241, 2/2
by inkadmin
The ‘food court’ of the tower was much as Erick remembered; a bunch of tables and chairs and lounging spaces, surrounded by business spaces and restaurants. And then there were the traps. Color bombs were inside every couch seat and hidden behind every door, just waiting for someone to walk though and get colored with indelible magical dye.
Ophiel instantly went about setting off one of every color for which he had a body, which meant that soon Erick had an Ophiel in every color, with a double in purple.
Rozeta disabled the traps where she sat down, and invited Erick to sit with her.
Rozeta served tea, and as Erick took a sip, she began, “I believe it would be a bad idea for you to try and circumvent the natural ascension to True Wizard that comes at this point in your life, either through a manaminer, or through other means. That sort of ‘manaminer-assist’-action would taint whatever final form you figured out. Furthermore, I believe that you asking the Well for assistance in this was not a good idea. Aside from the Well possibly granting you false information, and fucking up everything that you are from now until forever… Don’t go walking in the Dark, Erick— Or more to the point:
“Even in the Old Cosmology, Wizards were a minor manifestation of the Darkness, going their own way, not beholden to the Dark at all. By this action of you believing the Well and being transported by the Well, you threaten to make Wizards unanimous with the Dark yet again, which will not go well for anyone.”
“… Okay. Well. I understand that. So do you have any hints about True Wizardry that you haven’t already given me?”
Rozeta shrugged. “Not really. But since the Dark brought you here, he feels that something can be gained by you in this location… And yes. I know I just told you not to trust the Dark, but I highly doubt that when the Dark delivers you to me that it is trying to screw with you somehow, and by extension screw with all the rest of the world.”
“So there is something here, eh?”
Rozeta looked to Erick, and said, “There hasn’t been a True Wizard here on Veird since the Grand Translation put most everyone into bodies. Perhaps the problem lies in Particles itself? I don’t know. Perhaps you have to become a magical soul and nothing else, first. Perhaps lichdom is the proper path to Wizardry these days.
“I have told you this already, but back in the Old Cosmology, Wizards had to either purge themselves of everything that was not themselves or they had to permanently integrate everything that they were into their crystal form before they could ascend to True Wizard. This physical action was a magical action back then, since everything was made of mana.” Rozeta said, “So, like my father had once said…” It was tough for Rozeta to continue, but she did. “Perhaps the Script is the real problem, as my father suggests, because with the Script you’ve never had to truly wrestle with your innate mana production before. You have undeveloped mana veins because of that. And yet, Wizards used to ascend to Full Wizardry all the time, even without going through any of the proper steps at all. But there were steps for a lot of them, and you have never needed to go through those steps.
“On the other claw, mental hangups were always the largest stumbling block for every single Wizard… And that’s likely where you’re faltering. If you became a True Wizard, you’d have to either kill or instantiate Ophiel and Yggdrasil both, not to mention separate from the Script, and all that that would entail.”
Rozeta sipped her tea.
Erick sipped his tea, too. Yggdrasil would be easy to instantiate. All that would require is the removal of his seal, for any length of time at all. Doing that would probably allow Yggdrasil to plant his True Self, too. Or maybe removing the seal would allow Erick to do that; to fix that one pesky line in that blue box that said ‘The World Tree has yet to be planted.’.
Ophiel was going to naturally separate in a few months. Maybe 4. Erick could probably force that birth early if he wanted. The standard way to force that issue would be to use Time Magic, but Erick already knew that he could force Ophiel’s instantiation through some Wizardry, if he absolutely had to do that. Oddly enough, because how much Erick had screwed up [Onward], Wizardry might actually be the safer option than using Time Magic directly.
… But besides those personal issues, Erick was still not happy with the state of the world, either. So maybe he had some mental hangups about how becoming a True Wizard would separate him from everyone else in a very real way, and he didn’t want that separation yet.
But if he fixed everything, then he could safely separate?
Erick asked, “What sort of problems would you like to see gone from Veird, or solved?”
“I want the Forever War to end,” Rozeta said, without reservation, “Not sure how to stop those assholes from fighting all the time, though.”
