your client?”
“None of your business, Mr Vohl.”
“Father,” Emresh said angrily. “Let me—”
“Quiet,” Urman commanded dismissively.
“Yes,” Jasich agreed. “You’ve done your father quite enough damage.”
“What does that mean?” Urman asked.
“I apologise,” Jasich said. “I spoke out of turn.”
“My father asked you a—”
“Shut your mouth!” Urman snapped at Emresh, then turned his gaze on
Jasich.
“I have no patience for your games, broker. Tell me who your client is or
you’ll find unfortunate coincidences befalling your interests.”
Jasich sighed.
“As it happens,” he said, “my client anticipated a scenario quite like this
and issued directions accordingly. I have been given, should I be put under
duress, permission to reveal that my client is a member of the Nareen family,
out of Rimaros.”
“The Storm Kingdom?” Urman asked. “What do they want with a
handful of businesses in the Yaresh entertainment district?”
“My client, as it happens, is also a go-between. She has no interest in the
entertainment district or the business involved.”
“She’s doing this for someone else?”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“She has only involved herself to protect someone.”
“Protect who?” Urman asked. “My debtors? This mysterious person
behind her?”
“No, Mr Vohl. She’s doing this to protect you.”
“Me? Who and what do you think I need protection from?”
“Someone within your organisation has offended a person they very
much should not have.”
Remembering the broker’s earlier statement, seemingly made offhand,
Urman looked to his younger son before turning back to Jasich as he
continued his explanation.
“Mr Vohl, the offended party knows that if they retaliate against this
member of your organisation, events would escalate to the point where they
would be required to kill you and everyone around you before there were no
more people to come seeking revenge.”
“Even if this person could do that,” Urman said, “the city authorities
wouldn’t just sit back in the face of that much killing.”
“I don’t know the identity of the person in question,” Jasich said, “but I
am assured that he is unconcerned about any authorities. It seems an
outlandish claim, but given the identity of my client, not one I can entirely
dismiss. However, doing all of that would go against the person’s current
desire for anonymity. He, therefore, decided that he shall satisfy his need for
revenge by interfering with your interests rather than melting down your flesh
and carrying you around in a bucket. That is a direct quote, by the way, and
one I am assured can be taken quite literally, other than potentially requiring
multiple buckets or perhaps a barrel. My client is attempting to prevent that
person from deciding you are worth casting aside their anonymity over. She
knows that going through me is something you would be willing to do, but
going through her is not.”
Urman leaned back in his chair, considering the broker’s words. Jasich
stood in place, patient and unconcerned, while Emresh was agitated, unable
to keep his hands and feet still without fidgeting. His older brother, Valk, was
more composed, but still showed signs of uncertainty in his expression.
During the long silence, Emresh looked like he was about to speak several
times before either stopping himself or being stopped by a harsh glare from
his brother. Finally, Urman spoke.
“Broker. Sell me the loans you have issued.”
“As I have already explained, Mr Vohl, they are not my loans. I merely
administered them.”
“You’re a smart man, Mr Tovill. I’m sure you can figure something out.”
“What I have figured out, Mr Vohl, is that if you keep pushing, your best
result would be humiliating failure.”
“You think failure is the best I can do?”
“If you do anything, Mr Vohl, I am the only person in this room who will
still be alive at week’s end.”
Urman grimaced but refrained from another outburst.
“Take Mr Tovill home,” he told his minions. They took Jasich out,
leaving Urman and his sons. “Emresh, what did you do?”
“Nothing.”
“Don’t lie to me, boy.”
“Really, nothing. It was a normal week.”
“You didn’t hurt anyone?” Valk asked. “Make anyone angry?”
“Of course I hurt people,” Emresh said. “I just said it was a normal
week.”
“Who were these people you hurt?” Urman asked.
“I didn’t make a list.”
“Emresh,” Valk said. “You are the only one of us that spends time in the
entertainment district. You know the people there, yes?”
“Of course I do.”
“Out of the people you hurt, which ones were strangers?” Valk asked.
“What makes you think it was someone I hurt?” Emresh asked. “The
broker said offended, and how would I hurt some death-dealing savage who
could take us all out?”
“It was probably some kid from a powerful family out for fun,” Urman
mused. “Too prideful to drop their name, perhaps, or not wanting to drag that
name into a petty mess.”
He looked at Emresh.
“Some people know better than lay their mistakes at the doorsteps of their
families.”
“It could have been anyone he encountered,” Valk said. “The best move,
for now, is to find out more about the broker’s client.”
Urman nodded.
“Valk, look into any members of House Nareen in the city.”
“What do I do?” Emresh asked.
“Go home,” Urman said. “My townhouse, not your place in the
entertainment district. Stay there until I tell you otherwise. I’ll have my men
make sure you go, and tell your mother you aren’t to leave.”
“You’re telling Mum on me?”
Jason’s team was in Clive’s skimmer, moving south over the forest canopy.
For once, Jason himself had joined them.
“While it’s good that we’re operating alone so you can come with us,”
Humphrey told him, “this isn’t a low-stakes contract to slowly get used to
working together with. We’re one of seven teams, four of which have gold-
rankers attached. We’re all scouting out the region south of the city. No one
has heard anything from anyone in that direction for days, including from the
first two teams sent to look into it.”
“Why split up all the teams?” Belinda asked. “Isn’t that asking to be
picked off in isolation?”
“Because the area we’re covering is so large,” Humphrey told her. “As far
as anyone can determine, the entire southern approach is cut off. The
Adventure Society wants this dealt with before a panic starts.”
“Should a panic be starting?” Neil asked.
“That’s what we’re trying to find out,” Humphrey said. “The local teams
are checking the main thoroughfares south. We’ve been assigned to hop
between smaller and more isolated communities, along with Korinne’s team
and another group of out-of-towners.”
“So, we get the low priority tasks,” Neil griped.
“Be grateful,” Humphrey said. “The teams with gold-rankers are going
after the main routes, which is where the most dangerous threats are likely to
be. Otherwise, the larger towns would have gotten the word out before going
silent.”
“We can handle dangerous,” Sophie said. “Unless it’s something gold
rank.”
“Rank isn’t the only source of danger,” Clive warned. “Yes, we could
handle most silver-rank monsters, but the Magic Society’s monster almanac
is filled with exotic threats. Not everything can be solved by punching.”
“That depends on how good you are at punching,” Sophie told him.

In their own skimmer, Korinne’s team was also moving over the rainforest,
trees just below them.
“Why couldn’t we just take the roads?” Polix wondered aloud. “It would
take longer, yes, but we could have just left earlier.”
“The Adventure Society wanted us to avoid trouble on the way to the
population centres,” Korinne said. “The comprehensiveness with which the
southern region has gone silent suggests that the roads are compromised.”
“But running these skimmers in flight mode consumes a lot of spirit
coins,” Polix said. “The Adventure Society is reimbursing us, right?”
“Of course they are,” Rosa said. “Isn’t that right, Korinne?”
“It is,” Korinne said. “They will fully reimburse us.”
“Why do you not sound convincing?” Polix asked.
“They will reimburse us,” Korinne said. “More or less.”
“More or less?” Kalif asked. “We’re fuelling this thing out of party funds.
What does more or less mean?”
“It means that the society is currently funnelling supplies to the conflict
with the messengers,” Korinne said. “They’re still paying out contracts, but
non-urgent reimbursements are being paid out in credit bonds.”
“What are credit bonds?” Kalif asked.
“It’s a token that you can use to reclaim an owed amount at a later date.”
“How much later?” Polix asked.
“A year.”
“A year? We won’t be around in a year!”
“You can claim them at other branches,” Korinne said.
“Do we still have to wait the year if we do that?” Polix asked.
“Only if you want the full eighty-five percent,” Korinne said.
“What do you mean, eighty-five percent?” Polix asked.
“There’s a slight fee for claiming the token at a branch other than the non-
issuing one,” Korinne said.
“We should never have taken this contract,” Polix complained. “Self-
funding a trip into some vaguely defined area where people keep vanishing?
Including adventurers?”
“Maybe the whole region is overrun with something,” Rosa suggested.
“I’ve heard stories about fungus that can overtake whole towns in one night.”
“I once saw a carnivorous vine the size of a large town,” Zara said. “It
was in an astral space, part of the mass expedition that Emir Bahadir arranged
five years ago. Iron-rankers only, with promising young teams from across
the world. It was a good chance to meet with other royalty.”
“Did you kill the vine monster?” Kalif asked.
“It wasn’t a monster,” Zara explained. “It was some kind of alchemically
modified plant creature that had been left to grow wild for centuries. It had
buried itself underground, but had vines on the surface, amongst the regular
overgrowth. It would attack anyone that entered its territory. Dozens of
adventurers teamed up to deal with it.”
“A single giant organism?” Polix asked.
“Yes,” Zara confirmed.
“Affliction specialist,” Polix said. “Even a whole bunch of adventurers
won’t get it done. You need someone that can keep scaling damage endlessly
to handle something that big.”
“Except that it wasn’t that easy,” Zara said. “We were iron-rank, and you
know what affliction specialists are like at that rank.”
“Crap area specialists,” Kalif said. “No iron-rank monster is tough
enough to make afflictions worthwhile and no bronze-rank affliction special
survives a bronze-rank monster. Not without a lot of backup. Faster and
easier to just run around killing stuff the regular way.”
“Yes,” Zara said. “It’s why only a few teams brought them. And they
were all specialised in area afflictions, which don’t have escalating effects
until higher rank. Fortunately, there was one focused affliction specialist, part
of a local team.”
“A focused affliction specialist?” Korinne asked. “They’re even weaker
than area affliction specialists at low rank. And as for high ranks, they’re just
worthless against anything but one giant creature.”
“If they really are affliction specialists, yes,” Zara agreed. “The person in
question became an affliction skirmisher.”
Everyone except Polix, who was driving, turned to look at Zara.
“Yes,” she said with a small, weary sigh. “I was talking about him. It was
the first time I saw him, although we never actually met until later.”
“You need to get over that guy,” Rosa said. “I don’t think he’s especially
keen on you, Princess.”
“It’s not princess anymore,” Zara said.
“Which I believe about as much as you not being obsessed with the guy
you joined our team over,” Rosa told her. “Maybe try to avoid letting out a
little sigh when you talk about him and it might come across as more
believable.”
“You realise he’s probably listening to all of this,” Kalif said. “That
shadow familiar of his is sneaky.”
“I keep sensing him skulking around,” Rosa said. As the team scout, she
had the best perception amongst them. “I’m sure he’s getting harder to spot,
though.”
“I appreciate you saying so, Miss Liselos,” Shade said from her shadow.
“I need to refine my skills again with each summoner I am familiar to, and
you have been very good practise.”
54
VA M P I R E M O N S T E R S L AV E S

K ORINNE ’ S TEAM PAUSED THEIR PROGRESS OVER THE RAINFOREST TO FEND OFF
a large group of spider monkeys. These were not like the spider monkeys of
Earth, as they had four extra arms, shot webbing from their hands and poison
barbs from the tips of their tails. They also were more aggressively
omnivorous, still enthusiastic about fruit while also mixing anyone they could
catch into their diet.
The rainforest canopy was an environment that was a mixed bag for the
team. They could all get by on silver-rank agility, but some fared better than
others in the trees.
Rather than slaughter all the monkeys, the team drove them off with a
show of force, with only a few of the creatures dying. They were not
monsters but native magical beasts, and the rainforest canopy was their
natural habitat; they were only a threat to anyone roaming the treetops, who
would generally be able to handle themselves.
The team was returning to the skimmer hovering over the canopy, making
their way up through the shadowy canopy, when Rosa, the scout, froze. She
turned to peer into the shadows as the rest of the team readied themselves.
They took tactical positions, floating in the air or perched on branches. Only
Zara was out of step, not having the years of training and working together
that kept the others in perfect sync.
Two blue and orange eye-shaped nebulas appeared in the dark. Realising
it was Jason didn’t do much to relax the team, and they remained on alert.
“How did you get so close?” Rosa asked. “You didn’t use to be this
good.”
“The entire reason we’re all together like this is so that Lord Pensinata
can train my aura use,” Jason told her. “It would be a little strange if I wasn’t
improving.”
“But this fast?”
“Wait until you see a messenger,” Jason said. “You’ll realise that this
isn’t fast enough.”
“What are you doing here, Asano?” Korinne asked. “You should be with
your own team.”
“I just wanted a word with your newest team member.”
“Last I heard, you wanted nothing to do with her.”
“Yes, well,” Jason said, his voice embarrassed. “I kind of have this thing
where I make grandiose statements of principle and intent, only to
immediately realise I have to go back on them for practical reasons. Lady
Nareen has undertaken a task at my behest and I wanted to discuss it.”
“I don’t think now is the best time,” Korinne said.
“Yeah,” Jason acknowledged, “but we’re off to fight evil and I’ve learned
it’s best to seize the moment. I die kind of a lot.”
“It’s fine,” Zara said. “I’ll catch up.”
The team shared unhappy glances but made their way up to the skimmer
while Zara activated a privacy screen. She stood on a small floating cloud
that roiled like a storm. Jason emerged from the shadows, sitting casually on
a branch as he pushed the hood back off his head.
“There are a lot of conveniently strong and horizontal branches up here,”
he observed. “Is that normal? I don’t know a lot about trees outside of their
use in landscape architecture, and I mostly forgot all of that stuff. It’s what
my dad did for a living.”
“Did, past-tense? Your father died?” Zara asked.
“What? No, there was a monster apocalypse and he’s fixing one of my
places. A bunch of gold-rankers dug it up looking for treasure, the pricks. I’m
not sure I was paying him, now that I think about it. I probably should be.
He’s going to have some wages racked up by the time I get back.”
“Did you just come here to talk nonsense?” Zara asked.
“It’s generally a safe bet,” Jason said with a disarmingly vulnerable smile.
“But this time, I came to thank you for helping me with that property
developer thug.”
“You supplied the money,” Zara said. “All it took me was a couple of
hours and my name.”
Jason nodded. “And you got to see what a hypocrite I am. I was against
you joining the convoy because your background would bring trouble. And
then I asked you to flaunt your name the first chance I got.”
“That’s not why you didn’t want me to join,” Zara said softly. “You
weren’t thinking of the trouble I’d bring, but the trouble I already had. That
my whole family brought you, but you never would have been involved with
us, if not for me.”
Jason knew that was wrong, as Soramir had been watching him from the
moment he and Farrah returned to Pallimustus. He doubted Zara was faking
ignorance, which meant that Soramir had not told her, leading to more self-
recrimination than was entirely warranted. He knew himself well enough to
realise that not telling her that was petty, but he could live with being a little
petty.
“Probably,” Jason agreed.
Zara sat down in her floating cloud, Jason laughing as her legs dangled
out of the bottom.
“You know that I can do things for you without drawing too much
attention,” she said. “For example, I didn’t need to throw my identity around.
The name of House Nareen was plenty to settle the issue.”
“It’s not settled,” Jason told her. “Vohl is looking into you.”
“People, especially ambitious ones, don’t eat a loss quite so willingly,”
Zara said dismissively. “It’s in hand. I’m not done with Mr Vohl.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes.”
“Your plan doesn’t involve marrying any dead people, does it?”
“I learned that lesson,” she said, shooting him a flat look. “I think it’s
time we both got back to our teams. I don’t know about yours, but mine is
waiting.”
“Oh, mine doesn’t even know I’m gone,” Jason said. “But genuinely,
thank you for handling the business with Vohl.”
“It’s not that big a concern,” she said. “It’s not like if I didn’t then you
would really go ahead and kill them all.”
“No,” Jason said, his aura showing nothing but sincerity. “Of course I
wouldn’t.”
Jason emerged from one of Shade’s bodies, arriving back on his team’s still-
moving skimmer.
“Where did you go?” Humphrey asked in his best disappointed-mother
voice.
“I didn’t go anywhere,” Jason said. “I’ve been here the whole time.”
Humphrey turned his gaze to Jason’s seat. Sitting in it was what looked
like a mummy from an old movie, made up of bandages bound tightly around
a roughly human-shaped cluster of leeches. Pinned to its forehead was a note
with the word JASON written on it.
“In my defence,” Jason said, “I thought he’d take the blood clone form.”
“You thought that you, but red and mute, would be convincing?”
Humphrey asked.
“Red, I might believe,” Sophie said. “Mute? No.”
“Come on, Colin,” Jason said, gesturing at his familiar. “The cat’s out of
the bag.”
Colin suddenly lurched to his feet with a burst of enthusiasm.
“No,” Jason said. “I don’t have an actual cat in a bag for you to eat.”
The mummy’s shoulders slumped, prompting Jason to wonder why a
bound-up swarm of leeches had collective body language.
“I may have a fresh spider monkey,” Jason told him.
“He is not eating that in the skimmer,” Clive called out from the driver’s
seat. “Not unless you’re supplying the crystal wash to clean it.”

When Jason and his team drew closer to their destination, they slowed to a
stop. Clive carefully descended the skimmer below the canopy but paused
high above the forest floor, out of the sun to hide amongst the trees. Jason
went over the side, vanishing into the shadows as Shade’s bodies poured
from his cloak to do the same.
The rainforest floor was a metropolis of shadows and obstacles; precisely
the kind of place it would be foolish to fight someone like Jason. His team
waited for Jason and Shade to scout the way forward, flickering from shadow
to shadow in the gloom. Their destination was a small town, a dozen
kilometres ahead, that had not been heard from in days. That was not
unusual, as it was a small and relatively isolated place, but with the region
increasingly going dark, Jason’s team had been sent to check. Every location
they were scheduled to check was the same.
Jason didn’t go the entire way shadow jumping, as even his mana would
suffer without a source of replenishment. He drew on his old techniques for
navigating the Greenstone delta on foot, adapted as he ranked up, but never
as practised as in his early days as an adventurer. With the hot, humid air, it
almost felt like he was back there.
One of Shade’s tertiary powers was the ability to be the locus of Jason’s
non-combat abilities. Because that included his map ability, sending out
Shade bodies was an excellent way to map out an area. It was Shade who first
encountered the town, after which his other bodies swept around it.
The town was surrounded by crop fields, divided by lines of trees rather
than fences. Rice paddies featured heavily, with many shade houses lined up
in rows for crops that weren’t as fond of the blazing sun. There were people
working the fields, although most of the labour was being performed by
construct creatures, built for this purpose and directed by elf supervisors.
It looked normal at a glance, but something was tweaking Jason’s
instincts. He kept himself hidden and his magical senses restrained. He made
his way forward using the lines of trees that divided the fields, as well as the
shade houses. He found a spot close to the town, inside a cluster of shrubbery
at the end of one of the tree lines.
The town was unremarkable, with simple wooden buildings, often open-
sided. Airflow and minimal obstruction seemed to be key to the design
principles, and all of the buildings were painted the same dark green. It
looked like the whole town had been repainted recently as well. Jason could
see right through many of the buildings, especially the houses. They were
furnished in the same minimalist principles in which they were constructed.
The internal spaces were open, with racks instead of cupboards, hammocks
instead of beds, and open sides instead of walls.
Once again, the town populace seemed normal, but Jason’s instinct that
something was off was growing, even if he couldn’t figure out what was
tripping alarms for him. Before taking the risk of expanding his supernatural
senses, Jason enhanced his physical ones. He started by pushing his vision
into the thermal range. The immediate detail that stood out was the fact that
every building had a heat bloom radiating from the new paintwork. It was
counteracting the design of the buildings, making it harder for the airflow to
cool them down.
Jason next turned his enhanced vision on the people. Elves were very
much like humans under thermal vision, barring essence-related exceptions.
The townsfolk all had unstable temperatures, with points all over their bodies
soaking heat as if they were feeding on it.
As he focused on the people, it finally clicked for Jason what his instincts
were picking out as wrong. Every person moved in the exact same way, from
body language to simple gestures to stride. They greeted one another the
same way, walked down the street the same way and picked out items at the
small market the same way. It was as if the whole town was the same person
with many different bodies.
“Bloody Stepford elves,” he muttered.
“Mr Asano?” Shade asked.
“I think we’ve got a pod people situation,” Jason said.
“Will you use the technique Lord Pensinata taught you to expand your
senses without alerting people to your presence?”
“No,” Jason said. “I’m still too inconsistent with it. I’ll discuss it with the
team before making any moves that could potentially set them off.”

“We definitely need a closer look,” Jason said after explaining what he saw
to the team back at the skimmer. “I have an idea in my head, though, and if
I’m right, these people might be able to sense me. The outworlder’s aide,
Benella, was almost certainly wearing some kind of aura mask that was
applied from the outside, instead of being created by her.”
“Is that even possible?” Belinda asked.
“Not using the magic we know,” Clive said. “But the last few years have
seen our world flooded with outside magic. It only makes sense that the
messengers have some as well.”
“These elves may be using aura masks as well,” Jason said. “They
wouldn’t even have to be as good as the one Benella has. They would only
need to hold up long enough to lure unsuspecting people into an ambush. For
victims to wander into town and get taken out or taken over by whatever has
a hold of those elves.”
“Why would the messengers want a town that occasionally kidnaps
people passing through?” Sophie asked.
“To keep everything quiet while they build up a secret army. It prevents
anyone from going home with stories about some weird stuff they saw in the
town, plus the populace itself is the goal, so a few extra recruits would be
welcome.”
“If they’re doing this all over the southern region,” Humphrey said, “then
a massive army has formed on the borders of Yaresh without the city
noticing. And if enough of the southern region was affected that the city did
finally notice, then that army is basically in place. If someone sets them off,
they may turn overt and move on the city.”
“Someone like any of seven teams roaming around right now, looking for
bears to poke,” Jason said. “Now that the city has noticed something is going
on, we have to assume these hidden enemies will move sooner rather than
later.”
“Which leaves the question of what we do now,” Humphrey said.
“Looking closer may trigger them, but we need to know what we’re dealing
with.”
“From what Jason described,” Clive said, “I would assume some manner
of body control.”
“Like that spider in the Order of the Reaper’s astral space?” Sophie
asked. “The one that turned all those monsters into an army of vampire
monster slaves.”
“Oh, great,” Neil said. “I can’t wait to relive the horrifying pitched battle
where we almost died after fighting for hours against a relentless horde.”
“It might be worth enquiring with Carlos,” Clive suggested. “Jason’s
observations suggest a heat-consuming parasite that takes over the body. As
Carlos specialises in things that take over the body, he might have some
insight into what we’re dealing with.”
55
T H E FA C E O F I N S U R M O U NTA B LE P OW E R

M ESSENGER ARCHITECTURE WAS OBSESSED WITH CIRCLES . T HEIR BUILDINGS


were circular, as was the pattern in which they were laid out. The wall around
each of their strongholds was also a circle. The wall was only ten feet tall,
which would hardly even slow down a silver-rank adventurer, but the wall
itself was not the obstacle. It was a platform for the powerful defensive
screen that tapped into the combination of aura projection and ritual magic
used by the messengers.
Benella was unnerved by the ritual magic used by the messengers.
Pallimustus had rituals and magical devices that created artificial auras, like
aura beacons used for signalling. Compared to what the messengers could do,
however, the Magic Society were children playing in the mud. Their ritual
magic was able to not just produce artificial auras, but even take on and
reproduce actual auras, as well as use them in more sophisticated ways.
The messengers could actively enhance protection arrays with their auras.
This improved both offensive and defensive capabilities, and was the key to
their success in fending off regular Adventure Society assaults. In addition to
the walls around the stronghold, the circular buildings could each serve as a
sturdy fort or bunker, depending on their size.
The buildings constructed by the messengers trended large, with a lot of
open space. Columns rose from the top of the circular walls, creating a gap
between the wall-tops and the conical roofs. The flying creatures often used
this gap for entry and exit, although there were also arched double doors.
Aside from that, smaller doors were used by servants of what the messengers
called the ‘lesser races.’
The messengers had five strongholds scattered to the west and south of
Yaresh, all of which had come under attack multiple times. Each stronghold
was made up of round buildings, surrounded by a neatly circular wall. In one
such stronghold, Benella was waiting in a large, round and almost empty
building.
Inside the building were three chairs that would best be described as
thrones, which were favoured by the messengers. The backs of the thrones
curved in an hourglass shape to accommodate their wings. Benella knew that
messengers could absorb their wings into their bodies, having seen them do it
herself. They almost always did not, however, although she was unsure why.
Amongst the non-messengers like Benella, who had chosen to serve
them, the best guess was that the messengers did not want to resemble
celestines so closely. There was little chance of that, even discounting the
wings, as the messengers were around half again as tall as a celestine. Even
so, the servants were careful to avoid even the implication. If a messenger
thought they were being compared to their ‘lessers,’ any servant that did so
would be annihilated, irrespective of their value.
In the community of servants, rumour and speculation would rapidly
spread. This was because the messengers felt no need to explain themselves
to those they considered lesser, which was everybody. Their inherent
superiority was a key part of their quasi-religious philosophy. Benella and the
other servants tried their best to learn such philosophy, despite the
messengers having no interest in teaching it.
Benella had found that the messengers’ refusal to explain themselves in
any instance and on any topic extended to the point of impracticality. All the
servants had made mistakes due to a lack of information a messenger could
easily have provided. The punishment for these failures was always violent,
often lethally so, despite the lack of fairness.
Benella had seen that the danger level differed from messenger to
messenger. Since joining the stronghold full time, she had realised that the
messenger she primarily served, Fal Vin Garath, was one of the more erratic.
He was more prone to violence, and what exactly would set him off was less
predictable—most servants took ‘everything’ as the default assumption.
The need to find a new place for herself was why she was waiting in the
large building with the three thrones, which looked tiny in the high, open
space. The only other thing in the building, other than Benella herself, was a
crystal recording projector on a small plinth.
She could no longer go back to Yaresh, having been exposed by John
Miller or, as she now realised, Jason Asano. She still maintained contact with
certain people in the city, and while they were now laying low, she had
managed to get the results of enquiries she had already made into John
Miller. It took very little effort to discover Miller’s true identity; he was
almost flaunting it. Between the scars, the skills and the team he was attached
to, almost any investigation would quickly reveal the truth. Whether he
realised it himself or not, Benella knew that Asano was aching to cut loose.
Benella’s utility to the messengers as one of their agents inside the city
was gone. Gathering information from overheard conversations in the cage-
fighting arena had only gotten her so far anyway. She had managed to dig out
a few useful titbits from attendees networking and making deals at the fights,
but nothing wildly important or revelatory.
Her main value had been in managing Zolit. He would become
increasingly unstable without her there to reinforce the right behaviour and
administer doses, now that she could no longer return to the city. That
problem was no longer hers, however, and the messengers would solve it as
they saw fit. They certainly wouldn’t bother telling her what was happening.
The presentation Benella was waiting to give was her chance to maintain
relevancy to her winged masters. They had no sense of loyalty to those they
considered lesser, so any accomplishments in the past had earned her almost
nothing. At most, it demonstrated that she was still potentially useful moving
forward. If she could show the messengers her value, she would be assigned
to a new role. If she could not, her best case was being an ordinary stronghold
servant. They could easily decide she knew too much and eliminate her as a
potential liability.
Benella’s most recent results had been extremely patchy. Things had gone
wrong from the moment she met Asano, and the key to her future was
demonstrating that he was a significant threat. If she could convince the
messengers that Asano was a threat they needed to deal with themselves, she
would be absolved of blame. The advantage to the superiority with which the
messengers viewed themselves was that their expectations of others were
low. If they were required to handle an issue, then it logically followed that a
servant was insufficient to the task. One thing the messengers never blamed
their servants for was not being their equals.
The key person Benella needed to impress was a messenger ritualist who
was relatively new to the stronghold, Jes Fin Kaal. She had been dispatched
by messenger leadership and was referred to by the other messengers as
Voice Kaal. From what Benella could tell, she was something between a
general and a priest. How that worked with the messengers’ religious
philosophy she was unsure, as the only thing the messengers seemed to
worship was themselves. What Benella did know was that if she could get the
favour of Kaal, she might escape the capricious attentions of her current
master, Fal.
In the face of insurmountable power, the only choice was to surrender to
it or be crushed by it. Watching her adventuring team get annihilated one by
one had engraved this onto Benella’s soul. In the wake of that, she had
betrayed her own kind and her own world to enter the dangerous servitude
offered by the messengers.
Benella was utterly convinced that the conquest of her world was
inevitable. If she wanted any place in it, then service to the new rulers was
the key, and the earlier the better. Only one thing had ever given her any
uneasiness in this conviction, and he was what had led her to her current
position. She had come to believe that the messengers were right about their
superiority, but Jason Asano gave her much the same feeling they did. It left
her uncertain about her choice, wondering if she had betrayed everything and
everyone, only to be wrong.
Like Benella, the messengers were also seeing a shift in their
circumstances. The arrival of Voice Kaal had led to speculation amongst the
servants that the messengers were primed to escalate the conflicts they were
involved in. Benella didn’t know much, but was aware that at least some of
the strongholds were fighting enemies that went beyond the adventurers of
the city.
Three messengers flew into the building through the roof gap: two male
messengers of silver rank, flanking a third who was shorter and had no aura
that Benella could detect. The messenger on the left was Lord Fal, while the
one on the right she had seen in the stronghold, but didn’t know the name of.
Messengers rarely deigned to introduce themselves to the servant races.
Compared to the fair-skinned, golden-haired Fal, the messenger on the
right was dark-skinned, with silver hair and solid silver orbs for eyes. His
wings were black, with white feathers along the bottom edge. His hair draped
down his back in strings of tight braids.
Both men were shirtless, showing off lean muscle but an odd absence of
nipples. Their lower bodies were covered by loose, flowing pants of dark teal
with gold trim. Their feet were bare but didn’t touch the ground, which was
typical. The messengers frequently floated in the air rather than set foot on
the ground. Their wings did not work like a bird’s, and they levitated around
using their auras.
Silver-rank essence users could levitate using their auras, and golds could
float around in slow flight. Compared to what the messengers could manage,
however, it was a pale imitation. Not only could messengers move faster and
with more control, but they were not easily disrupted by almost any
intervention.
Benella presumed the messenger in the middle was Jes Fin Kaal. She was
smaller than the others, barely taller than seven feet, and she lacked the
domineering presence of the other two. Benella couldn’t magically detect her
presence at all, despite Kaal being gold rank. All she sensed were the silver-
rankers beside her.
Kaal’s clothing was also different, being a loose robe of deep red, with
white trim that matched her pristine white wings. Only a few wisps of black
hair escaped the hood, which shadowed her pale, delicate features. Compared
to the solid gold and silver orbs that the other messengers had for eyes, Kaal
had more human eyes, albeit supernaturally blue. They stood out in the
shadowy hood even more than her bright red lips.
Despite the auras radiating from the two messengers beside her, Benella
could not take her eyes from the woman in the middle. Her compelling
presence did not seem aura-related, although perhaps it was some subtle
effect, beyond Benella’s ability to recognise. Her thoughts drifted back to
Asano, whose presence had been similarly mysterious.
The three thrones rose into the air for the messengers to sit on. After
being seated, Fal looked down on Benella imperiously, which was almost
comfortingly normal.
“You have asked to present to us information of a particular threat,” Fal
told her. “You speak of the man whose familiar followed you to our
meeting.”
“Yes,” Benella said, steeling her nerve. “I had already determined this
man was suspicious, and suggested investigation. The decision was made to
move directly to elimination, but he detected our approach and fled. I had
already initiated an investigation of him on my own initiative at that point, so
I was able to gather a good amount of information. Then I contacted Lord
Fal, and made the grave error of allowing the man to follow me using a
shadow familiar.”
“We expect our servants to serve to the best of their ability, no more and
no less,” the dark-skinned messenger said. “There is no admonition required
in a failure to notice a child of the Reaper.”
Relief flooded Benella, but she was not fool enough to thank the
messenger. The implication that her consideration would matter to him would
get her punished and possibly killed outright.
“After collating the information on this man from my various sources,”
she continued, “it became evident that he poses a potential threat. I believe
that further investigation is warranted, but in the wake of my failure, I am
unable to do so. Due to the Adventure Society learning that I serve you, I
cannot return to the city and my associates are either going into hiding,
fleeing the city or have already been snatched up.”
“And what of these contacts?” the dark-skinned messenger asked. “What
would be your recommendation?”
“Leave them be,” Benella said. “If I were an Adventure Society officer
looking into this, I would be laying traps for when agents come to tie off
loose ends, compromising us further. There is a reason that agents in the city
are not given critical information.”
Benella was under no impression that they were looking for actual advice.
The question had been a test, which was good. It meant that they were
genuinely considering Benella for a position of actual relevancy. She still had
a chance to get out of the building alive, if she could convince them that
Jason Asano was a genuine threat.
56
E V E N T H O U G H YO U F E A R

T HE ROUND BUILDING WAS LIKE A SILO : WIDE , HIGH AND ROUND , WITHOUT
any internal structures. Standing in the middle of it, next to a small crystal
recording projector, Benella felt tiny. The three powerful beings looming
over her, floating in the air on thrones, did not help.
Benella had one chance to prove herself still valuable to the messengers.
What she had gone with was presenting Jason Asano as a potential threat to
the agenda of the messengers, which was a risky play. Her initial
investigation into him had all stemmed from a chance encounter with him in
an obviously fake guise, and an instinctive sense that he was dangerous. The
more she dug up, however, the more her sense that he was a large problem
grew. The messengers, as far as she knew, remained unaware of him. She
managed to hold her nerve as she explained everything she had found,
advocating for further investigation into the man. Once she was done, she
could only wait like a prisoner about to be sentenced.
Thus far, only the two silver-rank messengers had spoken. Fal Vin Garath
was Benella’s master, who was abusive but not outside the bounds of
acceptability to his fellow messengers. He was free to treat the servant races
however he pleased, so long as it did not impinge upon the interests of other
messengers.
The other messenger she did not know, although she had seen him
moving around the stronghold. He seemed to be of equal status to Fal, while
being his physical and temperamental counterpart. Dark-skinned and silver-
haired, compared to Fal’s fair complexion and golden hair, he was composed
and civil in his conduct. This was true even to servants, although there was
no question that he demanded nothing less than total obedience. But while his
tone always carried an implicit warning when speaking to servants, Benella
much preferred it to Fal’s open threat.
The third messenger, dominant amongst the three, had yet to speak. Jes
Fin Kaal had, thus far, allowed the others to ask the questions, although Fal
had said little of use. It was the other messenger who seemed to be her
primary representative. Fal was about to speak when Kaal made a silencing
gesture. Then, for the first time since her arrival, she spoke.
“I am aware that your primary purpose in bringing this information to us
is to prove your worth for self-serving reasons,” she said, her voice an
ominous melody. “This is acceptable, as your goal is to prove yourself a
worthy servant. But of all the ways you could have chosen to approach us,
why did you choose this one? You could have brought any number of issues
to us. Why is this the one that will show you are an asset to be valued, and
not a liability to be excised?”
Benella didn’t even consider denying her motivations.
“I…”
She frowned, hesitant. She knew that her next words would be life or
death.
“In my ignorance,” she said, “I do not know how to address you.”
The standard mode of address for messengers was lord, be they men,
women or androgynous. Benella was aware that Kaal was part of a select
group within the messengers, and feared offending her.
“I am Voice Kaal, and you may address me as such.”
Benella neither apologised nor thanked her, being worthy of neither.
Fearing that she was subconsciously stalling for time, which Kaal would
notice, she steeled her nerves again.
“This is the thing that matters,” Benella said, her voice firming. “Yes,
there were many ways to show my value. Many issues I could bring to your
attention, but they did not warrant such an approach as this. The leadership
amongst the servant races would have been sufficient to address them, and
bringing them to you would have been a waste of your time. But this man is
someone I suspect will be beyond the ability of the servant races to handle.”
“Did you bring it to the servant leadership?”
“I did.”
“They agreed with your assessment?”
“They agreed that I should present this issue to you personally, Voice
Kaal.”
It had taken significant insistence on Benella’s part to address the
potential threat of Asano. The leadership had many calls on their time as
events were escalating in the stronghold. They had not only refused to look
into one silver-rank auxiliary adventurer, but would not even listen long
enough to discover why. Benella understood; she was far from the only
servant looking to advance themselves with ‘important issues for the
messengers.’ She finally managed to convince someone to allow her to
present her case. That way, she would be the one killed for wasting the
messengers’ time, being neither the first nor the last to meet their end that
way.
Benella was unsure why Kaal was so interested in her thought process in
reaching that decision. Kaal’s seat descended partway to the floor and she
leaned forward, examining Benella. She could feel the messenger forcefully
probing her emotions with her aura. Could the voice even read her thoughts?
She had heard rumours from other servants, although nothing reliable.
“Why?” Kaal asked again. “Something very specific convinced you that
this man should be brought to our attention. I can feel it digging at your
insides like a burr. What is it? Why are you afraid of it? It’s not what you
found when you looked into him, is it? It’s the thing that made you dig
deeper in the first place. For all that you found to support your instinct, it was
something at the beginning that convinced you. It drove you to bring it to us,
even though you fear what doing so will mean for you.”
Chills ran through Benella’s body as the messenger rendered her
transparent, seeing through her thoughts and motivations. She bowed her
head, knowing she had to answer the question she had fervently hoped would
not be asked. It made sense that someone who could see through her like a
window would dig it out. Squaring her shoulders, she continued.
“I told Lord Fal that I first gained this man’s attention when I noticed
something about him. That the aura mask he gave me reacted unusually.”
“But there is more to it than that,” Kaal deduced, her voice certain.
Benella nodded, still not meeting her eyes.
“I felt something from this man. Something like I have never felt from
any of the servant races. I have only ever felt it from…”
Benella braced herself, squeezing her eyes closed.
“…from your kind. From messengers.”
Benella felt air wash over her, but nothing else. She opened her eyes to
see the dark-skinned messenger’s back in front of her, his wings spread out to
shield her. Past him, she saw Lord Fal, arrested mid-lunge by a restraining
hand on his chest. Fal still had a fist raised, ready to crash down on Benella.
“Return to your seat.”
“This creature just compared one of the lesser races to us,” Fal snarled.
“She was asked a question and answered it honestly,” Kaal said. “If she
lied, would you have struck her down for that?”
“Of course.”
“And I am certain this woman knew you would. That she came here,
knowing she would likely be asked that question, where both answers carried
a death sentence. Yet she came. I will not allow you to kill what may be a
surpassing servant. Not yet.”
“How can you tolerate her insolence?” Fal asked in a shout.
“However I see fit. Return to your seat, Fal Vin Garath. I will not tell you
a third time.”
Fal openly glared at Kaal but obeyed as he did so, returning to his seat.
The other messenger did as well.
“Thank you, Hess Jor Nasala,” Kaal said to him.
Benella was frozen as the two messengers floated back to their chairs.
She was at least glad that she had found a name for the third messenger,
although she still offered no thanks. He may have saved her life, but all he
was safeguarding was her potential value. Her gratitude meant nothing to
him.
Kaal rose from her seat, floating past the other as they returned to theirs.
She stopped when she reached Benella, looming over her. Benella did not
look up to meet her eyes.
“You are a gambler, elf. You have bet your life on the suspicion that this
man you have told us of is of sufficient value that we need to investigate, if
not intervene ourselves. That you did not take a safer approach to secure a
place in our service interests me. What about this man has so shaken you?”
“I know my power to assess is lacking,” Benella said. “I know he is not
the match of the gold-rankers arrayed against you. But of all the adventurers
I’ve ever encountered, this man is the only one my instincts told me was like
you. The messengers.”
“Like us?” Fal roared standing up in his seat. “You would compare—”
“Quiet,” Kaal said, her voice soft but with an almost physical power
behind it.
Fal complied in an instant, sitting back down, although he continued to
glower.
“Explain,” Kaal commanded Benella. “How is he like us?”
“I’m not sure exactly how to explain it,” she said. “There is an
otherworldliness to him. Beyond anything I’ve felt even from Zolit. Oh, Zolit
is—”
“I am familiar with the Zolit project,” Kaal cut her off. “Continue.”
“I’m not sure quite how to say it.”
“Yes, you are,” Kaal told her. “You simply fear what will happen when
you do.”
Benella nodded her admission.
“This man feels on a level with your kind that goes beyond rank,” she
said. “I spoke of otherworldliness, but it was not like what I had felt from
other messengers. It’s like he has the same thing that makes you special
but…”
Her voice broke, knowing she could well be about to die.
“…even more so.”
“She thinks some lesser being is—”
He was cut off as Kaal turned to look at him and his mouth sealed up, like
a wound healing over.
“I have taken your power to speak,” Voice Kaal told him. “What I have
left you with is the power to think and the power to act. In the future, use
them in that order. If I become convinced that your mouth can produce
anything worthwhile, I shall return it to you. Until then, I suggest you study
the value of silence.”
That her abusive master had been admonished and punished did not make
Benella feel better. Fal no longer had a mouth, but the glare in his eyes spoke
loudly. He was not happy about being chastised over one of the lesser races,
and in front of her, no less. The idea of being shamed in the face of an
inferior poured through his eyes as rage, although he was not fool enough to
suppress her with his aura. For the moment, the presence of Kaal was keeping
Benella safe, but she knew that should she ever be in his power again, she
would die. He wouldn’t even need an excuse, given her status. If a messenger
wanted her dead, it was his right to kill her.
That put all of Benella’s hopes on Kaal. She was not only of higher rank
than the other messengers in the room but was able to control the very nature
of their bodies. She had been the one to erase the mouth from Fal’s face. If
Benella could become the property of Kaal, Fal could not touch her without
cause.
Done with Fal, Kaal turned to the terrified Benella and crouched down, as
if approaching a skittish animal. Even so, the robe that was low enough to
hide her feet never quite reached low enough to brush the floor.
“You said this man is like us, but more?” Kaal asked softly.
Benella nodded.
“You believe this man is a threat to us.”
“Potentially. I would not presume to equal your judgement, and merely
wish to point out that he is out there.”
“And you have seen in him the same thing you see in us?”
“Not exactly,” Benella said. “But there is something there. My instincts
screamed at me that he…”
Benella trailed off, having realised what she was about to say before she
stopped herself.
“That he what?” Kaal demanded.
“…that he was on the same level as you. Your people, I mean, not you,
specifically.”
Benella waited for the death blow, but it never came. Then she felt Kaal’s
presence with her magical senses for the first time. They had been extended
gently and she realised it was for her benefit. Despite that gentleness,
however, there was an unflinching imperiousness to it. It was also something
different in her aura, compared to the other messengers: a thread of power
whose source seemed distant and endless.
“What do you feel?” Kaal asked.
“It’s closer to what I felt from Asano,” Benella said. “Not the same,
though. It feels like the power inside you is anchored somewhere else, while
his... It’s as if you possess power, but he is power.”
Kaal’s eyes widened for just a fleeting moment. Benella would have
missed it if Kaal had not been crouched down in front of her. The messenger
floated back to her throne and sat down between Fal and Hess.
“You brought this man to our attention, seeking to rise within our servant
hierarchy.”
“Yes, Voice Kaal,” she said.
“You had best tend your garden with caution, child. A misstep could see
everything you have grown pulled up by the roots and burned to ash.”
Benella wordlessly acknowledged Kaal’s guiding words with a nod. She
tried to avoid getting excited, realising that she had accomplished her goal.
She knew the messengers would sense her relief and joy, and thought for a
moment that she saw the tiniest smile tease the corners of Kaal’s lips, then
told herself she was imagining it.
“Tell us about this man,” she instructed Benella.
Benella gave a jerky nod, her whole body trembling.
“He is travelling under the identity of John Miller,” she said. “He is
ostensibly the cook of a team of travelling adventurers. This is an obvious
falsehood, as even the short time I had to investigate was sufficient to reveal
his true identity. His real name is Jason Asano, an adventurer belonging to
that same team to which he is ostensibly an auxiliary. The purpose of the
false identity, given its transparency, seems to be to garner less attention after
the events in Rimaros surrounding him. It is not a complex identity designed
for infiltration.”
She tried to calm herself by keeping her hands busy, giving her attention
to the crystal recording projector.
“It was difficult to obtain imagery of Asano, especially on short notice. I
did manage to obtain one recording with his appearance, which matches the
man I encountered. This is all I could get, as he has an item or ability that
interferes with recordings unless he allows them.”
She finished calibrating the projector and pulled out a crystal.
“What I have here is something he did allow, from a meeting that is
believed to have been held out in the open for the very purpose of being
observed. He is meeting with two people, both believed to be diamond-
rankers from outside of this world. One arrived and was taken away later by a
third entity. The other spent some time in Rimaros and is believed to be close
to Asano. I do not know her identity, but I heard reports that Soramir
Rimaros was deferent towards her. Soramir Rimaros is a diamond-ranker,
and officially, has taken Asano out into the cosmos. This was when I became
certain it was right to bring Asano to your attention.”
“When I asked you why you brought this to me,” Kaal said, “surely this
would have been reason enough to offer me, rather than risk angering us.”
Benella clenched her hand in a determined fist before turning from the
projector she was setting up to look at Kaal.
“You did not ask for a reason I decided to bring this to you, Voice Kaal.
You asked for the reason. If I had told you this was it, it would have been a
lie.”
Kaal gave a slight nod that Benella would have interpreted as approval if
she hadn’t known better. Benella slotted the crystal into the projector and an
image came up.
“Stop!” Kaal commanded immediately.
A startled Benella was only frozen for a moment before she paused the
recording. Kaal floated out of her chair to peer closely at the now-still
projection.
“You were quite right that this warrants further examination,” Kaal said.
“You have done well.”
“What is it?” Hess asked.
He also left his throne, and moved closer to examine the paused
projection. It showed Jason, Dawn and Shako sitting in chairs on the lawn in
front of Jason’s cloud house in Rimaros.
“Who are those people?” he asked.
“This will be Asano,” Kaal said, pointing to Jason. “The others are the
now-former prime vessels for the World-Phoenix and Zithis Carrow Vayel.”
The other two messengers stirred.
“Why would they be on this world?” Hess asked. “Are they interfering in
our affairs?”
“I doubt they would do so directly,” Kaal said. “The great astral beings
are more concerned with one another than us, although we cannot be certain
when Vayel is involved.”
“We cannot base our activities on doubts and assumptions,” Hess said.
“We should investigate this matter further.”
“Agreed,” Kaal said, “but the timing is poor. We are too close to the next
stage. Once the assault of Yaresh begins, we can seek this man Asano out
more actively.”
57
MOCKERY

T HE STASIS CABIN OF THE C ARLOS C RIME W AGON WAS AN ADAPTED BUNK


room filled with stasis pods. Each pod contained a member of the Order of
Redeeming Light, and Carlos regularly serviced the pods to make sure they
were operating properly. Space being at a premium, it was a narrow cabin,
making the maintenance work rather awkward.
Carlos grumbled under his breath as he worked. He’d been preparing for
the next major step in his research, to which Jason was critical. That was the
exact moment that Jason had chosen to ramble away and test his aura
techniques on any woman that wandered into view. Now he’d gone off with
his team on some ill-defined contract to find possibly nothing.
After finishing, Carlos left the cabin for the small washroom and was
wiping pod gel off his hands when one of his assistants appeared at the door.
“Boss, that weird shadow guy is at the door.”
“Show him in,” Carlos told his assistant.
“He said you should come out.”
Carlos grumbled as he made his way to the exit of the vehicle, through
the hatch and down the metal stairs.
“What is it, Shade?” Carlos asked irritably.
“Mr Asano and his team have a question for you, Priest Quilido.”
“Is it ‘why did we go off on some pointless mission when we could be
participating in world-changing research?’”
“No,” Shade said. “It is not.”
“Carlos,” Jason said, projecting his voice through Shade’s body. “Let me
tell you about something I saw.”
Jason explained what he’d seen in the town he scouted, from the heat-
producing paint to the uniform mannerisms and strange heat signatures of the
residents.
“What you’re describing sounds like a heat-consuming parasite with a
swarm hive mind,” Carlos said. “I have a lot of research on creatures and
objects that take people over in various ways, so I might be able to find
something more specific.”
“How long would that take?”
“A few hours. In the meantime, any information you could get from the
auras of the people would help.”
“Alright, I’ll discuss it with the team.”

With the skimmer floating in the rainforest canopy, Jason and his team sat
and discussed their next move. As they went through various approaches,
Jason pushed back against going in and scouting with his aura.
“You seem uncharacteristically nervous about using your aura,” Clive
told him.
“Yeah,” Jason said as he absently nodded. “I’ve grown accustomed to my
aura being an absolute advantage. Something I can always rely on being the
best at. Now I’m starkly aware that isn’t true and it makes me feel uneasy. I
only caught a glimpse of the messenger, through Shade, and it still shook me.
Even passively sensing the refinement of his aura through Shade’s senses
spooked me.”
“You can’t let anxiety over someone being better at one thing stop you,”
Humphrey told him.
“I know,” Jason said. “But I’ve also realised how much my aura powers
have been a crutch. I need to prove that there’s more to me than that. To use
every tool in the toolbox before I forget how.”
“Good,” Rufus said. “That’s exactly what I taught you.”
“There’s another thing, though,” Jason continued. “It’s been a while and
we’ve barely worked together out in the field.“
Like Zara in Korinne’s team, Rufus was a late and temporary addition to
Team Biscuit. He lacked experience working with the team and would
eventually go back to his training centre in Greenstone.
Jason had a similar problem around teamwork, having been away for so
long. Compared to Rufus, though, he still had the months in the Reaper’s
astral space with the others. That time had welded the team into a cohesive
unit. They still needed to kick off the rust and learn all the changes to each
other’s powers, but those ingrained patterns were still there.
The team had spent good chunks of Jason’s convalescence going over
their powers and formulating new strategies and tactics around them. Now
they needed to get out in the field and use them.
“Someone got stomped and had to sit out most of the contracts,” Neil
pointed out.
“I know,” Jason said. “I’m nervous about messing up. Making everything
go wrong. And what if it isn’t like before? What if—”
“I’m not a big worshipper of the gods,” Sophie cut in. “But for the love of
the gods, please shut up.”
“What?” Jason asked.
“We get it,” she said. “You’re in touch with your feelings, and that’s
great, but you are spending too much time with Rufus’ mother.”
“That’s what I’ve been saying,” Rufus said.
“For different reasons,” Belinda told him. “Quiet, you.”
“Jason, there’s been too much talking and too much thinking. That’s
always been an issue for you, but now it’s reaching the point where you’re
getting in your own way. So, here’s what’s going to happen. We’re going to
go to that town and you’re going to look at the auras of all the creepy people.
Then something is going to go wrong, they’re all going to attack us and we’re
going to kick everyone’s insides out. Everyone agrees with this plan.”
“We do?” Neil asked, earning him a gentle elbow jab from Belinda.
“I’m not sure that’s—” Clive began.
“I said,” Sophie cut him off, “everyone agrees with this plan.”
The group all turned to Humphrey, who was both team leader and
Sophie’s lover. He looked between Sophie and the rest of the team.
“Don’t look at me,” he said. “I heard everyone agrees with the plan.”
“You know,” Neil said, “Humphrey’s mother is almost always right.”
“What’s she got to do with anything?” Humphrey asked.
“I was just thinking,” Neil said. “Sophie may not always be right, but
she’ll punch people until they admit she is. She’s kind of like a violent
version of Humphrey’s mother.”
Humphrey’s face was stricken with wide-eyed horror.
Jason was the only one to draw close to the town, again making use of the
shade houses and tree lines in the agricultural flatlands around it. The others
waited in the edge of the rainforest for Jason to examine the town with his
aura senses.
“I’m a little worried about Jason,” Clive said. “It’s not like him to be so
hesitant.”
“He’s been anxious and fearful from the start,” Rufus said. “Gary and I
didn’t see it at first, but Farrah saw through him. He’s always had a knack for
using aura masks, even before he knew what they were. It’s like he tricks
himself into becoming this outlandish person. Someone who can survive in
the madness he always seems to find himself in.”
“That persona is how he gets there in the first place,” Neil said.
“Yes,” Rufus said. “But I’m thankful for it. Jason’s willingness to insert
himself into a situation he could walk away from saved my life.”
“It saved me from worse,” Sophie added.
“We were low rank,” Rufus said. “Our aura senses weren’t as sharp as
they are now and we didn’t see through him. But Farrah trained his aura, and
she saw how scared he really was. How fragile. But after he came back from
Earth, it’s different. He can’t—or maybe won’t—hide his feelings. He lashes
out like a cornered animal.”
“He’s getting better,” Humphrey said. “But that wound is still there. I
think he scared Emir.”
“My mother likes to say that we can never go back to what we were,”
Rufus said. “The best we can do is decide who we’ll be next.”
“Talking to your mum is why everything takes so damn long,” Sophie
said. “How long does it take to aura scout one small town? It’s barely more
than a village. I think Jason may have missed the key element of the plan.”
“Which is you running in and punching people?” Neil asked.
“Exactly,” she said. “Simple is best when it comes to plans. I learned that
from Humphrey. His mum made him read lots of books about strategy
written by people who went on to die in battle. It doesn’t say a lot about the
value of their books if you ask me.”
“They didn’t all die in battle.”
“Actually, the women writers mostly seemed to live,” Sophie mused.
“I bet it’s a pride thing,” Belinda said.
“It’s not a pride thing,” Humphrey asserted. “They were warriors. It
makes sense that they died in battle.”
“I’m with Lindy,” Clive said. “I never understood the whole male pride
thing. Seems like a good way to get yourself killed for stupid reasons.”
“Yep,” Belinda agreed as she and Sophie nodded.
“Speaking of the plan,” Rufus said, “I think we should make some
clarifications. Specifically, regarding the kicking-out of people’s insides. The
people in this town are more likely victims than perpetrators.”
“If they’re full of heat-sucking parasites,” Belinda said, “they’re probably
past saving.”
“That’s most likely the case,” Clive sadly agreed.
“We’ll know more once Jason is done,” Humphrey said.
“If he ever is,” Sophie complained.
“Give him time,” Humphrey said. “He said that technique takes a long
time to use properly. I know Jason can be a bit frivolous, but you heard him
earlier. I’m sure he’s completely focused on the task at hand.”

“That was a good sandwich,” Jason mumbled as he sucked sauce off his
fingers. “I need to find out what was in that sauce.”
“Mr Asano,” Shade said.
“I have to say, I’m loving how the elves around here do food. Sweet
drinks and spicy tucker.”
“Mr Asano.”
“I wonder what they use to make bread. It’s not wheat, and it’s not what
they used in Rimaros either.”
“Mr Asano, Miss Wexler is rapidly shifting from impatient to violently
impatient.”
“This technique takes time,” he said. “I have to slowly and carefully
expand my senses, unless I want people to notice my aura immediately. Even
then, I’m still learning. I’m certain that’s how Benella and her rental
henchmen found me at the park.”
“Rental henchmen?”
“I can only assume that’s what they were.”
“Why would that be the only possible assumption?”
“There’s no other reasonable explanation for how she ended up with
flunkies.”
“We spied on people who confirmed they were working together.”
“That kind of thing is easily misinterpreted.”
“I cannot imagine why your team would worry that you aren’t giving this
task your focus.”
“Because I ate one sandwich? I don’t need my hands or my mouth to
expand my aura.”
“But you do need concentration, Mr Asano.”
“And a sandwich helps me get into a balanced state of mind. Nagging
does not, by the way.”
Despite his teasing of Shade, Jason had, indeed, been slowly and
carefully expanding his senses into the town from his hiding place in a
shrubbery on the outskirts. He was taking it even slower than he had while
practising, in the hope of going undetected. This approach bore fruit as Jason
extended his aura senses over the closest of the townsfolk as they walked by.
They showed no reaction to his aura but, despite going unnoticed, Jason’s
expression filled with sadness and rage.
“I got a closer look at one of the elves,” Jason told the team through voice
chat. “I don’t think there’s any rescuing them. They have a death aura with
some kind of swarm aura inside them. I’m fairly certain they’re walking
corpses filled with parasites.”
“Can you get any more details?” Clive asked. “Anything you can pick up
will help Carlos identify what we’re dealing with. Maybe even find a
weakness we can exploit, or at least get a sense if whatever this is could be
widespread enough to cover the southern region.”
“I’m looking,” Jason said. “Slow and careful, though, so give me some
more time.”
Even Sophie didn’t complain at that, after the revelation that everyone in
the town was dead.
Jason continued expanding his senses, examining the auras of other
parasitised residents. Comparing them, he felt a familiar sensation from them,
but only passingly so. It teased at his mind until he finally realised what it
was: all of these people had creatures living inside them.
Unlike Jason’s symbiotic relationship with Colin, these were parasites.
They took and gave nothing back. In Jason’s mind, Colin had given him far
more than Jason had ever returned. Colin had kept him alive time and time
again, not just staving off death but healing him up enough to keep fighting
when he would have fallen.
When the Builder’s star seed tried to take over Jason’s body, Shade and
Gordon had been banished back to the astral, their vessels destroyed. It was
Colin who slowed the star seed as it claimed Jason’s body, helping him to
hold on. It was Colin, nestled inside Jason’s soul, who offered support in his
darkest moments. Without Colin, Jason would be dead or a slave, not unlike
the residents of this village.
The creatures that had taken the people of the town, both killing and
enslaving them, were a mockery of what Colin and Jason shared. It filled him
with a burning desire to go on a rampage, digging the parasites out of the
townsfolk and annihilating every last one. He didn’t, but his fury flowed out
through his aura.
His partially mastered aura-hiding technique was disrupted and the town
was alerted. As one, every elf in it threw back their heads and let out an
inhuman screech.
58
D I E I M M E D I AT E LY W IT H O U T P R O M P T I N G

J ASON ’ S TEAM EXPLODED OUT OF THE RAINFOREST AS INHUMAN SCREECHING


came from the town ahead. Sophie was nothing more than a flickering blur
while the others thundered over rice paddies, the terrain barely hindering the
superhuman pace of silver-rankers. Following them out of the rainforest were
the twenty draconic bone spiders in magic armour that Humphrey had
summoned while they waited. Behind them was Neil’s lumbering chrysalis
golem, a monolith of crystal that sank heavily into the mud, quickly getting
left behind.
They felt Jason’s aura flood out, infused with blind rage.
“That’s not good,” Neil said as they dashed.
Then they felt the rage vanish.
“Okay, that’s really not good,” Neil said.

Jason had carefully hidden his aura as he extended his senses over the town.
It was the revelations of what had happened to the people in it that made him
lose control. He could mask even strong emotions from showing in his aura
under normal circumstances, but his new sensory technique was a work in
progress. When using it to expand his senses stealthily, he lacked the same
rigid control.
When his senses revealed that the townsfolk were actually dead people
being puppeteered by some kind of parasite, that control slipped. His hidden
aura was revealed as it flooded with rage, revealing his presence.
The townsfolk tossed aside their too-perfect normalcy on sensing Jason’s
rage, letting out a chorus of alien shrieks. They started rushing to Jason’s
location, faster than their ranks should have allowed. In doing so, their bodies
moved in an awkward and off-putting manner, as if filmed in crude stop-
motion. It was damaging their bodies, some even breaking bones and falling
over as they overtaxed themselves.
They had completely transformed from the pleasant façades they had
been displaying to wild and twisted berserkers. Their uncanny-valley
appearance made plain that the elves were no longer people. Something
stranger and more insidious was inside them, wearing them as suits.
Although this infuriated Jason, he managed to rein in his anger, rather
than let it drive him. Oddly, his earlier explosion at Emir helped him regain
control instead of letting his rage run rampant. Following that encounter, he
had been dwelling on the anger waiting just below the skin, ready to erupt at
any provocation. It wasn’t a revelation, but it was a wake-up call that he was
not as mentally recovered as he’d previously believed.
Jason had been letting his anger control him for too long, and it was past
time to get it in order. For all that fury felt strong, he knew that was a trap. It
narrowed his vision, blinded his judgement and led him to choices he would
come to regret. It also blocked him out of the powerful combat trance
technique, which he could only achieve with a calm and balanced mind.
Now there was an enemy more than deserving of his anger, but he refused
to let himself indulge in the emotion. He concentrated on all the training he
had gotten from Rufus and Farrah about fighting with a cool head. Even with
the enemy rushing at him, he closed his eyes and took a long, slow breath.
Breathing was unnecessary, but made for a good meditative tool, helping him
achieve a flow of calm. He let the breath out and his anger with it, allowing it
to drift away.
Sophie arrived at his side, having moved across the entirety of the fields
surrounding the town faster than the parasitised elves could reach Jason. She
peered into his hood when she couldn’t see his glowing eyes.
“What are you doing?” she asked.
In response, he drew his sword.
“These people are dead,” he told her. “I’m preparing to free them.”
The oncoming enemy didn’t give him any more time for explanation than
that as they charged in on Jason and Sophie. There was no pattern to the
attacks, just dozens of parasitised elves. They launched themselves through
the air the moment they were close enough, literally jumping at them in wild,
artless attacks. The elves dashed through the streets and out of buildings,
quickly forming a mob.
Whatever intelligence had been guiding them to fake the role of a
pleasant populace had turned to mindless frenzy like someone had flipped a
switch. Their only tactic was to assault Jason and Sophie with a wall of
bodies.
Before the mob could form too tight a pack, Jason and Sophie moved
from the tree line and into the town, kicking off a melee in the middle of a
street.
Aware that something had taken over the townsfolk, the entire team knew
to be careful. The unknown parasite could potentially infect them, so until
they were certain of what it was, caution was the first priority. Humphrey
hadn’t allowed the rest of the team to charge blindly in after Sophie. The
fields they were crossing had elves that moved towards them in a frenzy.
While Sophie was past them before they had even really started to stir, the
rest of the team was not.
Humphrey led the team forward more cautiously, trusting Jason and
Sophie to hold their own. Their ability sets were both well-suited to this early
stage of the conflict, before too many elves gathered.
Sophie was always elusive in the face of the enemy, with abilities that
would shield her from retaliatory effects. So as long as she was the one
hitting and not being hit, she knew that she should be fine. She did not take
the risk, however, regardless of how minor it was. Instead of landing hits, she
chose to miss each target by a close margin.
Wind Blade was one of only two special attacks Sophie possessed, and
the only one whose use was unconditional. It allowed her to make slashing
gestures with any part of her body that launched blades of razor-sharp wind.
Large gestures created long, slow-moving blades, while short, sharp gestures
fired off small-but-swift projectiles.
Sophie making her attacks miss every enemy meant that she could instead
use the motions to fire off wind blades at point-blank range, meaning that
even the slow blades hit home. She soon started increasing her range when
possible, given the unskilled mass of bodies being thrown at them.
The wind blades did not end their effectiveness by cutting into enemies.
The silver-rank effect of the ability triggered a ring of cutting force from each
target struck. Sophie had practised long and hard to master the nuances of
this ability, actively negating the blades and rings before they struck herself
or any friendlies. She could even eliminate just a part of a blade or ring,
allowing two sides of a blade to pass around an ally.
Jason knew this, but was still rigorous about checking for friendly fire.
Humphrey and Clive had been fighting alongside Sophie for the past few
years, but Jason was still fitting back into the team’s rhythms. He didn’t trust
himself for pinpoint coordination just yet.
Like Sophie, Jason’s style was inherently evasive, but in a different
manner. There were similarities, such as a reliance on skill and uncanny
dodging through space displacement powers. But Sophie’s approach was a
domineering mix of raw speed and unmatched skill, challenging any foe to
strike her down. Jason was very different, relying on obfuscation, disruption
and erratic unpredictability unnerving his opponents over the course of the
battle.
Jason’s tactics began by sending a herd of Shade bodies to mix into the
elves. With the sun high in the sky and the battleground a wide street of dry
dirt, there was little in the way of natural shadows, so Shade would serve
instead.
Shade and Jason had worked on tactics to make Shade less vulnerable
when the familiar was serving as a shadow-jump platform. The more Jason
ranked up, the more enemies were able to affect Shade’s incorporeal form,
making it a less reliable defence than it had in the past.
One of the ways that Shade did this was by moving his bodies in and out
of shadows. While a shadow might be too small for Jason to jump through,
Shade had no such restrictions. For the elves, though, it quickly became
evident that they had no way of harming the familiar, which gave Jason the
chance to use another tactic.
Jason conjured copies of his cloak on a multitude of Shade bodies, which
danced through and around the elves. Even the wild, seemingly mindless
enemy was thrown off as Shade variously ballooned out the cloak to block
their view, sent blinding star motes flashing into their eyes and displaced
space itself.
The space displacement had minimal effect, just enough to turn an attack
on Jason from a near-miss into a full-miss. When two dozen cloaks were
using it at once, however, it left the crowd of elves stumbling into one
another, as what should have been sound hits missed entirely, sending them
off balance. This had no effect on the incorporeal Shade and his intangible
cloaks, leaving elves scattered about on the ground. This offered critical
breathing room for the high mobility approaches of Jason and Sophie, who
fared much worse against a shoulder-to-shoulder mob.
As for Jason himself, his cloak danced around him like a hazy cloud of
darkness and stars. Along with hiding Jason’s movements, it shifted between
tangible and intangible. In one moment, it was grabbing or blocking enemies,
and in the next, letting go, causing them to lose balance as they tried to pull
free or yank at the cloak, only to find the resistance gone. That was the
instant Jason would strike, his sword unseen until it passed through the cloak.
When Shade’s antics weren’t enough to stop the constantly growing mob
from clustering up, Jason and Sophie would both escape, buying time and
space to make a fresh approach. Jason used Shade bodies to shadow jump,
while Sophie employed her Mirage Step ability.
Mirage Step was not a true teleport ability, but a time-manipulation
power involving near-instantaneous movement. Like Eternal Moment,
Sophie’s main power for accelerating her personal time stream, the effect of
Mirage Step seemed like stopped time. She was progressing through time so
much faster than the world around her that everything else seemed frozen.
Mirage Step was even more limited than Eternal Moment, in that the time
displacement between herself and the world around her made it hard to
interact with. All Sophie could do while Mirage Step was active was move,
but it had other advantages, especially after ranking the power up. These
advantages were centred on the after-image left behind when she used the
power, and for which the ability was named. The after-image would send out
blades of dimensional force, similar to Sophie’s wind blades. It also
disoriented anyone who attacked the image, through short-lived mental
illusions.
The elves that attacked the after-image triggered an unusual reaction.
Normally, there would be visible coloured light around the head of an enemy,
indicating that they were caught up in illusions. For the elves, however, lights
appeared all over their bodies. The disorienting effect was also unusually
potent, causing the elves to collapse into thrashing heaps. Sophie took
immediate advantage and used her Wind Wave power to gather them all up in
a pile.
Wind Wave was a versatile ability that she could use for personal
mobility, to deflect magical projectiles, or herd enemies, as she was currently
doing. With the elves piled up, she used her personal time acceleration,
Eternal Moment, to produce a storm of wind blades and launch them all at
once. The blades slammed into the pile like an angry swarm of buzz saws,
cutting first with the blades, then the secondary cutting rings. The result was
an ugly meat grinder, the foul stench of death carried on the gusty air that
came in the wake of the exploding wind blades.
Sophie was no offensive specialist, and her perfectly executed synergy of
attacks were not enough to destroy most of the parasite-infested elf bodies.
What she did gain by piling them up and slaughtering at least an appreciable
number was one of the most valuable resources in any battle: time. Jason had
deployed his affliction-spreading butterflies that were multiplying on the
beleaguered elves.
Another benefit from all the slicing that Sophie did was that she and
Jason got a look at the parasites that crawled out of the chopped-up bodies.
Many had been immediately cut into pieces as well, but there were more than
enough to get a look, with dozens of worms pouring out of every
dismembered elf.
The parasites were brown worms, looking much like garden worms but
around the length of a forearm. Their most notable feature was at the tip of
each worm: a triangular chitin cap, almost like a drill bit. As the worms
became afflicted by butterflies, Jason learned the ominous name of the
creatures.

You have inflicted [Blood From a Stone] on [Parasitised Elf (host)].


You have inflicted [Inexorable Doom] on [World-Taker Worm].

The initial cluster of elves had been handled by Jason and Sophie, but it was
only a fraction of what Jason sensed coming their way. With his senses now
openly spread over the town, he sensed a larger population than the town
should have. This confirmed that one of the reasons the town had gone silent
was that the world-taker worms were claiming anyone that passed through.
Jason backed off as his team arrived, led by Humphrey and followed by
Humphrey’s summons. Sophie’s efforts to gather and slice up the elves had
brought them a brief moment to regroup.
“I sensed something in the town,” Jason told Humphrey. “I’m not sure
what; it seems shielded against magical perception and I barely noticed it at
all. Now you’re here, I’d like to take Clive and check it out.”
“It could be important to handling these things,” Humphrey agreed. “If
not to this fight, then to the larger one, if there are more towns like this. Any
clues on what these things are?”
“Something called a world-taker worm,” Jason told him.
“That’s not the kind of name I wanted to hear,” Neil said. “I guess a ‘die
immediately without prompting worm’ was too much to hope for.”
“Clive can fight with us while you investigate,” Humphrey told Jason.
“You move better alone. Just open a portal when you find something for him
to look at.”
“Will you be alright without me?” Jason asked.
Humphrey looked at the magical butterflies already moving to intercept
the approaching elves.
“Your presence will be felt.”
59
T H E O LD G R O OV E

T HE TEAM ONLY HAD A BRIEF RESPITE FROM THE WORM - HOST ELVES THAT
were inundating them, rushing from every street and building in the town to
hunt them down. While Humphrey and Jason quickly discussed Jason’s
departure, Clive drew out a ritual circle. Golden lines were left behind by the
edge of his staff as he used it to draw, like scratching in the sand with a
driftwood stick. The ritual, like the golden light itself, was an aspect of
Clive’s most fundamental ability.

Ability: [Enact Ritual] (Rune)

Special ability.
Cost: varies.
Cooldown: None.

Current rank: Silver 4 (12%).


Effect (iron): Manifest lines of magic to draw out ritual diagrams.
Materials required for a ritual may be used directly from a
dimensional storage space instead of being placed within the
diagram.

Effect (bronze): Create simple ritual diagrams to alter the parameters


of magical items.

Effect (silver): Conjure mana lamps with enhanced efficiency and


accumulation rate. Refined mana from the lamp can be used to
enhance ritual magic.

The ritual was designed for Clive and Belinda to stand on, altering the
parameters of their magical weapons. Belinda was using her Specious
Sorcerer ability to take on a spellcaster role, avoiding getting too close to
their enemies.

Ability: [Specious Sorcerer] (Charlatan)

Special ability.
Cost: Very high mana.
Cooldown: 6 hours.
Current rank: Silver 4 (09%).

Effect (iron): Gain a significant increase to the [Spirit] attribute and


the ability to use magical tools. Your maximum mana increases and
you gain an ongoing mana recovery effect.

Effect (bronze): Gain the ability to cast a number of basic spells.

Effect (silver): Gain the ability to cast additional spells, based on the
gear you have equipped.

With a robe, plus a wand in one hand and a staff in the other, she was
equipped much like Clive. She had supplied herself with decent-quality
items, albeit not the equal of the weapons and armour Gary had crafted to use
with her Counterfeit Combatant power. They certainly weren’t a match for
Clive’s staff and wand, which were a legendary growth item set he had
picked up at iron rank, before Belinda had even joined the team.
Both Belinda and Clive’s weapons would be affected by Clive’s ritual.
Instead of the normal bolts and beams of force for Clive, and fire for Belinda,
their staves and wands would produce cold attacks. They didn’t know much
about the parasites infesting the townsfolk, but they seemed to feed on heat.
That made cold Clive’s best guess as to what would be the most harmful to
them.
Clive finished his preparations by using another ability to attach ritual
circles to their weapons directly, the floating magic diagrams, somewhat akin
to Jason’s system windows. Not wasting time, Clive and Belinda were
already on the attack by the time Jason vanished into the shadows, blasting
the onrushing elves with bolts and beams of magic.
The team set up so that Sophie, Rufus and Humphrey moved in a circle to
shield Neil, Clive and Belinda from attacks on each side. Stash and Belinda’s
familiars were inside the circle as well, while Humphrey’s dragon-bone
spiders roamed out to run interference.
With the numbers they were facing, efficiency in both time and mana was
important. In extended fights, especially against so many opponents, they
needed to make the most of their big-ticket abilities, and even their mid-range
heavy hitters. The right abilities needed to be ready, with enough mana to use
them, when the optimal moments arose.
Managing this for the team had become Belinda’s job. Their time apart
meant that the team had to learn all new ways to work together. Not only was
their teamwork out of practise, but their old bronze-rank strategies were no
longer sufficient. They and their power sets had gone through massive
changes, and it was taking time to find the old groove.
One of the more defining changes to how they worked together was that
Belinda had taken on a tactical director role. While Humphrey generally
called the play, it was Belinda who helped the team execute the details. She
was always tracking who could do what and when, courtesy of Jason’s
interface, and the team’s efficiency was spiking as a result.
Belinda had fallen into this role for several reasons, starting with her
power set. Her powers placed her in a position to facilitate the rest of the
team in various ways, and ranking up had only amplified that factor. She
could reduce or entirely reset cooldowns, as well as duplicate key abilities.
Even Belinda’s magic tattoo could reset some of her cooldowns, being
the silver-rank version of the one she had at iron rank. She had been careful
to get it after what happened at bronze. After a night drinking with Sophie,
she woke up with a magic tattoo that produced hot sauce.
Judgement was key to Belinda’s power set, as almost every power she
used to assist the team would live or die on the timing. The only exception
was her aura.

Ability: [Masterful] (Adept)


Aura (recovery).
Base cost: None.
Cooldown: None.

Current rank: Silver 4 (11%).

Effect (iron): Abilities of allies within the aura come off cooldown
more quickly.

Effect (bronze): Mana and stamina costs for the essence abilities of
allies are slightly reduced. Has greater effect on abilities with
ongoing costs than instantaneous costs.

Effect (silver): Boons affecting allies have slightly increased effect.

The reliable but generalised bonuses were nice, but weren’t anything that
would turn a battle on its head. It was Belinda’s active powers that could
make for clutch plays, where the trump card of an ally became a handful of
trump cards and clinched a win.
Belinda’s ability to manage not just her own abilities but those of the
team was key, but only the start of why she was now the tactical centre.
Every essence user had their mind enhanced by their spirit attribute, but there
were differences in how that applied specifically. Clive had always been the
smartest guy in the room when it came to deciphering the complexities of
sophisticated and exotic magic. Ranking up had only enhanced his ability to
comprehend the most sophisticated nuances of magic. Jason’s mental
advancements were perceptual, allowing him to better process sensory input
greater than others of his rank. In Belinda’s case, it was a peerless ability to
multitask. The return of Jason and his party interface made that trait not just
valuable but the centrepiece for her new role on the team.
Jason’s party interface was one of the most impactful contributions he
brought to the team, now that they were silver rank. It provided so much
information that when the whole team was in a party, there was too much
visual clutter to even see. From health condition body indicators to mana and
stamina bars to cooldowns for every active ability, each team member had to
customise the interface to their own needs.
Humphrey, Sophie and Jason himself had the most pared-down
interfaces. They all had to move fast and get deep in the action, so minimum
obstruction was the goal. Being the healer, Neil maintained a more robust
interface so he could monitor the team, but that did not compare to Belinda.
She tracked every active cooldown of every team member in real-time, along
with the mana they had to use their powers.
It was a mess, but one that gave Belinda an unrivalled tool for enhancing
her effectiveness. Only she was able to parse all that data, let alone do so
while actively participating in combat. She was the one who saw the gaps and
plugged them, either by directing a teammate or by employing her own
versatile power set.
Belinda’s new authority in the team came with growing pains. Jason’s
interface gave Belinda the metrics to dig out the team’s inefficiencies and
zero in on their inefficient habits. It was good in the long run, but no one
enjoyed having their shortcomings pointed out.
“Neil, throw out some more spells,” she instructed. “Your mana is too
close to full. Use Verdant Cage on cooldown to slow down the incoming
elves as much as you can. Focus on the fields, where the existing plants will
strengthen the power. Then use Reels of Fortune to dump mana; my power is
ready to help you with the cooldown so you can triple-cast it.”

Ability: [Blessing of Readiness] (Adept)


Special ability (recovery).
Base cost: Moderate mana.
Cooldown: Varies.

Current rank: Silver 4 (10%).

Effect (iron): This spell can only affect an ally and not yourself. The
cooldown of the next ability used by the target is reduced by up to
one minute. The cooldown of this ability is equal to the time taken
from the cooldown of the target ability.

Effect (bronze): The affected ability can have the cooldown reduced
by up to ten minutes.

Effect (silver): This spell can be used one additional time while on
cooldown. The cooldown incurred by the second use is added to the
original, and the spell cannot be used again until the full cooldown is
complete.

Rough edges were no surprise after the team had spent years apart. It was
more than Jason’s absence; the rest of the team had drifted apart in the wake
of his loss. Neil and Belinda had worked together, protecting Jory as he
roamed the world in dangerous times. As for Sophie, Humphrey and Clive,
they had pursued their vendetta against the followers of Purity and the
Builder. Clive had played third wheel for almost two years as he watched the
other two awkwardly circle one another, the ghost of Jason between them.
Even worse were the regular debriefs on their relationship progress,
demanded of Clive by Belinda every time they all met up.
“I thought your job was to make us efficient,” Neil complained to
Belinda. “Explain to me how having almost full mana is an efficiency
problem and not just efficiency.”
“Your aura is feeding us way more mana than normal from all these
worms dying,” she said. “You’re letting mana go to waste because you can’t
hold any more.”

Ability: [Spoils of Victory] (Prosperity)

Aura (recovery, conjuration, boon, drain).


Base cost: None.
Cooldown: None.

Current rank: Silver 4 (02%).

Effect (iron): Effect (Iron): Allies within your aura recover mana and
stamina for each enemy that dies within your aura, also receiving a
minor healing effect. You can loot enemies that die within your aura.
Effect (bronze): Your [Spirit] attribute is temporarily increased each
time an enemy dies within your aura.

Effect (silver): Enemies that die within your aura leave behind orbs
of health and mana that can be collected by allies to gain healing and
recovery effects.

“Thank you for the orbs, by the way,” Humphrey chimed in. As the most
mana-hungry member of the team, as well as being highly mobile, finding
mana boosts scattered around the battlefield was a massive boost. Neither the
healing nor the mana gains were exceptional, but especially against a swarm
monster, like the worms, they added up.
“Your aura should have maxed out your spirit buff as well,” Belinda told
Neil. “Only using that power on shields and healing is a waste.”
The rest of the team was also giving their all, adventurers and familiars
alike. Belinda’s astral lantern familiar fired off its own force bolts, focusing
on any worms attempting to sneak up on the team while they were distracted.
Worms that had escaped both Sophie’s wind blades and Jason’s afflictions
were already crawling along the ground, seeking out the team in moments of
inattention.
Humphrey was the most vulnerable to the swarm, as he was a melee
fighter. Sophie and Rufus were as well, but her grace and speed, plus his
elegant elusiveness, made them untouchable. They moved like dancers on
fast-forward, reminding everyone that no one else on the team could touch
them for pure skill.
Humphrey was also highly skilled, but so much of how he fought was
about the application of power, which was not useful against enemies that
were weak and numerous. It also didn’t help that his powerful attacks sent
worms spraying out of the elves he cut apart. Without the evasiveness of
Sophie and Rufus, he found the worms splashing over him.
To minimise his exposure, Humphrey was modifying his usual combat
style. His usual fast-paced aggression was not ideal for defending, and his
heavy attacks were overkill against the worm-laden elves. He focused more
on lateral movement than charge-forward aggression, and on skill rather than
overwhelming power. It’s not that Humphrey didn’t have the skill—his
mother would never have stood for it—but it wasn’t his strongest area. Key
to making his adapted style work was his sword. Of his two conjured
weapons, he usually favoured the largest. For his current situation, however,
the smaller sword was the right choice.

Ability: [Razor-Wing Sword] (Wing)

Special ability (conjuration).


Cost: High mana.
Cooldown: None.

Current rank: Silver 4 (11%).

Effect (iron): Conjures a sword in the shape of a wing. Movement


powers are enhanced while wielding it. Ineffective when used with
special attacks best suited for large or heavy weapons.

Effect: (bronze): Feathers from the wing sword can be used as


projectiles.
Effect: (silver): Feathers from the wing sword can be animated to
intercept physical projectiles.

The Razor-Wing Sword was stylised as an angel wing of white and gold,
with glossy metal feathers. It could fire razor feathers from the blade, which
Humphrey was making the most of to pick off loose worms. As of silver
rank, it also produced feathers that floated around him to intercept projectiles.
As this included worms flinging themselves at him, Humphrey was able to
fight in relative safety.
Humphrey was still effective, despite changing up his style, but he was
not fighting at full effectiveness. He was forced to be careful instead of bold,
passive instead of taking the fight to the enemy. He had to be constantly
vigilant, even with his defensive measures. This was especially true when he
had to stand his ground between parasitised elves and his team members.
Neil took some of the load in those moments, dropping a
characteristically well-timed shield over Humphrey. That was when
Humphrey deployed what was his most useful power, given the
circumstances. His Fire Breath power sprayed out like a flamethrower,
burning up waves of elves and eliciting shrieks like those Jason’s aura had
drawn out. It was extremely effective, despite the worms feeding on heat,
because it was not ordinary fire.

Ability: [Dragon Might] (Dragon)

Aura (recovery).
Base cost: None.
Cooldown: None.
Current rank: Silver 4 (13%).

Effect (iron): Allies have increased [Power] and [Spirit].

Effect (bronze): Fire created by your essence abilities becomes


dragon fire.

Effect (silver): Allies have increased resistance to effects that reduce


the [Power] and [Spirit] attributes.

