Chapter 190 – Regulation
byMirian’s excitement only grew as the month of Duala continued. By the 13th of Duala, she was elated: she’d found another way to extend the cycles. Whether by design or coincidence, she didn’t know, but some aspect of the Elder Gates helped balance the energy in the leylines. Mirian pored over the leyline data she was getting from both sides of the Gates. The terrible surge that started in the east was moderated by the open portal. Around Cairnsmouth, there were fewer reports of arcane eruptions. From what she could tell, it wasn’t just that the portals were using energy from the leyline—the only thing powerful enough to create such a bridge through the fourth dimension—but also moving huge amounts of arcane energy.
She attempted to interrogate the creature she had taken to calling ‘Conductor’ about this. It still refused to be identified with a name, but it was more so that she could talk about it with other people, rather than saying ‘the weird Elder creature with the eyeball-covered tentacles’ all the time.
Use door to calm leylines? she sent to it.
THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE ASCENDED IS FORBIDDEN, Conductor sent back.
Save, Mirian sent, and then tried to picture all the places in Enteria and send that.
FORBIDDEN, Conductor repeated. THE PACT WAS MADE. CARKAVAKOM WATCHES.
When it sent Carkavakom, Mirian felt an overwhelming pressure on her. She felt an endless scream boiling in a vast creature. She saw a wall of flesh circling the sun, only it wasn’t at all like the sun in the sky, but red and had violent arcs of fire bursting from it. She felt a thousand eyes staring at her. It was like she was in a great void, and in a sphere around her, thousands of eyes had all blinked open to watch her. In the space of a single heartbeat, she felt awe, she felt terror, and she tasted ash in her mouth.
She found herself pressed up against the opposite wall, having involuntarily moved seven feet backward and slammed into it.
The message was, at the very least, clear.
Liuan Var still hadn’t managed to stop the Akanan invasion, but she was able to stop the airships. With the portal open, it was a simple matter to deploy a division of the Palendurio Army to Torrviol. Dug in with trenches, only slightly outnumbered, and with an unstoppable source of logistics, they could hold the line easily for far longer than the rest of the cycle would last.
Two more days passed. By the 15th, it was clear the miracle wouldn’t hold. The leyline surges moving through the continent were simply too large. The eruptions by Cairnmouth were late, but they couldn’t be stopped.
Mirian pored over the leyline data. Again, energy was pooling beneath Alkazaria. Why nothing in Akana? From the past data she’d taken, there were several leylines that looked like they should be forming a confluence near Ferrabridge, but the dynamic was completely different.
Architecture of the ascended. The Elder Gods, did it mean? Are even the exact paths of the leylines by Their design? she wondered.
There was enough energy moving through the system that confluences should also be forming down south in Persama.
She needed to investigate.
But first, she needed to figure out how to open the Elder Gate on the Torrviol end.
***
Song Jei had retrieved several maps of the Torrviol Underground from the secure library in Bainrose. Now, Mirian was looking over them again, looking for some sort of sealed room that was just like the one with Conductor. Occasionally, she would add a secret passage or write a note about an incorrect junction. The maps were all using a different scale. One of the older maps was actually measuring things in cubits. That particular measurement had been archaic a thousand years ago, but the map was only two hundred years old. Why the academic had decided to do that was as unfathomable as Carkavakom.
As she studied the maps, she kept having the feeling that she was missing something.
Eventually, she sat down and thought. Her mind drifted back to the early days of the loops. Almost immediately, she’d started going down into the Underground and finding strange things. She’d first seen that abandoned statue and the orichalcum disks, though she hadn’t been able to levitate at the time. She’d found all sorts of secret passages and strange doors. Doors, she thought. She’d found a strange one that was locked. Just before that train ride with Nicolus where she’d first seen a leyline breach and moonfall. Then she’d gone back to it right after. She’d been exploring the Underground, using that embarrassingly bulky mapping device. There was a door, she remembered. Covered in glyphs. Pre-Cataclysm construction. And my divination spells returned something strange. Did I ever open it?
