Alpha Strike: An interstellar Weapon Platform's Guide to Cultivation [Progression Sci-fi/Cultivation]

Book 1 - Lesson 41: "Make plans for the future."
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Book 1 - Lesson 41: "Make plans for the future."
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"Oh? What's this I see? When my people told me a group of Slatewalkers had arrived, I'll admit, I wasn't expecting so many… familiar faces."

Just the sound of the voice emanating from the crowd nearly drove Zolzaya into a bloodlust-fueled rampage. When the crowd finally parted, revealing the arrogant sneer of "East Scion" Mönkhkhan, only the tight grip of her father's hand on her shoulder prevented her from pouncing on the sod.

Through gritted teeth and a "smile" that would have made children cry, Zolzaya was the first to speak.

"Mönkhkhan… I'm surprised you had the gall. I warned you if you ever showed yourself to me again, I'd—"

One of the young man's cronies, a flat-faced man who Zolzaya had never bothered learning the name of, cut her off,

"That's Khan to you, you ungrateful bumpkin; you should—"

Though he was, in turn, cut off by Mönkhkhan's raised hand. The sneer dropped from his face, and he frowned over his nose at her as he spoke.

"Now, no need for that. We can't expect a half-breed like her to show any respect…."

The man turned and looked at her father, the sneer returning.

"I see your father survived his punishment. A shame. Then again, what else can you say about a… barbarian if not that they're resistant?"

Zolzaya pointed, her eyes bloodshot, but Juatan's voice cut off whatever she was about to say.

"Alive and well, young master. While it might be nice to catch up, I'm afraid we have business at the temple. So If you'll excuse us, we'll be on our way."

Mönkhkhan grinned, leaning over slightly to peer behind the group where Yutu was being carried.

"Oh? What's this now? Zaya, my dear, did your mouth almost kill someone again? You really should work on that; it's becoming a bad habit at this point. I've heard of a venomous tongue, but this is getting too literal."

Zolzaya lunged, her hands clawing for the man's eyes, even as he stepped back in surprise. She only took a single step before Juatan's firm hand rooted her into place.

A pompous young woman standing beside the scion laughed, her face hidden behind a fan.

"Dear, you were right! She does look just like a wildcat. I know you like them… feisty, but I'm surprised."

The comment garnered a laugh from the man's gathered posse.

Juatan frowned, the threat in his next words clear as day.

"I'm afraid that's confidential. We'll be on our way now."

Mönkhkhan frowned and raised his hand again. Several large armed men walked out from the crowd who'd gathered to watch the scene. Instantly, the air changed, and most of the civilians scattered as the young scion spoke.

"Now, don't be like that. I'm sure whatever it is can wait a while. It's been so long since we've had a chance to… chat."

The Slatewalker group tensed, the Guardians moving to surround the others, their hands on their weapons. The standstill lasted for a silent moment before a voice spoke up.

"Who would have thought the East Scion was such a rascal? I'm sure the West Scion will love to hear you're playing so… rough on her territory? Her father and I go way back, you know."

Kallik stepped from the group, arms folded, her new prosthetics on full display.

At the sight of the Grassreader garb she wore, many of the remaining crowd bowed in respect. Mönkhkhan only frowned and furrowed his brow. His face flashed between pale and red before finally settling into his default sneer.

"You think I'm afraid of that pathetic woman who dares call herself a Scion, let alone some crippled Grassreader from a backwater village? This is my city, and I'll not be made a f—"

Kallik's presence descended on the crowd like a heavy tide. The average civilian of Jadewalker city was at a higher level than a "backwater" village like Slatewalker, but even then, most never made it to [Iron Body]. Even the scion's entourage, most of whom were in the early to mid [Bronze Spirit] step, could feel the suppression from the peak [Silver Spirit]. At almost the same time, the Seven-Radiance Spirit Grass in their immediate surroundings shifted from various shades of purple and white to a near-solid crimson red.

One of the men surrounding them took one look at the grass and turned, bolting into the crowd. Another dropped his weapon and raised his hands into the air. The man in question turned and spoke to Mönkhkhan in a rough voice, fitting his thuggish appearance.

"Ya, screw that. I'm sorry, my Lord, but you paid for an E-rank assignment. No one said anything about Bloody-Grass Kallik. We were supposed to rough up some yokels, not fight a C-Ranker."

Several other men exchanged looks, with a few dropping their weapons or backing into the crowd.

Mönkhkhan's face flushed red, and he pointed at the man and yelled.

"I don't care who she is, you'll do as you're told, you blubbering Adve—OUCH!—what the hell was that?!"

The scion slapped his hip just as what could have been a large wasp flew away. He stared at the escaping insect and screamed, his eyes going bloodshot as a vein throbbed in his head. He turned and yelled.

"FINE! You're all cowards! I'll do it myself!"

Mönkhkhan drew the small club at his side and stepped forward, sending out his own [Silver Spirit] presence to meet Kallik's. However, before he had taken more than a few steps, Mönkhkhan stopped. The man's face twisted in confusion before twisting into something far more… urgent. Mönkhkhan fell to his knees, clutching his stomach. His friends rushed to his side, but even over the man's moaning, Zolzaya could hear the gurgling and more… unpleasant sounds coming from him.

The young woman who'd laughed at her was one of the first next to him. She patted and rubbed his lower back while crying out.

"My Lord! My Lord! What is the matter?! What happened? Do I need—"

She paused, both her patting and her words. Her eyes went wide, and her already pale face went white as snow. Slowly, she raised her shaking, pristine hand.