Humphrey’s aura turned any fire produced by his abilities into dragon fire,
which was significantly more troubling to deal with. It was certainly beyond
the power of the parasite worms to feed on.
The biggest problem with Fire Breath, and the reason Humphrey didn’t
usually rely on it as a mainstay, was that it was extremely mana-hungry.
Fortunately, the team had many methods of replenishing mana. Clive’s aura
and Belinda’s astral lantern familiar both did so, as did the crystals floating
around Humphrey from his own Crystallise Mana ability. Neil’s orbs were a
boost, and Humphrey’s equipment also leaned heavily into retaining or
replenishing mana. The net result was Humphrey possessed an extraordinary
amount of sustain for someone with his power set.
Humphrey’s greatest advantage, however, was not his powers, his
training or his gear; it was the humility to recognise that he was not the
critical figure in this combat. He didn’t make any bold rushes or seize any
perceived opportunities. He did the work, stayed the course and trusted in his
team.
60
G R I S LY C H O R E

W HILE H UMPHREY WAS ONLY ADEQUATE AS A PERSONAL PARTICIPANT IN THE


battle against the parasitised elves, his contribution was still large. This came
through the other assets he brought to the combat, starting with his cohort of
summons.
Humphrey’s dragon-bone soldiers, the spartoi, had been modified by his
powerful, if unpredictable, summoner’s dice. In this case, the soldiers had
been called up in the form of spiders with fire powers. It wasn’t ideal for
fighting their current enemy, but randomness was the price of such a potent
item. At least they had managed to slog through the fields, unlike Neil’s
golem. That had been left behind after it half sank into a rice paddy.
Humphrey directed the soldiers to form a cordon, intercepting the elves
approaching from all sides. Only twenty summons was not enough to block
them all, but they at least helped prevent the team from being overrun.
Unfortunately, Humphrey had to command them to stop spitting burning
webs over the elves.
The flames his summons could create were too removed to count as
Humphrey’s own fire. As such, Humphrey’s aura did not transmute it into
dragon fire, and the heat-hungry worms absorbed it. The affected elves had
their flesh burned, but, being dead, were unaffected unless they were low
rank enough that it burned them away entirely.
Like other forms of conversion they had seen, becoming a corpse-host for
worms seemed to rank up the body. Most of the elves being slaughtered were
ordinary people ranked up to iron. Their main threat came from the worms
that shot out when the bodies were cut apart. While the higher-ranked ones
were burned by the flames of Humphrey’s summons, though, the worms
inside didn’t care. They devoured the heat, which gave their scorched hosts a
burst of strength and speed. After witnessing that only a couple of times,
Humphrey ordered his spartoi to stop using fire.
Although the summons had the numbers, the most powerful member of
Humphrey’s cohort was naturally Stash. The mirage dragon had taken on the
form of a monster called a spriklish, which was essentially a massive sea
urchin atop three giraffe legs. Its main body was the size of an economy
hatchback, and it attacked by shooting spines that weren’t especially
dangerous, at least to an appropriate-rank adventurer. It also had many
weaknesses. The long legs were slow and thin, making it easy to topple the
creature. Even better, leaving the body up on its high legs made it easy
pickings for ranged powers. It had the ability to rapidly heal, but not fast
enough to overcome the attacks of a ranged adventurer.
What made the spriklish a valuable form was that it could shoot spines
very rapidly and with pinpoint accuracy. Against the multitudinous-but-frail
worms, it left them pinned to the dirt road by spines. Rapid spine regrowth
meant that endurance wasn’t a problem either.
Stash proved so effective at eliminating the growing sea of loose worms
that Belinda sent her echo spirit familiar to mimic him. A second spriklish
appeared, looking like a cheap hologram replica. The spines it fired were
magical force rather than physical spines, but they worked just as well.
Clive also had his familiar, Onslow, but was holding him in reserve. He
wanted the tortoise fully charged up so that he could cover for Clive once he
joined Jason. There was one more support, though, who arrived late to the
combat.
Neil’s chrysalis golem was slow and lumbering. Too slow to keep up with
the team as they crossed the rice fields, it had last been seen sinking into a
paddy, abandoned to the tender mercies of the parasitised elves. It at least had
distracted some of the elves who had gone from farming to frenzy, chasing
after the team as they made their way to the town.
The golem’s singular power was to shroud itself inside a chrysalis that
was near-indestructible, at least to attackers of its own rank. It underwent a
transfiguration inside before emerging in a new form, adapted to the battle at
hand. Going through the process was not swift, and the golem was ill-suited
for short battles. More often than not, they would be over before the summon
had undergone its transformation.
As was normal for a power with so many disadvantages, it was
formidable should the right circumstances appear. At silver rank, the golem
was far better at adapting to enemies and environments, compared to the
crude attack reactions that had shaped its lower-rank transformations. When
the transformed golem finally appeared over the battlefield, its crystal body
glimmered brightly in the sun.
The golem’s new form was a giant, crystalline wasp, the size of a bread
van. It had sixteen long, multi-jointed arms, each ending in a hand of narrow,
barbed fingers. The wasp came buzzing over the trees and hovered over the
battle briefly before descending into the fray.
Wholly unlike its ungainly initial form, the giant insect darted around like
a dragonfly, wings buzzing as they flapped in a rapid blur. Its hands reached
out and plunged into one elf after another, jabbing in and out. Each time a
hand emerged, dead worms dangled from the barbs on its fingers.
Neil’s transfigured golem marked a turning point in the fight. Having
configured itself to annihilate hosts and pluck out the parasites within, it
alleviated the pressure on the team. They still had to fight and be careful
about it, but they were less worried about running into desperate moments.
There were still more and more elves emerging from across the town,
however. With a population of several thousand, there was no shortage of
bodies. The team even had to move, having no interest in using the piled-up
dead as a bulwark. They crossed a field of corpses to an empty stretch of
wide road and then proceeded to create a fresh charnel house of elven bodies.
The team were all aware that the elven corpses they were laying out were
not monsters but victims. They were adventurers, used to laughing in the face
of death, but only Rufus had witnessed such a scene before. Years earlier, he
had met Gary and Farrah in a town of around the same size, where the
population had also been turned into walking corpses.
With the push of the enemy lessened by the arrival of Neil’s devastating
golem, the fight had lulls that were not entirely welcome. The team bantered
as if they were not surrounded by death, trying to keep their mind off the
horror they were participating in. The townsfolk had been dead before the
team arrived, but they were still aware that they were cutting down mothers
and brothers. They all turned their eyes from the reality of how many of the
bodies belonged to children.
“Whoever did this is going to burn,” Sophie growled.
Not even Humphrey disagreed with Sophie’s sentiment of revenge, but
the moment was soon over as more elves ran to the slaughter.
“It feels like they’ll never stop coming,” Neil grimly opined.
“They will,” Humphrey said, but he was unable to muster anything but
weariness to his tone.
The fight turned from a dangerous battle to a grisly chore as the team
eliminated one parasite host after another. Jason’s butterflies still flew
around, but many worms managed to crawl away. If they ended up needing to
hunt them all, it would be a tedious task.
The worm parasites had apparently turned mindless when triggered,
despite having been able to mimic the townsfolk at least enough to lure
visitors to their doom. It led the team into a false sense of security, and the
most dangerous moment of the battle came as they thought it was reaching a
clean-up stage. Whatever intelligence drove the worms held back a large
number of hosts, sending out just enough to keep the team active. Then they
rushed in to swamp the team with pure numerical advantage.
Despite being surprised, the team reacted with professionalism, their
readiness never having truly slacked off. Rather than push back hard,
Humphrey instructed the team and his bone spiders to stop warding off elves
and let them cluster up. Sophie even helped, rounding them up with her Wind
Wave power. Once they were nice and collected, it was Neil’s turn to step in.
Of everyone on the team, it was Neil who had the hardest time ranking
up. More than any other member, his power set had abilities that were high-
cooldown, circumstantial or both, making them difficult to use on a regular
basis. Even his summon was hard to raise up, with battles often ending before
the summon could enter its chrysalis, let alone exit. As for his healing and
support powers, the excellence of his team actually hurt him. In more fights
than not, there was little call for Neil’s abilities.
Neil was best served in critical fights, but constantly chasing the edge
would get the team killed, sooner or later. The rest of the team had a variety
of attack powers they could use. The biggest problems were Humphrey,
Belinda, Clive and Rufus, all of whom advanced an extra step faster because
they were human.
At low ranks, the human advantage in ability growth speed mattered little,
but now they were at the wall. When ranking up abilities took exponentially
longer, even a minor advantage would add up over time.
Like many healers, Neil used a lot of his downtime to raise his healing
powers slowly but reliably on civilians. It was also fulfilling to help people in
need, reminding Neil why he’d joined the Church of the Healer in the first
place.
Even so, many of Neil’s powers could only be deployed in action.
Without the team falling into dire straits, many of Neil’s powers went
unused. From his overwhelming single-target buff to wide-area heals and
cleanses, all of Neil’s big spells had an impact, but only when the
circumstances were right. Even though such abilities inherently rose more
quickly than others, it still made them awkward to use.

Ability: [Reaper’s Redoubt] (Shield)

Special ability (dimension, disease, unholy).


Cost: Extreme mana.
Cooldown: 6 hours.

Current rank: Silver 3 (98%).

Effect (iron): Take allies into a dimensional space briefly while


flooding the area with death energy, dealing disruptive-force
damage, necrotic damage and inflicting [Creeping Death] on
everything in the area.

Effect: (bronze): Allies undergo extreme mana replenishment while


in the dimensional space.
Effect: (silver): Enemies are afflicted with [Death’s Grip]

[Creeping Death] (damage-over-time, disease, stacking): Inflicts


ongoing necrotic damage until the disease is cleansed. Additional
instances have a cumulative effect.

[Death’s Grip] (unholy): The effects of healing are reduced. This


effect is initially weak but is enhanced by any necrotic damage
suffered by the victim.

As a healer, Neil had little in the way of destructive power, but the one ability
he did have was devastating. Although more and more elves continued to
rush at them, his power provided the team with a reset. When they emerged
from the dimensional space Neil created, the worms and their elven hosts in a
wide area were rotted and dead. The same was true of plants, trees and even
the wooden buildings, the closest ones having collapsed.
“Did I just sense our healer blanketing the area in death and murdering
everyone and everything?” Jason asked through voice chat.
It was light and jovial, as if they weren’t surrounded by death, even
though he mentioned it specifically. They each knew from Farrah that Jason
had once encountered what they’d all gone through on a much wider scale.
They realised he wasn’t being flippant about death, but telling them to do
what they could to put it out of their minds until the job was done.
“I had to do it,” Neil said. “Someone ran off by himself and left us to do
all the fighting.”
“Hey, I have an important role,” Jason said defensively. “On an unrelated
note, chewing sounds don’t come through my voice chat, right?”
“Not the time,” Humphrey scolded.
Unable put all the deaths aside, even for the moment, his face was filled
with rage with nowhere to put it. He could kill townsfolk victims and
massacre worms all day, but it wouldn’t give him the person behind it all.
The hope was that Jason found them, although that wasn’t why he reached
out.
“I just talked with Carlos,” Jason reported. “I updated him on what we’ve
seen.”
“And?” Humphrey asked.
“He said that world-taker worms are bad.”
“Oh, they’re bad,” Neil said. “I’m glad we figured that out. Extremely
helpful.”
“More helpful than sarcasm,” Belinda muttered.
61
INFERIOR

N ERVOUSNESS WAS NOT A NORMAL SENSATION FOR A MESSENGER . W HEN THE


adventurers arrived, Pei Vas Kartha had been in her hidden underground lair,
as usual, managing the worm implantations. She was confident that they
would not sense her presence, as any non-messenger perception would be
firmly but subtly blocked. The sophisticated aura magic rituals had been
inscribed into the facility by someone far stronger than Pei herself.
It was not the first group of adventurers to arrive. Pei remained until she
sensed an absurd aura flood the town. It was angry and startling powerful, but
that was not what disturbed her. The aura was not that of a messenger, yet it
undeniably carried properties that belonged to messengers.
There were several elements of that aura that Pei found unnerving. One
was that she was not used to anyone of her rank having a stronger aura than
her. She knew it was possible for non-messengers to have stronger auras than
normal, but seeing it for herself was unsettling. Then there was the nature of
the aura. Not only did it carry something akin to that of a messenger, but it
was so oppressive that it cast a looming shadow over her soul.
She caught herself shrinking her shoulders and then pushed them back up,
angrily reasserting her posture. She was not going to bow down to some
random aura. It wanted her to feel small and unworthy, as if she had been
judged and found wanting. As if she had sinned. That the person it belonged
to would not even be able to sense her made it even more galling.
Then she remembered that odd strain in the aura of messenger-like
power. She wondered how well-hidden she truly was and, in a moment of
crippling shame, found herself thankful to be shielded from even such
powerful senses.
The word ‘inferior’ slithered into her mind, like one of the worms she’d
been implanting into the elves. She snarled, feeding her weak emotions into
the flames of rage. Even so, she did not lose control and lash out. She
extended her senses past the protection of her lair, careful not to expose her
aura. She needed a better sense of what was happening above.
She sensed the adventurers fighting the worm-host, realising they were
stronger than the last ones. They were violently undoing so much of Pei’s
work by slaughtering the hosts, but she did not rush out to intervene. While
she had the pride of messenger superiority, she was not fool enough to
confront such a powerful team, at least while they were fresh. She would wait
until the battle had exhausted them before looking for opportunities to pick
them off.

The town’s elven population had been overtaken by parasitic worms that
were using the townsfolk as host bodies, pretending everything was still
normal. The arrival of Jason’s team had changed that. The townsfolk became
frenzied berserkers, throwing themselves at the team from every direction.
Jason and Sophie fended off the first wave until the rest of the team
turned up. Once they did, Jason went off in search of something that had
tweaked his senses. It was faint enough that he wasn’t entirely certain that he
wasn’t imagining it at first. He methodically searched, using his stealth
abilities to avoid the enemies charging his team.
While he moved, Jason relayed what the team had learned about the
worms through Shade to Carlos, still in the city of Yaresh. Carlos had a
decent amount of notes about world-taker worms, and once he had a name, he
was able to dig out some research records. This was specifically because of
his research into various means of taking over the bodies of innocent people;
world-taker worms were one example. He had collected notes from other
researchers as part of his own endeavours.
“I knew I had these,” Carlos relayed back through to Jason.
“Interestingly, this particular breed of worms has colour gradations that
indicate—”
“I’m more in the market for practical facts that will help me right this
second,” Jason interrupted him. “Basically, how are they going to try to kill
us? Also—and this is the big one—how do we make them not do that?”
While Carlos took him through the salient points, Jason continued his
search. Around the time he found what he suspected he was looking for,
Carlos had moved from more practical details and on to ‘interesting points of
note.’ Jason contacted the team to share what he knew, while Carlos headed
for the Adventure Society. With seven teams all searching the same region, it
was critical to disseminate the information.
“The worms maintain the host body’s functions,” Jason explained to the
team through voice chat. “Enough to make a passable facsimile of being alive
anyway. That’s why they don’t have the zombie look, even though they’re
dead.”
“And how they pass themselves off as people,” Rufus said. “At least long
enough to get people close enough to infest them as well.”
“I’d assume so,” Jason agreed. “You want to avoid the worms digging
into you. You can’t heal them out because they’ll just absorb the life magic
and multiply. You need to physically gouge them out of the body and then
heal the wound after doing so, once you’ve extracted all the worms.”
“Charming,” Belinda said. “Any good news?”
“Actually, yes,” Jason said. “They like to go after critical organs, like the
brain and the heart.”
“How is that good news?” Sophie asked.
“We have neither,” Neil said. “We’re all basically sacks of magic, blood
and meat. No critical organs they can devour to kill us instantaneously.”
“It’s a problem if too many of them get inside you, though,” Jason said.
“It’s harder to take over essence users of our rank, but not impossible. If
enough of them get inside you, they can hijack the magical matrix that makes
your sack of blood and meat work. That means taking control of you.”
“You know, my mum wanted me to be a merchant,” Neil said bitterly.
“Travel, money. Not being eaten from the inside out by worms.”
“I did say they were bad,” Jason said. “Carlos said that they’re classified
as an apocalypse beast.”
“That would suggest these worms are what’s responsible for the whole
region going silent,” Clive said. “Which leads to the question of whether this
is just the next disaster in the queue, or if the messengers brought them here.”
“I’m hoping you can help me figure that out,” Jason said. “I’m going to
open up a portal, so come on through.”
A dark portal opened up next to Clive, but he didn’t step through
immediately. Magic light seeped through the front of his robe and quickly
coalesced into a tortoise shape. Clive’s familiar, Onslow, was a tattoo on
Clive’s torso when not manifested. When he appeared, he was a flying
tortoise that could change his size and wield potent attack magic. Each
segment on his shell bore a glowing rune, representing one elemental power
he could use. Clive patted Onslow affectionately on the neck.
“I’ll need you to cover for me, buddy.”
One of the runes on Onslow’s back stopped glowing as a lightning bolt
shot out, chaining between enemies.
“That’s the way,” Clive said and went through the portal. He emerged
from the other end of the portal in some kind of underground space. Light
filtered down through cracks between a wooden floor above, dust dancing in
the beams. The floor and three of the walls were hard-packed dirt, and an old
ladder led up to an open trapdoor.
The last wall in the room was very different, being made of polished slate
bricks. Set into it was a pair of double doors made of carved wood.
Unlike the boards above, the wood of the door was extremely well made
and fitted, with no cracks to peer through. It also wasn’t painted in the same
heat-radiating green paint as the town buildings, and was instead covered in
elaborate magic sigils. They glowed very faintly and shifted under his gaze,
the lines slithering like serpents. He glanced at Jason, who was standing in
front of the doors.
“What do you think?” Jason asked as Clive moved to examine the doors,
fascination lighting up his expression.
“I have no idea,” Clive said excitedly as he opened his storage space.
Clive’s storage power, Rune Gate, was a little less convenient than
Jason’s, Belinda’s and Humphrey’s. Where they could all just pluck items out
of the air, Clive needed to open a miniature portal, ringed by floating runes,
that he could reach into and take things out of. Even so, Clive had arguably
the most useful storage ability, as it could also be used as a regular portal
power or to enhance the strength of his ritual magic.
Plucking out strange devices one by one, Clive used them to examine the
door before shoving them back into storage. One looked like an hourglass
and another like a magnifying glass. There was an opaque orb that flashed
various colours and a set of large crystals, strung together on a line. Clive
threw various powders at the door from bags, from ground-up lesser monster
cores to chalk powder mixed with salt and infused with magic. All the while,
Clive jotted notes into a book he left on a small levitating table.
“You know this isn’t an academic exercise, right?” Jason asked him. “Our
friends are fighting up there.”
“It’s fine,” Clive said absently, not looking away from his work. “Most of
those elves were normal people. The worms might be silver and bronze rank,
but artificially ranked-up bodies are much weaker than the genuine article.
You’ve fought enough of the converted to know that.”
“Yeah,” Jason said. “You know that I fought a new kind of converted on
Earth, right? Not based around the Builder’s clockwork cores, although the
higher-ranked ones used modified cores to stabilise their own conversion
process.”
“You’ve mentioned,” Clive said.
“I’m not sure that I mentioned that the guy who ran the organisation they
came from left me a vault full of secrets. Including all the research on their
conversion project.”
“Are you saying you can make converted?”
“No. Well, maybe. But I think he was hoping that I could refine the
process.”
“Why you? That’s not your area of expertise.”
“I think his choice was more to do with trusting me to use it properly. I’m
pretty sure he wanted me to find a way to give regular people powers,
without needing a truckload of essences. They wouldn’t match an essence
user, sure, but sometimes quantity over quality is the way to go.”
“Why would he want that?”
“I’m not sure. Both he and Dawn have made it clear that somewhere
down the line, I have another fight coming. What that is, I don’t know, but
everything this psycho did was in preparation for it. He wanted me to take
over for him after he was dead.”
“You killed him?”
“He killed himself because he knew that I wouldn’t let him live.”
That finally caused Clive to pause and he turned to look at Jason.
“Farrah never told us that.”
“Farrah wasn’t there for everything. How is that door going?”
Clive turned his attention back to the door.
“This is a ritual magic paradigm, unlike anything I’ve ever seen. This is
otherworldly ritual magic, like the astral magic the Builder cult was using.”
“Not like the local stuff, then.”
“Even more so than what the cult was using. We have magic that interacts
with auras, but it’s simple and crude.”
“Like the aura beacons used for signalling over long distances.”
“Exactly. The water link system is as elaborate as it gets, and there’s a
reason Farrah and Travis are looking to replace it. The efficiency and
practicality leave a lot to be desired.”
“And this magic does it better?” Jason asked.
“It makes sense that messenger ritual magic interacts with auras in far
more sophisticated ways than any of ours, given what we know about them.
This is beyond my expectations, though.”
“Do you even know what this magic is doing?”
“Oh, that’s simple enough. The door just has some simple locking magic.
The fancy part is the anti-detection magic that is shrouding whatever is
behind it. Frankly, I’m amazed you noticed this was here.”
“Can you open it?”
“Oh, that’s not a problem,” Clive said. “It’s essentially the same magic
we use in this world. The problem is that the alarm is part of the anti-
detection magic. I don’t understand enough about how it works to stop the
alarm from going off. It incorporates the intrinsic properties of messenger
auras, which I can’t replicate. At least this seems to confirm that whatever’s
going on here, the messengers are behind it.”
“Would I be able to replicate the messenger aura?”
“I was wondering the same thing,” Clive said. “It’ll take time and study,
though. It’s not something we can quickly knock out in a dirty basement. I
don’t see any way of opening this door without triggering the alarm.”
“Okay,” Jason said.
“Then how do we open the door?” Clive wondered.
“Kicking?”
“You want to kick it open?”
“If there’s anyone in there, I’m pretty sure they know we’re here.”
“Shouldn’t we wait for the team?”
“What if someone’s fleeing down an escape tunnel, or preparing
something that will let the worms overrun the team?”
“What if it’s twenty people waiting for the door to open so they can kick
the snot out of you?”
“Then I’ll run away.”
“You’re a lot better than me at running away.”
“There’s a portal right there. Actually, hold on a tick.”
Jason went through the portal to where his team was still fighting the
worm-host elves, but the enemy numbers were diminished as the town’s
population was finally nearing depletion. Standing near Neil and Belinda,
Jason held his hands up over his head and chanted a spell.
“As your lives were mine to reap, so your deaths are mine to harvest.”
Red lights, the remnant life force of countless dead worms, shone across
the charnel house of a battlefield. They then started streaming into the air, all
converging on Jason, who absorbed it all.

You have used [Blood Harvest] on multiple [World-Taker Worms].


Your health, mana and stamina have been replenished.
You have gained multiple instances of [Blood Frenzy] from [Blood
Harvest].
Maximum instances of [Blood Frenzy] have been reached.
Additional instances will be converted into [Blood of the Immortal].
You have gained multiple instances of [Blood of the Immortal] from
[Blood Harvest].

Maximum health, mana and stamina have been exceeded. Ability


[Sin Eater] has temporarily raised your maximum, health, mana and
stamina to accommodate. These maximums will diminish over time.

“Jason?” Humphrey asked. “What are you doing that you felt the need to
come back and gain a massive amount of temporary life force?”
“Clive is making me kick open a magic door.”
“I am doing no such thing,” Clive denied through voice chat.
“He also said he was going to run away if something scary is in there,”
Jason added.
“Can we please save the pithy banter for when we’re not fighting evil?”
Rufus asked.
“Have you never seen an action movie,” Jason said.
“No!” Rufus yelled. “No, I have not!”
“For a guy ostensibly against it,” Jason told Rufus, “your pithy banter is
on point.”
“Jason…” Humphrey growled.
“Fine,” Jason said, returning through the portal. “Clive, unlock this door
so I can kick it.”
Clive grumbled but put away the instruments he used to examine the
door. He then took out a clear crystal rod and pointed at the door. The rod
started glowing in a mix of swirling, strobing colours that slowed down their
strobing over time. The colours dropped out one by one until the rod was
glowing solid blue. Then the light stopped shining altogether, leaving clear
crystal once again.
“I didn’t think you approved of shortcuts like unlocking rods,” Jason said.
“Taking the easy path is the wrong move when the hard one has
something to teach you,” Clive said as he stepped well back, ready to jump
through the portal. “I don’t have anything to learn from simple lock magic, so
why waste the time? You remember that the rest of the team is still fighting,
right? Now, if you insist on kicking the door open, kick away.”
“Now that I think about it,” Jason mused, “what is that alarm magic going
to do? Will it be attached to a trap?”
“Probably,” Clive said. “Also, we’ve been out here talking for a while. If
anyone inside didn’t know we were out here, they do now.”
“Good point. Any suggestions on how we should approach it?”
“Yes,” Clive said, eyeing the open trapdoor above them as he pulled out
his wand. “You go first.”
Jason chuckled as he strode over to the double doorway. He lifted a leg,
about to kick it open when the doors were flung wide on their own. A wall of
worms poured out, like water through the sluice gate of an overflowing dam.
It was swift enough that Jason was inundated, toppled over and completely
buried. Clive was saved by silver-rank reflexes and agility, as well as his
extra distance from the door. He had a scant moment to react and he used it,
leaping up through the trapdoor in the ceiling.
In the building above, Clive immediately crouched to look down through
the trap door. The wave of worms was flattening out, but Jason was still
unseen, buried beneath them.
“I think we might have a problem,” Clive said through voice chat. “Jason,
are you there?”
“What’s the situation?” Humphrey asked.
“Jason just got buried in worms.”
“How buried?” Belinda asked. “Are we talking just a lot of worms, or full
bathtub?”
“More like swimming pool,” Clive said. “Jason?”
There was still no response.
“We can’t come down,” Humphrey said. “If any more of us break off,
we’ll get overrun.”
“I’ll take a closer look and see what I can figure out,” Clive said, leaning
in to get a better viewing angle through the doorway below. From what he
could see, it was a tunnel made of the same slate bricks as the wall into which
the door was set.
A figure stepped up to the now-open door, the worms parting before it
like the Red Sea. The creatures maintained a circle of clear space, not around
the person but an orb she held out in front of her.
As the figure came fully into view, Clive spotted the wings folded on her
back. It was a messenger with nut-brown skin and dark hair. Her wings were
also brown, with tan speckling. Her clothes consisted of a short, loosely
draped top and loose, flowing pants, both fawn-coloured. Her bare feet
floated just off the floor.
The object she was holding looked like a ball of overlapping leather
straps, around twice the size of a fist. The worms would not go near it and
Clive got to see an unmoving Jason as the messenger drew close. The worms
slithered off of his body and outside of the circle around the orb.
Jason’s conjured cloak had vanished, but his conjured robes had not.
Despite what was going on, Clive’s analytical mind couldn’t help but
absently posit that while Jason himself conjured the cloak, the robes were
conjured by one of his familiars. While the robes remained in place, however,
it was covered in holes. The skin visible beneath each hole had a small
wound mark.
Still holding the orb in one hand, the messenger conjured a spear in the
other. Clive raised his wand and fired, but a wing moved out to block the
beam. She brought the spear down. She was not the only one with protection,
however. A nebulous eye manifested in front of Jason, then expanded into a
shield that blocked the attack. Gordon manifested behind the shield with five
more eyes, all of which shot beams at Jason’s attacker. She blocked by
wrapping her wings around in front of her, which she could barely manage in
the enclosed space of the doorway. She then floated backwards, out of
Clive’s sight.
Clive saw that the worms flowed back from the edges of the room where
they had been driven, but they now avoided Jason, just as they had done the
orb. Then worms started crawling out of Jason’s body, tunnelling free of his
flesh. Many dug their way out through the wounds they had presumably
entered by, while others poked new holes in his skin and robes with their
drill-bit heads. Dozens of them emerged from all over Jason, and Clive
flinched as one pushed its way out from his eye socket, squeezing around the
eyeball, like a horrifying, fleshy tear.
Then the worms that had refused to move closer to Jason started
twitching and thrashing, like a rat pit after a snake was dropped in. They
pushed against the walls as if trying to climb up them, or started digging into
the dirt. The worms crawling out of Jason, half-emerged, flailed as they were
pulled back into his body, as if plucked by the tail.
Clive spotted one worm that managed to manage to escape and start
crawling away, only for a strip of red leather to extend from Jason’s robe,
wrap around the worm and pull it back. A leech with rings of savage lamprey
teeth emerged from the same wound the worm had escaped from, and when
the worm was dragged back, the leech brutally devoured it.
62
A P O C A LY P S E

B URIED BENEATH A TOWN WHERE THE POPULACE HAD BEEN BODY - SNATCHED
by parasitic worms was a hidden chamber. The messenger, Pei Vas Kartha,
had been operating there for months, luring the town elders into what they
had believed to be lucrative-but-ordinary treason. They had helped her to
magically excavate under a building, in the dead of night, installing the
facility.
The hidden chambers were topped by an ordinary building, with the
unordinary doors set into the brick wall of a basement otherwise made of
hard-packed dirt. The doors led to a tunnel and then stairs going down to the
main facility. There, Pei had bred more worms from the initial stock she was
given, preparing to take over the town. She started with one breeding vat in a
hidden room, so as not to spook her accomplices, but when the elders grew
wary, they became the first worm-hosts.
After that, the vat came out into the main chamber and Pei’s operations
expanded. More vats were added, along with implantation chambers to infest
the local elves in batches. The actual implantation of the town was
accomplished in only a few days, the time spent breeding a worm supply
paying off handsomely. Once enough of the town had become hosts, they
were able to monitor the others and lure in any visitors.
Pei herself was not immune to the worms, but the vats, chambers and
tubes allowed them to be moved around without setting them loose. As a
failsafe, she had the orb created by the messenger who had given her the
initial batch of worms. A similar device was in the possession of every
messenger infiltrating the towns and villages along the southern reaches of
Yaresh.
After months of everything going exactly to plan, genuine trouble was
overdue. Even the adventurers that arrived had been successfully swept up.
The real threat began with a dangerous aura that washed over the town above,
now fully converted to worm-hosts.
The man to whom that aura belonged had somehow found her hidden
facility and had been about to kick the doors open. By that time, however, Pei
had long-ago installed worms in vats by the door, rigged to the magical
alarm. The man had been buried in worms, but she decided to finish him off
anyway. His aura had been like nothing she’d ever experienced and she
needed him dead if only to quash the insidious doubts it had infested her
with.
Although the man was unconscious, worms digging through his body,
even his passive aura was incredibly hard to read. What she could glean from
it only unnerved her more. She moved to strike, conjuring her spear. She
could sense the other adventurer in the building above, but dismissed him.
His aura marked him as a capable but ordinary adventurer. It was the
anomaly on the ground in front of her that needed to be eradicated.
What came next only solidified her certainty that the man needed to die.
She casually deflected a wand beam from above and brought her spear down,
only to have it blocked. The unconscious man had an avatar of doom as a
familiar, which was shocking enough on its own to warrant reporting this
man to the messenger leadership.
There were very few forces that the messengers actively avoided. Even
the agents of most great astral beings were opponents to be wary of, but not
to back away from. Amongst the very few forces that the messengers were
careful to avoid belonged to the Eye of Annihilation and the Sundered
Throne. These were the only two forces known to regularly employ the
reality assassins, the avatars of doom. While it wasn’t unheard of to see them
elsewhere, it was rare enough to warrant very close attention. And now one
of them was floating in front of her, protecting a man that worms would soon
take over.
The avatar was only a familiar, restricted to Pei’s own silver rank.
Otherwise, she would have been annihilated in an instant. The beams it shot
at her were resonating force, unpleasantly penetrative but not the
transcendent damage the avatars possessed at diamond rank. They burrowed
into the magical metal she transformed her wings into as shields, but did not
punch through them immediately.
The messenger withdrew into the tunnel, not wanting to face the avatar
and the other adventurer, who was shooting beams through the trapdoor. She
retaliated by firing a swarm of feathers from her wings that danced around,
attacking from every angle. This forced the avatar to switch its orbs from
beams to barriers, and it seemed satisfied to remain on the defensive,
shielding its summoner. She knew this was a mistake on its part, as the
worms inside the man would soon take him over.
Even knowing this, the man on the ground had Pei shaken, despite what
had to be his inevitable demise. Did the avatar know something that she
didn’t? This rank-diminished avatar was not her match and she kept her
senses trained on the man it was protecting. The other adventurer was staying
above, likely wary of the worms, but the worms were not behaving as they
should.
Her withdrawal should have had the worms swarming back over the man,
who was no longer warded by the orb she carried. But, if anything, they had
started avoiding him more than the orb. The individual worms were mindless
creatures, directed by the intelligent brood mother in the chambers below.
Yet she sensed that they were scared of him when fear should not have been
possible at all.
That was when things got worse. Not just the worms around the man, but
the worms inside him radiated fear, and she sensed them struggling to escape.
They started digging out of his body, dozens of them, but they were yanked
back as if something inside was devouring them. Then one managed to
escape and something came out through the wound to get it. When she saw
the large leech with the ringed rows of lamprey teeth, a chill ran through her
body.
Messengers were the pinnacle beings of the cosmos, dominating the sky
of countless worlds. Now the messenger Pei Vas Kartha found herself in a
hole in the ground, stricken with… fear? Though she had sensed fear in
others, she had never felt it herself, so she could not be sure.
She was surrounded by dangerous creatures. One was an apocalypse beast
swarm that conquered worlds from the inside of their populations, and would
hollow her out like any lesser being if they got the chance. The creatures
were piled up around the walls, held off only by the magical orb in her hand.
But for all that such creatures had conquered worlds, they alone weren’t close
to enough that she would fear them. They might be the nightmare of entire
civilisations, but to the messengers, they were just another weapon.
It was the being in front of her that made her scared for the first time even
though he lay unconscious on the ground. He had been drowned in the
apocalypse worms and should be quite thoroughly dead. Yet the creatures
were even more fearful of him than of the orb she held, climbing the walls
and digging into the dirt to escape him.
The worms had burrowed into the man, as was their nature, but they had
found something inside him even more terrifying than themselves. Pei Vas
Kartha had understood immediately when she saw it. It was not the first time
she had seen a sanguine horror.
Even though she was the lowest caste of messengers, never surpassing
silver rank, Pei had seen many worlds. She had joined numerous conquests,
serving minor but valuable roles, such as worm breeder. In her experience,
she had encountered worlds ravaged by apocalypse beasts of different types.
Fungal vultures that devoured the atmosphere, choking out the inhabitants.
Primeval serpents that burrowed into the core of planets, triggering a volcanic
apocalypse that choked with ash, cutting off the sun.
The messengers knew these apocalypse beasts. Many, they even used
themselves, deploying them as weapons of mass destruction. This was the
case with the world-taker worms as well. But some apocalypse beasts were
never used. Too uncontrollable and too hard to stop if they got loose, the
danger was not worth the reward. When Pei saw the sanguine horror crawl
out of the man in front of her and devour the world-taker worm, she was
shaken. First an avatar of doom, and now this?
Only once had Pei seen a world where a sanguine horror had been loosed.
Conquered by the messengers, the native population had summoned a
sanguine horror from whatever nightmare realm where the Limitless Legion
met the Final Domain. The natives had believed they could control the swarm
monster and use it to drive the messengers off their planet. They had been
half right. A sanguine horror was hunger incarnate, and once it reached its
full strength, the only way to stop it was to starve it out. It multiplied too fast,
devouring life to fully replenish itself from even a single leech.
The surviving messengers, including Pei, had abandoned the planet. They
hadn’t taken any of the natives as slaves because there weren’t any left. She
had been shaken to her core by the experience, and not just from the horrors
she had witnessed. It was the first time she had seen the messengers run.
It was not that they could not fight the sanguine horror. Pei had
slaughtered countless of the leech-lampreys herself, let alone what the higher-
caste messengers of gold and diamond rank had slain. But no matter how
many they killed, the apocalypse beast didn’t stop. They would sweep
through a town, devouring every living thing. The people, the animals, the
plants. They dug up the roots in the ground and consumed the algae growing
in the wells. Everything they consumed was fuel to increase the leech mass.
The messengers had started burning whole cities in the path of the swarm,
like a fire break before an inferno. They tried to isolate the swarm from its
food supply so they could cut off its ability to reproduce. They were partially
effective, reducing the swarm’s size, but had been unable to quash it entirely.
While the messengers had been struggling to contain and eradicate the
remnants, they were unaware that their efforts were futile. Too late, they
realised that the sanguine horror swarm covering the land was only a
fragment of what occupied the planet. In the lowest fathoms of the oceans,
the swarm devoured every living thing, from fish to coral to leviathans of the
deep.
Only as the swarm cleared out the furthest depths and moved closer to the
surface did the messengers sense its presence. With the ubiquity of the
swarm, the leeches under the oceans had been hard to sense until they moved
closer. Even the diamond-ranked messengers had failed to recognise the true
threat until it was too late. Once the swarm grew and reached the shallower
portions of the ocean, they finally realised that attempting to stop it was
futile.
It might have been possible to stop the swarm before it turned the planet
into a lifeless husk, but what remained in the aftermath would not be worth
keeping. Pride in their superiority over every other living thing in the cosmos
had cost the messengers lives, but they were not so blinded by it that they
would fight to the death over a worthless rock. They gave up and left what
remained of the planet to the horror.
Sanguine horrors did not take hosts the way world-taker worms did.
Somehow, this man had claimed, as a familiar, the only thing Pei had seen
the messengers surrender to. That was not the only reason that she was
discovering fear for the first time. Once she started exploring the unconscious
man with her magical senses, she realised the sanguine horror was only one
of several bizarre things about him.
Firstly, his aura. Even dormant, while the man was unconscious, it was
incredibly hard to read. The more she gleaned from it, the more she was
startled. For one, he was not a dual-entity comprised of body and soul, but a
gestalt physical and spiritual being. He was no messenger, but he shared that
trait with them.
As their special nature was one of the cornerstones of their superiority,
the fact that this unconscious adventurer shared that nature rocked not just
Pei’s mind but her faith. Once again, she found a blasphemous idea creeping
into her mind, despite trying desperately to shut it out. The idea that perhaps
she, as a messenger, was inferior to someone that wasn’t.
The other things she sensed in his aura only made it worse. Scars from
battles he had no business surviving. The touch of transcendent beings.
Power that even she didn’t recognise. More than anything else, however,
what scared her was a power that she did recognise. Something no silver-
ranker should be able to possess. It was a power granted to the Voices of the
Will, except that it was not the remote, bestowed power granted to the voices
she had met. This was the other end of that power, not the recipient but the
source. The power she sensed in him belonged not to the servants of the astral
kings, but to the astral kings themselves.
It shouldn’t have been possible. For all that this man’s aura reflected a
toweringly powerful soul, he was definitely only silver rank. How could there
be a silver-rank astral king? But as her senses probed his astounding
familiars, she grew all the more certain. The bestowed power that should
belong only to the voices resided within them.
The astral kings of the messengers exclusively took other messengers as
their voices. Not only had this man become an astral king at least as early as
silver rank, but had claimed an apocalypse beast and a reality assassin as his
voices. That was more than a little disturbing, as a voice was the mouth of an
astral king to the world. What kind of astral king had, as his voices, beings
who variously devoured all life and annihilated that which should have been
immortal? Looking at the avatar of doom still shielding the man from her
storm of feathers, she was disinclined to ask.
Pei was still contemplating these questions when the man’s eyes shot
open.
63
SUPERIOR

A S SHE PELTED HIS FAMILIAR WITH METAL FEATHERS , P EI V AS K ARTHA


watched when the unnerving man opened his eyes. He rose to his feet, not by
pushing himself up but tilted as though on an invisible slab. She could sense
the way he moved with his aura, and it was not the crude inefficiency of an
essence user. He used it in the clean, smooth manner of a messenger. His
gaze moved up and down her body, his eyes like nebulas in a void. It did not
escape her attention that they were mirrors of the nebula eye floating in the
avatar of doom’s body, as well as each of its orbs.
Pei withdrew her feather storm for the moment and the avatar vanished.
She felt the man’s aura absorb it and grow even stronger in the process. Two
of the orbs were left behind, orbiting the man as they had the avatar. As the
man made no move to attack yet, she allowed her wings to recover from the
avatar’s attacks.
He looked past her at the tunnel descending to the main workrooms, and
then at the alcoves to either side of the doorway he was standing in. The vats
that had once held worms in those alcoves were smashed, the worms having
spilled over the floor like a carpet. Only two circles of the floor were empty
of worms, where Pei stood with her orb and the man with his hungry familiar.
Seeing Pei floating just off the floor using her aura, the man did the same.
In the back of her mind, she had been clinging to some hope that her senses
were being deceived. Seeing him move like a messenger and watch her with
cosmic eyes, that hope died. She knew then that she would soon die with it,
in a hole in the ground. At the hands of a superior being.
Pei was not going to give up without a fight, however. Once more, she
blasted out her metal wing feathers, but this time, they did not dance around,
looking for an opening. They shot straight and fast, her wings glimmering
with the speed at which her feathers had to regrow to keep it up.
What looked like a void portal manifested into being around the man,
shrouding him like a cloak. Her feather storm fell into it as harmlessly as rain
falling into a pond. He did not retaliate, but continued to float in place. The
only difference was the cloak was wrapped around him, hiding his body aside
from the eyes that stayed locked on her. The cloak flapped in some non-
existent breeze as if touched by astral rather than mortal winds.
She gave up on the attack and instead spoke to him, the rage in her voice
mostly covering the tremulations.
“What are you?” she asked, despite knowing the answer. She was unable
to make her conscious mind believe it, even with her gut screaming that it
was true.
Instead of an answer, the man asked his own question in a stony voice.
His tone held no fear, no malice and no anger. It was hard, immutable and
uncaring as a mountain.
“Are there more like you?” he asked. “More towns, more world-taker
worms?”
“Why should I tell you anything?”
“Because you’re a messenger. Your entire philosophy is that the inferior
being serves, is it not?”
She threw her spear down the tunnel and it multiplied into nine, and the
nine into eighty-one, filling the space. She bolstered each one with physical
force by sheathing them with her aura. She felt his aura move out like the
tide, stripping hers away. The spears slowed under the physical force
produced by his aura but did not stop. The two orbs floating around him
became shields to intercept them.
The spears hammered down on the shields and, even without her aura
infusion, there were too many for the shields to take. It was the ability she
had intended to eliminate the avatar with, but doing so to its summoner was
even better. Without the aura enhancement, the shields did not break until
most of the spears had shattered against them, but around a quarter turned the
man into a pincushion.
He was impaled many times over, even through the head, right below his
left eye. Even so, his gaze never left hers. He didn’t even move as the spears
exploded, shredding his robes and his flesh. His cloak could absorb
fragmentation attacks, but not when they came from inside his body.
Even so, his eyes stayed on hers as she conjured a fresh spear and the
ones she had already thrown disappeared. She dashed forward, plunging her
spear through his face, yet somehow, she missed.
She kept her range, launching spear jabs. He was using space
displacement to defend, but every technique had weaknesses. Enough attacks,
and some would land. She expected him to draw the sword at his side but
instead stopped her spear by the simple method of letting it hit him. He
grabbed it, not letting her pull it away.
They stayed locked in front of one another for a moment. She could
already see his wounds closing and his robes mending. She remembered the
power of an astral king and had a terrifying thought. Was he immortal? Was
this some kind of incarnation? It would explain the silver rank.
She yanked her spear free and floated back. Beyond putting up shields
and grabbing her spear, he hadn’t even fought, as if combat with her was
below him.
“You are not superior to the messengers!” she said, spitting the words
defiantly.
“Your mouth speaks, but it’s your aura that tells the truth. I can feel your
faith shaking like a naked child in a storm. By my reckoning, you are right;
I’m not superior to the messengers. But in your philosophy, I am. Good for us
both that I don’t share it. If I did, I would have to acknowledge vampires as
superior to the people they feed on.”
“What are you talking about?” Pei asked, even as she dreaded the answer.
“You are the first of your kind that I’ve met in person,” he said. “I’ve
seen familiars, replicas and encountered one through a remote-viewing
medium, but you are the first messenger I’ve ever had placed in front of me
like a dinner.”
“I am not your food.”
“No?” he asked, pushing his hood back to reveal a predatory grin. The
hole in his face from her spear had already closed and the red mark it left
behind was fading. “Now that I’ve seen you with my own eyes, and tasted
you with my own senses, I’ve come to realise something. I was told that the
messengers believed themselves the foundational species of the cosmos. I
always assumed they were deluding themselves, but to my great surprise, it
may well be true. I, at least, now believe it to be possible.”
“Why?”
“Do you know what a reality core is?”
“No.”
“It’s one of the fundamental elements of every physical universe. The
power source of reality. You feel very much like one of these reality cores.
Not quite the same, but close. And the thing is, it turns out that I can devour
life-force that has been infused with reality core energy. I found that out after
some vampires got a hold of these cores I’m talking about. They started
infusing the power of them into the blood they were consuming. And when I
consumed the vampires, that power became mine.”
“You ate vampires?”
“The meat held no appeal. The essence of a vampire is the life force, so
that is what I devoured. Now I find myself wondering what will happen when
I do the same to yours. You won’t know, as you’ll be dead by then. The very
fact that I can is why the messenger claims of superiority don’t hold up,
according to your own standards. I don’t hold with that master race nonsense,
be it from your kind or any other. But how can you be the master race if you
aren’t at the top of the food chain?”
“You are strange,” she responded. “Your nature, however you have come
to be that way, is powerful. But I suspect it is also unique and I am but the
lowest caste of messenger. You are an anomaly, and even then, your power is
far below others of my kind.”
The man let out an executioner’s laugh.
“You’re whistling as you pass a graveyard, messenger. I can feel your
fear. I can feel you trying to burn it as fuel for your hatred, and the despair
that won’t let you. True superiority has no qualifiers and you know it. You’re
reeling inside, knowing that everything you believed—the very foundations
of your identity—is wrong. A lie. If you were still the proud messenger,
dealing with a lesser, would you have stopped at such a token resistance?
Where’s the fight in you? It’s nowhere, because you know it would be futile.
An ageless life of superiority has engraved what being the lesser means into
your soul. Now that it’s you, you can’t even bring yourself to fight.”
He floated towards her at a crawl, barely moving in his ominous
approach.
“If you still have faith that you are superior,” he challenged, “then show
me.”
He glanced at the conjured spear in her hand.
“Take your weapon and strike me down with all your hatred.”
When Pei had tried to execute the man using the spear, the avatar blocked
it. She had various ways of empowering the spear, as well as other
supplemental powers, but the man was right; inside, she had already
acknowledged her defeat. The conjured weapon clattered briefly on the slate
brick floor, then dissolved into nothing.
“Why are you doing this?” she asked, almost begging.
“Because this is not the first time I’ve seen whole populations wiped out
by those who cared nothing for the lives they were taking. So, I’m going to
kill you, eat you, and send what’s left to the Reaper. And before I do, I’m
going to make sure that you understand that your entire life leading up to this
moment was a pointless lie. That every life you took, every time you stood
over someone and proclaimed them to be below you, it meant nothing. Your
life was a waste, your existence means nothing, and now it will end. You will
be the equal of all those you killed. I don’t know what the Reaper has in store
for you, but I’m going to hand you over rough.”
Pei steeled her aura, launching it at the man in a last-ditch effort to fight
not just for her life, but for her faith and for her soul. It slammed into an iron
wall and the man laughed cruelly. She felt his aura wrap around hers like a
hand and slowly start to squeeze.
“The messenger aura,” he mocked. “So special. So unique. So powerful.
I’d ask how it feels to have the embodiment of what makes you superior
broken down to nothing, but I can feel it. I can feel your faith dying, and
you’ll follow it soon. In not much better condition either.”
Pei rallied her strength, pushing everything she had into her aura, but the
man was right. He couldn’t injure her soul directly, but her faith was
shattered, which cut deeper than any wound. As the source of her aura, she
could no longer muster the strength she once had. Even so, her aura didn’t
collapse completely. Then, in a final moment of crushing despair, she
realised she was not holding him off at all. He was finishing her slowly, just
because he could.
The final straw came when another outrageous familiar, a shadow of the
Reaper, emerged from the darkness. Her defences collapsed and she fell to
the floor, dropping not just to her feet but to her knees.
“You may be getting carried away, Mr Asano,” the shadow warned,
finally letting her know the name of her murderer.
“Your father will get his due, Shade.”
Pei realised that it wasn’t just any shadow of the Reaper, but the astral
being’s famous wandering child. Who was this Asano, to have such a
retinue?
“I am not concerned about my progenitor, Mr Asano. I am concerned
about how far you are going.”
“So am I,” another voice came from behind Asano. It was the other
adventurer, still looking in from the trapdoor. “Jason, you remember that the
whole ‘guy with evil powers’ thing was a joke, right?”
The man named Asano turned away from her to look at the newcomer.
“Put her down, Jason,” the adventurer said. “Quick and clean. You don’t
have to rip her soul out while you’re at it.”
“She is her soul, and I can’t destroy it,” Asano said. “All I can do is
consume her residual life force as she transitions from a physical and spiritual
gestalt to a purely spiritual entity. It won’t be pleasant, but I’m not sucking
anyone’s soul out.”
“Jason, what you were talking about sounds a lot like an energy vampire.
Like whatever Thadwick turned into. Do you want that?”
Asano didn’t respond, but his cloak vanished, revealing the back of his
blood-red robes to her. The robes grew slick and wet as a thick coating of
blood seeped from them.
“Feed,” Asano commanded. “The woman and the worms.”
On the planet that the messengers had abandoned to the sanguine horror,
she had never been in real danger. She’d always been protected because she
wasn’t powerful enough for the heavy fighting. For that reason, she had never
feared, even as she had watched millions of natives be devoured, and even
some of her own kind that were caught out. She had watched them scream as
they were devoured, musing over their lack of equanimity as they suffered
the price of their failure. The same failure that was now hers.
As leeches poured out of the slick red robes, Pei Vas Kartha screamed for
the first and last time.
64
S I G N I F I C A NT LY M O R E P OW E R F U L

C LIVE WINCED AT THE GRISLY SOUND OF CHEWING THAT FILLED THE TUNNEL .
The worms were being merrily devoured by toothy leeches that grew in
number as they ate. The sound of fleshy consumption was accompanied by a
muffled screaming that came from the largest pile of leeches, under which the
messenger was buried. The pile undulated with the messenger’s helpless
thrashing.
The auras mixed up in the tunnel were unsettling. The strongest was
Jason’s, which loomed like a prison tower. Although it was not directed at
Clive, it filled him with unease, like an authoritarian monument. Next was the
aura of the sanguine horror.
Clive knew that the familiar was an apocalypse beast. He remembered
hearing about it in the beginning and being disturbed, but somehow it had
become normal to him. Jason had a way of hiding the disturbing things, such
as giving the creature an innocuous name. But as Clive felt the fully
unleashed hunger of it, the need to consume without end, he recalled the
dread that had struck him on first learning about Colin.
In that way, summoner and familiar were alike: easy to forget what lay
underneath the smiles and the jokes. Jason watched his familiar feed, the
hood of his cloak pushed back to reveal his stony expression. The impassive
manner in which he watched the heaping mounds of bloody monsters chew
up flesh was almost as confronting to Clive as the scene itself. He searched in
Jason’s expression for the laughing man he had met back in Greenstone, but
he had trouble finding it.
Clive thought of the mirage chamber recording from Greenstone where
Jason fought Rick Geller’s team. Jason was embarrassed by it and the way he
played up his monstrous behaviour. The act had been enough to intimidate
inexperienced teenagers, at least for a little while. But what Clive had just
seen in the tunnel wasn’t an act. There was something in Jason now that he’d
had to fake back then. Something all too easy to take out. Clive hoped that it
would be as simple to put away again.
“I’m fine, Clive,” Jason assured him, although his granite-hard voice was
unconvincing. It wasn’t the cold malevolence with which he had broken
down the will of the messenger, but echoes of that cruelty remained. Jason’s
gaze did not flinch from the bloody pile of creatures beneath which the
messenger was dying.
“It’s rude to read my emotions, Jason.”
“How could I not when your aura is all but shouting them? It’s time for
more team exercises in aura control, I think.”
The other auras in the tunnel, aside from Clive’s own, were of the worms
and the messenger. The worms were also an apocalypse beast swarm, yet it
seemed like little more than feed before the sanguine horror. The worms
exuded animalistic terror as they attempted in vain to escape the all-
devouring familiar.
As for the messenger, Clive tried to shut out her aura from his senses. He
had seen a lot of combat and death, even for a silver-ranker, but he had never
felt a death. Her aura felt broken, shattered by helplessness and despair that
dwarfed even the pain of being consumed alive.
“Jason, please just end this.”
“They’re connected,” Jason said in reply.
“What?”
“The messengers. I don’t know how it works exactly, but it’s to do with
an astral king.”
“Like you.”
“Significantly more powerful than me.”
“You think one of them is here? In this world?”
“No. It’s a servant of some kind. It’s connected to the astral king, the way
Colin and Gordon are connected to me, but deeper than that. Because their
king is stronger, so is the power it can give its servants. And one of those
powers is influence over those who subject themselves to that astral king.
Including this messenger.”
“So, this servant knows what’s happening here?”
“I don’t think so, not entirely. Just what’s happening to this one. It can
feel her pain, her despair.”
“So, that’s what you’re doing? Sending a message to the messengers?”
“Yes.”
“I think they’ve probably gotten it, Jason. So put an end to this.”
“Clive, they’ve killed who knows how many people, turning them into
nothing but places to stash these worms.”
“Yes, Jason. They’re callous and evil. Are you fighting them because
we’re better than they are, or to prove that you can be worse?”
Jason finally turned from the leech mound the messenger was buried
under to look at Clive.
“I don’t know,” he said in little more than a whisper.
He turned back to the pile.
“Mine is the judgement, and the judgement is death.”
Blue, silver and gold light came beaming down from the ceiling and into
the leech mound. The leeches were unaffected aside from the mound
deflating as the transcendent damage eradicated the messenger.

Ability: [Verdict] (Doom)

Spell (execute).
Cost: Moderate mana.
Cooldown: 30 seconds.

Current rank: Silver 4 (87%).

Effect (iron): Deals a small amount of transcendent damage. As an


execute effect, damage scales exponentially with the enemy’s level
of injury.
Effect (bronze): Damage scaling is increased by instances of
[Penance] on the target.

Effect (silver): Inflicts or refreshes [Sanction] on the target.

[Sanction] (affliction, holy): Healing, recovery and regeneration


effects have diminished potency. Base strength of this effect is very
minor but scales exponentially with the enemy’s level of injury.
Scaling is affected by [Legacy of Sin] in the same way execute
damage is. Cannot be cleansed while any instances of [Penance] are
present.

After the light of the spell ended, smoke seeped out of the leeches. This was
not the rainbow smoke of a monster, however, but akin to the transcendent
light of Jason’s spell. The smoke itself was blue, with gold and silver light
sparkling inside it. Clive postulated that the magic from which a messenger’s
body was made was more refined than that of a monster. He had heard of
similar phenomena around the deaths of very high-rank essence users.
There was also a red haze mixed into the smoke, wet and heavy like the
air before a storm. The haze was slowly fading, turning into more sparkling
light. Clive could sense the remnant aura of the messenger within it. Jason
held out his hand and chanted another spell.
“As your life was mine to reap, so your death is mine to harvest.”
The red haze moved towards Jason’s hand but struggled like a dog
pulling against its leash. Clive felt Jason’s aura push out, unleashing a soul
attack against the aura. The leash was cut and the life force was dragged out
of the aura and into Jason. Clive watched as Jason’s nebula eyes glowed
bright and his starlight cloak flared out, becoming a shadowy cloud. It took
on a shape like a bird silhouette, the stars inside it glowing brightly before the
bird shrank down to a cloak once more.

You have drained life force using [Blood Harvest].


Health, mana and stamina have been replenished.
You have gained multiple instances of [Blood Frenzy].

You have absorbed physical matter with inherent spiritual properties.


Your readiness to enter a star phoenix state has increased.

Current star phoenix state readiness: 0.3%

Jason looked down at his glowing hands, his body electrified as if he’d
mainlined a bolt of lightning. Clive looked on in concern as a predatory grin
crossed Jason’s face. The star phoenix state was what Jason turned into rather
than dying when his body was killed. It should have been unavailable to him
again until he reached gold rank, but now he had a new path forward. That it
went through the middle of the messengers did not bother him in the least. If
they were going to run around wiping out whole towns to use the people as
weapons, he had no qualms about devouring them.
Shade, who had been watching silently, finally spoke up.
“Mr Asano, while I recognise that you are simply accelerating her
transition from a physical-spiritual gestalt to a purely spiritual state, the
process is extremely traumatic to the soul.”
“I know,” Jason said softly. “I can feel it.”
“Mr Asano, I’ve warned you in the past about there being some things
you don’t come all the way back from.”
“I’m not coming back. On Earth, people came after me time and time
again because they didn’t respect me as a threat. You think Jack Gerling
would have been so cavalier about killing Kaito, Greg and Asya if he thought
I’d peel his soul like a grape in return?”
“Escalation is not a good way to handle a situation, Mr Asano.”
“I know. I’m going to need you to stop me from going too far, like when
you stopped me from ripping that guy’s soul out.”
“What?” Clive asked, but Jason ignored the question.
“But I have to be willing to go far enough,” Jason continued.
“Is that the person you want to be?” Shade asked.
Jason gave Shade a sad smile.
“You know how much time I’ve spent brooding about what I was going
to turn into,” he said. “That time is over. Now the question is about living
with what I’ve become.”
This time, the smile he gave Clive and Shade was genuine.
“Sometimes I’m going to have to do things that aren’t very nice, and I’m
done struggling against the parts of myself that let me do them. I’ve always
been afraid of how easy is to take those parts out when I need them. But
accepting them is the only way I’ll be able put them away again when I’m
done.”
Jason looked around at the leeches that grew in number as the number of
worms lessened. Some of the worms had fled further into the tunnel and
down the stairs leading deeper. A pile of Colin glooped after it, also spilling
down the stairs into the areas neither Jason nor Clive had yet seen. Other
worms had dug into the hard-packed dirt, digging neat, thin holes. The
leeches had followed by digging rough, ugly burrows. Even with many of the
leeches departing, there was no shortage left.

Familiar [Colin] has reached maximum potential biomass for its


current rank.

Unlike the world-consuming terror that a sanguine horror could become,


Colin was limited by the power of the vessel Jason created for him. He was
also infused with Jason’s power as an astral king, however, and Jason
decided to test what he could accomplish with that. He opened the gate to his
soul space and had the excess Colin crawl inside.
Jason followed, arriving in the extradimensional realm within his soul,
where he possessed god-like power. They were in one of the many cloud
buildings, this one round and empty, with a transparent roof. Colin
conglomerated from a leech pile into a blood clone of Jason, looking at his
summoner.
“You trust me to try something?” Jason asked.
Colin nodded immediately.
“Just to be clear, I don’t know exactly what I’m doing,” Jason warned
him. “I may be winging it a bit.”
Colin opened his mouth to emit a nails-on-chalkboard shriek.
“Hey,” Jason complained. “I do so know what I’m doing most of the
time. Some of the time, definitely. I make plans.”
Another screech.
“My plans are just fine, thank you.”
Shriek.
“I’ll have you know that I haven’t died in more than a year.”
Snarling screech.
“Okay, yes, that one was quite close. But I lived. I will admit that the
recovery time was longer than I would have liked.”
Jason frowned at the blood clone.
“Don’t give me that look. I’m just going to start, alright?”
Jason didn’t reach out with his senses as, in his soul realm, his senses
were already everywhere. Instead, he concentrated on the portion of Colin
that was in the realm with him. He explored the nature of the familiar, from
the core astral entity to the vessel containing it to the two links that bound it
to Jason.
One was the familiar link, which was strong but contractual and
impermanent. The other was more tenuous and crudely forged, but
permanent. Jason explored that link further as he tapped into the astral throne
and astral gate. These two elements of his soul were the core of what had
turned his soul into a physical domain.
The crude link was something that Colin had initiated himself while Jason
was unconscious, struggling to survive after pushing his limits. What Jason
had done to put himself in that position had broken down two extremely
powerful items inside his soul. One of these items had been given by a great
astral being and the other taken from one by Jason. Each item was intended to
be used in specific ways, with specific limitations, but when Jason managed
to damage his very soul, the items were damaged with it.
This resulted in the power driving the items being loosed as the items
themselves broke down. Jason’s soul absorbed large amounts from both, with
the rest triggering Jason’s loot power, which saved the leftover power from
killing him. Jason traded that leftover power away, but what he absorbed had
changed him on a fundamental level. It was responsible for the astral throne
and astral gate that now resided in his soul, reforging it into a physical realm.
And he was the astral king of that realm.
Jason was still in the earliest stage of learning what that meant. Before he
had even awoken, however, two of his familiars had made use of it. As Jason
was just learning, astral kings could bestow powers through a bond. His
existing familiar bonds served as an invitation, allowing Colin and Gordon to
accept that bond while Jason remained unconscious.
Jason had never actively attempted to manipulate that bond, but now did
so for the first time. Working by instinct and moving with caution, Jason
tapped into the astral throne and astral gate. He was still inexpert in wielding
their power, which Dawn had cautioned him to leave alone, especially the
astral gate. Naturally, that was what Jason had used the most.
The astral throne governed matter and physical forces, and Jason used it
to refine Colin’s physical vessel. The astral gate affected the spiritual, and
dimensional forces, which he used to modify the nature of the connections
between Colin, Jason and the physical vessel Colin inhabited.

You have attempted to disconnect the portion of familiar vessel


[Colin] in your astral kingdom from the main host.
If disconnected, the portion of the vessel can be claimed by the main
host by entering the astral kingdom, up to the biomass limit for its
rank.
Disconnected vessel portions will not count against the biomass limit
of the main host.
Destruction of the main host vessel will result in the main host
returning to the astral kingdom and claiming the disconnected vessel
portion, up to the biomass limit for its rank.
The blood clone splashed down as it turned into blood, Colin’s consciousness
no longer contained in that portion of it. Jason used his ability to control
physics to avoid any landing on him. He then manipulated the large, round
building around him. The walls turned from cloud stuff to black brick with a
dark red sheen. The translucent ceiling turned into dark greenhouse glass and
the floor into thick, rich soil. A pit formed in the middle of the room and the
blood immediately flowed into it, barely covering the floor at the bottom. The
air grew hazy and humid as plants grew from the soil, dark green, lush and
leafy.
The end result was like a dark jungle greenhouse, built around an almost
empty pit of blood. Jason was confident that Colin would like it. Jason’s
experiment worked out quite well, as his intention was to create a storehouse
of biomass for Colin. The leech familiar frequently had much of it destroyed
in combat, and replenishing it took time.
Having a storehouse of it meant that Colin could be ready to return to the
fight much faster. That was predicated on taking the time to fill the pit,
however. Colin would be working on that right now, feeding on the worms
outside of Jason’s soul realm.
Or was it astral kingdom? Jason had changed what he called the
dimensional space inside himself several times. This was partly as it
developed and changed, and partly as the names for all Jason’s
interdimensional assets blurred into a confusing mess. Was ‘astral kingdom’
what the realms of astral kings were properly known as? Was it what the
messengers called it? Jason’s interface had shown the ability many times to
properly label things when even Jason didn’t know the name.
Gordon manifested, floating over the blood pool. The eye-orbs around
him rapidly flickered in complex patterns.
“Yes, I’ll see what I can do for you too,” Jason told him. “Not right now,
though. We have to go fight more evil.”
More flickering.
“Yes, I know I took the time with Colin, but he has all these worms to eat
and he’d already gained his maximal biomass. It was the perfect time to try.”
Flickering, with long, bright pauses.
“No, I’m not going to do Shade first. For one, he isn’t linked to me the
way you are. And I can promise you, he does not want the ability to turn into
Herbie the Love Bug. He even threatened to do that once.”
Flickering.
“Yes, it would probably be in shades of black and dark grey.”
65
EVIL LAIR

J ASON EMERGED FROM HIS SOUL SPACE , CLOAK AND HOOD BACK IN PLACE . I N
the tunnel beneath the town, Clive was looking at the empty space where the
messenger had died. There was no visible trace after Jason’s execute spell left
not so much as a single drop of blood. Instead, there was a pile of dirty
clothes and the orb she had used to avoid the worms. Clive was searching her
clothes for anything else left behind, but stood up on Jason’s return.
“You handled that with unexpected ease,” Clive said. “I expected more
from the messengers.”
“It didn’t feel so easy. I was impaled a lot of times. There was a spear
inside my head and it exploded.”
“Now that our bodies are generalised magical flesh, your ability to infuse
yours with additional life force is more useful. You can shrug off formidable
injury.”
“Exactly. That would have been rough if I hadn’t topped up before
coming down here. Also, I think she was as weak a messenger as we can
expect to face,” Jason said. “The one Shade and I spied on was stronger, even
within the same rank. And she didn’t lose because of a lack in power. She
lost because of a weak mentality.”
“You played on the messenger superiority fixation,” Clive said. “Used the
various quirks you possess to shake her.”
“That will only work on the weak-minded ones,” Jason said. “I sensed a
vulnerability in her emotions and exploited it. She was lesser amongst her
kind, so she already had a subconscious inferiority complex. Most won’t
break as easily, and I won’t often get the chance to try.”
“So, you saw a weakness and preyed on it,” Clive said. “How much of
what you said to her did you mean?”
“I played up the melodrama, but it all came from somewhere. I may have
embellished, but I didn’t lie.”
“Jason, are you alright?”
“I’m fine.”
“You didn’t sound fine. You sounded ready to twist the heads off puppies
and drink their insides.”
“I just told you about the melodrama. I’m okay, Clive, really. I’ve put the
evil hat away for now, and my familiars helped me stay balanced. I’m about
as good as you could ask for, given the horrors that have taken place in this
town. I’m more worried about you.”
“Me?”
“Clive, the entire population of this town were killed and turned into meat
puppets for alien worms. It won’t be the only town like this either. I don’t
know how much you’ve sensed about what was happening up there while we
were down here, but the team cleared out all the hosts. I imagine that with
everything going on down here, you subconsciously suppressed your sense of
smell.”
Clive concentrated on his olfactory senses, realising that Jason was right.
His nose was immediately choked with the cloying stench of death, drifting
down from above. His tongue was coated in the coppery taste of blood and he
almost gagged. It was not a physiological reaction but a mental one, driven
by disgust. His supernatural senses expanded, filling him in on the killing
field that had once been a town.
As shaken as Clive was, he had only seen the early stages of the fight. He
could feel the team’s unstable emotions, ranging from numb horror through
grim determination to burning rage. Suddenly, Jason breaking the will of the
messenger responsible before killing her did not seem like such an
overreaction.
“The messenger didn’t go up in rainbow smoke,” Jason said.
Clive knew his friend was only trying to distract him, but welcomed it.
“Refined magic in their bodies,” Clive explained. “I’m more interested in
the red haze that was in their death smoke.”
“Remnant life force,” Jason said. “Normally, transcendent damage would
wipe that out when the body is completely eradicated, but the life of
messengers is not just physical. It’s tenacious, which is why I had to fight her
soul down to take it. Resurrection magic doesn’t work on messengers. Or
anyone like them.”
“Like you?”
“Yeah. But I have my own thing going on.”
“Is that what that bird form your cloak took on was? That looked like a
star phoenix.”
“You know star phoenixes?”
“They’re a symbol commonly associated with the Celestial Book.”
“I forgot you were in the bag for a great astral being. Didn’t really know
what that meant when you told me. You’re not in a cult or an order or
something, are you?”
“No. Those of us that venerate the Celestial Book maintain a loose
network, with ties to the Magic Society and the Church of Knowledge. I
haven’t been keeping in touch very often since the Magic Society and I
parted ways. They’d be very interested in you.”
“There’s a little too much of that going around,” Jason said. “Thus, the
false identity.”
“You aren’t hiding your real one very well.”
“If the fake story falls apart, then fine,” Jason said. “These may be the
only real adventuring years I have. I’m not going to waste them pretending.”
“What do you mean, the only real adventuring years?”
“I don’t know what Dawn told you about what’s coming,” Jason said.
“She didn’t want me to ask, so I didn’t. But something’s waiting for me down
the road, Clive, and it’s not good.”
“I’m not meant to talk about it,” Clive said. “But Dawn excluded me
when she talked to the others. I don’t know why.”
“Because she knew that you’d figure out something you shouldn’t.
Shouldn’t yet, at least.”
“It’s not like you to accept secrets being held over your fate, Jason.”
“I trust Dawn. Not her boss, but her.”
Jason turned to look down the tunnel, but instead of heading in, reached
out to Humphrey through voice chat.
“You need us to come up?”
“You’re alive, then,” Rufus said. “We were sensing the fight down there.”
“I told you he’d be fine,” Neil said. “Probably got another stupid power
out of it.”
“More like a new way to use an old one,” Jason said.
“Wait, you actually did?” Neil exclaimed. “That is a pile of heidel sh—”
“What about the messenger?” Humphrey asked, cutting Neil off. “Was
that her dying we sensed?”
“Yeah,” Jason said.
“Felt like she went out rough,” Sophie said. “Good.”
“We’re mopping up out here,” Rufus said. “We’re definitely not done,
but it’s finally looking like the town is running out of hosts. I don’t think we
need the help.”
“We can’t spare anyone, but I don’t think we need the help,” Humphrey
said. “Explore the hidden area and see if there’s anything else we need to deal
with.”
Jason and Clive shared a grim look. While they both hoped to find little
downstairs, they feared encountering fresh horrors.
“Let’s go,” Jason said. “I have a bad feeling that the other adventuring
teams are finding much the same right now, all across the region.”
“Will that be alright with just the two of us? At the very least, a lot of
worms escaped down there.”
“Any that haven’t been eaten yet will be too scared of Colin to come for
me,” Jason assured him. “And as for you…”
Jason looked at the messenger’s clothes, piled at Clive’s feet with the orb
on top of them. Using his aura, Jason floated it up in front of Clive.
“…that should keep you safe.”
Clive reached out and took the ball.
“Are you worried about how much you’re like them?” he asked.
“I can’t change it, so there’s no point worrying about it,” Jason said. “I’m
trying to make that my new personal philosophy. See if I can’t cut back on
the brooding.”
Jason flashed Clive a smile, but it wasn’t quite right. They could both still
smell the blood and death in the air. Clive nodded at him and they set off
down the brick tunnel.
“If being like the messengers gives me something I can use,” Jason said,
“I’m going to use it. So long as I don’t end up hurting people the way they
do.”
“I don’t think it’s their powers,” Clive said as they reached the top of the
stairs and peered down. “I think they just have a culture of being detestable
scum.”
The large slate bricks from which the hidden basement was built
continued down the stairs and into a wide chamber lit by glow stones in a
ceiling that stood two storeys high, with catwalks roaming around the upper
level. Arched doorways led into side chambers, but the main chamber itself
had plenty to look at. Clive knew a magical workshop when he saw one, with
workbenches, freestanding magical tools and magically driven vents in the
ceiling and walls. Most prominent were massive vats, some empty and some
teeming with worms swimming in sickly yellow fluid.
Even at a glance, it was clear that this was the centre in which the worms
had been bred, and not just because of the worms crawling around, being
hunted and devoured by Colin. The stairs were slick with ichor from where
worms had already met their end.
As they descended, they spotted four glass cylinders that had been
obscured by the vats from their initial vantage. These were just the right size
to hold people, and three of the vats had elves inside. Jason and Clive
extended their senses, quickly realising that the occupants were dead.
They moved towards the centre of the chamber, which had an open
workspace with long, clean tables. Worms writhed around the room with
leeches in pursuit, but they avoided Jason and the orb in Clive’s hand.
“What do you think?” Jason asked, standing in the middle of the
chamber. “My magical studies were all astral magic, not whatever passes for
biological sciences. I know an evil lair when I see one, though. Catwalks over
monster breeding vats are bit of a giveaway.”
Clive looked at the catwalks, which had no ladders or stairs to reach
them. He guessed that the messenger, who could float around everywhere,
had only used them to rest objects on while working. This was reinforced by
the crates on them that he guessed were filled with whatever served as
nutrient supply for the vats. He desperately hoped it wasn’t chunks of people.
“Am I imagining it,” Jason asked, “or do the messengers have much
better aura shielding magic than us? My senses can’t get out of here any more
than they could get in.”
“The party interface is still active,” Clive observed. “It can’t be a
complete seal. But if you can’t extend your senses past these walls, that’s
probably the case. Securing an area against perception requires a lot of
infrastructure and special materials, at least by any magic we know. I’m
guessing this place just has ritual circles in place behind these slate tile
walls.”
Clive’s senses weren’t as strong as Jason’s, but his perception power
excelled at recognising and analysing in-place magical effects, like rituals.
That allowed him to notice things that even Jason’s perception missed.
“There’s something going on with that section of wall,” he said, pointing.
“Also, in the floor, in the middle of the room. You want to take the floor
while I look at the wall?”
“Belinda will be of more use to you than me,” Jason said. “I’ll swap out
with her.”
He opened the voice chat to the rest of the team again. “How is it going
up there?”
“We think we’ve just about run out of townsfolk,” Humphrey said in a
haunted voice. “It’s… it’s bad up here.”
“I know,” Jason said softly. “I’m sorry you had to go through that.”
His own voice was haunted by the thousands of dead he’d been unable to
save in Broken Hill and Makassar on Earth. Just as he’d had to fight the
victims after they were brought back to life, Humphrey and the team had cut
down all the townsfolk already reduced to hosts for the worms.
“We’re going to get the messengers back for this,” Sophie snarled. “They
think they can just use people however they want.”
“Getting the messengers back doesn’t matter,” Humphrey said. “What’s
important is stopping them from doing this again. But if that means killing
them all, then that can’t be helped.”
Jason couldn’t think of anything that marked the severity of what the
team had been through more than a bloodthirsty Humphrey. Even under the
current circumstances, it came as a shock.
“I’ll come up, and swap out with Lindy,” Jason said. “We’ve found some
kind of magic workshop, so she’ll be more use than I am down here.”
He extended his senses through the room, determining that few of the
worms remained. Colin, on the other hand, was growing close his maximum
potential biomass again.
“Colin, leave enough to clean up the last worms and have the rest follow
me. Gather yourself together so we can go outside.”
All around the room, leeches melted into pools of blood. Wet strips of
ragged bandage shot out of them, tangling together at the bottom of the stairs.
The blood pools flowed quickly along the bandages, swiftly coagulating into
Colin’s blood clone form. It followed Jason up the stairs.
66
I M P E R F EC T R E S P O N S E S

T HE MESSENGER J ES F IN K AAL HOVERED JUST OVER THE FLAT ROOF OF A


circular tower in a messenger stronghold. She was looking out over the
rainforest contemplatively when another messenger floated up through the
round hole in the middle of the roof. It was the dark-skinned and silver-haired
Hess Jor Nasala, who was subordinate to Kaal. Not only was Kaal gold rank
to his silver, but she was also a Voice of the Will.
“Our agents in the city have reached out,” he reported. “The investigation
into them has been suspended for the moment as the Adventure Society
moves to respond to the world-taker worms. As you predicted, they are
committing significant forces to the eradication, now they have discovered
the threat. They are moving even more quickly than anticipated.”
“Will that affect the readiness of our forces?” Kaal asked, not turning her
eyes from the vista.
“It will not, Voice. The wing leaders are prepared to move on the city at
your command.”
Kaal nodded. “Inform the wing commander that he may move at his
discretion,” Kaal ordered. “But first, I would like to hear you out on
something.”
“It would be my honour, Voice Kaal.”
“Since my arrival here, I have found your counsel to be sound, Hess Jor
Nasala. I am grappling with an issue and would value your perspective.”
“Of course.”
“Pei Vas Kartha is dead.”
Hess frowned in thought until he recalled the name.
“One of the worm breeders? My understanding is that we assigned the
least of us to those positions exactly because of the risk.”
“Indeed, we did,” Kaal said. “That choice, however, has now presented us
with an unanticipated problem.”
“There was an issue with Pei Vas Kartha’s death?”
“Yes. We have an enemy who, through intention or happenstance, has
found a way to bring us trouble.”
“How so?”
“I felt Pei Vas Kartha’s death. It was ugly, but that, in and of itself, is not
the concern. The problem is that before she died, her will was broken. She
came to accept that something stood above the messengers in superiority.”
“Then she was deserving of death. I see now why sending the least of us
was a problem. What of the others?”
“Most escaped. Several died, but none in shame, like Pei Vas Kartha. I
believe what happened to her does not reflect a new approach by the enemy
forces, but an individual within them.”
“You believe it is this man Asano?”
“I consider it likely. I have dangerous suspicions about him.”
“Dangerous?”
“Do you think it is possible for there to be a silver-rank astral king? One
that does not come from within our own kind, no less?”
“In my experience, Voice, it is best not to count anything as wholly
impossible.”
“Wise,” she said with a nod. “What do you see as the central problem in
finding an approach to deal with Asano?”
Hess did not respond immediately and gave the question consideration.
“Ambiguity,” he said after thinking it over. “Any action we take has the
potential to ripple negatively through our people. If he truly is an astral king,
do we venerate him or strike him down? If we venerate someone not a
messenger, it undermines the core tenets of our people’s pride and self-
image. If we eliminate him, it undermines the absolute authority of the astral
kings.”
“Yes,” Kaal agreed. “But there is an aspect that makes that question of
whether to kill him not a question at all.”
“That if he truly is an astral king, he deserves veneration.”
“Exactly. If he is not, that simplifies things. If he is, he is more
complicated to respond to as a threat.”
“Do we need to respond at all?” Hess asked.
“Yes,” Kaal said. “The death of Pei Vas Kartha is the beginning, not the
end. If we leave him free to wreak havoc, he will.”
Hess frowned.
“If we are going to target him, the knowledge of what he did to Pei Vas
Kartha may give our less strong-willed people reason to hesitate. If one of us
is willing to acknowledge this man as superior, what if he is? Allowing seeds
of doubt to be planted into the soil of our faith is dangerous.”
“But if we keep what he did a secret, it will be fine so long as it remains a
secret. If not, we’ll be seen as tacitly acknowledging his superiority, seeking
to crush him before the truth spreads.”
“Are our people so weak-willed that they would be swayed so easily?”
“We are a people built on a faith that everyone we oppress seeks to
challenge. Doubt is no more than a pinprick to the faithful, but a pinprick that
carries poison. Enough poison will bring down even the mightiest beast. And
even in our own ranks, there are those who would question our values.”
“The unorthodoxy,” Hess said, his expression troubled.
“This man who killed Pei Vas Kartha, be it Asano or someone else, offers
us only imperfect responses to his deed. Whatever we do, including nothing
at all, will bring complications. My greatest concern is if this was their
intention. That suggests an enemy not to be taken lightly.”
Hess did not respond, knowing better than to talk for the sake of it.
Instead, he considered the problem at hand while gazing out from atop the
tower. After musing on it for some time, he spoke up.
“Perhaps we need to recontextualise how we see him,” he suggested.
“While the forces of the astral kings may come into conflict, we are unused to
viewing an astral king as an external enemy. If we can resolve his identity as
an enemy with his identity as an astral king, it may be possible to turn him
from a problem into a solution.”
“Go on,” Kaal told him.
“The Adventure Society and the rulers of the elven city know about the
natural array and the threat it poses, not just to us but to them. They have
even sent diplomatic envoys more than once. The wing commander executed
them, of course. While assistance would be useful, we cannot be seen
working with the servant races. But we need essence users to deal with the
array, which is why we have been enslaving them.”
“I have seen these servants,” Kaal said. “Those who will kneel before us
are too weak-willed to resist the array’s effects.”
“But if an astral king were to be the representative of the local denizens,
that would be an acceptable alliance. We can have them send those with the
required strength of will.”
Kaal finally turned to look at Hess.
“An interesting idea. An astral king is an acceptable ally, but we must be
sure that it is an astral king we are dealing with. He needs to be tested.”
“Use Fal Vin Garath. He lacks leadership and strategic abilities, but every
messenger is superior in their own way. Even if he dies to Asano, he will die
fighting, not kneeling.”
Kaal nodded. “Have the wing commander detach a group in the city
attack to target Asano specifically. If he is hard to track as our agents have
suggested, target his team.”
“And if Asano hides during the attack?”
“Then that itself is an answer.”