Erick had a timeless moment of disbelief that Rozeta would actually go that direction, and then he smiled. “It would be pretty great if they stopped fighting.”
Rozeta stared at Erick without actually staring at all, as she said, “It would take a Wizard to invent a supreme reason for why they are fighting at all, and then help mediate how to stop the fight, either through the removal of that reason, or through some other way to stop the eternal hate.”
“… Oh.”
Rozeta nodded. She knew the seriousness of what she touched upon.
Erick had a thousand thoughts on that. From the ethics of causing such a deep change in how the universe worked to wondering if he could even do any sort of real change at all, to suddenly realizing that other Wizards had ‘won’ wars by simply putting themselves at the end points of those wars, as the victor. And Erick was a ‘truly strong’ Wizard. He could… Do a lot, if he wanted.
“… It would have to be…” Erick began, “It would have to be a deep enough reason for war so as not to fuck up all the rest of history, right?”
Rozeta skipped all subtlety and directly stated, “Make both Elements able to gain more of themselves when one triumphs over the other. That could be the base reason for their war. From there, we pivot away from killing to games of triumph, and debates, and anything else that is not outright war. There has been a war for so long that there is no other way to see ‘angels-versus-demons’ other than as a war. But it could change. It could be made better.”
Erick set down his tea. “I’m not sure if we should continue this, or if you’re even Rozeta at all.”
“I am Rozeta,” Rozeta said, “So ask the real question.”
“Why would you ever suggest such a thing? The pure chaos that it would create is unimaginable!”
“I know what I am asking for. I know the danger of it all. I know a lot more than you, Erick. And I know that you might not choose to do this, and thus I will have damaged our working relationship from now until forever. But this change doesn’t have to happen now, and it’s just one possible solution to the problem. Maybe you simply talk to them and end the Forever War that way. Maybe you make it so that when an angel harms a demon or the other way around that they actually harm themselves, which is another solution I have considered but I am less sure about. Either way, the Forever War needs to end before it can be allowed to spread past this world.
“It’s because of them and their war that my father is allowed to do this Sundering search in the first place; that you were dragged into this horror, and that you and Jane and now Poi are subject to making repros and all that that entails. The only reason that the angels and demons voted that way was because both of them saw the chance for them to use what was coming to create some ultimate weapons against the other. Nuclear, Establishment, Wizard-ways. They even want to start wielding Primal Lightning against each other.
“I have overlooked their war for the longest time, because I must remain neutral, but they threaten to disturb the very fabric of our reality, and thus they need to change.”
Erick’s breath was almost still in his lungs. This was real. Ah.
Rozeta said, “The Forever War needs to end, and the creation of a reason for the war to exist at all, and the subsequent annihilation of that reason, seems like a good way to erase that war from existence for good. Maybe you can even make a simple artifact that is the basis for the entire War in the first place; both sides are small enough that that trick might actually work, but it won’t work once we get past Veird.” She said, “The ending of the Forever War also has the side effect of disrupting their voting bloc and returning actual democracy to the Relevant Entities of the Script. That needs to happen.”
“… Okay. It’ll take me a while to come to terms with that… A while.”
Rozeta leaned back in her chair. “Understandable. I have been able to uphold neutrality for a long time, Erick, but this latest turn of events… It’s taken me time to come to grips with this turn of events as well. I didn’t even know how to bring it up with you last time we spoke, but since you’re here in the Core… I brought it up.”
Erick didn’t speak.
Rozeta offered, “We can move on to other topics.”
Erick breathed out, then moved on. “Got any suggestions on how to handle Jane and her repros? I am worried about all of them.”
Rozeta was a goddess after all. She had seen a lot, and knew a lot. Erick felt he might as well ask her such a question. But as soon as he asked, Rozeta got a strained look in her eyes—
Rozeta said, “Anything I say to you could theoretically be used by my own father against me, so I’m going to echo Poi’s words, and say that you’re just growing apart… But. Perhaps give her missions to complete? To prove her power to herself and to you?” Rozeta shook her head. “I don’t know, Erick. Ask any other god besides me about that topic, please. Personally, I’m afraid of my father gaining Jane as paladins, and that you won’t fight against them if he should drive all of them toward your destruction.”