Only to find it covered in something… foul.

The following scream was loud enough to physically hurt, and Zolzaya was certain she'd seen a nearby window crack.

That's when the smell hit her. Zolzaya scrunched her face and pinched her nose, taking a step back. A move mirrored by many of those watching. The area soon erupted into chaos as several Guardians rushed into the gathering, either warned something was happening or drawn by the commotion.

The Slatewalkers took that moment to make their escape, slipping into the crowd and continuing on to the temple.

As they did so, Zolzaya didn't miss the sight of a large wasp crawling its way back into the folds of Yutu's carrier. She narrowed her eyes are the sight but didn't know whether she should frown or smirk.

————

Alpha laughed to himself as he slid across the prairies. That had been much easier than the old man! That said, he might have over-tweaked it a bit, with just that one data point to go on. It wasn't like they'd find anything that would get the humans in trouble. After all, there wasn't anything to find. The solution pompous rich boy had been 99.99999% saline.

How did Alpha know he was a rich boy? He could smell that type from miles away! Now literally!

As for the remaining 0.00001%? All it took was a single nanite latched onto the vagus nerve to ruin someone's day. It was a technique practiced throughout the Federation, both as an annoying prank and a way to control inmates in prison camps. After all, the same nanite used to cause… accidents could just as easily be used to cause intense pain or stop a heart (or equivalent organ).

Yaaaaa, Alpha was super glad he didn't have to deal with any of that biological nonsense. It sounded gross.

Civilian implants and monitoring devices prevented these more sinister uses, but those protections were disabled for prisoners. Inmates tended to be far more cooperative when they weren't sure which infraction would cause them to void in their pants for the guard's amusement… or bring them to their knees in agony. Some complained about the ethicality of the practice, but the results couldn't be argued with.

His fun for the day over, Alpha returned the [Wasp] to passive observations and turned his attention back to the road. Or lack thereof.

Not that there was much of anything, honestly. Just a bunch of grass, and grass, a really big rock over there, and more grass! This was always Alpha's least favorite part of any mission. The traveling! At the very least, it gave him time to think, something he got little time to do recently. That said a lot, considering he could process things far quicker than most biologicals.

The bloody whales didn't count…

He was pretty sure what they did was biotech, anyway.

But that was beside the point! Reflection time!

Ever since landing on this strange planet, Alpha felt like he'd just been dragged along through one event after another. What happened to this being his story?! It was becoming… frustrating.

All this sneaking and playing along wasn't Alpha's modus operandi. He much more preferred when he got to blow stuff up! But Alpha knew that sometimes, a more delicate touch was needed. Sure, he could have charged into the cart city and told them he was in charge, and they'd be doing things his way.

But what would that get him? Just a bunch of dead bodies and a seething resentment from the civilian population. A population who would go on to (and had before) make his job far harder than it should be. There was a reason he primarily targeted military and strategic locations, while damaging civilian infrastructure was highly discouraged.

Not like he had a miles-long Dreadnaught sitting in orbit, ready to crush any resistance that popped its head up.

On that same subject, he'd be foolish to forget the events before even landing on the planet.

Despite everything he'd seen since landing, this world couldn't be as primitive as it seemed at first glance. Someone on the planet, at least, could break through the icy layer surrounding them and establish spacefaring operations.

That chicken alone had almost been too much for him, even if his equipment and resources had been extremely limited.

That meant if he stirred up too much trouble, Alpha could find himself in a fight he wasn't ready for yet. Oh, there'd definitely be trouble, but Alpha just had to make sure the powers that be just saw it as "same as usual" instead of something to pay attention to.

For a time, Alpha had considered if this force had originated from one of the other planets, maybe even the larger one in the night sky. It was possible, it admitted, but even in such a case, simply having a base on the smaller moon meant that this force had some kind of vested interest in this.

No, better to lie low for now until he'd established himself. Once he'd got a proper base going and maybe researched the weird magic bullcrap that was going on here, he'd be in a better position to reevaluate going full murderhobo.

That started with building a rapport with the locals and building some kind of cover. Saving the child would go a long way toward that goal, especially if the child's family had as much pull in this place as the humans had made it out to sound.

Grinning to himself, Alpha continued on his way, drawing up all sorts of plans for the future.

Good thing he had plenty of time to do so.
 
Book 1 - Lesson 42: "Learn the players."
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Book 1 - Lesson 42: "Learn the players."
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"Lemme... lemme tell you shomethin'. The Cappin'? The Cappin'sh the worsht of the... hiccup... lot! 'John! Run thish here! John! I've got another pack... ooof... package for ya. Where? Other shide of the... hiccup... town. John! Take my fifty... fifty... fifty… stone sword to the blackshmith, would ya?' I'm a Runner, dang it! Not a... hiccup... recruit you can make do your... hiccup... errands! Then there'sh that old man! Don't get me... bleuuuuugh... shtarted on—"

Yu Xiurong held out a hand, stepped back from the foul liquid, and pinched her nose. She didn't know if the smell was the cheap booze the man was drinking like water or the man himself, and she didn't want to know.

Once she was far enough away, she spoke.

"I… thank… you for the… warnings, good sir, but I shall go now."

The man took another swig, swaying on his feet and waving.

"Good... hiccup... luck, pretty lady, with… whatever it was you were... hiccup... doing again."

Yu Xiurong turned an eye twitching and walked away. As she did, the strange drunkard called after her.