The town was a killing field, blanketed in dead. The elves had been enemies,
but really, they were victims. The worms had not just killed them but had
driven their bodies to attack the team. As a result, the people Jason and his
companions had been there to save were stacked in corpse piles across the
town.
The powers of essence users were unkind in their violence. Bodies were
piled up in mounds, men, women and children left in states that were chilling
to look at. Flesh scorched or rotted black. Severed limbs, hewn torsos and
heads cleft apart.
Now that the fighting was mostly over, the team had time to see what
they had made of what had looked like an ordinary happy town on their
arrival. Knowing that the parasitic worms had sealed the fate of the town long
before their arrival was cold comfort as they made their way through the
thousands of dead that carpeted the streets.
At some stage, whatever mind that controlled them decided to take what
hosts remained and fled. This left the team to the grim task of hunting them
down, which felt uncomfortably like following up a massacre of civilians by
eliminating the fleeing witnesses. Jason returned to the team, who were
moving as a loose group through the town.
“We’re not having trouble catching the elves serving as worm-hosts,”
Humphrey told Jason. “The elves can’t outrun me, let alone Sophie. The
problem is the worms that have been crawling off on their own. They’ve
gone into the trees, the houses, the rice fields; we’re pretty sure some of them
just started digging down. With your senses and Shade’s bodies for mobility,
you can find and deal with them quicker than the rest of us combined.”
Sophie returned in a blur, stopping in front of Jason. She peered into his
dark hood.
“What are you doing?” he asked.
“I noticed this earlier,” she said, “but I can see your head.”
“I can see your head too,” he told her.
“You can see his head?” Humphrey asked as the others crammed
themselves next to Sophie to look into Jason’s hood.
“What exactly is going on?” Jason asked, acting disgruntled. He knew the
team was trying to distract themselves from the horrors around them and the
part they played in it. If ignoring it with a little forced humour helped them
cope even a little better, he was happy to play along. He remembered his own
similar experience on Earth and wanted the team to deal with it better than he
had under similar circumstances.
“Your hood used to completely hide your head,” Humphrey said. “It was
just darkness in there. Then you came back and we could see your eyes, but
nothing else. Now we can see your head. Kind of. The silhouette of your
head.”
“Especially your chin,” Sophie said. “With your rank-ups and your beard,
it seemed a lot less pointy than before. Seeing it stick out of the dark like that,
though, you’re really reminded that you could put someone’s eye out with
that thing.”
“It does not stick out,” Jason insisted. “If it did, you’d have noticed it
long ago. My cloak’s appearance changed back in Rimaros, and you’re only
spotting the difference now?”
“In fairness,” Rufus said, arriving to join the group, “your cloak also
looks like you’re wearing a portal now. You can’t blame us for missing a
relatively minor detail.”
“I don’t know that ‘minor’ is the word,” Belinda said.
“Lindy, go help Clive,” Jason told her. “He found some magic doors.”
“I’ll head off, then,” she said agreeably. “If I need to pick a lock, I’ll call
and you can bring your chin.”
While most of the team continued to round up elves, Jason went hunting
worms that had left their hosts. He swept his senses over the town to find
them and deployed Shade’s bodies as shadow-jumping targets. As for dealing
with the worms, that was Colin’s area, with occasional help from Gordon.
Most of the worms were making their way through the rice paddies, where
Jason would sprinkle a few leeches and move on. Whether hidden in the
water or buried in the mud, Colin would find and devour the lesser
apocalypse beast.
Some of the worms had climbed into trees, hiding in the upper reaches.
Gordon used his beam to cut off branches or even topple the entire tree,
giving Colin easy access to them. It was a similar case in buildings where
worms had hidden under floorboards or between wall panels. Gordon opened
them up and Colin happily undertook his grisly work.
They wanted to be thorough in eradicating the worms, as there were
uncertainties about how they reproduced. They did not match Colin, who
could eat to multiply, but they had at least some means of self-replication.
The worms could soak up the life energy in healing magic used on their hosts
to reproduce, although there were possibly limits to that. Otherwise, what
was the point of the underground breeding centre?
Carlos had given them some information about the creatures, but his
knowledge was far from comprehensive. The worms were not a native
species to Pallimustus, which was fortunate but made information hard to
come by. Hunting down the errant worms might have been critical or futile;
they just didn’t know. It was more likely than not that there were many towns
in similar situations.
Jason made several wide-ranging passes over and around the town to be
sure as he could that he’d gotten them all. He then reconvened with the team
back in the underground worm-breeding facility. Colin had finished the last
of the worms there, the leeches Jason left behind clearing out the last ones
that had escaped down the stairs. Colin had then moved onto the ones
floating in vats, swimming through the unappealing yellow liquid.
Clive and Belinda spent that time assessing the place. The two anomalies
that Clive had spotted were places where hidden doors would open by
shifting sections of wall or floor. Belinda had traced out the doors and the
opening mechanisms, but hadn’t triggered them yet. She wanted to carefully
assess them for traps and other fail-safes before taking any action.
“Why secret doors?” Neil wondered. “This place is secret already, right?”
“Maybe it was from when they were first setting up,” Clive postulated.
“There’s no way all this was put in place without people noticing things, even
using magic. They would need collaborators with authority, like the mayor or
some influential local elders. Whatever is behind these doors might have
been the things the messengers were worried would give the collaborators
second thoughts.”
“Once you’re helping someone turn everyone in your town into a worm-
incubating corpse,” Neil said, “I think you’re past the point of second
thoughts.”
“Perhaps that was the point,” Belinda suggested. “These vats are all in the
open now, but there are signs of them having been moved. The messengers
might have convinced the collaborators that it was a more conventional
attack. Stockpiling weapons or something, good old-fashioned treason. In the
meantime, the first batch of worms was being cultivated in the hidden rooms.
Once the collaborators don’t matter, are in too deep or have just been infested
themselves, the operation expands and the vats come out.”
“Would they actually work with elves, though? Aren’t all we non-
messenger races too unworthy to work alongside?”
“Given that any collaborators are doubtless worm-filled corpses right
now, I doubt the messengers thought of it like that. They wanted it to be
secret, so they used the people of this town as necessary. I doubt they even
thought of turning on them as a betrayal.”
“It doesn’t matter what happened or why,” Sophie said. “The Adventure
Society will be crawling over this place soon enough. Let them figure it out. I
just want to find the ones who think they can do this to people and bury my
fist in their heads.”
“We’ll have some answers once we open these doors,” Belinda said.
“Maybe that will help us find a head for you to put a fist inside of.”
She was crouched down in front of the secret door set into one of the
walls. She had drawn a variety of sigils around it and left strange-looking
magical tools lying around.
“I don’t know enough about their aura magic to stop the trap on this door
from being triggered when we open it,” Belinda explained. “I’m
disconnecting the trap altogether, so we should be able to trigger it and have
nothing happen.”
“Should be able to?” Neil asked.
“If you don’t think I’ll get it right,” Belinda told him, “you can disconnect
the trap yourself. You want to take over?”
He held up his hands in surrender.
“That’s what I thought,” she said, turning back to her work. “This trap is
a bit funny, though.”
“Funny how?” Humphrey asked.
“The trap isn’t pointing out.”
“Not pointing out?” Humphrey asked. “What do you mean?”
“I mean that this door was rigged so that if you open it, you kill whoever
is inside, not whoever is out here.”
“That implies prisoners,” Rufus said. “I think we’d best get that door
open as quickly as it can be done safely.”
“And here was me about to take a sandwich break,” Belinda said.
“It’s not necessarily prisoners,” Humphrey said. “The messengers are
happy to use an apocalypse beast as a weapon. It could be some other
dangerous creature.”
“Using an apocalypse beast,” Jason muttered reproachfully, shaking his
head. “The maniacs.”
The team all turned to give him a flat look.
“What?” he asked innocently.
67
TRIAGE

I N THE WORM - BREEDING FACILITY HIDDEN UNDER THE TOWN , J ASON AND HIS
team gathered around as Belinda prepared to open the hidden door. Inside
could be anything from an empty room to a wildly dangerous entity, so they
were prepared to spring into action. When she finally triggered the door, a
whole section of the slate brick wall shifted backwards and to the side,
revealing a large opening.
The room inside was dark, with only the floating lights from the main
chamber outside the door providing any illumination. That didn’t stop Jason
as he took stock of the room, his Midnight Eyes power easily piercing the
dark. The chamber was large, at least half the size of the facility’s central
space. Cages were set out in rows, overstuffed with squalid, miserable elves.
Motes of starlight lifted off from Jason’s cloak and floated into the room,
filling it with a soft, silvery light. Not only did this allow the rest of the team
to see, but caused a stir amongst the prisoners. Few of their auras flickered
with hope, however, and the sounds were mostly fearful whimpers.
The elves were dirty from living in their own filth; men, women and
children were all crowded with barely room to sit, their knees pulled up
against their chests. Their auras shouted out their misery and suffering, but
also that they were alive and not worm-hosts. There were dozens of
survivors, all crammed into cages.
Jason noted that if the cages were absent, they would have been no less
trapped, but conditions would have been far more humane. They would have
had room to lie down for what sleep they could manage on the cold slate
floor. They could have relieved themselves on one side of the room and
stayed on the other, instead of being forced to go where they sat.
Jason felt his rage echo through the auras of his companions, but none of
them let it leak out. They were not going to spook the prisoners that had been
through more than enough already. Instead, they took joy in the fact that
anyone survived, even if it was just a fragment of the town’s population.
The team immediately went to work, Neil taking charge as the team
healer. Humphrey and Neil used their superior strength to pull open cages.
Sophie heavily pushed out her aura while the others withdrew theirs. Out of
everyone in the team, Sophie’s was the most reassuring and calming of the
group.

Ability: [Cleansing Breeze] (Wind)

Aura (recovery).
Base cost: None.
Cooldown: None.

Current rank: Silver 4 (12%).

Effect (iron): Allies within the aura have increased resistance to


curses, diseases, magic afflictions, poisons and unholy afflictions.
Cleansing abilities used on allies within the aura have increased
effect. Toxins are purged from the air within the aura.

Effect (bronze): Allies within the aura are continually cleansed of


curses, diseases, magic afflictions, poisons and unholy afflictions.
Mana and stamina recovery effects on allies have greater effect.

Effect (silver): When this ability cleanses an affliction from an ally,


they gain an instance of [Integrity].

[Integrity] (heal-over-time, mana-over-time, stamina-over-time,


holy): Periodically recover a small amount of health, stamina and
mana. Additional instances have a cumulative effect.

Despite the name, Sophie’s aura didn’t create a literal breeze. Instead, a
refreshing spiritual wave passed over the caged prisoners, purging the toxins
and diseases that had accumulated while they were all crammed in together.
It was an incongruous power within Sophie’s set, which primarily focused on
speed and violence.
The aura was the most direct expression of her soul, but was also shaped
by the tools used to unlock her aura power. The essence and awakening stone
involved were large factors, but even so, aura powers were considered to be
the ones most impacted by the nature of the person awakening the power. For
Sophie, most of her power set reflected the face she showed the world: swift
and untouchable. Yet the power that should represent her the most was
nurturing and protective.
An awkward expression crossed Sophie’s face as she pushed her aura out,
as if exposing a vulnerability. Belinda gave her a quick, reassuring hug from
behind and Humphrey flashed her a beaming smile.
The others also employed the power of their auras, careful to avoid being
imposing. Sophie’s aura turned the diseases and toxins the elves suffered in
their squalor into healing boons, and Belinda’s aura enhanced those boons.
Humphrey’s aura gave them a much-needed boost in strength and stamina. It
seemed they had been fed and watered, but just enough to keep most of them
alive. The team found dead amongst their number as well, two elderly people
and a young child.
The team’s auras were far from enough to settle the prisoners after all
they had been through. Even though the team was clearly not the messengers,
the prisoners became agitated at the new intruders into their hell. Sophie’s
aura at least managed to prevent things from escalating; a panicked stampede
could easily have led to deaths. Most of the people in the cages were normal
townsfolk, without the constitution to endure such conditions for long.
The way the team had been built from the outset, back in Greenstone,
meant that leadership did not always fall to Humphrey. The team took Neil’s
directions as he started the process of triage. His abilities, along with
Sophie’s aura, would help the initial management of the prisoners as they
extracted them from the tight cages.
Neil specifically had Jason not help, despite the usefulness of his
cleansing power. The nature of Jason’s powers would do more harm than
good when dealing with these people, already teetering on a ragged edge. The
last thing they needed was an ominous man feeding on their sins.
Jason joined the others, helping to clear space in the main room. Jason,
Rufus and Humphrey shifted tables and equipment under Clive’s direction, as
only he and Belinda could point out which things were dangerous to move.
Belinda started by conjuring tarps that she tossed over the worm vats, now
empty courtesy of Colin. They still contained sickly yellow fluid, streaked
with red.
They made a space at the side of the room near the stairs, where Belinda
conjured bunks and a treatment table for Neil to use. The team was not ready
to lead the people up those stairs, for two main reasons. One was that many
or most of the prisoners weren’t in a state to climb them. The other was that
the space upstairs was filled with dead, which was bad for both mentality and
hygiene.
Despite the horrifying conditions, and the doubtless horrifying
circumstances that brought them about, the prisoners were the lucky ones.
The people above, who had already been implanted with worms, would never
get any chance to recover.
Most of the people the prisoners knew were scattered around the town
above, not just dead but violently torn apart while fighting the team. Jason
and the others were not going to let them see that, and a gruesome stew of
pity, anger and shame sat heavy in their bellies.
Aside from one special group that Neil had quickly assessed as being in
no danger, they started moving patients to the treatment and recovery area the
team had set up. Neil went to work in earnest as he directed the rest of the
team to manage patients. First step was a cursory assessment by Neil,
followed by a quick shower. A simple cistern shower was about as much
complexity as Belinda could conjure, but it was enough. Jason pulled out a
barrel of crystal wash to fill it, making the shower cool but effective. Priority
went to the next person on Neil’s triage list for focused treatment, followed
by anyone else who had been through his initial assessment. A few he
determined too weak for the shower, so Belinda conjured a bath. While she
managed the shower, Jason washed the more delicate people, his telekinetic
aura gentler. It didn’t disturb those being washed, because they were the ones
too far gone to notice what was happening to them. It was hidden from
onlookers by the deep bath.
The recovery beds were bunked by necessity of space. Bottom bunks
went to the most delicate patients, usually after Neil was done with them.
Others had been deemed by Neil to not require treatment. A few were able to
climb the bunk ladders, but most were carefully assisted onto the higher
bunks by Humphrey and Rufus.
Clive had been directed by Neil to warm up the cold room with ritual
magic. The adventurers were unconcerned by the cold chamber, but the
prisoners were mostly normal people covered in filthy rags. Clive drew out a
ritual in the air over the treatment area. The golden light of the ritual drawing
turned to a warm glow as Clive chanted out the final element of the ritual.
“Is that the Healer’s Hearth ritual?” Neil asked him, neither his hands nor
eyes leaving the patient on his table.
“Yes,” Clive confirmed. “Rather than radiate warmth, it will gently
impart it directly into their bodies.”
“Good job.”
Once they had processed the bulk of the prisoners, Humphrey pulled
Rufus and Jason aside to discuss their next move. Humphrey activated a
privacy screen so the prisoners wouldn’t overhear them.
“What are we going to do with these people?” Humphrey asked. “Those
beds will do for now, but we can’t leave them there. We can’t take them
upstairs, though. Should we leave them here until support arrives from the
city?”
“I agree we can’t take them up into the town,” Rufus said. “If they see
what’s happened to their town, their friends and their families, they’ll suffer
all the more.”
“Their reaction to that would be unpredictable,” Jason concurred. “We
need to keep them as calm as we can manage, under the circumstances. We
got lucky with Sophie’s aura power being so out of character for her.”
“It’s not out of character,” Humphrey said. “It’s who she is behind all the
spikes and walls. She’s always wanted to be good, but the world never gave
her that chance.”
He looked at Jason.
“You gave her that. I wish it had been me.”
“You shouldn’t,” Jason told him. “It sets up an uneven power dynamic. If
you’d been the one to get her out of her old life, that would hang over you
your whole lives.”
“He’s right,” Rufus said. “It creates an imbalance that I’ve seen poison
relationships, but this isn’t the time for that conversation; stay on task.”
Humphrey nodded.
“We need to open the floor in case there are more prisoners,” he said.
“But we can’t do that while the prisoners we’ve already released are still
here. It could be anything down there, and if something comes out, looking
for a fight, we can’t guarantee their safety. We also have to deal with any
complications from the prisoners we left in the other room.”
“Sending them to Yaresh with your team’s ridiculous number of portals
and teleport powers has to be the way to go,” Rufus said.
“Portalling them is the obvious solution,” Jason agreed. “Assuming they
can handle the trip.”
Humphrey queried Neil through voice chat after glancing to make sure
the distraction wouldn’t be harmful.
“They should be able to endure it, once I’m done,” Neil said. “We can
space out the most delicate ones and make sure I’m waiting on the other
side.”
They left Neil to his work, resuming their private conversation.
“We need somewhere to portal them to,” Humphrey said. “Somewhere
that we all know well enough to set as a destination.”
“That pretty much means the camping ground where the vehicles are
parked,” Jason said.
“It’s not a bad choice,” Rufus said. “Open space, away from the heart of
the city. We just need to have them make some room and set up a camp. The
Church of the Healer are the people to approach for that.”
“That’ll work,” Jason said. “I’ve had to portal survivors out of a wiped-
out town before, and that’s how we did it. Shade, you know what we need.
Can you get Rufus’ mum to light a fire under the Church of the Healer?”
“I already have, Mr Asano.”
“Good man.”
68
U N Q U E S T I O N A B LY A U T H O R ITA R I A N

N EIL WAS CHECKING THE LOW - PRIORITY PATIENTS AT HIS TRIAGE STATION . T HE
more critical cases were already stashed on bunked recovery beds, with the
remainder those who were comfortably self-mobile. These were the people
that had endured the best and gotten the most from what Sophie and
Humphrey’s aura powers offered. In most cases, this was the handful of iron-
rankers who had lived in the town. Not adventurers, but agriculture
specialists with essences like earth and plant.
Sophie continued to assist Neil while the rest of the team returned to the
cage room and the last of the prisoners there, where one cage still contained
people. Unlike the townsfolk, who were all elves, this group of five had only
two elves, plus a human, a celestine and a smoulder. They weren’t just caged
but unconscious and chained up, with magical seals on the shackles around
their wrists, ankles and necks, chaining them to the cage. The cage itself was
also the most heavy-duty one in the room.
The shackles suppressed their auras, which had allowed them to go
unnoticed until the team found them while shuffling out prisoners. They were
stripped naked and filthy, but the athletic physique and attractive features of
essence users shone through. They reminded Jason of when he had first met
the infuriatingly handsome Rufus, who had looked good even after climbing
out of a cannibal’s cage.
“An adventuring team?” Humphrey posited.
“We need to get those shackles off to check their rank,” Clive said.
“Lindy, think you can pop them?”
“Hold on,” Jason said and pushed his senses out.
He forced his aura through the suppressive effects of the shackles to
touch their souls directly.
“Bronze rank,” he said.
The others turned to look at him.
“What?” he asked.
“I might have to ask Lord Pensinata if I can join in that aura training,”
Rufus said.
Belinda entered the cage; the door had already been yanked off by
Humphrey. She examined not the shackles first, but the people.
“Drugged, I think,” she said. “These shackles seem to be preventing
Sophie’s aura from purging whatever they’ve been dosed with.”
She then moved on to the bindings themselves.
“Usual suppression shackle situation,” she said. “Forcibly remove them
and it’ll kill the wearer. Straightforward locks, though. Generic keys should
handle it.”
Belinda took out a set of magic keys, similar to ones Jason had
occasionally crafted in the past. In addition to Belinda’s being higher rank,
the craftsmanship was far superior to Jason’s crude efforts. She used the keys
on the shackles, setting loose the probable adventurers. Humphrey took
blankets from his inventory to cover their nakedness as they started to stir.
Sophie’s aura was now affecting them, eliminating the toxins keeping them
knocked out.
“Let’s leave them to the friendly guy,” Rufus said. “Waking up to a
bunch of silver-rankers looming over them probably won’t be helpful.”
“Who’s the friendly guy?” Humphrey asked, prompting the others to all
turn and look at him. “It’s me?”
“Yes, Humphrey, it’s you,” Jason said. “You’re nice and handsome in a
way that makes others feel comforted. Which is way better than someone so
handsome you just look at them and feel bad about yourself as a person.”
“That is the single worst compliment I have ever gotten,” Rufus said.
“And what makes you think I was talking about you, Mr Vain?”
Rufus raised an eyebrow at Jason.
“Fine, I was talking about you.”
“They’re waking up,” Humphrey said. “Go away.”
Jason gave a derisive snort as he turned to leave.
“Rude. So much for being the nice one.”
The team had little more to do than wait, trying not to let their minds dwell
on the dead, scattered in piles throughout the town. Humphrey got the story
from the adventurers, whose tale was as expected. The group had arrived at
the town and quickly sensed something off about the residents. Investigating,
they were ambushed by the silver-rank messenger and subdued to await
implantation.
The one piece of new information was that they were being prepared to
host worms that were not the same as the others. As the team had yet to come
across any worms outside the norm, they suspected them to be in a lower
level of the basement workshop, through the hidden door in the floor.
Humphrey guided the adventurers to Neil to receive a thorough
examination. By the time he was done, Shade had notified Jason that the
Church of the Healer had arrived at the Yaresh campgrounds and started
clearing space for a refugee camp. It was intended to accommodate not just
the people rescued by the team but by all the scout teams sent to investigate
the towns and villages of the southern region. Reports were already coming
in to confirm that worm infestation was not an isolated incident.
Jason portalled through to assist with the setup. The camping grounds
where foreign adventurers left their magical mobile homes had ample open
space for a camp once the vehicles were cleared out. The church started
kicking people out to commandeer ground and Jason returned the land yacht
to the cloud flask.
The church officials were initially not interested in using Jason’s cloud
palace, as Jason himself was an unknown quantity. Things changed when
gold-rank members of the church, Arabelle and Carlos, both stepped up,
vouching for him. Jason then produced a cloud palace specifically designed
for the intake of people into the camp being organised.
The church officials weren’t ecstatic about the cloud palace after sensing
Jason’s aura permeating it. They were quickly forced to acknowledge,
however, that the amenities of the palace were exceedingly useful. Also,
while Jason’s aura was unquestionably authoritarian, the benevolent
protectiveness of it proved comforting to people in desperate need of feeling
safe.
Jason and Clive started portalling people in, though Humphrey did not
use his teleport. Mass teleportation was less convenient than portals, being
better suited to strategic than utility purposes. As most of the people were
normals, the two portals were more than sufficient.
Once the former prisoners were all transferred, the team returned to the
workshop and the hidden floor opening. The exception was Neil, who stayed
with his fellow Healer church members. Not only had he started building a
rapport with the prisoners, but he understood the amenities the cloud palace
offered. Even so, a portal was left open so he could rejoin the team at need.
The team expected more vats with some speciality worms, but if something
nasty leapt out instead, they wanted their healer able to swiftly come to their
aid.
In the workshop, the rest of the team stood around as Belinda went to
work on safely opening the hidden floor panel.
“I’m curious about these special worms that those adventurers
mentioned,” Clive said.
“I’m just looking to crush them underfoot,” Sophie said.
“Assuming they fit under your feet,” Jason said. “For all you know,
we’ve got a ‘worms of Arrakis’ situation going on down there.”
“Is that a monster from your world?” Humphrey asked.
“Not my world. It’s one you want to stay away from. The worms are bad
enough, but what you really have to watch out for is an oily Sting.”
“You mean a monster with an oily stinger?” Humphrey asked.
“No,” Jason told him. “No, I do not.”

The opening in the floor of the worm-breeding workshop was an elevating


platform that descended a long shaft. It came to an end in an alcove set into
the wall of another chamber, another plain room with the same slate brick.
Glow stones were set into the ceiling, revealing the worm vats they had been
expecting. The central vat was too large to fit on the elevating platform, and
the glass sides filled with murky yellow fluid. This made it hard to see what
was inside. The other five vats were smaller, each into its own alcove around
the walls.
The team quickly took stock of the chamber, spotting no immediate
threats as they swept the area. They then turned their attention to the vats,
starting with the large one in the middle.
“This vat is way too big for the platform,” Clive observed. “My guess
would be that this large worm is some kind of brood queen, brought down
here when it was smaller. The vat would have either been built here or carried
in dimensional storage.”
They spotted something shifting inside the liquid; it wasn’t long before
they saw what they were dealing with. It was a massive worm, forced by its
size to coil up, even in a vat several metres across. The lack of room often left
it pushing against the glass, which is how the team could see it through the
ghastly yellow fluid.
This worm was quite unlike the ones they had dealt with so far, but size
was far from the only difference. Where the others had been thin, this one
was bloated into obesity, with corpse-pale skin. It also lacked the drill-bit
head of its smaller brethren. Instead, it had a flat, fleshy head with a puckered
sphincter. The team also spotted a few normal worms swimming in the goo,
and they watched as one crawled out of the big worm’s sphincter.
“Is that its face or its… other end?” Belinda asked.
“It seems to be some kind of brood queen,” Clive assessed. “Not to
mention the ugliest worm we’ve run into, although that fluid it’s in doesn’t
help. It seems to be a more concentrated version of what we saw in the vats
above.”
He then turned to the other vats, which were smaller cylinders, also with
glass sides. Jason found himself ominously thinking they were the perfect
size to hold children, but did not voice the macabre thought. Inside each vat
was a single worm, much closer to the normal worms than the bulbous queen.
Only slightly larger than normal, they retained the drill-bit heads. The most
notable difference was that each one was a bright colour: blue, green, red, and
yellow.
“I’m more concerned about these colourful worms than with the chunker
in the middle,” Jason said.
“Why?” Clive asked.
“My first concern was getting caught up in a gritty Power Rangers
reboot, but then I remembered something far more terrible. One of the most
famous and deadly monsters in my world is called a Dalek. A while back, a
bunch of Dalek variants in bright colours like this turned up, and it was… not
good. Like these worms, they were created by those caught up in hubris,
willing to inflict terrible damage in the pursuit of their own mad ideas. Just
one look at those things, and you immediately knew someone had undertaken
a truly horrifying act of creation.”
“What happened?” Humphrey asked.
“We managed to go on, and eventually, the people behind it were
removed from power. But as these things so often go, someone else took their
place. Someone who would go on to do worse things than we imagined
possible.”
Jason turned away, looking off at nothing with a haunted expression.
“Jason?”
“Yes, Clive?”
“Are you talking a bunch of crap again?”
“Yes, Clive,” Jason said gravely. “Yes, I am.”
Clive shook his head and turned his attention back to the vats.
“These are obviously the specialty worms that the messenger was
breeding for the adventurers,” he said. “It seems that the messengers cultivate
different worms for different purposes, and I wonder how expansive that
program is. Do they just have these for implantation into higher-rank hosts,
or is it more? Are there speciality infiltration worms that can do a better job
of pretending to be people? Is Yaresh already facing an infestation?”
“A grim thought, but one for the Adventure Society to explore,”
Humphrey said. “I’m just glad we didn’t face adventurers with enhanced
worms inside them while we were cleaning out this place.”
“How powerful do you think they would be?” Jason wondered.
“According to Carlos, most conversion processes rank-up whatever they
convert, but they’re relatively weak for their rank. At least compared to
essence users.”
“Well-trained essence users,” Rufus corrected. “These world-taker worms
would tear through Greenstone like a sickle through grass.”
“I have to imagine these specialty worms are stronger than the ones we
encountered thus far,” Humphrey said. “They were little more than corpses
being thrown at us. Most likely, these would be closer to vampires, or the
Builder’s clockwork converted.”
“Which would have made fighting through the worm-hosts an uglier
affair,” Rufus said. “If we had to deal with anything that posed an individual
threat, we could have been easily overrun.”
“It would have been uglier for the adventurers in question,” Belinda
pointed out. “They aren’t in great shape, but these worms look fully grown,
or close to it. It might not have been long before implantation.”
“Maybe,” Clive said. “We can’t be sure how large they are fully grown.”
“Carlos said that the hosts they occupy are for a secondary incubation
cycle,” Jason said. “It wasn’t relevant to the fight, so I didn’t bring it up, but
they are inside people trying to turn into something else. He didn’t know
what, though. Anywhere that finds out tends to be eradicated.”
“Perhaps something to do with how the worms self-propagate,” Clive
guessed. “Something that will allow them to spread without needing breeding
centres like this one.”
“Or maybe they just turn into fatties, like this one,” Belinda said, tapping
on the glass of the tank. She placed her palm against the glass. “It’s warm.
Feels gross.”
“We know that the worms can consume heat,” Clive said, also shifting his
gaze to the central vat. “It might be part of the reproductive cycle.”
“That would make sense,” Jason said. “Did you notice how all the
buildings had been magicked-up to radiate heat? I bet that’s part of the
incubation cycle.”
“I wonder if the aspects of intelligence we saw all came from the larger
worm,” Clive said. “Colin has a decentralised hive mind, but I suspect the
world-taker worms operate differently. My guess would be that any higher-
order mental capacity comes from this queen worm, and she directs the
worms like a general.”
“But we didn’t see a lot of intelligence from the worms,” Belinda pointed
out. “They made one strategic move the whole time, and it was a very simple
one.”
“Maybe it needs these,” Rufus suggested, tapping one of the smaller vats.
“Maybe they serve as officers under the general.”
“Relay nodes, able to mediate between mindless worms and the higher
mind of the queen,” Clive said. “That would make sense. But this is all
speculation. Whether the queen is truly sapient or just possesses some level
of animal cunning I can only guess. With study—”
“No study,” Sophie said. “We kill every one of these things we can find.”
69
VO I C E O F T H E W I LL

S OPHIE WAS TAKING A FIRM STANCE AGAINST STUDYING THE WORMS RATHER
than eradicating them on sight.
“Do you want some lunatic researcher trying to do what the messengers
did and use them as a weapon?”
“It’s a good point,” Belinda agreed. “Imagine what Evil Clive could do if
he got his hands on these things.”
“Evil Clive?” Clive asked.
“Lindy, I thought you were Evil Clive,” Jason said.
“Oh, that’s sweet of you,” Belinda happily replied, touching his shoulder
briefly.
“Sophie’s right,” Humphrey said. “All it takes is some duke who wants to
turn his city-state into a kingdom and has more ambition than morals or good
sense. They set up their own breeding program, somewhere no one finds it. It
gets out of control, the worms get loose and by the time anyone realises, it’s
too late. The world-taker worms have too much momentum and live up to
their name. Even if they can be stopped, the price in lives is high. I’m not
saying that our actions alone will be enough to avoid that outcome, but I’m
not willing to do anything to make it any more likely.”
“Do you practise portentous monologues in the mirror for when these
situations come up?” Jason asked. “Because seriously, that was on point. I’ve
tried practising sinister lines that I can use later, but I had to knock it off
because I’m waaay too melodramatic. It should be simple and concise, like
‘I’m Batman,’ but I always end up veering into ‘I am the terror that flaps in
the night’ territory. So now I just wing it so I don’t get carried away.”
“You still get carried away,” Belinda said.
“I do?”
“A bit.”
“A bit nothing,” Clive said. “Do you want me to play the speech you gave
that messenger?”
“Play it?”
Clive pointed to the mana crystals floating over his head from his
Crystallise Mana ability.

Ability: [Crystallise Mana] (Magic)

Conjuration (restoration).
Base cost: Low.
Cooldown: None.

Current rank: Silver 4 (04%).

Effect (iron): Create a crystal that floats around you, accelerating


mana recovery. Crystal is impervious to damage, but vulnerable to
dispel effects. If dispelled, crystals grant an immediate burst of
mana. You can have a single mana crystal at a time.

Effect (bronze): Crystals can intercept magical projectiles, negating


their effect. For a period after negating a projectile, a crystal
becomes inactive, unable to produce mana or intercept further
projectiles. Maximum crystal count is increased to three, with each
active crystal cumulatively increasing mana recovery.

Effect (silver): Each crystal can absorb one projectile while negating
its effect. Crystal with an absorbed projectile will consume the
projectile’s energy to increase mana production. Absorbed
projectiles can be redirected at enemies, with the effects diminished
based on the amount of projectile energy converted into mana.
Maximum crystal count is increased to five.

Humphrey had the same; he and Neil both shared the very common ability
with Clive. But where five crystals were floating over Humphrey’s head,
Clive had a sixth. When he pointed this out, they all recognised it as a
recording crystal.
“Do you want me to show the others?” Clive asked.
“It wasn’t that bad,” Jason insisted.
“Why don’t we let the others see it, then?”
“Because it’s embarrassing, and they know how dramatic I can get. And
we need to deal with these worms, which leads to an important question: Do I
feed Colin the colourful ones first or the big one?”
“There’s a lot of Colin to go around,” Belinda said. “Why not both?”
Jason shrugged and started moving from vat to vat. They each had a
sealed opening on the metal top that Jason presumed was for extracting
worms and feeding nutrients. He used it for dumping in leeches, most of
which went into the central vat. The smells that came out from the vats as he
opened the seals were rancid.
“Ooh, that’s rough,” Jason said. Then he took a step back as the obese
worm in the central vat banged against the inside of the glass.
“Are we okay with it doing that?” Clive asked. “Things breaking
containment in magical laboratories have historically had less-than-ideal
results.”
“I’m open to suggestions,” Humphrey said.
“Is running away on the table?” Belinda asked. “I did not like the smell
coming out of those tanks. Couldn’t we just go back up the entry shaft and
drop stuff down to kill the worms?”
“I’m not running away from what amounts to a giant sausage,” Sophie
said. “A sausage that is being enthusiastically devoured, no less.”
As Sophie said, the leeches in the vat were aggressively chewing into the
worm. Red blood stained the sickly yellow fluid, making the contents of the
vat murkier with each passing moment. Gaping wounds were easy to spot as
the worm slammed itself against the glass of the vat, sometimes squashing
leeches in the process. The amount of life force Colin was consuming
allowed him to reproduce faster than he lost leeches.
“There’s a lot of life force in that worm,” Jason observed. “I don’t think
I’ve ever felt Colin quite so enthused. You show them who’s the best
apocalypse beast, Colin! Also, please don’t eat any planets.”
The others all turned to look at him.
“What?” Jason asked. “I said don’t eat any planets.”
“Are we all sure we aren’t the villains here?” Belinda asked. “Am I Evil
Clive?”
The worm slammed its torn and bleeding body against the vat again,
causing spiderweb cracks to appear.
“That’s not good,” Jason said as the cracks rapidly spread.
The team all floated off the floor and away from the cracking portion of
the vat.
Any well-trained silver-ranker could slowly move themselves around, just
without the speed, power and control of Jason or a messenger. They also had
to maintain careful concentration or they would drop.
As the worm banged against the side again, the vat broke, spilling yellow
liquid onto the floor. It was thick, almost slime, and heavily streaked with
red. The worm only half emerged, getting caught on the broken glass and
cutting itself open. A foul smell emerged the moment the vat broke, but when
the worm suffered deep lacerations, it became excruciatingly pungent. It was
the only stench any of them had encountered that was worse was rainbow
smoke. They all shut off their sense of smell as soon as the wall of stench
struck them.
“Okay, Lindy,” Sophie choked out. “I was wrong. We should have run
away.”
“I have no expertise in magical research, or in eating worms,” Rufus said.
“I’ll leave this to Jason and Clive.”
With that, he floated himself up through the elevating platform shaft in
the ceiling, Sophie, Belinda and Humphrey following close behind. Jason
looked at Clive, whose expression was torn. There might be something to
learn if he stayed, or it might just be some leeches eating some worms, which
he could happily imagine in the fresh air.
“I think whatever’s in those vats is making my eyes sting,” Clive said,
making his decision. “Tell me if anything interesting happens.”
Jason shook his head with a chuckle as Clive made good his escape. The
leeches in the side vats had finished their meals and he let them out, but
didn’t absorb them immediately.
“If you think I’m letting you inside me while you’re covered in gunk,” he
said, holding up a leech with his thumb and forefinger, “you’ve got another
think coming.”
With the elevating platform still downstairs, the shaft was open and Jason
was able to extend his aura through it. He used it to grab the barrel of crystal
wash, left over from cleaning off the prisoners, and float it down the shaft. A
little of the wash went a long way, so it was still mostly full. While Jason was
moving the barrel, Colin finished off the large worm.

Familiar [Colin] has consumed [World-Taker Worm Matriarch].


[Colin] can use the devoured power of the [World-Taker Worm
Matriarch] to awaken as a Voice of the Will. This will require
extended hibernation in the astral kingdom to which it is connected.
Only passive, unmanifested abilities will be available during this
time, and manifestation will be impossible.

Familiar [Colin] must fully return to the Astral Kingdom to initiate


awakening.

“Voice of the Will? I keep adding to the list of things I need to ask the
messengers. I’ll have to leave one alive. Eventually. If I can find one that
isn’t in the middle of committing war crimes. Still, far be it from me to look a
power upgrade in the mouth. Come and get cleaned up, buddy.”
Jason floated individual leeches into the air with his aura until they
surrounded him like a swarm of bees.
“Hey, I think we might have just found a great new tactic, Colin. This is
going to scare the crap out of people.”
While holding the leeches in the air, Jason used his aura to lift droplets of
crystal wash from the barrel to clean them.
“You know what? This is pretty good aura manipulation practise. You’re
so useful, Colin. Good boy.”

Jason emerged from the shaft into the workshop. Belinda and Clive were
exploring the messenger’s work while Sophie, Humphrey and Rufus stood
around. The underground workshop was hardly pleasant, but it was a better
place to wait for the Adventure Society than the town full of corpses. Just as
Jason reached the top of the shaft, Neil appeared through the portal Jason had
left open.
“Lindy,” he said. “We could use some logistical aid. The Adventure
Society has been expanding the refugee camp in the camping grounds with
people evacuated from other towns and villages. The cloud palace is being
used for assessment and treatment, but we could use some housing.”
Belinda nodded and followed Neil back through the portal. Neil had
grabbed Belinda for her ability to conjure simple items. That ranged from
tools like a sword, a pickaxe or a wall to soft items like curtains or bedding.
With Belinda at silver rank, she could conjure a vast number of simple
objects that would last for a considerable time. Knocking out what amounted
to a series of pre-fab dormitories would be well within her abilities, freeing
up time and resources that local authorities could expend on longer-term
solutions.
At the same time, more adventuring teams were heading for towns like
the one Jason’s team had purged. Following close behind were support teams
from the Adventure Society, Magic Society, various churches and the Yaresh
civic authorities. Reports had come in quickly, from Carlos and others
connected to alternate scout teams. Once the magnitude of what was going on
had been revealed, resources and personnel were deployed in far greater
numbers than the original scout teams. More towns needed to be checked,
some teams required backup and everywhere would require management in
the aftermath.
“What will the messengers do, now that their plans have been revealed?”
Humphrey mused.
“I don’t know,” Rufus said. “Given the scale of this operation, though,
they had to have known that exposure was inevitable. The question is what
they planned to do when that happened. This isn’t anything the Adventure
Society won’t have considered, though. They’ll be reinforcing the operation
sites for the clean-up in case the whole idea was to bait out teams that could
be taken down in isolation by messenger strike groups.”
“But doesn’t that draw a lot of forces out of the city?” Jason asked. “What
if that’s the whole point of all this?”
“It’s not like the city will be emptied out,” Rufus said. “I guarantee you
that forces in less critical operations are being recalled as we speak. Plus, the
city’s defensive infrastructure is a massive impediment to even a
concentrated messenger assault.”
“Does that make anyone else feel like messenger saboteurs are bringing
down that infrastructure as we speak?” Jason asked.
“Now that you say it, yeah,” Sophie said. “Good job, Rufus.”
Rufus gave Jason a flat look.
“Where did you even learn all this about city infrastructure and defence
protocols and the like?” Jason asked.
“My family runs a… get bent, Jason.”
The others all laughed as Jason headed for the stairs. As the one with the
strongest senses, he would be the one to first notice the reinforcements. The
workshop was impeding his perception, so he needed to go outside.
“I could have used a drink too,” he muttered.
70
H E H I M S E LF D O E S N O T B EC O M E A
MONSTER

J ASON DIDN ’ T LINGER DOWNSTAIRS WITH THE OTHERS FOR LONG . H E HAD NO
interest in facing the town filled with dead, but didn’t want his aura restricted
by the underground facility. His aura could somewhat escape the workshop’s
inhibition magic with the doors open, but it still greatly impeded his senses.
He went up the stairs, through the tunnel into the dirt basement, and then up
the ladder to the trapdoor.
This returned him to the building that served as the secret entrance to the
underground facility. It was one of the few buildings in the town that did not
have open-sided walls, and was used as a storage shed. Judging from the
layer of grime coating empty barrels and broken farming tools, it was one
that saw little use.
Jason went outside, once more taking in the stomach-churning scene of
bodies littered around the town. Although he knew they had been worm-
hosts, dead before the team even arrived, it still rattled Jason to look at. It was
not the first time he had seen the dead piled high—tragically, far from it. He
desperately hoped he would never become accustomed to the sight.
He would rather have stayed downstairs. He could join the others in
distracting themselves from the dark reality with light banter, pushing the
dark thoughts away until the job was done. There would be ample time to sit
with the horror in the sleepless nights Rufus had warned Jason about. That
had been Jason’s very first night in his new world, and felt like a million
years ago.
Jason thought back to that night and didn’t recognise that person he had
been anymore. Idly wondering about the choices he made, he wondered how
things could have been different. He’d made a lot of mistakes and seen a lot
of death, some of which was on his head.
But the big things had gone well enough. Better than could be expected in
most cases. Earth wasn’t in precipitous danger. The days of proto-spaces
threatening to spew forth dangerous monster waves were over. The monsters
would manifest directly now, and mostly far weaker. They would not be
contained in the proto-spaces, but it was good enough.
Pallimustus had weathered the monster surge and the Builder invasion.
Jason had even managed to push the Builder into leaving a little early. He
would never know how many lives even a few weeks without fighting had
saved, and while that did not make up for the dead scattered before him now,
it was at least some consolation to his soul.
Jason and his friends had to live with cutting down the people of the
town, and while they were already corpses, that wasn’t how it felt. Even
accepting that, they were desecrating the remains of innocent strangers,
people they had not been able to protect. This was sadly not new for Jason
and Rufus, but the others would need to come to terms with that.
Jason knew that his team would endure, however. He’d done it. Not well,
but he’d done it. He hoped he could help them do it a little better. It was the
people of the town he felt bad for. The few dozen that had survived were not
going to feel like they had. Their world had just been destroyed. Almost
everyone that each of them knew was lying in front of Jason, hacked to
pieces, burned to ashes or torn apart.
These were small-town people and their town was over. How could they
ever come back to this nightmare place after what happened? Even if they
did, there were not enough of them left to revive it. It was a ghost town now,
and the memories would haunt them. The blood and the bodies could be
cleared away, but their presence would linger. The town was done.
A grim future awaited the survivors. Many of them may never have even
left the town before, and now their lives would change forever. Compared to
them, Jason and his team had places to go and homes to return to. Even when
they suffered losses, they had the power to minimise them and seize a path
forward. The surviving townsfolk were the pawns of fate, stuck in a world of
magic they didn’t have and monsters they couldn’t fight. Whatever their
future would be, it was not theirs to choose.
For all that Jason had faced hard times since arriving in this world, he at
least had made his own choices along the way. He had the agency to seize his
own destiny, even with forces beyond comprehension arrayed against him.
Determination and far more luck than he had any right to expect had carried
him along. The survivors of the town had no such agency. Their lives were
not theirs to choose and would never be the same.
This was the distillation of something Rufus warned Jason of, on that first
night, and why Jason dwelled on it now. That grim days were ahead, but if he
ceded control to others, he wouldn’t have any choices at all. He would be left
only able to wait and see what happened to him, with no power to change it.
That was how Rufus convinced Jason to be an adventurer.
Standing, looking out at the dead, Jason thought about how many lives
and deaths had passed through his hands. He remembered the waterfall
village where, for the very first time, he had made the choice to stand
between innocent people and the violence that was coming for them. Doing it
again in the very same village, he had earned his first and largest scar.
As his powers grew, so did the challenges. Protecting Greenstone from
the Builder. Broken Hill, Makassar. The entire Earth threatening to tear apart
from dimensional forces. The dangers escalated more quickly than his powers
did, and he’d had to become something further and further from human to
meet them. More than once, it had cost him his life. But at least he came
back, when so many others did not. This town that he didn’t even know the
name of was just the latest to host the mounds of dead that he had failed to
save.
There was nothing Jason could have done for the people in front of him,
but what about the dead that lay behind him? The people who died at Broken
Hill? Makassar? His brother, his lover and his friend? How did the ones he
saved balance against the ones he failed to? The loss of each had galvanised
Jason, prompting spikes in his strength that he used down the line. Were
those losses worth the things Jason had accomplished? Were all those people
sacrifices or just helpless victims?
“It’s a bleak equation,” he pondered.
Shade emerged from Jason’s shadow to stand beside him.
“You can count the dead, Mr Asano,” Shade said, knowing Jason’s mind,
“but it accomplishes nothing. All you can do is move forward, doing the best
you can with what you have. I’ve heard you say that many times, and of all
your…”
Shade’s pause was rich with disapproval.
“…catchphrases, it is the one I prefer. The one that has wisdom.”
“You think I’m wise?”
“No, Mr Asano. No. Dear goodness, no. Which is why you should always
remember those sparkling moments when you manage to achieve them.”
Jason let out a soft chuckle, not enough to wipe the sadness from his
expression.
“Are you alright, Mr Asano?”
“You know what, Shade?” Jason asked, looking out over the dead. “To
my own surprise, I actually might be. I don’t ever want to get used to scenes
like this, but I’m not going to let them break me either; I’m going to use
them. Let them remind me of why I have to keep pushing, of why I have to
get stronger. Of who and what I’m going to face, and the lengths they are
willing to go.”
He bowed his head.
“I’ve got this voice inside me, telling me that if I become worse than the
things I fight, they’ll be too scared to do what happened in this town. I’ve
been so angry for so long now that I don’t even remember when I started
listening to that voice. But it’s wrong. It never works like that, does it?”
“No, Mr Asano. It does not.”
“I’ve been heading down a certain road for a while now, but it doesn’t
lead anywhere I want to go. It’s time to take a different direction. Maybe find
some of that naïveté that I discarded along the way.”
“Your treatment of that messenger—”
“That was the line. That’s how far I can go without losing myself. I let
myself go right up against it with her. But I think that’s okay. I’ve been
telling myself that’s not where the line is for a long time. That I’m a good
person who is only doing these things because I have to, and when the world
stops dumping on me, I’ll stop. But the world never stops dumping, does it?”
“No, Mr Asano. It does not.”
“It’s time to accept that my line is where it is. To stop deluding myself
over who I am and moping over how bad things are. The people of this town,
living and dead, have gotten it far worse than me, and I owe it to them to stop
this from happening somewhere else. I have so much power. So many good
people around me. So many things to be thankful for. So much I can do.”
“If what you did to the messenger was the line, Mr Asano, does that mean
you’ll be stepping back from it?”
Jason nodded. “Once I accept where my line genuinely is, instead of
telling myself where it should be, I feel like it will be easier to avoid pushing
up against it. Not unless I need to.”
“Do you regret breaking her will before you killed her?”
“I don’t know. No, I think. I probably should. It was anger that drove me,
and anger is always hungry for more. But I’m willing to go that far, after
what she did. She had a rough time, but I was just talking up my power. A
bit. The essence ability I used on her is a vulture, picking the bones clean; it
can’t damage the soul. It might be a little rough-and-tumble on a gestalt entity
like a messenger, but she’ll find her way to your dad fully intact. It’s not like
when you stopped me from using that guy’s star seed to peel the body off his
soul. That would have been over the line.”
“Yes, Mr Asano. That would be more than I was willing to tolerate.”
“I’m not done giving the messengers a hard time, though. They have a lot
of things that I need. Advanced astral magic. Understanding of what an astral
king is. Knowledge of whatever Emir is looking for.”
“You may need to leave some of them alive for that.”
“True. But they also have a power inside them that I can use. If I have to
crack them open like eggs to get it, then so be it. They came to this world,
looking for trouble. After seeing how far they’ll go to find it, I’ll happily
oblige them.”
“Will you dedicate yourself to pursuing them, then?”
“I don’t need to. They came here in numbers, and they came to stay. The
conditions they used to get here ended with the monster surge, so while I’m
sure they have the means to leave, I doubt they can do so easily or en masse.
Even just living the adventurer life, I’m going to be hunting them for a good,
long time.”
“And if they hunt you back?”
Jason’s grin belonged on a comic book cover, and not on the face of the
hero.
71
A N EG G S TA R T I N G T O H AT C H

S TANDING IN THE TOWN FILLED WITH FALLEN ELVES AND ANNIHILATED


parasite worms, Jason looked off to the distance. Something had pinged his
aura senses, somewhere out in the rainforest, and he withdrew his magical
perception. It was a gold-rank adventurer, and Jason wasn’t sure if he had
been noticed in turn, but the person was making a beeline for the town.
“Time to make myself scarce,” he said.
In the workshop under a nearby building, meanwhile, Jason’s team were
having a discussion.
“Is he even going to keep up the hidden identity?” Clive asked. “They
don’t care here about what happened in Rimaros.”
“He kicked the Builder off the planet,” Sophie said. “I think they might
care that the guy who did that is running around.”
“Even so,” Clive said, “the locals have much more immediate concerns.
The messengers and these worms are problems now, while the Builder
invasion is history.”
“Extremely recent history,” Rufus said. “There are still pockets of Builder
cultists scattered around the world. Even here, you know that.”
“We need to finish briefing Korinne’s team,” Humphrey said. “They need
to know the complexity of the situation when we go after the messengers.”
“We don’t even know if we’ll still be sent after them,” Clive pointed out.
“These worms are going to shake up whatever plans the Adventure Society
had. I don’t think Jason will have the luxury of hugging the shadows for
much longer. And it’s not like he’s doing a great job at playing nondescript
cook. He’s terrible at playing any roles other than lunatic or monster.”
The others nodded their agreement.
“Lindy always complained about me when I was on the job,” Sophie said.
“I used to play socialite a lot when we were preparing to rob a place, and she
always said I wasn’t embodying the role enough. But at least I wasn’t joining
cage fight tournaments.”
“You weren’t?” Humphrey asked.
“Well, once, and she didn’t let me hear the end of it. The job did not go
well.”
“Jason isn’t on some infiltration mission,” Rufus said. “It’s not about him
maintaining some rigid identity. Most adventurers have secrets; Jason himself
is ours. When people see a cook who is obviously more than he appears, it’s
not anything to worry about. They’ll assume he’s someone like the princess
hiding out in Korinne’s team, some spoiled aristocrat looking to avoid the
trouble that comes with their name. Jason just needs to avoid inspiring too
many powerful people into looking closer. If adventurers went looking into
every person with obvious secrets, they’d never have time to do any actual
adventuring.”
“Exactly,” Jason said, coming down the stairs. “It’s okay to be shady, so
long as we don’t step on the toes of anyone who can make trouble for us.
Where I come from, we call it plausible deniability.”
“And when the people we rescued are debriefed?” Clive asked. “What
happens when they mention the guy with the starlight cloak that doesn’t
match any member of our team? It’s not a huge leap to someone looking up
our team members, present and former.”
“Clive,” Rufus said. “You were the one who pointed out how busy things
will be for the locals. I doubt they will have the time to go looking into Jason
with everything going on. Even if they do, Jason’s record has been sealed.
The whole thing now, not just sections, the way it was in the past. And the
classification of those restrictions is high enough that someone important has
to really want it before the Adventure Society will give them anything.”
“Plus, the locals don’t know us,” Humphrey said. “Any power the
prisoners describe will be passed off as belonging to any one of us.”
“Why are you so keen on me giving up the identity anyway?” Jason asked
Clive.
“I just think it would be better if you were back with the team properly.”
“I can’t argue with that,” Jason agreed.
“Also,” Clive said, “Colin might be useful to clean up worms in other
places. I’m guessing that worm eradication will be a big priority. If you
weren’t hiding, you could use him more.”
“Colin can’t replicate enough to be effective on that scale,” Jason said.
“At best, he can double his standard mass, which he can only maintain while
actively feeding anyway. Besides, he’s sleeping off Christmas dinner.”
“What does that mean?” Sophie asked.
“You never been in a turkey coma?” Jason asked.
“What’s turkey?” Clive asked.
Jason looked back up the stairs. “We can talk about this later,” he said.
“You’re about to get visitors, so it’s time for my portal and me to scarper.”
Jason and Clive still had active portals that they had funnelled the
prisoners through, along with Belinda and Neil. Jason went through his portal
and it vanished behind him.

Jason had returned to Yaresh previously, just long enough to reconfigure his
cloud construct from land-yacht to palace. He had greater control over the
specifics of the design than when he first obtained the cloud flask, and was
able to lay it out like a hospital. The palace took the appearance of a hospital
as well, with a white, square exterior arranged into three connected wings.
The interiors were likewise white, with square tile patterns.
The design was to best facilitate the needs of the camp, being set up to
screen, treat and manage the evacuees from worm-infested towns and
villages. The ability of the cloud palace to utilise different amenities, as well
as clean anything inside it, would be a boon for medical work.
The palace was situated at one end of the space being cleared for the
camp, with the other end near Emir’s cloud palace by the wall. Two front-
facing wings marked the border of what would become the camp, with one
rear wing away from the camp. The rear and one of the front wings each had
three storeys; the remaining front wing had a fourth.
The rear wing contained living space for Jason and his companions. This
included Melody, who had remained under Jason’s watchful eye while her
new secure room was formed. The private wing for Jason and his friends was
the only part of the palace that continued to serve as Jason’s spirit domain,
where his influence was sufficient to impinge upon the natural laws within it.
Jason withdrew his full influence from the front wings, having it operate
more like a normal cloud construct. This was critical for allowing in the
priests from the Church of the Healer, as they would be cut off from their
god’s influence in the spirit domain.
This was something that Arabelle and Neil had gotten used to, but they
did not have powers directly bestowed through divine essences or awakening
stones. They also knew Jason. Explaining why their god was not welcome to
a group of clergy while they were busy setting up an evacuee camp was not
an efficient use of time. And if they had divinely granted powers on top, it
would be even worse.
Jason knew that leaving the area of a god’s influence did not prevent
essence abilities with divine origins from working. He had seen that in astral
spaces where the influence of gods did not reach. If anything, it might mean
that it was harder for the gods to revoke those powers, although Jason
couldn’t be sure. Another thing he was uncertain about was the degree to
which he could interfere with those powers should they be used in an area
over which he had dominion. He suspected he could have an influence, but he
also suspected that running tests was a bad idea.
The front wings still retained Jason’s aura, but he tamped it down to the
minimum. Carlos, Arabelle and Neil, all members of the Church of the
Healer, were already at work and gave him suggestions for facilities he
should include. One wing was designed for intake, with treatment rooms and
spaces to organise people that were divided by what looked suspiciously like
cattle-yard railings. There were also secure screening rooms for checking
people for worms, and cells to hold any that did.
The other front wing was designed around secondary services, such as
cafeterias and shower rooms that people in the camp would need to visit once
or more per day, for as long as the camp was set up. This was the wing with
the extra storey, which contained administrative spaces. The people running
the camp had needed a place to retreat to and organise things out from the
chaos the camp could be in.
The palace had only so much space within, however, especially as Jason’s
palace was smaller than Emir’s. Part of that was the rank difference, with his
palace being silver rank currently, compared to Emir’s gold. He suspected
that the unique nature of his palace had an effect as well. Given the additional
energies being fed into the cloud flask from Jason’s soul realm, he guessed
that more of the flask’s resources were required to contain it.
Because of the size limitation, Jason had abandoned dormitory space
entirely to focus on facilities that would benefit from the amenities his cloud
palace could offer. Places for the evacuees to live and sleep were being
arranged by the churches, civic authorities and the Adventure Society, all of
whom had become involved in organising the camp. The Magic Society was
also present, but they were in no danger of being put in charge. No one
believed that they were interested in the welfare of the evacuees over
studying any worms they brought with them.
Jason had no interest in their jostling over influence and had left them to
it, returning to his team. Now that he was back at the camp, he went to check
the results. He had to admit that whoever was in charge worked fast, as the
camp had sprawled out in the short time he was away. The area around the
palace had been cleared of other vehicles to make room to set up the
expansive evacuee camp. That space was already filled with a mix of tents
and prefabricated buildings, conjured by Belinda and others with similar
powers. The conjured items mostly had a matte plastic look to them, in
various colours, and Jason recognised the dark green that belonged to
Belinda.
Activity was hectic both inside the palace and out in the camp. People
rushed around, Jason picking up auras that ranged from normal through to
gold. He identified the familiar ones, including Amos Pensinata, and Taika,
who was meditating in the private section of the palace. Jason was startled to
realise that Taika’s aura was so close to breaking through to silver that it was
like an egg starting to hatch. Jason quietly withdrew his aura and left him to
it.
With so many people hurrying everywhere, it was easy for Jason to tweak
his aura such that others overlooked him as he roamed around. This was
especially true within the cloud palace, where he could blend into the
surrounding aura. He sent Shade’s bodies out as well, taking stock of the
camp. If anyone was trying to exploit the chaos to work against the camp, the
city or Jason, he wanted as much warning as he could get.
After roaming the camp, Jason made his way up to the administrative area
on the fourth storey, to a private office he had set aside for his own use. The
room was empty and he moved to the front wall, a single giant window
overlooking the camp. Shade emerged and floated next to him.
“How are the organisers making use of the palace amenities?” Jason
asked.
“Mrs Remore has been appointed facility liaison, to help make the most
of the resources at hand. I have been assisting her, naturally, and she has been
making sure the palace is being used efficiently. Some assets are unavailable
outside of the spirit domain, of course, such as your avatars.”
“I don’t think a bunch of cycloptic shadow monsters would help the
situation, even if they are practical. I’m pretty sure they would just start a
panic.”
“I concur, Mr Asano.”
“Is there anything that would benefit from my personal intervention? In
the kitchens, maybe?”
“The procurement, preparation and distribution of food is being handled
by the city authorities. They have the cafeterias well in hand and their own
personnel in charge. Attempting to take over management would disrupt
more than help.”
“I don’t have to manage things; I could be an extra pair of hands.”
“That would require taking orders, Mr Asano.”
“I can take orders.”
Instead of responding, Shade turned his head toward Jason.
“Yeah, alright,” Jason grudgingly conceded. “Just keep scouting the camp
outside the palace and let me know if anything crops up. Actually, position
some bodies around the city as well, and maybe a few to patrol outside the
city walls.”
“You are concerned that the messengers will attack?”
“Rufus doesn’t think so, but I can’t shake the idea.”
“Why not?”
“Because that’s what I’d do.”
“What would you do about the city defence infrastructure?”
“Not sure. I’m guessing readiness levels would make sabotage unreliable.
Maybe set up something inside the city to draw defenders from the walls,
then hammer one point hard. I’m no strategic genius, so maybe I’m all
wrong. It’s not like my suspicions are specific enough that I can check them
out.”
“Mrs Remore is working with the camp leader to help make the most of
the palace’s facilities,” Shade said. “Shall I mention to her that if something
does happen, she should be ready to evacuate the palace so it can be
reconfigured?”
“That’s a good idea, Shade. It’s probably nothing. I hope it’s nothing, and
not just because I don’t want to see the city attacked. I don’t want to find out
that I think like a messenger.”
“I suspect, Mr Asano, that they would be more alarmed to discover they
think like you.”
“Was that a compliment or an insult?”
“Yes, Mr Asano. It was.”
72
W H AT T H E S WA R M C A M E T O C U R E

J ASON STOOD IN AN EMPTY ROOM , LOOKING THROUGH A WINDOW WALL DOWN


at the evacuee camp. It was far more than just the few dozen people from the
town Jason and his team had gone to, as towns across the southern region
likewise had adventurers investigating. The expedition had started with seven
teams and expanded once the truth was discovered.
Through Shade’s eavesdropping, Jason was keeping an ear out for how
things were going. Jason and his team had encountered one of the worst-gone
towns, almost entirely taken over. Other towns were thankfully only in the
early stages and had been saved by adventurers who drove off or killed the
messengers in them. Unfortunately, it was not all good news.
“Of the seven teams initially deployed, two of them lost members in the
process of killing or driving off the messengers they found,” Shade reported.
“In both cases, it was in larger towns than we were sent to, where multiple
messengers were present and the teams did not have a gold-ranker with them.
Also, one team was lost entirely. Their deaths have been confirmed using
their tracking stones.”
Each Adventure Society branch maintained tracking stones connected to
the adventurers operating in that area. One of the first things Humphrey had
done on the team’s arrival at Yaresh had been to visit the Adventure Society
and notify them that the team would be operating in the area so that local
tracking stones could be produced. This was based on soul imprints taken by
the Magic Society.
As souls shifted over time, the imprints required refreshing, especially
after rank-ups. This was why Farrah had extra problems when identifying
herself on her return from death. Also, other changes in the soul could
invalidate an imprint, which was very much the case for Jason. The solution
was to obtain a personal crest, which was only possible while at iron rank. It
was common amongst nobility and provided a fixed marker for soul
imprinting. The Adventure Society had simply copied Jason’s imprint when
creating one for his John Miller alias.
“If someone was able to take out an entire adventuring team,” Jason said,
“are they thinking that location is the central hub for worm production?”
“There has been speculation, but I don’t have access to the full
information,” Shade said. “I am only going by what the Adventure Society
officials here in the camp have been discussing. I do know that the location in
question was one of the larger towns.”
“So, there might have been a whole messenger contingent there. There
certainly had to be a gold-rank messenger.”
“From early reports, Mr Asano, there is a particular messenger tactic that
the team will need to be wary of.”
“Oh?”
“Messenger abilities vary quite a lot, but many seem to be able to isolate
themselves and an enemy such that neither can leave until the other is dead.”
“Allowing them to take out critical enemies,” Jason said. “Healers, glass
cannons and the like. Any restrictions, or can they just go in and pluck people
out of our formation?”
“It seems to require a certain level of physical isolation. So long as you
keep the core members together, it is likely that they will be stuck targeting
your more mobile members.”
“That’s acceptable,” Jason said. “Rufus, Humphrey, Sophie and I can all
handle a one-on-one. Lindy, in a pinch, although best if we can avoid it. If we
keep her, Clive and Neil together, we should be alright.”
“From what I can tell, it is a category of ability the messengers possess,
not a specific power. Each messenger who possesses such a power will have
their own variant, so there is no predicting exactly how that power will work.
I think it is inevitable that you will encounter such a power, Mr Asano, but
there is no telling what the exact effects will be.”
“You picked up all this from hearing about just a few encounters?”
“These powers are responsible for the two deaths in the teams that lost
members but weren’t wiped out,” Shade explained. “It has been a topic of
some discussion, and this is far from the first time that the locals have clashed
with the messengers.”
“I see.”
Jason continued to watch the camp’s activity. There was an arrival area
where portals or flying vehicles brought in survivors from the towns and
villages. They were brought into the cloud palace where Jason had set up
screening and treatment rooms. Jason couldn’t see this process through the
window, but could observe anything happening in cloud palace, should he
desire.
The screening rooms were a redundancy measure, as sufficiently close
observation should allow worm-hosts to be picked out from their auras. Jason
fully agreed with the measure anyway, because of the specialty worms. They
had yet to be implanted in the adventurer prisoners Jason’s team had found,
but there was no telling what the results would have been. The disappearance
of several adventuring teams had been the original prompt for the sweeping
investigation into the towns, which left others potentially infested with the
special worms.
The precaution proved valuable when a group of liberated adventurers
was brought into the cloud palace. Jason detected an aura mask placed over
them, subtle enough that he might not have even noticed in person. In his
cloud palace, however, very little escaped his perception. As they entered,
Jason sensed an aura mask similar to the one used by Benella, the elf who
had been a spy for the messengers.
At a mental command from Jason, an image of a hallway appeared on the
window in front of Jason. It was the group of liberated adventurers being
escorted down a hall by a woman in Church of the Healer robes and a man
wearing an Adventure Society emblem. They were all bronze rank, according
to their auras, and were on their way to the screening rooms.
A second mental command brought up a second live image from within
the palace. This one showed Arabelle Remore, in one of the palace’s
administrative offices. She was standing over a desk with a scowl on her face
as she organised procurement lists.
“Arabelle,” he said.
She looked up, glancing around. “Jason?”
“You’re working with the person running the evacuee operation, right?”
“Yeah,” she confirmed, half-groaning. “I’m in charge of making the most
of your magic cloud hospital. Right now, supplies are being brought in as
quick as people can get their hands on them, which is not the basis for an
efficient system. I’m trying to make sure things go where they’re needed
without too much getting lost in the shuffle.”
“Unfortunately, I need to add to your load. I’m sorry.”
“Can it wait?”
“I think there is a group of worm-infested adventurers in the building.”
“So, ‘no’ is what you’re saying.”
“Pretty much. A group of rescued adventurers just came in, but they’re all
wearing aura masks. The sophisticated kind I’ve seen the messengers use.”
“And you think they’ve been infected.”
“It could be something else. They could be magically disguised
messengers for all I know. Unless I poke them hard enough that they notice, I
can’t tell what they’re hiding.”
Arabelle left the room, the image on the window moving to track her
quick stride.
“We have a team of Adventure Society enforcers on standby for this
reason,” she said. “They’re stationed by the screening rooms.”
“I know, but they won’t act on my say so.”
“I’ll get them moving; if something is going to happen, it will be in the
screening rooms or on the way. Whoever or whatever we’re dealing with,
they’ll get violent once they realise their disguises won’t hold up. Can you
use the building to assist?”
“Of course. I just didn’t want to contain them out of nowhere and alarm
the people working here.”
“I’m pretty sure they’ll be alarmed anyway.”
“But at least about the right thing. I want people worried about intruders,
not the building randomly eating rescued adventurers.”
“That’s not my responsibility. Once we’ve contained these adventurers, I
want you to meet Hana Shavar, the woman in charge. I don’t have time to be
your mouthpiece all day.”
“Yes, ma’am.”

Five elite worm-hosts were moving down a hall, in a building with white
walls that looked like smooth tiles but were actually absorbent cloud-
substance. The hosts communicated silently, much like Jason’s voice chat,
wary of their situation. The facility all the rescuees were being taken into was
beyond expectations, preventing their magical senses from moving beyond
what they could see.
Unlike slave worms, the elite worms only needed one worm to the host,
and each had an independent mind. While they were capable of commanding
slave worms and communicating with the matriarch, they could operate
independently, without control. They were independent minds within the
swarm.
They had realised that the messengers had never intended to leave this
world to the worms once attackers started descending on the initial breeding
sites. As the matriarchs started dying, with minimal reaction from the
messengers, the worms realised that their agenda no longer aligned with that
of their winged allies.
The elite worms had no recourse but to go along, looking for an
opportunity. They at least still possessed the aura masks left on the host
bodies by the messengers; they could look for the chance to slip away. If they
could rejoin the other elite worms in the city, they could begin to work on
redeeming a situation that had turned dire. They had not yet had a chance to
quietly escape, with so many eyes on them.
Now they were in this strange building, with walls that could block their
senses and soft floors that muffled sound—any corner could have people just
around it. At least there were only the two people moving with them, now.
Even better, they were the same bronze rank as the aura masks inscribed into
the host bodies. With the host bodies enhanced to silver, they could put their
escorts down quickly and move on.
From what the worms gathered, one of their escorts was a kind of healer,
Gloria. The other, Lomius, had a role that was alien to the worms. He seemed
to have been given the task of helping others of his kind organise one
another, which was the kind of inefficiency that only came from creatures
with isolated minds. Without the swarm to guide them as a colony, their
fractious psyches would quickly fall to confusion and disarray. They even
had to designate one another with names, just so they could effectively
interrelate. The swarm memory had seen this over and over, with countless
worlds and countless species. This was what the swarm came to cure.
If the worms were going to move before they reached their destination,
the timing was as good as it was likely to get. The two weaklings with them
would offer minimal impediment.
“Where are you taking us?” one of the elite worms asked.
“Just a screening to double-check you don’t have any of those foul worms
in you,” Lomius said. “Frankly, I think it’s a redundant time-waster, but does
anyone listen to me? No, and now you poor sods are stuck jumping through
rings instead of getting cleaned up and fed. You’ve been through enough
already, without any extra poking and prodding.”
The elite worm made the host give a friendly smile. “I don’t suppose you
could skip it, then? We’ve already been through so much.”
Lomius looked to the healer. “What do you say, Gloria?”
“No.”
“Come on.”
“No.”
“You know they don’t really expect to find anything. Otherwise, they’d
have more than just us escorting them.”
“Lomius, if we had the people, we would have.”
Gloria shook her head firmly.
“My Adventure Society colleague may think that this step is
unnecessary,” she told the worm-hosts, and then her expression softened. “I
truly am sorry to stretch things out for you, but when the cost of a mistake is
so high, redundancy in safety measures is exactly what you want.”
“Oh, come on, Gloria,” Lomius said. “Do they look like dead bodies
being puppeteered by worms to you?”
“No, Lomius, they don’t. Which is why we have a screening process
instead of having you and me eyeball it.”
Lomius shrugged at the worms. “Sorry, but you heard the lady. Rules are
rules.”
Without warning, the smiling worm shot into motion. A hand was flung
at Lomius, drill-bit-like spikes emerging from its fingers like claws. A wall of
cloud stuff coalesced between the host and the elf, but was not enough to stop
the attack. It did slow it down, at least; only the finger spikes were buried in
Lomius’ head. The silver-rank strength of the host would have otherwise
buried its entire hand into the bronze-ranker’s head, leaving him very dead
instead of just injured.
Another worm-host went for Gloria, but another cloudy barrier gave her
time to toss up a magical shield. The single strike was enough to break it, but
there was no follow-up. The air around the worm-hosts had rapidly grown
opaque, condensing into thick cloud-substance. Like a mix of marshmallow
and concrete, it left the worm-hosts stuck, with only the two arms that had
made attacks visible. They jutted comically from the cloud-stuff, thrashing
impotently.
Gloria only stared for a moment before turning to Lomius on the ground.
She threw out a fast healing spell and assessed his injuries. He was conscious
but incoherent, having had several three-inch spikes puncture his head.
Bronze-rankers usually still had brains as a massive physical vulnerability,
especially non-adventurers.
Another glance at the now-blocked hallway told Gloria that the
adventurers were not likely to get free. She examined Lomius and realised he
had dangerous puncture wounds to the brain that her quick heal hadn’t come
close to fixing. She assessed that immediate treatment was more important
than evacuating him from danger and potentially exacerbating the wounds, so
she went to work on a more powerful, ritual-assisted healing ability.
Gloria was still working on the ritual when the Adventure Society
enforcers arrived, only moments after the attack. The team leader directed her
people to protect Gloria, but wasn’t sure what to make of the white wall with
two arms sticking out. They had spike-claws jutting from the fingertip and
were jerking helplessly.
“What do we do with this?”
73
A M O R TA L P E R S P EC T I V E

F ROM HIS ROOM OVERLOOKING THE CAMP , J ASON WATCHED A COMBINATION OF


Adventure Society enforcers and Magic Society functionaries take away five
cylinders on a floating platform. Each cylinder was a stasis pod, containing a
worm-host that could be vaguely made out through the blue liquid in the pod.
Someone appeared in the room and joined Jason in staring out the
window. It wore brown robes and sported a neat grey beard, appearing as a
handsomely middle-aged man. Jason knew that it was neither middle-aged
nor a man, and didn’t react to its arrival. It was only able to appear there
because Jason had withdrawn his spirit domain from the bulk of his cloud
construct.
“Just because I happen to have left the door open,” Jason said, “that
doesn’t mean I want just anyone wandering in.”
“Thank you for giving my people access to these facilities. It has given us
the most precious resource when it comes to healing: time.”
“You don’t need to thank me for basic decency. If you can help, you help.
That’s obvious. Besides, I’d rather knock up a quickie hospital and help
people than carve up people I was too late to save.”
“You’ve had a grim day.”
“Lots of people have, but that’s adventuring. We meet a lot of people on
the worst days of their lives and hope to make them a little less awful. Didn’t
do so well today.”
“Not every adventurer sees their role in that light.”
“Enough do. I know a lot of us get changed by the money, the power, the
influence. I certainly was; just ask your boy Dominion. But when the time to
step up comes, most adventurers put all that aside. Is there a lot of ambition
wrapped up in that? Sure. But they answer the call; the monster surge proved
that. There’s a lot of hope to be found there.”
Healer smiled. “I am glad that you can find optimism on such days as
these. I wondered if there was any left in you when you first came back to
this world.”
“Is that what you’re here for? To cheer me up? I don’t think providing a
few amenities for the camp here warrants the personal thank you.”
“You are in a strange position, Jason. May I call you Jason?”
“Since when does your lot ask permission for anything?”
His laughter was warm and comforting, like a roaring fire in a snow
chalet.
“I suppose we don’t. Not with mortals, but you don’t fall neatly into that
box. You are certainly and most enthusiastically mortal, yet you have a foot
firmly planted in our realm.”
He glanced sideways at Jason.
“Thank you for opening your space to my people. Domains are tricky
things, and I can easily see how you might be reluctant to withdraw it.”
“Making your people come in and deal with the presence of a spirit
domain would only cause problems. It would promote distrust and soak up
valuable time while I convince your people to use the building. Seems
obvious to take a step back.”
“Even so, it is not easy to forsake control, even for a short while. My boy
Dominion does not approve.”
“I don’t approve of him either, so fair enough. If you really are grateful,
though, I don’t suppose you’d be open to a few questions?”
“I can give you some answers, but the areas I can speak on are limited by
my role. I am not Knowledge. Also, will you trust anything a god has to
say?”
“You may not be a bloke, and you may not have a heart, but you seem
like a bloke with his heart in the right place. And as for a topic, surely a god
can talk about god stuff.”
“Yes, but my advice is to concentrate on mortal affairs. The rest will
come to you naturally as the incongruity in power between your aspects of
self grow smaller.”
“Oh, I’d be more than happy to wait until I naturally get to cosmic affairs,
but you may have noticed that they’re not waiting for me. I’ve got a great
astral being with a personal grudge. I’ve got gods paying way too close
attention—no offence—and I had to start re-writing reality to save the world.
Twice. And I cannot understate the degree to which I do not know what I’m
doing with that, and I’ve still got a dimensional bridge to finish. For which I
need to go poking around a messenger invasion, which is pretty tame by
comparison. And yeah, the messengers aren’t mine to deal with, but then
there’s the whole bit about me being an astral king. Even if I’m willing to put
that aside, I don’t think they will.”
“Then use it; they will respect that status. It won’t stop them from trying
to kill you, but there can be advantages to being a respected enemy.”
“What happened to focusing on mortal affairs?”
“The messengers are mortal. More or less. But I cannot give you more
advice on that than I have. I don’t want War complaining to me about
encroachment.”
“How does that work, exactly? What happened with Purity? Why didn’t
your lot tell anyone?”
“It is not for the rest of us to reveal the deceptions of the god Deception,
or unveil the disguises of the god Disguise.”
“Tell that to generations of people who were worshipping the wrong
god.”
“We did. To gods, the limitations of mortals seem strange. They seem
like nothing to us, often meaningless or even contradictory. We, in turn, have
limitations that make no sense to mortals, yet to us are as binding as the
inevitability of death is to them.”
“You might be talking to the wrong guy about the inevitability of death.”
“As I said, Jason, you are in a strange position. Your nature is liminal,
which makes it hard to know how to deal with you.”
“Isn’t there a God of Truth who could have told everyone about Purity?”
“It is far from that simple. Fire and water may seem like oppositional
forces at a glance, but in reality, their interactions are complex and not
always obvious. In the same way, Truth and Deception are not simple
antagonists. And even if they were, would you, of all people, want them
playing out their conflict in the mortal realm?”
“Isn’t that exactly what Disguise did by taking over the Purity church?
That’s a lot of mortals being played with like pieces in a game.”
“And if gods were constantly making proxy war of the physical realm,
then all mortals would be but pawns, moving back and forth. We gods choose
our moments and take our turns, by our own measure.”
“And Truth didn’t get a go in however long since the rest of you ganked
Purity?”
“We did nothing to Purity. Most mortals believe that we did, but no. He
sanctioned himself.”
“And what is sanctioning, exactly? I’ve been wondering about this for a
while.”
“Sanctioning is an extreme change in the nature of a transcendent being,
through a comprehensive shift in their authority.”
“Just to be clear, when you say ‘authority,’ you’re talking about the
power to fundamentally reconfigure reality and unreality both, creating or
recreating elements of cosmos, be it part of a physical universe or the deep
astral, right? Or is it more of a ‘permit to host a charity sausage sizzle’ kind
of authority?”
“The first one.”
“I figured, but thought it was worth making sure. I’d feel like an idiot if I
got it in my head that the old Builder was banished to the depths of the astral
when he was outside a hardware store, fundraising for the local girl’s cricket
team.”
Healer turned to look at Jason, who looked back.
“What?” Jason asked.
“You are an odd person.”
“I’m not that odd. You just need to talk to more mortals.”
“That is not so easy. The direct attention of a deity can be hard to
withstand. We once gave you that attention, to harden your soul for the
challenges to come. There is a reason our appearances in the worship squares
are brief and focused on crowds. Unless a mortal is within my spirit domain,
or part of my clergy and inured to my attention, even speaking to a projection
like this for too long is harmful.”
“Should I be worried? We’ve been here for a while. I feel fine, but are
you pulling a spiritual silent-but-deadly on me?”
“As I have said before, you are unusual. Not many mortals have a nascent
universe inside them.”
“Mum always told me I was special. That’s not true. She said my brother
was special. Hey, did you change the subject? We were talking about
sanctioning, and suddenly you’re bringing up my mum.”
Healer raised an eyebrow, but Jason shamelessly ignored him.
“You were saying something about sanctioning being a shift in
authority.”
“Yes. A transcendent entity is, by nature, either largely or entirely
comprised of authority. Very little of that authority is boundless, however,
and most of it has specific affinities. This is how gods come to have areas of
influence.”
“So, you’re pretty much a sentient bundle of authority with a healing
affinity?”
“Putting it that way is rather rude, but yes. To the degree that a mortal
mind can comprehend the nuances, that is somewhat accurate.”
“And sanctioning is changing the affinity of someone’s authority?”
“Yes. As the name ‘sanctioning’ implies, this is normally a punitive act,
imposed by other transcendent entities. You know of the new Builder. The
previous Builder had its authority forcibly transmuted until it could no longer
serve as the Builder.”
“So, the old Builder is out there somewhere.”
“Yes, although I shall speak no further on that. It is not for me to tell or
for you to hear. Yet. The higher-order secrets will come to you as you
progress as an astral king.”
“And you said that you and the other gods didn’t do that to Purity?”
“No. Gods can alter their own nature, but it is hard to do so without
encroaching on other gods. Purity did it not by changing the affinity of his
authority but by expending it.”
“He used up all his power?”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“I do not know his reasons. As a god, I am content, but I know that others
are unsatisfied with their lot. Purity took all his power, transmuted all that he
was, and channelled it into an act of creation.”
“Creation? You’re saying that the God of Purity made something so
hardcore, he had to top himself to get it done?”
“Yes.”
“What could possibly require a god killing themselves to make?”
“Something that would inspire the messengers to invade a world.”
Jason’s eyes went wide.
“Someone told me that the messengers were here looking for something.
Something that can purge the monster core effects out of someone’s soul.
You’re telling me that it’s some kind of artefact that a god killed himself to
make?“
“That’s not strictly accurate, but is broadly correct, yes.”
“So, to sum up, the God of Purity got ennui and committed suicide by
MacGuffin.”
“That is not how I would describe it, but I can see how that could be seen
as the case. From a very specific perspective.”
“You know, I was wondering if my friend was overstating what a big deal
this monster core purification thing is.”
“He was not.”
“Yeah, I’m getting that.”
“Into whose hands this object falls is important, yes.”
“Are you asking me to go look for the thing? Is that why you’re here?”
“No. You have no place amongst the forces that will clash over this.”
“Diamond-rankers.”
“Yes. You can participate in the search, should you desire, but once it is
found, run far and fast. I would advise staying out of the chase altogether.”
“Do you know where this divine relic is?”
“Yes.”
“Are you going to tell anyone?”
“No. After reluctantly going along with Deception and Disguise, the gods
have unilaterally decreed that none of us shall interfere with the search for the
artefact Purity left behind, or the fight that takes place over it. We shall leave
its fate to mortals to determine for themselves.”
“Even though it’s some kind of divine relic?”
“If a new Purity rises, they may intervene. It is unlikely one will before
the issue is settled, however.”
“If you’re not here to get me to involve myself, why are you here?”
“To express my gratitude, as I said. I also have something for you.
Consider it both a thank you for your accommodations to my people today, as
well as a welcoming gift for your first step into the immortal realm, as
tentative as that step is.”
He held out a fist-sized orb, clear but filled with sparks of blue, silver and
gold. The moment Jason took it, the god was gone.

Item: [Genesis Command: Life] (transcendent rank, legendary)


The authority to create a life. (consumable, magic core).

Effect: Give true life to an astral construct created from a


dimensional space. The construct becomes a true astral entity, bound
to the dimensional space.

Uses remaining: 1/1

“Holy crap, guy,” Jason muttered. “I think you’re overpaying just to rent out
some space.”
74
M R A S A N O W I LL S E E YO U N OW

J ASON LOOKED AT THE ORB IN HIS HAND , GIVEN TO HIM BY THE H EALER . H E
wasn’t certain exactly what it would do, but with the power of his soul space,
he was certain he could figure it out. He was tempted to do so immediately,
but instead, put it into his inventory. There would be time later, and he
couldn’t help but feel there was another shoe left to drop with the
messengers.
Rufus had posited that the messengers might strike the teams
investigating the worm-infested towns. Jason wanted to be able to portal in
and rejoin the team in an instant if that happened, but his instincts told him it
wouldn’t. It could just be his imagination, but he felt an uncomfortable
affinity with the messengers, and he couldn’t shake the idea that they would
come for the city.
If and when the messengers made a move on the city, there was only so
much Jason could do. Compared to the city’s defence infrastructure, one
cloud palace would not make a big impact. He certainly couldn’t compare to
the high-ranking defenders, but he was prepared to make the most of what he
could offer. Shade bodies were already placed throughout and around the
city.
For the moment, he stayed where he was, looking out over the evacuee
camp. He could sense Arabelle moving through the administrative area of the
cloud hospital, alongside another gold-ranker. It wasn’t someone Jason knew,
but had sensed roaming around the hospital. They were heading for Jason’s
location and would shortly arrive. Jason weighed his options for a moment
between politeness and being needlessly dramatic before deciding to be true
to himself.
“Shade?”
“Yes, Mr Asano?” Shade asked, emerging from Jason’s shadow.
“Please show the ladies in when they arrive.”
Shade’s silhouette form did not have a face with which to give Jason a
flat look, yet somehow his pause managed to convey the feeling of one.
“Must we, Mr Asano?”
“What?” Jason asked innocently.
“I know that tone, Mr Asano, and I know what you want.”
“That saves time, then.”
“I’d rather not.”
“It’s kind of your job.”
“Mr Asano, it’s a terrible movie.”
“I know it’s a terrible movie.”
“And a worse book.”
“It’s a much worse book, yes.”
“I’m not doing it. If you wanted to do this, you should have chosen
Christian Grey as your alias.”
“Shade, you understood the job when you became my familiar.”
“Mr Asano, I don’t understand the job now.”
“Just get out there; they’re about to arrive.”
Shade did not grumble and Shade did not sigh. Even so, and looking in
the other direction, Jason felt their heavy implication.
“Will the high priestess be meeting Mr Asano or Mr Miller? And what
will he be wearing?”
“Good question,” Jason said, and removed the coins that disguised his
eyes. “Asano, I think. I don’t think lies will help smooth out my relations
with the lady.”
Jason was shrouded in dark mist for a moment, and when it faded, his
clothes had been replaced with a sharp grey suit from his Alejandro Albericci
collection. He then turned back to the window and looked out into the middle
distance.
“Better?”
“Much. You realise that this world has barely started recording theatrical
productions for public viewing. They won’t understand the reference to a
movie poster from another universe.”
“They never do, Shade.”
“Then why do you insist on doing this?”
“Because it’s fun.”
“Is that entirely appropriate today, Mr Asano? Not long ago, we were
standing in a town filled with the dead.”
“It’s not appropriate, but I’m going to do it anyway. You know I’ve tried
brooding on the dark days, and you know how that worked out.”
“I do.”
“It didn’t make me feel better; I just spiralled. You know that better than
anyone. So, I’m going to remind myself that while life can be a crap sack of
death and misery sometimes, I don’t have to let those times define my life. I
tried that and it sucked.”
“Very well,” Shade acceded. “I approve of your attitude, Mr Asano,
although I must stress the opposite about the means by which you have
chosen to express it.”
His voice dripped so heavily with disapproval, despite its formality, that
Jason was inclined to ban Shade from watching British television.
“When we go back to Earth, I hope your niece is in need of a familiar,”
Shade muttered as he disappeared into Jason’s shadow.
“What was that?” Jason asked.
“I have no idea what you are talking about, Mr Asano.”