Horrors on top of horrors.
Erick asked, “It’s not possible that I’m secretly and Paradoxically Melemizargo myself, right?”
Rozeta shook her head. “You’re not him. Paradox Wizards are confounding bastards at the best of times, but a Paradox Wizard could never become the Dark.”
“And yet, people have been calling me ‘Xoat’ for the longest time.”
“Now that—” Rozeta said, “Xoat and the Darkness are entirely two different things. But if you want to talk about how a Paradox Wizard could be Xoat? Well now that’s a much more reasonable conversation.”
“… I’m not sure if I like that comparison.”
The tension in the room eased as Rozeta gave a small grin. Then she nodded. “I understand your reluctance, but there’s nothing wrong with you being an incarnation of Xoat.”
Erick moved on, again. “So about the Well’s idea for me to find a Creation Wizard in the Dark?”
Rozeta shook her head. “A bad idea. You’d bring forth any number of my father’s claw-picked Wizards, and I cannot abide by that. We wouldn’t have a Destruction Wizard capable of matching them for power, either, and we absolutely do not want a Destruction Wizard on Veird at all.”
“Understandable, then.” Erick went right onto the next question, “So if Solomon gains enough personal mana creation… At what point does a normal person become a Wizard?”
“Ahhh… Now that’s a question.” Rozeta said, “There’s a qualitative difference between the mana production gained through the Trials of the Dark and the mana production of being a Wizard. Small Wizardries are happening all across Veird all the time now, primarily because dragons are living in the open here or in Fairie, but there’s an increasing section of the population that does Wizardry through their own natural mana production that they gained in Trials of the Dark. Mostly, people are just making magics easier than they used to be able to make magic; going from the Basic tiers of the Script paid for with 1 point, up to tier 5 and 6, just through pure desire and a basic magical education. The average level of spell creation used to be 2.7 before the dungeons. Now it’s 4.1.
“But becoming a Wizard through the mana gained from trials is completely unheard of. I haven’t seen anyone cross that divide, but it should be possible.” Rozeta said, “It would require some sort of ignition-event, though, to transform a conglomeration of Dark mana into personal mana.”
Erick scrunched his eyes. “So there’s a difference between Trial mana and personal mana?”
Rozeta shrugged. “There is no chemical or physical difference between a diamond grown with a spell and a diamond grown with natural forces, but the one grown by natural forces has a certain magical impression upon the world that the spell-created diamond does not possess. And yet, magical impressions can be manufactured. Just takes time and pressure.”
Erick thought about that for a moment. And then he tried to relax, and look around a little. “So I guess I ended up back here somehow… Want to talk about that past? I might be looking to get it back… or maybe Melemizargo wants his wife back?”
Rozeta smiled a little at the mention of Melemizargo getting his wife back. “That particular path is a doubtful one. My father was not a father like you are a father. Most dragons are not. Back in the Old Cosmology it was considered an honor and privilege to mate with the Dark. It was a privilege my mother won several times in the last 30,000 years, or something like that. The Dark is a completely absentee father, though, until events bring his children to his attention.”
Erick raised an eyebrow.
“Dragon culture is a lot different from what you’re used to, Erick, because Dragon Essence does not lend itself to normal ways of mortal life. Dragons in Fairie are perhaps the most normal of us all, making eggs and leaving them to hatch and grow and thrive on their own, or die in the process. When dragons inhabit the forms of the mortal races they’re a bit better about caring for offspring, but you know how that ends. All dragon fathers and mothers leave dragonkin children to die or thrive on their own, for their Dragon Essence and Will To Power drives the dragons onward, and if the child should prove strong enough, then the parents will see the child again eventually.
“Benevolence Dragons are a big change in that natural order, though. I see all of them raising clutches together… Which is kinda weird, actually. But they seem to be happy that way.” Rozeta shrugged. “Whatever comes next will probably form the basis of the rest of existence from now on, but back then things were not like they are now.
“In this land, I had what I would call a ‘normal’ dragon childhood.