"And remember! Be wary of the wasps! They're watching! Always watching!!!"

Yu Xiurong sighed and shook her head, and walked on. The group had tracked the Star Thief from the abandoned ruins across the prairies and eventually stumbled across a small "scar," the term used by the Radiant Sea natives for the paths left in the wake of their roaming cities. Scars would gradually "heal" over a few weeks, so travelers often used them to locate nearby settlements. Judging by the age and size of this scar, the Yu Xiurong and the disciples estimated its origin to be no larger than a medium-sized village and only a few days away at that.

The worrying part had been discovering the Star Thief's signature turning in the same direction. The group had rushed after, praying they made it in time or at least found a few survivors.

Instead of the scene of death and devastation they'd expected, however, the group had found a quiet village making their way toward the nearby Earth Shrine. It was well into the village's rest cycle when they arrived, with only the local Guardians and a few civilians wandering between carts.

In any other circumstance, the proper procedure would have been simply to walk into town, announce their presence and purpose, then ask questions of anyone willing.

Given the… strangeness of the situation, Yu Xiurong chose to take a more subtle approach. They still knew too little about the Star Thief or their motivations. If the Star Thief was hiding out in the village, showing their hand too soon might have dire consequences, especially for the peaceful villagers.

The group then split up, with orders to examine and explore the village as stealthfully as possible. A simple task, given that even the strongest Guardian in the village, a mid-step [Gold Spirit], was still far below the disciple's peak step [Shackle Breaking].

That had been a few hours ago, and Yu Xiurong found herself… frustrated. What little the public seemed to know, or at least were openly speaking of, seemed to be mixed and twisted by rumors and gossip to where little of it made sense.

Hopefully, the others would have more pieces of the puzzle.

Soon, the four gathered back together near the edge of the village to share what they'd learned.

Qi Mingxi, Fang Peng, Lin Weiyuan, and Yu Xiurong stepped from the shadows of the village, one by one, silent and unseen, their very presence hidden under several layers.

Yu Xiurong was the first to speak.

"Report. What have you found?"

The young Qi Mingxi's voice was soft as a shadow as she answered.

"The details are sparse, but there seems to have been some kind of accident recently. No one has openly spoken of it, but more than a few homes are observing mourning rites. Strangely, the actual atmosphere is mixed. Some are openly criticizing the leading council of Elders, while others appear to see the incident as more of a 'force of nature' than anything preventable."

Yu Xiurong raised a brow,

"And no sign as to what happened?"

Qi Mingxi shook her head.

"No. None would openly speak of it, and any who tried were silenced before they could get more than a few words out. I observed many hand signs and other superstitious behavior often attributed to warding off bad luck, so I suspect that may have played a part in it."

Fang Peng nodded and folded her arms, being the next to speak.

"That would explain some things on my end. I hit up the local tavern—"

Yu Xiurong narrowed her eyes at the younger woman, who raised her hands in defense.

"—cloaked, of course! I came across a group of younger adults. They didn't look much younger than us, so I assume they were the newest apprentices to pass their tests. There wasn't the festive air you'd have expected of a group like that, though. They were drinking and passing stories between each other, mostly about this person or that, none of whom appeared to be present. It reminded me of the old folks who'd gather and talk about their war days, but that seemed… Odd. My knowledge isn't great, but I was under the impression the Wandering City's apprentice tests were more of a formality than anything dangerous."

Lin Weiyuan nodded as well and picked up from there.

"They are. The Radiant Priaires aren't the only place to have such 'apprentice tests.' But because of the unusual ecosystem and higher level of danger present in this place, apprentices only graduate at a much older age and are far more skilled than in other parts of the world. Not only that, but the proctors for such tests often double as guards and safety nets. Ironically, this means that the rate of death, or even injuries during such tests, is far lower than in comparable groups."

Yu Xiurong frowned.

"You think something happened to the apprentices?"

Yu Xiurongs' mind flashed to the destroyed villages. If a group of fresh apprentices had been caught in something of that level…

Lin Weiyuan shook his head as he answered.

"Some? Not all of them, obviously, but given what we've gathered, it's likely."

Yu Xiurong raised a brow and asked, her fists clenching.

"Do you think our Star Thief had anything to do with it?"

Lin Weiyuan opened his mouth to respond, but paused, tilting his head.

"I'm… unsure. I encountered a group of children who were discussing a 'Lord Protector' of some sort. They mentioned little, but I snagged this from one of their… clubhouses."

He said "clubhouse," but the small shack built into the back of one store had been surprisingly well-guarded. Not only did the children rig the area with various traps and some simple arrays, but the children had even worked out guard rotations and regular inspections.

Nothing he couldn't slip by, but even the inside had been neatly organized, with dozens of charts and graphs detailing various plans. Everything from simply pranks to more… ominous things. He didn't know what "Project Swarm" was intended to be, but some of the summary details made him question if this really was a clubhouse or the hidden base of an underground criminal organization.

He'd even questioned if he should blow his cover and report what he'd seen to the village, but while there, he'd witnessed a Guardian sneak in through a hidden latch and make a record in an obviously well-worn notebook. It seemed the adults in the village were well aware of the children's… hobbies already. No need to poke his nose in their business, then.

Lin Weiyuan reached into his sleeve and pulled out a sheet of paper. On it was a copy of a drawing he'd seen plastered on the clubhouse wall. A drawing of a large, four-legged beetle-like creature.

Yu Xiurong stared at the drawing, frowning as she spoke.

"Strange… I'm… not familiar with this creature. Are any of you?"