Hana Shavar was the High Priestess of the Church of the Healer for the city
of Yaresh. When people had started arriving, after being rescued from towns
and villages across the southern region, she personally took charge.
Scrambling for resources was difficult as they were already being sent off as
fast as they could be, to supply the fight with the messengers.
Tapping into the local adventurer resources was a typical approach in
such circumstances, although the building from which the evacuee camp was
run left her uneasy. On the surface, it was perfect, with a slew of amenities
that were a boon to her work, but she could not shake a nebulous suspicion
about it.
Something about the building tickled Hana’s senses. That there was an
aura, heavily tamped-down, was normal for a soul-bound item like a cloud
flask. The aura itself even felt protective and benevolent, but something told
her that something else lay dormant, like a sleeping dragon.
Arabelle Remore had been a useful asset, both in making the most of the
building and assuaging Hana’s unease. As a follower of the Healer, Remore’s
mental health specialty was not as immediately useful as others might have
been, but would be critical in the days to come.
Healing magic would swiftly bring the survivors of the towns and villages
to full physical health, but what they had been through would take a much
longer recovery. There was no healing spell for the memory of everyone you
know being killed and their bodies paraded around in a mockery of life.
Even so, Remore did not entirely settle Hana’s concerns. While she had
never been outright evasive with Hana’s questions about the building and its
owner, Hana got a definite sense that important things were going unsaid. For
this reason, Hana wanted to meet the owner of the building, so when Remore
asked if she would, she immediately agreed. Although she was busy, the
chance to alleviate her concerns was worth a little time.
Hana was dealing with a few last issues around the infested adventurers
that had been caught when she sensed the presence of her god. Where she
couldn’t be certain, but he was definitely projecting himself somewhere in the
building. With all the work they had to do, it was welcome, although she
could not help but feel disappointed that he hadn’t appeared before her.
One of the building’s amenities was a communication system that
allowed Hana to see and speak with her key subordinates in the building, but
checking around, she could not find where the god had shown himself. That
was when she discovered that the others hadn’t felt his presence, only Hana
herself.
Remore took Hana to the top floor of the building, which had the most
space currently unused. It was tagged for the kind of long-term treatment that
Remore and others like her would need to conduct once things slowed down
enough to make that possible. They arrived at a door with a shadow creature
standing outside it. Most shadow entities blurred into the gloom around them,
but this one was neat and clearly defined, looking almost officious despite
being little more than a silhouette.
“High Priestess Shavar, Mrs Remore,” it greeted them in a male voice
with formal intonation. “Welcome. I am Shade.”
“Shade,” Remore said. “Why are you playing doorman? Is something the
matter?”
“Yes, Mrs Remore,” the shadow said, paradoxically sounding both
extremely polite and extremely disgruntled at the same time.
“What happened?” Remore asked.
“The usual,” the shadow said.
“Ah. Would I even understand if I asked?”
“No, Mrs Remore. I would apologise for Mr Asano, but I do not wish the
responsibility and he has no intent to contrition.”
Hana had seen nothing but professionalism from Arabelle Remore, so
was surprised to see her let out a long-suffering sigh.
“Alright,” Arabelle said. “Let’s get it over with.”
“Very well,” Shade said.
The shadow creature was not easy to read, yet Hana had the sense he was
steeling himself with a rigid pause. There was a shared camaraderie between
Remore and the shadow that Hana recognised from warriors facing grave
odds together, which was more than unusual for what should be a mundane
meeting.
“Is something the matter?” she asked.
“I do so hope not, Priestess Shavar. Mr Asano will see you now.”
Hana couldn’t be certain that she didn’t imagine the very slight shudder
that seemed to pass over the shadow creature as he spoke and the door
opened. The first thing she noticed was the lingering presence of her god; this
was the room in which he had appeared.
Inside, the room was empty save for a man standing with his back to the
door, hands in pockets as he stared out the window wall. The window itself
was tinted, leaving the camp outside and the sky beyond it pale and washed
of colour. After a moment, the man turned, giving her the same assessing
look she gave him.
Startlingly, his aura was a closed book, despite being only silver rank.
Hana’s senses were sharp, even for a gold-ranker, but all she got from him
was the same muted aura she sensed from the building itself. If there was any
difference, it was that her sense of something dormant and dangerous lying
within that aura only grew stronger. If she wanted any more than that, she
would have to force her senses onto him, crashing through the boundaries of
politeness.
That left his appearance by which to judge him. Asano’s expression was
that of faint amusement, as if thinking of a joke only he understood. From the
exchange with the shadow creature, she imagined that was the case, although
whether the joke was at her expense she could not tell. From Arabelle’s
reaction, she guessed it was a self-indulgence of the man himself.
Sharp features were softened by a neatly trimmed beard, with glossy
black hair the standout feature. He had the usual polished symmetry of silver
rank but was not stand-out handsome. She guessed that his face had been a
little too angular before the polishing effects of ranking up. His suit was neat-
casual in the Rimaros-style, expensive without the need to flaunt it, which
meant really expensive. He wore it well enough, but it had the feeling of a
costume. Something in his expression told her that he liked costumes, the
more flamboyant the better.
Asano’s eyes were flagrantly magical, but what drew her attention were
his scars. Small marks stood out, bisecting one eyebrow and gouging a thin,
hairless mark in his beard. A more substantial mark was on his throat, plainly
visible with the open collar of his shirt.
Finally, she turned to the eyes, blue and orange with dark sclera. They
gave the sense of distant power, off in a void, and Hana immediately
concluded that this was the most honest thing in his appearance.
Looking into his eyes, something finally clicked about the building. It
was hard to notice, barely registering on her magical senses, but something
was feeding power to the building from somewhere. If she hadn’t been
intimately familiar with the process, as a channel for divine power, she
wouldn’t have recognised it at all.
This time, she did push her senses beyond the limits of propriety,
exploring the link between the man and the building. She traced the link back
to some kind of power inside him that she didn’t recognise, her aura recoiling
at the touch of it. He showed amusement rather than offence.
“Rude,” he said, the edges of his mouth curling up in a slight smile.
“Your aura is strong for your rank.”
Despite outranking him, his words felt patronising after what she’d just
sensed. Even without the power that tossed her perception back, the aura she
had dug through to find it had been impossibly potent for a silver-ranker.
“Who are you?” she asked bluntly. After what she’d just done with her
aura, there was little point in the pretence of manners.
“Jason Asano.”
She frowned.
“What are you?”
“Team chef.”
“Liar.”
“Frequently. Drink?”
A drinks cabinet made of clouds rose from the floor. A bench slid out of
it with three glasses and Asano started mixing drinks, not waiting for a
response.
“I have concerns about this building,” Hana said. “And about you.”
“And I have concerns about you,” he said, not looking up from his task.
“Arabelle, your friend’s manners leave something to be desired.”
“You’re right,” Hana acknowledged. “But while you’re standing there,
playing games, people with intense trauma are being brought in here. I need
to know that you are genuinely trying to help and not setting us up for
something that will only make things worse.”
“I’ve seen what’s inside them, Priestess,” Jason said. “I’m not sure it can
get much worse for these people. If I have some political agenda, what do
they care? And if I was in league with the messengers, enacting some wildly
convoluted scheme, do you think some lady interrogating me in my own
house will bring it all down?”
There was flinty rebuke in his final words, but when he looked up from
the drinks, there was still nothing but faint amusement on his face while his
aura was as unreadable as ever. The beverages in front of him were in wide,
short glasses, clear to show off colourful layers of liquor. He took one of the
glasses from the bench and the other two floated off as the cabinet descended
into the floor. Hana realised that he was levitating the glasses with his aura.
Like a messenger.
“I have too many questions to be able to trust you,” she said, leaving the
glass floating in front of her.
“Oh, you have no idea how many reasons there are not to trust me,
Priestess.”
Arabelle grabbed her drink and took a heavy gulp, shaking her head at the
both of them.
“Mr Asano, you should be taking things seriously on a day like today.”
“I disagree,” Jason said. “I’ve seen many days like today, and I’ve taken
them very seriously. I’m not going to go roaming past the survivors,
whistling a jaunty tune, but I won’t wear a dark cloud over my head like that
will somehow make things better either. As for trust, that’s up to you.”
“You just told me not to trust you.”
“No, I said there are many reasons not to trust me, not that you
shouldn’t.”
Hana narrowed her eyes as she ran another assessing look over the
infuriating man.
“I understand that you have seen a lot of death today, Mr Asano.”
“That’s right.”
“You seem very frivolous for someone encountering such a thing.”
“I do, don’t I?”
“Do you think that those deaths mean nothing?”
“That would make me a monster.”
“Which is exactly why I asked.”
“The deaths matter. They all matter.”
“Then how is it that you seem so unaffected?”
“Practise.”
“How can you use your aura like a messenger?”
“Also practise.”
“Why was my god here?” Hana asked, which drew a raised-eyebrows
expression from Arabelle. “I sense his lingering presence in this room.”
“Fashion advice,” Asano said. “He’s looking to switch the church robes
from brown to a pale blue. I’m trying to talk him into a floral print, but he’s
proving reluctant.”
“You’re veering in the direction of blasphemy.”
“I’m Jason Asano, pleased to meet you. That’s twice I’ve introduced
myself, by the way, which you have yet to do. If your god left anything here
that you can sense, I can’t imagine he did so by accident. You might want to
spend some time contemplating why.”
Hana frowned.
“I am Hana Shavar. High Priestess of the Church of the Healer, Yaresh.”
Instead of the slight, rather smug smiles he had shown thus far, his
sudden and genuine-seeming smile lit up his face.
“Have a drink, Priestess. This might be your camp, but this is my house
and you’re a guest. A rude one, as we’ve already established.”
Cloud furniture rose from the floor, a seat behind Jason and a couch
behind Hana and Arabelle. Jason and Arabelle sat, then Hana took the still-
floating glass and sat as well, glowering at Jason.
She looked at the glass in her hand. Did it have some undetectable poison
whose fumes were affecting her? She barely recognised her own behaviour,
realising that this man and his strange building unsettled her much more than
she had originally realised. Was it the strange power inside him, or some
childish jealousy over her god appearing in front of him without letting her
know why? Was it as simple as a personality clash? There was just something
about the man that made her want to punch him in his smug face, but she was
far better than that. Scolding herself, she schooled her emotions.
“I apologise, Mr Asano. You have been generous, and I have been
discourteous.”
“It’s a rough day, Priestess; I won’t begrudge you a little stress. And call
me Jason.”
“My behaviour notwithstanding, I have a responsibility to this city and
the people we are attempting to help here. I cannot allow any potential
dangers, and this building troubles me. Its owner troubles me more. I’ve seen
cloud palaces before—there is one nearby for direct comparison—but this
one is different. I don’t know what power you are using to feed it, or how, but
it’s close enough to a divine connection that I keep coming back to my
original questions: who and what are you?”
Asano crossed his legs and leaned back in his chair, relaxed. He took a
sip of his drink.
“To sum up, Priestess, you want me to tell you all my secrets before I’m
qualified for the privilege of lending you what I’m confident you’ve already
found to be an exceptionally useful building.”
“Yes. Mr Asano, what are your thoughts on mysterious powers that you
don’t understand, with motives you don’t know?”
“I’m against them, as a rule, but as they try to kill me on a regular basis,
I’m somewhat biased. As someone who encounters them on a regular basis,
though I’ve learned that sometimes you have to suck it up and do the job in
front of you.”
“And how has that worked out for you?”
“Very mixed,” he said, frustration poking through his façade as he turned
to Arabelle. “Is this what I’m like? Marching into places to make rude and
outrageous demands?”
“Yes,” Arabelle said absently, peering into her glass with a sceptical
expression. “How is this so sweet? It’s like syrup.”
“I think I’m starting to see why people don’t like me,” Jason said, then
turned his attention back to Hana.
“If you don’t trust this building,” he told her, “don’t use it.”
“That would make the camp activities far less efficient,” she said.
“Especially given that we are already using it quite heavily.”
“Then you have a choice. Give it up and make things worse, or keep
using it and live with the mystery. I’ll leave the decision up to you.”
Jason and his chair both descended into the floor, vanishing. Arabelle
immediately turned to Hana.
“If I might ask, High Priestess, are you alright? I’ve been watching you
act with decorum all day, in the most hectic of circumstances. Jason was as I
expected, and I know he can be hard to deal with, but if you’ll allow some
blunt honesty, it was your behaviour that surprised me.”
Hana looked into the glass in her hands, still untouched. Her expression
reflected her thoughts, uncertain and troubled.
“I’m sorry, Priestess Remore. I’m not sure exactly what has gotten into
me. I think it is an accumulation of things. Also, I don’t think I’ve ever had
someone infuriate me so quickly. The arrogance and the smugness of him.
What we’re doing here is important and he treats it like a joke. That is not an
excuse for my behaviour, I know. Do you think he will withdraw his use of
this cloud building?”
“Oh, don’t worry about annoying Jason. Being rude will get you on his
good side faster than being polite, if anything. I’m more worried about what’s
going on with you. When was the last time you slept?”
“I don’t know. Three, four days? We assaulted the messenger strongholds
in sequence. Wanted them on the back foot in case the problems to the south
were part of some plan of theirs. I was barely back in the city when the call
for the camp came in. But again, that’s a reason, not an excuse.”
“You need to rest.”
“There’s too much work.”
“And there are people to do it, at least long enough for you to sleep. I’m
not asking, High Priestess. This is an order from your mental care specialist.”
Hana nodded, still staring into the colourful liquid in her glass. She closed
her eyes as she lifted it to her lips to take a sip. As the thick sweetness of the
liquor spread over her tongue, her eyes shot open.
“This is amazing!”
75
H O T C H O C O L AT E

J ES F IN K AAL WAS NOT PRONE TO NERVOUSNESS . A S A MESSENGER ,


confidence was ingrained. More than that, she was a Voice of the Will, a
representative of her people’s most powerful beings. But as much as she
might have tried to bury the memory, she remembered the sense of inferiority
that had defined the final moments of Pei Vas Kartha as she died at Jason
Asano’s hands.
While being a Voice of the Will was an unquestionably powerful
position, there was no escaping the fact that it was a state of permanent
subordination. Even if that was to an astral king, serving anyone did not come
naturally to messengers. While ordinary messengers might obey her now,
each one of them was looking towards the day when they surpassed her,
reaching the pinnacle of their kind. That only a minuscule few would ever
reach those heights meant little, so long as the potential was still there. For all
the power that a voice commanded, they did not have that potential. Their
power ultimately came from another.
The messengers had never been able to determine what set the limits to
their individual power. They did not even learn those limits until they hit
them. For those who discovered themselves unable to surpass silver rank,
there were only two options. One was to accept their status as the least of
their kind, and live with being superior to everything that wasn’t a
messenger. The other was to seek out an astral king that would have them,
allowing them to artificially surpass their limits.
While other messengers might serve an astral king, and be subject to their
power, they could always escape it if they themselves grew powerful enough.
For a Voice of the Will, there was no going back. Silver and even gold-
ranked messengers might show deference to a Voice of the Will; those who
reached diamond looked at them with disdain. Diamond was the hard limit
for voices, while messengers who reached that point on their own had the
potential to become astral kings, however unlikely that was. For that reason,
diamond-rank messengers looked down even on voices that had reached the
same rank.
Jes Fin Kaal was a gold-rank voice, and while she had claimed command
of the messenger forces in the region, there was a diamond-ranker amongst
them who could take that right from her whenever he liked. That he had
chosen not to was typical of diamond-rank messengers. While they might be
forced to capitulate to the agendas of astral kings, their obsession was
transcending mortality to become one themselves.
Unsurprisingly, the diamond-ranker, Mah Go Schaat, had claimed the
largest and tallest building in the stronghold as his own. Jes flew up and
hovered around the domed pinnacle. She waited to be acknowledged, one
minute turning into ten and minutes becoming an hour. Everyone in the
stronghold could look up and see her being left outside, waiting on an
audience.
Jes did not mind; it was both a childish power play and a chance to rest
her mind in meditation. Between the attacks on the messenger strongholds,
organising the upcoming attack and reacting to the adventurers hitting the
worm nests, she could use the rest. As for the idea of being shamed in front
of the entire stronghold, she did not care what the people below or the one
she was waiting on thought of her. She neither needed their praise nor feared
their scorn.
Finally, a panel in the dome slid open to allow her entry. Inside was a
library with bookshelves and tables covered in tomes. Freestanding magical
writing boards were scrawled with notes and had papers pinned to them,
showing scraps of map or magical diagrams.
There was only one chair. It was a massive throne of dark leather in the
messenger style, with an hourglass back to allow for wings. Mah Go Schaat
sat in it, his brown wings with dark yellow speckling spread out behind it. He
was a massive figure, even for a messenger, being almost as tall sitting as Jes
was when floating upright, just over the floor.
The chair faced the door, but he did not look up as Jes entered. His gaze
was locked onto a many-faceted crystal he was holding in one hand. She
waited patiently, just as she had outside. Finally, Mah’s eyes shifted from the
crystal to her.
“Why do you interrupt my contemplation, Voice?”
“The time approaches to attack the city. We launch our attack in the hours
before dawn.”
“You would presume to have me move at your word?”
“I am only the voice. The word is that of the astral king.”
“Is it? This is your plan, Jes Fin Kaal.”
“If you wish to claim my position, you have the power. I can let the astral
king know that you will be enacting her agenda in my place.”
Mah glowered and Jes did not let her disdain reach her face. Mah was a
typical, unthinking thug who believed that being a messenger and being
powerful was all he needed to embody their superior ideals. Jes knew that
superiority was not just a birthright, and that their actions were needed to
maintain it.
Jes knew that it was foolish to prod Mah, yet she could not resist the urge.
The more powerful a messenger became, especially one like him, the more
they chafed any time they were forced to acknowledge any will but their
own. Being a voice, and no longer the instrument of her own will, had given
Jes what she believed was a more objective perspective. The myopic power
obsession of too many messengers left them with no sense of what truly made
their kind great. They had faith just as blind as the fools who worshipped
gods.
Mah not only lacked the inclination to administer the messenger
strongholds but also the ability, and he knew it. Like Fal Vin Garath, whom
Jes would be sending to test Asano, Mah was a brute who saw value in
nothing but power. It was only on realising that martial power alone would
not allow them to transcend immortality that they started looking further
afield. Jes had seen more than one diamond-ranker suddenly immerse
themselves in study after hitting the barrier that lay between diamond rank
and transcendence.
“Very well,” Mah finally said through gritted teeth.
“If I may,” Jes said with deference, knowing when to step back, “I would
like to submit a role in the attack for your approval.”
“Speak on it,” Mah ordered.
“The weapon we placed in the city years ago is no longer under
containment,” Jes said. “I was going to place someone new to contain the
change, but as the timing was right, I decided to exacerbate it instead. Once
the weapon awakens, the city will deploy their forces against it, as it is
already inside the defences. That is when we will attack weak points in the
city infrastructure that we have identified. My hope is that you, as the
supreme power in this conflict, will occupy the city’s diamond-rank
defenders. If you can kill them, all the better, but containing them is enough
to let our forces rampage.”
“It will be two against one, in their territory. I am stronger than either, but
not both together.”
“That is why we let them tire themselves fighting the weapon. You come
in and clean them up.”
“What is your goal?”
“The city has been the feeding point for the forces that have been
harassing us. We seek to ruin and sow chaos, to bring the war they have
pressed on us to their doorstep. They coddle their weak masses, who will
demand their power be used as a shield they can huddle behind, no longer
sent to the attack. We can then turn our attention to the Builder’s remnant
forces, the Ashen and the tainted.”
“Then what solution have you found to the natural array? Have you
finally accepted it for the crucible it is?”
“I still oppose a mass attack. There is no telling how many more of our
people will suffer the taint.”
“Which is how we cull the weak and inferior. The ones who fall to the
taint—as you doubtless would, without the astral king’s power—are not
worthy to be counted as messengers.”
“We will let the essence users deal with the array.”
“You would let them destroy it? What of your astral king’s plans?”
“The enemy will carry them out for us.”
“Having your foe act when you lack the strength. Pathetic.”
“There are many kinds of strength.”
Mah snorted derision.
“How will you even manage that?”
“What does it matter, so long as it works?”
Mah’s lip curled in a sneer, but he didn’t push.
“Go, then. Send word when the time comes, and I may deign to join your
attack.”
Jes gave him a short bow. “My gratitude for your benevolence, Mah Go
Schaat.”
The rear wing of the cloud hospital Jason created was the private residence
and provided facilities for Jason and his team, still fully within his spirit
domain. Jason waited, leaning against a wall with two fruit drinks in large
steins, one of which he was sipping from through a metal straw. On the
opposite wall, a doorway opened as the cloud door dissolved into nothing,
revealing an exhausted-looking Taika.
The big man was stripped down to the waist, his dark, tattooed torso
almost large enough to seal the doorway again. Gone was the roundness that
he had when they first met, his body instead sporting the sculpted muscle of a
professional wrestler.
Jason held out the spare drink, Taika taking it eagerly.
“Thanks, bro,” Taika said as he plucked the straw from his stein, then
heavily gulped down half of the drink at a go, juice running down his chin.
He let out a breath as he grinned and wiped his chin with the back of his arm.
“That’s the stuff.”
“For a guy who’s been meditating,” Jason said, “you look a lot like
someone who just finished a session at the gym.”
“Meditation isn’t exactly the same for an essence user as for a lady who
buys a lot of crystals at a new age store,” Taika said. “You know that. I’ve
seen you doing that Dance of the Sword Fairy technique that Rufus taught
you.”
“Yeah,” Jason agreed.
The availability of more effective meditation techniques for adventurers
was one of the fundamental differences between the essence users of Earth
and Pallimustus. As one of the pillars of non-core advancement, such
techniques were also the least intuitive to develop. Pallimustus had been
refining them for millennia, whereas Earth had almost nothing.
Even the US Network only had a few basic techniques, but that had still
put them in a globe-dominating position amongst the magical factions. Those
techniques had come from the Network founder when his familiar—who
would go on to become Mr North—betrayed him.
As essence users ranked up, their minds changed, becoming capable of
more. Meditation techniques needed to change accordingly, taking in
elements of internal mana manipulation, martial arts katas and plain physical
exertion, depending on the nature and purpose of the exercise. Jason relied
heavily on different versions of the sword dance meditation Taika mentioned.
“Did Humphrey show you something new?” Jason asked.
As Humphrey and Taika had similar roles, Humphrey had supplied Taika
with more appropriate techniques than Jason or Farrah had to offer him back
on Earth. Without anything specialised for him, he had been using the same
general techniques Farrah taught all her Network trainees.
“Actually,” Taika said, “I met this bloke when I was coming back into the
city from a solo job.”
While Jason had been doing sexy aura training over the past week, Taika
had been taking solo contracts, pushing himself to finally cross the line into
silver. As a result, his aura was almost trembling with how ready he was to
take the final step.
“We got to talking,” Taika continued, “and he ended up showing me this
meditation technique that meshes perfectly with my garuda essence. It’s
called Golden Wings Transcending the Heavens. Sounds pretty sweet, right?”
“It does. And it looks like it works pretty sweet too, if your aura is
anything to go by.”
“Hell yeah, bro. You ready to have me on the team?”
“That, I’m not so sure about,” Jason said.
Taika frowned. “Are you saying I’m not good enough?”
“No, I’m saying that between you and Rufus joining, there’s too many
sexy brown people. I’m worried Belinda will have the team name changed to
Hot Chocolate.”

The messenger forces were preparing to leave their strongholds. The attacks
from the city had been an impediment, but not a critical one, and the
messengers were aching to pay what they thought of as the servant races back
in kind.
Not far from one of the marshalling yards, Jes looked at Fal Vin Garath,
who still didn’t have a mouth after she had taken it from him. She was
somewhat surprised that he had managed to endure, not thinking the brute
would tolerate what she had done to him for long. Her ability to affect him in
such a way was tied directly to Fal’s acceptance of the authority of the astral
king she served. The moment he rejected that authority, his mouth would
have returned. She would have subsequently killed him, but he’d have died
with his mouth back.
It was a test in and of itself, as even a moment’s disloyalty would have
been enough. Yet he stayed true, despite the inherent ambition and
demonstrated arrogance of the man. Although Fal was her least favourite
kind of person, Jes was forced to acknowledge at least a modicum of
grudging respect.
“We are going to attack the city,” she told him. “You’ve already been
given your task. Hunt down Asano and kill him. If you can, all well and
good. If not, do your best to withdraw and regroup with our regular forces.
Do you understand?”
Fal’s blank lower face morphed back into a mouth, yet he silently
nodded.
“Good,” she told him. “Now that you have a mouth again, do you have
any questions?”
“If this man truly is somehow a silver-rank astral king, are you certain
you want me to kill him?”
“If he is someone that you can kill, Fal Vin Garath, he isn’t worth using.”
She felt the anger suffuse his aura.
“You don’t like it,” she said. “You don’t like that this man is already on
the path that is the goal of every messenger. You don’t like that I’m using
you as a tool, as if he is more important than you. I am curious if you will let
that anger rule you. If you do, you will die. It might be because you fight
Asano to the death, or perhaps you will lash out at me and be struck down.”
She grinned.
“Prove me wrong,” she told him. “Show me that you’re more than a
mindless thug, and you will find that I can be a valuable ally in your quest for
advancement. We did not start off on the best foot, Fal Vin Garath, but do
well here and this could go very well for you.”
76
SADNESS PORRIDGE

H ANA S HAVAR LET OUT A HAPPY MOAN AS SHE STIRRED IN HALF - SLUMBER
before her head cleared as she came fully awake. Despite herself, she
couldn’t help but stretch out, luxuriating in the cloud bed that felt far too light
to support her weight, while doing so perfectly, moulding to her body.
Propping herself up on her elbows, she looked around. The room was
small, one of several on the hospital’s top floor set aside for the people
running the camp to get some rest. Arabelle Remore had sent her stumbling
in, following Hana’s afternoon meeting with Asano. She barely managed to
yank off her clothes before collapsing into the cloud bed, hardly registering
the enveloping softness before sleep took her. Taking her first proper look
around, she noticed that although the room was small and almost featureless,
it was cosy, with a soft light that slowly grew brighter, allowing her sleepy
eyes to adjust.
The room was quite different from the clean and clinical décor that
comprised the rest of the hospital. While this room contained only a bed and
a bedside table, the cloud-construct nature of the building was on full display.
While white was the predominant colour, soft hues of blue and orange
gradated softly to break up the monochrome.
She looked to the bedside table where the clothes she had roughly pulled
off before falling into slumber had been cleaned and neatly folded. She
grabbed her pocket watch, sitting atop the clothes, and frowned as she
checked the time. After meeting Asano in the afternoon, she’d spoken with
Arabelle, issued some directives for while she was resting, and been asleep
within half an hour. One of those directives had been to wake her in the
evening, but she had been left to rest for hours past the turn of midnight.
Navigating her way out of the cloud bed was a little odd, like escaping the
fluffiest of marshmallows. Her feet sank ankle-deep into the lush, airy
softness of a floor that was almost as luxurious as the bed. The pull to let
herself fall back and return to slumber was so strong that she examined her
aura for undue external influence, before scolding herself for laziness.
She glared at her clothes on the bedside table. She had been half-dead on
her feet, but she clearly remembered leaving them crumpled on the floor.
Even in the depths of exhausted sopor, anyone approaching her should have
stirred her to wakefulness. Who had managed to come in, take her clothes,
wash, and then return them, all without tweaking her aura senses? The
obvious candidate was Asano, despite his silver rank. The combination of his
remarkable aura and dominion over the cloud house might have made it
possible. After all, the one aspect of the room she was in was that her senses
could not penetrate the walls.
She swept her magic and aura senses over the clothes, looking for any
trace of tampering. After finding nothing, she pulled them on, ignoring the
pang of regret as her shoes went on, separating her feet from a floor she
would have happily slept on every night for the rest of her life.
She needed to get out of the room and clear her head before she took her
clothes back off and crawled back into bed. She looked to the door,
delineated in the blue and orange of a winter sunset. The door didn’t have a
handle but a patch on the wall next to it that emitted a gentle glow. She
pressed her hand against it and the doorway dissolved into mist, revealing
Jason Asano leaning against the opposite wall. He held out a plate with a
gently steaming fried sandwich on it.
“Morning, sunshine.”

Jason watched as the door dissolved to reveal the high priestess. Her clothes
were neat and clean, but she herself looked drowsy, eyelids drooping heavily
over vibrant green eyes. Her light brown hair was only slightly mussed,
despite falling well below her shoulders, somehow looking more sensual than
dishevelled. He wondered absently if that was a gold-rank thing or if she was
just one of those people, like Rufus, who looked great under any
circumstances.
If Jason looked even close to that astounding, first thing after waking up,
he wouldn’t have needed to get so good at cooking breakfast food. But he
did, which inspired his confidence in the fried vegetable and egg sandwich
with spicy relish he held out for her.
“Morning, sunshine.”
“Did you take my clothes?” she demanded.
He looked her up and down.
“You’re wearing your clothes.”
“My clean, pressed clothes. Someone came into my room and did that.”
“That would be Shade, my shadow familiar. I have no interest in the
goings-on inside your room.”
“Then how did you know I was waking up, to be here with a hot
sandwich?”
“This is my house, Priestess. I see everything.”
“I just woke up in my underwear,” she pointed out.
“Uh… well, when I say ‘see,’ that’s more of a metaphor. I knew that you
were awake and getting dressed, but I wasn’t actually watching.”
“But you could look if you wanted to? Without me knowing?”
“I could.”
“Then I just have to trust that you didn’t?”
“You do. But don’t flatter yourself, Priestess.”
Her eyebrows shot up and he flashed her a grin.
“Are you the one who stopped me from being woken up, Mr Asa… Mr
Miller?”
“That was your designated mental health professional,” Jason told her.
“Who I see explained my identity situation.”
“Why did you even tell me your real name?”
“I like to put an honest foot forward,” he said. “What you see is what you
get with me.”
“I have no idea what I’m seeing when I look at you.”
“Which is exactly what to expect going forward, from what I’m told. Are
you going to take this sandwich, or should I eat it myself?”
“I’m fine eating spirit coins.”
“Not in this house.”
Jason didn’t have the time he would like to focus on magical cooking.
Experts could produce moderate but long-lasting boons with their food, but
Jason focused elsewhere. By giving up on the trickiest part of cooking magic,
he was able to use high-rank ingredients for the most fundamental aspects of
cooking: taste and nutrition. As such, the sandwich on the plate he held could
be swapped out for the gold coin or ten silver coins a gold-ranker needed.
Such food also cost noticeably less than the coins it replaced, with the
added benefit of tasting like food and not like a car battery. This was one of
the key reasons that gold-rankers favoured high-magic zones, even if they
weren’t actively adventuring. Where the production of high-ranking food
ingredients was viable, the cost of gold-rank living went down while quality
of life went up.
Jason contemplated this as he watched her peer at the sandwich with
suspicion, even as her nostrils flared at the delectable smell of it. She took the
plate from his hands.
“Thank you, I’m going to eat it walking,” she said and immediately set
off down the hall.
“Uh, Priestess?”
She stopped and looked back.
“Yes?”
“Elevating platform is in the other direction.”
“I’m certain it was in this direction.”
“It was, yes. When you went to sleep.”
“It moved?”
“Yes. As did the room you were sleeping in. Cloud-stuff makes
renovations fairly easy.”
“I didn’t think you could make major structural changes to a cloud
construct on this scale without breaking it down first.”
“Mine is a little more flexible than most, although there are still some
hard limits.”
“Why would you change things around?”
“Some of the teams found towns where people were in the process of
having worms implanted. My friend Carlos figured out how to extract the
worms without killing the host if they catch the process early enough, if you
have the right facility, so I had to make room. The administration area’s a bit
crowded now, the shower queues are a little longer and there’s not quite as
much space for frozen food. Also, I had to give up my big empty office for
watching the camp from.”
“Your friend Carlos? Do you mean Priest Quilido?”
“That’s the bloke.”
“You are friends with a lot of powerful and prestigious healers.”
“I’ve taken a few hits in my time.”
He felt her gaze rest on his scars.
“Why did my god visit you?” she asked softly.
He almost gave a flippant answer but stopped himself.
“I’m not going to tell you that,” he said gently. “You have to get to know
me better before I’ll talk about something like that, and you won’t even eat
my sandwich.”
“Why are you so concerned with this sandwich?”
“Because you’re wasting the sandwich. The plate is enchanted to keep it
warm, but it’s fried food. It’s pretty light, but you’ll still see some congealing
if you just let it sit there.”
“Why are you always trying to make me eat and drink?”
“Feeding people is kind of my thing. I made that myself, just so you
know. The sandwich, not the plate. It’s a lot better than the food they’re
getting down in the cafeteria.”
“What they’re getting in the cafeteria has nutrition, energy and even mild
healing properties. It was designed specifically for normal-rank people that
have experienced trauma and is what their bodies need.”
“Their bodies, sure, but gruel is not what their souls need.”
“It doesn’t matter how it looks or tastes.”
“That came through very clearly when I tried some. While you’ve been
asleep, I’ve been working with your head of food distribution to fix the
recipe.”
“This may be your house, Asano, but this is my camp. Who gave you
permission to do that?”
“Arabelle. She shares my opinion that people will recover faster if their
food doesn’t taste like it was made in a gulag.”
“What’s a gulag?”
“A forced labour camp. These people have been through enough without
feeding them sadness porridge.”
“Just direct me to wherever the administration area is.”
“We have to talk first.”
“About what?”
“Arabelle tells me that you’ve been in the fight against the messengers?”
“Yes.”
“The messengers haven’t attacked the teams handling the towns in the
south where worm-breeding sites have been found. What does that tell you?”
“The attacks on their strongholds may have put them on the defensive.
They may not have been ready for us to hit the towns where they were
infesting the people with world-taker worms. Or, potentially, this all fell
within their plans and they are looking to strike at the city while so many
adventurers are clearing out those towns.”
“And if they intend to attack the city?”
“Then the best time will be leading up to dawn.”
She checked her watch again.
“Most likely within the next few hours,” she added.
“City administration has put the city on a heightened alert level, just in
case. Preparations to get the population into the monster attack bunkers as
soon as an attack begins were started yesterday. The Adventure Society is
organising combat response teams and the Magic Society is keeping a close
eye on the defence infrastructure.”
“I need to organise the evacuee camp response.”
“Already being done. You have effective subordinates, which is the mark
of a good leader.”
“Why are you the one telling me all this, instead of one of those
subordinates?”
“Because the plan, if there is an attack, is to reconfigure the two cloud
palaces into defence bunkers for the people in the camp. And there are things
you will need to know about that before it happens.”
“Such as?”
“If I turn this place into a bunker, your god won’t be able to reach you
inside. That goes for every priest and every god, but yours is the one with the
most people in camp.”
Jason could see the walls go up in her body language.
“What are you talking about?” she asked.
“Just what I said. Your powers should still work fine, but you won’t be
able to hear the voice of your god.”
“I’ve experienced that before when I went into astral spaces to confront
the Builder cult. Does your cloud house have the power to create a
dimensional space outside the world?”
“No. It’s more like… have you ever entered the core areas of another
god’s temple?”
She narrowed her eyes at him. “That isn’t a dimensional effect. That is a
god being shut out because they don’t have permission to operate in a space
dedicated entirely to another deity.”
“You’ll be dealing with much the same thing. I’m just letting you know
so your people don’t freak out at a more inopportune moment. I’m not
waiting until the middle of a messenger attack for you to declare me an
abomination unto Nuggan. You can take your people into Emir Bahadir’s
cloud building if you like. He’ll be making a bunker as well, and it will be
gold rank. Mine is only silver.”
“I strongly suspect there is not ‘only’ when it comes to this building, Mr
Miller. What you have just told me raises many questions.”
“Sure does,” Jason laughingly agreed. “And you’re probably going to get
annoyed that I’m not going to answer any of them.”
“Why not?”
“Because I don’t have to. I don’t have to do any of this. I could have kept
to myself and not gotten involved. But I didn’t. I stepped up because people
needed help, even when it meant my secrets poking out of the shadows.
You’ll have to forgive me if getting suspicion instead of gratitude for my
trouble is starting to make me cranky.”
He walked over to her and reached for the plate, but she moved it out of
his reach.
“I’ll eat it,” she said. Good to her word, she picked up one of the
triangular cut halves and bit off a corner, her eyes lighting up. “This is good!”
“You don’t have to sound that surprised,” he grumbled.
77
T H E B E T T E R A DV E NT U R E R

O NE BUILDING ON THE A DVENTURE S OCIETY CAMPUS OF Y ARESH WAS OLDER


than all of the others. It had been the entire headquarters for the Adventure
Society in the early days of the city, and the defensive measures built into it
were formidable. As Yaresh grew, and its branch expanded from a building
to a full campus, the building and its defences had been repurposed. It now
served as a set of secure residences, for those who needed to be kept safe,
along with those who needed to be kept secure, but the campus prison tower
was not appropriate. This was the case for Zolit Kreen.
Zolit was not just an outworlder but one that had originally been a valash:
a species that did not natively appear on Pallimustus and looked like a
humanoid chihuahua. Both of these things made him attention-grabbing, and
he had spent years working very hard to undo that damage. Zolit had been a
run-of-the-mill adventurer by intention, slowly but surely ranking up to silver
while remaining as unremarkable as he could. He did his part during the
monster surges while doing his best not to stand out.
After attaining the wealth and extended lifespan that came with being
silver rank, he’d retired and found a comfortable niche as a fight promoter. It
was an environment where everyone was a little bit strange, looking for a
gimmick so his idiosyncrasies didn’t stand out as much. Everyone had their
thing, and being a valash outworlder was his.
It had all gone wrong the moment he set eyes on the other outworlder.
He’d become complacent, forgetting the importance of being ordinary. The
next thing he knew, Adventure Society enforcers were dragging him out of
bed in the middle of the night and locking him up in an admittedly lavish
suite that was, nonetheless, a prison. They were asking him about the
outworlder and, for some reason, his assistant, Benella. They were talking
nonsense about messengers and Zolit had no answers to give.
What was worse was that he was starting to feel ill and he didn’t have any
more of his medicine. One of the problems with not being native to this world
was that there was an incompatibility between himself and the magic of
Pallimustus. It was something he was sensitive about, as he was always wary
of the Adventure Society grabbing him and handing him over to the Magic
Society for experimentation. He’d decided to reach out to the other
outworlder about it, but he didn’t get the chance. Benella disappeared and
he’d been snatched up by the Adventure Society.
Benella’s disappearance had been the biggest problem as she had been the
one procuring his medicine for years. He didn’t know which alchemist she
used or what exactly was in the medicine; it was one of countless things he’d
relied on her for in the early days. His memories of that time were hazy at
best, and the ones from his old world were gone entirely. This was another
side effect of the magic incompatibility for outworlders, according to the
expert Benella had found.
Zolit groaned, pacing around in the secure but opulent suite, barely
dressed. For as long as he could remember, Benella had been managing his
life. Without her help in the beginning, when his magic incompatibility kept
leading to blackouts, he never would have managed at all.
Now she was gone, and some kind of traitor? She was the main thing that
the Adventure Society interrogators asked about. They didn’t call themselves
interrogators, but that’s what they were. And Zolit was terrified to talk about
his medicine lest they turn their attentions on him rather than her. Or worse,
hand him over to the Magic Society. They might claim that they didn’t do
unethical research on innocent people, but he knew what obsessed
researchers did behind closed doors. It was one of the main things Benella
had warned him about in the early days.
He needed them to let him go so that he could track down the medicine
for himself. He was feeling worse and worse by the hour, his thoughts
increasingly scattered. He couldn’t sit still and his body was releasing sticky
sweat. He shouldn’t sweat at all, as a silver-ranker, let alone this strange,
tacky substance. Three showers with little more than an hour between,
scrubbing the residue from his body. He should ask for some crystal wash,
but he didn’t want to draw attention to his condition.
Sleep wouldn’t come, his mind racing and scattered. He was hungry too,
more and more as the night moved into the early hours of morning. At least
they were feeding him properly, and he’d just asked for another meal.

An Adventure Society functionary, Argrave Mericulato, pushed a trolley of


food down a hall of the secure residence building. His aura mask hid the
seething anger that was always inside of him at being reduced to such menial
tasks, while he kept his expression easy and friendly. He never used to
suppress his emotions, but it was something he had to learn. Fortunately, no
one paid that much attention to servants, which was what he amounted to, in
spite of his silver rank.
He wasn’t a traitor. Any reasonable person would see that the Adventure
Society were the traitors, having been the ones to turn on him. They didn’t
care that he had been a celebrated adventurer in his own right; the moment
his father had died in the One Day War, everyone had turned on him. They
treated him as if only his father had any value, ignoring his own
accomplishments.
His team had just up and left. It wasn’t his fault that the right tactical
decision in the moment was to make a strategic withdrawal without them. He
was the most important team member, so obviously, they should be the
distraction that let him go to safety. There was a flying attack fortress, gold-
and diamond-rankers battling about, and the dimensional pocket device his
father had given him only had room for one. His father had died in that battle,
so waiting it out in safety was the responsible move, for the family. Not that
his sister saw it that way.
The team hadn’t even come looking for him in the aftermath. They left
Rimaros almost immediately, pausing only long enough to have him listed as
missing, presumed dead. The pocket dimension device had messed up his
tracking stone and they didn’t even come looking to confirm. Instead, they
had him formally struck off their team list. By the time he went through the
massive amount of paperwork to get himself re-listed as alive, they had a new
team member. They had refused every water link request and sent him a letter
that read ‘Sorry: team full.’
Four years together and they ended it with three words. Years of treating
him like a prince, only to reveal their true faces the moment they heard about
his father. Finding another team should have been easy, and it had been the
first time. Once they heard his now-dead father’s name. How was Argrave to
know that the incompetents would demand too much, and then blame their
failures on him?
After that, teams had been harder to come by, even with so many looking
to fill slots in the wake of the monster surge. It was not Argrave’s fault that
these pathetic adventurers didn’t understand how to properly support what
should obviously be the new core of their team. Four teams, none of them
worth a single damn.
The Adventure Society was worse than no help. Time and again, Argrave
went to them with the perfectly reasonable demand of being placed on a team
that was worthy of him. And each time, the society was duped, bamboozled
by the lying teams that sought only to cover their own incompetence. With
each new team that scapegoated him, Argrave’s eloquent arguments fell on
increasingly deaf ears until he was forced to move on, looking for an
Adventure Society branch that wasn’t full of idiots.
Unfortunately, idiots flocked together. He moved south, from one branch
to another, encountering nothing but fools, incompetents and those who
undermined him out of jealousy. They went so far as to poison his name so
that each branch already knew of the teams he’d been in, along with the lies
they’d told. But did they listen to what really happened? Of course not. The
simple-minded fools believed the first thing they heard and were too stupid to
recognise the truth when they heard it.
It was in Yaresh that Argrave realised that he was the one who had been
the fool. He should have realised from the start that it wasn’t a few bad
apples. The entire Adventure Society was made up of petty idiots, saddling
him with one pathetic team after another because they were jealous of his
talent. They knew they would never reach his potential, leaving him no
choice but to roam from one branch to the next, looking for honest people.
Finally, he was forced to admit that there were no good people in the
Adventure Society. If they had even a scrap of Argrave’s potential, they
would be adventurers themselves, not bureaucrats using their petty power to
bring down their betters. But even in bad teams, Argrave’s light was too
bright to hide. In the end, they had to strip him of his status as an adventurer,
denying him the chance to shine.
Adding insult to injury, they had the temerity to offer him the role of a
menial functionary that he only took due to his financial needs. It was not
cheap to travel in the manner he deserved, and his pathetic sister had cut him
off before their father’s body had turned to rainbow smoke. It wouldn’t
surprise him if the bureaucrats knew this and took shameless advantage.
Argrave did not betray the Adventure Society because that wasn’t
possible. The Adventure Society betrayed him first. Every snub, every team
member who didn’t understand how to properly support the hero their team
had been graced with. He came into these groups who had lost a member in
the surge, and it was little surprise they had. And when he told them as much,
they had the gall to get angry at him.
The messengers understood his value. He’d only met one briefly, when
his aura mask had been applied, and the intimidating being had been brusque,
it was true. But they were from beyond the borders of the world and radiated
glory; they would learn that Argrave was glorious too. It was only a matter of
time until they realised and Argrave stood among them. Their philosophy of
superiority resonated with him, and finally, there would be someone to
recognise that some people were just better than others.
Of course, being from another world, they would need to see his
superiority in action. He had leapt at the chance to use the menial task the
Adventure Society had given him, as what had meant to be a humiliation
would be the instrument through which he would prove his greatness. They
had tried to make him a servant, but the cream would always rise to the top,
and there was nothing they could do to stop it.
The fool guard was one of the Adventure Society enforcers who clearly
couldn’t hack it as a real adventurer. His senses swept rudely over Argrave
but didn’t penetrate the aura mask. It was more proof which of them was the
better adventurer, not that any more was needed. The guard looked Argrave
over and gestured at him to stop the cart and checked each of the covered
trays.
“He’s agitated again,” the guard said. “He hasn’t slept at all, and I think
he might be sick. We’re waiting on a healer, but the priority is some kind of
evacuee camp. The messengers did something to the towns south of the city.
I’d advise leaving the cart and getting out quick.”
Argrave swallowed a retort about the guard looking after himself and
instead gave him a smile.
“Thanks for the warning,” he replied.
The guard opened the door to let him wheel the trolley in, then closed it
behind him.
Through the door was a well-appointed room containing a creature that
Argrave found disgusting, but he plastered on a smile. The tiny man with the
emaciated dog head was unpleasant to look at, but Argrave didn’t let his
revulsion show. Fortunately, the aura mask meant he only needed to school
his expression.
“Hello again, Zolit,” he greeted.
The agitated little man was visibly unhealthy. He had been pacing around
the room wearing shorts and a robe left hanging open. His skin glistened and
he looked sticky, although whether that was natural for whatever he was or
some odd condition, Argrave didn’t know. He didn’t particularly care either.
Zolit ignored him, moving to the cart and lifting lids from trays that he
awkwardly picked up all together before moving them to a table, spilling bits
of food as he went. Argrave shook his head as he watched Zolit sit down,
facing the other direction. The idiot could have had him move the trolley to
the table and transfer the trays across neatly, but it worked out well for
Argrave’s own plans. He opened the narrow panel hidden on one of the
trolley legs and withdrew a long needle.
Zolit didn’t turn as Argrave approached. The little man was shoving food
into his mouth in an agitated frenzy, only letting out a muffled yell as
Argrave’s hand slipped over his mouth. Argrave jammed the needle into
Zolit’s spine, through the slats in the back of the dining chair.
To Argrave’s complete startlement, Zolit shrank to the size of a marble in
the time it would have taken to snap his fingers, with a wet sucking-slapping
sound. The marble fell to the chair and rolled onto the floor.
Argrave turned to look at the door, but the guard outside did not make an
appearance. The thick walls and heavy doors of the building had long-
standing enchantments to prevent eavesdropping. After waiting an extra
moment, just in case, he moved to where the tiny sphere had settled in the
carpet and leaned over to peer at it.
He’d been told that the device he was given would make it possible to
take Zolit away, sneaking him out of his prison. He had been expecting it to
knock the little man out and turn him invisible, allowing Argrave to wheel
him out on the cart. Having the man turn into a tiny brown ball was certainly
more convenient, although he would have appreciated a warning.
He reached down to pick the ball up and discovered it was astoundingly
heavy. Not too much for his silver-rank strength to lift, but the marble-sized
object weighed as much as a heavy person. He’d have to keep it in his hand,
as it would weigh down any pocket enough to be glaringly obvious and he
hadn’t been allowed to bring a dimensional bag.
Argrave held the orb up in front of his face, peering closely. It was warm
and leathery to the touch, looking like it was made of tiny leather strips
wrapped around one another. Jason would have recognised it as a tiny version
of the orb the messenger had used to ward off the world-taker worms.
The door opened and the guard stepped inside.
“You really shouldn’t linger… where’s Kreen?”
“Uh, shower. He was all sticky with something and wanted to wash it
off.”
“Yeah, I told you he was sick. He’s been showering every few hours.
What’s that thing you’re holding?”
Argrave had done his best to casually move the hand holding the tiny
sphere casually to his side, but he’d been peering closely at it when the door
was opened, so the guard saw it plainly.
“Just a personal keepsake,” Argrave told him, but saw that there was an
unfortunate limit to the guard’s credulity. The guard placed a hand on his
sword hilt and took a wary stance.
“Step back into the middle of the room, Mericulato.”
“I don’t think—”
The guard drew his sword.
“Step back into the middle of the room. I won’t ask again.”
Argrave did as instructed, moving into the lounge area as his mind
scrambled for an appropriate response. He would need to take out the guard
quietly and get off-campus before anyone realised. As he was thinking, the
guard moved into the room and checked the only other door, which led into
the bathroom. He saw that it was empty and levelled his sword at Argrave,
touching his other hand to a brooch on his chest at the same time.
“Where is Kreen?” the guard demanded. “And what was that thing you
were looking at?”
“Oh, this?” Argrave asked.
He held up the sphere between his thumb and forefinger. He was careful
not to let the guard see how heavy it was, then tossed it at him. The guard
moved to intercept it with his sword but the sphere stopped dead, floating in
the air between them.
“What is…”
“What the…”
The orb started to grow and pulsate. It looked as if a tiny creature was
rapidly growing inside a leathery egg, trying to claw its way out. For all
either man knew, that was exactly what was happening. The guard brought
his sword down on the sphere and it slid off, not so much as budging it from
where it hung in the air. The growing orb started emitting an aura, silver and
weak but rapidly growing stronger.
“I think we might need to get out of here,” Argrave said.
“What is it?”
“I don’t know, but I don’t want to stay and find out.”
“You’re not going anywhere.”
The sphere had grown to the size of a basketball and glowed faintly with
golden light as the aura transitioned from silver to gold. The surface of it, still
covered in leathery strands, was writhing and undulating.
“I really think we need to…”
Argrave trailed off as something started pushing its way out of the orb.
On opposite sides, each facing one of the two men in the room, something
scaly was shoving through the leathery strands. Argrave chanted a quick spell
as the guard swung his sword again. From either side of the orb, snakes shot
out. The sword blow and Argrave’s firebolt glanced off harmlessly. The
snakes latched their fangs into the two men.
78
B R AV E B EC A U S E IT C A N W I N

A S THE NIGHT MOVED CLOSER TO DAWN , THE MOST LIKELY TIME FOR A
messenger attack grew imminent. Jason floated, cross-legged and eyes
closed, over the roof of the cloud hospital as he projected his senses through
the Shade bodies scattered around the city. His eyes shot open when he
noticed something approaching the cloud house. He was alarmed because all
he sensed was a small dead spot within his perception, subtle enough that
he’d almost missed it entirely.
Jason unfolded his legs, dropped his feet to the roof from where he was
floating above it and dashed to the edge. What he spotted below was Taika
standing with another man at the edge of the camp, both looking up at him.
Jason focused his senses, hearing the other man laugh.
“You’re right,” the man told Taika. “He does have sharp senses.”
Astoundingly, the man was a head taller than even the mountainous
Taika. His hair was a golden mane with long sideburns, while his eyes were
green and sharp. He had craggy features and a hawk nose, with none of the
polished perfection typical of high-rankers. None of his massive physique
was fat, but he was a slab of a man, more powerlifter than bodybuilder.
The man was bare-chested and bare-footed, with loose, rough pants held
in place by a piece of rope used as a belt. Hanging from the belt was a gourd
and he held a closed umbrella, slung over one shoulder.
Jason leapt off the roof, using his aura to slow himself as he approached
the ground and lightly land in front of the two men. Jason had picked up a
few extra centimetres from ranking up, but in front of Taika and the stranger,
he looked like a 50% scale model.
“G’day, I’m Jason.”
No one around them cared about Jason, even after he’d leapt from the
roof. The camp workers were busy and the evacuees had more on their minds
than some adventurer. As for his lack of subtlety in front of Taika’s
companion, Jason was entirely confident that lying was pointless. There was
little point trying to be less prominent when Jason’s instincts screamed that
this man was an absolute powerhouse.
“Haliastur,” the man introduced himself in a rumbling voice. “You’ve got
quite the odd friend here, Taika.”
“And here was me about to say the same thing,” Jason said.
The man in front of him did not register on Jason’s magical senses at all,
to the point that he suspected the man only revealed himself at all as a test.
Even so, there was a presence to him that transcended auras and magic. For
most, that would be something that didn’t consciously register, but Jason
recognised the sensation.
Jason had encountered diamond-rankers, gods and great astral beings
often enough that he had a decent sense of what he was dealing with when
encountering entities vastly above his own power level. This was true even
when their auras were far beyond his ability to read; there was something
about their presence they couldn’t entirely hide. Consciously recognising it
was there required the kind of regular exposure that very few people below
diamond rank had. Most would pass it off as inherent charisma, or some kind
of subtle aura manipulation, if they noticed it at all.
Jason had come to think of it as a transcendent presence, but that didn’t
mean it only belonged to transcendent beings like gods and great astral
beings. Both Shako and Dawn displayed it, and Jason suspected that he
himself had the barest skerrick from his nature as an astral king. But neither
Zila nor Soramir Rimaros had it, suggesting that the key was to touch the
transcendent. That was something most essence users would only do at the
peak of diamond.
This man had it as well, and Jason gauged him to be roughly on Dawn’s
power level, although that was admittedly a guess. His measure of
transcendent presence was still crude and operating from an extremely low
vantage point. Another guess Jason had about the man was that he was not an
essence user.
Jason was certain that Haliastur saw through him completely while he
saw very little. The man confirmed as much immediately.
“Blessing of the Reaper. Blessing of the World-Phoenix. Astral king,
that’s an odd one. You’re the one building that half-assembled dimensional
bridge between this world and some other one. Jumping on the back of the
link that idiot Builder got himself sanctioned over. And you’re the one Shade
is attached to right now.”
Shade emerged from Jason’s shadow.
“Good day, Haliastur.”
“Shade. I thought you might be embarrassed to show yourself after
getting bound to some astral space for a few centuries.”
“You’ve been talking to Umber. Shame is something you have for your
choices, where I have no embarrassment over mine, even when the outcomes
were not what I had hoped for.”
“A healthy attitude.”
“You two have met, then,” Jason said.
“We have,” Haliastur said. “It’s a big cosmos, but the most powerful in
any given region are relatively few in number and immortal, so we all meet
eventually. Once you get to diamond rank, Shade can guide you to Interstice.
I’ll introduce you around.”
“Interstice. That’s the cosmic city-universe, right?”
“Yes.”
“And what brings you to this world?” Jason asked. “Is this something to
do with the former First Sister of the World-Phoenix? She already left.”
Haliastur raised his eyebrows.
“Little Dawnie was here? What for?”
“Him,” Taika said, nodding at Jason.
“I’m just another pawn the World-Phoenix pushed into place,” Jason said.
“I imagine you’re not used to people seeing through your lies,” Haliastur
said, his voice showing no signs of taking offence. “How does a silver-ranker
know Dawn?”
“He more than knows her,” Taika interjected. “He…”
Taika’s chocolate skin turned milk chocolate as he paled under Jason’s
glare.
“…knows her quite well,” he finished lamely.
Haliastur glanced at Taika with another chuckle.
“How did you and Taika meet?” Jason asked.
“How did you and Dawn meet?” Haliastur countered.
“The World-Phoenix sent her to make me save the world. Not this one.
The one at the other end of that link.”
“And did you?”
“Twice. Working on a third time, which should be the end of it.”
“The bridge.”
“Yep.”
“It’s an incomplete mess.”
“Tell me about it. I don’t suppose you know how to finish it?”
“Sorry, I’m less a dimension engineer than an invincible paragon of speed
and power.”
“And modesty,” Jason added. “I guess it’s back to the plan of beating
astral magic out of the messengers.”
Haliastur threw back his head and let out a laugh that felt like an
earthquake.
“I like you, Jason Asano. You have a fun friend here, Taika.”
“And how did you meet?”
“I’ve been looking for something for a couple of decades and received
word that it is in this city. Someone has lured me here as part of some game,
but that matters not so long as my objective is met. I came across Taika and
saw him using his powers, and as I happened to have some insights, I
introduced myself. It turns out that we get along quite well.”
“This thing you’re looking for,” Jason said. “Is it a threat?”
“Oh, yes,” Haliastur said, then gestured at the camp. “You’ve seen that
the messengers like to use apocalypse beasts as indiscriminate weapons.”
“Unfortunately,” Jason said.
“You will find that what they have done here is not unique. Such disasters
are being launched all over this world. They aren’t likely to actually cause an
apocalypse, as the messengers know better than to use something that they
can’t control.”
“I get the impression that they dislike an absence of control.”
“Very true. But they will cause considerable damage and the messengers
don’t always get it right. I recall a sanguine horror getting out of hand and
scouring a planet only a few decades ago. But you wouldn’t know anything
about that, would you?”
“I wasn’t alive a few decades ago.”
Haliastur snorted but didn’t push.
“I have been pursuing one of these apocalypse beasts for a little time
now,” he said. “Have you ever heard of a naga genesis egg?”
“No,” Jason said. “Shade?”
“I know of it by reputation,” Shade said. “My understanding is that it
consumes flesh and converts it into a serpent race called the naga. It can wipe
out an entire world, replacing it with the serpent people.”
“We have myths about them in my world,” Jason said. “Not the egg bit,
that I know of, but the serpent people. If we’re about to have an army of naga
to deal with, what we really need is…”
Jason looked to Taika, thinking about his confluence essence. How would
Haliastur, who Jason was convinced was not an essence user, be able to help
Taika, who was? He looked at Haliastur, the gourd at his belt and the
umbrella slung over his shoulder. Haliastur, who had been chasing a naga egg
for decades.
“I don’t suppose that there’s amrita in that gourd?” Jason asked.
Haliastur let out another laugh.
“Amrita?” Taika asked. “I have an essence ability called that.”
“Your friend here has figured me out,” Haliastur told him.
“Are you going to help us?” Jason asked.
“I am here for the naga egg, which is not so slight a thing as world-taker
worms. I do not know how they’ve been keeping it dormant or hidden from
my senses, but if it becomes active, removing it will be help enough, believe
me.”
“I do,” Jason said. “If it comes to—”
Jason and Haliastur both turned towards the centre of the city with stern
expressions.
“What is it?” Taika asked. He wasn’t quite silver yet, and even if he had
been, he would not match the aura senses of either of the others.
“Some manner of aura burst,” Haliastur said. “It started at silver rank and
grew to gold very quickly. I believe it is the egg.”
“I know that aura,” Jason said. “Or I did before it became warped and
turned gold. It belonged to another outworlder. He used to be a valash.”
Haliastur’s eyes went wide.
“So that’s how they did it.”
“Meaning?” Jason asked.
“I think that the messengers took a soul, modified it, wrapped it around
the egg and shoved the egg into this world. Artificially creating an outworlder
whose soul served as a barrier to contain the egg.”
“Can they do that to a soul?”
“Difficult. But possible, if you’re willing to perform soul engineering.
The astral king who rules the local messenger forces, Vesta Carmis Zell, is a
known practitioner, so I believe we have our answer. She’s a proper astral
king, not a baby one like you, Jason Asano.”
“Where do they get the soul? It would have to be a volunteer or they
couldn’t touch it, right?”
“Yes, but you can torture someone’s soul until they become a volunteer.”
“I’m familiar with the process,” Jason said with a glower.
Haliastur looked Jason up and down again.
“So I see.”
“I once saw a disembodied soul used as a magical barrier,” Jason told
him.
Haliastur nodded. “Soul engineering. It can be used for various purposes.
Where did you come across something like that?”
“An astral space that used to be an astral vessel of the Builder, until the
Reaper’s people stole it.”
“What happened to it?”
“The Builder was trying to take it back and fire up some of those world
engineer golems he uses, so my friends and I broke the place and shut it
down. He didn’t take it well.”
Haliastur laughed.
“You live an interesting life, Jason Asano.”
“Something tells me that tedium isn’t a problem for you either. Why
aren’t you rushing over to where that aura surge was?”
“The egg is awakening. If it senses my presence while it is still taking its
initial form it will panic and expend all of its gathered power immediately.
That will cut off its potential for overrunning this world, but flood the city
with serpents. The people of this city will die before I can stop them all.”
“So, you let it grow up into a monster brave enough to take you on and
then kill it?”
“That is the idea.”
“Uh, what if it’s brave because it can win?” Taika asked.
“It can’t,” Jason and Haliastur said simultaneously.
Haliastur grinned.
“That should be long enough,” he said. “Genesis eggs experience
explosive growth. I will try to minimise the damage to the city, but you
should stay clear.”
“Oh, that’s all you, bloke. If that thing is kicking off, the messenger
attack probably isn’t far behind.”
Haliastur launched into the air, transforming into a golden bird.
“What the hell is that bloke?” Taika asked. “And why were you so sure
he can win?”
“He’s a garuda. Or the garuda; I don’t know how the real thing differs
from the myths. But garuda is the devourer of serpents. Naga in particular,
which is how I figured out what he is.”
“Garuda is my confluence essence.”
“Yep. That’s why your new meditation technique works so well.”
“That’s pretty sweet, bro. I do have one question, though.”
“What’s that?” Jason asked.
“What’s a garuda?”
Jason turned to look at him.
“Seriously? You have the garuda confluence and you don’t know what a
garuda is?”
“I got an ability from it called Feaster of Serpents, so I thought it was a
specialty chef thing.”
“A chef thing? Why would you think that?”
“Your sister has chef powers.”
“My sister’s a chef. What other powers did you get from that
confluence?”
“Amrita. It summons a jar of stuff to drink.”
“Okay, that’s fair. What else?”
“One is called Brother of the Dawn. Unbowed is the one I got when I first
absorbed the essence.”
“They don’t sound very culinary. What about the last one?”
“It’s called God-Striking Fist.”
“God-Striking Fist?”
“Yep.”
“And you thought it was some kind of cooking confluence?”
“You never know with awakening stones. I thought it might be an Iron
Chef thing.”
“What awakening stone did you use to get that?”
“Defiance.”
“You thought an awakening stone of defiance gave you an ability from a
chef-type essence called God-Striking Fist?”
“Some of those chefs are pretty rough. What about that bloke who swears
all the time?”
“Taika?”
“Yeah, bro?”
“By any chance, did it just reach the point where it’s been long enough
since you got your essences that you were too embarrassed to ask what your
confluence was about?”
Taika bowed his head. “Yeah, bro.”
Jason gave a good-natured chuckle, reached up to pat his shoulder, gave
up and patted him on the bicep.
“That’s nothing to be ashamed of, mate. You have no idea how many
times I’ve ended up looking like an idiot.”
“Sure I do. I know your sister pretty well.”
Jason groaned.
“Mr Asano,” Shade said.
“Yeah, what’s up, Shade?”
“Messengers have just been spotted by the city scout patrols. The city
alarms will be activated very soon, so it is time to take down the cloud
hospital and establish a bunker.”
“Right,” Jason said. “Let the high priestess know it’s time to evacuate the
hospital so I can take it down. I just hope that—”
An explosion sounded in the distance and all heads turned to look
towards the centre of the city. Dozens of giant snakes had risen over the city
like the heads of a hydra, looming as tall as the city’s towers. Light from the
towers lit the snakes in ominous silhouette, making their visage all the more
menacing.
“…something like that doesn’t happen.”
As they watched, another monstrous form grew to the size of a building.
It was roughly humanoid but with an eagle’s head, four arms and golden
wings spread out from its back. It was draped in golden robes and its skin
was emerald-green. One hand held an umbrella and the other held a gourd.
“Bro, I can turn into something like that. I can’t get big like that, though.
Do you think I will after I rank up?”
Despite the spectacle in the distance, Jason turned to look at Taika.
“You thought it was a chef essence?”
“That power is from the wing essence, bro. Calm down.”
“Taika?”
“Yeah, bro?”
“Have you been messing with me this whole time?”
“Yep.”
“Seriously?”
“Did you really think I believed that garuda was a Gordon Ramsey
essence? How dumb do you think I am? It’s a little hurtful, bro.”
79
A M A N T H AT W I LL I N S P I R E C O U R A G E

T HE CRASH OF WOOD SMASHING APART AND STONE BEING PULVERISED FILLED


the air with noise, dust and splinters as Jason dashed through it. He dodged
falling sections of ceiling and leapt through holes in once-intact walls, his
cloak deflecting much of the debris filling the air.
“You’ll try to avoid damaging the city my arse,” he grumbled, his voice
lost in the noise.
Outside of the central city area, most of the architecture in Yaresh was
built with living trees as a core, moulded into elaborate shapes and
supplemented with brickwork. The trees were usually of the magic variety,
outside of the poorer districts, and held up to impacts very well. This was
important when some of them were being ripped out of the ground, used as
crude clubs and tossed around.
The building-sized garuda, Haliastur, was savaging what looked like an
even larger hydra whose main body was an arena-sized orb and whose heads
counted in the dozens. Prehensile necks were grabbing whole tree buildings
and launching them at the garuda, who deflected them away. They crashed
into other buildings, chunks bouncing off to inflict more damage as they
broke apart.
The results were that the evacuation of people in the area was not going
well; the casualties were mounting. Adventurers rushed in to get people out
alive, but the adventurers themselves were facing casualties. The closer
anyone came to a fight between diamond-rankers, the more the difference
between life and death became luck. The spreading disaster zone at the heart
of the city was an ample demonstration of that.
The unconventional structure of the tree buildings held up better than
traditional designs, at least at first. Once their integrity was finally
compromised, however, they collapsed much faster. Jason rushed through a
building that was crumbling under the weight of most of another building,
tracking civilians with his aura senses. He found them huddling under a table
as he dashed into the room, watching the ceiling collapse.
Pushing his silver-rank speed to the limit, he launched himself across the
room. He kicked away the table that would not shelter the woman and two
boys from tons of stone and wood. Standing over them and spreading his
cloak wide, he pushed against the falling ceiling with his aura, which wasn’t
close to strong enough.
His aura slowed the fall only a little, but it was just enough for Jason to
interpose himself between the ceiling and the people as it slammed into his
back. His legs almost buckled but managed to barely hold, trembling at the
weight. He formed a shelter for the people he was leaning over, his cloak
draped around him. Cloud stuff emerged from the bottle hanging around his
neck, plugging the gaps between his cloak and the floor, filtering out stone
dust and splinters.
“HUMP!” Jason bellowed, his voice carried on his aura to boom through
the building, overwhelming even the sounds of destruction. Moments later,
the weight threatening to push Jason down grew lighter as huge chunks of
brickwork and broken tree trunk were tossed away.
Humphrey raced against time as the floor under Jason and the civilians
threatened to give way, just as the ceiling above had. As he had to be careful
not to bring even more of the ceiling down, it was a race that Humphrey lost.
The children let out startled screams as the floor fell out of under them and
they were grabbed in a net of shadow arms, dangling over the hole now
below them. Finally, Humphrey cleared out enough space that Jason could
hand the children up to him.
Humphrey took the kids and Jason the mother as they leapt from the
building that continued to crumble like a biscuit behind them. It was a tall
residential treehouse, which was how it had caught debris from the diamond
rank battle taking place in the distance. Humphrey had a kid slung under each
arm, flying clear with his conjured dragon wings. Jason held the mother using
shadow arms while his cloak spread out into wings of darkness, speckled
with stars.
They flew into an area where the adventurers had set up a staging point in
an open market. It left them somewhat exposed to debris thrown off by the
diamond-rank battle in the distance, but there were no buildings tall enough
to tumble onto it.
The staging area was covered by a dome of shimmering pale blue energy
set up by Clive. Inside was Clive’s portal, through which civilians were being
sent to the nearest monster attack bunker. The dome had no chance of
stopping the larger chunks of rubble and collapsing building, but could keep
out choking dust and at least some of the smaller debris.
“If I had a portal instead of a teleport, I could do more,” Humphrey
complained.
“Say that when a building is about to fall on a bunch of people and you
teleport them all out. Portals aren’t fast enough to do that.”
They didn’t have time to stop for banter and both left after that quick
exchange. Jason shadow-jumped through a Shade body and Humphrey leapt
away as if shot from a cannon.
There was another portal site shielded by Clive’s rituals, this one with
Jason’s portal. This allowed the team to spread out, giving them two options
for where to take the people they found or rescued. Until messengers attacked
and made it into the city, the team was spreading out, operating alone but
with others close enough to offer backup at need.
Each team member had their own specialties, and they used voice chat to
call in the right person for any job. Humphrey’s strength and ability to fly
were obviously useful, and he was able to dig out trapped people the easiest.
The ability to teleport into spaces that he could see but not access was also a
boon. Neil had the strength but not the flight, but his ability to shield and heal
made him arguably the team’s most critical member.
Sophie, Rufus and Jason all used their excellent mobility for rapid
response. Sophie’s speed meant that she could get to the people most in need
while Rufus could use his two short-range teleports, Moonlit Step and Flash
Step, to navigate buildings in the process of collapsing. Jason’s biggest
advantage was that his aura senses could pick people out that the others might
have missed. In all the chaos, it was easy to overlook normal-rank people
whose weak auras were on the verge of winking out. But Jason was able to
track them down and feed them a potion, get them to Neil or both.
Clive was in charge of watching the bigger picture and focused on
maintaining the extraction areas around his and Jason’s portals. He had set up
as many rituals as he could cram into the area without them interfering with
one another. Mostly, they were designed to shield the people from the smaller
things that were harmless to a silver-ranker but could still hurt normal people.
Belinda’s role was to assess and extract people from the trickiest
situations. Her versatile skill set and power selection meant that she had the
best toolkit for the trickiest work. Many civilians were trapped under rubble
that was difficult to extract them from. Some were in danger of it collapsing
on them while others were injured and almost any shift could kill them.
Belinda assessed their needs and either extracted them herself or called in the
right team member to help.
The one Belinda called on the most was Gordon, whose pinpoint beams
were ideal for cutting through debris. All of the familiars were proving their
worth, either subsumed into their summoner or actively taking part. Belinda’s
astral lantern familiar was inside her, allowing her to use eye beams similar to
Gordon’s. They couldn’t cut away debris as fast as Gordon’s half dozen
powerful beams, but for delicate work, they were ideal.
Stash, like Belinda, was incredibly versatile. For clearing heavy rubble he
used the form of a fifteen-foot gorilla with a face on its chest and a third arm
where its head should have been. For snaking through tight spaces to reach
people, he could take the form of a mouse or, indeed, a snake. From there, he
could take a form like a dungeon beetle to extract them.
Dungeon beetles were predatory creatures with a very hard and mostly
hollow carapace. They were known for taking their prey, entrapping them in
their carapace and then burrowing deep underground, letting their prisoners
slow die of thirst before consuming them. As grim as this was, the hollow but
very strong body and the burrowing power were ideal for digging people out.
Onslow, Clive’s flying tortoise, was flying around the areas furthest from
the extraction points. This was where Rufus, Jason and especially Sophie
were to be found, and they could hand over civilians to Onslow to be carried
to safety. Onslow was able to shuck off his shell which became a large and
sturdy flying transport. Without his shell, the rest of him became a tiny and
adorable green tortoise-man, which was perfect for calming down scared
children.
With large chunks of falling debris bouncing heavily off his shell,
keeping people calm was important. Onslow used his elemental powers as
best he could, throwing out water barriers and exploding chunks of stone with
lightning bolts, but his indiscriminate powers weren’t the best for the
situation. It was getting people to safety that was his most valuable role.
Colin was still hibernating in Jason’s astral realm, with no indication of
rousing. Shade, on the other hand, was characteristically valuable. He could
scout spaces that even Stash couldn’t squeeze into and allowed Jason easy
mobility around the zone.
Jason found another group of civilians, trapped at the bottom of a hole. It
was just wide enough to pull people out from, but too narrow to go down and
get them. This was a problem that simply lowering a rope couldn’t solve
because the sides of the hole were sharp and jagged. Anyone coming out
would require delicate extraction to avoid being lacerated to death on the
way.
Jason called on Belinda’s echo spirit familiar, Gemini, who could mimic
the team’s abilities. They both used Jason’s ability to call up shadow hands,
essentially creating a tunnel of dark hands that could lift the people out while
shielding them from the sides of the hole.
“Mr Asano,” Shade said.
“What do you need?”
“Both cloud palaces have completed the conversion to bunkers and High
Priestess Shavar is ready to start moving evacuees into them.”
“Alright. I’ll be along as soon as we get these people out.”

Once again, Taika felt the frustration of still being bronze rank. He was so
close, and if he’d managed to cross that line, then he’d be out in the city
instead of playing usher to evacuees, leading people into the two cloud
buildings as the camp was organised. Lines of people clustered together,
snaking through the camp and leading up to the bunkers.
Emir Bahadir’s cloud bunker was the larger of the two by a solid margin.
The five-tower configuration of the palace was still echoed in the bunker,
which was a smooth dome with five spires jutting up and out at angles, like
leaning towers. Spaced evenly around the dome, the spires had a massive
ritual diagram floating between them: an elaborate pentagram using the spires
as anchor points. Glowing with shifting colours, the brightness of it painted
the area in rainbow hues.
Jason’s bunker was a pyramid covered in interlocking hexes of matte
black, with blue and orange light glimmering in lines between the hex panels.
The top of the pyramid did not reach a point and instead formed a cup over
which a giant version of one of Jason’s eyes floated ominously. Notably, the
rainbow light from Emir’s palace stopped dead as it approached Jason’s,
stopping as it hit an invisible wall that shimmered faintly when the rainbow
light struck it.
Taika let out a sigh as he looked at the power the two buildings displayed.
He was not a man with a hunger for power, but when people needed help, he
couldn’t help but feel inadequate when confronted with such displays.
“Your frustration is understandable,” Hana told him.
He had felt her approach as, like him, she was actively using her aura to
calm the crowd. These people were only hours from having their towns
wiped out by alien horrors and their nerves were raw.
“While this task is not as exciting or dangerous as running through the
periphery of a diamond-rank battle,” Hana said, “that does not make it
unimportant. Panic could easily set in, and that will be a disaster. For all the
power I possess, people would get trampled and die before I can restore
order. I am grateful for your reliable presence, not just for your aura, but for
you.”

Ability: [Unbowed] (Garuda)

Aura (Boon).
Base cost: None.
Cooldown: None.

Current rank: Silver 0 (0%).

Effect (iron): You and allies within your aura have enhanced
[Power] attribute and resistances.
Effect (bronze): You and allies within your aura gain one or more
instances of [Courage] when performing acts of courage within your
aura.

Effect (silver): Negate the effects of afflictions that penalise


attributes or reduce damage inflicted. The afflictions remain in place
but do not take effect on you or any ally within the aura.

[Courage] (boon, holy, stacking): Negate the next instance of


significant damage you would suffer or the next affliction that would
be applied to you. If a single attack or effect causes both and/or
multiple afflictions at once, the entire effect is negated. Minor
instances of damage and less impactful afflictions will not trigger
this unless sufficient instances of those afflictions are applied at once
to have a cumulatively significant impact. Additional instances of
this boon can be accumulated.