“My tale of this Grand Wizard’s tower is barely unique, though, for there isn’t a god or otherwise who fell to Veird who didn’t come through this place at some point in their lives. This Grand Wizard’s Tower was practically the center of the universe, though back then such a statement would have sparked a thousand dissenting voices.
“I was born here, though, so it was my center for a long time.
“Liliandroza set a clutch of eggs sired by Melemizargo down upon the fourth island out there, the one that is half-buried in the ocean, and I was hatched in that clutch, whereupon I won the hatching battle. My brothers and sisters fled with superficial wounds, for the Wizards in their tower prevented me from killing the others, which I wasn’t thankful for until many years later, when one of my brothers…” Rozeta got a far-off look in her eyes, as she said, “He saved me and I saved him.”
A silence descended.
Erick asked, “Did he survive the Sundering?”
Rozeta’s pain was old, and so she easily said, “No, he did not. He was on the other side of the universe when that happened and I was on Veird already. This Grand Wizard’s Tower didn’t survive at all.” She waved a hand, indicating the tower. “This is all just a rebuilt memory.”
Erick nodded as he looked around. For a moment, Erick focused on the unfinished stone statue of ‘Xoat’, standing in the back of the food court, and at the empty base behind that statue. Melemizargo’s statue should have been there, on that empty pedestal, overlooking the statue of Xoat. But the representative of the Dark was gone from this place; removed by Rozeta, for his crimes.
Erick asked, “When did Melemizargo become a part of your life? Or how about your mother? If she lived here, too.”
“My father was not present at all for any part of my life until I came into my own power, when I began working with Koyabez on the manaminer of Veird. But before that, a thousand years before… I lived here in this Tower, and I knew my mother as a distant force of power, always in her garden and keeping the Tower secure.
“This Tower and the Wizards therein were much more my family for the first 250 years of my life…”
– – – –
They had moved up to the second floor an hour ago to have some pastries and coffee at ‘Koyabez’s Rest’ and to talk of history long gone, of material solutions to current-day problems, and about the differences between ‘safe’ Wizardry, and ‘big’ Wizardry.
Rozeta refilled her coffee and Erick’s, as she continued, “Solving the Forever War outright would be a Big, unsafe Wizardry, so yeah, I don’t want that. Not right now, anyway.”
“Well good!” Erick laughed a little. “Neither do I.”
Rozeta smiled, saying, “I would prefer a smaller solution, though I doubt it would work. Maybe you can use some combination of Wizardry and Benevolence to pluck out important demons and angels from the mess of them all to talk to them and to get them to agree to a permanent truce? Maybe.” She lost her smile. “I was really hoping that the inroads with your Gate Network between the Wasteland and Greensoil would have lasted, but then that asshole Darundi went and did some political gain.”
Erick sighed. “I had a lot of circumstantial evidence… Enough to convince me. But that really is what happened, eh.”
“I can talk to you about things that you already know, but as a goddess of neutrality, I won’t and can’t involve myself with mortal intrigue.” Rozeta said, “Honestly, Erick, you could make this world so much better if you had fewer morals, but if you did, then you wouldn’t be you, so going the slow way is better for everyone.”
Erick sipped his coffee, thinking.
Rozeta said, “Smaller Wizardries are good for that. A dungeon would be good for testing those small Wizardries, too. Removal of that timer to change the Rules. You might think of some sort of implementation of your own control over the dungeon, instead of needing to go through a dungeon master slime. You can try creating Dark Mirrors and Pathing Portals in your dungeon and linking it all with a Benevolent Gaze upon history… Just viewing history shouldn’t be a problem, and as a Paradox Wizard you should be able to do that. As none of that is allowed or possible via the dungeon, or the Script, or by Benevolence, all that would all require Wizardry in order to happen.”
“All good targets for Wizardry experiments, theeaaH—” Erick yawned. “—good targets then. Excuse me.”
Rozeta smiled softly. “You’ve been awake for about 4 days now. There’s a room in the palace on the other island for you, if you want.”
“That sounds like a wonderful idea…” Erick thought about the trip to the Surface, and then to Ascendant Mountain, and then to the house in the Dark where he should be sleeping right now. “… It’s gonna be damned hard to sleep in that dungeon.”