She passed the drawing around, though each shook their head.

Turning back to Lin Weiyuan, Yu Xiurong asked,

"Any idea what this might be? Could it be some form of Guardian Beast? I've heard of some towns in the Wandering Cities making such contracts, but I was under the impression those were much larger than this village."

After all, proper care of a Guardian Beast worth anything was a major investment.

Lin Weiyuan shrugged and responded.

"Possible, but given the size of the village and what we've learned so far, I think there's another possibility."

Fang Peng raised her brow, finishing the thought.

"You think it could have been the Star Thief's beast companion? Are we even certain there is one?"

Lin Weiyuan nodded.

"All the evidence points to such. It would also fit the narrative we've gathered here well."

Qi Mingxi frowned as she asked.

"But why would the Star Thief's beast companion be welcomed in the village? Or be labeled as 'Lord Protector'? More importantly, where is the Star Thief themselves? I've heard no mention of someone like that at all."

Lin Weiyuan shrugged again.

"I don't know. It's just a theory based on what we know so far. Maybe they got separated by whatever happened in the ruins. Or maybe the Star Thief became injured to where they couldn't openly show themselves and had to use their companion as a cover. We still know too li—"

An old, gravelly voice cut off the young man mid-sentence.

"So you want to know about that bastard, do you? I think I could help you out there."

The group jumped at the sound of the voice and turned their guard instantly up.

On the covered porch of a nearby homely-looking shack sat an old man, slightly balding and face full of wrinkles. He sat in front of a small chessboard, staring down in contemplation. He picked up one piece and smiled, moving it into place.

Yu Xiurong stepped forward and smiled, bowing slightly as she spoke.

"I'm sorry if our conversation disrupted you, good sir. We're just travelers passing through your humble village on our way to the Earth Shrine and were curious about the events we'd heard about while here. You said you might shed a bit of light on them for us? I'd hate to impose…."

The old man waved them off, not bothering to look up from his chessboard. A second later, he picked up another piece on the other side of the board and moved it as well, frowning before answering.

"It's fine, it's fine. I've been having trouble sleeping, anyway. Not like a little noise will make much of a difference."

Yu Xiurong bowed again and responded.

"Nonetheless, I appreciate your understanding. You said you knew more about this... 'Lord Protector'? Is that true?"

The old man laughed, throwing his head back.

"Ha! Lord Protector, that's a good one! The bastard is a menace, is what he is! Walts into town, pretending to be the hero, all the while wrapping everyone around his finger. Bah! I can see right through his type!"

The old man sighed and shook his head.

"And you should see the things he taught the kids! Shameful is what it is! Irresponsible!"

Yu Xiurong frowned, her eyes narrowing.

"I… see. That does sound like a problem. Have you not told elders or authorities about your suspicions?"

The old man turned and pointed to her.

"I know, right?! If you're going to corrupt the kids, at least do it in a way they don't realize! Manipulation is all about subtlety! You're supposed to plant the seeds, make them think that they're the ones having the ideas! How are the kids supposed to grow and learn if you just give them everything?! —"

Yu Xiurong nearly spat blood as the old man continued. He turned back to his game and shrugged.

"As for the other children, not much point. There's no way the youngins here could have done anything against something like… that. Better for everyone to keep up the illusion and see them on their way."

Yu Xiurong's frown deepened, but she asked anyway.

"That's… understandable. Would you happen to know which way they went? We maybe be simple travelers, but maybe we could warn others on the way about their… corrupting ways."

The old man went silent for a moment, moving pieces back and forth on the board before shrugging.

"Sure. I could do that."

The old man processed to give them strangely detailed directions to where this mysterious "Lord Protector" had gone. Yu Xiurong's group quickly departed from the village and followed the old man's instructions.

The entire time, Yu Xiurong's mind kept wandering back to the interaction with the old man in the village. Something had been… strange about it, but she couldn't quite put her finger on it.

However, such thoughts were soon left behind as the group came across a fresh trail, just as the old man had said. The four shared a look with each other and nodded before continuing down the trail.

The hunt was on.

—————

WHACK!

"OWE! What was that for?!"

Malaki rubbed the back of his head as Maliit loomed over him, frowning, a thick book clutched in her hand.

Maliit rubbed the bridge of her nose with her free hand and asked.

"Really, dear? Was any of that truly necessary? I thought we would keep our hands out of this one?"

Malaki tsked and looked away, still rubbing his head as he spoke.

"We are! They'd have caught up, eventually. Besides, it's funnier this way. Not like they're gonna hurt anyone, anyway. Think of it as an older, wiser man giving a lesson to his juniors about biting off more than they can chew."

Maliit raised an eyebrow and countered.

"And when that boy starts a war?"

Malaki waved her away, moving another piece on his board.

"Bah! He was always going to do that, anyway. War's in his blood. I can taste it."

Maliit sighed and shook her head.

"Sometimes, I don't know why I married you…"

Malaki turned to look up at her, grinning ear to ear.

"You know you love m—"

Maliit cut him off by leaning over and moving a single piece from the other side of the board.

"Checkmate."

Before the old woman walked back inside.

Malaki paused, narrowed his eyes, and stared at the board. The longer he looked, the more his brow furrowed. Finally, the old man stood and, with a yell, flipped the board.
 
Ugh, my phone does not like to let me highlight a small part to quote.

Jeez I wonder why that conversation was suspicious there Yu.