The high priestess was a tall woman, although Taika still towered over her.
She placed a comforting hand on his forearm.
“Remember that the powers we gain are not just about essences and
awakening stones, but about who we are. This is true for our aura powers
most of all. Your aura is inspiring, and that isn’t just a power that you have.
It’s a reflection of something inside you. I’ve always held that as we gain
power, it doesn’t change us, but concentrates us. It takes who we are, shaves
away the fluff at the edges and leaves behind the distillation of our core
natures. You are a man that will inspire courage. Lift people up. That is a
very fine thing. Not everyone’s reflection is so uplifting.”
She turned her gaze to the ominous eye looming over the camp. Jason’s
aura did not push out beyond the boundaries of the pyramid to impose on the
camp, but essence users with aura senses could easily detect it. Even more
than Jason’s aura in person, the building was portentous, benevolent but also
judgemental. It radiated a sense that to enter it was to abide by its rules, that
transgressors would pay the price of their sins.
“I can see why Asano warned me,” Hana said. “I’m not sure I want to
send anyone in there after all.”
“I’m not sure you want to go in there yourself,” Taika said. “Jason has…
views about gods.”
“My god seems to like him. Which is strange, given what I know of
Asano. Certainly given that aura.”
“How much do you know about Jason’s background?”
“Not much. I can tell he’s an outworlder. Like you.”
“We come from the same world. Jason had responsibilities there, ones
that shouldn’t have been his to bear. What our world taught him was that he
couldn’t allow anyone to stand in his way when things absolutely needed
doing, even if that meant becoming a tyrant. Jason is always the first one to
stand between people and the bad things coming after them, which I think
that’s why your god likes him. But he got used to people standing in his way,
even when he was killing himself to save them.”
“And who keeps him in check if he won’t listen to anyone?”
“No one,” Arabelle told her as she approached the pair. “And that’s the
problem. He never trusted authority in the first place. The other world taught
him, when the stakes were at their highest, that he had to become the
authority. One that no one can command. So now, he defies everyone. Kings,
diamond-rankers. Gods, great astral beings.”
“That sounds like a path to a quick death.”
“It is,” Taika said. “He doesn’t let death command him either.”
“Everything’s ready with Emir’s bunker,” Arabelle said. “We should start
moving people into the bunkers.”
“We’re waiting on Asano to open his building back up,” Hana said. “He
wanted to show me in himself. He thought that there would be an issue with
our priests.”
“He’s right,” Arabelle said. “You’ll see for yourself what it means to defy
even gods in there. It’s unsettling, being cut off from the comforting presence
of your god when you’ve gotten so used to it. You might want to put the
priests in the other bunker.”
“We need people in both, so I’ll lead the ones in Asano’s bunker myself.
Once he opens it up.”
Shade emerged from Arabelle’s shadow and Jason stepped out of the
familiar’s shadowy form.
“Sorry I’m late. Dashing heroics; you know how it is. Anyway, shall
we?”
80
L U C K T H AT G O O D

T HE SKY RANG WITH NOISE DESPITE THE BATTLE AT THE CENTRE OF Y ARESH
being a dozen kilometres away. Even from the outskirts, barely within the
outer walls, the titanic figures could be seen looming over the towers at the
heart of the city. The eagle-headed garuda was entangled with snakes
wrapping around his body, as if a basket of them had been tipped over him.
There was also a cluster of serpents of almost unbelievable enormity, as if sea
monsters had risen from the deep and merged into a leviathan hydra.
The air thundered as the colossal adversaries destroyed buildings of metal
and stone as if they were cardboard. Debris flew out over the city, chunks of
masonry whistling like bombs as they fell from the sky. The garuda was
diamond rank and its opponent was the same, having rapidly passed through
silver and gold rank as it grew.
At the outskirts of the city, just inside the outer walls, was the refugee
camp for people who had been displaced from towns to the south. The camp
was a flurry of activity as the people shuffled into the two cloud palaces that
had been converted into bunkers. The larger bunker, belonging to Emir
Bahadir, was a dome from which five leaning towers extended up and out.
The other was a pyramid made up of matte-black hexes with blue and orange
light glowing between the panels. The pyramid did not rise to a point, instead
having a cupped top. Floating over it was a giant eye made up of nebulous
blue and orange light.
Hana Shavar looked up at the ominous eye as her people led civilians into
the wide doors at the base of the pyramid. She was the High Priestess of the
Healer for the city-state of Yaresh, but she had sent most of her own people
into the gold-rank bunker belonging to Bahadir.
There was a reason she directed all the clergy, both from her church and
others, away from the bunker belonging to Jason Asano. When it had taken
the form of a hospital, she had found the building to have an unnerving
quality she couldn’t quite place. Now it was in full defensive mode, the
power lurking within no longer hidden. Somehow, Asano’s building could
place a barrier between priests and their gods, cutting off the voices of the
deities.
The constant presence of her god’s power had always been a comfort to
Hana, watching over her in her greatest moments and darkest hours alike.
Only in a few rare moments had she been cut off from him, in an
otherworldly realm or the heart of another god’s sacred ground. Those times
were the worst for any priest.
For those who had felt the direct touch of their deity, every feeling and
instinct told them it was a power without limit. An all-seeing, all-powerful
force, beyond the petty concerns of the mortals that served them. When that
presence was cut off, the fact that even the gods had limits was a harsh reality
to face. Ground that should have been solid underfoot suddenly lurched,
unstable.
Hana had experienced it enough times that, while uncomfortable, she had
grown used to it. Grappling with the knowledge that her instincts and reality
conflicted had challenged her faith, but ultimately came to reinforce it. She
realised that her god not being all-powerful meant that he was not simply an
omnipotent, benevolent force, bestowing grace on small mortals. He had
limits, albeit extreme ones.
The revelation that strengthened her faith was that her god had limits, her
faith was not just some game he was playing; her position as a priestess was
not pointless in the face of ultimate power. He might not need her as much as
she needed him, but he did need her. She wasn’t just taking from this great
being, but also had something to give. Her purpose, her life’s work, was true
and good.
This was what gave her comfort in those moments when she was
somewhere beyond her god’s power. She could be his hands when he could
not reach, his eyes when he could not see and his voice when he could not
speak. She was a priestess. The representative of her god, and that was never
more important than when she was cut off from him.
Not every priest had come to this conclusion, however, with the
revelation having taken Hana years to not just reach but truly internalise. It
was not something she could offer her fellow priests in the middle of a
refugee evacuation, so she pushed all the priests into Bahadir’s bunker, where
just walking inside would not threaten a crisis of faith.
There was no shortage of secular staff to guide people into Asano’s
sinister lair, although Asano himself was no longer present. He had shown up
long enough to reconfigure the building from a hospital into the menacing
pyramid bunker it was now, but he had immediately returned to rescuing
people caught up in the battle of colossi.
In his place was Jason’s familiar, Shade, although most of the shadow-
creature’s multiple bodies were apparently busy. Shade directed a larger
group of shadow entities, whose presence neither Shade nor Asano had
explained beyond referring to them as avatars. They were dark silhouettes
that looked like people in hooded cloaks, with a large single eye instead of a
face. It was hard to miss that those eyes were reflections of both the giant orb
floating over the bunker, and with Asano’s own eyes.
Hana had checked the bunker before allowing anyone inside and now
Shade led her back into the building. They moved past the lines of people
heading in through the large doorway, directed by Asano’s dark avatars.
The walls, floors and ceilings were cold, hard and empty. They were
made from dark crystal flecked with blue, silver and gold. There was no
decoration and none of the leafy green plants that had been found all
throughout the hospital variant of the building. Having seen inside the
dormitory sections, she knew that they were at least furnished with plush
cloud furniture.
“The dormitory spaces set aside for the refugees may not offer a lot of
room,” Shade assured her, “but they are more comfortable than the hallways
suggest.”
Hana glanced at the shadow familiar, not for the first time wondering if
he could read minds.
“I appreciate that,” she told him, “but safety is the priority, not comfort.”
“Do not worry on that front, Priestess Shavar. I would say gods help those
who come here looking for trouble, but they will need more than gods in Mr
Asano’s domain.”
There was an undercurrent of ominous glee to the familiar’s polite tone
that was sufficiently subtle that she may well have been imagining it. She
could believe his words to be false bravado if not for the gaping hole in her
mind where the presence of her god was normally settled.
Various passages and rooms had a wall of mist blocking them off. These
walls were as impermeable to Hana’s senses as the rest of the pyramid, which
was another reason it unnerved her. Magical senses that could take in the city
at a glance were stopped by the walls as surely as her vision. It left her
feeling as isolated from the world as she was from her god.
“The walls serve to secure the civilians in the dormitories,” Shade
explained, once more anticipating her concerns. “While the outer walls are
strong, a sufficiently dedicated attack will penetrate them, especially if gold-
rankers are involved. The dormitories are the most reinforced internal spaces,
making the empty corridors a more appealing path for enemies traversing the
inside. It will give the defences time to deal with them.”
“Can the defences deal with gold-rankers that can punch their way in?”
“I am quietly confident, Priestess Shavar.”
“I suspect, Shade, that you are quietly everything.”
“That is very kind of you to say, Priestess.”
They arrived at an elevating platform at the centre of the pyramid that
was also shrouded in mist. They stepped through the mist and the elevator
ascended higher into the building.
“Beyond myself and the avatars, only you have access to this central
shaft,” Shade explained as the platform passed through more mist barriers in
each floor. There were only four, with the platform stopping in a room with
no ceiling. Above their heads was the open cup with the nebulous eye
floating over it, and high above that, the city’s barrier dome. From the open
ceiling, the walls of the room sloped down, being the outer walls of the
pyramid.
“This room seems like an invitation to break in,” Hana said, looking up at
the ominous floating eye.
“It does, doesn’t it?” Shade said. “Let us hope the messengers are polite
enough to accept.”
Images appeared in the air around them. Most showed scenes from inside
or around the buildings, mostly people shuffling into the bunkers in queues or
settling into the dormitories. One showed a man arguing with one of the
camp staff, and as soon as she focused on it, sound started playing. The man
was complaining about the constricted space, apparently convinced that some
people were being given private rooms.
“There’s always a few,” Hana muttered, the sound dimming as her
attention moved on.
Her gaze fell on a zoomed in perspective of the distant battle. The eagle-
headed giant was ravaging the hydra heads and the serpents crawling over it,
often devouring them outright. Even so, they seemed to replenish themselves
endlessly, more snakes appearing as the hydra heads rapidly healed or grew
back entirely. She again glanced up.
“Is that vision coming from the large eye?”
“It is. This room can show anything from inside the building or that the
eye can see. You can monitor the bunkers and the surrounding conditions
from here. If you fight in here, you will have an environmental advantage,
although I advise you to withdraw if and when attackers break in. The
elevating platform will safely extract you.”
“Assuming that the messengers really do attack the city.”
“They are already assembling. Mr Asano has arranged for you to extend
your senses beyond this room if you filter them through the eye.”
It took Hana a moment to figure out how, but passing her aura and magic
senses through the eye before extending them over the city was fairly
intuitive. She quickly sensed the battle of diamond-rank titans,
overshadowing everything else. She sensed adventurers around the city,
scrambling to rescue citizens or prepare for attack. Her senses passed through
the city’s active barrier magic far easier than they should have and she sensed
the messengers gathering around the city on every side.
Having taken part in attacks on the messenger strongholds, Hana
understood their strategies. Each messenger was at least a little different from
the others, but they fell into several broad roles. One of the most important, at
least for large scale operations, were the summoners.
Summoners amongst the messengers had many advantages over their
essence-user counterparts. Not only were their powers more convenient to
activate, requiring no summoning circles, but they also summoned creatures
in greater number. Their creatures might be less individually powerful, but
that was an acceptable trade-off when it allowed them to balloon the
relatively small number of messengers.
Hana could sense them building up their forces, not far from the city
walls. It was close enough to be a real threat, but not so close as to be
attacked without people leaving the protection of the city. Only a few
skirmish specialists were out making trouble amongst the enemy, while the
rest waited for the attack. The number of defenders was unfortunately low,
with many adventurers still in the towns to the south.
“That’s not good,” Hana said as she used the giant eye to pan her senses
over the messenger forces. “It doesn’t look like they’ve managed to infiltrate
the shield infrastructure nodes to sabotage them, but they clearly understand
how the city barrier works.”
“There is a flaw in the city defences?” Shade asked.
“Not a flaw, but there are only so many ways to shield an entire city, and
no solution is perfect. Every system has weaknesses, and knowing how they
work means those weaknesses can be exploited. In this city, the defensive
screen is adaptive, meaning that it focuses the shield energy to any areas
under attack in any given moment. It excels against monster attacks, which
are sporadic by nature. It’s why this type of barrier is so common in cities
and fortress towns. But if you have the numbers to assault the entire shield all
at once, instead of staging sporadic attacks like monsters do, you reveal the
weakness.”
“I believe I see,” Shade said. “If you take a shield designed to focus its
power on places it is attacked, and then attack everywhere, the shield
becomes thin all over. It then becomes vulnerable to big, instantaneous
attacks.”
“Exactly. The shield won’t collapse if you punch a hole in it, but it will
take time to self-repair the breach. Long enough that you can get a good
number of people through all at once. And we know for a fact that the
messengers have at least one diamond-ranker. I’m guessing they’re going to
spread the attacks of all their summoned creatures to thin out the shield. Then
they’ll punch through various spots with simultaneous attacks from their
diamond-ranker and stronger gold-rankers. The openings will only be
temporary, but enough for their strongest forces to come through, along with
enough summons to serve as fodder.”
“I assume the people commanding the city defences are well aware of
this,” Shade said.
“Of course; they’ll be watching this far closer than us. They would have
already sent people out to disrupt the enemy, if we had the people to send.
It’s looking more and more like the worm-infested towns to the south were
never meant to be the real invasion force.”
“Or they were and this attack is a contingency for if they were discovered
prior to being ready.”
Hana shook her head. “Multiple-stage plans with integrated
contingencies. I do not like smart enemies.”
“For a smart enemy, the strategy you have posited seems like an all or
nothing proposition. If the strike forces who breach the city fail to conquer it,
they will be cut off once the barrier repairs the holes.”
“They’re not here to conquer,” Jason said as he stepped out of Shade’s
body like the shadow creature was a doorway. “They’re here to sow terror.
We may not have the people to take the fight to them, but we can at least see
where they are setting up their strongest attackers.”
Jason casually gestured with his arm as he tugged the hood back from his
head to reveal his face. The images floating around the room all shifted, their
original depictions getting replaced. The new ones showed various locations
outside the city, as seen through the slight shimmer of the defensive barrier. It
was a dome that rose up from the city wall, and now it was surrounded by
enemies.
Messengers only made up a minority of the forces, and usually hovered
somewhere near the top of the city wall. Their summons, all of which could
fly, surrounded the domed barrier from all angles, including directly above.
The summoned monsters were strange to Jason’s eye, divergent from the
normal pattern. Most monsters looked like they could appear in the
environment in which they spawned, so long as there was enough magic.
Aquatic shark-crab hybrids on the coast. Swamp monsters with sodden bark-
like skin. Even the more bizarre ones that were mostly mouths and tentacles
appeared in magically corrupted lands, dark caves or the depths of the ocean,
where such entities were unwelcome, but not unexpected.
The messenger summons were different. They didn’t look like anything
that would be naturally produced in any environment not created by MC
Escher. One was a set of concentric metal bands, floating in the air. They
spun around one another, their edges covered in eyes that flicked gazes all
around. Another looked like a single closed eyelid with wings sticking out
either side, but when the lid opened, it revealed not an eye but a mouth with
rows of dagger teeth. They were all similarly alien, although eyes and wings
featured heavily. Some were geometric, looking like floating sigils. Jason
spotted a giant disembodied hand with a mouth on the palm and eyes on the
fingertips.
Hana realised that the images in the pyramid’s viewing room were not
picking out random strange monsters, but instead what was most likely the
strike teams. She could sense their strength, with gold-ranked messengers
gathered into clusters around the city.
“See where they’re positioned?” Jason asked Hana. “Do you see what
those locations have in common?”
Hana extended her senses again, focusing on those areas. In each one, she
sensed lines of civilians streaming in those directions, along with the
powerful magic of the permanent bunkers designed for monster incursions on
the city.
“They’re going after the bunkers,” she said in a horrified whisper.
“Yep,” Jason said. “I think they want to break through the defence
barrier, inflict as many civilian casualties as possible and get out before the
barrier stabilises. I don’t know if this was always the plan or if it’s a backup
once they saw our new bird man friend fighting their snake monster. Either
way, I think it’s what they’re up to now.”
“Do you know where the city’s diamond-rankers are?” Hana asked.
“Helping out the garuda, last I saw,” Jason said. “Fortunately, the garuda
is doing the heavy lifting. If our diamond-rankers had to deal with that and
the messengers, this city would be done.”
“Then we are extremely lucky he is here,” Hana said.
Jason frowned.
“Yeah,” he said unhappily. “We’d have been completely buggered if he
wasn’t here. I don’t trust luck that good.”
81
N I C E A N D G RU NT Y

T HE CITY OF Y ARESH WAS UNDER SIEGE BY MESSENGERS AND THEIR


summoned monsters. It was Jason’s first time participating in the full-blown
defence of a city, and a high-magic one at that. During the defence of
Rimaros, he had been working monster clean-up on another island.
If not for the danger to the people of the Yaresh, he would have enjoyed
being an unremarkable cog in the big machine, one of many silver-rankers
recruited to the task. As the messengers and their summons were silver rank
at a minimum, bronze-rank adventurers would only be a liability in battle,
despite their numbers. They were relegated to support roles, which worked
well for healers but reduced combat adventurers to glorified ushers, leading
civilians into bunkers.
Silver rank was considered the threshold for becoming a real adventurer
in high-magic zones. The leap in power from bronze to silver was far greater
than anything that came before, as bronze-rankers were just too easy to kill.
Silver rank represented the stage at which a well-trained essence user took
their first major step away from frail mortality, their bodies transforming
from a sack full of weak points into a sack full of hit points.
Silver was also a stage that any adventurer could reach if sufficiently
resourced. Outside of magically desolate zones like Greenstone, an active
adventurer could go from bronze to silver in five to ten years. For guild elites,
three years was the norm, and many went faster. There were always
circumstances that provided opportunities for the bold, with the extended
monster surge Pallimustus had been through an extreme example. There were
now more newly minted silver-rankers than any other period on record.
Even the gold-rankers had seen their numbers grow, although to a far
lesser degree. The gold-rankers of Yaresh were the true power in the city’s
defence, with Jason’s gold-rank companions already having joined them.
Emir, Arabelle and Callum Morse were three-quarters of their old
adventuring team, with the slot of Arabelle’s absent husband filled by Emir’s
wife, Constance. They had moved out with Amos Pensinata, who was
famously powerful even by gold-rank standards.
Carlos Quilido was a healer, and not a combat one like Arabelle. He had
been deployed to assist dealing with the many injured by the battle taking
place at the centre of the city. The building-sized garuda still fought the
serpent apocalypse beast, even as the messengers gathered outside the city.
The native gold-rankers of Yaresh were in charge of the city’s defence.
The Deputy Director of the Adventure Society had a communication power
not unlike Jason’s, but more powerful by virtue of rank. He had used it to
connect every team leader in the city of silver rank and above, coordinating
the city’s defenders.
Jason had taken a brief pause from rescue efforts to check that his cloud
palace had formed a defensive bunker properly, having never properly tested
the defences. He was in the observation room at the peak of the pyramid-
shaped building with Hana Shavar and Shade, eyes closed as he explored the
building with his magical senses. The structures all looked good, the weapon
systems ready and waiting. They were the contribution of Travis Noble, the
magical ordnance specialist from Earth. Jason had thought the results would
be more gun-like, but instead were clearly shaped by Jason’s own
proclivities.
He could also sense the people in the bunkers. The civilians were filling
up the dormitories, and he could sense Estella Warnock and Taika in the
small quarters he had set aside for them. Estella paced nervously while Taika
was meditating. Jason guessed that Taika was hoping to break through to
silver in time to join the fight, and as close as he was, he might even do it.
Jason didn’t think leaping straight into a fight from a rank-up was a good
idea, but he was in no position to criticise reckless leaps into combat.
Humphrey reached out through Jason’s party chat ability. As team leader,
he was the one taking directives from city defence command and relaying
them to the group.
“Jason, the evacuation of the civilians into the city defence bunkers is in
full swing. They’re directing everyone to prep for incursion, assigning teams
to the bunkers they expect to be attacked.”
“Have we been assigned to the refugee camp?” Jason asked.
“No, the refugee camp is surrounded by adventurer vehicles, plus the two
cloud palaces. The entertainment district has bunkers that are some of the
largest but weakest in the city, so we’re being sent there along with many
other teams. We’re already headed there, so can you meet us on the way?”
“No worries, mate.”

Jason stepped out from one of the bodies Shade had stationed on a rooftop.
Most of Shade’s bodies remained with Jason for combat purposes, but a
handful were stationed in the cloud palace or in strategic locations around the
city. This allowed Jason to quickly shadow jump to any of them, navigating
around the city without putting his portal on cooldown.
It was not hard to orient himself after appearing on the rooftop; the
diamond-rank battle between the garuda and the endlessly spawning serpent
creature was impossible to miss. The eagle-headed humanoid was taller than
the towering buildings of the city centre, and every time it struck at the
hydra-like serpent heads it fought, thunder rumbled across the city. Even
some ten kilometres away, air that should have been still under the city’s
barrier dome was stirred by the shockwaves of the fight.
After sparing the battle a quick glance, Jason ran to the edge of the
building and leapt off. His cloak of darkness and stars took the form of
sweeping wings, undulating as they pushed him through the air.
He looked over the city from his high vantage. Much of Yaresh was built
around living trees, magically shaped and then filled out with stone. The
heart of the city contrasted this as living buildings gave way to polished metal
and shining glass towers. Many of these had been damaged or toppled
entirely by the garuda and its serpentine foe fighting amongst them.
The city was washed in a blue tint as sunlight passed through the dome of
the city’s defence barrier. Normally visible as little more than a heat-haze
shimmer, it now glowed blue as it fended off attacks all across its surface.
The messengers had begun their assault and their summons were gathered
around it like a swarm of angry bees.
Jason was far from the only airborne traveller as the sky was filled with
adventurers alone or in teams. Most rode personal vehicles of various types,
from flying skimmer cars like a Star Wars character to floating clouds like
Sun Wukong. Others rode on familiars, had magical wings like Jason, or
simply flew around like superheroes. Sophie was one of those, catching up to
Jason as she easily outpaced him in the air. The rest of the team trailed
behind in Onslow’s expanded shell.
Clive’s familiar, Onslow, could expand his shell into an open-sided flying
craft, the unshelled tortoise taking the form of a small green humanoid.
Wearing child’s clothes provided by Clive, he looked like an adorable team
mascot. He was still more than capable of directing deadly elemental attacks
from the glowing runes atop his shell, however.
Jason and Sophie slowed to join the others in the shell. Clive had
purchased some furniture for travelling inside Onslow’s shell, but as they
were headed for combat, he had left most of it in his storage space. He had
only put out a plush rug that the team sat on as Humphrey briefed them.
Sophie and Jason flew in and sat with the others and Stash, in the form of a
puppy, crawled into Sophie’s lap for head scratches.
“The messengers have several aspects broadly in common with essence
users,” Humphrey explained.
He wouldn’t be introducing anything too revelatory, but was a big
believer in reiterating information until it stuck. As the team’s primary
strategist, he had studied their future enemies more than anyone else on the
team.
“The messengers all have unique power sets,” he continued. “Not as
many or as varied as essence users, but don’t underestimate their versatility.
Also like us, their power sets tend to fall into roles, so look out for what
they’re doing and react accordingly. Strikers are high damage but not as
resilient, so prioritise them.”
He nodded at Sophie.
“Defenders are a lesser danger, but hard to kill. They’re also good at
occupying multiple attackers, so they won’t go after the others. Sophie and I
will be largely responsible for occupying them so the rest of you can go for
softer targets, but be ready to focus defenders down if that’s the right play.
Belinda will take on the field tactician role as normal, so she’ll be looking for
opportunities we can jump on.”
“Healers are the top priority, right?” Rufus asked.
“As always,” Humphrey said with a nod. “Healers are rare amongst the
messengers, but if we spot one, it goes to the top of the list. Be aware that
they will be the most heavily defended, so we only go after healers as a team,
and with a plan. Or we send Jason by himself.”
“You’re just going to throw me in there?”
“Yes,” Humphrey said. “And you’re not a pinpoint assassin, so I expect
you to kill more than just the healers while you’re at it. Next up, we have
summoners, who are the weakest of the messenger archetypes individually,
but critical to their forces. Killing them won’t get rid of the summons, but it
will reduce the cohesiveness of their summoned monsters. Low priority, but
take the chance if it’s there.”
He looked at Neil and Clive.
“The key thing to watch out for is that many messengers have the power
to isolate individuals, forcing a one-on-one confrontation. Neil and Clive,
you’re our weakest solo fighters, so stick together with Belinda in Onslow’s
shell. Clive, I want you focused on setting up big hits against any messengers
you can get a line on through the wall of summoned monsters. Lindy and
Neil, boost him when you aren’t focused on healing or protecting the group.
Lindy, I want you to hold your tricks for when we can make the most of
throwing the messengers a surprise or two. Stash, I want you to stick to them
and keep them safe.”
Stash let out an affirmative yip.
“If they can’t get you alone,” Humphrey continued, “they can’t use those
isolating powers on you. Just watch out for area attacks, since you’ll be
clustered up. You know what to do, Neil.”
Neil nodded.
“I can’t afford to just stand still,” Sophie said. “I’m useless that way and
might as well have stayed back at the cloud house.”
“You’re right,” Humphrey agreed. “Everyone not sticking to Onslow will
be on the move, operating with some degree of independence. You and I will
be staying relatively close, running escort for the others. I’ll be sweeping
summons that get near Onslow, and I want you getting in the face of any
messengers, Soph.”
“I take the big ones and you take the little ones,” Sophie told him.
“Essentially, yes,” he confirmed. “The messengers have the intelligence
to make strategic and tactics choices their summons won’t. I want you getting
in their faces, disrupting whatever they’re trying to do and setting them up for
big hits from Clive.”
“You don’t want me to kill them?”
“Focus on disruption, at least at the start. You’ll have plenty of fight to
power up and you’ll be nice and grunty in the late stages.”
“Oh, I’ll be the grunty one, will I?” she asked, and Humphrey’s face
reddened.
“Time and place,” he told her through gritted teeth.
“What about the one-to-one powers the messengers have to isolate?”
Rufus asked.
“As long as the group stays together, all the information we have says
they’ll be fine. For those of us moving alone, we have to assume that some or
all of us will be hit by them eventually. Most likely after the messengers
realise they can’t break off Neil or Clive to target.”
“Will they even go for us?” Sophie asked. “They have to assume that we
know about their powers, so anyone going it alone can handle themselves in a
duel.”
“Don’t underestimate messenger arrogance,” Jason said. “Our side might
rate the messengers as slightly below a combat-focused adventurer in a one-
to-one comparison, but I’ll bet you they do the opposite. And I honestly don’t
know which side is right. I promise you that their auras will be a critical
factor.”
“We can’t just hunker up in fear of solo fights,” Humphrey said. “As
Sophie said, if we don’t fight our way, we might as well not have come.
These enemies are too strong to bring anything but our best. We just have to
trust that we can take them alone and get back to the fight.”
“Which means some of us will be relatively alone,” Rufus said.
“Yes,” Humphrey agreed. “Especially you and Jason, Rufus. You don’t
have your own flight power, so I want you on the ground. Messenger
summons are all flyers, but they’ll be trying to break into the underground
bunkers.”
“I can clear out summons while simultaneously setting up my powerful
attacks for the messengers,” Rufus said. “Maybe catch some of those
defenders by surprise with big hits.”
“Jason,” Humphrey said. “I know you don’t like talking about Earth, but
from what Farrah has told me, you should be just fine in the middle of the
enemy. Is that something you can handle?”
“No worries. Being alone in the middle of thousands of monsters is kind
of my thing.”
“Just don’t die again,” Neil told him.
“No promises.”
“Jason, you’re out of resurrections,” Humphrey pointed out.
“I hate to break to you, cobber, but so is everyone else. Even your
Immortality power won’t get you back up until gold rank.”
“He’s not wrong,” Neil said. “Resurrection magic has been harder for a
few years now. Even at gold rank, you have minutes at best, and only the
most complex and difficult healing magic can do it.”
“Sorry about that,” Jason told him.
“It was something that the gods of healing and death did to how magic
works,” Neil said. “It wasn’t your fault.”
Jason’s expression became an apologetic wince.
“It wasn’t not my fault. I thought I told you this. The whole bit with the
Reaper making a deal so the World-Phoenix wouldn’t keep bringing me back
from the dead.”
“I thought that was a joke.”
“Why would that be a joke?”
“Because it’s insane.”
Neil let out a sigh.
“Look at who I’m talking to. Shade, please tell me the Reaper didn’t have
the gods change how magic works because of Jason.”
“The Reaper did not have the gods change how magic works because of
Mr Asano.”
“Thank you,” Neil said, his voice relieved.
“Mr Asano was more of an inciting incident that pushed the Reaper to act
on something he has been concerned about for quite some time.”
Neil gave Shade a flat look.
“Is it too late for me to go find energy vampire Thadwick and join his
team again?”
82
BREACH

J ASON AND HIS TEAM WERE RIDING INSIDE O NSLOW ’ S EXPANDED SHELL
towards the entertainment district. Buried under the taverns, clubs, theatres
and nightclubs was a massive subterranean bunker, one of the least secure in
the city. It was large and magically reinforced, but mostly relied on a sturdy
roof, with no active defences that could deter attackers from digging in
eventually.
That was usually fine if a monster spawned in the city or some managed
to break in during a monster surge, but messengers were more intelligent
foes. Not only would they bother to go after the people in the bunker but
would also realise its relative vulnerability. Jason’s team and others like it
were tasked with holding off the messengers once they made it into the city.
Eventually, they would be forced to either retreat through the breaches they
created in the barrier dome or be trapped inside when they closed.
Jason stood at the edge of Onslow’s shell looking out at the dome that
spanned over the city. The barrier had already turned from clear to blue as
summoned monsters attacked the entire surface of the dome. As it became
increasingly stressed, it started buzzing like wet power lines, even giving off
a similar ozone smell. Most people wouldn’t detect it, but Jason’s silver-rank
olfactory senses could smell the tang of it, even from far below.
Humphrey tilted his head, listening to a voice in his head. He was
currently under two communication powers: Jason’s linking him to the team,
and a gold-ranker coordinating the city defences.
“They’re expecting breaches at any moment,” he warned. “We’ll be on
site in only a minute or two, but we may be arriving at a fight already in
progress.”
Gary picked his way along a street far closer to the centre of the city than
Jason and his team. This was a part of Yaresh where buildings were made of
polished metal and stone rather than living wood. The buildings were also
taller, at least the ones that had more than a shattered base pointing jaggedly
upward like the hilt of a broken sword.
The street was in ruins, entire sections of building having fallen to the
street. Navigating them alternately meant clambering over, skirting around or
even going through them, entering through a shattered section of wall and
exiting through a door or window that somehow remained intact.
Gary was travelling with other essence users specialised in various crafts,
moving closer to the great battle at the centre of the city than most
adventurers. The craftspeople had little to no combat experience other than
Gary, but that barely mattered. Anyone short of diamond rank who got
involved in the fight between the garuda and the serpent monster would die
helplessly, combat veteran or not.
Cresting a toppled tower, Gary paused to look up. Debris was raining
from the sky as titanic beings smashed apart buildings. Some of the debris
was the buildings, landing on other buildings or the wide boulevards like
bombs. Dust choked the air, acrid in the lungs of any low-rankers caught in it.
The air was filled with shrill cries from the serpents and the thunderous
crashes as the fight destroyed yet more of the city. Behind those irregular
sounds was a sonorous hum, growing louder as the barrier endured attacks
from the outside. The light filtering through the dome had become a deeper
blue, lending the city around Gary the feel of an underwater ruin. He briefly
thought back to the village under the lake he, Farrah and Rufus had
discovered near Greenstone, shortly before they met Jason for the first time.
He shook his head, his mane dancing around his head. He looked down at
where the others were making their way over the obstruction. They may not
have been fighters, but they still had silver-rank strength, endurance and
agility, so they needed no help. The support team of bronze-rankers with
them were actual adventurers and were likewise capable.
The only member of the group that had any trouble negotiating the terrain
was Gary’s summon. A ten-foot-tall forge golem, it was a humanoid
construct of grime-black industrial metal. The glow of molten metal radiated
from the joints, between the metal panels and in the eye holes that were the
only features on an otherwise blank face. It was not a great climber, but
Gary’s almost gold-rank strength was able to haul the six-ton golem with no
concern. In many cases, the golem went through, rather than over obstacles.
Gary and the other craftspeople were all volunteers looking to help with
the evacuation. Their powers were more effective than the average
adventurer’s for dealing with widespread destruction. They could meld stone,
reinforce buildings in danger of collapsing and use other techniques to extract
any survivors who had become trapped. The support team of bronze-rank
adventurers with them were assigned by the Adventure Society, as they had
powers well-suited to getting the rescued civilians to safety once free from
whatever had them trapped. Most had vehicle or speed powers, but the
Adventure Society had even managed to spare a portal user and a healer.
The healer was especially useful with the thick dust that tightened the
lungs of the normal-rankers they found. Children were especially vulnerable,
often unconscious until subjected to a healing or cleanse ability. Luckily,
low-rankers were not taxing on a bronze-rank healer’s mana reserves.
The group had little time to spare. Once the messengers and their
summoned monster army broke through, there would be no safe evacuation
of civilians through the streets. Waiting out the rest of the attack buried where
they were was not a great option, especially for those with injuries, but
travelling through the open streets would not be safe.
It was already proving dangerous even before the dome was broken
through. Twice Gary’s group had encountered naga—people with the upper
body of an elf and the lower body of a serpent. These were lesser beings
created by the serpent-spawning apocalypse beast the eagle-headed garuda
was fighting. Fortunately, the freshly created beings had been disoriented by
their coming into being. He guessed that was why they’d wandered off. One
had been bronze and another silver, which Gary had easily dispatched, but he
dreaded meeting a gold.
At this point, the streets were mostly clear of civilians not in need of
rescue, as they had already evacuated to the bunkers. The bunkers were
designed to withstand monster attacks and the civilians had been drilled in
swiftly heading to them when anything threatened to get past the walls. This
usually meant monsters manifesting inside the city, but soon after the
monster surge, those drills were fresh in everyone’s mind. With magical
assistance to organise everything, evacuating the populace into the bunkers
had gone smoothly in most of the city.
The place this wasn’t true was the centre of the city. Groups like Gary’s
were risking extreme danger to rescue people trapped in fallen buildings or
cut off on blocked streets. What should have been easy terrain had turned
harsh and was getting worse by the moment as debris rained from the sky.
Anything from loose rubble to the better part of entire buildings were leaving
massive craters or obstructing entire streets.
More than once, Gary had to interpose himself to shield another
craftsperson, getting hammered into the ground for his trouble. After each
instance, he had needed a healing potion and to conjure a fresh shield. As
they moved, they saw many people who had been struck down while
attempting to escape.
Gary and his group reached the next building where they sensed the auras
of trapped survivors and went to work. Gary had the hammer, iron, fire and
forge essences. His powers were better suited to smithing weapons than
reinforcing buildings, but fortunately, he had experience to draw on. In the
years leading up to the monster surge, Gary had spent time moving between
isolated towns, helping them prepare. Not only had he supplied them with
weapons but he had also worked on reinforcing walls and other defensive
infrastructure.
The craftspeople shaped stone, reinforced structures and opened up
pathways to dig out trapped people. These were people either too low-rank to
escape themselves or people trapped with low-rankers. A silver-ranker
pushing their own way out could easily cause a shift in debris that killed the
people with them. Sadly, Gary had already encountered some who had made
that mistake.
Each situation required its own adaptation to the specific conditions,
testing the creativity of the craftspeople. As they went from rescue to rescue,
they discovered which approaches worked best in most circumstances,
refining their use each time. A common tactic was for a tunnel into a fallen
building to be stone-shaped into place. The two-piece chest plate of Gary’s
forge golem then opened to spray a layer of molten metal across the surface
in a surprisingly well-controlled stream. A water user then cooled the molten
metal to reinforce the tunnel.
The silver-rank conjured metal was thin but strong, and while it would
vanish along with the golem in time, it was more than enough to evacuate
whoever was at the end of the new tunnel. Rough and ready construction was
the order of the day at every site as jury-rigged girders and iron walls only
had to hold long enough to get trapped civilians out.
The group realised their time was up from the hum of the barrier dome. A
constant drone behind the crashes of debris and thunderous sounds of
diamond-rank combatants, it had been consistently rising in pitch. Once the
hum started to pulse, they knew the breach was about to happen. Gary looked
up but couldn’t see more than a hazy blue through the dust.
“Time to get to the bunkers ourselves,” he declared, his tone brooking no
dissention.
As a group, they headed for the nearest bunker. It wasn’t too far, as the
city centre had a number of them. In normal conditions, a silver-ranker on
foot could reach one in minutes, if not seconds, but conditions were far from
normal. The terrain was one thing, but in short order, they heard sounds in the
air that were something between electrical discharges and breaking glass.
They couldn’t see it, but they knew the barrier protecting the city had been
breached.

Jason and his team had managed to reach the sky over the entertainment
district just in time to see the breach occur. The breaches were centred over
the bunkers, so the team had a clear view as the barrier dome rippled like
water. The rippling magic energy shifted from blue to clear as monsters
pushed against it, but then suddenly pulled back.
The summoned creatures moved from the other side of the dome and a
messenger gathered energy over his head, arms raised. It formed an orange,
red and yellow ball, glowing like a sun, the colours plain through the now-
clear section of barrier. Other messengers fed streams of power into it and it
slowly grew larger.
Jason and his team watched and waited; they were far from alone in doing
so. The air was not as thick with adventurers as the other side of the barrier
was with monsters, but it was far from empty. Many teams hovered in the air,
in vehicles and on personal flight devices. More adventurers were on the
rooftops far below, waiting to protect the bunker beneath the ground.
There was a moment of stillness on both sides of the barrier dome. It was
not quiet, with the distant thunder of diamond-rank battle, but the air was
thick with tension. The fireball grew larger than the messenger creating it,
until it was finally unleashed.
The flaming sphere did not rush forward, moving slowly towards the
barrier dome. It struck the clear, rippling section of the barrier, which went
hard like glass. It then shattered, though it did not sound quite like glass with
a sharp electric crash. A jagged hole appeared in the barrier, but it did absorb
all the power from the fireball before breaking. Fragments of brittle magic,
temporarily made solid, fell a short distance before dissolving into nothing.
Monsters poured through the breach like pressurised water through a
sudden leak. The summoned creatures were all bizarre flying entities, moving
through the air and firing projectiles or swooping to the attack. A one-eyed
griffin with four wings that looked freakishly like human arms dove into the
attack with lion-like forelimbs and eagle talon hind legs. A large uncut
crystal, purple and floating in the air, was orbited by magic sigils carved from
what looked like rubies and sapphires. The sigils conjured rings of flame and
razor-sharp circles of ice that were shot at the adventurers.
Like all the others, Jason’s team moved forward to meet them. Humphrey
and Sophie launched out of Onslow’s shell, while Rufus stepped off and
dropped down. Jason stepped into Shade and vanished. As soon as they were
gone, a shimmering wall of air swirled around the shell. Onslow could use
various elemental powers by activating the glowing runes on the segments of
his shell, and as a silver rank, Clive could enhance them. He was using ritual
magic to enhance the wind shield as Belinda, dressed in a robe and pointy
hat, was shooting blasts of magic from her staff and wand. Neil was taking
stock of the battleground forming in the sky, saving his mana for when his
team needed it.
Along with Onslow, Belinda and Humphrey’s familiars were at the ready.
Stash was currently retaining his puppy form as it allowed him to stay out of
the way. His task was to guard the shell and its occupants, and he would
shapeshift as and when needed. Belinda’s astral lantern, Shimmer, was
pumping out mana to the team. Given that the battle would be a long one, that
would pay off more and more the longer the conflict continued. Her other
familiar, Gemini, was a blurry replica of Clive. It was better at replicating
abilities than before, now that it was silver rank, and shared Belinda’s knack
for doing more of the best thing anyone else was up to.
The team was variously ready and waiting, or already on the move. The
Battle of Yaresh had begun.
83
G A R Y G O E S T O WO R K

B REACHES TO THE BARRIER WERE HAPPENING ALL ACROSS THE CITY , BUT ONE
was unlike any of the others. Seen and heard from across the city, the
messenger’s only diamond-ranker came down through the peak of the dome
like an anvil through glass. The dome being penetrated released sound that
reached the outer walls and force that shattered windows for kilometres.
Adventurers were avoiding the central part of the city because of the ongoing
garuda battle, but even at a distance, many flyers were knocked out of the
sky.
For most of the city’s adventurers, the highest-level conflicts were more
like a fireworks show than a battle they were participating in. Distant
explosions made for a spectacular view, but getting too close held nothing but
danger. Jason and his team paid minimal attention, trusting the city’s own
diamond-rank defenders to intercept. All they could do was hope that the city
wasn’t levelled in the process.
The high-level fights were mercifully out of reach of Jason’s team in the
entertainment district, and they had more than enough to be going on with.
Enemies gushed through the local breach like water through cracks in a dam,
mostly monsters but with a solid contingent of messengers. The adventurers
outnumbered the messengers, but the monsters were a countless swarm.
No one on the field was lower than silver rank. While both sides had
gold-rankers, Jason was relieved to see that the adventures had a slim
advantage in that regard. None of the monsters were gold rank, only
messengers. His aura senses told him that the most powerful combatant was
on the other side, however. Auras were far from a perfect measure of power,
but Jason’s instincts warned him about one of the messengers.
It was the man who had conjured the fireball that breached the barrier.
His skin was light brown and his hair dark. He wore light leather armour, but
any protection at all was rare amongst the messengers, as if to admit the need
was to show weakness. The man’s wings were shades of brown and grey,
more like a bird than an angel.
Both sides were led by their gold-rankers, although very little in the way
of orders were going out. Summoned monsters swarmed down towards the
adventurers defending on the ground, while the ones in the air thinned them
out as best they could. The messengers sought to impede the adventurers as
much as they could, with the gold-rank battles especially settling into a
détente.
The gold-rankers of one side could swiftly decimate the other if they
weren’t forced to negate one another. It was a tense conflict that no smart
silver-rank went anywhere near, largely taking place in the higher reaches of
the battle. At the low end, the advantage of flight the summons had against
many ground defenders was ameliorated by their goal. If the monsters
couldn’t dig down to the bunker they had failed, so they were forced to come
to the defenders. The result was a massacre, although not without adventurer
casualties. No matter how many monsters fell, however, there were always
more pouring down.
Jason’s team went to work, sticking to Humphrey’s outlined strategy.
Belinda and Clive made use of the rituals Clive had set up inside Onslow’s
shell that enhanced the beams and blasts coming from their magical staves
and wands. Arrays of nested ritual diagrams were difficult to integrate
without them interfering with one another, but Clive had spent much of the
past few years perfecting the unusual practice of combat rituals.
Clive had been well aware that while he was a utility asset to the team, he
was the least useful member when it came to combat. He had a few support
abilities and one very powerful attack spell, but he often found himself
feeling more like an auxiliary member than a full one. As such, he had spent
much of the time Jason was absent working to improve his combat
effectiveness.
He was never going to match Humphrey, Sophie and Jason, who were the
combat mainstays. Belinda’s versatility meant that she was always filling a
gap, disabling enemies or making a team member even better than they
already were. As for Neil, his value as healer was obvious. Clive couldn’t
change his powers and he was never going to be a solo combat star, so
instead of trying to expend his abilities, he narrowed them.
Clive had long used combat rituals to enhance his effectiveness, largely
inspired by his acquisition of very powerful staff and wand weapons. Combat
rituals were largely looked down on by adventurers and magical researchers
alike, but Clive was determined to take them as far they could be taken. The
result was a collection of rituals that could be nested in tight arrays, turning a
largely ignorable beam attack from his staff into an attack that rivalled an
essence ability.
The result of Clive’s efforts was that he and his familiar had become a
turret bunker, pouring out attacks that ravaged the summoned monsters. At
the same time, it was efficient enough that the barrage could be maintained
for hours. Clive had mana enough to spare that he could feed extra to
Onslow, resetting and enhancing the familiar’s magic powers. As for any
monsters that tried to assault them, Onslow’s elemental powers could fend
off any but the most concentrated assaults. While it took some preparation
time, Clive finally felt that he could contribute to battle without absolutely
needing the support of the team.

Gary’s group of craftspeople and low-rank adventurers were navigating a city


that looked like it was going through the apocalypse. Thunder pealed, not
from storms but from the battle of behemoths only vaguely visible through
the choking dust. Stones that ranged in proportion from the size of a fist to
the size of a house fell from the sky at random; the sky had to be watched at
all times.
The biggest problem facing the group was that their destination, a bunker,
was the same place the messengers were targeting. The craftspeople and their
adventurer support team hurried through the city, picking up straggling
civilians as they went. Fortunately, this didn’t slow them too much as the
adventurers had all been chosen for their ability to hasten others. One had an
aura that enhanced movement speed while another had a pack of rideable
lizard familiars. One adventurer picked up civilians and carried them
telekinetically.
It did not take long after hearing the barrier broken open before the
monsters found them. Gary knew that he would not be able to shield the
civilians and bronze-rankers against the summoned creatures. They were all
silver rank and he was the only real combatant, so he would need to take the
fight to the monsters. The other craftspeople were of at least some help,
conjuring ice barriers and water shields or raising up walls of earth. They
even managed to fight back—shooting obsidian spears and other projectiles
— but they were not fighters.
Under Gary’s direction, they strove to keep moving rather than secure
kills. Any monster that wanted to slink back into the sky, Gary was happy to
let go. The group sustained injuries and lost a couple of civilians to a monster
that fired sonic blasts. That one was left struggling to fly back into the sky,
after being weighed down with a coating of molten metal.
Gary’s senses told him that the whole city had become a war zone as
adventurers, messengers and monsters clashed. Hard-hit streets became even
worse as powers flew off in every direction, tearing up pavement and
hammering buildings. Scattered civilians too slow or stubborn to reach a
shelter were pummelled by stray magic or collapsing buildings.
Despite losing a couple of civilians, the group was largely optimistic as
they drew close to the bunker. The craftspeople had done a surprisingly good
job of deterring the monsters, even if they mostly escaped alive. Gary was
about to warn the group to be wary as they rounded the next corner when an
aura emerged from the throng of monsters that stood out from the others.
A messenger flew around a building and descended to float just above the
ground in front of them. Gary could sense he was of the summoner type from
the way his aura interacted with the monsters in the area. He was slightly
taller than even Gary’s height. Beautiful, with golden hair and pale skin, his
sculpted body delicately draped in loose clothes of white and gold. His bare
feet floated just over the flagstone street, the pristine white wings spread out
behind him undulating softly. The dust that clung in Gary’s fur and on his
armour did not touch the messenger, as if afraid to soil it.
Gary knew that the messenger being only a silver-ranker did not mean the
adventurers’ numbers were an advantage. He was certain the summoner
could call on the monsters with swiftness, and probably even boost their
power. Even if he could seize the momentum before the summons were
brought into play, messengers were no joke to fight alone.
“I have sensed you driving off my creatures,” the messenger told them,
his voice a melody of the heavens. “That will end here.”
There was almost pity in the messenger’s voice; Gary’s hackles rose as
the beautiful man looked down on them. The messenger looked at him and
smiled, then pushed out with his aura. Despite being one man, he suppressed
the silver-rank craftspeople who had never trained their auras for combat. The
messenger’s aura was unlike anything they had encountered, a brutal and
almost physical force. Compared to delicate appearance of the messenger, his
aura was that of a savage thug.
Only Gary’s aura held strong, the benefits of training with Jason. Jason’s
aura was even more brutal than this man’s, with many of the same traits yet
even more oppressive. Jason had been ruthless in training his companions to
resist aura suppression, and none of them shirked. They all knew how
dangerous auras could be.
The others in Gary’s group did not fare as well. The civilians collapsed
outright, one of them going into a seizure, but Gary had neither the time nor
the power to help them. The bronze-rankers and the craftspeople fared about
the same, the adventurers better trained while the craftspeople were stronger.
They all turned pale as their auras shrank like mice under the gaze of a hawk.
Gary’s aura wasn’t suppressed, but he was definitely outmatched, even
when the messenger was simultaneously suppressing the others. His aura
wavered but held, trembling under the strain. Many of the others had dropped
to one or both knees under pressure that was spiritual rather than physical.
Gary squared himself, planting his feet. His right hand held his hammer, the
head glowing red-yellow with heat. His armour and shield did the same,
glowing between plates of dark metal. His head was bare; he had not
conjured his helmet so as to not restrict his line of sight on the sky.
The messenger looked at Gary with surprise, as if at a pet that had
demonstrated an unexpected trick. He floated forward, stopping directly in
front of Gary.
“Kneel, savage, and you shall live. Serve me, and I shall even spare
these… people… out of respect for your value as a slave.”
Gary grinned defiance through lion’s teeth. What he’d heard about the
arrogance of messengers had proven true, as had the fact that it could lead
them to make tactically unsound choices.
“You want savage?” he growled.
Gary’s roar hit the messenger like a cannon, the pure sonic force of it
shooting the messenger back faster than the bronze-rankers could even track.
The messenger smashed through the wall of the building it had just come
around, while the building itself was covered in spiderweb cracks.
“Pull it out,” Gary snarled.
The foundry golem at the rear of the group opened its chest cavity.
Glowing hot chains shot out of the golem and into the hole made by the
messenger entering the building. They stopped for a moment and then started
pulling back rapidly.
The only light they could see through the hole was the glow of the chains,
wrapped around something in the dark. They hauled it out with industrial
inevitability as the chains went back into the chest cavity of the golem. The
messenger became visible as he reached the hole, looking far less
untouchable. He was caked with dust and grime now, sear marks burnt black
into white wings where the chains were binding them.
The messenger did not allow itself to just be dragged along, ignoring the
sizzle from his hands as he gripped the chains. He twisted himself as he was
dragged, planting his feet at the edge of the hole and hauling back against the
golem. For a moment, his movement was arrested as he struggled for control.
Gary stood next to the chains that extended from the golem behind him.
He tossed his hammer casually in the air, grabbed one of the chains and
yanked, sending the messenger hurtling in his direction. Even bound, the
messenger’s wings managed to turn his tumble in the air into a glide, but it
came to an unceremonious end before he could arrest his momentum. Gary
snatched his hammer out of the air and brought it down, smashing the
messenger into the ground.
The winged man’s face had hit hard enough to crack a flagstone, but Gary
was far from done. He grabbed a wing and flipped the messenger like a steak.
He felt the beleaguered man’s aura reaching for the monsters nearby and
distracted him with a hammer to the face. The shield dropped from Gary’s
arm, pinning the messenger’s chest and arms when Gary planted a foot on it.
His head visible, the messenger glared up at Gary as he tried to push him off,
but the leonid was intractable as a mountain.
Gary looked back at the people behind him, under his protection. His
mind flashed to Farrah’s death, when he could do nothing but watch
helplessly as dimensional invaders killed her in front of him. He looked down
at the messenger, gripped his hammer in both hands and went to work.
84
T H E L A DY S H O O T I N G H U R R I C A N E S AT
P EO P LE

B ELINDA WAS MIMICKING C LIVE , BLASTING AT SUMMONED MONSTERS WITH


her own staff and wand, but she was a pale imitation of the real thing. She
could also make use of Clive’s rituals, boosting her weapons to deal more
damage and chain their attacks from enemy to enemy. The problem was that
her weapons were not able to make as much use of the rituals as Clive’s
were. Her staff and wand were both quality items, but if she let the rituals
overcharge them as much as Clive did his, they would swiftly break down.
Clive had discovered his legendary-quality growth items in an astral
space and nothing available on the market could match them. They could take
more punishment than ordinary weapons and were the crux of his combat
effectiveness. Belinda didn’t begrudge him such a key tool, but was feeling a
little wasted as a second-rate imitation.
Watching how the monsters moved, she looked for fresh options. Her
power set was versatile, but didn’t do well when coming into direct combat
without time to prepare. If she had time to study the area, rig the terrain or at
least lure enemies into a favourable environment, her charlatan and trap
essences were incredible assets. When the fight was open and sudden,
however, her effectiveness dropped. To have a real impact, she had to get
opportunistic, finding the right moments to make an unexpected move.
The monsters poured through the breach in the barrier dome, hundreds of
metres above. They immediately dropped towards their target, the bunker
buried beneath the ground. Adventurers in the sky did their best to thin them
out for the other adventurers at ground level, while the messengers sought to
distract them, letting the monsters go through unimpeded.
Area attacks were the most valuable asset to the adventurers, given the
circumstances. This was not her team’s strong point, but they did have a few
powers that had taken on area effects as they ranked up. The most spectacular
was Sophie’s wind blades, which were usually too slow for area attacks. She
tended to use them at point-blank range, being a melee fighter, but she did get
the occasional chance to truly unleash. With the monsters clustered so thickly
together, it was shooting fish in a barrel.
Belinda watched as Sophie periodically shot her wind blades at the torrent
of creatures descending through the sky. Her blades grew wider as they
travelled, and for each enemy they hit, they triggered a secondary ring of
cutting force. In normal circumstances, most silver-rank monsters had the
reflexes to dodge, but with a curtain of monsters falling from the sky, it was
harder to miss them than to hit.
The results were incredibly destructive, but using any individual power
was like trying to divert a river with a bucket. Only a lot more people with a
lot more buckets would get the job done, and other adventuring teams were
doing better jobs of widespread devastation. Team Storm Shredder fought
nearby, demonstrating this as they made good on their name. Their core
strategy was built around stacking buffs on powerful attacks; in this case,
electric arrows chaining from monster to monster. The result did look like a
thunderstorm shredding monsters.
Their already impressive area attack powers were given a powerful and
thematic boost by the inclusion of Zara Rimaros. She might have been
adopted into another family with another name, but she lived up to her former
title of Hurricane Princess as she unleashed localised storms of hurricane-
force wind and water. Monsters were left battered, disoriented and soaking
wet, set up for an electrical blast.
Even so, the monsters did not stop pouring in through the breach like beer
from a keg. Truly clearing out the monsters would require the slow-but-
extreme area attacks of affliction specialists. These were people with entire
teams built around keeping them safe as their afflictions escalated in reach
and power.
Jason and Rufus both had slow-burn affliction powers, but Rufus used
them more as a platform to set up finishing moves on individual targets. His
afflictions were used to charge up powerful attacks that could take down even
silver-rank enemies, if there were enough weaker enemies to load up with
afflictions. One-shotting a silver-ranker was something few could manage,
even assassination specialists and gold-rankers. As Rufus was no
assassination specialist, the setup required was slow and required a small
army of enemies to afflict so he could build power up from them. Even if he
met these requirements, he had to roam amongst those enemies, which was
always a dangerous proposition.
Belinda knew that Rufus was far below them, working on that at that very
moment. Jason was somewhere in the middle of the enemy, starting the
destructive butterfly chain that could, if it got up and running, rival some of
the full-blown affliction specialists. If the butterflies weren’t stopped from
spreading early, they would eventually get way beyond anyone’s ability to
suppress.
That would take time, though, and time was in short supply as the
monsters descended to the ground and the bunker beneath it. Immediate area
attacks were what would buy the affliction specialists time. Belinda’s powers
were all about using them in the right context; as she looked again at the
descending monsters, that might be exactly what she needed. All she had to
do was convince someone to do something very stupid.
“Hump,” she reached out through party chat. “I’m seeing a very solid
opportunity to do some damage.”
“I take it that there’s a complication.” Humphrey said. He sounded
perfectly calm, even though Belinda saw him carve a monster in half as he
spoke. “I’m guessing you want me to do something very stupid. Also, don’t
call me Hump.”
“You still have those floating discs I gave you, right?” she asked him.
“I do,” Humphrey said, his voice wary. “I don’t see how they would do
you much good without them being right in amongst the monsters.”
“Very astute,” Belinda praised.
“Jason is better suited to diving in amongst the monsters,” Humphrey
pointed out.
“Little busy,” Jason said, sounding strained even through voice chat.
“I could do it,” Sophie said as she kicked off a messenger’s back to go
sailing through the air. The messenger turned and fired a thick beam of
energy from its hands, striking Sophie square on. He had struck an after-
image, the beam passing through and punching a hole through a summoned
monster as Sophie appeared behind the messenger again, kicking him in the
head.
“You need to keep anyone from focusing on Onslow,” Humphrey told
her. “I’ll do Belinda’s madness run, but I’ll need some extra attention, Neil.”
“Don’t worry,” Neil assured him. “I’ll keep you alive.”
“I’d have preferred if you said you’d keep me safe,” Humphrey told him.
“I didn’t say safe,” Neil told him. “You can’t hold me to that.”
“See?” Belinda said. “You’ll be fine, probably.”
There was no response for a moment.
“Did you just make a grumbling sound and then realise you couldn’t
figure out how to send it through voice chat?” Sophie asked.
“No,” Humphrey said unconvincingly.
“Oh, look out,” Sophie said. “Messengers high and right.”
The group’s attention turned to a trio of messengers that had taken notice
of the flying shell from which adventurers were safely spitting out attacks.
“How is that fair?” Clive complained. “Why aren’t they going after the
lady shooting hurricanes at people?”
“I think you’ll find that some of them jumped her a while back,” Belinda
said, pointing.
Clive looked to where Zara’s team was fending off a half-dozen
messengers. “Oh. I guess that is fair.”
Humphrey rocketed through the air to engage the three messengers
moving in on Onslow’s shell. Even propelled by a special attack designed for
rapid air strikes, however, he still arrived after Sophie. Her first two kicks
landed on their heads before they even registered her presence, a perfectly
timed distraction for Humphrey’s arrival. His Dive Bomb attack was a
combination power, allowing him to link it with his Unstoppable Force
ability and land a devastating hit. Combined with his ability to sacrifice life
force to enhance his power, his massive sword blasted into all three like an
explosion, sending them flying.
Despite being robbed of the initiative, the messengers were undaunted.
One of them conjured scale armour stylised like feathers that covered him
head to toe. Only magic giving the rigid armour flexibility made movement
possible, as ordinary armour with the same design would have left the wearer
unable to move.
The other messengers fell back behind their armoured companion, one
conjuring a bow stylised like a wing. The other had feathers fly from her
actual wings, turn to metal and combine to form a sword. Humphrey and
Sophie ignored the defender, both teleporting behind the trio to engage the
strikers. Humphrey dropped his heavy sword and conjured his lighter one, the
messenger swordswoman in front of him frowning at it. Humphrey’s Razor
Wing Sword power created a sword that looked a lot like a messenger’s
wing, rendered in metal.
Sophie and Humphrey played out a dance in the air with the messengers
as they manoeuvred for position, the defender trying to reposition himself to
protect the others. Humphrey, with his conjured dragon wings, was the most
awkward of the group. He swiftly found the armoured messenger interposed
between himself and the others. Sophie was the opposite, a leaf on the wind
with her flight power, Leaf on the Wind. She harried the two strikers
simultaneously, especially the archer.
“You have strength and skill,” the armoured messenger told Humphrey,
“but it will not be enough this day. Withdraw, wait out the battle, and you
will live to see tomorrow.”
They hovered in the air facing one another. They both had wings out, but
it was magic holding them aloft, not aerodynamics.
“But if I do that,” Humphrey told him. “Who will distract you three?”
“What?”
Sophie and Humphrey teleported away, just as a prismatic beam washed
over the messengers.

Clive stopped firing off his weapons and started gathering mana the moment
Sophie warned them about the messengers.
“Set them up for a big hit, if you please.”
“Let us know when to get out of the way,” Sophie said through voice
chat, already landing kicks on their heads.
Jason’s party chat was useful for keeping contact through loud battles and
across large distances, but it was also a powerful tool for silently
communicating tactics. Humphrey and Sophie held the messenger’s attention
while Clive charged up his strongest offensive ability.

You are preparing to cast [Wrath of the Magister]. Select the variant
you wish to cast.
Variant one: [Prismatic Affliction].
Variant two: [Prismatic Void].
Variant three: [Spell & Weapon Enhancement Ritual]. This variant is
already in place. Multiple effects do not stack but additional casts
may be used to cover additional areas.

“Jason,” Clive said into party chat as he looked at the system box, “I am so
glad to have you back.”
“Still busy,” Jason said. “I hope these guys have seen my powers before,
because otherwise, they researched me personally.”
“Are you alright?” Clive asked him.
“Yeah, no worries. I just need to—”
“Jason?”
“Can’t really talk. Stitch this, you birdman-rally-looking mother fu—”
Jason cut off his chat channel mid-sentence.
Clive turned his attention back to the spell he was gathering mana for. It
was the slowest ability in his arsenal by far, but the payoff was
commensurately impressive. It was one of the unconventional powers,
usually belonging to spellcasters, that offered variations of the ability to
choose from with each use. At lower ranks, the void variant had been a mana-
intense trump card that could kill anything at bronze-rank that would stand
still long enough to charge up the spell. Now that the enemies were silver,
Clive found more value in the debilitating effects of the affliction’s variant.

You have selected the [Prismatic Affliction] variant of [Wrath of the


Magister]. Select any or all of the following colour effects, with each
colour additional mana costs:

[Red] (high mana): Target’s temperature is significantly increased


(high-damage frost burn if combined with blue).
[Yellow] (high mana): Target’s abilities have increased mana cost.
[Pink] (moderate mana): Target’s resistances are reduced.
[Green] (moderate mana): Target’s blood is poisonous to itself.
[Purple] (very high mana): Expending mana harms the target.
[Orange] (very high mana): Target suffers increased damage from all
sources.
[Blue] (high mana): Target’s temperature is significantly decreased
(high-damage frost burn if combined with red).

Although it was the early stage of the battle, Clive didn’t hold back.

You have selected all colours. Total mana cost has increased to
beyond extreme.

Clive had a larger mana pool than normal, courtesy of a blessing from a great
astral being. It had triggered a human gift evolution, turning the normal
human affinity for special attacks into one for spells. Combined with his
ability to accelerate mana recovery and burn health for mana, Clive was built
for big, expensive spells.
Clive warned Sophie and Humphrey at the last moment and did not wait
for them before unleashing the spell. Silver-rankers had lightning reflexes
and he didn’t want to miss, trusting his teammates to get out of the way.
From where he stood at the edge of Onslow’s shell shelter, a prismatic
beam as wide as the shell itself blasted from Clive’s outstretched hands,
blasting over and past the messengers. Clive had deliberately aimed to avoid
any adventurers, but the beam washed through the throng of summoned
monsters behind them.
Humphrey and Sophie dove back in, pouncing on the now severely
debilitated messengers, Belinda and Clive backing them up with ranged
attacks.
The two strikers fell, mostly from Humphrey’s attacks. He burned life force
to inflict massive spikes of damage, Neil restoring it with healing magic. It
was too early in the battle for Sophie to kill quickly, not having built up her
magical buffs, so she focused on preventing the withdrawal the savaged
messengers were attempting to make. Even so, the defender managed to
escape into the summoned monsters. Sophie started to chase them, but
Humphrey called her back.
“We dropped two of them,” he told her. “Keep the victory rather than
chasing defeat. No good will come of diving into all those summoned
monsters.”
“Speaking of which,” Belinda told him, “can we get back to our
conversation about you diving into all those summoned monsters?”
85
H U M P H R EY ’ S N E W N O R M A L

C LIVE LOOKED AT THE BREACH IN BETWEEN BLASTING AT MONSTERS WITH HIS


staff and wand.
“They must have summoners stationed outside, sending more in as we
kill these ones.”
“I’d say a lot of summoners,” Belinda agreed. “I know their summoners
can call up more than even Humphrey, but these numbers are beyond
anything they told us to expect. Which means we could really use someone
diving in there to help me use my power effectively.”
“Yes, I’m going,” Humphrey grumbled through voice chat.
“Have you got the discs?” she asked him.
“Yes, I still have the discs.”
“Did you pack a lunch?”
Humphrey’s sword claimed the last head of a monster that looked like
conjoined triplets carved out of marble, with three wings at equidistant points
around its body. It didn’t look like it could function, let alone fight, but it was
more intelligent than most monsters and even could cast a handful of spells.
Humphrey had charged at it through a rain of projectiles, his mana crystals
absorbing some and the others blasting his armour with elemental attacks of
fire, ice and lightning. Once he got within arm’s reach, it was a short fight.
“If you’re ready, I’m just going to go,” Humphrey told Belinda. “You
alright with that, Neil?”
“I’m ready,” Neil confirmed.
Humphrey plunged into the torrent of monsters spilling in through the
breach and dropping like a waterfall towards the ground. He cleared a path as
best he could with his fire breath and swept enemies away with his massive
dragon-wing sword. Neil’s shields snapped into place every time they came
off cooldown, but attacks still rained down on Humphrey’s dragon armour.
Neil was a skilled adventurer, but in a very different way to Sophie. He
had two quick-use shields that were his most commonly deployed abilities.
They were short-lived but exceptionally effective when timed correctly.
Neil’s skill was not demonstrated in martial or acrobatic prowess but in
situational awareness, judgement and timing. Knowing when to use an ability
and when to hold it for a few seconds later. Reading the fight to predict what
his teammates would face. Understanding exactly what his companions could
and could not endure.
Neil’s quick-shield abilities both had cooldowns of twenty seconds, with
one being more tactical and the other focused entirely on protection. The
tactical power, Burst Shield, blasted away enemies that attacked the barrier. It
could be used to give the recipient respite from attack, room to manoeuvre or
the opportunity to make a counterstrike. This shield was useful as Humphrey
was swarmed with enemies, but the protective shield was more critical.

Ability: [Absorbing Shield] (Shield)

Special ability (recovery, retribution, drain).


Cost: High mana.
Cooldown: 20 seconds.

Current rank: Silver 4 (07%).

Effect (iron): Create a short-lived shield that negates an incoming


attack and generates mana-over-time with a strength that scales with
the amount of damage negated. High-damage attacks of gold-rank or
higher may not be entirely negated.

Effect (bronze): Attacks made against the shield drain health and
mana from the attacker and bestow it upon the recipient of the
shield.

Effect (silver): The recipient gains [Priority Ward].

[Priority Ward] (boon, magic, stacking): When [Absorbing Shield] is


used on a target with this boon, the cooldown is reduced by one
second for each instance of [Priority Ward]. Additional instances of
this boon may be accumulated.

Absorbing Shield not only protected but even had some healing and recovery
effects. Most importantly, repeated uses meant the short-lived shield could be
used on closer and closer intervals. The counterbalance to this was the high
mana cost, which could rapidly stack up with sequential uses.
Belinda and Clive’s auras both reduced the mana cost of the team’s
abilities, and Clive’s replenished mana at the same time. Even so, Neil was
swiftly burning through mana as he cast Absorbing Shield over and over.
“Clive,” Neil said as he threw the absorbing shield on Humphrey again.
He could barely see Humphrey through the throng of monsters to put the
shield up. “Humphrey is taking a pounding out there and I’m going through a
lot of mana to keep him up. I’m going to need a tide.”
“If I use Mana Tide now, that’s it for the fight unless Belinda uses her
reset on it.”
“If I don’t get some more mana,” Neil told him, “that’s it for Humphrey.”
“Alright,” Clive agreed, pausing from his attacks to cast a spell.
“Let the astral tides bestow their bounty on the chosen.”

Ability: [Mana Tide] (Balance)

Special ability (recovery).


Cost: low mana.
Cooldown: 4 hours.

Current rank: Silver 4 (02%).

Effect (iron): Draw mana from the astral to replenish allies. Mana
recovery begins slowly and escalates over time. Local dimensional
conditions may impact the rate of recovery.

Effect (bronze): Allies affected by this ability increase their mana


recovery by spending mana. The more mana spent, the greater the
recovery increase. Abnormal local dimensional conditions may
produce positive or negative side effects.

Effect (silver): When allies affected by this ability use powers that
cost mana, the effect of those abilities is enhanced. Enhanced
abilities will be affected by environmental factors.

Mana started trickling into the team, over a widespread enough area that even
Jason and Rufus were affected. The trickle grew swiftly as the dimensional
membrane between the universe and the astral was still thin and patchy
following the monster surge.
Neil continued tossing Absorbing Shields on Humphrey, finding that they
were lasting longer than they should. Mana Tide caused abilities to be
impacted by the environment, such as ice spells being stronger in the cold or
fire spells stronger in the desert. To Neil’s delight, the city barrier, throwing
off loose energy from where it had been breached, seemed to be boosting his
shields.
The rest of the teams opened up with their strongest abilities, so as not to
waste the extra mana. Belinda was waiting for her opportunity, which came
as Humphrey emerged from amongst the monsters, job done. He crash-
landed inside the shell, bloody and bedraggled despite Neil’s best efforts. His
rigid dragon-scale armour was shredded, draping off him like rags. It was
clear that he had been chum in the water to that many monsters without the
elusiveness of Sophie, Rufus or Jason.
What Humphrey had been doing amongst the monsters was deploying
small discs, looping through the horde and leaving them behind like
breadcrumbs. The palm-sized objects were unremarkable, with barely enough
magic to float in place. Humphrey had left a trail of them behind, and while a
handful were destroyed by the monsters, most were ignored. The orders of
their summoners to reach the ground and dig through to the bunker were
more important than a few small, unthreatening devices.
As Neil healed Humphrey, who was conjuring a fresh set of armour,
Belinda’s attention was on the discs. She had crafted them personally with
cheap and easy magic, looking for something unremarkable and inexpensive
as she wouldn’t be getting them back.
Far more expensive was the looking glass that allowed her to spy on her
discs from a moderate distance and, more importantly, allowed her to use her
abilities on them. It was a simple device, the range was fairly short and only
worked on two of her abilities. Even so, the price for devices that would
break the line-of-sight limit that most abilities had was always a costly
proposition, and in more ways than one. Such items required an intrinsic link
to the user, meaning that if someone hostile got a hold of them, they had
grasped a dangerous vulnerability.
The looking glass wasn’t actually glass but a hoop of moon silver,
threaded with sun gold. The image that appeared as she activated it was an
illusion it produced of the closest disc. Extending her power through the
hoop, Belinda used her Lightning Tether power. A rod rose from the disc and
an arc of electricity jumped to the nearest monster. The arc stayed in place as
another arc jumped from that monster to another, repeating in a chain until
seven monsters were linked.
The nature of the power was to inflict very little damage close to the rod,
little more than a static shock. The further the targets moved from the rod,
however, the larger the damage from the lightning arcs linking them together.
Further, the arcs would fire off electricity at other nearby enemies. Given that
the monsters were hurtling towards the ground at breakneck speed, the
damage swiftly became immense. As myriad arcs of electricity crackled and
seared through the monsters, from the outside, it looked like a waterfall of
lightning.
Such a spectacular display quickly drew attention. The monsters avoided
the lightning and the rod to which it was tethered, although they were so
tightly packed, there was only so far they could go. The messengers did not
avoid it, recognising it as a threat. One of them acted to stop it, shooting a
razor-sharp feather from a safe distance. Weaving through the monsters, the
feather struck the lightning rod, which immediately detonated in an explosion
of electricity and force. Even having given the rod distance, the radius was
large enough that many monsters were severely burned. There were no
immediate fatalities, but some lost the ability to fly, be it through scorched
wings or electrical paralysis.
Belinda shifted her looking glass to another disc and called up another
rod.

Belinda activated all the discs left by Humphrey that hadn’t been taken out by
monsters before she got to them. By the time she was done, the team had
once again drawn the attention of the messengers. They had been left alone
for a time after killing two and driving off a third, but after Belinda’s
lightning waterfalls, their interest was renewed. Fortunately, they were
mostly still focused on the big area attackers like Zara and some of the local
guild teams. The most they did, for the moment, was redirect more of the
monsters to attack the team. It was only a tiny fragment of the numbers
continuing down from the cracked dome above, but it was enough to put the
team under real pressure.
Humphrey had fully recovered, while Belinda worked her magic. With a
few healing spells, freshly conjured armour and a quick splash of crystal
wash, he was once again looking like the imposing team leader. After getting
tossed around by the monsters when he went to them, he was looking to even
the score now that they were coming to him. He was going to show them
what he could really do, force more messengers to show up themselves and
then kill them too.
Humphrey flew around on his conjured wings, the mana drain of doing so
reduced by one of the many expensive items he possessed. One of the
benefits of coming from a wealthy and connected adventuring family was the
ability to source the perfect items, making him the best-geared member of the
team. He used his connections to help the others, but nothing could match the
efforts Danielle Geller spent on equipping her children.
Humphrey had struggled on first reaching silver rank. At iron and bronze,
the power of his attacks was overwhelming, butchering all but the sturdiest of
monsters in a few blows. His strongest attacks could wipe out multiple targets
at once. Silver rank was the threshold at which the resilience of bodies,
especially those of monsters, outstripped even the strongest of attacks. One-
hit kills became a thing of the past and Humphrey had needed to correct some
bad habits.
It was a lifetime of training, plus his dedication and experience that
helped him push past his initial problems and find his new normal at silver
rank. He did so by taking the opposite approach to the rest of his team,
which, as a whole, specialised in fighting the least common and most exotic
enemies. Humphrey doubled down on his role as the team’s anchor, bringing
a conventional speed and power approach that was a foundation for many of
the team’s strategies.
Adventuring at silver rank was a different proposition than what came
before. Many adventurers in high-magic zones never saw an unsupervised
contract before silver-rank. Most monster encounters fell into three
categories: swarms of weaker monsters, packs of balanced monsters, and the
most powerful monsters, spawning alone or in pairs.
At lower ranks, the powerful monsters were the most dangerous, with the
strongest bronze-rank monsters outstripping many of the weaker silvers. The
difference only really mattered to bronze-rank adventurers who had to be
wary of the damage reduction and resistance bonuses that came with rank
disparity.
At silver rank, the solitary monsters were no longer the key threat. With
even weak monsters being startlingly resilient, the standard shifted away
from the once invincible attacks that had cleared out monsters like sweeping
a dirty floor. A good team could leverage their numbers to gang up on one or
two targets effectively, or use superior strength to clear out weaker monsters,
even if they were tougher than before. Although their team makeup was
rather unusual, Humphrey and his team were not so bizarre as to escape that
dynamic.
The most dangerous monsters, then, were those too numerous to gang up
on, yet too tough to be handled quickly. This was the dynamic that Humphrey
had prepared himself for. He might not slay every monster with a single
sweep of his sword anymore, but he still hit harder than most adventurers,
and could move around quickly while doing it. With potent, unrelenting
attacks, supplemented by a moderate amount of area damage, he was a square
peg in a square hole when it came to the most common and dangerous of
monsters.
Humphrey was perfectly suited to the level of power displayed by the
monsters summoned by the messengers. The messengers used middle-ground
monsters exclusively, but had somehow managed them in massive numbers,
making it the worst of all worlds. With extra monsters now focused on
Onslow’s shell as the team’s primary platform, Humphrey got busy.
86
N O T E N O U G H M O N S T E R S T O F I G HT

F OR H UMPHREY AND HIS TEAM , THE FIGHT HAD REACHED A NEW PEAK OF
intensity. After Belinda’s wide-scale destruction using her lightning tether,
the messengers had sent a storm of summoned monsters to assault Onslow’s
tortoiseshell mini-fortress. Rather than being placed on the defensive,
however, they were taking the fight to the enemy. Clive’s Mana Tide spell
had the team operating above and beyond their normal levels, giving them the
mana to throw everything they had at the enemy.
Humphrey cut a spectacular figure, hurling himself at the monsters while
spraying out dragon breath. He dashed through the air, unloading blow after
blow from his humungous dragon wing sword, spinning like a top as his
Unstoppable Force attack carved troughs through the bodies of the monsters
that dove in to surround him.
Once his mainstay attack, Unstoppable Force could no longer one-shot
monsters the way it did at low ranks, but it still excelled when many monsters
fell within reach. Not only did it blast concussive force out with every hit,
extending the reach of the attack, but the cooldown was reduced for every
enemy struck. With monsters all around, he was able to burn through mana
and stamina firing it off again and again.
The monsters quickly learned that being too close to Humphrey was a
good way to get their faces carved off, or whatever the bizarre creatures had
instead of a face. Their over-eagerness to box him in waned and they dropped
back to make ranged attacks, forcing him to engage only a couple of them at
a time.
Humphrey was unperturbed. Humans were masters of special attacks and
Humphrey had a variety of them for every situation. Rising to the fore in his
repertoire was an attack that had gone largely overlooked when his rank was
lower and the monsters weaker. Relentless Assault had no cooldown and
increased in damage every time it was used in quick succession. This let
Humphrey chop his way through monsters like a lumberjack felling a tree
before using a dash attack or teleport to keep his sequence going with the
next monster.
There were so many monsters in the air that Humphrey had no trouble
maintaining his attack sequence. As the special attack reached certain
thresholds, it added resonating and disruptive force to his blows, smashing
apart armour and magical shields respectively. As the messengers’ strange
summons often had one or both, it made Humphrey all the more effective.
His Relentless Assault escalated in power beyond anything he had seen
before as he went through monster after monster. It landed with explosive
force, eliminating summons in just a handful of hits. There was a
commensurate cost, however, as the ability came with a stamina cost, rather
than mana. The more he used it, the faster Humphrey exhausted himself. This
was where one of Humphrey’s human gifts came into play.

Ability: [Magic Warrior]

Transfigured from [Human] ability [Essence Gift].

You may expend stamina in place of mana and mana in place of


stamina.

Humans were unique amongst essence-using species in that none of their


inherent abilities did anything without essences. Where every leonid was
strong and every elf graceful, humans got nothing until they absorbed an
essence. The most representative powers humans had were four blank
powers, called essence gifts, that would evolve automatically, one-by-one as
essences were claimed.
That Humphrey, on absorbing the magic essence, gained a power that
would let him throw everything he had into his endeavours before he dropped
surprised absolutely no one. The ability to use mana and stamina
interchangeably meant that he could keep throwing out powers when the
mana or stamina to fuel them was depleted, until he had absolutely nothing
left.
Relentless Assault was growing more expensive with every strike, the
stamina cost growing and growing. But so long as Clive’s Mana Tide lasted,
so would Humphrey.

Marek Nior Vargas was the messenger leading the breach force over what the
people of Yaresh called the entertainment district. It was no surprise that the
inferior species would dedicate so much time and resources to pointless
frivolity. He was happy enough to be the one to make an example of the base
creatures, quivering underground like rodents, even if he did not care for the
operation as a whole.
There was little to be gained in making the attack on the city, whatever
the Voice of the Will, Jes Fin Kaal, might say about morale. He had seen
over and again that, when pushed, even the least of sapient species would
push back. Only a prolonged, inter-generational oppression could truly break
a people, which Marek had seen for himself over and again. So had Kaal, so
he knew that her assertions were a lie.
Marek was not above participating in politics, if only to protect himself.
He detested the ambitions that led to political games. They, in turn, led to
internecine sniping that only served to weaken the messengers as a whole. As
a realist, Marek recognised that most messengers gave little more than lip
service to serving their kind as a whole. They were obsessed with standing at
the top as individuals, rather than standing together as a people. This was as
true of the least silver-ranker all the way up to astral kings.
It was hard to blame them. Every doctrine the messengers held told them
that they were superior simply by existing, so what did they have left to
overcome but one another? Marek was not so foolish as to accept the
indoctrination, however. He had seen much, from messengers stricken with
fear to members of the servant races as powerful as any messenger. This man
Asano was just another example, wherever he was.
Marek was high above the city, just below the barrier dome. He and his
fellow gold-rankers clashed with their adventurer counterparts, reaching a
stalemate for the moment. Marek was fine with this state of affairs, as his
priority was not the success of their objective. He was not going to sabotage
the directives he was given, but neither would he take any undue risk to see it
done. Ending the raid with minimal messenger casualties took precedence
over killing a few livestock in a hole.
His fellow gold-rankers were smart enough to know the city was not
worth their lives and acted with appropriate caution. The silver-rankers, on
the other hand, needed to be reined in. Seeking glory and caught up in ideas
of their own invincibility, some of them had already fallen. Despite his
directives that they take no risks, many had overreached when sent to impede
any adventurers too effective at thinning out the monsters.
Marek’s attention was drawn to one particular group. They were far from
the most effective at slaying monsters, although that trick with the lightning
tethers had earned Marek’s approval. He appreciated a power used well over
one that was mindlessly strong, and, unlike many messengers, could respect a
capable enemy. They had already killed a couple of messengers that had gone
after them, gaining Marek’s attention. The survivor of that sortie had raved
when forbidden from gathering more messengers and attacking again.
Marek judged that the group was more of a threat to individual
messengers than the monster horde. Even after the trick with the lightning, he
did no more than send additional monsters to harass them. Clearly they had
skill, but without the ability to produce regular attacks on the scale of the
lightning, their threat to the operation was limited. The girl throwing around
miniature hurricanes was much more of a problem, which was why he had
sent one of his more reliable teams to harass her. It didn’t matter if they failed
to secure the kill, so long as she wasn’t rampantly tearing apart their
summoned forces.
Another concern was someone even Marek had a hard time pinning
down. Operating amongst the monsters, what he presumed to be an
adventurer was moving through their forces with seeming impunity. The
adventurer’s aura was difficult for even Marek to sense, but the glimpses he
caught confirmed it was silver-rank, and highly unusual for an essence user.
He suspected this was the man Asano that Jes Fin Kaal was interested in, but
Marek did not care. Until it was confirmed and he was forced to act by order,
he would not take action personally.
Instead, he sent some messengers to contain the man. He had somehow
gained the disturbing ability to produce Harbingers of Doom, the cataclysmic
butterflies that should not be found on a world like this. The fact that a
cosmic weapon was not only being used in an isolated universe but at such a
low rank was further evidence that the man was Asano.
Marek was not going to check unless he absolutely had to. He deployed a
few messengers to keep things under control, as the butterflies were not
dangerous if caught early. He again sent some of his more reliable people,
however; if the butterflies were allowed to propagate, it would spell doom for
the operation. He knew from experience that if not stopped quickly and
thoroughly, they would eventually spread faster than the summoners could
reproduce the monsters the butterflies destroyed.
He passed his attention over the area, seeing a dangerous spread of
afflictions, but nothing that couldn’t be absorbed. So long as the butterflies
were contained, he need pay it no more mind for the moment. He returned his
attention to the group centred on a flying tortoise shell, considering if they
were worth more attention after all. He could sense some manner of ability
drawing magic through the dimensional membrane, fuelling an escalation in
their battle that was overwhelming the additional monsters he had sent. Out
of curiosity, he directed even more monsters their way to see how they
performed.

As the most straightforward team member, Humphrey was easy to overlook.


Jason, Clive, Belinda and Sophie were all various levels of unconventional,
while Humphrey was a textbook brawler. But as a fresh wave of monsters
broke off from the main force to assault Onslow’s shell, he took centre stage.
The monsters were numerous, but he was no longer alone amongst the horde.
He was also no longer relying on his own power alone.
With the support of the team, Humphrey became an engine of monster
annihilation. Buffs turned his special attacks from weapons into ordnance.
Neil’s shields, themselves boosted by Clive’s Mana Tide spell, meant
Humphrey’s armour was not under constant barrage. He also had a mantle of
glowing runes, courtesy of Clive, but the most important boosts came from
the stacked aura powers.
Humphrey’s own aura boosted his power and spirit attributes. Belinda
and Clive boosted mana recovery, reduced ability costs and reduced
cooldowns. Neil’s caused enemies to drop floating spheres of life force and
mana that anyone in the team could absorb, while Sophie’s power enhanced
other forms of mana and stamina recovery, boosting what the others offered.
On top of all this was Clive’s Mana Tide, increasing mana recovery with
each passing minute.
Humphrey’s items further reduced the cost of his powers; his powers cost
far less than the baseline while his resources to spend on them were
overflowing. Humphrey had the chance to do something he had never been
able to do before: go completely wild. No cooldown management, no mana
management; he was throwing out special attacks as fast as he could swing
his sword.
The Relentless Assault ability proved more and more aptly named. He
blasted his Fire Breath power without pausing, his sword still swinging as
flames poured from his mouth. He used other special attacks like Flying Leap
and Dive Bomb to move between monsters, but these were combination
attacks. He was able to link them to his Relentless Assault, the sequence
never stopping.
The rest of the team also opened the taps to full, making the most of the
deluge of mana. Sophie had the least advantage—she already had enough
mana efficiency that she couldn’t empty her mana pool if she tried. Try she
did, however, and was almost impossible to see as she flickered through the
sky like a wind spirit. She grew stronger as the fight wore on but, for the
moment, was focused on preventing monsters from overrunning Humphrey
or Onslow’s shell. Clive and Belinda focused on finishing off monsters left in
Humphrey’s wake, so as to save Humphrey from needing to slow down for
clean-up.
Clive overcharged his combat rituals, pushing the limits of what even his
exceptional weapons could handle. He shot down stragglers while Belinda
cleared any that reached Onslow’s shell in fighting shape. She made excellent
use of her Force Tether and Lightning Tether powers, while also shooting off
her staff and wand, interspersing those attacks with attacks she stole from the
summons using her Power Thief ability.
Clive fired off his prismatic Wrath of the Magister spell, which Belinda
copied with her Mirror Magic ability. At silver rank, she could even use the
copied spell twice, then reset Clive’s cooldown with Blessing of Readiness.
He cast it again as she used her magic tattoo to reset Mirror Magic. They cast
their spells again, turning what should have been a single spell with extreme
power but a long cooldown into six geysers of rainbow annihilation. With so
many monsters, it once again demonstrated that the team could output
periodic area damage, and at far greater power levels than normal widespread
attacks.
The final piece of their combat puzzle was one of Neil’s powers. The
unflashy healer had one very flashy ability called Reels of Fortune. Intensely
mana hungry, it conjured a set of intangible slot reels that rolled every time
he fed it enough mana, the results random. At silver rank, there was a second
set of reels and the results could potentially be much stronger, although the
chance for dud rolls remained.
With more mana than he could ordinarily spend, Neil dumped it into the
reels over and over. Some rolls were just wasted mana for no effect, while
others ranged from moderate team buffs to chain lightning that dashed
through the monsters, striking them dead with every stroke. Then Neil finally
rolled a jackpot.

Reel of Fortune: Jackpot

Select a single target ability to affect all enemies and/or allies in the
area as appropriate to the chosen ability.

Duration will be extended or the effect of instantaneous powers will


be increased. This will not cost mana or trigger cooldowns.
Any negative aspects for allies normally produced by the ability will
not take effect.

Neil goggled at the system window for a moment, even as his instinctual
understanding of the spell confirmed what was written. This was a result he
had yet to see from the reels, one of the new results possible at silver rank. As
for the spell to choose, he didn’t consider anything but one. He made his
choice, not even needing to cast the spell. The entire team then had system
windows pop up.

You have been affected by [Hero’s Moment]. All benefits of this


ability operate multiplicatively with existing bonus.

All attributes are increased.


All resistances are increased.
Damage reduction is increased.
Maximum mana is increased.
Maximum stamina is increased.
Mana and stamina recovery are increased.
All essence ability cooldowns are reduced.
All essence ability effects are enhanced.

The normal duration of this ability is extended.