“Make the house into a safe space with Benevolence Wizardry.”
“… Ha!” Erick said, “I probably could, couldn’t I. Benevolence should be able to make a safe space… I think.”
Rozeta nodded. “You might not be able to simply burn away something like a Sun Wizard could, but Benevolence has utility. But, there is something else to consider. In creating a safe space around a dungeon core through act of Wizardry, you are going against the core; you will have put a safe space over an area overseen by the Dark, which will definitely cause unintended side effects, because the core being able to protect itself through absolute violence is sort of its base nature. That’s not even getting into other possible side effects, such as my father saying, ‘No’.”
“I could make a core with the base nature of making the world safe?”
“And then we get into a conversation about ‘what is safe’ which goes through a bunch of philosophy but eventually arrives at a ‘safe’ dungeon core being antithetical to the Darkness, and the real-world problem of the Dark then doing something unexpected to ‘fix’ the problem.”
“Ah. Yeah. Unintended Big Wizardry. I should have realized that before I said it.” Erick looked down at the coffee. “I think it stopped working.”
Rozeta stood. “I’ll let you get to bed, Erick. Sweet dreams.”
And then Rozeta stepped away, into the ether, vanishing in a golden flow.
“I suppose it’s time to clean up one more mess before I go,” Erick muttered to himself.
And then Erick looked over at Ophiel, and at the ten purpleberry pies that he had attempted to eat, and had instead gotten everywhere across the floor, and across a few tables and chairs. The distribution of crust and purple and lumps of berry were all very purposefully placed. It kinda looked like the cloud castle, with different purpleberry pie detritus on different levels of chairs and tables, forming the different buildings of the cloud castle. And then Ophiel noticed Erick looking.
Ophiels in four different colors suddenly flopped onto the mess and squawked, “My art! No touch!”
“Ophiel,” Erick began, “You have made a beautiful sculpture of the house, but we can’t leave art like this wherever we go. Please put the room back how you found it.”
Quietly, and defensively, Ophiel whistled, “nooooo.”
“Your art is fantastic, but it will only last a few days like this anyway. The berries are wet right now, but they’ll dry and darken. Then mold will come in and grow colors everywhere, while also being quite dirty.”
Ophiel hopped up, and cast some Preservation magic on the mess. “No dirty! Last forever!”
Erick stared for a moment, disbelief and surprise and a strange sense of pride all vying for prominence in his mind. And then came discipline. Erick said, “You’re not getting any more purpleberry pie from Quilatalap unless you clean up this one.”
Each Ophiel looked at each other, all of them sharing unsure guitar noises and unhappy flute sounds. And then, most reluctantly, Ophiel began cleaning up his mess.
Erick wordlessly thanked the gods for the small miracle of children sometimes listening.
– – –
As Erick fell into a bed fit for a king and softness surrounded him, Erick wordlessly thanked Rozeta for the hospitality, and the talk. He now had a solid plan going forward. He was absolutely not going to ‘Wizard-up’ a solution to the Forever War, but… He could do something good for everyone. A little here, a little there.
Maybe pluck out lost powers from the history of Veird, to bring them into the modern day?
As Erick almost fell asleep, he had another thought, though. All of this power he had, this capability to change this very world, went against his own idea that no one should have the power to change the world on their own whims.
Poi approved of Erick making changes, though; he had always said as much.
Rozeta and the gods were fine with Erick making changes, too.
… Still felt weird.
– – – –
Erick stepped out of the sky, Ascendant Mountain sprawled out in front of him, all its crystal spires glinting in the light of a fresh morning. Everything was palest blue, mostly white, and filled with shadows, with not a spot of red glows anywhere; nothing was on fire, so all was good.
Another lightstep took Erick directly to the entrance to the slime dungeon, among a copse of crystal-crusted trees. Nothing untoward out here. Another step took Erick through a dark portal, inside, to stand upon the white staircase. Nothing was on fire down here, either, and as multicolor Ophiel explored the multicolor space, Erick saw that nothing was wrong, though a lot of things were still uncomfortable.
But Jane seemed happy, and Poi and Solomon seemed okay…
This was fine.