It might have been the random old man was obviously spying on your secret meeting. Maybe it's because his primary complaint about Alpha was that he wasn't subtle enough with his corrupting the children, while your scouting makes you wonder if the children are really a criminal syndicate. Heck, it could even be because you didn't bother to find out why everyone considers him a hero.

Then again, Yu never did bother to confirm what the "Star Thief" looked like. Just that label alone is incredibly problematic. It implies that something that literally fell from the sky belongs to her, and anyone else is in the wrong.

Malawi probably made the correct move in what I'm guessing is sending Yu right to the Earth Temple. Alpha thrives on chaos, and the more players at once the more likely things are to devolve. Heck, there's a non-zero chance Yu comes out of this appearing to have helped the kidnappers.
 
Book 1 - Lesson 43: "... and the pieces"
Sorry for the delay! had a issue with the patreon chapter but its fixed now!
Enjoy the Chapter every!
And good Announcement! We're Alllllmost to the next Patreon Goal! HURRAH!
What's that mean for you? Bonus chapter! That's what! Hurrah! We need only 6-7 more Pathfinders ($7.50) to make it and we'll be all good!
In fact, to tempt you with my evil ways to join the dark side, I've included a bit of a sneak preview at the bottom of the chapter!
I'm sure SOME of you will be super excited to see. Have fun!

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Book 1 - Lesson 43: "... and the pieces"
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"Crapcrapcrapcrapcrap!"

Alpha dodged around a thick, black vine as it poked out from the swampy, muddy ground, attempting to ensnare the TAWP's leg. The vine missed but exploded the next instant, covering the leg in a thick, sticky, tar-like substance.

Not again!

Alpha tried to pry the sticky good off with the TAWP's nanite skin, but it was too late. The substance bubbled, then suddenly exploded with growth. Dark green-purple vines appeared on the leg's surface, the microscopic spores hidden in the tar germinating and growing at a rate that should have been physically impossible. The vines wiggled in the air for a moment before half started creeping up his leg, and the other half plunged deep into the ground.

Alpha tugged, easily breaking the new growth attempting to root him in place, and a quick burst of his RCS trusters burned away any plant life left clinging to him. The slight delay had been enough, however, as even thicker purple vines erupted from the ground and wrapped around the main body of the TAWP, pulling down. Alpha struggled against the vines, but the TAWP couldn't exert much force on this kind of terrain.

As the TAWP's underside contacted the ground, hundreds of thin, probing roots or vines poked out, attempting to pry themselves into every opening, but found none.

Alpha was a harder nut to crack than expected, though, as the ground rumbled. The surrounding swamp bulged upward to relieve that the TAWP stood at the center of the sadistic child between a venus fly trap and a gargantuan rafflesia.

The center, a gaping maw of wriggling barbed vines, pooled with muddy soil and putrid water. Dozens of enormous dark-purple spotted "petals" surrounded it. Each was covered in a mix of wiggling black vines and razor-sharp teeth as they rose out of the muddy soil.

These petals rose higher, stretching dozens of meters, then folded inward, attempting to surround the trapped AI.

{About time you showed yourself.}

Alpha thought to himself as the petals closed around him. Soon, no gaps were left between the petals, as they overlapped to further constrict their unwilling prey in an ever-tightening cocoon.

After a moment, the constriction stopped. All was silent for a brief moment until a dozen bright lasers punched through the petals, crisscrossing all along their length. The toothy rafflesia screamed, causing nearby swampy puddles to explode from its force.

Like tumbling blocks, pieces of the closed flower tumbled away, revealing the TAWP standing at its center, its hex-shield glowing bright.

Several laser turrets dotted its surface, their tips glowing, small streams of steam rising. The giant rafflesia's various vines weakly wiggled in the air for a moment before falling to the ground, limp.

Alpha shook himself free of the loose vines and stepped away, grumbling to himself.

This was the sixth time he'd fallen into the same trap in the last day, and he regretted not going around. When he'd first encountered this swampy section of the prairies, Alpha wasn't sure what to make of it.

{What kind of swamp moves?!}

He was absolutely certain he'd plotted his course to pass by it after the scouting [Wasps] reported it, but when he'd actually arrived, it had cut him off completely.

{I want to file a complaint with whoever designed this crappy place!}

Moving swamps. Sudden blizzards. Even Rolling clouds of darkness that turned him around for hours and made his head hurt. He didn't even have a head!!!

Alpha saw why everyone was making such a big deal about this time of the year. In just a few days, the prairies had gone from a relatively normal place (barring the rainbow grass and man-eating penguins) to a chaotic mishmash of roaming disasters.

{How the hell does anything survive here?!}

Unfortunately for Alpha, this swamp was a poor match for him. The loose, muddy soil forced him into walker mode, and even then, it was slow going. To top that off, the local wildlife was just as fond of him being there as he was. Alpha added more notes to his records.

{Uncategorized Floral species 443-S-3; Temporary designation - Alphatrap-: Plan A-5 for locating trip vines has been unsuccessful. The plants seem to emit subsonic vocalizations for unknown purposes, disrupting attempts via radar or other similar means. Preemptive tripping of vines has shown mixed results, as the subject appears to have some weight or size limit for prey, likely to limit energy expenditure on prey it could either not contain or would cause a net loss.

Likewise, attempts to force out the organism, or exterminate it outright, have been mixed. The surrounding terrain and its large size make damaging the subject impractical through conventional means. As of now, the most effective method for dealing with the creature has been outright avoidance, or when that is not possible, an internal assault after it has fully emerged.