She returned to the maps. It had been close to the passage in Griffin Hall. She searched the maps. Nothing. But it hadn’t been that hard to find. But the spies and professors all used the maps. Why would they go wandering off towards what’s marked as a dead-end passage?
There’d been something strange about that door.
“I vaguely remembered something,” she said to Jei, rolling up the maps. “This way.”
They snaked through the passages.
“What are you thinking about?” Mirian asked.
Jei was silent. “Why?” she asked.
“Because I’d like to know. I appreciate you, more than you can know. I don’t want to command you to answer. Or guilt you. Friendship… looks different for me,” she said.
They continued on, the only sound the echo of their boots through the narrow passages. “Home,” Jei said finally.
“You haven’t talked much about home,” Mirian said.
“I have often thought there is no point to yearning for what cannot be. Yet sometimes I fall victim to it, and wonder how my family fares. Zhighua is not a good place to live right now, but it is beautiful. I wonder how my sister is. I wonder if I will ever see any of them again. Perhaps it is not fated to be. Right now, I have no life; I am not living. I am a tool being wielded in service for a god I do not have faith in, and it must be so.”
Mirian was silent. She felt a pang deep in her chest.
“There is some solace in the knowledge; if I am not alive yet, then I cannot die. I wonder: what will befall my home, when this is all done? Will Akana complete Baracuel’s conquest? Will that bring peace, or just suffering? Will the old regime of Zhighua be reborn? Would that be better or worse? Nevertheless, all these thoughts will end soon. Is there a point to having them? Perhaps. But perhaps it is better to push them aside and be the orb that lights the path of fate.”
So often, she had become numb to events, but there were times that they surged inside her. Mirian felt a single tear trickle down her face. “We’ve suffered a terrible fate,” she said quietly.
“You cannot comfort the world before it dies, for then you will spend an eternity in mourning. You can only push forward and let it live. It took me a long time to learn that lesson with Bao. I mourned for who she was for so long that I forgot to celebrate who she had become. She is still my precious treasure.”
“Some days, I feel unworthy. What did I do to deserve you?”
“Never feel that,” Jei said. “I gave up in believing in ‘justice’ or ‘deserve.’ There is only what is, and what you do with it. I have probably said this before. I think the thought pattern emerges in my mind so often I must have said it, so I think if I say it I will repeat myself. But I will say it in case I haven’t: you cannot save everyone. What you do must serve the greater good of all. When this is over, you must have changed the world so that these horrors cannot repeat.”
She had said it before, but Mirian still hated it. Why must I be the one to choose? “It’s a burden,” she said.
You might be reading a stolen copy. Visit Royal Road for the authentic version.
“Good,” Jei said. “If it ever stops weighing on you, that’s when you should worry. The tonnage of so many lives should not feel light.”
“True,” Mirian said. She thought of Viridian’s discovery. What would Enteria look like without spell engines? She needed to start thinking of the shape of the future. “The world will change. I need to better understand the shape of it.”
“I have always found knowledge and experience to help in whatever I am trying to do.”
“There’s so much to learn.”
“Always.”
They turned another corner. They were off the map now. They took another passage. This one brought them close to the Bainrose plaza.
At last they came to it. The door.
The seams of the stone wall had a faint blue glow to them, and the solid oak door had an orange glow inside the keyhole. She’d misremembered; the door had no glyphs on the outside, but by the arcane energy present, it was obvious there were glyphs somewhere in its construction.
Jei furrowed her brow. “When did you discover this?”
“Near the start of it all. I was wandering around the Underground randomly, trying to figure out where you were going and how the spies were getting into Bainrose. Or something like that.”
Mirian cast date rock. Her divination was much better now, and she could easily target the mortar between the stones. “Five thousand two hundred years,” she announced. That didn’t just predate the Cataclysm, it pre-dated it by nearly four hundred years. There were legends of a people who lived before the Cataclysm. “What do you know of the Viaterria people?”
“Nothing,” Jei said. “Most of what is said to be known is conjecture. Have I mentioned Zhuan Li?”




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