Another lightstep took Erick directly to the house under the floor, where he entered the kitchen just in time to see Solomon flip a pancake, and call out that breakfast was ready. Six Janes sat at the table, instead of the 5 of yesterday, while Poi sat at the far end, all of them talking to each other, with three of the Janes asking about [Hive Mind], and the other three distinctly not wanting [Hive Mind]. Erick briefly wondered where the Jane#6 came from, but they must have used another one of the slimes in the mage tower, and yup, Erick counted them again, and another one had been used.
The second Erick appeared the Janes were up and demanding to know what had happened, and Erick was quite flustered by the experience of having 6 daughters all wanting to know if he really was okay. Only one of them gave him a hug, though; the other 5 stayed away, looking somewhat crushed that they weren’t the ones hugging Erick, and also that they didn’t feel they were allowed to hug him. Erick made a movement to hug them, too, but they winced, and backed away, and so Erick did not close that distance.
Instead of thinking about that, Erick rapidly went into a brief rundown of what had happened with the Well. As the Janes focused on work, too, the whole group came together in solidarity. Silently, and to himself, Erick wondered if he would be experiencing the same sort of ‘multi-child’ event with Ophiel, and maybe even Yggdrasil, when they were ‘born’. Yggdrasil would probably remain himself, but Ophiel… Looking upon all the differently colored and shaped Ophiel, Erick imagined that Ophiel would probably become a lot of different kids.
Erick was too busy talking about what had happened in the Core to give much more than a passing thought toward suddenly having 10 Ophiel, multiple Janes, and also Yggdrasil all as kids.
Before Erick knew it, he was out of the spotlight, breakfast was back on, and the conversation turned back to [Hive Mind].
“If it can’t be done with us, because we don’t know Mind Magic,” Jane asked, “Then how about an artifact of [Hive Mind]? Do the Mind Mages have those?”
“We can’t all be the same person anyway,” another Jane said, circling back to the main point against [Hive Mind]. “Us all being the same person defeats the entire purpose of making the squad of separate people.”
Jane nodded, then said, “But in the downtime? We could all come together—”
“Then what about transferring memetic threats that we don’t know we’re passing to each other?” said another Jane.
Poi had seen that point coming, so he said, “We have those artifacts, but they’re not perfect, and communicable memetic threats are very much a threat in this New Cosmology. I imagine they’re a threat in the Old Cosmology, too.”
Solomon skirted around the conversation to set before Erick a very large plate of pancakes, sausage, and eggs. He stage-whispered, “You didn’t miss much; just a bunch of arguing and monster killing.”
Stolen from its rightful place, this narrative is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings.
Erick happily took the plate of food, smiling as Jane after Jane derided Solomon for his lack of adventuring experience, which was primarily filled with complaints about how he wasn’t allowed to just blast everything away with absolute authority. ‘Just blasting’ was no way to learn what the dungeon was trying to teach you. There was some pushback from the other Janes, though.
“Quite frankly, Jane, Jane, Jane, and Jane,” Solomon said, smirking, “I think Jane and Jane have it right; I can blast shit apart if I want.”
Erick had an absolutely surreal moment.
It was yet another moment in a chain of such moments.
“Yes but you only get half-gains!” Jane said.
“And half-gains are better than none. And speed matters,” Another Jane said.
“Lyrical didn’t beat us in base regen due to being precise about anything,” Jane, original style, said.
“Well that’s true,” Jane said, reluctantly.
Erick was having trouble with the surreality of it all, but on the other hand, he was absolutely enthralled with the conversation, because it was like he was watching his daughter from a completely different angle. Primarily, the Janes spoke of what was done right in the dungeon, and what was done wrong, and they gave a whole bunch of specifics about this and that, but to Erick ‘blast it apart with light’ was a valid strategy. More than that, though, Erick was listening to his daughter talk to herself.
He was learning so much from all of these interactions.
But regarding the ‘proper way to do a dungeon’, Erick eventually found a moment to quip, “It’s like you used to say, Jane! If violence isn’t working, you aren’t using enough of it.”
All six Janes still groaned, and all six of them visibly thought about throwing something at Erick.