The debilitation suffered after this ability ends will not occur.
There were not enough monsters to fight to take advantage of this turn of
events. The waves sent their way had been thoroughly disposed of, many of
the team’s attacks taking out parts of the main horde as collateral. Humphrey
didn’t wait for more to arrive, plunging into the torrent of monsters still
streaming through the breach. The rest of the team, centred on or inside
Onslow’s shell, followed.
87
THE DIFFERENCE IN CONVICTION

H UMPHREY ’ S SECOND FORAY INTO THE MAIN FORCE OF THE SUMMONS WAS
markedly different from the first. His Relentless Assault attack had reached
such levels of power that his silver-rank sword broke apart every dozen or so
strikes, the forces passing through it too much for it to endure. It didn’t stop
Humphrey; he didn’t miss a beat, conjuring the sword anew each time and
continuing his assault. Every swing of his blade left a monster debilitated or
dead, the toughest finding half their body turned into scattered chunks. The
weaker ones were reduced to a fine mist, drifting on the air.
While Humphrey was revelling in a level of power he had never
imagined, he was fully cognizant that it was a fleeting moment, one that
would pass sooner rather than later. Clive’s Mana Tide had reached peak
output as the spell’s duration drew close to the end, while Neil’s buff was not
a long-term one, even with the duration extended. Most of all, Humphrey had
maintained his Relentless Assault to the point that even with multiple
significant mana sources and an expanded mana pool, it was becoming too
expensive to sustain.
With each swing, a noticeable chunk of his mana pool was emptied. It
was like nothing Humphrey had even experienced, and he was feeling the
strain. Something deeper than exhaustion of his stamina and mana, the
meridians that were the pathways of magic in his body were becoming
strained. Jason had an affliction that replicated this, making abilities more
costly to use, but this was no attack. Humphrey had just overextended the
magical matrix, the underlying framework that was the core of his body. All
he needed was a good rest, but he wasn’t ready to rest yet.
There was also something else, another effect that Humphrey had heard
of but never seen. There was so much power piled up on him, from potent
boons to a constant influx of shields and healing. Most of all, it was
Humphrey’s attack. The build-up power was thankfully centred on the sword
Humphrey kept swapping out because, like his swords, Humphrey was silver
rank. Even his tenuous connection to the magic of the attack, just enough to
guide it, was leaving him shaky. If he, instead of the weapon, was the main
conduit, that much power would break him down. And unlike his sword, his
body couldn’t just be conjured fresh. That was more Jason’s area.
The accumulated power of Humphrey’s special attack had started to feel
unstable to the point that others were noticing more effects than just how
much power it had built up.
“Humphrey,” Clive warned through voice chat, although the signal was
patchy with so much magic around them. “If the magic comes close to
triggering a backlash, just let it go. Silver-rank magic becomes extremely
volatile if it reaches gold rank and might do something.”
“Something?” Sophie asked.
“It’s magic,” Clive told her. “It’s inherently unpredictable. People like me
work very hard to take small parts of it and make them predictable.”
“Tell that to Jason’s aura,” Neil said. “Humphrey’s like the Jason’s aura
of hitting people right now.”
“You’re making my point,” Clive said. “Look at how wrecked Jason
always ends up after one of his stunts. Do you want to be lying around for
three months? Do you want to die? Because that’s kind of his thing, and not
all of us come back from the dead recreationally.”
“It’s not a hobby,” Jason complained through voice chat. “That’s just
something I tell people.”
“I thought you were busy,” Belinda said to him.
“I am, but I still have time to defend my…crap; no, I don’t.”
He started yelling through voice chat.
“Stop eye-beaming my butterflies, you messenger prick! I’m going tear
your head off, shove it up the other end and watch you eyebeam your own
insides! Then I’m going to drag you over to that monster with the one antler
sticking out of its forehead and… wait, is that an antler? That can’t be a… oh,
that isn’t right. That is not right. Who summoned that? There might be kids
watching this battle, you depraved pricks! Humphrey, this monster has a big,
multi-pronged—”
Humphrey muted the chat channel with a thought as he kept fighting.
Sophie, like Humphrey, was deep inside the monster torrent. After the
lengthy fighting they’d done, she had finally built up enough power to be a
genuine threat, while being even more elusive and harder to kill than ever.
She was no match for Humphrey’s power, but at that stage, there was no
match for Humphrey’s power at silver rank.
She was pinballing between messengers, trying to disrupt them from
controlling the summons. If she could break their concentration enough, it
would buy the defenders much-needed time to thin the monsters out.
Neil, Belinda and Clive were still in Onslow’s shell, floating around the
outer edge of the horde. Belinda had conjured a massive, flat metal plate,
hooked onto the underside of Onslow’s shell. She had then cast her Pit of the
Reaper ability on it, facing down. The ability created a pit that was not a hole
but a dimensional space, which could be placed on anything roughly level,
even the surface of still water. Belinda’s custom-conjured plate was a
purpose-built surface, sized just right. Shadowy tentacles reached from the pit
like a nightmare kraken, snatching anyone or anything that got too close to
Onslow’s shell and wasn’t part of the team. The monsters quickly realised
that too close was a significant radius, as many of them were dragged into the
darkness of the pit. Despite it being upside down, nothing dragged in fell
back out, only tentacles re-emerging in search of fresh meat.
The rest of the team were far from idle. Neil concentrated on Humphrey,
who Clive was worried would explode despite the fact that he was so
powerful; he was still being hammered by monsters. He threw out shields and
healing as fast as he could while dumping mana into his Reels of Fortune as
fast as they would take it, trying not to waste the mana coming in from
Clive’s spell. He knew that once the Mana Tide was over, he would miss the
near-infinite stream it had become.
Belinda’s tentacle pit snatched monsters out of the sky and dragged them
into the void where they suffered massive necrotic damage. Each time the
duration ended, the pit spat out whatever was left of the monsters that had
been dragged in. Some two thirds survived, at least until she cast the spell
again and they were drawn back inside.
Even with the fake death kraken plucking monsters out of the sky, the
sheer density of monsters meant that Onslow’s shell came under constant
barrage. Clive had used ritual magic to enhance the wind barrier surrounding
the shell and powers launched from the glowing runes marked on it. Each one
launched fire, lightning, a hailstorm or some other elemental power, the runes
fading as each was expended to produce an attack. Clive constantly restored
them with his own overflowing mana, allowing Onslow to keep up the
barrage.
Belinda didn’t just use her Pit of the Reaper spell, which she had no need
to supervise. She also used her two tether powers on the top of Onslow’s
shell, leaving the enemy with an unpleasant situation. Force Tether dragged
enemies towards it, dealing damage to any that resisted. Those that managed
to overcome its strength suffered the damage of that, along with an unhealthy
dose of electricity from the Lightning Tether. Anyone who did escape took
increasingly more severe electrical burns the further they got from the tether
rods planted on the shell.
Staying on the shell was not a valid option either, as that left them as
sitting ducks for the dark tentacles looking to drag them into the pit. The
monsters tried destroying the rods anchoring the tethers, which then exploded
with startling force. That was enough to inflict massive harm, and Belinda
immediately created fresh tethers.
As for Belinda’s familiars, her lantern had returned to her eyes, allowing
Belinda to fire eyebeams at stray monsters between copying Clive’s Wrath of
the Magister spell, restoring her detonated tether rods or refreshing the Pit of
the Reaper. Any gap periods she filled by simultaneously blasting bolts of
force from her wand and beams from her staff and eyes.
Her echo spirit was also mimicking Clive’s Wrath of the Magister. Unlike
Belinda’s copy, however, the familiar’s version was more illusion than
reality. It did inflict a respectable amount of force damage, but nothing
compared to the real thing with its massive damage and debilitating effects. It
looked real enough, though, even to magical senses. That forced monsters
and messengers alike to scatter out of its way.
Stash also moved into action, doing his best impression of Sophie. This
meant imitating her speed by turning into a flitter drake, which looked like
something between a lizard and a hummingbird. It somehow took the worst
aesthetic elements of each, turning into a grotesquery that looked both too
small and too large at the same time. It had not endeared Stash to Sophie
when he first used the form, explaining that it was the way he could be most
like her.
The ugly form was hard to make out, however, as Stash did indeed move
through the battlefield in a blur. He specifically went after the monsters that
managed to avoid Belinda’s defensive measures as they continued to harass
Onslow’s shell with attacks.

The messenger, Marek Nior Vargas, absently blocked a projectile fired by a


gold-rank adventurer with his wing, his attention on the adventurer that had
dived deep into the monster horde for the second time. He had grabbed
Marek’s interest the first time because the move had made no apparent sense.
The man had escaped, a worthy enough feat, although the attempt had
unsurprisingly left him beaten and bloodied, for what seemed like no result.
Marek’s confusion had lasted until the lines of lightning had started raining
down into the horde, originating from points along the path the man had
taken.
Marek did not fear a fool who overestimated himself and learned a brutal
lesson. But a man with the conviction to take that kind of beating because he
knew it was worth the risk was another prospect entirely. The conviction to
get things done, and the wisdom to make sure the things getting done were
right, was something that Marek feared.
He had no interest in the attack on the city and whatever schemes the
Voice of the Will was using it to enact. The people defending the city, by
contrast, could not have cared more; to retreat was to abandon their homes
and their families. Marek had seen time and again the flame that lit inside
people, and how that flame became a forge producing heroes and martyrs.
The difference in conviction could easily be the deciding factor in the battle.
Marek was confident in his superiority over the servant races here, but he
knew that passion and commitment could close that gap in the face of
Marek’s disinterest. If the defenders of Yaresh started throwing themselves at
the enemy with truly reckless abandon, the tenor of the battle would change.
Those willing to accept casualties for victory had a grim but powerful
advantage, even if any victory they earned became a pyrrhic one.
Seeing the man plunge back into the descending torrent of monsters once
again had Marek concerned. Strategic decisions were all well and good, but if
the enemy was willing to go to lengths that he was not, then his part of the
raid could be brought undone. Marek might not care about the success of his
part in the mission, but neither would he ignore a threat. Marek focused his
attention more directly onto the man and immediately realised that a threat
was exactly who and what he was.
The sheer number and power of magical effects on the man had surpassed
silver-rank power levels, to the point of bordering on outright volatile. It was
rare for that kind of power escalation, but Marek had seen it a number of
times. The result would go one of two ways.
If the magic got out of control, the results would annihilate a goodly part
of the horde of summons, given the man’s location within it. Of course, the
man himself would die with them, but that might even be his purpose. But if
he held on, any silver-ranker wielding that kind of power would be something
to behold.
Marek watched in wonder as he tore through the summons like a wildfire
through dry grass. That his fellow messengers could see that display and
remain convinced of their inherent superiority amazed him. Standing above
all others took work. No one just stumbled arse-backward into the kind of
power that let them stand at the peak of the cosmos.
Elsewhere in the battlefield, Jason sneezed.
88
SOMETHING TO TURN THE TIDE

J ASON SNEEZED .
He was standing on the corpse of a monster as it fell through the sky,
using shadow arms to hold himself in place. Shade and Gordon flew next to
him as he rode the monster downward, away from a spear-wielding
messenger flying above.
“Mr Asano, did you just sneeze?” Shade asked.
“I did. That’s weird, right?”
“Given that you do not have sinuses, I would say yes.”
“Maybe someone is talking about me.”
“I don’t see the relevance.”
“Sometimes you sneeze when someone is talking about you.”
“That does not sound likely.”
“It’s a thing.”
“I do not believe that it is a thing.”
“It’s totally a thi—”
Jason shadow-jumped using his cloak, leaving it behind as a spear made
of fused-together teeth passed through it, thrown by the messenger. She was
rocketing down headfirst, wings back and tight to avoid drag, another spear
appearing in her hand as she conjured a fresh one.
A Shade body emerged from a small shadow cast on her body by her arm.
Jason jumped out of Shade’s body, conjuring a new cloak around him.
Shadow arms shot out of it to grab the messenger and drag Jason down to
slam his feet into her back. He pushed his feet in hard as he grabbed her
wings and hauled back on them, yanking her body into an arch.
The messenger went from a controlled dive to an uncontrolled plunge. It
was a peculiarity of messengers, Jason had discovered, that damaging or
constricting a messenger’s wings impeded their ability to fly. This had
surprised him, as he had always assumed that their wings were unrelated to
actual flight. He didn’t know much about aerodynamics, but he knew an
eight-foot-tall woman with bird wings was not going to fly around without a
good lot of magic. Their flight magic was apparently seated in their wings,
however, and he was appreciative of the weakness.
With the messenger’s ability to fly curtailed, they were heading for the
ground at a rapid pace. Jason continued to pull on her wings while pushing
his feet into her back, holding her in place. She reached back and grabbed his
ankles, but lacked the leverage to dislodge him. Bone spikes shot out of her
fingertips and dug into his legs, but he ignored them.
Numerous shadow arms coming from Jason help him maintain his
position, mounted on her back like a sky surfer. One arm held his conjured
dagger, making rapid, shallow stabs like a sewing machine. As the dagger
loaded her up with special attacks, Jason chanted a spell.
“Bear the mark of your transgressions.”
A small amount of transcendent damage seared a brand onto her face,
making her yell all the louder. Jason cast another spell.
“Your fate is to suffer.”
“GET OFF ME, YOU FILTH!”
“If you’d warned me you were attacking the city,” Jason shouted over the
rush of air as they fell, “I would have had time for a bath. That’s on you.”
She had dropped the conjured tooth spear to grab at his legs, the lengthy
weapon having no good angle. When stabbing his legs accomplished nothing,
she let them go and conjured a new weapon. This one was a giant blade made
from jagged, yellowing bone. It was a vastly oversized sickle with a deeply
curved hook; the tip was covered in sharp, irregular barbs. The messenger
was holding it so the point was aiming back at herself. It was sized just right
to swing at her back and the man perched upon it.
“Lady, has anyone ever told you that your powers seem kind of evil?”
“DIE!”
She swung the sickle back over her head to stab at Jason with pinpoint
accuracy. The viciously barbed tip looked like it passed through Jason, as if
he were a ghost. In reality, a combination of a subtle back-sway and his cloak
bending space meant it passed through the air in front of him, jabbing into the
messenger’s own back. She screamed, more in rage than pain, and the
weapon vanished.
“You realise that was a terrible plan, right?”
Jason felt a mass of power building inside the messenger, but he wasn’t
quick enough to escape before bone spikes erupted from every part of her
body. They tore through her flesh and thin, practical clothing to jab in every
direction. Jason was impaled dozens of times by thin bone spikes that broke
off inside him as he moved, the fragments crawling through his body like
worms.
“I already have worms for that, you hag,” Jason said through gritted teeth.
The messenger didn’t respond, having gone limp. Her aura had also
greatly diminished and Jason realised that the attack had taken large amounts
of her reserves. After madly chasing Jason around the entire battle, her body
wasn’t up to the expenditure when it was being ravaged by Jason’s afflictions
already. He suspected the main culprit was his Tainted Meridians affliction,
which forcibly raised mana costs. It made the massive attack consume even
more mana than the messenger had realised and she passed out from mana
exhaustion.
Jason forcibly pushed himself off the spikes, more of them breaking off in
the process. He used his cloak to float, letting the unconscious messenger
drop. He knew she would likely wake before hitting the ground, even if there
was only a short drop left. Messengers recovered even faster than
adventurers, so she would—
Jason watched her crash into the ground, limbs in that awkward sprawl of
a thing that wasn’t alive anymore.
“Huh.”

Valk Vohl was far from a stand-up citizen of Yaresh, but there was a
difference between being a criminal and not standing up when angels and
their strange pet monsters invaded. Not when he could fight. He was no
adventurer, but he’d done his part during the monster surge and he was doing
it again now. He was back to back with some adventurer whose name he’d
forgotten, controlling what looked like a giant stick figure made of swords as
it swung its arms at the monsters.
It wasn’t enough. The monsters kept pouring out of the sky, no matter
how many the people of Yaresh killed, and they were close to the point of
being overwhelmed. He and the adventurer were both low on mana, their
armour rent and skin wet with blood.
When one of the messengers splattered onto the broken flagstones of the
road, bone spikes sticking out and limbs awkwardly splayed, he was only
startled for a moment. It, possibly she, wasn’t getting up to kill him, so he
turned his attention back to the things that were. Then he saw a figure emerge
from the shadow of a half-collapsed bordello.
There was something about the man that unnerved him, and he realised
that he couldn’t sense the man’s presence, even looking right at him.
“Gold-ranker,” he said, the words arresting the attention of the other
adventurer.
“Where?” he asked, looking around.
Valk watched the man who had come from the shadows walking over to
the dead messenger. He was calm in the chaos, wearing a robe the colour of
dried blood. His eyes were inhuman, glowing blue and orange. His features
were just a little too sharp for a truly classic high-rank handsomeness, the
neat beard failing to entirely hide the lengthy chin.
“We could use a little help here!” the adventurer with Valk called out and
the man turned his gaze them. Then his gaze moved upward, to the monsters
above. That was when Valk and his companion felt the man’s aura. It rolled
out like a physical thing, making the air around them seem heavy. They
realised he was no gold-ranker, but he didn’t feel like an essence user either.
His aura was tyrannical, as if everything belonged to him by virtue of his
existence. Valk feared for a moment that he was some kind of wingless
messenger, until he saw how the monsters reacted.
They fled.
The creatures flew off, crashing into their fellows still coming down in a
mad panic to run from whatever the man standing over the dead messenger
was. Valk watched them go, then felt his gaze drawn to the man as if by a
magnet. He watched as the man held a hand over the messenger and chanted
a spell, his voice winter cold.
“As your life was mine to reap, so your death is mine to harvest.”
Transcendent light of blue, silver and gold was drained from the corpse,
into the man’s hand as the body dissolved into rainbow smoke. As the man
drained the messenger’s energy, Valk thought he heard a scream, but it was
somehow picked up with his aura senses, not his ears. An image formed over
the man, that of a shadowy bird speckled with silver stars. The man finished
claiming the messenger’s energy and the image vanished.
“Who are you?” Valk asked him.
“I only drove the monsters off for a moment,” the man said, his voice
hard but lacking the malevolence with which he had chanted the spell. “Get
what rest you can and be ready for their return.”
“Will you stay and help?”
“More messengers are coming for me. I won’t bring them down on you.”
Shadows rose up to wreath his body, becoming a shadowy mantle. A dark
figure rose from Valk’s own shadow and the man stepped into it, vanishing.
The shadow figure then retreated into Valk’s shadow, also disappearing. He
stared at his shadow warily, wondering what else was in there.

Jason emerged from Shade’s body on a rooftop, looking up. He could sense
Rufus not far off, and an army of monsters glowing with Rufus’ silver and
gold flames. Soon enough, Rufus would use his zone power, Eclipse, and
consume those afflictions, hopefully shooting a few messengers out of the
sky.
Jason wished that he had been as effective. He had taken out one of the
messengers harassing him, but they had won and he had lost. It was almost
certainly too late for his butterflies to spread properly, even if he managed to
get them going now. The messengers had shut down every attempt to get
them going, killing the butterflies and even slaughtering their own monsters
that Jason afflicted to produce them. He’d been pointlessly running around
the whole battle, accomplishing nothing.
Jason had not felt inadequate in his power set in years, since he had been
a green iron-ranker with half his power set yet to awaken. But he could sense
the places around the city, and even this battle over the entertainment district,
where affliction specialists were succeeding where he had failed. It was the
first time that he felt lesser for being an affliction skirmisher.
For all that they were forced to build whole teams to hide behind, it was
here, in open war, that such adventurers showed their true worth. Left alone
they would die quickly, where Jason would thrive. But where he had stealth
powers, they had afflictions. Where he had utility powers, they had
afflictions. And where he had affliction, they had afflictions.
Jason had to find ways to make his powers work in any situation, where
they simply picked the appropriate ones from their selection. They weren’t
restricted to complicated butterfly-based delivery systems that could be shut
down by an enemy that knew what they were doing. If an enemy stopped one
approach, they could simply use another.
Jason had already given up on wiping out huge waves of monsters with
his butterflies some time ago. It wasn’t going to work and there were other
afflictions for that. Instead, he decided to focus on wiping out the messenger
team that had been sent after him. The monsters were ultimately a disposable
force, but if enough messengers went down, the enemy would pull out.
His efforts to put a stop to the messenger team had not gone as well as he
had hoped at first. They were quite capable, working together well and
harassing him without any exploitable overextensions. They even had one of
the messengers’ rare healers, meaning that chipping away at them was
pointless.
The group of messengers were a team and their practised cooperation
showed as they swiftly eliminated any butterflies, along with any monsters
that were spawning them. In response, Jason had spread out his attempts to
trigger a butterfly chain.
The biggest advantage Jason had over them was that they absolutely had
to shut down the butterflies and anything producing more of them—ideally
including Jason. This meant that he could leverage his mobility to force them
to split up.
Eventually, he had allowed their most aggressive member to get what
seemed like a clear shot at Jason’s back. She overextended, a little too far
from where the others were quashing butterflies, allowing Jason to
counterattack. Now she was dead and devoured, her remnant life force
getting him a little closer to another chance to resurrect.
He looked up at the teeming monsters, sensing the messengers amongst
them. They would stick together now that he’d taken one of them out; they
had to know as well as he did that it was too late for the butterflies to have a
massive impact. They would most likely stay as a group, eliminating
butterflies as best they could, but letting some of them go rather than
compromise their safety again.
Shade stood next to Jason as he watched the sky.
“Thinking on it, Mr Asano, I may have been wrong.”
“About what?”
“The sneeze. We know that your powers often interpret themselves in a
way that has meaning to you, and we know that you have some powerful
sensory ability that you are unable to consciously use. Perhaps your sneeze is
a manifestation of that mysterious sensory power, revealing that someone
actually was talking about you.”
“I have an extra sense I don’t know about?”
“The capabilities demonstrated by your original power called the Quest
System prove that. It was your ability, yet it knew things that your conscious
mind did not.”
“You’re right,” Jason mused. “Do you think I’ll be able to use the sense
that made that power work once I’m higher rank?”
“Perhaps. Or perhaps that sensory power is long gone and it really was
just a sneeze. That power may have been fuelled by lingering astral energy
from when you first became an outworlder. The ability may have evolved for
the simple reason that the fuel ran out and you couldn’t use it anymore.”
“You’d barely signed on as my familiar when I lost that ability, right?”
“That is correct, Mr Asano.”
“How did you even think of that ability, to draw that conclusion? You
barely saw it in action.”
“It is not a conclusion, Mr Asano, but a postulation. As to why I thought
of the ability, it is arguably the most startling one in your repertoire. A
sensory ability that powerful, even when you were normal rank? Clearly, it
was not tied to your aura or magical senses as you had neither. I am very old,
Mr Asano, and there is very little that I am unable to at least postulate on.
Whatever sense fuelled your Quest System ability is outside even my
experience.”
“So, you have no idea?”
“At best, I could guess at something that I cannot be certain is even real.
If anyone, it would pertain to you, but I hesitate to speak on it. It is more
myth than anything, and less the ‘heroes and gods’ kind of myth than the
‘man in a trailer with a foil hat’ kind of myth. Although it usually does
involve heroes and gods.”
“You’ll have to tell me about it some time we aren’t in the middle of a
city invasion.”
“I had been wondering why you were just standing here. Are you
attempting to confront the remainder of the messenger team?”
“No, they’d kill me. But I want them close enough to really see what
they’ve chosen to pit themselves against.”
“I thought you were saving that for when they—”
“They will. Soon. I might have been shut down, but plenty of others
weren’t. My biggest contribution was tying up a bunch of messengers so they
couldn’t harass other adventurers. The adventurers here on the ground are
feeling overwhelmed, but they’re holding on. People like Zara and the
affliction specialists are doing work, and the messengers’ commander will
need something to turn the tide.”
89
T H E S T R O N G E S T A R R OW I N H I S Q U I V E R

M AREK OFFERED A MENTAL SALUTE TO THE MAN RAMPAGING THROUGH THE


monster horde. He had managed to overhear one of the man’s companions
call him Humphrey, and Marek hoped he would survive to eventually reach
gold rank. He would like to face him in battle, perhaps finding a clue in that
confrontation to push his own advancement forward. He lamented that while
this battlefield had many exceptional silver-ranked enemies, the golds were
only passable. It seemed that the defenders of the city had limited care for the
civilians of the entertainment district.
With the gold-rankers being adequate but unexceptional, Marek wished
he’d been chosen for other battlefields. He could sense more impressive
essence users in other parts of the city, including one whose aura was a match
for most messengers.
He turned his attention to the silver-ranker he suspected of being Asano.
Two people with such unusual auras implied they were connected, perhaps
with the gold-ranker instructing the silver. If he personally intervened, would
the gold-ranker move to assist, giving him the chance for a more exciting
battle?
Marek shook his head, scolding himself. Compromising the strategic
situation for personal ends was the kind of behaviour he despised in a certain
breed of messenger that he looked down on. That most of his fellow
messengers fell into that group was a misfortune he lamented regularly.
Marek frowned as he sensed the team he sent to harass Asano lose one of
their number. He was impressed; he had sent neither rash nor weak people to
contain the man. Even so, the harbinger butterflies were still not establishing
themselves, so the situation required no further intervention. Marek did not
want to lose people, but some casualties were inevitable.
The man Humphrey also did not require Marek’s intervention. For all he
was impressively carving a path through the monster horde, time would put
an end to the rampage more effectively than a costly confrontation. The
unstable power driving him would soon come to an end, one way or another.
Humphrey was certainly destructive, yet still failed to impact the battle as
much as the wide area attack specialists amongst the adventurers. Marek’s
messengers were of more use containing them than going after Humphrey.
He could easily kill messengers in his current state, but Marek could afford to
lose however many summoned monsters he took down.
The monsters were not infinite, however, for all the expense they had
employed to make it seem so to the defenders. The Voice of the Will, Jes Fin
Kaal, had brought in the artefacts that were enhancing the number of
monsters the summoners could call up at once. The acquisition was made
against the advice of Marek and other gold-rankers, but she had overruled
them. Even so, she never explained what made them worth the resources and
favours expended to obtain them, significant even to the messengers.
At least the expensive artefacts were located outside the barrier. If the
adventurers were able to reach them and shut off the monster spigot, the raid
would come to a swift end, the costs coming to nothing. He wondered if Jes
Fin Kaal would see it that way, since the success of the city raid was clearly
not her true objective. Whatever political game she was playing, it
unfortunately had the approval of the astral king, or his disinterest at the very
least. Otherwise, he would have stopped her already.
Again, Marek told himself not to dwell on it. All he had to do was an
adequate job and get as many of their people out alive as was viable. If he
started digging into whatever plots the voice was carrying out through the
city invasion, it would only cost him, and get him nothing. He was sure that
she was scheming against someone amongst the messengers, but equally
confident it was not him. He was carefully apolitical as a defence mechanism.
This was part of why he had been so reserved in directing his portion of
the raid, even as those under his command chafed at his conservative
strategy. The gold-rankers were alright, being seasoned warriors, but Marek
could feel the hunger in the silver-rankers under his command. They were
straining like an untrained beast on a leash, eager to cover themselves in
glory and adventurer blood.
They were going to be disappointed. Marek was never going to let the
most reckless element of his forces do as they wished and, if the adventurers
managed to force a direct conflict with the messengers, he would signal the
withdrawal. He wasn’t sacrificing anyone he didn’t have to on the altar of Jes
Fin Kaal’s schemes, even if she was voice of the astral king’s will.
He could sense that in other battlefields, some commanders had made
different decisions, chasing the same glory as their silver-rank subordinates.
That was far from enough to convince him to let his messengers loose. It
accomplished just the opposite; the casualties he sensed under more proactive
commanders were exactly what he wanted to avoid.
It was, however, time to make a change. The adventurers were starting to
press in, their affliction specialists taking hold in spite of the messengers
working to suppress them. Unlike the man working alone behind enemy
lines, these were people with a frustrating variety of afflictions and delivery
systems, as well as entire teams dedicated to making sure they were used.
It was time to draw the strongest arrow in his quiver. This was one that
most other commanders had already fired, to what Marek considered
insufficient effect. While Marek was forced to concede that aura superiority
had its advantages in the establishing moments of a conflict, he saw using it
immediately as a waste. Essence users had demonstrated time and again that
when given time to adjust, they could fight at near-full capability under aura
suppression.
Compared to that, a sudden and well-timed aura wave could finish an
enemy already under pressure, or reverse a disadvantageous trend. That was
what Marek faced in his own battlefield, so it was time to turn the tide.
A large wave of destructive magic headed for Marek, his gold-rank
opponent having cast a large spell while Marek had been contemplating his
options. He glanced up at a house-sized sphere of blue-gold flames barrelling
down on him, burning through monsters as it went. Marek fed mana into his
wings and flapped them a single time in the direction of the fireball. It was
blasted back the way it had come, causing the gold-rank adventurers to
scramble out of the way.
Marek sighed with boredom, wishing that the only capable adventurers in
his battle hadn’t been silver rank. He took out his communication stone and
issued a directive to every messenger under his command.
“Unleash your auras.”
In the early stages of the battle over the entertainment district, the area-
specialist teams had started off strong. They had been carving large chunks
out of the monsters, which earned them the focused attention of messengers,
suppressing their effectiveness. Then, slowly but surely, they started pushing
back the messengers, once again thinning out the monsters seeking to
descend and dig through to the civilian bunker.
The adventurers were becoming so effective that more monsters arrived at
the ground dead than alive. As one of the adventurers working at ground
level, Rufus had to watch out for monsters falling like rain. Despite operating
at ground level, though, Rufus was spending little time on the ground. He
moved through the air with a combination of silver-rank acrobatics and short-
range teleport powers. Many adventurers failed to fully leverage their new
physical limits after ranking up, but Rufus was too well-trained for that. He
used the monsters themselves as platforms, hopping between them like a frog
moving between lily pads.
Rufus didn’t use the buildings often despite the frequent convenience of a
rooftop. The entertainment district looked like a bombing site, with no
building escaping damage. He didn’t trust any of them to not collapse under
him.
The monsters often didn’t react when Rufus landed on them, lacerated
them with his gold and silver swords before moving on, and left gold and
silver flames in his wake. The summoned creatures were under a compulsion
to dig down to the bunker, mostly hovering in the air and firing ranged
attacks at the ground. Many didn’t even fight back against the adventurers,
simply drilling down as far as they could before being taken out.
Rufus’ afflictions were useful for setting up the big attacks that would
hopefully shoot down messengers, but ineffective at clearing out monsters.
The disadvantage of Rufus’ eclectic power set was that that any individual
element was somewhat weak, requiring skill to draw out the potent synergies.
The main work of handling the monsters was being done by an affliction
specialist. Rufus didn’t know the woman, but she was clearly effective,
which both sides had come to recognise. A full dozen messengers had been
deployed to suppress her, but three full adventuring teams had moved to
counter.
The messengers had been well-chosen, all being protective types that
appeared to have healthy amounts of defence, affliction resistance and even
self-healing and cleansing. That was something an affliction specialist could
overcome, given time and protection, but the more focus she had on the
messengers, the less time she spent clearing out monsters.
As a result, the adventurers on the ground were increasingly feeling the
pressure. Monsters dug down, through layers of street, rock and buried
magical protections, slowly uncovered and broken. Rufus picked a building
that looked reasonably intact to land on and paused long enough to look over
the situation. He opened a voice channel.
“Jason, are you busy?”
“No, actually. Things are swinging our way, so you can expect the
messengers to drop the aura hammer soon. I’m getting ready for when that
happens.”
“Ready how?”
“The usual.”
“Something stupid, self-destructive and absurdly attention-grabbing?”
“Pretty much.”
“Do you have a few moments before that happens?”
“I can spare a little time. I should probably scoot off before the
messengers hunting me get here anyway. What do you need?”
“I’ve got an affliction specialist dealing with her own set of messengers.
She’ll get through them, but they’re pretty shielded up, so it’s taking longer
than we need it to. Any chance you could come in and brighten the
messengers’ day?”
Jason stepped from the shadow of a broken section of wall.
“I can do that,” he said.
“It’s over—”
“I can sense it,” Jason said before Rufus had a chance to point.
Rufus could barely sense anything amongst the mess of auras that was a
magical battlefield, but Jason turned his gaze the right way immediately. He
moved back to the shadow he had appeared from and vanished into it.

Elseth Culie was frustrated. The teams defending her were doing an excellent
job, but she wasn’t doing her part as fast as she needed to. Some of the
messengers had flexible but comprehensive full body armour that had to be
dug through before she could afflict them directly. Others had classic bubble
shields, while the more annoying ones had both. Some pushed off the
afflictions on to proxies, such as the one who created clones of herself and
the one who collected afflictions into her feathers, shooting them back at
Elseth’s defenders.
She had answers to all of these, from resonating or disruptive force
afflictions to spells that replaced afflictions on a target the moment they were
disposed of. But with the messengers also purging, dispelling and cleansing,
as well as replacing dissolved shields and disintegrated armour, it was taking
too long. With each passing moment, she more desperately needed to refocus
on monster slaying.
Suddenly, someone was next to her, startling her with its lack of aura. At
first, she thought it was a monster, draped in what were clearly magic
shadows. It glanced at her with alien eyes from within a dark hood.
“I’m going to eat your afflictions,” the man said. His tone was cold with a
hint of apology, but the clear intention was to do as he said, whatever she
might have wanted. His shadow rose up like a living thing and he stepped
into it, disappearing. Then he was amongst the messengers, loudly chanting a
spell.
“Feed me your sins.”
The transcendent light of messenger life force shone from within the
messengers, tainted by Elseth’s afflictions. She was familiar with the spell he
was using. It was a rare spell that was usually awakened by those with bright
intentions but dark powers. She was unsurprised, then, as her afflictions were
devoured and transcendent damage was left in their place.
Transcendent damage ignored any protections and dug right into the
messengers, who immediately retreated. Elseth was certain they were going
in search of the healing and cleansing they would need to survive. With all
the afflictions she had dumped on them turned transcendent, it would take a
lot.
As the messengers fled upwards, the shadowy man floated down. Her
defenders let him through as they looked to her for new direction.
“We need to get back to clearing monsters,” she declared. It was an
obvious statement, but the first part of command was being certain and
confident. Knowing what she was doing was also useful, but lower priority.
The man landed gently next to her and pushed the hood from his head. He
had sharper features than humans preferred, but his human face had an exotic
appeal to elven sensibilities.
“Prepare your people for an aura assault,” the man warned her. “You
reclaiming control over the ground level will probably be the final straw that
provokes…”
He trailed off as an aura dropped down like a hammer. The messengers in
the battlefield had all unleashed their auras at once, silver- and gold-rankers
harmonised in a symphony of power. The auras of the messengers were
fundamentally different to those of essence users, as if they were not just
spiritual but physical. There was a weight to their suppressive force, and
Elseth felt her aura suppressed as if the titanic hand of a god was reaching
down to cover her.
That was when she finally sensed the aura of the man in front of her. It
swept out like a colonial power, claiming territory as it pushed out what was
there before. He created a bubble that felt more like the messengers than his
fellow essence users, and while Elseth’s aura was freed up, she still did not
feel comfortable. There was an overwhelming sense of domination, her
spiritual senses telling her that she was safe only by the benevolence of the
power controlling the area around her. A power that demanded obedience.
Elspeth and the other adventurers looked at the man with unease as he
tilted his head to look up. A strange monster that looked like an empty cloak
surrounded by floating orbs appeared. She felt some of the others tense, but
they quickly felt the link between the man and his familiar.
“Gordon,” the man said. “Let’s get to work.”
90
W I N A F I G HT

F AL V IN G ARATH WAS NOT HAVING A GOOD DAY . H E DETESTED BEING FORCED


to act at the behest of the Voice of the Will, Jes Fin Kaal, and this mission
was exactly why. She had sent him to kill Jason Asano, but she clearly
expected him to not come back. He would relish the look on her face when he
dropped Asano’s head at her feet.
Fal could not openly defy the voice. Like all messengers, he needed to be
sworn to an astral king, lest he wither and die. It was one of the strongest
drives to become an astral king, as only then could they truly stand with no
one and nothing above them. Until then, the astral king had influence not just
over his actions but his very being. And as a voice of the astral king’s will,
Jes Fin Kaal shared that influence.
Having his mouth sealed closed was a humiliation, especially when it did
not even come from the king herself but one of her voices. Fal was at the start
of his journey, still silver rank, but he already had a long list. When he stood
at the peak, everyone on that list would pay.
For now, however, Fal was stuck obeying the voice of the astral king to
whom he was sworn. He was unable to defy her voice, but that did not mean
he could not undermine Jes Fin Kaal. She had plans for the outworlder and
saw Fal as meat she could feed to him. But Fal would be the one to feed, and
Kaal’s intentions for Asano would die with him.
The first step was finding the man inside the city. He was quite elusive
and the city was in chaos, making an individual aura almost impossible to
pick out. Unless he forcibly manifested his aura on a large scale, which
would be insane in this circumstance, Fal would have to hunt him down.
That meant starting with the most likely place to find him and then
torturing answers out of the people there. Either Asano would be drawn in or
he would get information that drew him closer. The best information the
messengers had was that Asano and his team were based out of a large
adventuring vehicle, located alongside those of the other foreign adventurers.
Fal went through the breach closest to the area. There was a large zone of
eclectic vehicles, many of which were the size of buildings. It amounted to a
city district comprised of mobile forts, centred around a sprawling refugee
camp. The camp had been emptied, leaving no one behind and there were no
defenders out in the open. He could sense adventurers inside the vehicles,
most of which were unable to block his aura senses. Either the district had
minimal defenders or they were gathered in the vehicles that could block his
perception.
The leader of the contingent to which Fal had been attached issued orders
as soon as they were through the barrier.
“Watch out for countermeasures from the adventurer vehicles. Eliminate
any that are impacting the monsters, but watch out for ambushes. They may
have greater numbers than we can sense.”
Monsters had poured through the breach before any of the messengers, to
absorb any ambushes and reveal emplaced defences. This proved wise as the
defenders remained in their mobile forts, letting the vehicle weapons do the
work. With the larger vehicles especially, they boasted heavy-duty weapons
that could eliminate a silver-rank monster with a well-placed shot, and make
a gold-ranker take notice.
Vehicle weapons were not designed to take out people or smaller
monsters, however, which was why adventurers only used vehicles when
hunting large monsters. Only the fact that the monsters were an unmissable
curtain made hunkering down in the vehicles a viable strategy. The
messengers, once they made their appearance, had little trouble avoiding the
vehicles’ weapons, at least for the most part. Several vehicles had more
pinpoint weaponry, especially the two that were not, currently, vehicles.
Although they both completely blocked magical perception, the two
buildings were plainly cloud constructs currently configured as buildings.
And those buildings were configured for war. The messengers were
appropriately wary of the two buildings, as cloud flasks were the tools of the
most well-resourced adventurers. There was no telling what manner of
weapons and defences they had been equipped with.
One of the buildings was gold rank and the other silver. The gold-rank
one was a dome with five heavily leaning towers jutting out. The towers
themselves were capped with domes that blasted out various attacks. There
were explosive fireballs and armour-piercing ballista bolts that were conjured
already in flight. The most common attack was a chain lightning that hopped
between monsters, eradicating one with each jump. The gold-rank attacks of
a giant magical fortress were too much for silver-rank monsters.
The various attacks also had the accuracy to strike out at messengers,
especially the lightning blasts. Unlike the summoned monsters, however, the
messengers had exotic powers and intelligence. They used magical barriers,
conjured armour and used the summons as living shields, meaning that while
messengers certainly took hits, they weren’t slaughtered like their summons.
The other building was a pyramid with a cup instead of a peak. Over the
cup floated a massive, ominous eye. The sides of the pyramid were covered
in matte-black hexagonal panels set into cloud-substance underneath. The
cloud-stuff shone blue and orange in the seams between the dark hex panels.
Like the gold-rank cloud building, the pyramid had not just attacks but
ones that could effectively target messengers. Some of the hexes withdrew,
sinking into the cloud-stuff behind them. Rising in their place were complex
arrangements of metal set into the surface of the cloud-material like eye-
shaped mosaics. The eyes contained components of blue, orange and black
metal, but each was dominated by a single colour. There was one eye of each
colour set into each side of the pyramid, firing beams of different coloured
energy.
Fal recognised that the design of the eye weapons was not native to this
world, but used elements of techno-magic it had yet to develop. The beam
fired by each eye-weapon corresponded to the main colour of that eye. They
fired in quick succession, the efficient downtime a result of combining magic
and technology to create something better than either could do alone.
This alone made it plain that the pyramid belonged to the outworlder,
Asano, although that was hardly necessary. While the other cloud construct
had a detectable aura from being soul-bound to an essence user, the pyramid
used its aura as a weapon. It blanketed the entire city district, amplified
strongly enough that the gold-rankers’ attempts to suppress it fell short. They
perhaps could have managed it if that was all they did, but they needed to
fight.
What the aura did was make any monster or messenger that attacked
suffer a retaliatory affliction. That affliction didn’t do anything by itself, but
despite its rarity, Fal knew of it and the danger it presented. The affliction
was called Sin, and it escalated any necrotic damage suffered. It was a rare
affliction known to be employed heavily by Jason Asano.
One of the three beam colours, black, directly delivered necrotic damage
to take advantage of the affliction. This was less effective against those with
potent armour or magical barriers, but that was where the other beams came
in. The orange ones were resonating force, rapidly breaking down physical
armour, while the blue disruptive-force beams had a similar effect against
magical barriers.
The beams all ignored the monsters to target the messengers, although
they mostly struck monsters anyway. There were just too many of them, and
the messengers quickly learned to interpose a solid wall of monsters between
themselves and the pyramid. For this reason, the extra power and
unpredictable lightning arcs made the gold-rank building the greater threat.
While the beams attacked the messengers, the giant eye above the
pyramid was the most effective weapon for eliminating monsters in the
district. Its gaze took the form of a massive beam that grew wider the further
it projected. The beam itself was barely visible, a heat-haze shimmer tinted
faintly blue. The results were likewise subtle, with no immediate impact. It
bestowed afflictions, what Fal suspected to be the ones in Asano’s own
repertoire.
The messengers were able to easily avoid the eye’s gaze, but it affected
the monsters in droves. After the eye’s gaze had moved on, the monsters left
behind were soon melting in the sky, gobbets of wet flesh rotting away to fall
like raindrops. Even with the lack of empathy quintessential to messengers, it
was a horrifying sight. The information they had on Asano suggested a
foolish hero complex, but this was not the power of a hero. It wasn’t even the
power of a villain. As dead flesh rained across the entire city district, it felt
like the punishment of a vengeful god.
Fal scoffed at his own thought. Messengers were not afraid of gods and
Asano was not one in any case, even if his pyramid felt like a temple. Despite
its bizarre power, he knew the building could not project Asano’s aura
without Asano being present, meaning he had found his target. A soul-bound
item lacked a strong enough connection to the soul to be a source of the true
aura being projected by the building. Asano had to be inside, using the
building to amplify his power.
The messengers continued to throw their summons at the vehicles below,
cannon fodder they were happy to let die. While the defenders had not yet
been forced to emerge, their weapons proving so successful, the situation
could only be sustained for so long. Most weapons on adventurer vehicles
were designed to fend off the odd monster attack and make the occasional
hunt. They were not built for war or the sustained fire they were currently
pumping out. Whether their power supplies ran low or the weapons were
overtaxed and shut down, they would only last so long.
Fal guessed there would be a few exceptions, almost certainly including
the two cloud buildings, But, inevitably, most of the vehicles would stop
firing before the summoned monsters stopped coming. Then the defenders
would show themselves, and things would go badly for them. This particular
attack force included a higher proportion of gold-rankers than normal, so they
could reliably break into the vehicles once they were exposed.
Fal had his own mission that only required cracking open one of the
vehicles. He sought out the gold-rank commander of the messenger forces.
“We need to invade the pyramid,” Fal told him. “The outworlder, Jason
Asano, is in there. The Voice of the Will wants—”
“I agree,” the commander said, cutting him off.
Fal had been expecting more of an argument.
“The voice made it clear that Asano is the priority in this zone,” the
commander continued. “My orders are to facilitate a confrontation between
you and Asano where you can use your isolation power to duel him. Even if
that was not the command, that pyramid is a problem. It isn’t as much of a
threat to us as the gold-rank cloud building, but it’s killing the summons far
too quickly. I want it dealt with before the adventurers are forced to come out
and face us, so we have as much fodder as possible.”
“You’ll gather the gold-rankers for an attack, then?” Fal asked. The
higher percentage of gold-rankers reflected Jes Fin Kaal’s priorities.
“My information is that Asano is arrogant and likes to make public
demonstrations. You may be able to lure him from the building for a duel. If
you kill him, his building will be greatly diminished, perhaps even going
dormant entirely. If he kills you, we will catch him outside the building if we
can and chase him into it if we can’t.”
The commander was testing his nerve. It was clear enough that the man
was one of the voice’s lackeys, which was shameful for a gold-ranker. His
job involved making sure that Fal did as instructed. Fal didn’t care, as he only
had to do one thing to spite the commander and the foul woman he served:
win a fight.
91
KING OF THE SKY

F AL V IN G ARATH SNEERED AND HEADED IN THE DIRECTION OF THE PYRAMID .


Although no one saw it, the sneer was for his commander, for his astral
king’s Voice of the Will and for Asano, who would soon be dead. Fal’s
wings spread out as he wove his way through the battlefield, the image of
grace and elegance as he glided through the chaos. He seemed untouchable,
yet there was no frenetic dodging as he moved through the monsters; attacks
from the vehicles below passed him by. He danced through the sky. One
moment, he was swooping down or shifting his angle as he descended in a
graceful curve. At other times, he tucked in his wings and plunged
downwards, spinning in an inverted pirouette as energy beams and explosions
went off around him as if avoiding his path.
Fal was big, even for a messenger, but he was no thug; his large size
belied his swift and graceful powers. Any fool could blind-fire a storm of
razor-sharp feathers and be effective. It required true superiority, even
amongst messengers, to take simple enhancements to agility and spatial
awareness and become an effective force on the battlefield.
Fal’s fighting style was a reflection of his flight: open, graceful and
mobile. If he was forced to fight Asano inside a building sized for humans,
his own body would be an enemy as he was boxed into small rooms and tight
hallways. While there was glory to be found in fighting on the enemy’s terms
and winning anyway, Fal knew that Asano was not a foe on which to build
extra accolades. Jes Fin Kaal knew what Fal could do, and at least some of
what Asano could do. Even if she was underestimating Fal, her confidence
that Asano would beat him meant that the outworlder was not to be taken
lightly.
As he drew closer to the pyramid, the beams from Asano’s building
increasingly focused on him. They prioritised messenger targets, so most of
the others were giving it a wide berth, letting the monsters take the hits.
Despite the increased attention from the beams, Fal eluded them easily.
He did not yell out his challenge to Asano. Any animal could bellow. Fal
had a point to make: messengers were different. Not just stronger but
inherently better. When Fal called out to Asano, he did so in a way that the
servant races could not replicate. Projecting his aura, he laced it with physical
force, the signature trait of messenger auras. He created vibrations in the air
that manifested as words, rumbling loudly across the battlefield. The result
was Fal forging words as thunder, crashing down imposingly on the
defenders hidden in their fortresses.
“JASON ASANO. COME OUT AND FACE ME!”
The beams stopped targeting Fal, instead going for other messengers that
were more distant. This allowed Fal to hover in place, his eyes glaring
challenge.

In the entertainment district, Jason was chatting with Rufus as they watched
Gordon draw out a massive magical orrery.
“Placed in an extreme circumstance, with power levels far above your
own,” Rufus told him, “you do something spectacularly outlandish that you
probably shouldn’t.”
“There you go, then,” Jason said. “You just said I shouldn’t do it.”
“Are you going to do it?”
“Of course I’m going to… sorry, give me a sec. I’ve got a thing.”
Jason looked off into the middle distance.

On each side of the pyramid, a hex panel opened and a metal object slid out.
They were simple metal arms with a small pyramid made of clear crystal
seated on the end. The four pyramids glowed with soft light and a massive
image appeared in the sky, over the giant eye. It was a cloaked figure that
looked to be standing on the eye, although its translucency demonstrated that
it was only a projection. The cloak’s hood was pushed back from the figure’s
head, revealing Asano’s face. His eyes, reflections of the image orb his image
was standing atop, glared up at Fal Vin Garath, who was floating some
distance from the pyramid.
A voice spoke, but it did not come from the image of Jason. The same
technique that Fal had used was replicated, but on a much larger scale. The
aura coming from the pyramid covered the entire city district, strong enough
that the gold-rankers had not managed to suppress it.
The entire battlefield shuddered with physical force as Jason crafted his
words, the walls of the sturdy fortress vehicles shaking. The air itself
trembled, the summoned monsters panicking as messengers halted in the air,
unnerved. They could feel something in the aura, something that resonated
inside them and told them to obey. They shook it off immediately, but it left
them unsettled.
When the words came, they did not come from any one place. They were
not spoken at all. They just came into being, like an act of creation.
IF YOU WANT TO FIGHT ME, THEN COME IN HERE AND
GET ME.
The words were inescapable, yet they went precisely as far as the aura
and no further. They covered the battlefield, yet instead of thundering across
the city, the sound stopped dead beyond the area Jason chose.

Fal felt hesitation for the first time. He knew that it was an intimidation tactic,
having just used it himself, but the comparison was humbling. Messengers
did not handle being humbled very well. Fal knew that he had accomplished
the display only by using the pyramid to somehow amplify his aura, but it
didn’t matter. Once enough people were involved, image became truth, which
was why Fal had made such a public challenge in the first place.
To the defenders, Asano’s words had been a rallying cry. To the
summoned monsters, it was confusion, the voice of a master scolding them in
anger. The summoners quickly reasserted control, but there was no denying
the influence Asano had. This was even true of the messengers. The entire
reason Fal had been sent after him was because he was somehow an astral
king.
Fal realised that, on some level, he had been denying what Asano was.
Though he’d been told, the very idea was absurd. But now he had felt the
truth shuddering through his body, and there was no part of him that could
deny it anymore. And he knew that every messenger on the battlefield was
experiencing the same thing.
As the giant projection of Asano vanished, Fal considered ways to
undercut him. He was tempted to mock him, to try and lure him out where
they could fight on Fal’s terms, but he knew that it wouldn’t work. After
Asano’s display, shouting mockery at the pyramid would be like a drunkard
shouting at a temple, a worthless buffoon.
Even the slender chance of it working was gone once a contingent of
gold-rankers moved to join Fal. There was no way he would come out to face
that. Fal had no doubt that the sudden show of support was designed exactly
to make sure that Asano did not emerge. The Voice of the Will had plans for
Asano, and Fal was the sacrificial lamb that would prove his worth to the
other messengers.
Asano proving himself against a messenger was a pointless exercise in
showmanship. Many messengers had died to adventurers; it was happening at
that very moment, all around the city. Any fool would see through it, but that
was politics. So long as she could sell the pretence, Jes Fin Kaal got what she
wanted. Which now meant Fal had to enter the pyramid and fight Asano
under the worst possible conditions.
“Well?” the commander asked. “Aren’t you going in? We all heard that
impressive invitation.”
The commander’s voice was steady, but Fal knew he would be roiling
inside. Fal knew how galling it was that an astral king at his own rank
existed. Astral kings were the peak that every messenger strove to ascend, yet
here was someone who had reached it, without being a messenger, and at
lower rank.
Fal turned to speak to face the commander, unable to resist delivering a
jab.
“I didn’t hear my name,” he said. “He didn’t sound like he was any more
worried about you than me. Or did Asano’s display leave the mighty
commander of all these gold-rankers scared?”
“You would be wise to watch your words, Fal Vin Garath.”
“Or what? You’ll have the Voice of the Will send me on a suicide
mission? You’re just a servant. You might as well be one of the lesser races,
huddling in their vehicles.”
The commander smiled instead of retorting, which unnerved Fal in the
fleeting instant before he realised why. The reflexes of a gold-ranker could
have deflected the harpoon shot from the pyramid before it impaled Fal, but
he hadn’t even warned him, let alone moved.
The harpoon yanked back with blinding speed, dragging Fal with it. The
chain to which it was attached led into the cloud stuff of the pyramid where a
hex panel was absent. In the moment it took for the harpoon to pull back
inside, Fal struggled pointlessly against the huge barbs holding the harpoon
in place. He could have gotten free with a few extra moments, but he didn’t
have them. He disappeared, dragged into the pyramid and the hex panel slid
back out to cover the place he had entered.

Fal fell through a misty wall that immediately turned solid behind him. The
harpoon had vanished somewhere during his passage through cloud-
substance that made up the building, itself turning ephemeral.
Impaling was a negligible wound to a messenger, the damage already
healing by the time Fal floated off the floor and into a more dignified
position. The floor was already slick with his silver-gold blood, shining like
metal with a faint blue sheen. It stained his clothes, loose and white with gold
embellishments that set off his gold hair.
Fal pressed his hand onto the wall he had just passed through, finding it
now cool and solid to the touch. It was some manner of smooth-cut stone or
crystal, or perhaps some substance in between. He took in his surroundings, a
hallway that would have been generously sized for humans. To Fal, it was
cramped, his impressive height almost brushing the ceiling and his wings
unable to unfurl at all.
He looked each way down the corridor; one way led to a turn and another
to a dead end. He wondered at the odd design choice, thinking about how it
would be the worst place for him to fight. That immediately triggered a
realisation that came too late as something struck him from behind like a
meteor. He was smashed into the wall at the dead end of the hallway,
spiderweb cracks appearing in the stone from the impact. That was a hard hit,
even for a silver-ranker, and Fal slumped to the ground again. He rallied
instantly, looking up to see what had hit him.
It looked like a human, only bigger. The dark-skinned man was not as tall
as Fal himself, but Fal was towering even by the standards of his own kind.
This man may have been a full foot shorter, but with his sculpted muscle and
majestic size, a pair of wings would have let him pass for a messenger
himself.
Fal again rose up, not pushing himself to his feet like an animal but
floating with his aura. It was hard, as the aura permeating the building was
hostile and oppressive. It wasn’t enough to entirely suppress him, but it made
using his aura a struggle. Even so, he used it to stand to his full height, feet
floating just off the floor. He looked down at the man who was in no apparent
rush to continue his attack.
The man’s body might not have matched Fal for height, but he was just as
wide, if not wider, with shoulders that were geographical in magnitude. He
wore loose pants but neither shirt nor shoes, although he did have a towel
draped over his shoulders. Intricate tattoos marked his chocolate skin; while
Fal didn’t recognise the Māori designs, he correctly guessed that they were
tribal in origin. The man’s short-cropped hair was wet. He had the blank
scent of someone who had just used crystal wash, although his natural scent
was beginning to assert itself. It was the springtime freshness that marked an
outworlder, and a glance at the man’s aura confirmed it.
As Fal examined him, he examined Fal in turn. Although Fal doubted that
the huge man had to look up at people very often, he showed no concern in
doing so with Fal. His expression said that he didn’t see anything interesting
and his gaze turned to his own body. He frowned with displeasure at Fal’s
blood from the impaling wound, which had gotten onto his arm and chest
during their impact.
“Bro, I just showered,” the man complained.
Fal knew that if the man was willing to converse, he might well lead him
to Asano.
“You took a shower in the middle of a battle?” Fal asked.
“I was covered in rank-up goo. Have you smelled that stuff? It’s chemical
warfare, bro.”
“You just ranked up to silver?”
Fal’s aura senses were massively suppressed in this building, barely able
to glean the most basic information about the man. He pushed a little harder
and saw the tell-tale signs of a very recent rank gain. For all the man looked
unperturbed, his body must have been aching for rest.
“Who are you? Where is Jason Asano?”
“I’m Taika Williams, and Jason’s not in. That giant battle you just
mentioned, remember? If you’re looking for him, just wait. He’ll do
something pretty attention-grabbing sooner or later. It’s kind of his thing.”
“You’re lying.”
“No, it really is his thing. And I’m not even counting that big projection
he just did. How he managed that from across the city, I have no idea.”
“I mean that you’re lying about him not being here. There’s no way he
can project his aura at a remove. Not unless this pyramid is a lot more than a
cloud building.”
Even as he said it, Fal realised that it almost certainly was. There was an
oppressive power, a sense of dominion that he normally associated with
ground sanctified to a deity.
“I’m telling you the truth,” Taika said. “You’re pretty rude, bird man.”
“I am not a bird man,” Fal said, forcefully enunciating each word. For all
his conflict with his own kind, Fal was still a messenger, with a messenger’s
pride.
“I am one of the supreme beings of every reality blessed enough to be
graced with our presence.”
“You’ve got giant bird wings, bro. Not a criticism; I’m just saying that
you need to accept yourself in order to love yourself.”
“These wings are the symbol of my glory as a messenger.”
“They’re bird wings, bro. Just big and on a man, so… bird man.”
Fal conjured a curved sword and swung it at Taika’s neck. Taika held up
an arm to block it and the sword bounced off. The skin was unblemished,
although the area around the strike point had turned jade-green. It swiftly
faded back to Taika’s normal chocolate colour. Taika didn’t retaliate.
Fal frowned.
“Is that the Emerald Skin power?” he asked.
“You know your essence abilities, bro. Not your weapons, though. That
curved blade is for slicing, but you went for the chop. Can you conjure a
machete? It might work better for you; I’ll wait.”
Fal ignored Taika’s words, instead focusing on his own aura. He pushed
it out to wash over the other man, through the interference of the building
around them. His aura flinched back as soon as he tried to suppress Taika at
all, his instincts screaming at him to kneel before the king of the sky.
As he had feared, this man had the powers of a garuda.
92
A PRETTY CREEPY DUDE

T AIKA HAD BOTH HANDS AGAINST THE SHOWER WALL AS THE WATER SLUICED
the ichor from his trembling body. Nothing short of crystal wash would get
the foul, clinging gunk the body produced during a rank-up off, but that was
fine. The cloud palace showers had the water infused with crystal wash.
Jason was surprisingly free with the stuff, given how there had been a
shortage in Rimaros.
“Oh,” Taika said to himself, suddenly realising why.
He scrubbed away the foul black-green residue with a cloth that he was
going to dispose of, crystal wash or no. He knew he shouldn’t go straight out
and fight, but he was going to anyway, the moment he stopped looking like a
swamp monster. His body was still strained from the rank-up and what he
needed was sleep. But that was not going to happen with a war raging
outside.
Jason also knew that Taika shouldn’t fight. He had told him as much, but
also knew that his friend would not be deterred. Or so he thought. His body
had mostly stopped shaking by the time he emerged from the shower to find,
instead of his fresh clothes, Shade.
“You forgot a change of clothes, Mr Williams.”
“I did not forget a change of clothes.”
“I suspect that Mr Asano forgot for you,” Shade said, his tone soaked in
disapproval. “This building tends to eat things he wants to disappear. He has,
however, provided you with what he declared to be an appropriate outfit.”
Taika looked at the purple stretch pants that Shade held out for him.
“Seriously?”
“I can assure you of my firm protestation, Mr Williams. But you know
how he gets.”
Taika chuckled, took the pants, slid them on and tied off the waist cord.
“Yeah, I know. Good looking out, bro.”
“Now that you are fully attired,” Shade said inaccurately, “Mr Asano has
something he would like you to handle, Mr Williams.”
“He doesn’t want me to fight.”
“He does not.”
“I managed to rank up in time, and I won’t be fobbed off. Unless what he
has for me is a fight, I’m not interested.”
“Which he anticipated. This task is, indeed, a fight.”
“What kind of fight?”
“I mentioned that this building tends to eat things that Mr Asano does not
like. There is a messenger floating around who fits that description.”
“He wants my first fight after ranking-up to be a messenger?”
“Yes. I would add that I do not care for this particular messenger either.”

Fal Vin Garath’s day was only getting worse. He was trapped inside Jason
Asano’s pyramid, boxed into a dead-end corner by a man with garuda
powers. If it came to a fight, Fal’s quick and mobile style would be all but
useless. His only advantage was that the man in front of him had only just
ranked up. Even so, fighting would be a bad choice until he could find a
better battlefield.
Garuda powers were a problem. The garuda were natural-born kings of
the sky, and whether it was a garuda in person or an adventurer tapping into
their power, they were some of the worst enemies that messengers could face.
Fighting an adventurer with garuda abilities would bring Fal prestige. He
could add it to the list of reasons that winning fights in his current
circumstances would bring him glory. That was also the list of things he
desperately needed to avoid today, but he didn’t seem to have much choice.
With the worst possible opponent in the worst possible place, talking was
the better strategy. This was not a strong area for Fal, and for most other
messengers as well. Messengers didn’t negotiate with the servant races. That
was beneath them. Should the servant races be graced with the presence of a
messenger, all they required was the honour of obeying whatever directive
they were issued. Reality, however, was not always kind. Fal, given his
current circumstances, would need to talk this man, Taika, around. He did his
best to not show his annoyance at needing to learn the man’s name.
“Your aura power comes from the garuda essence,” Fal said.
“Yep,” Taika confirmed.
“And you’re an outworlder. Did the garuda bring you here? Or did it
come here looking for you in the first place and only stumble upon the egg?”
“I barely know that bloke. He came here for the evil egg you lot had
hidden away. I have met him, though. He saw me doing the garuda thing and
gave me some tips.”
Fal didn’t let a grimace cross his face. Not only did this man have garuda
powers, but guidance, however brief, from an actual garuda. That was even
assuming the man was telling the truth. Fal had not developed the gift of
reading people from their body language, as very few could hide their
emotions from his senses. In this place, though, his magical senses were
impeded, along with his aura.
“We don’t have to fight,” Fal said. “I’m here for Asano, and not even to
assassinate him. I’ve been instructed to test him. With a duel. No tricks, just
honest combat. Honourable combat. I’m led to believe he’ll go for that.”
“I wouldn’t go trying to predict Jason unless you predict he’ll do
something insane and then make a sandwich. I don’t think he’ll go for your
honourable duel, bro; he doesn’t much like honest combat. He’s more into
shameless cheating. Back stabbing. Poison. Luring people into his evil magic
pyramid.”
“Harpooning someone through the chest is a rather unsubtle lure.”
“You think that’s bad? Get a look at his floral shirts, then you’ll know
what unsubtle is.”
“We don’t have to fight. What would you get out of it?”
“Cardio? But you’re right, we don’t have to go at it. You could surrender.
Jason wants us to take any messengers we fight alive if we can. That being
said, you might want to fight to the death instead.”
“Why? What does he want us for?”
“I’m not going to lie. I stopped paying attention pretty early when he
explained it to us. It’s always ‘astral this’ and ‘spirit that’ with him. I think
you messengers have some kind of energy he can… well, he didn’t use the
word eat, but it sure felt like he was talking around it.”
“Eat?”
“I know, right? Jason can be a pretty creepy dude. I mean, he’s probably
not going to eat you eat you, but he is big on sucking the life force out of
people. Which he insists is not the same as drinking blood or eating people,
but I dunno, bro. There are only so many times a bloke can tell you he’s not
eating people before you start to think he’s definitely eating people.”
“Eating is a disgusting practice, whatever you eat. We messengers sustain
ourselves on the power of the cosmos.”
“Jason too. It’s a little weird how much you guys are like a copy of him.”
“We are a copy of no one. My people are ancient, while he is less than
three decades old. He is a copy of us.”
“If you say so, bro,” Taika said sceptically.
“Why don’t you take me to Asano? He and I can settle things between
us.”
“I told you he’s not here.”
“But he is somewhere.”
“Sure, but he doesn’t want you there. He wants you here. You think he
can’t kill you with this building? The only reason you aren’t a puddle of
gooey flesh soup right now is that he doesn’t want you to be. He’s waiting for
your gold-rank friends to come in here too. As for you, he fed you to me.”
“Are you saying you eat people as well?”
“What? No, gross. It’s an intimidating metaphor, bro. Was it scary? This
is my first time bantering with a supervillain. It kind of sucks that you’re
basically evil Angel, though. He’s the worst X-Man. People might tell you
it’s the guy whose only power is to blow himself up the one time, but at least
that’s interesting. Angel’s just got wings. He should start a courier service or
something, not fight evil. Why are you looking at me like you have no idea
what I’m talking about?”
“Because I have no idea what you’re talking about. You and I may well
fight to the death and you’re babbling nonsense.”
“Can’t take yourself too seriously, bro. I watched Jason do that and it
kind of messed him up. So, yeah, it’s a little bit gallows humour, but I’ll get
by. So long as you’re the one swinging on the gallows.”
“Again, we don’t need to fight.”
“Bro, you and yours just smashed your way into this city. As we speak,
you pricks are trying to break into the places the innocent people are hiding
so you can kill them just to make a point.”
Fal saw a potential way forward in Taika’s words. It could be considered
traitorous, but he’d never been ordered not to voice conclusions he came to
on his own. And since the Voice of the Will had thrown him to the wolves,
he had no loyalty to her.
“That’s not really what’s happening,” he told Taika. “The woman who
masterminded this attack doesn’t even care about what happens. She’s just
using me, like she is you. She doesn’t tell me anything, but her plans go
beyond this attack, and I know what she really wants. It’s all internal
messenger politics and her own ambition.”
For the first time in their encounter, Taika looked hesitant.
“Then what’s it really about?” he asked.
“I know why she wants Asano. Take me to him and we can talk about it.
Work out something that forwards all our agendas, rather than those of the
people that sent me here.”
“The best I can do is lock you up until he comes to you. I mean, you’re
locked up already, if I’m being honest. Jason could just seal off the hallway
and leave you in there. Or make your body rot away, although I hope he
doesn’t. Not for your sake, but I just had a shower. Washing off this blood
will be bad enough, but I don’t want melty messenger on me. It should be
fine, though. He decided to let me test out my new power level on you, where
he can keep me safe. It’s a little condescending, but he means well. Unlike
you.”
“We may be on different sides, but we at least have some common
interests.”
“Mate, I’m hearing words, but it’s not your mouth you’re speaking out
from. You’re talking about some kind of what? An alliance against your
bosses? You think I’m that easy to manipulate? That you can lure me into
that kind of trust? You didn’t even tell me your name. It didn’t even occur to
you that it might be a good idea, when you’re trying to suborn some bloke, to
give him the basic courtesy of an introduction.”
“I am Fal Vin Garath.”
“I don’t care what your name is. You missed your window to paint
yourself as anything other than a piece of crap that knows how long his odds
are. Jason put me here to kick the crap out of you, and that’s what I’m going
to do. You’re training wheels, bloke.”
“I can be far more valuable to you than that. I have to serve the
messengers above me, but they’ve sent me here to die. We can work
something out. You, me and Asano. The attack on the city doesn’t matter.”
Fal immediately saw that he’d made a mistake as Taika’s expression went
from amiable to stormy.
“Doesn’t matter?” he growled, his normally high-pitched voice taking on
the deeper timbre of rage. “People are dying. Innocent people. There was
never a single second where you thought of their deaths as a bad thing, was
there? You don’t think their lives matter any more than I matter enough to
give me your name.”
“Yes, we come at this from very different perspectives. But perhaps we
can find a way to an ending we both want. If you take me to Asano—”
“You don’t get Jason,” Taika said, his voice ominously soft.
Even Fal, oblivious to social cues, could sense the lurking violence. He
didn’t wait, making the first attack himself.
He conjured a second sword into his other hand and swept both at Taika’s
neck. Each was blocked by a huge forearm but, this time, Fal did not stop at a
single strike, launching into a combination of flashing moves, up and down
Taika’s body.
To Fal’s surprise, Taika didn’t keep blocking. Where a blade struck
without active blocking, his flesh still turned emerald green and resisted the
damage, but wasn’t as resilient. Fal’s blades managed only shallow cuts, but
they successfully scored Taika’s flesh.
It only took a moment for Fal to realise what Taika was doing as the
already big man grew to match Fal’s height. His head became that of an
eagle, red and gold feathers running down to his shoulders like a mane. His
body retained its chocolate colouring and tattoos but became leaner, sleek yet
powerful. Taika went from bodybuilder to boxer, his physique optimised for
quick, explosive power. His fingers and his feet became more talon-like, and
wings appeared on his back. They were feathered in red and gold, but, like
Fal, he had to keep them tucked away.
The change took less than a second, but Fal’s reflexes were fast even for a
silver-ranker. He tried to use the moment to slip past Taika and escape the
dead end, but it was a hard ask. Taika, as it turned out, also had superior
reflexes, and superior strength to go with it. He grabbed Fal by the face and
slammed him back into the wall, his feet no longer floating but dangling from
where Taika held him in place.
Fal dropped his swords, grabbed Taika’s arm and used one of his powers.
A spiral blade of force shot its way up Taika’s arm, which immediately
turned green and hard. Even so, the corkscrew of energy wound its way up
his arms, spraying blood as it gouged a deep, razor-thin wound in stony green
flesh.
Taika’s grip loosened as his arm flinched. Fal slipped out and again made
to escape past Taika. Taika grabbed at a wing, but another of Fal’s powers
rendered it almost frictionless, as if greased. It slid through Taika’s fingers
and Fal managed to slide around him, his wings brushing against the wall.
The open corridor was still restrictive, but at least he wasn’t boxed into a
dead end. He conjured fresh swords as Taika turned on him, glaring with
eagle eyes.
Garuda were paragons of speed, power and fortitude. Fal considered
himself their match in pace and mobility, but he and Taika both had their
speed constrained by the environment. That left Taika with strength and
resilience, and Fal with a massive disadvantage. His best bet was to hope that
Taika felt pressured by the restrictiveness of the space.
“I will face you in honourable combat,” Fal declared. “But this tunnel is
unworthy of our duel. Surely this place has at least one room large enough for
us to fight in.”
Taika didn’t sneer, refuse or mock. He didn’t say anything. His fist broke
the speed of sound, the pressure wave hitting Fal like a compressed
hurricane.

Ability: [God-Striking Fist] (Garuda)

Special attack (dimension, holy).


Cost: Extreme stamina, extreme mana.
Cooldown: Six hundred and sixty-six minutes.

Current rank: Silver 0 (00%).


Effect (iron): Make a hard, fast punch. Time and space manipulation
will not function in the vicinity while the punch is being swung.

Effect (bronze): Cooldown is reduced based on the condition of the


enemy after the attack. More resilient enemies results in a shorter
cooldown time. An amount of stamina and mana is refunded based
on the condition of the enemy. A sufficiently resilient enemy may
trigger a refund of stamina and mana greater than the initial cost.

Effect (silver): Damage inflicted is transcendent.

The very air thundered at the passage of Taika’s fist as it broke the sound
barrier. Fal, astoundingly, was fast enough to start dodging, but not enough to
completely avoid it. He bounced off the wall and the ceiling before hitting the
other end of the hallway like a bomb.
Taika whispered urgently under his breath. “Please don’t get up, please
don’t get up.”
For all the power of Taika’s hit, the messenger floated up from the floor
for a third time since being dragged into Jason’s pyramid.
“That sucks, bro,” Taika told him. “If you’d stayed down, I could have
totally been One-Punch Man.”
93
S EC U R IT Y OV E R S I G HT

T AIKA LOOKED DOWN THE HALLWAY AT THE MESSENGER FLOATING AT THE END
of it. After being impaled and smashed into walls multiple times, the once
glorious being now looked like a bird that couldn’t stop flying into windows.
As for Taika himself, he was in a strange state where he was both exhausted
from his recent rank-up and simultaneously tingling with energy from his
shape-change ability.

Ability: [King of the Sky] (Wing)

Special ability (shape-change).


Cost: High mana.
Cooldown: None.

Current rank: Silver 0 (00%).

Effect (iron): Take the form of a garuda. [Power] and [Speed]


attributes are increased. Wings allow for gliding but not flight
without an additional power. Powers that conjure wings instead use
the wings of this form and have significantly enhanced flight speed
and manoeuvrability.

Effect (bronze): Aura suppression and suppression resistance against


any creature with wings or that is currently flying is significantly
increased.

Effect (silver): Certain other abilities have enhanced effects.


Affected abilities: Emerald Flesh, Grace of Garuda, Golden Wings,
Block Out the Sun, Feaster of Serpents, Amrita, Brother of the
Dawn.

Taika was reminded of a time before he knew magic was real, fending off
sleep deprivation with enough coffee to animate the dead. His poison
resistance would now put paid to any effect caffeine once had on him, yet he
found himself with that same odd sensation. His body was heavy, yet an
electric charge ran through it.
He was starting to think that Jason may have been right to warn him
against going outside in his current state. Even so, he still had a ragged bird
man to deal with before he sought out precious slumber.
Fal glared back at Taika, conjuring fresh swords yet again. Then he
glanced down the passage where the hallway turned, leading elsewhere in the
building. Taika saw him looking and burst out laughing.
“Are you gonna leg it? If I were you, I’d definitely scarper, but I’m not a
messenger. Where’s the pride, bro? If you run, that kind of makes me look
superior, and I once squashed my plums trying to sit on a chair like a guy
from Star Trek. You wouldn’t know him.”
Fal faced Taika, his conciliatory façade completely gone. Although
bloodied and beaten, his eyes stared imperiously, his pride and disdain no
longer hidden away. His arms became a blur, firing off blades of wind that
rushed unavoidably down the corridor at Taika.
Taika didn’t try to dodge or even stand his ground and endure. He
launched himself down the hallway, not running, not even really flying. He
shot like a bullet.

Ability: [Momentous Charge] (Swift)

Special attack (movement, combination).


Cost: High mana and stamina.
Cooldown: Four minutes.

Current rank: Silver 0 (00%).

Effect (iron): Charge attack. Rapidly gain [Momentum] during the


charge. Can culminate in a non-combination special attack.

Effect (bronze): Can cover extreme distances and move through the
air. The speed of the charge escalates over the duration of the
charge.
Effect (silver): The damage from [Momentum] is enhanced by your
speed at the moment the attack lands.

[Momentum] (boon, magic, stacking): When making an attack, all


instances are consumed to inflict resonating-force damage. Multiple
instances can be accumulated and instances are lost quickly while
not moving.

Fal’s wind blades exploded onto Taika in rapid succession but failed to
penetrate his skin as it again turned green to resist the damage. With hits
landing all over his body, Taika had turned almost entirely emerald, his
tattoos standing out in stark contrast. Damage was not the primary purpose of
the wind blades, however, which exploded with force that pushed back
against Taika’s forward motion. Taika saw the surprise on Fal’s face when he
didn’t slow down at all.

Ability: [Unstoppable Strike] (Swift)

Special attack (movement).


Cost: Moderate mana and stamina.
Cooldown: One minute.

Current rank: Silver 0 (00%).


Effect (iron): Melee attack. If any instances of [Momentum] are
triggered by the attack, they deal an amount of disruptive force equal
to the resonating-force damage.

Effect (bronze): When combined with a movement-combination


special attack, the physical momentum of that attack is extremely
hard to impede. Physical barriers and constraints are struck with
resonating-force damage. Magical barriers and constraints are struck
with disruptive-force damage. Resistances to any effect that impedes
motion are significantly increased for the duration of the
combination attack.

Effect (silver): The cooldown of this ability is reset when using a


movement-combination special attack, allowing this ability to be
combined with that attack.

Fal managed to interpose his wings between himself and Taika, snaking them
around his body from where they were tucked behind him. They absorbed the
damage, but the damage was still enough for blood to stain where the blunt
attack crashed into them. Fal bounced off the wall behind him like a ball as
Taika threw aside the protective wings. The beak of his eagle-headed face
came down like a pickaxe digging for ore.
Fal’s skull was hard and the beak slid across it and down the messenger’s
face. The result was a massive gouge that took one of his eyes with it. Taika
didn’t waste time, immediately following up with rapid punches. Despite his
wound, Fal was just as fast, his short swords clashing with Taika’s fists. Even
boxed into a hallway, both men showed off blinding speed, their movements
a blur as they clashed.
Ability: [Grace of Garuda] (Wing)

Special ability (movement).


Cost: None.
Cooldown: None.

Current rank: Silver 0 (00%).

Effect (iron): [Speed] attribute, reflexes, movement speed and


perceptual speed are increased.

Effect (bronze): Mana and stamina costs of movement abilities are


reduced. Gain instances of [Momentum] while moving at high
speed.

Effect (silver): Instances of [Momentum] gained from other abilities


take longer to drop off when not moving. When [Momentum] is
triggered, instead of all instances being immediately consumed, they
begin rapidly dropping off one at a time. This continues until all
instances are gone or additional instances are gained.
The difference between the combatants swiftly became apparent. While Fal
did have a slight edge in speed, he didn’t have the room to dodge that was a
hallmark of his elusive fighting style. They traded blows at staggering speed,
with Fal coming out the worst. Forced to block a much stronger opponent, he
was constantly being hammered with fists that landed like wrecking balls.
When he got a blade past Taika’s blocking arms, by contrast, they managed
little more than shallow cuts in jade flesh. If Taika got an arm in the way,
they did nothing at all. The only real damage Fal managed to inflict came
from magical attacks, his spiral cutting magic proving the most effective.
Bleeding from spiral cuts, Taika managed to body-press Fal into the wall.
He then conjured an amphora to drink from while keeping the messenger
pinned. As soon as he drank, his wounds healed faster.

Ability: [Amrita] (Garuda)

Special ability (conjuration, restoration).


Cost: Varies.
Cooldown: Varies.

Current rank: Silver 0 (00%).

Effect (iron): Conjure a jar containing one to five doses of


restorative elixir that bestows an ongoing health and mana recovery
effect. The elixir may be shared and does not interact toxically with
other potions. Cooldown is predicated on how many doses are
conjured, from one minute for one dose to fifteen minutes for five
doses. Mana cost is low, moderate, high, very high or extreme,
depending on the number of doses conjured.
Effect (bronze): For the duration of the elixir’s recovery effect,
abilities that provide damage reduction are enhanced.

Effect (silver): Duration of the elixir’s ongoing recovery effect is


increased. The elixir can be converted to a life elixir at an extreme
mana cost per dose. Life elixir has no effect when consumed but
does not disappear after being removed from the amphora and may
be used as a material in rituals and crafting.

Fal’s body turned slick while Taika was drinking from the amphora. He slid
from between Taika and the wall, dashing down the hallway Taika had
goaded him into not using earlier. Taika dropped the amphora, which
vanished before it hit the ground, but he didn’t rush after Fal.
“Drinking with a beak is tough,” he observed to himself, then looked
down the hall.
Fal was swift; he had already vanished around a corner. Taika glanced at
the trail of blood left behind.
“I don’t know where you think you’re going, bro. There’s no way out and
you’re Hansel & Gretelling pretty hard.”
“I feel obligated to point out, Mr Williams,” Shade’s voice came from
Taika’s shadow, “that ‘Gretelling’ is not a verb. Or a word.”
“Bro, have you been in there the whole time?”
“Mr Asano has given me strict instructions not to explain when or where I
may be at any given point. He likes people to realise I could always be
watching.”
“The panopticon effect, I get it. That’s a rude thing to do to your friends,
bro.”
“Indeed,” Shade concurred. “Mr Asano has some rather authoritarian
tendencies. But your attention should be on the blood trail, Mr Williams.”
Taika looked at the blood trail and saw the floor turn from hard stone to
soft cloud material and siphon the blood away. A glance at the wall he had
smashed Fal into showed that it was likewise being automatically cleaned and
repaired.
“Oh, bloody oath,” Taika muttered and then rushed off, following the
rapidly disappearing trail of blood.

Fal realised in short order that not only was the pyramid all hallways and no
doors, but it was also changing as he moved through it. Dead ends forced him
to backtrack into places that were not the same as when he had passed
through moments earlier. He recalled what Taika had said about Asano
waiting for the gold-rankers to invade. He didn’t know if the pyramid was
powerful enough to contain them, but knew that they would test it sooner or
later. He would not be getting out. They would assume he died and come
after, to eliminate the pyramid as a threat.
Fal was recovering swiftly. His burst eye had grown back, but its vision
was still blurry. Even if he was fully restored, however, it didn’t matter.
There was no door he could break through in search of hostages or a better
place to fight. His most powerful attacks had bounced off the walls in his
attempts to breach them. Taika had made some serious dents, mostly with
Fal’s head, but Fal himself lacked the strength. Powerful attacks were not his
strong point. There was no escaping Taika in these halls, and Fal had
accepted that, in these halls, he couldn’t win. All that remained was choosing
the most dignified manner in which to lose.

Taika followed the blood trail being rapidly devoured by the cloud palace’s
passive cleaning functions.
“I suggest you hasten, Mr Williams. The gold-rankers have decided to
invade the building. The gap at the top was apparently too tempting to resist.”
“How’s it going?”
“They rushed in deep before they realised that walls were closing behind
them. The afflictions are just starting to break past their resistances and they
are debating whether to smash walls to go deeper or smash walls to get out.”
“Which one do you want them to do?”
“It doesn’t matter. They don’t realise that Mr Asano can reorient the
chamber they are in, gravity included. Whatever wall they break through, he
will choose where it leads. They will need to rapidly break through walls in a
straight line if they want to get out. Mr Asano will allow that, so long as they
don’t head in the direction of one of the dormitories where people are
secured.”
“How is he doing all this? Doesn’t he have his own thing going on
elsewhere?”
“Mr Asano’s unusual nature includes a certain level of multitasking. It’s
similar to how gods watch all of their followers and sacred grounds. On a
much more limited scale, obviously.”
Taika rounded a corner and found Fal waiting for him. The messenger
was looking much restored, but his former glory remained buried under a
coating of blood, pounded out of him by Taika’s fists. His swords were in his
hands, which dangled loosely at his sides.
“I won’t surrender,” he said, resignation in his voice. “There is no shame
in failing an impossible task, only in giving it up.”
“Cool story, bro.”