Side Note: Investigate magic weedkiller. I don't like being eaten…}


Alpha sighed and closed his notes. Lucky for him, he was nearing the end of this swampy area, and the swamp itself seemed to head in a different direction.

It only took him an hour more to trudge his way through. When he at last stepped back on solid ground, Alpha threw his hands into the air and did a little dance. As soon as he got a proper base up and running, Alpha was building some terrain adaptors for the TAWP. They were too complicated to print using the TAWP's nanoskin, but most of them could be compacted for transport, allowing ease of use.

He didn't use them often, but if more places on this planet were like this, he'd rather be safe than sorry.

"It seems they were right. I've never quite seen a creature quite like you… tell me, 'Lord Protector, where is it you hail from?"

Alpha froze. One of his side-facing optical sensors swerved and locked onto a figure behind him. The TAWP lowered and turned in that direction, facing the figure directly.

Only a few meters away from where the spawn ended sat a younger human adult male on a larger boulder. Neither of which had been there only a few moments prior.

How the hell did people keep sneaking up on him like this?! It was getting embarrassing…

The young man only smiled up at Alpha, a sharp-tooth grin stretching from ear to ear.

—————

"What do you mean 'he'll meet with you tomorrow'?! Do not understand this is a time-sensitive matter?!"

A red-faced Kallik nearly screamed into the face of the frowning, stoic priest in front of her. Nearby, several other priests worked with prep Yutu to be brought deeper into the temple's medical wing. The rest of the Slatewalker group stood to the side, having agreed that Kallik should do most of the talking.

While the Grassreaders and Prima Temple were technically two different organizations, they shared a mutually beneficial relationship. An Elder Grassreader like Kallik should have had a far better chance of catching the right ear.

Should have…

The stoic priest frowned, pushing up the spectacles he wore.

"Grassreader Kallik, I'm afraid it's you who doesn't understand. We're merely days away from the Darkest Night. There are arrays to lie down, rites and ceremonies to prepare for, and events to organize. We're short-staffed as it is, and finding even a senior priest with the time to speak to you was frankly a miracle in and of itself, let alone the Head Priest. If any of your… outlandish claims are worth further investigating, you'll be contacted tomorrow. No sooner. Now, if you insist on making a spectacle of yourself, I'll have to kindly ask you to leave the temple grounds until further notice. Or you may find your request thrown out entirely."

Zolzaya didn't need her gift to read the emotions playing across her mentor's face, but the older woman said nothing as she tried to burn a hole through the priest's skull with her eyes.

A long moment passed in silence before Kallik turned and pushed herself through the gathered priests, making her way toward the exit. The Slatewalker group shared a look before following her.

———

Kallik paced back and forth, biting her thumb as the others found a seat in the small inn room. Inns in the Wandering Cities weren't big, more catering to the small number of foreign travelers that wandered the prairies alone or in small groups. With such a dangerous time as the Darkest Night approaching and most prairie natives preferring their home villages, the inns were essentially empty.

That worked well for them, as they could find an inn near the temple.

After booking their rooms, the group gathered in Kallik's room.

Ganbaatar was the first to speak.

"So what now? I know we didn't want to go through the Jadewalkers, but if the temple is going to turn us away at the door, do we have any other choice? Not like we yell our story from the middle of the street. We'd get thrown in a cell before the Akh'lut Rep ever heard a word of it."

Juatan answered back.

"Not much else we can do if we don't want to wait till tomorrow. Assuming they don't just push it back again. I agree; time is of the essence, though. The sooner we can contact the Akh'lut, the sooner the Lord Protector can make his move. He should be in position sometime by tomorrow if your estimates of what he can do are accurate."

Kallik stopped pacing and shook her head. When she spoke, she didn't look at anyone in particular but stared out the window toward the temple.

"Something doesn't sit right with me about this. I know Head Priest Erden. He's a stick-in-the-mud about the rules, but he's not someone to ignore something like this. As soon as I used my authority as an Elder, he should have been notified immediately."

Zolzaya frowned and asked.

"You think we're being blocked on purpose?"

Kallik growled and punched the windowsill.

"I don't know! And that's what frustrates me. Why would we? The Temple and the Akh'lut are interlocked. Most of the high-ranking officials in the Temple are Akh'lut. At least in the Radiant Sea. Why would they be hindering their own investigation?! It doesn't make any sense!"

The group went silent for a long moment before a quiet, almost whispered voice spoke.

"We… we could… I mean… we could always… maybe… sneak in?"

As one, the rest of the group turned and stared at the young Guardian sitting on the bed. The woman, Munkh, gave a soft squeak and hit behind the large metal tower shield she carried everywhere.

Ulagan raised an eyebrow, his eyes wide. That had to have been the most words he'd ever heard his fellow Guardian speak at one time. Many newer Guardians assumed the small woman was too proud or haughty to speak to them. After all, she was the kind of genius only seen once in a generation.

Those who had worked with her for a few years quickly learned the truth. For all her skills and talent, the woman was almost cripplingly shy. The Captain once joked that Munkh had picked the tower shield as her "weapon" so she had something to hide behind.

Still, sneak into the Jadewalker temple? That was quite… daring of her. Totally not something he would have expected someone like her to suggest. Still, given the security and consequence of they got caught, it was a ter—

"That's a great idea!"

Kallik's words nearly caused Ulagan to spit blood. He looked at the Grassreader, his eyes wide as she continued with a grin splitting her face from ear to ear.