– – – –
When the Janes left to go back to delving, Erick sent a dense telepathic packet to Poi and Solomon about what had happened with the Well. Erick had spoken of all of that at breakfast, but Erick had left out specifics that needed to be said. Poi already knew everything, of course, but Solomon did not, and he needed to know the full story.
It took Solomon a moment to digest the information therein, but not too long at all. When he was done, he opened his eyes, and nodded. “Wanna talk about the Janes now?”
“They were scared to hug me when I came back, but they all wanted to.”
Solomon gave a tiny, knowing smile. “Yeah. Same for me, but… When we were in the dungeons, one of them let slip that she was happy that she had sisters, and then she realized I overheard her and they all got embarrassed about that.”
That made Erick feel some kinda odd way that was hard to put into words. Happy, for sure, but also a bit melancholy. “It certainly did seem like they were happy to be around each other.” Erick said, “Honestly this whole thing is kinda hard to process.”
Solomon nodded, his expression turning serious, “I’m trying not to think about it too much, because all I can think of is that most of them are going to die. I’m probably going to die, too.”
“Not if I have anything to say about that,” Erick said. “And you have Time Magic, too, right?”
“I do,” Solomon said, “Though it appears a lot weaker than what I’m used to.”
Erick’s eyebrows rose. “How much weaker?”
“I can go 10 seconds in the past for 10,000 mana, but I can’t activate it again and again in rapid sequence to go back 100 seconds.” Solomon said, “I get a lot less bang for the buck than I used to.”
Erick frowned. “That is a concern.”
“Not much of one,” Solomon said.
Poi didn’t seem concerned about dying or the lack of absolute power that Erick was used to having.
As soon as Erick had that thought, Poi said, “I’m not concerned with dying; that is correct. I’ll live on even if this body perishes.”
“Well that’s weird, but okay.” Erick stood from the breakfast table, saying, “Let’s work on proper defenses, anyway.”
Solomon nodded.
Poi asked, “Where do we start?”
– – – –
Erick stood with Solomon and Poi in the mage tower, underneath the model of the solar system, where the sun was the dungeon core. That false sun glowed white and iridescent, bathing the room in a calm sort of light that glinted off of the [Crystal Stasis]’d dungeon master slimes, hanging out in the asteroid belt.
A message held in the air ahead.
– –
RULES:
1: Script Interface, minimal settings
2: Auto-Resurrection, unlimited lives
3: Maximum Life Support, slime generation set to maximum; PLAIN SLIMES ONLY
4: Sanctity of Space, golem enforcement of life form level; MAXIMUM LETHALITY
~ Exceptions: Fallopolis, slimes, Erick Flatt, Jane Flatt, Ophiel, Yggdrasil, + Accompaniment
5: Direct access to Darkness
Note: Rules Changes Locked for <07D:01H:39M>
– –
Erick was going to try and turn that timer down to 0, to unlock Rule changes in the dungeon.
Poi said, “You could put the core in a [Hasted Shelter] and make it count down fast on its own. No need for Wizardry at all.”
Erick paused in thought.
Solomon did too. And then Solomon answered, “Do the Wizardry, Erick.”
Erick said, “The [Hasted Shelter] idea is a good idea. It has merit. It’s a good way to visualize what I want to happen… But Solomon is right.”
Poi shrugged. “I just needed to say what both of you were thinking, to put it out there for discussion instead of left unsaid.”
Erick looked at Solomon, and Solomon looked at Erick.
“… Well, huh,” Solomon said.
“I’m only going to try to ‘add a switch’ to the timer,” Erick said, “And then if it works, we can add more switches in other places; try to make this a repeatable Wizardry.”
“That was always the hardest part; the repeatability,” Solomon said, “None of the Wizardry worked the same twice in a row.” And then he paused, adding, “Well… We can reliably copy spellwork through Wizardry; speaking to the mana instead of casting at all.”
Erick raised an eyebrow. “Have you tried that sort of Wizardry, yet?”
Solomon happily said, “It wasn’t working at the start of the dungeon delves, but after the second day I had 2,300 base mana production, and I was able to make tier 1 through 4 magic work through Wizardry alone.”




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