Taika was leaving a fresh trail of silver-gold blood as he dragged Fal through
the hallways by his hair. Along with the thick line on the floor, marks
punctuated the walls where Taika occasionally slammed the messenger’s
head. The fast-healing messenger kept blearily rousing. Shade had emerged
from Taika’s shadow to move alongside him.
“You did very well, Mr Williams.”
“These are pretty controlled conditions,” Taika said. “I don’t think
anyone needed me to deal with this guy.”
“Will you go out to join the fight, then?”
“Nah, bro. I got that out of my system. I’m barely staying on my feet
here. I’m glad you kept me from going out, so thanks. It would have been
pretty rough.”
Fal moaned insensibly as he threatened to rouse again. Taika was about to
slam the messenger’s head into the wall again when Jason’s aura surged. This
wasn’t the background aura that always suffused the cloud palace but
something coming from further away. It was a deeper, richer aura projection
than anything Taika had experienced.
“Is that Jason himself?” Taika asked.
“Boosted, but yes,” Shade said. “I believe his pursuers will be able to find
him now.”
The messenger thrashed like a fish on a hook, his hair still gripped in
Taika’s hand. Taika wasn’t sure if it was some kind of frenzy or if Fal was
having a seizure, but it stopped when the messenger’s head hit the wall hard
enough to crack the dark stone. The stone turned into mist briefly, drawing
away the blood and restoring the wall to a clean, undamaged condition.
“Do you think I could get that installed at my mum’s house?”
“Perhaps not that exact thing, Mr Williams, but I imagine something
similar. You should talk to Miss Farrah or Mr Standish once we make our
way back to Earth.”
“Bro, why do you only ever use women’s first names? I’ve heard you call
Emi and Erika and Farrah by their first names, but you even use Jason’s
surname, and you’re his familiar.”
“I don’t use all women’s first names,” Shade pointed out. “Only the ones
I like the most. Also, it made things easier when everyone was named
Asano.”
Taika gave Shade a side glance.
“Jason still doesn’t let you spy on people in bathrooms, right?”
“It’s observing, Mr Williams, not spying. But, no; that security oversight
remains.”
94
I H AV E T O G O F I G HT E V I L

T HE COMMANDER OF THE ADVENTURER FORCES DEFENDING THE


entertainment district was Eilaf Hayel, a gold-rank elven adventurer and
Yaresh native. He was a veteran of fighting the messengers, having assaulted
their strongholds more than a dozen times. He was extremely familiar with
the aura suppression tactic they employed and how it impacted the morale of
adventurers. The fact that they hadn’t used it from the opening moments of
the battle was not a relief but a concern.
Eilaf’s gold-rank senses allowed him to monitor the auras around the city.
In most of the battlegrounds, the messengers had deployed their auras
immediately. This had helped them gain a foothold as they came through the
breach, but Eilaf had seen in his own battlefield that the ceaseless torrent of
monsters didn’t need the help.
That the commander he was up against held their auras in reserve
suggested that he was not underestimating the adventurers, which was
unfortunate. One of the weaknesses common to messengers in Eilaf’s
encounters with them was an overwhelming arrogance that led them to
underestimate opponents. He had hoped a messenger that didn’t undervalue
their opposition was weak enough that they had to act with caution.
That hope was forlorn. The messenger commander was not just powerful,
but the single strongest messenger Eilaf had ever seen. Most messengers
were marginally weaker than a well-trained adventurer, and while there were
certainly exceptions, he had never seen anything like this.
The commander was shrugging off the most powerful attacks that Eilaf
and his fellow gold-rankers could throw at him, and sometimes throwing
them right back. Fortunately, the messenger was more interested in
commanding his forces than pressing the adventurers by attacking in person.
He was likewise directing his forces conservatively, a situation Eilaf wanted
to continue for as long as possible.
The Battle of Yaresh, not just in the entertainment district but across the
city, was essentially a race. The messengers were trying to dig out and
slaughter as many civilians as they could before the city barrier restored
itself, trapping them inside. Eilaf didn’t know why his counterpart did not
push for speed, but as it was the only mistake the man seemed to be making,
Eilaf wanted to capitalise on it.
Eilaf had his own gold-rankers pressure the other gold-rank messengers,
prioritising them over the commander. Aware that the conservative strategy
could be a trap to lure them in, Eilaf didn’t let his people push too hard and
overextend themselves. Both sides being conservative was to the adventurers’
advantage, so he would let that play out as long as he could.
The move proved a sound one. Eilaf came to suspect that the enemy
commander was less than enthralled with his assignment and was more
interested in running out the clock than pushing for success. If the man would
rather keep his people alive and leave unsuccessful than sacrifice them for
victory, Eilaf was the last person who would get in his way. He just made
sure that the commander was occupied keeping his gold-rankers alive rather
than interfering with the silver-rankers.
Things continued to go well for Yaresh, as there were some real gems
amongst the silver-rank adventurers. The more the battle turned in favour of
the adventurers, however, the more Eilaf anticipated the aura drop. The
adventurers had all been warned about messenger auras and many were
veterans who had experienced them already. Even so, Eilaf wished he could
warn them all again. That was not practical in a battle, but he could at least
prepare his gold-rankers.
Eilaf was unsurprised when their foes finally unleashed auras that hit the
adventurers. It was like a physical force, to a small degree, albeit not enough
to cause any harm. The real impact was spiritual, with just enough kinetic
force to show the essence users that messenger auras were fundamentally
different.
It was a subtle but effective intimidation tactic, which was ultimately the
purpose of the aura wave. Suppressing the auras of adventurers did have a
tactical impact as aura essence abilities were shut off, but it wasn’t the main
goal. Having their auras pushed down left the adventurers feeling weak and
helpless, like bullied children.
That reaction wasn’t universal amongst adventurers, with many fighting
on, unconcerned. Those were mostly veterans who had besieged messenger
strongholds and tasted their auras in the past. For most, however, a
suppressed aura left them feeling vulnerable and exposed. Such tactics were
key means by which the messengers propagated their sense of superiority.
The adventurers didn’t collapse under the assault, but it certainly arrested
their forward momentum. Eilaf and his gold-rankers had the edge in both
numbers and—discounting the enemy commander—individual strength. The
combat power became less relevant as the gold-rankers on both sides moved
to pure spiritual conflict, floating in place as it looked like they were trying to
stare each other down. If not for the advantage in numbers, the adventurers
would have been overwhelmed by the messengers’ advantage in spiritual
strength.
The silver-rankers were likewise clashing aura-to-aura, and the
adventurers were struggling. They did not give up the physical conflict the
way the gold-rankers had, but their spiritual battle was reflected in physical
combat. The previous advance of the adventurers had come to a halt, while
the messengers went from holding back to pushing forward, taking the fight
to their enemy.
Elite adventurers were well-trained in aura use, but the messengers
simply had a higher baseline. Not only were their auras stronger, but even the
least messenger had a refined grasp of how to use it that few could match.
Adventurers were used to heavily outclassing any individual foe, and often
found themselves taken aback at how close messengers came to matching
them. As a result, first encounters with messengers were the ones most likely
to go poorly.
Eilaf had seen green adventurers struggle against messengers time and
again. He felt unease in the auras of adventurers, and doubt could be a plague
in a fighting force, and panic was a wildfire. Morale was the key to any
battle, and the side that lost it was the side that broke, regardless of relative
strength. The monster torrent was gaining ground against adventurers
suddenly struck with hesitation. Unfortunately, all Eilaf could do was hope
that his adventurers had the steel to hold on.
Elseth Culie was finally getting back to clearing out monsters after the
messengers fled to seek healing. Her task became more urgent as the
adventurers on the ground became less effective under the aura suppression
blanketing the battlefield. Elseth and the teams protecting her were in a
bubble that held the suppression off, centred on a man currently looking up.
Asano’s aura was not unlike that of the messengers, if not even more
domineering, but she quickly stopped worrying about that and focused on
killing more monsters. Asano himself was not moving, watching as his alien
familiar drew lines and symbols in the sky that glowed in blue and yellow.
The creature Asano called Gordon was orbited by six blue and orange nebula
orbs in the pattern of eyes. Each orb fired beams of blue or orange energy,
leaving glowing shapes in the sky like fireworks that didn’t stop lingering.
All six eyes drew intricately intersecting lines, the beams implausibly
managing to never cross one another. The familiar was drawing a massive
ritual circle, not just on a flat plane but in a sphere. Lines, runes and sigils
were woven together in a floating sculpture of light.
The summoned monsters did not interfere with it or anyone inside
Asano’s aura, visibly fleeing from it. This left the other adventurers protected
by the aura free to pour out attacks. Elseth made up for lost time as best she
could, giving no thought to her dwindling mana reserves as her spells
pumped out mass afflictions that were already spreading through the
monsters.
She only paused to pull out her most expensive mana potion and chug it
down, taking the chance to look over what Gordon was doing. It had
completed its sphere and started crafting smaller ones around it, connected by
lines. The smaller spheres drifted around the central sphere on their own.
“An orrery?” she said, not realising it was out loud.
The finished magical sculpture had formed an intricate and startlingly
beautiful orrery, the smaller spheres moving around the larger central one. It
was a massive creation, the size of a wealthy townhouse, and as she looked at
it, she realised that the sculpture was a ritual magic diagram, but unlike any
she had seen before.
Like many adventurers, Elseth had a decent grounding in ritual magic.
Even so, she failed to grasp even the most basic principles of what the
familiar had crafted. She suspected that it operated on some magical
paradigm completely outside of her experience.
“Gordon turned out to be something of a magic artist,” someone said.
She looked over, not recognising the voice. It was Asano, proudly
watching his familiar. She hadn’t realised it was him because his icy voice
had thawed, speaking warmly of Gordon. He turned to look at her.
“You should probably get back to the afflictions,” he suggested, his voice
still soft. The friendly smile was completely undercut by the aura pouring out
of him, oppressive and territorial. She was equally parts glad and astounded
that it was holding off the messengers’ collective aura, but she also wanted to
leave it as soon as possible.

While Gordon continued to draw the most outrageous and elaborate ritual
Jason had ever seen, he concentrated on maintaining his aura against the
messengers. They had somehow managed to blend their auras together into a
singular force, a technique Jason would ask Amos Pensinata about later. The
messenger aura was spread not just across the entire entertainment district but
also the battlefield filling the sky above it. This dilution of power meant that
Jason was able to push it back over a moderate area, only possible because
the gold-rankers from each side were negating each other. He managed a
sufficient range to shield the affliction specialist and the adventurers
supporting her, with space for more adventurers who found them to take
shelter. She went back to dosing monsters while the rest lashed out with
ranged attacks or left to guide other adventurers to the safety of Jason’s aura.
There had been very few occasions in which Jason had truly opened up
his aura, projecting it with as much strength as he could muster. It had
reached the point of being too powerful, a danger Farrah had warned him of
on the day she introduced him to auras. His aura also covered too much
ground, pushing through all but the most extreme measures to constrain it. If
not for the suppressive force of a full contingent of messengers, it would have
spread out across the city, likely harming any normal-rankers that had not yet
reached a bunker.
While he regretted that there would be collateral damage once Gordon
was done, Jason’s resolve did not falter. He could sense the messengers
pushing back against the adventurers, allowing more and more monsters to
safely descend. They had already started digging through the ground at an
accelerated rate, growing closer to a breach of the bunker’s defences. If he
had even a chance to arrest the aura advantage of the messengers, he would
take the chance.
Rufus arrived next to him in a flash of light, startling the adventurers
whose defensive perimeter he had circumvented.
“You’re doing something about this, right?”
“You expect me to stop the collective aura of who knows how many
messengers, all by myself?”
“Yes.”
“You have some pretty outlandish expectations there, mate.”
“Yes. I hate to break it to you, John,” Rufus said, using Jason’s fake name
due to the nearby adventurers. “But you’re the one who set up those
expectations. Placed in an extreme circumstance, with power levels far above
your own…”
He threw his arms out, indicating the wider battle.
“…you do something spectacularly outlandish…”
He pointed to the giant glowing orrery over their heads, then looked flatly
at Jason.
“…that you probably shouldn’t.”
“There you go, then,” Jason told him. “You just said I shouldn’t do it.”
“Are you going to do it?”
“Of course I’m going to… sorry, give me a sec. I’ve got a thing.”
Jason looked off into the middle distance, glaring at nothing.
“If you want to fight me, then come in here and get me,” he declared to
no one, then turned back to Rufus.
“Sorry about that. Anyway, shouldn’t you be taking out some messengers
about now?”
“That’s why I’m here,” Rufus told him. “I want to time it for right after
you do whatever you’re going to do. I’m hoping to take out a few in single
shots.”
“How many afflictions have you left out there to absorb?” Jason asked.
“A lot,” Rufus told him. “So, get to it.”
“I’m waiting on Gordon to finish. He’s doing an amazing job, right?”
“It’s amazing to look at,” Rufus agreed. “What kind of magic is that?”
“I have my suspicions. I’m pretty sure Shade knows and isn’t telling me.”
“That is for the best, Mr Miller,” Shade asserted as he emerged from
Jason’s shadow.
“So you say.”
“Since we’re waiting,” Rufus said, “do you have any sandwiches?”
“Who are you talking to?” Jason asked, pulling out a sandwich wrapped
in paper and handing the slightly larger half to Rufus. They both looked up at
the monster-filled sky.
“Have you ever seen this many monsters at once?” Rufus asked, then bit
into his sandwich.
“Yep,” Jason said. “Not all flyers, like this, though. There was a vorger
swarm that came pretty close.”
“In that astral space?”
“The one the Builder tried to take back? No, this was a transformation
zone. I told you about those, right?”
“When you explained them, they just sounded like astral spaces.”
“Bloke,” Jason scolded. “I’m starting to see why Clive gets cranky when
people don’t understand astral magic. A transformation zone is a defence
mechanism of reality, when the dimensional membrane has a localised
catastrophic failure.”
“But they’re still a dimensional space you can go into, right? Does that
just make it a kind of astral space?”
“You can go into a bath and you can go into the ocean, Rufus. Yes, you
can slowly soap up your taut, black body and bald head with a sponge in
both, but that doesn’t make your bathtub an ocean.”
“I’m not entirely comfortable with that analogy.”
“The point is, they’re different. But if you get both in the same space,
you’ve got maybe a month before it blows a hole in the side of reality large
enough to suck a planet into the astral. Where it stops existing, because there
is no physical reality in the astral.”
“Yes, Jason, I know you saved the world. You mention it quite a lot.”
“You’re damn right I do. Do know how awesome that is? I do wish I
could stop saving it from this dimensional nonsense all the time. I want to
fight a guy with a weather machine.”
“Are you in any danger of getting to a point?” Rufus asked.
“About what?”
“You were telling me about when you saw a massive vorger swarm.”
“Oh, right. So, I was in a transformation zone, patching a hole in the side
of the universe. I was just about done when a bunch of vorger came through.
There was a nightmare hag too.”
“Another one? What did it show you that time?”
“It was kind of embarrassing, so I don’t want to say.”
“It’s fine. I’ll ask Farrah.”
“I didn’t tell Farrah.”
Rufus gave him a flat look.
“Please don’t ask Farrah.”
They realised that someone was staring at them and turned to look at the
affliction specialist.
“What?” they asked simultaneously.
“Who are you people?”
“This is Rufus and I’m Ja… John. It’s not a fake name.”
Rufus shook his head. “May I ask your name?”
“Elseth Culie.”
“It’s lovely to meet you,” Rufus told her. “I’ve noticed you’re the main
reason the monsters haven’t cracked the bunker yet, so thank you.”
“Who are you?” she asked him.
“He’s a teacher and I’m a cook,” Jason told her.
“You were just talking about saving the world,” she said.
“I’m a very well-paid cook. Also, it wasn’t this world, so you don’t have
to worry. Probably.”
Jason looked to his right as Gordon floated down next to him, his work
completed. They looked up at the final result, a glowing orrery like a solar
system make of fireworks that refused to fade. Each sphere was comprised of
a complex, nested array of lines, runes and sigils.
“Clive is going to be sorry he missed this,” Jason said as his cloak
billowed around him and he rose up into the air.
“You could use a recording crystal,” Rufus suggested, calling up after
him.
“No time,” Jason yelled back. “I have to go fight evil.”
“Some of my people have recording crystals,” Elseth offered. “A lot of
teams are recording the battle for analysis and posterity.”
“I might take you up on that,” Rufus said. “Thank you.”
“Is your friend going to be able to make sense of that thing? It’s a ritual
diagram, right?”
“It is,” Rufus said. “And no, he won’t know how it works. He’ll love it.”
95
S T R AY T H O U G HT

J ASON FLOATED UP , HIS CLOAK SHAPED INTO GENTLY BEATING WINGS AS THEY
carried him into Gordon’s ritual diagram. His eyes swept over the
sophisticated magical orrery, his body tingling as he passed through the
glowing lines. He moved to the centre of the large, central sphere. He had the
unnerving impression of being inside a complex machine, the operation of
which he didn’t completely understand. But he did have a basic grasp of how
it worked, enough that he could take his place as the final component of the
ritual.
Gordon’s ritual magic was foundationally different to what Jason had
been taught. The same was true of every ritualist on Pallimustus and Earth.
Neither Dawn nor Shade had been willing to explain it to him, both
transparently feigning ignorance. He, in turn, declined to tell them something
that neither seemed to have realised: Gordon’s ability to use that ritual magic
was somehow bound to Jason.
Gordon had become even more linked to Jason than an ordinary familiar.
It was when he had done so that Gordon unsealed the ability to use the
strange ritual magic. Their link gave Jason some instinctive insight into how
it worked, but nowhere near enough to attempt using it himself. It wasn’t
knowledge but an instinctive feel, similar to what he had for astral forces.
Jason was not entirely without knowledge, however. He had spent a year
roaming around Earth, using the Builder’s magic door to access the
fundamental underpinnings of reality. He had been crudely repairing the link
between worlds, working with trial and error, without any theoretical
framework. In that time, he had slowly and fumblingly obtained some
understanding of the fundamental mechanisms of reality. In Gordon’s magic,
he recognised the framework that he had lacked. By his own admission, his
comprehension was that of a monkey attempting to do maths, but at least he
could make the attempt. Also, he loved bananas.
It would take years of study that Jason wasn’t even sure how to do before
he would gain any real comprehension of the alien ritual magic. But all he
needed today was the means to trigger Gordon’s ritual, and for that, he knew
enough. Just. He was pretty sure. Worst came to worst, he could ask Gordon
for a hint.
This was only the second time that Gordon had used this kind of ritual
magic. The first had been when Jason had flooded himself with reality core
energy that needed to be bled off. Gordon had used an aura projection ritual
that drained the power out of the very unconscious Jason to fuel itself,
blasting his aura across Rimaros. That ritual had been inefficient by design,
so as to drain the excess power killing Jason.
This new ritual was the same basic concept, a significantly more
sophisticated refinement of the original. Along with being orders of
magnitude more efficient, it did not replicate the same aura projection that
ordinary ritual magic could accomplish. It was designed to draw out and
project Jason’s aura far more comprehensively. More than simple aura
amplification, it would dig out every element of Jason’s soul and put it on
display, impressing exactly who and what he was on everyone within range.
And that range would be enormous.
This time, Jason was an active participant. Floating in the air, he
nervously opened and closed his fists. He thought back to his early days on
Pallimustus, desperately trying to hide the vulnerability he felt. Confidence
was something with which he had taken a hard ‘fake it until you make it’
approach. He had hidden his fear and confusion by making everyone else
fearful and confused, veering manically between movie monster impressions
and babbling nonsense.
Somewhere along the way, the version of himself that was cranked up to
eleven had stopped being a mask. As he prepared to become more vulnerable
than he ever had, it was time to find out if he had the resolve; if he’d finally
made it or, deep down, he was still just faking it. This would, quite literally,
announce himself to the world. No hiding behind bad manners, manic
behaviour or thirty-year-old television references. His soul would be on
display for all to see, allies and enemies alike.
When Gordon had suggested this, Jason had recognised the value.
Especially after his abject failure to get Gordon’s butterflies up and running,
this was the only way for Jason to make a substantive impact on the wider
battle. Despite his self-assurances that he was happy just being one more
adventurer, it never occurred to him not to do something outrageous and
stupid to help sway the battle on a wider scale.
While Gordon’s new ritual magic was unquestionably powerful, Jason
could already see reasons it would never replace the ritual magic he already
knew. Firstly, the complexity was absurd. Instead of relatively simple
diagrams that could be drawn on a flat surface, these rituals were three-
dimensional structures. Without a power like Clive’s to draw them in the air,
anyone using them would need to assemble actual sculptures.
The real killer, though, was in how the rituals were powered. Ordinary
rituals drew on ambient magic, meaning that all most rituals needed was to
not be in a magical dead zone. Gordon’s rituals required a different source.
That had been the reality core energy inside Jason for Gordon’s first ritual,
but he was definitely not trying that again. He didn’t need that level of power
anyway, as this new ritual was far more efficient. This time, he was going to
do something that Dawn had explicitly told him not to: tap into his astral
gate.
The astral gate inside his soul was, along with the astral throne, one of the
things that fundamentally changed Jason’s nature. They were the tools of
astral kings, who forged their very souls into physical universes, creating
domains where their power was unassailable and all-but-unlimited.
Dawn had told him that he should experiment with the astral throne,
which governed physical aspects, while leaving the astral gate alone. It
tapped into the deep astral, the infinite plane of raw magic and dimensional
forces that Jason was far from ready to handle. After his first time tapping
into it had left him convalescing for months, she had advised him to leave it
be until he had ranked up. Preferably, all the way to diamond. That it had
taken him months after she left before he completely ignored her warning
was something of a personal triumph.
She hadn’t been wrong, and he knew it. The astral space was the sea on
which every universe in the cosmos sailed. What would opening the gate to
that infinite power do?
“Explode me like an overfilled water balloon, probably.”
“Mr Asano, you’re talking to yourself again,” Shade said as he emerged
from Jason’s cloak to float next to him.
“I know,” Jason said. “I’m a little distracted trying to use a giant alien
magic ritual. Which looks awesome, thank you, Gordon.”
“The looks are not the point, Mr Asano,” Shade said.
Jason turned his gaze from the glowing ritual sphere to look at Shade
from under raised eyebrows. Despite being a blank-faced shadow with just
enough softly glowing white to imply a butler’s tuxedo, Shade managed to
look embarrassed.
“Apologies, Mr Asano; I’m not quite sure what came over me.”
“It’s a big day,” Jason told him. “Just don’t let it happen again.”
Jason relaxed some of his built-up tension at the banter with Shade, but
strain and worry still marked his expression. Around them, the orrery
clamoured for power like an insistent pet at mealtime. This was his last
chance to back out.
“What do you think, Shade? Do I tap into the astral gate and risk getting
completely wrecked?”
“You know the price for what you are about to do, Mr Asano. You’ve
paid it before. Channelling more power than you can handle has hurt you in
the past, but I’m not telling you anything you don’t know. It isn’t the first
time you’ve made this choice. You’re just wasting time now when we both
know that this isn’t really a choice for you.”
“It kind of is.”
“We don’t have the time for you to lie to me, Mr Asano, let alone
yourself. I’ve seen you choose between the safety of others and the safety of
yourself time and time again. Stop dithering and get to work.”
“Strict nanny,” Jason said with a chuckle.
He sighed, nodded and closed his eyes as he pushed his senses into the
orrery. This was not a simple amplification ritual that would passively affect
his aura, and he had to feed his aura into it, like loading a cannon. It was a
simple enough process, using the same fundamental aura control techniques
that Farrah had taught him years earlier.
Jason was connecting with the ritual, which was far more reactive than an
ordinary one. He was loading it with his aura, but that was the cannonball and
it needed the gunpowder. The orrery was hungry and ambient mana was not
what it needed. Jason reached into his soul, sending his will through his
spiritual realm to where his astral gate rested. He understood its functions
only a little more than he did Gordon’s ritual magic, but he didn’t need to.
Today, all he had to do was open it.
Jason’s spirit realm had been tapping into the infinite power of the deep
astral since before it became a place that others could enter. It started as a
trickle of power, replacing his need to feed himself spirit coins or magically
rich food. Beyond that gentle, passive stream, drawing on the astral for any
more power than that had not been an option. Then came the astral gate. The
hole in the wall through which power trickled had now become a tap. And a
tap could be opened.
He reached out with his will to open the astral gate the barest sliver. It
was the tiniest gap he could manage, and yet a torrent of raw magic geysered
into his soul. Like drinking from a fire hose, his senses were overwhelmed, as
all he could sense was the spray of it striking him like a weapon. Although
the impact was spiritual, he almost fell from the sky in his disorientation.
That would drop him out of the orrery and collapse the ritual.
He steeled his resolve, concentrating on shaping himself into a conduit,
feeding power into Gordon’s ravenous orrery. He immediately understood
that if he didn’t have that outlet, the magic would have ravaged him.
Attempting to use the same method to fuel his essence abilities or ordinary
rituals would probably kill him, with neither being designed for that kind of
power.
Even with the outlet of the orrery, Jason struggled to remain conscious.
The power pounded its way through his soul, and as his soul was also his
body, he felt it as a physical impact. He shook like an old pipe with too much
water pressure, his eyes glowing bright like beacons.
The orrery also shone brighter and brighter. The sigils and lines of the
central sphere blurred, melding together and hiding Jason’s presence,
transmuting into a heatless orange sun, stained with ominous swirls of dark
blue. The spheres orbiting it also turned solid and took on the familiar
nebulous eye shape of Gordon’s orbs.
Jason’s aura didn’t blast out immediately, the orrery building up power
like a charging battery. As the source of that charge, Jason floated within the
sun, now inundated in blue and orange light. He clenched his fists, holding on
as magic continued to explode through him. He maintained a tenuous grasp
on lucidity, tapping into meditation techniques to maintain a grip on reality.
Even so, his mind was scattered, odd thoughts popping in and out. He
absently compared the sensations he was feeling to getting a colonic
irrigation from a hurricane and started brainstorming business names for the
service.
Jason was barely clinging to sanity by the time the orrery was fully
powered. He closed the astral gate more from instinct than conscious
command, drooping in the air as he felt like a cored apple. Then the orrery
flared to life and Jason snapped back to alertness. He felt his soul pulse like a
heartbeat, swelling with each thump.
The aura projection rituals Jason had experienced before were just that:
projections. They cast an image, compared to now where Jason felt like he
was genuinely expanding, spreading out over the city. It reminded him of
when he had formed his spiritual domains, taking over the transformation
zones and remaking them in his image.
This was a declaration. Jason’s soul was showing everyone exactly who
and what it was. His aura flooded the city, even the areas where gold- and
diamond-rankers held sway. He was not taking over the territory, but simply
announcing himself. It was not the formation of a new spirit domain—yet, his
mind added, and he scolded himself for the thought. He hoped Knowledge
wouldn’t tell Dominion about the stray thought.
There was a moment of stillness across the city as the fighting stopped. It
was a fleeting instant, less than a second, and then the adventurers,
messengers and monsters went back to thrashing one another. But in that
instant, something had changed. The summoned monsters became erratic,
their summoners struggling to keep them under control. As for the
messengers, some became hesitant, but many more became enraged, thrown
into a berserker frenzy by what they had just sensed. Some attacked their
opponents with renewed vigour, while others left their own battles to hunt
down the source of the aura.
In any case, Jason had succeeded in his goal. Whether cowed or inflamed,
the harmonic interlinking of messenger auras had been disrupted, not just in
the entertainment district but across the city. The adventurer commanders
didn’t waste the opportunity, pushing themselves onto the front foot. The
messenger auras weren’t gone, but they were no longer a unified front. As for
the messengers themselves, they were not thinking tactically, which the better
adventurers made the most of.
Unfortunately for the adventurers, their leaders had held their nerve. The
gold-rankers were simply too strong to fall under Jason’s influence and were
screaming orders and dominating their silver-rank kin, pulling them into line
before they gave away too much of an advantage.
In the entertainment district, the orrery faded away, dissolving into the air
as Jason floated back to the ground. Jason landed, disoriented, as he looked at
his hands held out in front of him, the fingers flexing open and closed.
“How are you holding up?” Shade asked him.
Jason turned with a confused expression before his eyes focused. He
looked back at his hands.
“I’m fine,” he said. “I mean, barely standing up, but I’m pretty sure that
all I need is a good rest. I think I’ve finally hammered my own soul so much
that it’s gotten used to the abuse.”
His expression creased into a scowl.
“That doesn’t make me sound good.”
96
HERETIC

T HERE WAS A SINGLE DIAMOND - RANKER AMONGST THE MESSENGER FORCES ,


Mah Go Schaat. He had no interest in the astral king’s goals, and longed for
the day he would no longer have to take the woman’s directives. He was
already powerful enough that she could only ask so much of him, and he gave
no more than was strictly required. He was still bound to her service,
however, until he finally found the path to astral king for himself. In the
meantime, he was stuck servicing her agenda, as delivered through her Voice
of the Will, Jes Fin Kaal.
He was under no requirement to handle any issues below diamond-rank.
In his current deployment, this meant countering the native diamond-rankers
when they participated in raids on the messenger strongholds. Now that the
messengers were the ones on the attack, he would be part of it. The diamond-
rank adventurers would doubtlessly participate in the defence of their city,
meaning that Schaat was obligated to join the attack.
The natives had two diamond-rankers. They were weak for the rank, but
Schaat was not a fool. He knew that even the weakest diamond-ranker was
one of the deadliest entities in any world, even if they weren’t a messenger.
He had no intention of taking them lightly, and if the attack plan had not
involved softening them up with an apocalypse beast, he would not have
participated at all. His obligations to the astral king did not include suicide
missions, which meant that Jes Fin Kaal had been careful to hide that this
mission was exactly that.
Schaat did not realise the duplicity of the voice until he had breached the
barrier from above and his senses spread across the city. He didn’t care about
the operation, or how it served the astral king’s goals. Beyond what the astral
king demanded of him, Schaat didn’t care at all. Even so, using four life-
forge gates to attack this unimportant city struck him as wasteful. He had
wondered what the voice saw in the place that was worth the expenditure, but
not enough to interact with his lesser and ask. It was only after he breached
the barrier from above that he realised he should have.
With the barrier stained blue and covered in monsters like bees on
honeycomb, he could not see inside. Neither did his formidable magical
senses reach through the barrier, such was the strength of such a formidable
emplacement. The presence of the garuda had been hidden from him.
That the garuda was here now, right as the genesis egg was activated, was
too staggering a coincidence. Someone who knew about the egg must have
leaked that information at just the right time to coincide with the attack. As a
result, the diamond-rankers had been spared from pushing into that chaotic
clash.
That left the question of what anyone got from leaking that information.
The answer, to Schaat’s mind, was obvious: it got him. He was inside the
barrier, now, with two diamond-rankers to deal with. As for who had set it
up, that was equally obvious.
While the management of the astral king’s local operations fell to Jes Fin
Kaal, she was ultimately a gold-ranker, Voice of the Will or not. She had
neither the power nor the right to overrule Schaat on almost any matter,
should he take an interest. Nor could she make major decisions without
passing them by him. He had been willing to overlook the costly life-forge
gates because he liked that she didn’t bother him with every little thing. But
he now understood that he should have paid more attention.
Schaat had been expecting the native diamond-rankers to have expended
significant resources fighting the naga genesis egg, making them easy
pickings for Schaat to deal with. Instead, he found a gods-bedamned garuda
eating the egg like it was breakfast, the remains of countless serpents
demonstrating the epic battle it had waged on the egg’s spawn to reach that
point. Even now, giant serpents attacked the garuda while smaller ones
rushed off into the city. The garuda allowed it for the moment as it finished
off the egg, tearing chunks off with its beak, which would cut off the serpents
at the source.
The entire raid was a trap. It was an assassination attempt disguised as a
city invasion, so that Schaat would die and Jes Fin Kaal would no longer be
under his thumb.
It grated, but did not surprise, that the astral king permitted this. The
Voice of the Will would never go after a diamond-ranker without her
approval, however deniable the plan might be. Schaat avoided politics
entirely, so he had no idea what schemes Kaal and the astral king were
working on. He was focused on becoming an astral king himself, but clearly,
he had been remiss in his narrow focus. While he had been in study, she had
obviously been making back-handed deals that would forestall any backlash
from the upper-tier messengers at the attempt to kill him off. Arranging the
death of a diamond-ranker was no small thing, even if it was unlikely to stick.
Schaat’s first thought had been to abandon the raid. The barrier breach
was right there, as he had just made it. But that, in itself, was a trap. He was
obligated to participate in the attack because of the diamond-rank adventurers
and the garuda’s presence didn’t change that. Kaal would deny arranging
events, and now that Schaat had joined the fray, flight would be seen as
cowardice. Kaal could claim he fled in fear and have him neatly removed
from authority, which equally got her what she wanted. If anything, that was
an ideal outcome for her, as it avoided any chance of backlash from getting
him killed.
Only if Schaat could prove she arranged everything would he have a case
to defend his reputation, and it would not entirely erase the sting of having
fled. Kaal was also not sloppy enough to leave threads for him to pull on after
the fact. If things had reached this stage, he was certain she had already
cleaned up after herself.
That left Schaat with an unenviable choice. If he left, he would be safe
but disgraced. While he did not enjoy his responsibilities, the authority that
came with them was essential to his efforts in becoming an astral king. If he
was branded a coward, his status as a diamond-ranker would hold less
weight, leaving him even more subject to the astral king’s control.
The only option that remained was to fight. Fortunately, the garuda would
not participate. He was here for the serpents and no garuda would fight on
Kaal’s behalf. Schaat imagined the garuda had seen through Kaal’s
manipulations and only gone along with them enough to get what he wanted.
Kaal would get no more out of him, of that Schaat was certain.
That still left two diamond-rank adventurers. Schaat had clashed with
both in the past and was confident that he could deal with either one alone,
but not both together. They knew his strength as well, and working as a pair
in their own territory, they would be able to fight him to a stalemate. For
them, keeping him from rampaging through their gold-rankers was enough.
This was not a situation where Schaat could kill one quickly and move on
to the other before the first revived. Even if the one he killed lacked a power
to accelerate his resurrection, there was no way to kill a diamond-ranker
quickly. It was why the high-rank effects of assassination powers moved
away from damage and into escape prevention and revival negation.
Killing diamond-rankers took planning. Getting them to stay dead was
often the result of decades, if not centuries, of elaborate plotting. Schaat was
confident that even if he died here, the most Kaal could have arranged was
for his resurrection to be delayed, not shut down entirely. That would have
been too traceable, and all she needed was him gone long enough to carry out
her plans, whatever they were. Whether he was trapped in death for a while
or disgraced into irrelevance, she got what she wanted.
He wasn’t going to let that happen.
Schaat still had certain advantages. Even if he was just stumbling onto
Kaal’s schemes, by analysing them he would be able to discern her strengths
and weaknesses. Some were easy enough to infer already. She wouldn’t be
able to get the garuda or the diamond-rank adventurers to actively participate
in her plans as that would be too easy to trace back to her. Instead, she would
have had to align their agendas with hers, which could only go so far.
Schaat considered the people in play. The garuda knew better than to
interfere too heavily in a universe the World-Phoenix had isolated from the
wider cosmic community. Although they were famously individualistic, they
would not fly in the face of a great astral being’s agenda the way the
messengers would.
The World-Phoenix would not object to it hunting down the naga genesis
egg, as that was their purview. It would even allow some nudging of locals in
one direction or another, in moderation, but starting a war with the
messengers was too far. The messengers had paid a price for defying the
World-Phoenix and invading this world that the garuda would not. As for the
diamond-rank adventurers, they would be satisfied if Schaat left their city,
having no need to see him dead.
The path to frustrating Jes Fin Kaal’s plans, then, was to stall. He
couldn’t ignore the diamond-rank adventurers or the voice would rightly
claim dereliction of responsibility. But he didn’t have to kill them, or even
really hurt them. All he had to do was occupy them, keeping them off the
gold-rank messengers. So long as he did that, he could ignore everything else
and then withdraw with the rest of the messenger forces at the end of the raid.
He would accomplish no more than the bare minimum in assisting the
raid, making sure the diamond-rankers were occupied and no more. He had
no investment in the operation even before it turned out to be a pretence to
kill him. If he came out unscathed, and the voice claimed he hadn’t done
enough, he could simply state that the adventurers were too challenging. No,
why sacrifice his pride over it? He would claim that the voice’s plan was
flawed. If anything, the more messengers that died, the worse Jes Fin Kaal
looked. So long as those deaths weren’t laid at his door, it was the first step in
turning the tables on Kaal and having her removed.
He wouldn’t be allowed to kill her outright, as she belonged to an astral
king. But this was the start of a path by which he could reveal her
machinations and duplicities, forcing the astral king to revoke her protection.
It meant dirtying his hands in politics, but after this, he would do just that. He
could wash them clean in her blood when she was the one disgraced and he
was finally free to kill her.
Schaat engaged the diamond-rank adventurers, as was required. He was
overtly cautious, his opponents quickly realising that he was stalling for time.
They were suspicious of diamond-rank reinforcements, at first, but eventually
realised the truth: that he wanted to leave the city as much as they wanted
him to go.
Both sides still clashed. Schaat had to keep up appearances and the
adventurers would not leave him be in case his disinterest was a ploy. They
took no incautious chances, fully expecting a no-score draw once the raid was
done. If they could avoid a diamond-ranker rampaging through the city, they
would. The garuda was closer to fighting for them than not, and yet had done
more damage than all the messengers and their summoned monsters
combined.
The intermittent combat, with neither side overcommitting, left Schaat
with the spare attention to watch the city with his magical senses. Some of
the more powerful gold-rankers—from either side—might have been tempted
by the voice to intervene, despite the danger. Reaching diamond rank was not
as hard as transcending it, but it was still a threshold that most failed to cross.
The insight an astral king’s servant could offer, garnered from her mistress,
would sway the hearts of many.
There was no sign of further duplicity, however, and Schaat did not
expect it to appear. The temptation to keep adding more complexity to a plan
was how it unravelled, and Schaat acknowledged that Kaal was not so
foolish. But the gold-rank adventurers seemed to be paying their diamond-
ranked compatriots very little attention, concentrating on the defence of their
city. As for the messengers, they were revelling in getting back at the servant
races. Schaat could only agree that the servant races needed to be shown their
places after having the temerity to attack messenger strongholds.
Marek Nior Vargas caught his eye, the gold-rank commander seeming to
have as little interest in the attack’s success as Schaat himself. Schaat saw the
man as a potential rival, should he ever reach diamond. He was smart,
straightforward and mostly avoided politics. He also hated Jes Fin Kaal,
meaning that of all the commanders, he was the least likely to be part of her
plot. Schaat didn’t entirely dismiss the possibility, though, as strange things
were happening in the commander’s battlefield.
Although remaining slightly wary of Marek, Schaat dismissed the strange
activity, as it was only occurring amongst the silver-rankers. While some
gold-ranker could potentially pose a threat, however negligible, nothing from
two ranks below could be a danger. Nothing from two ranks down could even
surprise him, or so he thought until he sensed something in Marek’s zone. It
was close to the ground, some manner of ritual magic, but not of a kind that
should exist in this world.
It was a kind of magic he had only encountered in his studies of
transcendent power, in his pursuit of astral king status. More astoundingly—
he would say impossibly, if not sensing it at that very moment—it was silver
rank. How was anyone in this world, even the diamond-rankers, using
intrinsic-mandate magic?
“Kaal, what did you do?” he muttered with a grin. It didn’t matter what
she was scheming now, because this was a step too far.
“No,” he corrected himself, realising that Kaal was not behind it. There
was no way she would risk getting caught dabbling with intrinsic-mandate
magic as a Voice of the Will. Even if she was careful and used foes of the
messengers as proxies, it was too dangerous. If the astral king she served
found her meddling with a different higher-order power, her privileged
position and everything that came with it would be instantly revoked.
This made whoever or whatever was using that magic a curiosity. Not a
threat, as it was still silver ranked, but perhaps a warning of greater threats to
come. He wondered if the garuda was behind it. It wouldn’t make a lot of
sense, but the messengers, the garuda and the naga genesis egg were the only
cosmic-level forces in play. If it was actually coming from some local silver-
ranker, that represented something outside of Schaat’s knowledge, experience
or studies.
Schaat waited for the magic to trigger, hoping the result would give him
more clues. If he was smart about it, he could potentially leverage this to get
his revenge on Jes Fin Kaal. He absently wondered how they were even
feeding it the required power. Examining it with his senses, he discovered it
was some manner of aura projection ritual, and immediately wondered why.
It would only be able to affect a silver-rank aura, and what silver-rank aura
was worth that kind of magic?
The answer exploded across the city, blanketing every battlefield inside
the barrier. It was the most comprehensive aura projection Schaat had ever
encountered, fully revealing every nuance of the projected aura. And the aura
itself was startling, from the strength relative to its rank to the scars that
marked it. They spoke of spiritual battles no silver-ranker should have
encountered, let alone endured. Each one told a story of tribulations faced
and overcome. Gods and great astral beings; unwinnable fights and world-
shaking resolve.
There was more to it as well. The base nature of the aura was a grab-bag
of cosmic forces. The gestalt nature of the messengers and the nascent realm
of an astral king. The spiritual domains of divine territory and the intrinsic
mandate of the great astral beings.
Schaat was staggered at what he sensed. This was the embryo of
something beyond monstrous. It was a power that crossed cosmic lines, a
myth from before the sundering. He doubted that anyone else on the
battlefield even realised what they were sensing.
There were five diamond-rank beings in the city, counting the garuda and
the remnants of the egg. Normally, any aura ranked below theirs would
shrivel back like a withering plant. A silver-rank aura should be washed away
like words in the sand as the tide rolled in, yet it did not. It could certainly not
push back such auras, but it shared the space they occupied, utterly
unyielding.
Schaat knew that the messengers throughout the city would be rattled.
They wouldn’t understand all of what the aura contained, but what they could
was enough. That it possessed their gestalt physical-spiritual nature meant
that it shared their inherent superiority. Some might even think it was one of
them.
That realisation was nothing, however, next to the unmistakable nature of
an astral king. Mortals might not recognise it, but no messenger could miss it,
even if the astral realm behind it was incomplete. It was an astral king, at
silver rank, flying in the face of everything the messengers knew. It mocked
their ambitions, everything they strove for. Only those who knew the origin
of their kind would realise what the owner of that aura was. But as Schaat
himself had only uncovered that secret in his studies of transcendent power,
he was likely the only messenger on the field that did.
Across the city, messengers froze in place. Even some of the gold-rankers
were affected. It wasn’t any kind of magical compulsion, and it certainly
couldn’t suppress their interlinked auras. It was simple shock. The very
existence of whatever was behind that aura was a challenge to everything the
messengers believed about themselves, their ambitions and the superiority
that defined them.
Schaat was past the blind indoctrination of his youth. He knew the origins
of his kind and the lies that governed their society. He knew that the
messengers, as a whole, were not inherently superior. Superiority was for
individuals, like him. But for those blinded by self-aggrandisement, being
confronted by someone that seemed to share their nature, yet was an astral
king at silver rank, in defiance of it? He knew that for those without the will
to adapt, it would be an almost religious experience, and not a positive one.
Messengers neither worshipped gods nor venerated great astral beings.
They obeyed the astral kings, but did not pray to them. Messengers
worshipped themselves and their faith was towering. But for messengers all
across the city, that tower had just shifted at the foundations.
Although it felt like an eternity, the strange stillness that spread over the
city lasted only a fleeting moment. Barely a second went by before the
messengers were moving again, most now overtaken with rage. The gold-
rankers held themselves together, but many of the silver-rankers were
behaving strangely.
A few scattered handfuls were listless, not resuming the fight. Around
half of the silver-rankers were doing the opposite and going berserk. Some
left their battlefields to seek out the source of the aura. Others were too
caught up in fights and launched themselves at their enemies in frothing zeal.
The messengers, who had no religion, had found their first heretic.
97
A N E X T R E M E LY A N N OY I N G C ATA LY S T

S OPHIE AND H UMPHREY RETURNED TO THE RELATIVE SAFETY OF O NSLOW ’ S


hollow flying shell. Jason performing some insane act was an inevitability,
and once he had, the monsters went mad. Some continued towards the
ground, the control of the summoners managing to hold. Others snapped the
leash and fled back up the way they had come, or flew about randomly in a
confused frenzy.
“I have a feeling we should get to Jason,” Humphrey announced. “I
suspect that he’ll soon be the centre of some extremely unpleasant attention.”
“We can barely tell which way is up,” Clive said, right as the shell was
rocked by an impact.
“I’m confident we’ll find which way is down if we don’t do something,”
Belinda said as she looked out the side.
“Did a monster just ram us?” Sophie asked.
“Yes,” Neil said, also leaning to peer out and up. “A particularly large
summoned monster has rammed the wind barrier protecting the shell and had
its face shredded for the effort.”
“At least it had a face,” Belinda said. “How is the barrier holding up?”
“Onslow can maintain it so long as I keep feeding him mana,” Clive said.
“The ritual enhancing his ability is inside the shell, so we don’t have to worry
about that unless the monsters use some extremely powerful dispel magic. I
have no idea if the messenger summons can do that.”
“These messenger summons are weird,” Belinda said. “Have you seen the
ones that are just a bunch of metal rings spinning around each other? How do
they even fight?”
“They slowly charge up infrequent but extremely powerful force beam
attacks,” Humphrey said. “I was prioritising any that targeted Onslow, and I
saw Sophie deflecting the others that I didn’t get to.”
Another heavy impact rocked the shell.
“Onslow isn’t indestructible,” Sophie pointed out. “We need to move.”
Clive gave Onslow’s shoulder a reassuring squeeze. His familiar, when
separated from his shell, was a child-sized humanoid tortoise. In that form,
Onslow supplemented his usual elemental attacks with weaponised
adorableness. Stash, who currently looked identical except for a bushy
moustache, handed Onslow half of a salad sandwich.
“Where did you get that?” Neil asked Stash.
“Uncle Jason.”
“Did you just call him Uncle Jason?” Neil asked.
“No,” Stash said with the complete yet casually dismissive conviction of
an inveterate liar.
“Not exactly the most time-critical conversation,” Humphrey told Neil.
“I know. But where was he keeping the sandwich, though?”
“Onslow,” Humphrey said, “please take us down, towards Jason and
Rufus on the ground.”
“Stash doesn’t have a dimensional space,” Neil said.
“We’ve been headed down for a while,” Clive told Humphrey. “It’s just
hard to tell amongst all these summons.”
“Or a dimensional bag,” Neil continued.
“Is anyone else sensing those messenger auras in amongst the monsters?”
Sophie asked.
“Not even a regular bag.”
“We can all sense the messenger auras,” Belinda said. “We’ve been able
to since they started suppressing all the adventurers, and it’s even worse now
half of them have gone berserk.”
“Maybe a discreet satchel? Stash, do you have a satchel?”
“Neil, could you maybe let it go, just for now?” Humphrey asked.
“You know, don’t you?” Neil accused Humphrey. “Does he keep his
sandwiches somewhere disgusting?”
“It could be a shape-shifter thing,” Belinda suggested. “Maybe he shape-
shifts a hidden orifice every time he changes form. A secret flesh crevice.”
“Ew,” Sophie said. “Please never say ‘flesh crevice’ again. That’s gross.”
Belinda gave Sophie a disbelieving look.
“What?” Sophie asked her.
“I once saw you beat a man’s head to pulp using a different man’s head,”
Belinda said.
“So?”
“So, being disgusted by the term flesh crevice seems a little odd after
some of the stuff you’ve done.”
“I just asked you not to say that again.”
“HEY!” Humphrey bellowed. “Can I remind you that there’s still a battle
going on?”
“Oh, yeah,” Belinda said. “Sophie, you said something about the
messengers… Neil, what are you doing?”
Neil and his moustachioed twin looked up guiltily from where they were
peering suspiciously at each other’s bodies.
“What?” they asked simultaneously.
“The messengers,” Sophie said. “They were holding back before Jason’s
little display. Now there are a bunch of them dropping like stones right
towards him. It’s easy to spot them because their auras are spiked with rage.”
They all turned their attention to the auras of the messengers, glowing
like embers amongst the summoned monsters. As Sophie had pointed out, a
good number of them had lit up their auras and started plunging towards the
ground.
“We should move faster,” Humphrey said. “Onslow, can you speed up?”
“He’s a tortoise,” Clive said. “Slow is, dare I say it, kind of his thing.”
“He also flies and shoots lightning bolts, Clive,” Humphrey pointed out.
“I can confidently state that Onslow is superior to the ordinary tortoise.”
“I’ll ask,” Clive said sceptically and turned to Onslow. “What do you say,
little buddy? Can you get us down any faster?”
The diminutive familiar threw his arms up and let out a sound that was
something between a chirp and a cheer. Then the team hit the ceiling in
undignified fashion as the shell dropped like a missile. Only Onslow and
Sophie were the exceptions, with Onslow remaining adhered to the floor as if
glued. As for Sophie, in the instant of acceleration, her reflexes and agility
allowed her to flip and land on the ceiling in a crouch.

Marek Nior Vargas wasn’t happy. There was no longer any denying that the
man he suspected to be Jason Asano actually was. He was also, like an
extremely annoying catalyst, the cause of Marek’s other problems. Asano’s
spectacular reveal meant that the Voice of the Will would have some
uncomfortable questions as to how Marek had failed to notice Asano before
he had blasted his presence across the city.
Marek lamented that he wasn’t a diamond-ranker that could put in the
absolute minimum effort, the way he sensed Mah Go Schaat doing. He would
need to go investigate Asano, as instructed, despite not caring at all about the
man or Jes Fin Kaal’s plans for him. If he was lucky, the voice would deploy
someone herself before he had the chance.
As commander of a portion of the messenger forces, Marek was going to
get his silver-rankers in order. Strictly speaking, Asano was the priority, but
Marek had the discretion to reorder priorities in the field should events grow
sufficiently extreme. With a full third of his messenger subordinates gone
berserk or near-catatonic, he counted that as meeting the sufficiency
threshold.
He proudly noted that none of his personally trained troops had lost their
minds except for Mari Gah Rahnd, and she was always somewhat unique. He
strongly suspected that she was fine, faking a berserk rage so she could rush
down at Asano because it seemed interesting. If she wasn’t the best fighter he
had by far, Marek would have kicked her from his personal cadre long ago.
Marek ordered the messengers that had retained their equanimity into
action, sending them to round up the others. He did not begrudge the frenzied
messengers their rage as he fully understood it. Those who broke, either
driven to fury or left reeling and immobile, were the ones whose worlds had
just been shaken to the core. Astral kings were very big on indoctrinating
fresh messengers, keeping them compliant with promise and purpose.
Once they left the shelter of the astral kingdoms, the sense of superiority
now instilled in the messengers kept them dismissing anything that
contradicted what they had been taught. Marek knew from experience that
without a good leader to help break those dangerous ideas, a messenger was
left with the exact mental fragility that Asano had just exploited.
Despite himself, Marek found him respecting the tactic. Asano had
demonstrated an understanding of both the nature of the messengers and the
exploitable nature of blind faith that was surprising, allowing him to turn that
insight into a weapon. Marek was no uncritical believer in standard
messenger doctrine, but even he was shaken by what the man had shown off.
What Asano demonstrated flew wildly in the face of what freshly created
messengers were taught. Marek had been lucky enough to find himself under
a leader who showed him that the indoctrination was judicious with the truth,
but he never imagined the reality he saw now. While he accepted that the
truth had been bent, he at least believed in the path of power laid out before
them. Asano was a living impossibility, showing what may well be an
alternate pathway not just for himself, but for any messenger that could snare
those secrets.
Marek felt the temptation to go after Asano himself and quickly realised
that he was not the only one to have that thought. All around the city, he
sensed gold-ranked messengers abandoning their stations and heading in
Asano’s direction, their adventurer counterparts either charging after them or
exploiting their absence. None of that compared to Mah Go Schaat, however,
the diamond-ranker moving so fast, he almost vanished from Marek’s senses.
It was a speed that, for most practical purposes, was the next best thing to
teleportation.

Mah Go Schaat was certain that the thoughts going through his mind were
replicated in most, if not all of the gold-rank messengers in the city. They all
knew that the Voice of the Will had placed the utmost priority on Asano, and
it was becoming evident why. Even if they didn’t understand what he was,
the way Schaat did, they saw that he represented: a path to power that was
alike, yet also different from that known to the messengers. In difference,
there was knowledge, and that knowledge might help them unlock the secrets
that would lead them to become astral kings.
Jes Fin Kaal had not told Schaat about Asano, but little escaped the
attention of his diamond-rank senses. As soon as the aura projection
happened, he heard the name on the lips of the gold-rankers under instruction
to capture the man. Many of the gold-rankers were already moving, but he
suspected they might not be so eager to share Asano with Kaal, now that his
potential had been revealed.
That the gold-rankers had the jump on him mattered nothing to Schaat.
The busy city would obstruct them, however little that might be, but it was a
problem he did not share. No gold-ranker was a match for his speed and he
could barrel through any obstacle like it was vapour.
Schaat started to move and the world slowed down around him. The
effect wasn’t a power but a passive effect of his diamond-rank speed. His
perception accelerated to match his pace so he didn’t just crater into the
ground. He flew through the forest of monsters, messengers and adventurers,
the two diamond-rank adventurers moving in pursuit. He stopped for no
obstacle; any monsters, messengers or adventurers he struck turned into
blood mist without so much as bumping him slightly off angle. He passed
through a building, leaving only a dust-filled tunnel in his wake.
He found Asano standing on the ground, the remnant energy of his
intrinsic-mandate ritual hanging in the air above him. When he stopped, the
world should have returned to a normal pace as his perception normalised to
a practical speed. Instead, everything that was moving slowed even more, the
world around him coming to a halt.
“Mah Go Schaat,” a voice said from behind him.
He didn’t sense anything, which was terrifying for a diamond-ranker. He
turned, focusing his attention on the woman standing there. With something
to focus on, his magical senses managed to pick her up, albeit barely. As best
he could tell, she was a half-transcendent, having reached the maximal stage
of diamond rank. That left Schaat in the extremely unusual position of
coming second in power.
He looked around at a world that had completely frozen, at least to his
subjective senses. This woman had accelerated both of their time streams
enough that they were operating outside of normal time. His gaze ran up and
down her body, which was that of an elf in simple tan pants and a pale green
blouse. Her hair was a lighter brown than her skin, and flecked with green.
Her eyes were amber, bright to the point that they almost seemed to be
glowing.
He frowned as his slow examination ended without his time-stream
returning to normal. She seemed satisfied to wait.
“Your ability to manipulate time is good,” he said. “Too good. You serve
the Sand.”
“I do,” she said. Her was voice soft and melodious. Schaat could not help
but feel that she was tamping down a natural playfulness to her tone.
“What do you want?” he asked.
“A favour.”
“What favour do you want from me?”
“The favour isn’t from you, Mah Go Schaat, nor is this the time to request
it. Leave Asano be. Turn around and leave this city.”
“There is more than I coming for him.”
“The rest he can handle.”
“Are you sure? It’s a lot of people who are a lot more powerful than he
is.”
“It always is, and he always manages.”
“Who are you, and what do you want with him?”
“I am Raythe, and I have told you as much of my intentions as you need
to know. Leave or die.”
“I’m not so easy to kill, even for someone like you.”
“That’s alright,” she told him. “I have time.”

Jason and Rufus were looking up at the sky along with the elven affliction
specialist, Elseth Culie. There were other adventurers scattered around them,
having taken shelter from the messenger auras in the protective bubble of
Jason’s spiritual aegis. Monsters were still coming down, although in far
lesser amounts, and seemed to be focusing on any area except where Jason
was.
Elseth quickly directed the adventurers to spread out and fight. Those
who had not been shielded by Jason were still woozy from the messenger
auras, and it impeded their combat effectiveness. Elseth herself was already
sending out affliction-laden spells.
“The messengers will get them back under control sooner rather than
later,” Rufus said. “We need to be ready for a fresh surge.”
“I still don’t understand what just happened,” Elseth said between
incantations.
“You remember how I said I was a cook?” Jason asked her. “This was
basically a Friday night fry-up, except it was war. I grabbed what I had,
chucked it together and did my best.”
“That was terrible,” Rufus told him. “That analogy doesn’t land at all.”
“I know,” Jason said with a grimace. “I could tell while I was saying it,
but I thought I could turn it around. Be cool with understated mysteriousness,
you know?”
“They can’t all be winners,” Rufus said. “I think the monster attacks will
be more intense than ever, once the summons are back under messenger
control. And if I can sense the messengers that are coming, I know you can.”
“I don’t know if I can handle them,” Jason admitted. “I never did get the
butterfly thing working.”
“There is one thing you could try,” Rufus said.
“What’s that?”
“Stop spending the whole battle trying to get one power from one of your
familiars to do all the work for you and do it yourself.”
“You make me sound like a slacker.”
“Fighting smarter rather than harder is a good thing, Jason, but don’t let
yourself become obsessed with any specific tactic. You lose the big picture
and start overlooking good opportunities. Stop messing about with something
that doesn’t work and remember how you used to do things before your
extradimensional friend started shooting butterflies at people.”
“You two are extremely strange,” Elseth told them.
“No, I’m normal,” Rufus said.
“If you were normal, Rufus, you would have pants that tight enchanted so
they’re flexible in a fight. Which you’re about to have, by the way. There’s a
lot of stuff coming, and not just from our battlefield. Gold-rank messengers
and adventurers are bearing down on us, and the diamond-rank messenger
just vanished.”
Just as he said it, a messenger corpse appeared at their feet, still radiating
diamond-rank power. Rufus and Elseth immediately staggered back, the aura
forceful even in death. Jason raised his eyebrows, then grinned.
“Well, that’s the biggest freebie I’ve gotten since the World-Phoenix
token.”
“What do you think happened?” Rufus asked.
“I think we just got deus-ex-machinised, but I’m going to take the win
and leave the how and why to later.”
He held a hand out over the corpse and chanted a spell.
“As your life was mine to reap, so your death is mine to harvest.”
Rufus watched transcendent energy flow out of the body and into Jason
as the corpse dissolved into rainbow smoke. The dark image of a bird,
speckled with starlight, appeared above Jason, growing stronger as he drained
more of the corpse’s astounding remnant life force.
“I don’t think his life was actually yours to reap, Jason.”
“It’s a spell, Rufus. I just have to say it; it doesn’t have to be true.”
“That’s an attitude you’ve thoroughly taken to heart, haven’t you?”
98
T E A C H I N G M O M E NT

M ESSENGERS AND ADVENTURERS ALIKE RUSHED TOWARDS J ASON . F OR THE


highest-ranked people, traversing the city was not a lengthy exercise, and the
diamond-ranker adventurers pursuing Mah Go Schaat arrived first.
The diamond-rankers were both elves, a man and a woman. Her name
was Allayeth and his was Charist. They found Schaat’s corpse, dissolving
into rainbow smoke. A sharp-featured silver-ranker was extracting and
devouring the remnant life-force. As he drained the diamond-ranker’s power,
a dark shape looming over him grew more and more distinct. It was quickly
becoming void black, speckled with stars.
“Star phoenix,” Allayeth whispered. She had heard of them but not seen
one; they were creatures of the wider cosmos, not native to Pallimustus.
“What’s going on here?” Charist demanded.
“I just got food delivery,” the silver-ranker said. “You know how it is.
You’re fighting a battle, you get peckish, but you don’t have time to cook.”
He gestured at the monster-filled sky above them.
“Because of the battle, obviously,” he continued. “I have to say, I was
hesitant about raw messenger, but it was totally worth going diamond rank.
There really is satisfaction to be found in top-quality ingredients.”
“You’re making jokes?” Charist asked incredulously.
“You get used to it,” another silver-ranker called out. “Sorry about him.”
The second speaker was a dark-skinned and extremely handsome human.
He and a third silver-ranker had backed off from the intensity of the dead
diamond-ranker’s aura. The man devouring the life energy from the corpse
seemed unaffected. A glimpse at his aura revealed that it was the same one
that had been projected over the city, sending the messengers and their
summoned monsters into a frenzy.
The first man turned around to shout back at him while still draining the
immense life force of the messenger.
“Don’t apologise for me!”
“Then don’t be rude,” the handsome man called back. “These are busy
people with a lot going on right now. They were probably chasing whoever
that messenger you’re eating was.”
“I’m not eating him! Look, the life force is going in through my hand.”
“If you want to avoid having to explain so often that you don’t eat people,
maybe don’t make food delivery jokes.”
“Okay, that is fair,” the first man acknowledged.
The two diamond-rankers shared a confused look. They were used to the
silent adoration of silver-rankers, who were honoured simply to be in their
presence. That was the reaction they were getting from the third silver-ranker,
an elf. She looked equal parts in awe of them and horrified at the other two.
The diamond-rankers turned to her.
“What is your name, adventurer?” Allayeth asked her.
“Elseth Culie, Lady Allayeth.”
“A local girl,” Charist said. “Your father is known to me. Convey my
regards.”
“It will be his honour and mine, Lord Charist,” Elseth said, bobbing her
head nervously.
“What is happening here?” Allayeth asked.
“This man is called Miller, although I don’t think that is his true name.
He and his familiar worked a ritual using some manner of magic I have never
seen before. Then the messenger arrived, dead, moments before you. Miller
proceeded to drain its life force.”
“I do appreciate you turning up,” Miller said cheerfully. He was still
draining silver-gold life force, the messenger’s reserves seeming limitless,
even in death.
“Should we stop him?” Charist asked his companion.
“No,” Allayeth responded.
“It is unlikely that a silver-ranker can keep the messenger dead,” Charist
said, “but it will likely be some time before the messenger reconstitutes if his
life force is drained entirely.”
“Will the silver-ranker be able to hold all of that power?”
“He shouldn’t be able to contain what he’s taken already, yet he seems
unperturbed. I imagine one of his essence abilities allows his life force
reserves to expand when he drains excess.”
“Yep,” the man going by Miller announced. “I guess I’m no mystery at
all to you lot.”
They looked at him draining the power of a diamond-ranker whose
seemingly instantaneous death at his feet remained wholly unexplained. The
man wore a cloak that matched the starry void of the star phoenix image
forming above his head.
“If the messenger is dead,” Charist said, “then we are free to go after their
gold-rankers.”
“A lot of their gold-rankers are coming here,” Allayeth pointed out. “Our
presence is the only reason they haven’t arrived already.”
“So, what’s it going to be?” Miller asked them. “Are you going to use me
as bait and clean up the gold-rankers that come after me? I’ve been bait
before, it’s cool. You should probably run around, intervening where the
fight’s not going so well for our side, though. If you do, I’d appreciate you
leaving us some gold-rankers to fend off theirs.”
Allayeth looked thoughtfully at Miller but spoke to Charist.
“He’s got a point. I was inclined to, as he said, use him as bait, but killing
gold-rankers isn’t why we’re here. The priority is defending the city. Even
with their diamond-ranker dead, they could still break into the bunkers.”
“Very well. Miller, or whatever your name is, you’ll have some questions
to answer when this is done. I will redirect enough gold-rankers here to
achieve parity with the incoming messenger forces, but no more than that. It
is a large city and this is far from the only battleground.”
“Tell me about it. I’ve got a pyramid with a bunch of gold-rank
messengers in one room and a bunch of civilians in another. I’m one quirky
neighbour and twenty-three minutes plus ads short of a hit family sitcom. Oh,
I think this bloke is finally running low.”
The diamond-rankers watched as the last of Mah Go Schaat’s corpse
dissolved into rainbow smoke. Miller finished draining the energy, the image
above him now seeming completely solid. It shrank down, sinking into
Miller’s body.
Jason had drained a lot of life force over the last few years, including from
messengers. None of it prepared him for what came out of the diamond-
ranker.
“Are you alright?” Rufus asked. He was able to move closer now that the
remnants of the messenger and the two diamond-rank adventurers were gone.
Some of the messenger’s aura remained, an echo of his formidable power,
but it was fading fast.
“I’m good,” Jason said, his expression wide-eyed manic.
“It’s just that you look a little intense. Like you’re on something that
maybe you shouldn’t be.”
“Yeah, that checks out,” Jason told him. “That guy’s life force was like
mainlining distilled lightning. In a good way.”

You have drained life force using [Blood Harvest].


Health, mana and stamina have been replenished.

You have exceeded maximum levels of life force, stamina and mana.
Ability [Sin Eater] has temporarily increased your maximum levels
for life force, stamina and mana. These maximums will decline over
time.

You have gained multiple instances of [Blood Frenzy].


Maximum instances of [Blood Frenzy] have been reached.
Additional instances will be converted into [Blood of the Immortal].
You have gained multiple instances of [Blood of the Immortal] from
[Blood Harvest].

You have absorbed physical matter with inherent spiritual properties.


You have accumulated sufficient spiritually active matter to enter a
star phoenix state.

Current star phoenix state availability: 1.


Next star phoenix state readiness: 14.8%

“What was that bird thing?” Rufus asked.


“A visual representation of my ability to self-revive,” Jason said. “I’ve
got another resurrection in the chamber now. I’m just hoping I don’t get
crushed to death by a chunk of falling building and have to use it right away.”
Jason and Rufus looked at each other, then both turned their gazes slowly
upwards.
“It’s fine,” Rufus said with relief. “Still just a bunch of monsters. But
there’s something going on up there. It’s hard to tell through all the monster
auras.”
“It’s gold-rankers,” Jason said. “They’re all clashing in the sky already.
The team is dropping down through that, so I hope they’re okay.”

“It’s getting rough out there,” Humphrey said. “Lindy, time to pull out one of
your tricks.”
“I’ll try and clear up a path, sure,” Belinda said. “Get over to the edge.”
Humphrey moved to the open side of Onslow’s shell and Belinda
conjured a massive, heavy plate into his hands. It was as large as Onslow’s
shell itself and Humphrey had to brace his feet so the weight didn’t tip him
out. Belinda used her Pit of the Reaper ability on it and Humphrey tossed it
down with all his considerable strength. If he hadn’t, it wouldn’t have been
able to outpace the plunging shell.
The plate dropped vertically, its surface containing an aperture to a dark
dimensional pit. Tentacles darted in and out, snatching anything they could
reach and yanking it into the void. Monsters, messengers and adventurers
alike sensed it coming and moved out of the way, clearing Onslow’s shell for
an unmolested descent.
This tactic worked well until they were closing in on the ground and a
messenger directed monsters to swarm the shell, clamping onto it. They
ignored the wind barrier that scraped at them as if they were pushing
themselves into a wheat thresher. Onslow was forced to a halt and even more
monsters piled on. That was when Neil used his Reaper’s Redoubt power.
The team were all drawn into a safe dimensional space as death energy
flooded a massive area centred on their original position.
Onslow’s shell and its occupants reappeared in a cleared airspace, the
survivors of Neil’s ability having fled. Many didn’t make it, having already
been afflicted with Sin from Jason’s aura, making them vulnerable to necrotic
damage. The shell descended once more, finding the battle on the ground as
frenetic as the one in the air, if not more so.
The monsters that were still on task continued to dig into the earth of an
entertainment district that had become unrecognisable. It was now little more
than rubble and excavated pits, monsters digging as adventurers fought not
just them but also the messengers.
Most of the silver-rank messengers that had arrived were operating at or
near ground level, fighting with savage abandon. After spending much of the
battle holding back, they were mad with zeal as they sought out Jason and
fought anyone who impeded their search.

Jason was teleporting across the battlefield so as to spread out the messengers
pursuing him. He led them around the ruins of the entertainment district and
into the path of scattered adventurers. The gold-rankers of both sides
remained in the air, countering each other as they had for much of the battle.
This left the main battle to the silver-rankers, but the golds could not be
ignored. Every so often, a gold from one side or another would fire off a
powerful attack or even break loose, attacking some silvers before returning
to the fight above.
Jason wasn’t just fleeing as he shadow-jumped back and forth. He
frequently doubled back on messengers that he’d already led into
adventurers. Between their distraction and his surprise attacks, he was able to
swiftly leave a slate of afflictions before most had time to react. Enhanced by
Blood Frenzy, Jason’s speed outstripped most silver-rankers.

[Blood Frenzy] (boon, unholy, stacking): Bonus to [Speed] and


[Recovery]. Additional instances have a cumulative effect, up to a
maximum threshold.

Even with his enhanced speed, Jason was still taking hits. This was partly
because he went rampant, ignoring wounds and incoming attacks in pursuit
of getting as many afflictions laid on as possible. The gold-rankers were not
entirely out of the fight either, with one firing a long-range assassination
power that caused Jason’s head to explode. He was staggered but didn’t stop,
still swinging his sword through the brief moment it took his head to grow
back. The life force flooding his body made him, for the immediacy, all but
unkillable. Not only was he flush with life force from draining Mah Go
Schaat, but he also gained more as he went.

[Blood of the Immortal] (boon, healing, unholy, stacking): On


suffering damage, an instance is consumed to grant a powerful but
short-lived heal-over-time effect. Additional instances can be
accumulated but do not have a cumulative effect.

While he did manage to swing his sword without his head, the precision was
significantly lacking. More frustrating for Jason was waiting for his mouth to
grow back. He yelled out a battle cry the moment it was restored.
“‘Tis but a scratch!”
“Maybe draw less attention to yourself,” Rufus suggested through voice
chat.
“No idea what you’re talking about,” Jason responded innocently.
“Someone just blew up your head!”
“No, they didn’t.”
“I just watched it happen.”
“It was just a flesh wound.”
“Yes. The flesh of your entire head.”
“I’ve had worse.”
The messengers pursued Jason around the battlefield as monsters
continued their directive to dig their way down. Adventurers like Elseth Culie
were working to stop them, but the messenger presence made crucial
demands on their time. More often than they would like, they were forced to
face messengers instead of clearing the monsters from their assault on the
underground bunker.
Slowly but surely, the messengers were boxing Jason in. Had their minds
not been clouded with zeal, they might have wondered how they were
managing to herd someone who could teleport that freely. When Jason
decided enough of them were in range, he used his Feast of Absolution
power.
From across the battlefield, the life force of the messengers lit up, as
Jason revoked all the afflictions that had built up on them. Even the ones he
never faced had gained afflictions for each attack they made against an
adventurer. Poison, disease and unholy power were drained from all of them,
bruise-coloured lights of sickly green, bruise purple and ugly yellow. The
afflictions flowed through the air on streams of silver-gold, matching the life
force of the messengers. From above, Jason looked like an eldritch spider,
draining his victims through his arcane webs.
In the place of the removed afflictions, inside Jason’s enemies, he left the
blue, silver and gold glow of transcendent power. It ate them from the inside,
irresistible and all but unstoppable.
Jason was not the only adventurer making a good showing for himself.
Rufus was on a rampage, finally triggering his zone magic that turned the sky
over the battlefield dark, lighting it up with a false moon. Containing all the
power Rufus had been building up since the start of the battle, it fired beams
of immense power, crippling or outright killing messengers. He only
managed a few shots before the power was gone, but his display roused the
adventurer morale. Seeing a solid win heartened the adventurers to push back
against the zealot messengers.
Seeing their forces being overpowered, the gold-rank messengers issued a
directive. The raging zealots weren’t doing a lot of listening, but this was an
order that suited their current state just fine. From the start of the battle, the
adventurers had been wary of the isolating duel powers the messengers
possessed. Suddenly, each of the messengers that had them, which was most,
used them all at once.
Just before they did, a gold-rank messenger had taken note of Onslow’s
shell. Half of Jason’s team was using it as a bunker, even inviting a few
glass-cannon adventurers to join them. The messenger broke free of his
opponent and dropped on the shell like a hammer. It broke apart, sending
adventurers scattering just as the silver-rank messengers were launching their
duel powers.
Only those standing alone could be targeted, or the isolation powers
failed. Humphrey and Jason were both hit, while Sophie dodged and found
Belinda, causing the messenger targeting her to waste his power. Neil was
grabbed by Stash, in the form of a hopping insect that pulled him out of a
messenger’s path.
Clive landed hard after Onslow’s shell shattered. His arms wrapped
around Onslow’s humanoid form, whimpering from having his shell smashed
apart. A silver-rank messenger found him like that and activated his challenge
power, drawing them into a dimensional space. It was clearly an artificial
area, consisting of a flat white circle, floating in a void.
Clive looked up, dazed, just a spear came down and skewered Onslow
through the head.
“Face me, human.”
Clive pushed himself to his feet with his staff, his wand having been lost
somewhere in the breaking of Onslow’s shell. He looked down at his dead
familiar; the vulnerable humanoid form could not resist the messenger’s
spear.
“No familiar,” the messenger sneered. “One look and I can see that you
are a weak spell caster. You will never leave this place.”
Clive looked up at the messenger, blank-faced, then again down at
Onslow.
“Sentimental,” the messenger mocked, then lunged with his spear.
Clive’s staff shifted, and the spear slid along it, making the messenger
slightly off-balance. The end of the staff slipped between the messenger’s
legs and Clive gave it a little leverage that turned the hovering charge into an
ugly tumble.
Clive didn’t follow up as the messenger floated to his feet, more hurt by
the indignity than landing on the ground. Clive looked at him, blank-faced,
took out a recording crystal and tossed it into the air.
“I need to record this,” he told the messenger, his voice flat and
emotionless. “It’s going to be a teaching moment.”
99
R I G I D F L AW S

C LIVE WAS TRAPPED IN A DIMENSIONAL SPACE BY THE DUELLING POWER OF A


messenger. Until one of them was dead, neither was able to leave. The space
was an empty void, the only object being a massive flat disc on which Clive
stood. The remains of his precious familiar, Onslow, lay at his feet.
Facing off against Clive was a spear-wielding messenger whose sneer had
turned into a glare. He had lunged at Clive, only to discover the adventurer
could use his staff for more than blasting force bolts.

Item: [Spell Lance of the Magister] (silver rank [growth], legendary)

The staff of an ancient sorcerer, this weapon is focused on priming


enemies for a potent magical assault (weapon, staff).

Requirements: The power to wield magical tools.


Basic attack: Explosive disruptive-force bolt. Inflicts [Spell
Impetus].
Basic attack: Disruptive-force beam. Consumes mana. Sustaining the
beam on a target periodically inflicts [Spell Impetus].
Effect: Increase the mana consumption when casting a spell to
increase the effect. Effect is further enhanced if wielding both [Spell
Lance of the Magister] and [Magister’s Tithe].
Effect: Can be used as a focus for the unique ritual [Magister’s
Ballista]. This ritual is not possible without the staff.
Effect: When used to strike an enemy in melee gain an instance of
[Power of the War Magus].
[Spell Impetus] (affliction, magic, stacking): All resistances are
reduced. When the recipient suffers an offensive spell from someone
wielding [Spell Lance of the Magister], all instances of [Spell
impetus] are consumed to increase the effect of the spell.
[Power of the War Magus] (magic, stacking): Gain a body-hugging
barrier that resists damage. When a force bolt is fired from the staff,
all instances are consumed to increase damage.

Clive didn’t have the matching wand, Magister’s Tithe, which had fallen
from his grip when the gold-rank messenger smashed apart Onslow’s shell.
The silver-rank messenger he now faced had trapped Clive before he could
retrieve it. The messenger continued to glare at him, hefting his spear. A
system window appeared, flickering on the verge of collapse.

Party leader [Jason Asano] has had all abilities negated.


Party has been disbanded.
Ability [Party Interface] has ended.

The window blinked out of existence.

Humphrey stood with each foot pinning a wing as he drove the point of his
sword down on the messenger’s throat. The point of his stylised dragon wing
sword was essentially blunt, so he had to ram it down over and over,
committing decapitation by blunt object.

For most of the time Jason spent on Earth, Clive had adventured as a trio with
Sophie and Humphrey. His powers were not suited to frontline combat, but
without a full team to shield him, coming face-to-face with danger was
inevitable. Clive’s preferred solution was to pre-empt such situations with
comprehensive planning, but even he acknowledged that it was impossible to
be ready for everything.
Even if he had been willing to ignore this truth, Sophie and Humphrey
were not. They drilled him on fighting up close and personal, where he was
least comfortable. He would never choose to take the fight into melee, but he
could hold his own far better than the messenger he faced had expected.
They moved around each other in a dance, the messenger’s spear
alternately jabbing, lunging and spinning. Clive moved through the patterns
Sophie and Humphrey had drilled into him, the tips of his staff leaving trails
of gold light behind them. They lingered in the air as the pair clashed, and
soon the air was littered with golden streaks.
Clive’s powers were far from ideal for this kind of fight, but he had a
number that were strikingly effective. His Mana Shield power allowed him,
as the name implied, to soak damage by draining mana from his fortunately
enormous pool. It was a costly draw when under repeated attack, but the
silver-rank effect at least included a mana drain field that leached it from his
enemies. With only one foe on hand, however, its efficiency was not the best
in a duel.
His main source of replenishment was the silver-rank effect of the Blood
Magic ability. The base effect was to trade health for mana, which was the
opposite of his current requirements. As of his last rank-up, though, he could
turn other people’s health into mana with a ranged drain attack. Every time
his opponent was fool enough to give him some distance, Clive drained his
mana in a bright blue stream.
The messenger quickly learned not to let Clive have any distance. Along
with mana drains, Clive used each reprieve from melee to bolster himself
with more spells. A few abilities from the balance and karma essences left
Clive almost more trouble than he was worth to attack.
Rune Mantle inflicted random retaliatory effects, from explosive knock-
back damage to strength-enervating afflictions. Mantle of Retribution was
more simple and direct, applying retribution damage in response to every
attack. It wasn’t only defensive powers either, as any chance to cast was an
opportunity for the Instant Karma spell. This was an attack spell that dealt
damage to the target based on how much damage they recently inflicted
themselves.
In the early stages of the fight, attacking Clive seemed pointless as he
soaked all the damage and dealt more back. Even the special attacks that
punched through Clive’s Mana Shield were returned twice over, each one
more powerfully than the original.

Ability: [Vengeance Mirror] (Karma)

Special attack.
Cost: Varies.
Cooldown: Varies.
Current rank: Silver 4 (01%).
Effect (iron): Replicate the last spell or special attack used on you or
an ally by an enemy within the last few moments. Cost and
cooldown are the same as the replicated attack. You may still use
this ability if the triggering effect was negated. The replicated ability
functions at your rank, not the rank of the enemy that originally used
it.
Effect (bronze): You may use the replicated ability a second time.
Effect (silver): The ability replicated has enhanced effects if used
against the individual it was copied from.

Clive’s close-quarters techniques were not built for extended use,


however. They were designed to get him out of danger or to hold on until
help arrived, neither of which was going to happen here. The messenger
simply took Clive’s hits and bulled through the retaliatory effects.
The messenger’s powers leaned towards decent resilience and rapid
healing, allowing him to eat the punishment and keep going. Clive, on the
other hand, was heavily reliant on his mana pool. While it was far larger than
a normal adventurer, it could hold up only so long when his Mana Shield was
under constant barrage.
The main factor swinging the fight away from Clive’s favour, however,
was that the messenger was starting to read Clive’s patterns. Clive may have
been heavily drilled by Sophie and Humphrey, but even highly effective
patterns were no match for experience, and many of Clive’s patterns were
ineffective, inefficient and seemed to make little sense.
The messenger was battered but healing fast, while Clive was
increasingly just battered. More and more attacks were punching through his
barrier as his mana ebbed, making his shield weaker. The messenger
recognized that his enemy could no longer afford to copy his attacks and
returned to throwing out powerful special attacks, his spear glowing and
vibrating with power. Sensing his impending victory, the messenger started
to gloat.
“You fight well for a spellcaster, human, but your skills are shallow. You
cannot hide behind your magic shell forever.”
Clive remained silent, just as he had since tossing out the recording
crystal. If the messenger wanted to gloat, that was fine. All the more pride to
strip away, and better that than wonder why Clive’s fighting technique had so
many fixed patterns and rigid flaws. The two continued to dance through air
now thick with the golden lines still being left behind by Clive’s staff.
The messenger had realised the floating, glowing lines were harmless and
that Clive was trying to use them to bait him onto Rune Traps. The
messenger was too attentive, however, and ignored the golden lights as he
watched carefully for the traps. He even remembered where the traps were
after they vanished, not triggering any of them.

Sensing that the spellcaster’s exhaustion was bringing the battle to its climax,
the messenger moved to finish it in one glorious strike. A powerful beat of
his wings threw him high into the air. The spellcaster took the chance to
shoot a force blast from his impressive staff, boosted by consuming the
charges it had built up from every melee strike landed throughout the duel.
The messenger quickly folded his wings in front of him, absorbing much of
the damage, but the heavy impact still sent him tumbling back, feathers
scattering from pummelled wings.
It was not enough. All it accomplished was making the messenger even
more determined to finish the spellcaster with his ultimate attack. He glared
down at the man, who had moved into the centre of the glowing lines that
marked the progress of the battle. Glowing lines, the messenger realised, that
looked very different when viewed from above.
At ground level, the lines were nothing but random shapes, left behind by
Clive’s staff as it moved. From above, viewed as a flat plane instead of in
three dimensions, it looked suspiciously like a ritual circle. Suddenly, he
remembered all the moments of strange, impractical movement the
spellcaster had gone through in the battle. He had put it down to inexperience
and adhering too closely to fixed forms, and he suspected that truly was the
case.
Somehow, the spellcaster had managed to do something else as well.
He would have needed to remember every required nuance, adding to the
ritual diagram opportunistically as the fight allowed. The kind of mind that
could keep all that together was staggering, and the messenger hoped that the
spellcaster had made a mistake in the process. He almost certainly had.
Getting it perfect should be near impossible, yet the messenger was certain,
deep in his gut, that there weren’t any mistakes.
The messenger met the man’s eyes. The spellcaster’s expression had been
blank throughout the battle, but now it was not. The messenger’s blood
turned cold on seeing the gleeful malevolence on the spellcaster’s face as he
held up his staff and chanted a ritual trigger.
“Let loose wrath’s ascension: Magister’s Ballista.”
The messenger initiated his ultimate attack power. It didn’t, strictly
speaking, have a name, but he thought of it as Descent of the King. He did
not tell anyone about the name. The power launched him towards the ground,
but surprise had cost him. The spellcaster began his short chant as the
messenger was startled by the revelation of the ritual, hesitation costing him
in the critical moment. His plunging attack was gathering what he thought of
as unstoppable momentum when a force spear shot up and stopped it.
The spear had shot from the end of the spellcaster’s staff, and it did not
just stop the messenger but sent him tumbling up in the other direction. The
momentum of his attack was easily overwhelmed, and the spear was far from
done. It turned around and then shot into the messenger again. Over and over
it landed, never giving the messenger a chance to recover as it grew weaker
and weaker. He was bloodied and beaten by attack after attack, juggled
helplessly in the air. The spear impaled a wing on one pass and half-blinded
him on another. He was too disoriented to see the man on the ground
directing the spear, waving his arm like a conductor.

Clive didn’t stop the spear from juggling the messenger until the magic of the
ritual was expended, even though he was sure the messenger was long dead.
What he did do was have the recording crystal zoom in as the messenger
went from glorious warrior to avian roadkill. Clive felt the dimensional space
dissolving around him and he released the magic of Onslow’s vessel.
Normally, that would return the familiar to a tattoo state on Clive’s chest, but
the dead vessel was empty now. Onslow’s spirit would not return until Clive
summoned a fresh vessel, the old one dissolving into rainbow smoke. Clive
didn’t even remove himself from the stench of it.
“I’ll bring you back to me, little buddy,” he whispered.

Many other adventurers had been caught up in the wave of messenger


isolation attacks, some coming out on top and some coming out dead.
Humphrey had escaped fairly quickly, having taken his messenger apart. He
and the rest of the team continued to fight messengers and monsters as they
waited for Jason and Clive to escape.
Jason’s isolation was a type that others could see but not interfere with,
those making the attempt finding themselves damaged and tossed away by a
barrier surrounding each combatant. They could see Jason and his opponent,
however, and were not especially worried. The mix of indignation and
frustration on his opponent’s face told them that Jason was doing what Jason
did.
The one they worried about was Clive. Not only was he one of their
weaker individual combatants, but they couldn’t see what was happening. He
had vanished into a dimensional space and they dreaded seeing a messenger
reappear with his corpse. Instead, Belinda was startled as Clive reappeared
right in front of her, battered but alive. Also, alone.
“Nice one,” she said nodding. “What happened to the messenger? You
don’t have a looting power; shouldn’t there be a corpse?”
Clive shoved her backwards and a wet mass of flesh and feathers fell
from above, spraying silver-gold blood when it crashed between them with a
juicy splat.
100
D O U BT, F E A R A N D H E S ITAT I O N

A MESSENGER SLAMMED INTO J ASON AND THEY BOTH WENT TUMBLING TO THE
ground. Similar attacks had struck Humphrey, Clive and other adventurers
around the battlefield. Jason and the messenger rolled away from one another
and he felt some manner of power settle over him. His magical buffs
vanished. His conjured items, cloak and robe, crumbled into dust. His aura
was fully restricted, but not exactly suppressed. It felt more like there was an
invisible cloud surrounding his entire body, preventing him from projecting
any aura through it. That cloud felt familiar, like the boundary of a soul,
meaning it was most likely impregnable.
A system window appeared, flickering like a TV with a bad signal.