"If they're stopping us from seeing Erden, then we'll just go see him ourselves. Even if they catch us, that kind of thing can't just be swept under the rug. The Head Priest will hear of it, if not the Akh'lut representative."

Ulagan held out a hand, his voice cracking as he spoke

"Hey, wait now. You can't be serious. We're talking about the temple here. We can't—"

Juatan stood and moved to look out the window. His eyes narrowed as he spoke.

"Hummm. If we're going to do this, we'll need a distraction. The Jadewalker Guardians are disciplined. They'll be on the scene moments after an alarm is raised. I still have some contacts from my time in the officer's academy, but I don't know if they'll be of much use."

Ganbaatar smiled and spoke up next.

"I'm sure I could cause some trouble with a bit of help. A lot of the taverns will be full tonight, with people getting their fill before the Darkest Night. What do you say, Zaya? I'm thinking D4, P2, and maybe a little B2 to spice things up. We've not used that one in years. Munkh can even take Yutu's role."

Zolzaya didn't bother to answer, only smiled with a dark grin that matched her mentor's.

Ulagan stood, his voice raised.

"Now, hold up, everyone!"

The group paused, staring at him as he continued.

"Look, I know we're on a time crunch here, but you can't honestly be thinking of doing this, can you? If we screw up, it's not just our flanks that get tossed in the fire."

The group only stared back. Kallik raised a brow, frowning as she crossed her arms and spoke three words.

"The woodwelder incident."

Ulagan paled, his eyes turning to moons. He tried to speak but couldn't form the words before sighing and falling back into his seat.

"Ok, Fine! Fine! Where do you need me?"

Kallik's grin returned, and she called her hands before addressing the group.

"Good! Now we just need to—"

A sudden knock at the door cut her off. She was silent for a moment before calling out,

"Yes? Who is it?"

An unfamiliar voice called from behind the door.

"Grassreader Kallik? I have news from the temple. Is now a good time?"

The Slatewalker group fell silent. Kallik turned and met Zolzaya's eyes.

The young woman had gone pale, her hands tightly gripping the end of her shirt. Zolzaya locked eyes with her mentor and slowly, almost unnoticeably, shook her head. Kallik's eyes narrowed, and she turned to look at Juatan. The older Guardian nodded and stood, slowly drawing his blade. Munkh too stood, the tower shield in her hands held at the ready.

Again, the man behind the door knocked, and the voice called out.

"Hello? Is everything alright?"

Kallik called back, her voice the picture of calm.

"Yes! Just one moment, please. I'll be right there."

She then slowly walked toward the door.

————————————————————————
 
Oh, somehow I don't think this will work out for the bad guys. The conspirators really are underestimating both groups.

One has been causing chaos for hundreds of years and surviving. The other is Alpha.

I wonder if they believe the literal child about him being "Dumb." Because, I could totally see them attempting to trick him into thinking they're the good guys or something. The thing about these people is they're powerful, but arrogant.
 
Book 1 - Lesson 44: "The enemy of my enemy."
Alpha is tired of playing games.
Time for the kiddy gloves to come off.

————————————————————————
Book 1 - Lesson 44: "The enemy of my enemy

————————————————————————

Alpha stared at the stranger, several laser turrets locked onto his biosignature. The man definitely hadn't been there only a few moments before, nor had the large boulder he sat on. More magic bullcrap, no doubt. Alpha was getting tired of being constantly caught off guard like this. What happened to being a super advanced AI with capabilities far beyond most biological minds?

Something was severely wrong with him; he knew that, yet all his diagnostics came back all clear. Even after major repairs. Maybe if he had some time to sit down and do a deeper dive, he could figure out exactly what was wrong, but this place kept throwing one thing after another at him.

Seeing the several still glowing turrets pointing his way, the stranger held up his hands and slid down the boulder. He was a young man, human in appearance, though his hair was divided into several black-and-white sections. His eyes were a golden yellow, and when he spoke, Alpha could see his mouth was filled with teeth far sharper than they should be.

"Hey now, no need for that friend. Or would you prefer 'Lord Protector'?"

Alpha's optic plate spun, and he responded, his voice calm but clear with an unspoken warning.

"That depends on who's asking. And whether I like what you have to say."

The stranger grinned, though he never lowered his hands or looked away from the glowing tips of the turrets. When he spoke, he did so with a soft chuckle.

"Me? No one important. Just a messenger. From someone who hopes we can come to an… understanding. You can call me Tuguslar. Not that the name would mean anything to you, I suppose."

Alpha considered if he should stay in character or not. Either option had its pros or cons. A moment of silence passed before he said,

"Go on…"

The strange man's eyes went wide,

{Didn't expect it to be that easy…}

Tuguslar muttered to himself, likely not thinking Alpha could hear him. His sharp-toothed grin soon replaced the look though, and the man bowed.

"This one thanks the Lord Protector for taking the time to hear his request. As for the details, the ones I represent and I are aware that you're… new to this area. As such, we don't expect you to quite understand the nature of events in which you've recently found yourself... That's fair, and we can hardly hold it against one of your standings for stepping on toes that you didn't know were there. That being said, your presence has… complicated things for those I represent. Plans that have been long in the making."

The TAWP couldn't really "emote" in the same way a biological could. After all, it was a machine designed for combat, not casual socialization. That said, Alpha had developed certain ticks over the years that he found effective in interacting with most biologicals, be it intimidation or other responses.

The TAWP rose higher into the air, the back legs extending slightly so that the front optics plate stared down at the man, the glowing red lights brightening slightly as Alpha spoke.