All magical effects have been negated. This does not trigger any
secondary effects.
All conjured items have been eliminated. This does not trigger any
secondary effects.
All magical items have had their abilities suppressed. This does not
trigger any secondary effects.
None of your familiars can manifest. All existing familiars have
been unmanifested and passive familiar abilities have been disabled.
All magical abilities have been suppressed. This does not trigger any
secondary effects.
Jason barely had time to read it before the window sputtered and blinked out
entirely. He pushed himself to his feet, watching the messenger do the same.
That was something he’d never seen before, as messengers always floated to
their feet using their auras. Yet, here was one who pushed herself up with her
hands and stood with her feet on the ground instead of floating over it.
Jason noted that her appearance also diverged from the standard for many
messengers. They frequently favoured diaphanous materials with little
practical or protective value, more concerned with their image as beings of
power and glory. This messenger looked more like an adventurer, with
practical leather armour and a pair of long-handled axes. Her elbow-length
leather gauntlets had reinforced knuckles and serrated blades running up the
outside of her forearms. This matched the blades of her axes, the edges also
serrated. They very much looked like the intention was to maximise not
damage, but fear and pain, making shallow tears in flesh rather than deep
cuts.
Her gear was incongruous with her facial features. She was beautiful, as
all messengers were, but it was not the sharp beauty of a sword. Her face was
cute, sweet and soft, her dark hair cropped into a short and practical pixie cut.
Standing at more than seven feet tall did oddly little to change the
impression. She looked, to Jason’s eyes, maybe sixteen or seventeen,
although he knew she was likely much older.
“How old are you?” he asked.
“By the reckoning of this world, it is my eighteenth year. I will be young
to have such glory as will come to me today.”
Jason sighed.
“This one’s going to feel bad,” he muttered to himself.
At that moment, Sophie and Rufus attacked her from each side in a pincer
strike. Both were blocked by an energy barrier that froze them in place for a
moment before hurling them both away.
The messenger looked at them with a scoffing laugh before turning back
to Jason.
“I am Tera Jun Casta,” she announced proudly, “and it is your ill fortune
to meet me. I was not the one chosen to test you, Jason Asano, but I will be
the one to kill you. It is I that will wipe clean the stain of your heresy and
reap the glory that comes of claiming your head.”
“Okay,” Jason said with the resignation of an office worker being handed
a fresh stack of paperwork. “Good luck with that.”
He was now garbed in boxer shorts, boots and a potion belt with his
scabbard hanging from it. His sword dangled loosely in his hand and the
necklace with his magical amulet and shrunken cloud flask hung from his
neck.
“You may be arrogant now, Asano, but—”
“If I’m being entirely honest,” he interrupted her, “I was pretty arrogant
before now as well. My surname is Asano and my personal name is Jason,
and I have a slight flaw in my character.”
“You will not be so glib once you realise the situation you are in!” she
declared in a hurried half-yell, as if to preclude his butting-in again.
“You clearly don’t realise who you’re dealing with,” he told her. “Glib is
kind of my thing. And I understand the situation perfectly well.”
“Is that so? You are in for a rude surprise, Asano.”
“I love surprises. And rudeness, for that matter. What have you got for
me?”
She scowled. “You are no doubt confused as to what has happened to
your powers.”
“Nope. You used an ability that encapsulated us each in some kind of
barrier that seems to hug our bodies. My guess is that the barrier is made
from your soul, meaning that nothing can affect us except each other. We’d
probably make good battering rams, if what happened to my friends is
anything to go by. We’re impervious to outside harm unless they bury us
alive or something. I imagine that both our power sets are fully suppressed
and that we’ll stay sealed away until one of us is dead. Maybe there’s a
secondary release mechanism where, after a certain time, either we both get
released or both get killed.”
The messenger’s eyes went wide.
“How can you possibly know that?”
“It’s called context clues. I think you need to get out and see the cosmos a
bit. Does inter-dimensional conquest have a gap-year program? Have you
ever heard of Rumspringa?”
“I don’t understand your foolish prattle. Speak plainly.”
“You messengers travel between universes, right?”
“That is within our power.”
“You should find a quiet one and try a little self-discovery. Have you read
Eat, Pray, Love? You could do a liberal arts degree. You need to expand your
horizons is what I’m saying.”
“I see what you are doing. Babbling to mask your fear.”
“Actually, I’m stalling while I check if I can do anything about this
barrier with my aura. No luck, sadly; your soul has us locked down tight.”
“You will be free when I wrench your head from your body.”
“Try and get the spine to come with it if you can. Hold it up and let it
dangle for a moment. If I’ve got to go, there are worse ways than a classic
fatality. I don’t suppose you have ice powers by any chance?”

Elseth Culie, the elven affliction specialist, was doing her best to slow down
the fresh wave of monsters digging at the bunker underneath the ruined
entertainment district. With the messengers having given up their safe but
conservative strategy, they were suffering more losses, but their summoned
minions were freer to complete their task.
Rufus and Sophie had taken on the role of shielding Elseth as she worked,
her previous guardians scattered or occupied fighting messengers. In between
spells, Elseth looked over at where John Miller and a messenger were
shrouded in a power that had deflected both Sophie’s and Rufus’ attempts to
intervene.
“Most of the messengers and adventurers started fighting right away,”
Elseth pointed out. “What do you think they’re talking about? And why is he
in his underpants?”
“The answer to almost any question you have about Jason,” Rufus told
her, “is that it’s better if you don’t know.”
“He’s probably telling her that something is kind of his thing,” Sophie
added, eyes scanning the sky above them for threats.
“What is his thing?” Elseth asked.
“Melodrama,” Rufus said. “And I hear the messengers are just as bad.
Their fight may come down to who can best capture a sense of mournful
longing as they stare off into the middle distance.”
“Yeah, like you’ve never done any brooding,” Sophie told him.

Tera Jun Casta tired of Jason’s words and lunged to the attack. He
immediately recognised that she seemed comfortable fighting with her
abilities suppressed, which was hardly a surprise given the nature of her
duelling power. Her style was practised but orthodox, for the most part. She
didn’t try anything elaborate, simply trying to make her serrated axes meet
flesh as efficiently as possible.
The wild card was her wings, which she used to supplement her clean,
efficient axe work. Her feathers were a dark red-brown, like her hair, with a
tough, leathery texture. The wings held up well to slashes from Jason’s sword
as she made liberal use of them. Whether as a weapon to batter him, an
obstacle to lead him or a shield to block him, she made the most of the
advantages they offered.
While she used the wings effectively, it was not a tactic that Jason found
overwhelming. He had fought bizarre creatures by the thousands in six years
of adventuring, and it had been a long time since he considered a humanoid,
even a tall one with wings, as exotic.
Without his powers, Jason was forced to become more aggressive. This
was where sparring with Sophie, Rufus and Humphrey paid off, as they were
all aggressive in different ways. His model for this was Sophie, as while their
styles had diverged over time, they retained the same root in the Way of the
Reaper.
Rufus had always been ruthless about Jason training for the worst-case
scenarios, but he had trouble getting him to be more straightforward. Jason
always got caught up in tricky strategies and roundabout tactics, which he
infused into every combat scenario.
Jason had full access to the Way of the Reaper’s techniques, courtesy of
the largest skill books he had ever seen. The reality was, however, that there
were only so many that Jason had mastered. While he had made the
techniques he used the most his own, the majority he could use, but with a
rote-learning comprehension that anyone truly skilled would look down on.
Jason switched up his style frequently to keep the messenger on edge, not
knowing how he would face her next. One moment, he was fighting at the
limits of her reach, and the next, dashing in past the long hafts of her axes. A
backflip kick to the chin led into a more acrobatic style, leading her on a
merry dance through the levelled buildings of the entertainment district.
At first, it worked. The impetuousness of youth quickly had her frustrated
and making mistakes, although Jason failed to capitalise. The weakness of his
over-elaborate approach meant that he wasn’t landing the kind of heavy,
repeated hits required to take down a silver-ranker. They were extremely
tough and healed fast, making a victory without powers to amplify damage
hard to achieve.
Jason’s failure to do significant damage turned the balance of the fight
against him. While Tera was young, she had been fighting her entire life,
giving her triple Jason’s combat experience, at least in years. Once her mind
settled, she realised his flaws and that she did not share them. Her vicious
weapons and straightforward style were built around winning this kind of
fight.
Jason realised that he needed to stop getting caught up in flights of fancy
about how to fight. Time and again, Rufus had told him that there were times
when all the tricks in the world didn’t matter. Sometimes it was about the
willingness to be brutal and the resolve to endure brutality. Some fights
couldn’t be danced around or subverted. Sometimes you had to stand up, take
the hits and hit back harder.
When he finally accepted this, the tenor of the fight changed. Jason faced
off against Tera inside what he guessed had once been a tavern. It seemed
like it had been an open space, but too little remained to tell. What was left of
the walls wasn’t even as tall as he was, barring a chimney that threatened to
crumble at any moment. Outside, what had once been a street was now a pit
dug by monsters trying to drill into the bunker below.
Jason and Tera started wailing on each other with their weapons. Tera’s
serrated axes and gauntlet blades were brutal and flesh-tearing, while Jason’s
was refined and elegant. The sword had its powers suppressed, leaving the
runes running down the black blade in their basic white. Even so, it remained
a masterful weapon of near-limitless potential, forged by Gary with the
assistance of his diamond-rank mentor. It was a sword whose construction
was guided by the power of Jason’s soul flowing through it, making for the
ideal melding of wielder and weapon.
The duel had become simple and savage, painting both combatants in
their own and each other’s blood. Tera’s twin axes were suited to this kind of
fight and had torn ragged gashes in Jason’s flesh. In their brutal stand-up
fight, she had taken the early advantage because of her weapons, but she felt
that start to shift. Her axes had taken a beating from Jason’s sword, with
heavy nicks and even losing some of the edge serrations.
As the fight was a marathon, rather than a sprint, she was forced to be less
aggressive with her weapons. Jason’s sword, on the other hand, was marred
only by blood. Whether clashing blade to blade, slicing through her tough
armour or missing and striking a wall, nothing left so much as a scratch on
the blade. This allowed Jason to continue being as aggressive as he liked.
Even though she had to be mindful of her weapons, Tera continued the
exchange of relentless attacks. She and Jason both grew more savage, striving
to inflict damage faster than natural silver-rank healing could undo it. Like
lumberjacks hand-sawing a tree, they fell into a rhythm of attack and counter-
attack until they were both torn and ragged.
Tera’s armour was all but ribbons, the skin beneath it not much better.
Jason was, if anything, worse for not having armour in the first place. The
love hearts on his boxer shorts were now invisible, the white cloth soaked
entirely red.
An unspoken agreement formed between the pair: the one with the will to
keep standing and take it the longest would be the one to survive. This was
only a realisation for Jason, as Tera had always known things would come to
this. Jason could see the manic glee in his opponent’s expression as the duel
reached this stage. It was her power that had put them here, after all, and this
was the kind of fighting she knew.
For her part, Tera was surprised that Jason had lasted this long. His
foolish early strategy was something she had seen before, and each time her
enemy had crumbled on realising it would utterly fail. Every trickster she had
fought lacked the resolve for this kind of fight. But not only did this
adventurer engage fully in the ugly slugfest, but he was grinning like a snake
after an egg rolled into its lair.
Tera was starting to feel an uncharacteristic sensation she realised, after a
moment, was worry. It was only a tiny amount; this was her kind of fight and
it was playing out just the way it should. Asano’s tricky fighting had been
annoying, but he finally realised that without a way to finish the job, all his
fancy dancing meant nothing. The only way to win was to stand there and
take more punishment than the enemy.
Tera loved her isolation power. It stripped away all the tricks and all the
magic, leaving combat in its purest form. Victory wasn’t about weapons or
skill unless one person massively outclassed the other. It was about resolve.
The ability to take the hits unflinchingly, not letting it affect hitting the
enemy back.
This was why Tera chose not the weapons that inflicted the most harm,
but those that instilled the most fear. In every duel Tera had initiated with her
power, the fight had come down to crudely hammering each other until her
enemy lost their nerve. As the damage built up, they realised that to keep
fighting it would only get worse and worse. That was when the fear crept in.
Then there was the pain. The mind could block out pain, she had learned, but
the ragged wounds left by her serrated axes were ugly. They looked painful,
which helped force the idea of pain into the mind.
Once fear and pain crept in, the fight was all but over. They would
hesitate, just a little, not even realising they were doing it at first. But it was
enough to sap their strength and make them shrink back, just enough to make
a difference. That was when she dominated. Every moment made it worse
until they finally collapsed, often literally. More than a few opponents had
knelt and waited as she took their heads, spirits broken.
But it had been too long. None of the signs were there. Asano was
looking more like a market-stall meat skewer now, but he kept coming at her
harder than ever. His eyes sparkled with inhuman light from a face caked in
blood. There was no fear of death, no grimacing through the pain.
Tera had fought fear, pain and death for her entire life, but now she faced
a man who had walked beside them until they were boon companions.
Looking into his eyes, Tera realised that the summoned creatures her kind
had brought with them were not monsters. This was a monster.
With that revelation, the doubt, fear and hesitation finally arrived. But to
her horror, they came from within her, not him, her mind and body betraying
her. They saw what she had brought out in this man and knew that he would
never stop. She was somehow certain, against all sense and reason, that even
killing him wouldn’t do it. She might as well have duelled the sky, for all her
axes could cut it down.
Tera refused to let fear rule her. After using her power so many times, she
had now found an opponent that would not fall in the kind of fight she had
engineered. Instead, she had to change it. She had to gamble on a decisive
move before her growing fear left her paralysed.
Behind her opponent, a deep pit lay where there had once been a road.
Monsters had dug it as they strove to breach the underground bunker, and
were probably down there, digging still. It would be a tight space where long
weapons would be useless and her gauntlet spikes would be the weapon of
choice. Dropping her axes, she launched herself into a crash tackle.
Her wings lacked the magic to fly, but one heavy beat from them was
enough to throw her forward like a battering ram. Jason’s sword went
tumbling from his hand as they barrelled over the edge of the pit to plummet
down. When they reached the bottom, they crashed hard into a summoned
monster.
The monster was a cube with an arm emerging from each side and an eye
in the palm of each hand. Beams from those eyes had been drilling through a
metal plate it had dug up when Tera and Asano landed on it hard. To Tera’s
surprise, the impact and their combined weight finished the job, breaching the
bunker and dropping them all inside.
101
NO

T HE BUNKER BENEATH THE ENTERTAINMENT DISTRICT WAS SET UP AS A SERIES


of dormitories, punctuated by various service rooms. As the occupants were
primarily not essence users, there was a need for food preparation and toilet
facilities for thousands. Those facilities, in turn, required logistics and utility
infrastructure to service them.
Jason, Tera Jun Casta and a confused summoned monster crashed through
the ceiling and into a warehouse filled with massive crates and barrels. They
hit a rack hard on their way down, sending several crates tumbling to the
floor. The crates broke open and spewed out compressed rations, more than
the crates should have been able to hold. Cheap but mediocre dimensional
magic had been used to increase storage space, but that magic broke along
with the crates, depositing the contents onto the floor.
Jason and Tera were both bloodied, having finally fought hard enough to
overcome each other’s inherent toughness and rapid healing. Jason’s sword
was back outside; it had been dropped when Tera rammed them both into the
pit. She had already dropped her axes and lost one of her gauntlets during
their descent. The other had lost one of its serrated arm blades, but it was now
the only weapon that either of them had.
Alarms blared at their intrusion and, as they got to their feet, a pair of
silver-rank adventurers burst through the warehouse doors, a squad of
bronze-rankers behind them. One of the silver-rankers dove at Tera and was
hurled into the wall hard enough to leave cracks for his trouble. The other
fired a stream of frigid wind, laden with icicles at Jason. Jason turned to look
at the man as the beam stopped dead around arm’s length away.
“I know I’m in rough condition,” Jason understated, “but of the three
intruders, one has wings and another is a monster. You can’t figure out which
one is the adventurer?”
Tera looked at Jason and then at the door, making her choice and bolting
for it, past the adventurer picking himself up off the floor. The bronze-
rankers split like bowling pins as she barrelled through, bouncing off the
barrier that shielded her from everything but Jason.
“Deal with the monster, then seal and barricade the room,” Jason
commanded the silver-ranker. “I’ll handle her.”
Jason had no aura to back up his words, yet the man who had just
attacked him found himself moving to obey. There was something in Jason’s
voice that dared him to disobey, and he was not taking that dare. He was not
an expert fighter, which was why he’d been assigned to the bunker. He
wouldn’t be missed in the battle above, and if the bunker was breached, it
was unlikely to matter how strong the on-station defenders were.
Jason swiftly pursued Tera, following a trail of silver-gold blood. He
moved through a short series of utility corridors until he found her shoving
open a pair of double doors. They looked heavy and were doubtless
magically reinforced, but the people behind them had failed to close them in
time. She shoved the unlatched doors wide, scattering the people on the other
side before dashing inside.
Jason pursued her into a massive dormitory that held hundreds of people.
Rows of bunks filled the far end while closer to the door, cafeteria-style
tables were lined with people. Tera glanced back at Jason and he saw the fire
in her eyes had dimmed. She was no longer willing to face him, even if she
did have the only weapon.
He would have let her live if he could, but she had taken that option from
him. He didn’t know whether her power would release or slay them if it
expired before one of them killed the other. He wouldn’t trust her word on it,
and he wasn’t willing to wait when monsters would soon be pouring into the
shelter through the hole.
He watched Tera look from him to the people who were scrambling to
move away from them, climbing over tables and each other to head for the
bunk end of the massive room. He realised that she wasn’t seeing people
fleeing for their lives; she was seeing hostages. They were her path to
evening the odds, making up for her lost confidence.
She would be able to get to the closest people before he could get to her,
and they both knew it. Even if he did reach her first, the fight would come
with collateral damage, and quite likely a lot of it. The normal-rank civilians
would most likely be killed just from impacting the barriers around her and
Jason. If she forced the fight amongst them, they would both be slaughtering
the people he was there to protect. The room was full of hostages.
When she moved in their direction, Jason knew that there was little point
in chasing. All he could do was try and talk her down, but the idea of civilian
casualties he was helpless to stop clouded his mind. Memories of people
dying in Broken Hill and Makassar because he wasn’t strong enough flashed
through his mind.
“Don’t. You.” DARE.
He didn’t even speak the last word. It vibrated through the air on a wave
of aura and Tera stopped dead, jolted in shock. She stared at Jason, who was
equally surprised. What he just did shouldn’t have been possible with his
power sealed by the soul barrier still around him.
They stared at each other as Jason’s mind raced through the possible
explanations, rejecting all but one. His astral realm wasn’t just a place he
could go, a place that belonged to him. It was him; it was his soul. And just
like a messenger, his soul was his body. Her challenge power might suppress
his essence abilities and even his aura, but it could not suppress his entire
astral realm. That power was far too great, and in his fury, he had tapped into
it, shucking off the suppression on his aura for a brief moment. Now he knew
that was possible, the situation had reversed. He just had to figure out what
he’d done and how to do it again.
Jason examined the sensations shooting through him, but it was hard to
pick out any unusual sensations through all the damage. He managed to pick
out an odd tremulation, his body quivering ever so slightly in reaction to the
power that had just surged through it. It was a similar sensation to
overcharging his portal ability with energy from his astral gate.
“How?” Tera asked in breathless disbelief, still shaken by Jason’s use of
his aura.
For once, Jason did not respond with a pithy line. He was concentrating
on how he could actively tap into that power, replicating what his rage had
done unconsciously. He knew he couldn’t call up a portal to his astral realm
to draw power through. He had tried that while stalling for time with banter at
the beginning of the fight. But he was his astral realm. Did he even need a
conduit? Could he be the portal? Not to travel through, but to tap into his full
reserve of power.
He saw the shock fading from Tera’s face and she was eyeing the
civilians again. They had managed to flee further down the room while Jason
and Tera stared at each other, but it wouldn’t stop them from getting caught
up in it if the fight continued. He didn’t have time for careful
experimentation, to see if he could do the thing that popped into his mind
without harming himself. That was nothing new. Concentrating on the feeling
he had when he’d spoken out in anger, he reached inside to draw out power
in a way unlike any he had attempted before.

Tera’s attention was arrested again as she felt Jason’s aura brush against her,
faint but unmistakable. She told herself it wasn’t possible, despite it being
unmistakable. She felt his aura surge again, just like when it had flooded the
city. His power and his rage towered over her, diminishing everything she
was and belittling her ambitions. Just as it had the first time she felt his aura,
fury rose within her to fight back.
From the day she was brought into being and her training began, Tera had
been told that she was the pinnacle of creation: a living embodiment of the
will of the cosmos. That nothing, save for her own kind, was her equal. She
was power and glory manifest, at the beginning of a path that would lead her
to stand at the top, even amongst the messengers. To become an astral king.
The path was known, but it was rigid and hard. Only a messenger could walk
it.
In eighteen years, not a single day went by where she doubted her path
for a moment. She met every challenge and accomplished every feat
presented to her. She would reach gold and then diamond, and then become
the pinnacle of her kind that, in turn, was the pinnacle of all kinds.
Then came Asano. He was no messenger, yet everything that made her
special, she could feel within him. The body-spirit gestalt. The aura that
could grasp physical reality, even stronger than her own. Most of all, he
wasn’t struggling to climb the tower to astral monarchy; he was inside it,
walking up easy stairs at his leisure. He was incomplete, but unmistakably an
astral king.
It was perversion. Heresy. The only path to astral king should be a
messenger transcending diamond rank. This man made a lie of everything she
knew. Everything she had been told, every single day of her life. Most of all,
it made her feel small. Lesser. How could she be the pinnacle of creation with
this abomination roaming the cosmos, making a mockery of who and what
she was? And it wasn’t just an astral king either. She didn’t recognise exactly
the other elements of his aura, but at the very least, she felt the echo of
divinity. Was he on a path that went beyond even astral king? If such a
person could exist, a supremacy that she could never reach, then not only was
she not superior, but she never could be. If so, then what meaning was there
in her own experience?
The fear and doubt that had plagued her were gone. She did not need
hostages or weapons. All she needed was Asano’s ruined corpse beneath her
feet, dissolving into rainbow smoke. His existence must come to an end. She
was poised to launch herself at him when her entire universe became pain.

Jason had known from the start that this fight would be bad. He had, for all
intents, been pushed into a death match with a teenager, born and raised in a
cult. Like any cult, the doctrine seemed transparently foolish from the
outside, the ideology crumbling at the first sign of critical thought. Their
superiority obsession was clearly nonsensical, falling apart when contrasted
with almost any information not sourced from their own insular community.
But to those born and raised in a cult, or who had found something in it
that filled a deep need, the incongruities didn’t matter. They had been primed
from the beginning to ignore the lies of outsiders, however compelling they
might seem. But when they were forced to confront those problems, they did
not rationally accept what the outsiders saw as logical, self-evident
conclusions. They got angry and they got violent.
Tera’s power made the fight kill or be killed. One of them would die;
there was no room for mercy. But, like anyone, Jason did not like being
forced into corners where every choice was bad. He had become so tired as
he kept falling short on Earth, stuck between bad and worse decisions. He
had been faced with one hard choice after another as the people that should
have been helping stood in his way.
The Network betrayed him over and again, but he kept working with
them because that was what it took. He failed the living as the victims piled
high in Makassar, then had to destroy what was left when the bodies were
turned into unliving monstrosities. He had to make deals with the very
enemies behind those previous events, all the while planning to turn on them.
In doing so, he became that which he hated most: a betrayer of trust.
He was improved from what he had become at that time. Not recovered,
not entirely; there was no going back to what he was before, but he was able
to live with himself again. Mended enough that he could put the hard choices
of the past behind him, even if they would always be there. But now, once
again, he was faced with a bleak proposition: kill a woman—a girl—that he
saw as a victim. It wasn’t even really an option, as the alternative was to die.
No.
The refusal was a declaration, not just to himself but to the universe. He
wasn’t going to let it happen. Yes, this girl was an enemy. Yes, she had
probably killed countless innocent people. Yes, many were more worthy of
being saved than she was. But here and now, he was done. The world had
bent him to the point of breaking and it was trying to bend him some more. It
wanted him to kill this girl, but he was going to give her mercy.
This time, the world was going to bend.
Jason’s spiritual battle against the Builder he remembered not with his
mind, but with his soul. His body had not been his own and it had been a
spiritual war, in any case. One that a mind seated in the physical matter of a
brain was inherently incapable of comprehending. But Jason was not the
same man that warred with the Builder over his soul at iron rank. He didn’t
even have a brain anymore, and his soul was not just a spiritual entity lurking
behind his body. His soul and his body were one.
Jason still didn’t remember much of what happened, like hearing echoes
from the other end of a long tunnel. The memories were emotion more than
anything; fear, resolve. A seemingly limitless will that screamed for him to
capitulate with the force of a typhoon. Colin, joining him in the last stand for
his soul. Defiance.
The one thing he had come to fully remember was a sensation. The
Builder had not been able to harm his soul, but he could inflict a pain that
transcended anything a physical body could experience. Jason’s own spiritual
attack was a paltry echo of that, something he had learned from that scathing
sensation, barely remembered as it was.
The Builder had scoured Jason’s soul, trying to force him to open it up
and accept his oppressor. Jason had not. And now he fully remembered that
pain, exactly what the Builder had done to him, and how. He had resolved to
never use it. It was not something to inflict even on an enemy. He had thus
far drawn the line at far less savage soul attacks, even if sometimes he had
needed a friend to help him not cross the line.
But that was not enough for what he needed to do now. He had to become
like the Builder and inflict a suffering he had promised himself he never
would. He wondered what Shade would say, but he only had himself in that
moment. His own judgement that had failed him in the past. Jason could feel
his familiars inside, locked away and unable to advise him as he crossed a
line he had resolved not to.
He could only tell himself that while he was replicating the Builder’s
actions, it was not with the Builder’s intentions. That this was the only path
to mercy. Was it a justification? He knew that, whatever he told himself, he
had a hunger for power and control. The god Dominion had seen it from the
beginning.
In the end, all he could do was the best he could with what he had. And
what he had was a girl whose soul had trapped them both and would not let
go until one of them was dead. He was certain that if she had the power to
end it, she would have. So he had to reach inside her soul and end it for her.
But first, she had to let him in.
The only way he could shut off her power was to force his way into her
soul and do it himself. He couldn’t break in, any more than the Builder could
with him. She had to let him, and there was no way she trusted him enough to
allow that, whatever the circumstances. Sometimes, even when the mind said
yes, the soul said no.
He would have to do what the Builder did to him. Make her suffer, as he
had, until she capitulated. If she capitulated. And even then, he couldn’t be
sure it would work. He had never rummaged around someone else’s soul.
He could just kill her. He knew what he was about to do and that, in the
face of such miserable suffering, killing could be seen as a mercy in itself.
But Jason wouldn’t allow it. Fate had put this girl in his path and decreed that
one of them would die. Fate could go fuck itself.
Transcendent light of blue, silver and gold shone through Jason’s skin as
he lit up like a beacon. He drew on the power of his astral realm, his body
shaking as he turned himself into something like a portal that only his power
could pass through. It clashed with Tera’s soul, the very thing that bound
him. This meant he didn’t need to push through the suppression to attack it; it
was right there waiting for him.
Tera fell but didn’t hit the ground, instead floating up. Her spine arched
and her wings, head and limbs were all yanked in the direction of the ground
as if something was holding them while brutally pushing into her back. Her
mouth opened in the image of a scream, but at first, none came. Then there
was a sonorous hum, building with every passing second, slowly rising in
pitch as it grew louder.

Emresh Vohl was huddled with the civilians, despite his silver rank. The
adventurers had tried to recruit him in case of something breaking into the
bunker, but he had refused them to their derision. But he was no adventurer,
having ranked up on cores. He’d never fought anything more dangerous than
a stable hand a rank lower than he was.
His choice had been validated when the ragged angel had barged into the
room, battered and bleeding. The bronze-rankers trying to close the door on
her had been thrown back as she shoved it open and stormed in, dripping
silver-gold blood.
He knew that she was one of the messengers that people had been talking
about, not an angel from the old elvish stories his mother told him as a child.
But even as injured as she was, she still looked like one. There was
something glorious about her, even under the blood, the wounds and the
tattered armour.
The man that followed her was no such thing. He was all but naked, the
blood painting his body covering him more than his red-stained under shorts.
He was in even worse condition, his body covered in savage lacerations.
Emresh had not wasted time using his silver-rank physicality to rush past
others, not caring if a few children or old people were knocked aside. But he
kept his gaze on the two figures, and he did not like the way the messenger
looked at them. He’d seen that look on his father many times; it was the look
of a man who saw assets and not people. It was not an outlook he’d ever had
a problem with until he was the asset.
The two intruders had a short exchange, him warning her in a voice that
rang like a gong. She looked at him in shock and he seemed equally
surprised. For a long moment, they just stared at one another. Then he started
to glow and she was dragged into the air by an unseen force, her arms, legs
and wings pulled downwards as if trying to drag her back.
The room was eerily quiet, civilians and bronze-rank adventurers equally
huddled in silence as they looked on. Then came a base hum, slowly growing
louder and higher until people started to moan and Emresh felt a pricking in
his ears and eyes. A child cried as the rising pitch of the hum left blood
trickling from her ear, more joining her as blood started seeping from the
eyes, noses and ears of the young and the elderly. Then an aura washed over
them, domineering yet protective, the authority of a benevolent dictator.
The sound stopped affecting the civilians, who looked on at the suffering
angel and glowing man who was also floating into the air. Dark red leather
appeared on his body, draping him in a robe. It soaked away the blood left on
his exposed hands and face. When his face cleared, Emresh’s blood ran cold.
Silver-rankers had excellent memories. Emresh knew that face, even if
the dark brown eyes were now an alien blue-orange. He had last seen it on
the floor of a tavern, shielded by the man’s arms as Emresh and his boys
kicked the man over and over.
Things started clicking into place. The mysterious person who had
severely damaged his father’s business interests, for some unknown slight.
The way the man had taunted Emresh, all but asking for a beating. Emresh
had gone to the tavern looking to beat someone and he now realised the man
had offered himself up because he could take it.
He watched as the man’s face vanished into a dark hood as a cloak that
was not fabric but a living void manifested around him. He could just make
out the silhouette of the man’s sharp chin, beneath the glowing eyes.
Essence users rarely exhibited the base physiological functions of a
normal body. They hardly ever blushed, hardly ever cried and never went to
the toilet. Especially by silver rank, only extremes of emotion could make
their magical bodies replicate the base nature they had left behind. This left
Emresh confused at the warm trickle he felt in his pants.

The most infinitesimal portion of power the Builder could exert would still be
enough to annihilate a universe. Jason couldn’t comprehend power on that
scale, let alone match it. Yet, even at his power level, his facsimile of the
Builder’s assault on his soul was a horrifying thing to do to a person. Jason
himself knew this better than anyone, and as he flayed Tera’s soul, he felt an
intense revulsion he had to push through to keep going.
It was the only potential path out that he saw leading anywhere but to her
death, but he wondered again if death was not the greater mercy. He knew
what the treatment he was giving her would do. It had taken him months and
some of the best experts in the world to recover. He doubted the messengers
would give her the same care that he had received.
He kept pouring on the pain, willing her to surrender. The faster she let
him in, the quicker the pain would end, and if she didn’t surrender at all, he
would have to kill her anyway. Then, instead of mercy, he had taken her from
death to excruciatingly miserable death. He had to steel his resolve over and
over to continue, redoubling his efforts as his will squeezed her soul like a
ball in his fist.
Jason didn’t have a star seed, but he wasn’t looking to take her over once
he was allowed into her soul. All he needed was a connection, and in the
course of his torturing her, he realised that it was already there. He could feel
a link, not between Jason Asano and Tera Jun Casta but between astral king
and messenger. He could tell immediately that it had always been there,
waiting. It was strange and made him feel uncomfortable. It was almost like
messengers were built to be controlled.
Jason poured his will into that connection, every ounce of soul strength he
could muster assaulting her anew. Finally, he felt the first, tiny tremble in her
will to resist. Whatever that connection was, it left her hard-wired to obey, so
long as he could activate it. That she was able to resist the inherent urge to
surrender that came through it deeply impressed Jason, even if he wished she
didn’t. He desperately wanted to stop, although not near as much as she did,
he knew.
He had to finish it. He had to push through, and make her give up. He
floated over to her, his cloak drifting loosely around him. He had pushed
away the power of her soul enough that he could use at least some of his
powers. He reached out a hand, palm down in the space where her torso was
arched up.
Yield. Your. Soul.
Her body trembled, then shook. Then she fell to the ground.
102
A F I G HT T O T H E PA I N

O UTSIDE OF THE BARRIER DOME SURROUNDING Y ARESH , THE COMMAND


council, the strategic command for the messenger raiding force, floated in the
air. Information from the field commanders within the city was relayed to
them through speaking stones, a magical device this world did not possess.
Communication was one of several odd points of ignorance in this otherwise
magically developed world, alongside their dearth of dimensional magic.
One of the commanders left the group to move in the direction of the
Voice of the Will, Jes Fin Kaal. Although in charge of all the messenger
forces in the region—undisputedly, with the death of Mah Go Schaat—she
had been leaving the direction of the raid to the gold-rankers that made up the
strategic command. They were both surprised and grateful, as they knew their
people and how to lead them far better than an outsider, even one sent by the
astral king.
The voice had been satisfied setting objectives and then leaving the
commanders to determine how best to carry them out. She only made a few
stipulations, although they ranged from small to fundamental in their impact
on the strategic approach to the raid. Attaching one messenger to the troop
most likely to encounter one specific adventurer was a confusing but easy-to-
accommodate directive. Employing the great summoning gates, on the other
hand, defined the manner in which the attack was conducted.
The commander approached Jes Fin Kaal and made a status report. Kaal
listened without looking at the man, her eyes locked on the city barrier,
despite seeing little more than a blue blur through its surface.
“…being pushed back across the city,” the commander reported. “We had
believed that the gods would largely remain out of the conflict, but not only
have the churches mobilised extensive forces, but those forces have proven
suspiciously strong and well-informed.”
“The goddess Knowledge,” Kaal said, her voice unconcerned. “We have
long known that she was preparing for our arrival in this world. She pushed
the boundaries of what information she was able to spread, but our
collaboration with the Church of Purity has given her leeway.”
“The command council is advising withdrawal, Voice,” the commander
said. “The barrier breaches are repairing themselves quickly and the
defenders are taking the upper hand as the summoning gates reach their
limits. They are close to breaking down and we cannot replace the summons
being destroyed as quickly as before. The fall of Mah Go Schaat has also
freed up the local diamond-rank adventurers, and we’ve started losing gold-
rankers. Casualties are already shifting away from the summoned fodder and
onto our actual forces.”
“You have confirmed the aura event was Jason Asano?”
“Yes, Voice. Also…”
Kaal finally turned to look at the commander.
“What?” she demanded.
“We have been unable to determine how Mah Go Schaat died. As best we
can tell, he was rushing towards Asano in the wake of the aura events. The
next moment, he was dead. At Asano’s feet.”
The voice blinked in confusion.
“Just like that?”
“Yes, Voice. And then… Asano devoured the life force left in his
corpse.”
Kaal’s eyebrows shot up and then, to the commander’s surprise and mild
terror, she burst out laughing.
“Voice, we lost the diamond-ranker.”
Kaal gave him a friendly pat on the shoulder.
“And we likely won’t be seeing him again for some time. Such a shame.
What is Asano’s current disposition?”
“One of our silver-rankers caught him in a duelling power. We have been
unable to ascertain his status from that point.”
“He was drawn into a dimensional space?”
“No, Voice. It was the power type that wraps each duellist in a soul shell,
allowing them to fight each other, but anyone else coming into contact is
forcibly thrown away.”
“Then why do we not know his status?”
“Their duel moved into a breached bunker. It is likely their fight created
massive casualties amongst those sheltering inside. These soul shells can hurt
a silver-ranker; they’ll kill the frail servant race civilians.”
“The bunkers don’t matter. What about Asano?”
“Forgive me, Voice, but were the bunkers not the entire objective in
attacking the city? To sow terror?”
“What? Oh, yes, of course they were. What are you doing to get eyes in
that bunker?”
“The commander for that district is Marek Nior Vargas. He has secured
the entrance with his personal forces only, not the ones that were assigned to
him. But he is denying entrance to our forces, along with the city defenders.”
Kaal’s face took on a contemplative expression.
“Interesting,” she mused. “I knew many of our gold-rankers would fight
over Asano once they realised what he was, but Marek Nior Vargas being
one of them is a surprise.”
“His actions could be seen as traitorous.”
“They could. But, equally, he may simply be taking care in securing
Asano. He’s always been a careful one, and I suspect not all of our people are
acting with duty utmost in their minds. He does not act without due
consideration, and he knows I will allow only silver-rankers the chance to kill
Asano.”
“From our ongoing assessment of him, I’m not sure any of our silver-
rankers can kill Asano.”
“Precisely.”
“Then why did you specifically direct them to try?”
“Because our people are slow to learn when it comes to respecting those
who come from outside of our ranks. An unfortunate side effect of the
learning programs. But now, they will respect the threat he poses and, more
importantly, his potential when directed to our ends.”
“You have your own intentions for him, then?”
“I have all manner of intentions, Commander, as those who whisper
behind my back are all too ready to point out. Remember that we are not in
this region to wipe out a servant-race city. That is why we are raiding it
instead of razing it to the ground. Our objectives are greater, which is why
the gold-rankers were instructed that Asano be either captured or left alive,
and Marek Nior Vargas knows this.”
“But if he is a traitor, he might try to kill Asano, or seize him for his own
ends.”
“He is a cautious man, and is unlikely to make a sudden, bold move
now.”
“But if he does?”
“Then it will be an unexpected but not unacceptable outcome. Marek
Nior Vargas won’t kill Asano, because that gets him nothing. And he has no
information he can share with Asano that will interfere with the astral king’s
agenda. He may even streamline the transition to the next phase.”
“The next phase, Voice?”
She focused on the commander again.
“The Command Council will be informed as necessary. For now, the
council recommendation has my approval. Signal the full withdrawal.”
“Thank you, Voice.”

Jason projected his will into the soul of the messenger, and the result was
disorienting. His magical and aura senses showed the inside of Tera Jun
Casta’s soul, while his ordinary senses still showed the inside of the bunker.
He could barely comprehend what his spiritual senses perceived. It was more
vast and complex than his mind could parse, with only glimpses of partial
understanding.
Being inside her soul did show him enough to disprove a hypothesis he
had formed while he was attacking it from the outside. He had started to
suspect that the messengers were some kind of artificial race, created by the
astral kings or some other beings, behind the scenes. What he discovered
inside her soul disabused him of that notion. It felt messy and organic;
everything was in a constant state of flux, yet it all worked in harmony. It was
like hearing a hundred songs that seemed discordant, yet when played over
one another, produced a heavenly chorus.
The elements of her soul ranged from completely incomprehensible to
almost completely incomprehensible. The exceptions were three things that
stood in stark contrast for the simple reason that Jason had a solid and
immediate understanding of them. In all three cases, it was a connection to
things outside of her soul that helped Jason both to find and to understand
them.
The first element appeared to be the very core of the messenger’s
existence: a nexus hub for the body-soul gestalt that comprised her very
being. Onto that central nexus, someone had placed a mark. From what he
was seeing, Jason guessed that the mark was placed while the soul was still
forming, like branding a newborn calf. It was placed before the soul became
an impregnable whole, granting whoever placed the mark continued access.
Looking at the mark and how it was impacting the soul, it clearly did
more than grant access. It had become an intrinsic part of the soul by the time
it finished forming, like an internal organ. Now, if the mark was removed, the
result would be a spiritual wound that would eventually be fatal.
The next aspect that stood out was what he identified as her potential.
This was where her power slowly accumulated, not unlike where Jason’s
essence powers grew. She was not an astral king, however, so instead of the
garden inside Jason’s soul, she had a kaleidoscopic churn. That churn,
however, was not growing. There was a seal placed on it, leaching power out
of her soul entirely. Once again, Jason recognised the power of an astral king
at play; just glancing at it showed him how he could use the same thing.
The seal drawing out power meant that Tera was eternally trapped at
silver-rank, the power that would accumulate and trigger her advancement
siphoned off. The astral king was taking the power that should have slowly
let her grow to gold rank and beyond, claiming for himself. Jason realised
that this must be a standard practice; every messenger unable to move beyond
a certain rank was not held back by some inherent limitation. They were
unwitting power batteries for the astral kings they served.
Jason’s mind went through what he knew about the messengers. The
Voices of the Will had chosen to serve the astral kings in return for the
chance to advance further than their natural limits. But now Jason realised
that those limits weren’t natural at all. The great gift of raising a messenger’s
potential was nothing more than adjusting the seal to let more power
accumulate before siphoning it off.
Although startled, Jason moved his attention to the third aspect of her
soul he recognised. This was easy enough because it was the mechanism that
drove Tera’s duelling power. As Jason was currently fending that power off
with power-boosted suppression resistance, he was able to trace the power
right back to the source and immediately reached out with his will to turn it
off. It didn’t budge, leaving him no more able to disable it than the messenger
herself.
Jason turned back to the first element he’d recognised, the marked core of
her being. He could feel the control that brand had over her, and realised that
if he had that control, it should let him end the duelling power. It was a move
that filled him with revulsion, but it was necessary. Now that he had seen the
underlying mechanism of the power, he could tell that if neither of them died
first, it would kill them both within minutes.
He examined the mark, seeing that it was similar to writing he had seen
before. There was an ancient and mysterious ideographic language that Jason
had seen other examples of. His sword had the name written on the blade in
those ideographs, and when he branded enemies with his Mark of Sin power,
that brand also used the same language. The exact meaning of the symbol
was multi-layered, but it roughly translated as ‘soul-shaper.’
Hoping his own would sound at least a little less villainous, he searched
his own soul for a similar mark and found it immediately, appearing the
moment he willed it. He let out a sigh in his mind when he saw that it
translated to ‘hegemon.’ Because of course it did.
Replacing the other astral king’s brand with his own proved startling
easy, the original shifting into the new shape with the barest expression of his
will. When he did so, her entire soul shook like a shanty in a hurricane, but he
ignored it and immediately turned off the now-compliant duelling power.
He was about to withdraw from her soul, then stopped himself. He looked
again at the brand, now his own, on the core of her being. He knew he
couldn’t remove it; there had to be a brand now or it would destroy her
slowly, like a spiritual gut wound that was unable to heal.
He cast his senses out, looking to see if he could find her own mark,
somewhere in her soul. It was far harder than finding his own, and not only
was it not his soul, but she wasn’t an astral king. She didn’t even have the
potential to become one, with that seal in place, capping her potential.
The most he could find were dregs of what had once been the start of a
mark, but both the brand—now his—and the seal were suppressing it. Jason
willed his brand to stop doing so, and it did. Then he turned his attention to
the seal and found that, unlike the brand, it was a simple matter to remove.
He could sense her soul already trying to throw it off, and all he needed to do
was give it a little help. He channelled some of his own strength into Tera
and the seal pulsed like a heart before bursting.
Vesta Carmis Zell was an astral king, comfortably residing in her astral
kingdom. She was watching servant race armies battle to the death,
resurrecting them and bestowing on them different abilities to keep things
interesting.
When she felt one of her seals disappear, she went deathly still.
It was a silver-rank seal, one of countless, but there was only one way for
it to be removed: for an astral king to be allowed into a soul to remove it.
“HALLAS!” she bellowed, shaking her entire realm with such power that
the servant races all died. She revived them again as her servant, Hallas,
arrived. Hallas was one of her more satisfactory experiments in soul
engineering: a living soul bound into a golem. The golem was seven feet tall
and humanoid, wrought from white and gold materials that would be coveted
even in the cosmic city of Interstice.
“Hallas,” she commanded. “Reach out to the others. I am calling the
Council of Kings.”

With the seal gone, Jason cast his senses through Tera Jun Casta’s soul once
again, looking for the mark that represented Tera herself. The nascent aspects
he had sensed were already moving, coming together and refining
themselves. He waited, but while the mark quickly took an initial form, it was
far from complete. It did not develop to the degree Jason’s or the other astral
king’s had because Tera was no astral king.
It wasn’t enough for Jason to use. Tapping to his own power, he took
some of his own presence and radiated it through her soul, doing his best to
give her an understanding of an astral king’s nature. He focused it on her
nascent mark and she responded, her soul instinctively using him as a
blueprint to further develop it. The moment he sensed her not just reference
him but copy him outright, he cut off the power and retracted his presence.
He was trying to help her, not remould her in his own image.
Her mark remained incomplete, but he was sure it was enough to work,
given it was her own soul. He reached out to her brand, his will again guiding
her unconscious instincts to replace his mark with hers.
Once again, her entire soul shook. Jason felt an immediate sense of
rejection from her soul and he withdrew his presence from her soul entirely.

Near-silence reigned in the dormitory bunker. The sound of a few wailing


children was the only noise, and they sounded small in the vast chamber. The
sound of the messenger falling to the floor was a punctuation mark to her
conflict with Jason, and in its wake, everything went still.
The people there hadn’t seen the bulk of the conflict between Jason and
Tera, and while they had seen the end, they did not know what to make of it.
From the perspective of those huddled in the bunker, Tera had burst in,
followed by Jason. He’d scolded her in a voice that rang out in their souls
like the command of a god, started glowing, and then, so far as anyone could
tell, broke her with his mind.
Jason slowly descended from the air as the light shining from within his
body dimmed. It was gone completely by the time he stopped, hovering with
his feet just above the floor. He floated over to the unconscious messenger
and lowered himself onto the floor in a kneel. This was partly to examine her
and partly because he wasn’t certain he could stand on his own two feet. The
power he had just finished channelling hadn’t crippled him, but it left him
exhausted and hollow, like a pitted olive.
Shade manifested from Jason’s shadow.
“G’day, bloke,” Jason said, his voice straining to maintain its trademark
casual relaxation.
“How are you, Mr Asano?”
“Between you, me and the huddled masses wondering if I’m going to kill
them next? Pretty knackered.”
“Events have progressed in your absence. I recommend you take stock,
Mr Asano.”
Jason fully expanded his senses for the first time since he had been caught
up in her duelling power. He grunted, what was normally effortless giving
him an immediate headache. His senses did not extend beyond the bunker’s
protective magic, even though it had been breached at the point where he and
Tera had entered. But what he sensed inside the bunker was alarming enough.
Jason pushed himself unsteadily to his feet.
“Shade, did you happen to retrieve my sword with one of your bodies?”
“Of course, Mr Asano.” Shade produced Jason’s sword from his
dimensional space and Jason took it. Immediately, his arm dropped, the
sword tip scraping the hard tile floor as his arm dangled.
Jason and Shade both turned to the still-open doors. Moments later, a
gold-rank messenger floated through, a silver-rank adventurer dangling from
each hand. They were the pair Jason had encountered on entering the bunker.
His senses told him that they were unconscious, not dead.
Jason recognised the commander of the messenger forces in the
entertainment district. Like Tera, this man dressed more like an adventurer
than a typical messenger, eschewing the impractical drapery for plain,
practical armour. He was very brown, from his light skin to his dark hair, to
the grey-tipped brown feathers of his wings.
His aura was intimidating. Like his appearance, it was imposing but not
flashy. Jason didn’t try to move as the messenger floated over to him at a
walking pace, more messengers filing through the doors behind him. He was
flanked by two more gold-rankers, with silvers forming up in a tactical
wedge. All that power was directed at one very tired Jason and his shadow
familiar.
“My name is Marek Nior Vargas,” the commander told him. “Put your
sword away, Jason Asano; you barely have the strength to stay on your feet,
let alone lift it. You couldn’t fight one of my silvers, let alone all of us.”
Jason slowly lifted a hand to push the hood of his cloak back, revealing
his face.
“Then again,” Jason told the commander, “perhaps I have the strength
after all.”
He floated into the air to match Marek and lifted his sword, holding it
level and steady, pointing at the messenger as he made a steely-voiced
demand.
“Drop. Your. Sword.”
“I… don’t have a sword,” the unarmed Marek told him.
103
O N E L U D I C R O U S E N C O U NT E R T O T H E N E X T

J ASON DROPPED BACK TO THE FLOOR , LANDING IN A SUPERHERO CROUCH ,


then toppling over.
“Yep,” he grunted, lying sprawled on the ground. “I’m pretty much spent.
Hey, commander angel pants, what are you doing here? You know the
diamond-rankers won’t let you roam free in a bunker for long, right? You’ve
kind of boxed yourself in.”
One of the other gold-rank messengers moved closer to Marek and
whispered, although silver-rank hearing meant that Jason heard it perfectly.
“Are you certain we should risk everything by betting on this… person?”
“We need something different, Payan,” Marek told him. “He is different.”
“I’m not sure that is the kind of different we want.”
“It’s the kind of different we have.”
Marek floated over to Jason, looking down at him. “We are wagering
heavily on someone protecting us from them.”
“Please tell me that someone isn’t me.”
“It is you.”
“Then you may be out of luck unless both those diamond-rankers have a
deathly vulnerability to snoring. It’s really starting to feel like nap time.”
Marek floated down until his feet touched the ground, then reached down
to offer Jason his hand. Jason groaned, accepted it, and allowed the
messenger to pull him to his feet. The messenger was a good two feet taller,
forcing Jason to crane his head back to look at him.
“I pretty much get it,” Jason said. “You’re unhappy with your current
astral king service and are looking to switch to a new provider.”
“Your phrasing is unusual, but you have deduced the situation with
accuracy.”
“Then you’re going to need quite the sales pitch, bloke. I’m not a fan of
the Nazi-scientist deal.”
“I would like nothing more than to sit down and discuss many things with
you at length. Unfortunately, time is against us. This was not a move I
anticipated making, and it is only a matter of time before my fellow
messengers realise what we are doing.”
Jason stood upright, his tired slouch vanishing and the expression on his
face turning hard. He slid his sword into its scabbard before responding to the
messenger.
“You being in a hurry doesn’t change the fact that you came here to kill
the people huddled at end of this room. It doesn’t change the fact that good
people died stopping you. You saw what was left of this district after the
monsters you sent were done with it. Even the ones that got out with their
lives have had their homes and livelihoods destroyed. You came here for no
other reason than to destroy. To sow fear and leave scars across the city that
would remind the people here what it means to fight the messengers.”
“I was reserved in my actions. I think you know this.”
“Not out of any consideration for the people you were attacking. You
think slaughter and destruction carried out with diffidence instead of
enthusiasm means you aren’t responsible for the lives you’ve taken?”
“How many lives have you taken?”
“Plenty, and it’s messed me up pretty bad. I don’t imagine you lose a lot
of sleep over it, though.”
“No,” Marek conceded. “I won’t pretend that I am something I’m not, but
—”
Marek stopped as a chime sounded from each of the messengers present,
including the unconscious Tera. Marek took a stone from a small pouch on
his belt. It was strobing red.
“And our time is almost done,” Marek told Jason. “That is the signal for a
general withdrawal. The attack on your city is over.”
“You think the defenders of this city will let you just waltz out? You
can’t come and go as you please, killing whoever catches your eye. You think
I’ll let you go?”
Marek’s gold-rank offsider, Payan, floated up to them.
“You can barely stand and you think you can do anything to us? Any of
us could kill you in an instant.”
“Go for it; I’ve been killed plenty. The Builder killed me. His prime
vessel killed me. I imagine you’ve heard of Shako. Every time the Builder
wants one thing and I want another, I get hurt or I get killed. But I get what I
want, and he doesn’t. You think I’m scared of a few messengers? Why?
Because you’re all standing in a triangle?”
The messengers floating in a wedge formation bristled but went still when
Marek held up a hand.
“We have no time, Jason Asano,” Marek said. “I do not like to do it this
way, but I will give you a simple choice. Your world has the concept of
political asylum. I wish to claim it. I want to defect.”
“Leaving aside how much you know of my world,” Jason said, “you’re
not talking about asking the city for asylum, are you? You’re asking me.”
“Only another astral king can harbour us.”
“Yeah. As it happens, I just found out why.”
Jason turned to glance at Tera Jun Casta, still sprawled unconscious on
the ground. Marek followed his gaze and then narrowed his eyes as he peered
at her.
“What did you do to her?”
Marek moved to her side in a blur of motion, kneeling to place a hand on
her forehead.
“You know her?” Jason asked him.
“She was under my command, but no. You changed the astral king she
belongs to.”
Marek stood, turned and looked over Jason with a freshly assessing gaze.
“What astral king does she belong to? It’s not you; I could tell with both
of you in front of me. But she does not belong to Vesta Carmis Zell anymore
either. I would feel it, the same connection I have. And how are you even
both alive? She used a duelling power.”
“I thought you didn’t have time for questions.”
Marek stood up, frowned, and then nodded.
“You are right; I do not. I need asylum, for myself and my people. I can
promise you that there are benefits to be had for doing so.”
“I’m not looking for a bribe.”
“And I do not offer one. These are benefits you will want not for you, but
for all the forces arrayed against my kind.”
“So, your pitch is that you’ll do something super impressive if I take you
in, but you don’t have time to explain it right now.”
“The withdrawal has been called. If you will not accept us, we will have
to leave before the city barrier closes. That will be bad for both of us.”
Jason sighed.
“Shade, thoughts?”
“He claims to need time, Mr Asano. You could offer him that, if you are
willing to stand up to the diamond-rankers who will demand you hand them
over. I think we both know that will not be a problem for you.”
Jason sighed again, then turned back to Marek.
“Give me one reason,” he said. “Not vague promises. Give me one good,
solid reason that I should even entertain the idea of helping you.”
Marek paused for a long time, his expression thoughtful. Finally, his gaze
came to rest on Tera Jun Casta, lying on the floor. He closed his eyes for a
moment, opened them and then turned to Jason.
“Because you have chosen mercy,” he said.
Jason locked eyes with Marek for a long time, needing to crane his head
back to do so. Then he turned, just as Marek had earlier, to contemplate
Tera’s prone form.
“Bloody hell,” he muttered unhappily.
A portal arch rose from the floor, filled with gold, silver and blue light. It
started off human-sized, but grew to accommodate messengers at a gesture
from Jason.
“You know where that goes, right?” Jason asked.
“Your astral kingdom.”
“Get your people inside. It will keep everyone off you until we can have
that long talk you mentioned.”
Marek ordered his people in, the messengers looking decidedly uncertain
but doing as they were told. More messengers came through the doors when
Marek called them with his communication stone. They had been the ones
blocking the hole in the bunker’s ceiling against other intruders, and Jason’s
team was hot on their heels. They found Jason standing with Marek as the
messengers filed through what the team recognised as a portal to Jason’s
astral realm. The team knew Jason in the middle of his latest insanity when
they saw it, and since the messengers weren’t attacking the civilians or Jason,
they looked on warily from the door.
When Marek was the only one remaining, he turned to Jason.
“Do not leave us for long. Our current astral king will likely revoke our
patronage, and that will kill us.”
“I’m aware,” Jason told him, then gestured at Tera. “Take her with you.”
“She’s knocked out. If she does not subconsciously consent to move
through the portal, I can’t.”
“Then try. Or would you rather leave her to the mercies of my side, after
what your side just did?”
Marek floated over to Tera, gently knelt down and picked her up. He
moved back to the portal and they both disappeared into it.

“You could have at least let me fight,” Melody said to Sophie as she and
Emir led her from Emir’s cloud palace to Jason’s. “I could have fought
messengers.”
“I wouldn’t trust you to use your mouth when eating a sandwich,” Sophie
told her. “There’s no way we would let you loose in a city-wide battle. How
many times have I explained this in the last few weeks?”
“So why did it take so long to put me back in Asano’s cloud palace? This
man’s is tedious.”
“I have an extensive library.”
“Asano has television. I’ve been learning the language of his world by
watching stories about a man with a moustache and a sleek red carriage. The
gold-ranker’s palace lacks innovative amenities.”
“That he lets you see,” Emir said. “And the gold-ranker has a name.”
“And if he also had a personality instead of colourful hair beads, someone
might care,” Melody told him.
Emir raised his hands to his bead-laced hair with a hurt expression.
“I like my hair beads.”
“Be nice,” Sophie admonished Melody.
“Of course, you like the boring guy,” Melody said with a groan. “Are you
still seeing that Lump guy?”
“It’s Hump… it’s Humphrey,” Sophie said.
“I am not boring,” Emir insisted. “In fact, you’ll find that a great many
people’s most fervent wish is that I was more boring.”
They approached Jason’s cloud palace, which was once again set up to
serve refugees. Instead of just the towns to the south, much of Yaresh’s
population was now homeless, making them refugees in their own city.
In the weeks following the battle of Yaresh, countless tons of rubble and
ash had been collected and repurposed in construction projects that were
rebuilding the city at a startling pace. Even so, tent cities still dominated, both
inside and outside the city walls. Sophie, Emir and Melody had been walking
through what amounted to a tent district that had grown up around all the
parked adventurer vehicles, including Emir’s and Jason’s.
“You’re going to see Jason?” Sophie asked Emir as they neared the
entrance. They didn’t pause in the doorway itself, as there was a stream of
people coming in and out.
“If he refuses to leave his soul space, or whatever he’s calling it now,
then I’ll have to go see him.”
“You’re not going to try and get him to see the diamond-rankers, are
you?” Sophie asked. “They’re the reason he’s not coming out.”
“Not the Yaresh diamond-rankers, no,” Emir said. “There’s another one
that has come here to see him.”
“Just don’t cause him any trouble,” Sophie warned. “Your wife still feels
guilty about going along with…”
She glanced at her mother.
“…your old teammate. She’d be more than happy to do me a favour.”
Emir held his hand up in surrender.
“No trouble for Jason,” he promised.
Sophie took her mother inside as Emir wandered over to a nondescript
woman who was splitting her attention between the cloud palace and a cube-
shaped device in her hands. She looked to be a well-preserved forty, although
Emir knew she was many times older than that. He grinned as he saw the
frustrated expression on her face.
“I see you’re still a woman,” he said by way of greeting.
“What? Oh, yes,” she said distractedly. “A couple of years, now. I’ve
been thinking it’s time for a switch again. Not a man, though. Somewhere in
the middle, I think. Young.”
Emir looked down at the device. “No luck?”
“It works on yours.”
“Oh, I’m aware,” he said. “I was in the bath when you decided to return
my palace to the cloud flask to make sure your override still worked.”
“I made the damn thing; of course I should be able to control it. What has
this boy of yours done to his? I know I designed them to be adaptive, but this
is outside all of the parameters I set.”
“I was about to go in and ask if he’d speak to you. He’s been dodging the
local diamond-rankers, so he’s been reluctant to come out.”
“They’re diamond-rankers. Why don’t they just break in, if they’re that
determined?”
“They did, after the first week. He’s retreated into a dimensional space.”
“You can force open dimensional spaces.”
“Not this one. The Builder tried, once, and even he couldn’t manage it.”
“Who is this boy?”
“Someone who has a habit of being the right person in the very wrong
place.”
“Really? Did he start off ordinary and get caught up with something
powerful? Properly powerful, I mean, not just some diamond-ranker?”
“Actually, yes.”
She made a sound of mild surprise.
“Fate senses, probably. That would explain the strange, disparate powers
I’m reading from this cloud construct. You would have to go from one
ludicrous encounter to the next.”
“That certainly describes Jason,” Emir said. “What are fate senses?”

“Just the knowledge that it’s possible to survive without astral king patronage
will be a revelation,” Marek said. “It is the fact that the kings are artificially
limiting our advancement that will be the match that turns the Unorthodoxy
from dead wood to raging inferno.”
“The Unorthodoxy,” Jason said. “That’s the messenger rebellion against
astral kings you were talking about?”
He and the messenger sat on a long park bench in a wild garden of plants
flowering vibrant red.
“It is far from a rebellion,” Marek said. “You cannot rebel against those
without whom you will die. But what you’ve done for us shows that we can
live without astral kings.”
“So long as you have an astral king to put your own brand in place,”
Jason pointed out. “I’m not going to be your one-stop-shop for messenger
refurbishment, if that is what you’re thinking. We both know that wouldn’t
work.”
When Jason changed the brands on the souls of Marek and his people, it
was not a smooth process. Opening up their souls to Jason was difficult for
them, their unconscious reluctance overriding their conscious minds. In the
end, only one had been unable to will themselves into opening their souls to
Jason, and he had died several days after the astral king he previously served
removed his own mark.
Even at the end, in the face of death, the messenger had not opened his
soul. Marek had asked Jason how he did it with Tera and suggested he do the
same, but Jason flatly refused. With Tera, he needed to save them both, and
even then he still felt revulsion at the act. More than once in the subsequent
weeks, he’d jerked awake from a flashback nightmare. As she was still to
wake, there was no telling what trauma she had survived.
“I am not asking you to free more souls,” Marek said. “The first step must
be showing my kind that it is possible. Then we can work at suborning astral
kings. Those not on the Council of Kings won’t challenge the council under
current conditions. If the messengers as a whole discover what the kings have
been doing, that will change. I am certain that some will be willing to go
along, if only to use the rebellion to build a power base the council cannot
undermine.”
“That is your affair; I want no part of it.”
“I am surprised that you placed our own marks to free us, when you could
have branded us with yours. We were in no position to argue. It was let you
into our souls or die.”
“I’m not taking anyone as a slave, no matter what they’ve done. I’ll kill
them if the consequences of leaving them alive are worse, but I won’t enslave
anyone. Again. It was strictly a one-time thing.”
“Then you will let us leave?”
“Slavery is not an option. Imprisoning, I’m more open to. Being secret
rebels or whatever doesn’t absolve you of the things you’ve done. You may
not care, but I do.”
“Then what will it take for you to release us?”
“I don’t know,” Jason admitted. “I’m not big on incarceration either, if
I’m being honest.”
“Letting us go is only good for your side. We will be undermining
messenger power structures.”
“So you’ve told me. Repeatedly, and at length. I’ll continue to consider
your arguments.”
Before Marek could answer, Jason was gone.
104
T H E F O O LI S H C H O I C E

I NSIDE J ASON ’ S ASTRAL REALM , M AREK N IOR V ARGAS WAS WALKING WITH
his friend and companion, Payan Nior Roel. Having bloomed in the same
district of the same garden world, they had known each other for all but the
first few days of their lives. They had served under the same commander,
who had helped break their indoctrination. They had confided their doubts in
one another and secretly sought out the Unorthodoxy together.
“We need to leave this place,” Payan said, far from the first time.
“And I am asking you to wait,” Marek said patiently. “Again. And I have
been asking him to release us, but really I am laying a foundation for the
relationship. It’s going to take time for him to see us as anything other than
superiority-obsessed zealots.”
“We’re free of the astral kings, except we’re trapped in the astral
kingdom of this one. Do you not realise what the revelation of not needing
astral kings to survive will mean? Let alone that the astral kings have been
imposing the limits on us while claiming they were natural.”
“I do realise what it means,” Marek said. “It means that our deaths will
come extremely fast if we are not extremely careful. And while we can
demonstrate our freedom simply by existing, we have no proof that the kings
are limiting us. The astral kings will call us liars and aberrations.”
“But that isn’t true. Our people will see that.”
“People will choose what they want to be true over what is, given even
the flimsiest excuse.”
“The servant races, yes, but we are talking about messengers.”
“You shouldn’t call them servant races, Payan. Not only will our host not
like it—and there is no place we can hide from him here—but think about the
revelations we have just learned. The reality is, Payan, that we are the true
servant race.”
“Which is why we need to get out there and start changing things.”
“Which we will, but I think you’ve failed to realise that the most
important gift that our freedom gives us is time. Time to hide. Time to plan,
prepare and gather resources. No Voice of the Will to answer to. No astral
king spying on our souls. That means we can finally hide. We’ve never had
that before.”
“And you would hide in a prison?”
“Yes, I would. Don’t squander this chance, Payan. This astral kingdom is
tiny and incomplete; it’s more of an astral estate. When will you ever get
another chance to see an astral kingdom as a work in progress? You should
take it all in, learn as much as you can and be grateful for the time you get to
spend here. This time will pay itself back a thousandfold when we are
seeking to construct our own astral kingdoms. Think of Mah Go Schaat,
cloistered away in his study. How many centuries had he spent chasing
rumours that would give him a fragment of what is all around us?”
“But what does Asano want of us while we are here? What is his
agenda?”
“You have already given Asano your trust, Payan. You let him into your
soul.”
“Against every instinct screaming at me not to. If the alternative was
anything but death, I don’t know that I could have. Pios Val Haat couldn’t,
even then, and it killed her.”
“Yet, all he did was free us, when he could have made us slaves. He did
not even leave himself a way back into our souls, which he equally could
have. He had no need for schemes because we were perfectly vulnerable and
he had all the power. What could he have done that showed his lack of ill-
intent more clearly than that? I’m actually asking because I cannot think of
anything.”
“But that’s the issue, isn’t it? He’s made it clear that he sees us as
enemies. You think he wants to play us against the astral kings?”
“I think he does now, after I’ve put the idea in his head.”
“Then why did he help us?”
“I don’t know. When I was trying to convince him, asking for mercy
felt… wrong. I haven’t thrown off the superiority doctrine as thoroughly as I
like to tell myself. But I saw Tera Jun Casta who, by all rights, should have
been dead. And I saw Asano, exhausted from the effort of circumventing a
duel power, which shouldn’t be possible. He should have killed her. Could
have killed her. He had the power and she was an enemy. Why he made that
choice, I don’t know. But it feels important that I find out.”
“Then perhaps,” Payan said, “you should ask him.”

“I hate that shadow,” Charist said.


He and his fellow diamond-rank adventurer, Allayeth, had just come from
Asano’s cloud palace. Again. Asano’s familiar had politely told them that he
would inform Asano of their ‘request’ as soon as he was able. They had
returned to the Adventure Society’s main building, one of the few that was
essentially intact in the wake of the raid, taking tea in a private parlour.
“I told you that we shouldn’t have broken into the cloud palace,” Allayeth
said. “He wasn’t in there and it only made things worse. The High Priestess
of the Healer has filed multiple formal complaints to the Adventure Society.”
“We’re diamond-rankers; what do we care?”
“We decided to stay here for some time, Charist. The people of this city
love Hana Shavar, as does the Healer. Causing her trouble is trouble for us.
Unless you’re looking to rule with an iron fist, we can’t just squash the city
authorities.”
Charist’s face took on a contemplative expression. Allayeth saw it and
groaned.
“No,” she told him. “We are not going to rule with an iron fist.”
“You’re the one who brought it up.”
She gave him a flat look.
“Fine,” he reluctantly acceded. “But I won’t have this Asano running over
us the way I’m apparently not allowed to with the city’s precious authority
figures.”
“He is a concern. Have you read the testimonies from the people in that
bunker?”
“You mean where he tells the messenger to give up her soul and it looks
like she does? Clearly, Asano is someone who needs to be brought to heel.”
“No,” Allayeth said. “I spoke to Soramir Rimaros again this morning. He
said that force is a very bad idea.”
“Well, we’re not in the Storm Kingdom. We don’t have any places named
after Soramir Rimaros down here.”
“Actually, there’s a trade town just upriver called Rimarino that—”
“Are you kidding me?”
There was an aura pulse from behind the door and Allayeth responded in
kind. An Adventure Society functionary came in.
“It’s time?” Allayeth asked.
“They should be portalling in six minutes from now,” the functionary
said.
“I can’t believe it’s come to this,” Charist muttered as he rose from his
chair.
“If it worked in Rimaros, it should work here,” Allayeth told him.

In a city far to the north of the Storm Kingdom, Rick Gellar was dressing up.
“They’re treating me like a translator that speaks Asano,” he complained.
“This is a steaming pile of heidel shi—”
“Diplomacy, Rickard,” his teammate and girlfriend Hannah told him as
she adjusted his collar. “We’re about to meet with diamond-rankers.”
“Oh, so now it’s Rickard. I know you were the one who told the protocol
officer at the royal palace in Rimaros that my name was Richard.”
“And I know that you won’t stop talking about how Asano is always
surrounded by beautiful women whenever you get near him.”
“Said like someone who didn’t have her own little crush on him.”
“I have no idea what you’re talking about,” she said airily.
They walked out of their bedroom in the Geller family compound and
made for the teleport zone where the compound’s defences wouldn’t interfere
with a portal. With a sizeable messenger stronghold not too far away, the
compound was always on low-level alert. Dimensional interference was
normally too expensive to leave running, but the compound leveraged
peculiarities of the local magic to make it work.
The rest of Rick’s team joined him and Hannah on the way. Phoebe
Geller was Rick’s sister, now back on his team, and Claire was Hannah’s
twin. The last member of the team was Dustin Kettering, the only non-local.
They had picked him up in Greenstone after their original fifth, Jonah Geller
was killed during a failed star seed extraction. Dustin had been on a team
with Neil Davone and Thadwick Mercer, who had disbanded the team while
also under star seed influence.
“We’re barely back from Rimaros and now we’re going south again,”
Claire complained.
“I didn’t get to go last time,” Phoebe said, “so I’m looking forward to it.
It will be nice to see how Sophie is coming along.”
“I’m looking forward to seeing Neil again,” Dustin said. “Also, being
somewhere less dusty. None of you warned me that they call this region the
dust basin. It’s easy to get magic that shrugs off humidity, but for dust, you
have that annoying air magic blowing over you the whole time.”
“That’s why I told you not to buy the cheap anti-dust bracelet,” Claire
told him.
“I’m not going to pay that much money for a dust bracelet. It’s like those
humidity bracelets back in Greenstone all over again. At least there my name
wasn’t Dustin in a place full of dust. People keep trying to give me terrible
nicknames.”
“Work faces on,” Rick interrupted as he led them through the door and
into the courtyard they would be portalling from. The gold-ranker, his aunt,
gave him a wink as she opened the portal. This involved a gelatinous blob
appearing that swiftly expanded into a ring shape, floating in the air. The
space in the middle of the ring filled with green glowing energy.

Inside Jason’s astral realm, Marek was explaining what he knew of Jes Fin
Kaal’s intentions to Jason and his team. They were in a grassy area, splayed
out in lounge chairs. The two exceptions were Marek, floating just off the
ground at the front, and Gary, cooking at the back. The smell of grilling meat
wafted over the team.
“The astral king is after something buried deep underground,” Marek
explained. “She has known about it for decades, which is why she had the
naga genesis egg placed here. I suspect the astral king will not be happy
about the voice expending so many resources on the Yaresh raid, but I could
just as easily be wrong. Astral kings are known for massive expenditures
when they want something.”
“And what is it that they want, exactly?” Humphrey asked.
“I don’t know,” Marek said. “But I think your Goddess of Knowledge
does. She’s been building forces up here for years, which is the only reason
we didn’t wipe out Yaresh on our arrival.”
“It’s something to do with the natural array, isn’t it?” Clive asked.
“I believe so,” Marek said.
“Can somebody explain what that is again?” Sophie asked. “The last time
we were meant to be briefed, Clive threw a tantrum and stormed off.”
“It was not a tantrum,” Clive said. “But ignoring that, a natural array is a
magical array —a permanently emplaced ritual—except it occurs naturally
instead of being crafted through ritual magic. The elements that make it up
are essences, awakening stones and quintessence that have manifested
normally over decades or even centuries. They just happen to have
manifested in exactly the right proximity and arrangement that their magical
energy interacts to produce a ritual-like effect.”
“That can’t be common,” Sophie said.
“It’s breathtakingly rare,” Clive agreed. “Magic Society researchers have
murdered one another over the chance to study one. Not only does every
element need to be positioned with excruciating precision, but it must do so
without being interfered with in the many years it takes the natural array to
form.”
“And being made up of valuable materials,” Belinda said, “anyone that
finds it will plunder it.”
“It got away with it here by all the bits appearing deep underground?”
Neil asked.
“Exactly,” Clive said. “The essences, stones and quintessence that make
up the array will be what you’d expect from manifestations that far
underground. Earth, fire and iron will make up the vast majority, I imagine.”
“The astral king knew of its existence,” Marek said. “I do not know how,
when even the elf city almost on top of it was oblivious. The original
intention had been to conduct a mining operation and excavate down, setting
off the naga genesis egg in the city if they discovered the operation. But
obstacles arose and things became significantly more complicated.”
“Complicated how?” Humphrey asked.
“We were expecting an array buried in solid earth, doing whatever it was
doing. What we found instead was a subterranean city centred around it, with
a population that had been there for centuries. What’s more, there is an astral
space down there that the Builder cult somehow managed to find and occupy.
They’ve been fighting the locals ever since. When our forces arrived, not
only did we find ourselves stumbling into what was now a three-way war, but
Knowledge’s army was waiting to strike from behind. Even worse, the effects
of the array were impacting our forces. We were forced to withdraw with
considerable losses.”
“I have heard the early stages of the conflict went poorly for the
messengers,” Humphrey said.
“Yes. Significant reinforcements were sent by the astral king. That was
when I arrived with my people. We set up the strongholds, but aside from the
various factions in the conflict, there was another major impediment. The
nature of the array seems to imbue individuals with elemental magic.”
“And what does imbuing people with magic do?” Belinda asked.
“Those living down there were smoulder,” Marek said. “That makes
sense as they have strong earth and fire affinities. They are an essence-using
people, but those who live there now are not. Centuries of exposure have
turned them into a more magical sub-species. They can no longer use
essences, but their inherent powers have grown considerably.”
“There are other cases like that,” Clive said. “Moonstalker Elves.
Thunder King Leonids.”
“The subterranean residents have adapted well,” Marek continued.
“Those who already have high levels of inherent magic are less positively
affected. The messengers sent down swiftly started mutating into elemental
variants.”
“I bet that went down great with team ‘we are the superior race,’” Neil
said.
“It did not,” Marek agreed. “Especially as the changes cause intelligence
to rapidly and precipitously devolve. Most of the initial force of silver-
rankers were lost and even some of the golds failed to escape before being
affected.”
“And that’s when you started suborning essence users,” Jason said.
“Yes,” Marek confirmed. “We discovered that essences users and the
Builder’s converted are both resistant to the effects. Not immune, but there
was no concern on our part for casualties amongst the…”
“Say it,” Jason told him.
“…servant races,” Marek continued. “There were a number of problems,
however. One was that our efforts to recruit and suborn essence users were
not resulting in the numbers we required. The other was that the main
component of successfully resisting the array’s effects, at least amongst
essence users, was willpower. That, as it turns out, is something that those
willing to serve us tend to lack.”
“No surprise there,” Taika said. “That bloke you all sent after Jason tried
to get me onside. His arguments sucked, bro.”
“That was when the stalemate with the local forces settled in. We had our
fortresses, with the Knowledge army and Adventure Society war camps
pressuring them. We also had to periodically deal with incursions from
below, through the very access shafts we had dug.”
“You had dug?” Jason asked pointedly.
“That our slaves had dug,” Marek corrected. “To end the stalemate, the
astral king sent Jes Fin Kaal. She is a Voice of the Will, one of the astral
king’s personal servants, imbued with a portion of her power. She did not
come to fight, however, but to plan. She brought the world-taker worms and
the infested proved resistant to the array’s effects.”
“They weren’t meant to be an invasion force?” Rufus asked.
“Something important to understand about Jes Fin Kaal is that she never
does anything for just one reason. Every resource has an alternative use.
Every plan has contingencies and synergies; every objective has alternatives.
When something goes wrong, she adapts, turning adversity into opportunity.
You, Asano, are the perfect example. She wants to use you, and she is
keeping her options open as to how.”
“She must have gotten a surprise when you sold out instead of capturing
him, then,” Neil said.
“No,” Marek said. “Her orders to the silver-rankers were to kill him, so as
to prove his worth to the rank-and-file messengers. His actions during the
raid more than accomplished this. The gold-rankers were under orders to
capture Asano if possible, and leave him alive and free if not. She does not
need you captured, Asano. She believes she can get what she wants from you
without forcing you into it.”
“How?” Jason asked. “And what does she want from me?”
“She will attempt to use you to retrieve whatever it is she wants from the
subterranean city. I suspect she will make an enticing offer to secure your
participation. With you ostensibly in command of an essence user force, she
can make it work. She will, of course, have plans contingent upon your
refusal as well as your acceptance.”
“Why me? The astral king thing?”
“Yes. The indoctrination of my kind excels at instilling obedience, but it
does have its drawbacks from a control perspective. My kind are unwilling to
work with what they see as their lesser. Any attempt at collaboration
inevitably descends into abuse for the sake of amusement. If they are going to
work with essence users, there needs to be an essence user they acknowledge.
She was going to have you prove yourself in a duel, which would hopefully
demonstrate your astral king nature. Your aura displays during the raid
served her purpose far better than she could have hoped.”
“She’s going to send someone to make an offer,” Jason said.
“Yes. Most likely, she will approach the city itself, rather than you
directly. Leverage their influence to pressure you into action.”
“That’s idiotic,” Sophie said. “The city is already pressuring him, and it’s
getting them nowhere.”
“That’s because what they want right now is control,” Jason said. “They
want the messengers I have and to know whatever they think I know that they
don’t. That’s easy to refuse. But what if they want something that will help
the city? The people? Civic authority holds minimal leverage over me. Moral
authority is harder to resist.”
“Jes Fin Kaal must meet the needs of the astral king,” Marek said. “It is
the only time you can find her acting on a single objective because she has no
choice. It’s the only condition under which she becomes predictable. I
promise you that whatever she offers the city, it will be hard for you to
refuse.”
“And the astral king wants the natural array?” Clive asked.
“There is something else down there she wants,” Marek said. “I know
that it is not the array, nor the elements that make it up. Whatever it is, the
astral king wants it very badly.”
“The messengers are here for Purity’s legacy,” Jason said. “Is that down
there? It would be quite the hiding spot.”
“No,” Marek said. “This is something the astral king wants for herself, to
the point of letting the other kings vie over the Purity relic. I don’t know
what, but everything else is secondary to her.”
“Then all Jason has to do is say no,” Sophie said. “Plan stopped.”
“Plan altered,” Jason corrected. “I don’t think this Jes Fin Kaal will move
forward with an absolute failure point in her plan, especially such a
predictable one.”
“Then we go along with her?” Humphrey asked. “It seems that if we want
to have the ability to influence events, we need to be part of them.”
“To put out an idea that no one seems to have considered,” Rufus said,
“what if we actually go along with the diamond-rankers? Telling them what
we know and giving them what we have? They are on our side.”
Dark clouds gathered in the sky above them.
“I’ve tried working with the organisations on my side before,” Jason said,
his voice rumbling with the echo of thunder.
“That is a no, then,” Rufus said. “I just thought I’d ask.”

Marek and Jason were on a balcony on the pagoda tower at the heart of
Jason’s astral realm, looking out over the gardens and buildings. Jason was
leaning casually against the rail while Marek was upright, floating just off the
floor. The grounds in front of them shifted and changed in a constant state of
flux. Buildings grew larger or smaller, disappearing or new ones suddenly
being there. The flowers in the gardens changed colours and the pathways
and streams shifted location.
Marek never noticed any of it happening. He would simply realise the
difference without having seen it change. He was looking right at it and yet
failed to perceive it, his senses lying to him that it had always been that way.
“Why are you helping us?” Marek asked. “Why was asking for mercy
what convinced you, when the sensible choice was to use us? To hand us
over to the rulers of Yaresh?”
“I might still do that.”
“I don’t think you will, but I don’t understand why not. And I feel like it
is somehow important that I should.”
Jason turned to look at Marek. He didn’t speak for a long time as he
stared at the messenger. Finally, he turned his gaze back out towards the
grounds.
“When I first started to realise that I was more powerful than I was
moral,” Jason said, “I asked my father for advice.”
“Is your father a powerful man?”
“No. What he told me was that when I have someone at my mercy, and
I’m faced with the choice between ending them or not, that is a chance to
decide who I am.”
“The wise decision is to kill your enemies unless you need them for
something. Kill the root and the plant will not grow again.”
“The wise decision, you say. I think that depends on the kind of wisdom
you’re talking about. But I did make your wise choice. Or rather, I just killed
and didn’t even think of it as a choice. I don’t know why it was different with
that messenger girl. She wasn’t different, not really. A little young, but
definitely not innocent. But for some reason, that was the moment. I’ve been
thinking about what my dad told me lately, and that was the moment I
decided to listen.”
Jason ran a hand over his face, took a deep breath and let it out in a slow
sigh.
“Maybe it was just because I’m contrary by nature,” he continued.
“Mercy was the hard path and I don’t know how to take the easy one
anymore. Everything pointed to killing her, and for whatever reason, I
decided I wouldn’t. It’s not like I’m a good man; that ship sailed far too many
corpses ago.”
“We each have our values,” Marek said. “Yours and mine are quite
different, but we both, I think, lament our failures to live up to them.”
Jason nodded.
“I don’t even know if what I did to her was mercy. I might not know even
after she wakes up. I may have destroyed her more horribly than death could
have, but that might not show itself for months or even years. There’s no
fully predicting damage of the mind. But I hope I did right. I can’t tell
anymore, and I’m not sure I was right when I thought I could.”
“Then why try?” Marek asked. “Why make a fool’s choice you can’t be
certain of instead of the smart choice you can confirm?”
“Because I’ve been down what you call the smart choice, and I do mean
down. It only gets darker the longer you walk it. Making things worse and
getting what you want out of that is easy. Making things better is hard and
often uncertain. And yes, it means making the fool’s choice. It’s harder and
you might get it wrong. But if no one dares to be a fool, then all there will
end up being is darkness. I’m sick of darkness, and I like being a fool, so
that’s what I’m going to be.”
“You do not think anything like my people.”
“Your people could stand to think more like me, from time to time.”
“I think you are right. I see now, I think. It is aspirational, yes? You want
to make the foolish choice the right one, even if that always means taking the
harder path. I too have a hard path if I want to save my people. To redeem
them.”
“Then I wish you success. But you should know that it will be even worse
than you think. Sometimes, the world will try to break you. Either you have
to bend, or you make the world bend.”
“Bend the world? If that is your goal, you will need almost inconceivable
power.”
Jason smiled and Marek’s gaze moved from the silver-ranker to his astral
kingdom laid out before them.
“I may have just started to understand you, Jason Asano.”

Jason Asano will return in He Who Fights With Monsters 10!


T H A N K YO U F O R R E A D I N G H E W H O F I G HT S
W IT H M O N S T E R S, B O O K N I N E .

W E HOPE YOU ENJOYED IT AS MUCH AS WE ENJOYED BRINGING IT TO YOU . W E


just wanted to take a moment to encourage you to review the book. Follow
this link: He Who Fights With Monsters 9 to be directed to the book’s
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Every review helps further the author’s reach and, ultimately, helps them
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HE WHO FIGHTS WITH MONSTERS


BOOK ONE
BOOK TWO
BOOK THREE
BOOK FOUR
BOOK FIVE
BOOK SIX
BOOK SEVEN
BOOK EIGHT
BOOK NINE
BOOK TEN

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He WILL protect this town. Glenn Redwood has longed
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leveling and growing stronger. Answering the challenge of
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Trapped in a Dungeon. There's only one way out. Kill
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It's time to break free, by any means necessary.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Shirtaloon was working on a very boring academic paper when he realised


that writing about an inter-dimensional kung fu wizard would be way more
fun.

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