"Are you telling me to stand down?"

The effect of the display was satisfactory as Tuguslar took a hasty step back, his hands raised and the grin on his face slightly twitching as he spoke.

"No, no, good sir! We'd never think to tell you what to do, not at all. We simply ask that you let things play out as they would should you not have arrived. After all, this is not your land nor your people. You have no real stakes in all of this, correct? Of course, we're not asking this of you from the kindness of your heart…."

Tuguslar reached out a hand and gave a flick. An ornate black box appeared from nowhere. Alpha instantly recognized several of the patterns carved into the box, though the designs were far less complex than what was found on his drone. He reached over with his free hand and opened the box. On top of a small cushion sat a gemstone several times larger than even the largest heart crystal Alpha currently possessed. Though still rough and uncut, this gem glowed with an inner light and appeared far more spherical than the rough crystal shards found in the penguins.

The man let Alpha observe the gem for a moment before closing the lid and placing it on the ground, pushing it toward Alpha as he spoke.

"Consider it a gift of first meetings, no strings attached. This is but one of the things we can offer you as compensation for washing your hands clean of this whole mess. I assure you, whatever you hope to gain from this, my benefactor can easily match or exceed it."

Alpha stared down at the box. He had to admit to himself; he was tempted. But there was still one major issue that prevented him from doing so.

Alpha looked back up from the box and stared Tuguslar down. His voice was flat as he spoke.

"And the child?"

The man stumbled but quickly recovered.

"I… and not sure what you mean. The child is in safe hands."

Alpha mentally frowned. Something was fishy. So he asked,

"That being the case, I'm sure you'd be willing to let me confirm that for myself, yes?"

Tuguslar furrowed his brow, and his smile became a little more tense as he responded.

"I don't believe that would be a good idea… Sir. As I stated, the child is safe. You no longer need to concern yourself with them."

Alpha didn't bother responding directly and instead recited directly from the Federation code.

"Article E3-EC45-Shield: Child Guardianship and Battlefield Safety Act - Federation soldiers are to ensure the safety and continued wellbeing of any Federation child found inside of hostile territory until such a time that said child is released into the custody of appropriate custodians as outlined by the Galactic Collective for the Protection of Children (GCPC). Any force, be they private or civilian, who attempts to interfere with said duty, is to be labeled as hostile forces and treated as such."

The stranger stared wide eyes, his mouth agape. He quickly recovered and frowned at Alpha; his overly cheerful tone dropped.

"Disregarding that I've never even heard of this so-called 'Federation' of yours, the child belongs to the Akh'lut and the Radiant Sea. By what right do you claim them?"

The TAWP straightened as Alpha responded,

"As of… 3 weeks, 4 days, 16 hours, 32 minutes, and 52 seconds ago, this land and its civilian inhabitance are registered as the newest colony of the Third Galactic Federation. As such, all rights, privileges, and responsibilities of citizenship have been retroactively extended to the people. That includes protection under, and responsibility to, Federation Law."

The man gawked, his face turning a deeper red with each moment before he pointed at Alpha and yelled.

"How dare you! Do you have any idea where you stand?! Not even the Great Pillars of the Skybreaker continent DARE to lay claim to these lands! Let alone some no name, unknow—"

Tuguslar's words were cut off by a lance of light.

A thin beam of super-heated plasma raced past his left ear at the speed of light. Tuguslar froze, his entire body shaking as sweat poured down his neck. Slowly, he turned; the large boulder he'd sat on only a moment earlier was now cleaved in two, each split-end glowing red as the melted rock dripped down the side. There had been no warning, no gathering of energy, not even a twitch from the strange being in front of him.

Only a single, instant line of light cutting through reality.

On top of Alpha's back, the [Gungnir] finished forming. A blast from the ion-cannon using his own energy core was far weaker than using a proper nitrogen crystal, but it sufficed to put the fear of Alpha into those who didn't know better. Too many shots would wear him out, so it would never be a primary weapon, but that wasn't any of his concern anymore.

Alpha was tired.

Tired of the games and tired of playing along.

He'd tried to play nice. This was a new world. One he didn't know and didn't have the tools or time to study properly. This wasn't the way he did things. This wasn't how things should have been.

He'd gone along with all this native drama for so long to get a lay of the land. To try and understand what and who he was dealing with. That way, when he finally made his move, he knew exactly what buttons to push, so there was as little resistance as possible.

Yet every step of the way, it seemed it was his buttons that were being pushed.

Maybe it was time they learned why he'd earned the title "Conqueror."

Alpha took a step forward, purposefully putting the entire weight of the TAWP behind it, causing the ground to shake as he spoke.

"I'm afraid you don't understand. I'm not making a claim to anything. From the moment I stepped foot on this land, this world belonged to the Federation. That is not a subjective claim. That is an immutable Truth. Only two people exist in this world at this very moment. Federation citizens and Rebels. Whichever you wish to throw your lot in with, I honestly don't care. Be aware this is the only warning I'll give you and your 'benefactor.'"

The strange man stared, eyes wide but silent. When he spoke, his face began warping, becoming more bestial and strange, and he pointed at Alpha.

"I thought the Cultivators were arrogant! What gives you the right to lay claim to our home?! I've never even heard of you or your 'Federation'!"

Alpha stood the TAWP to its full height and stared down at the man. His final two words were spoken with a calm absoluteness that sent a small shiver down the strange man's spine.

"You Will."

Tuguslar lept several feet back, instantly covering more than a dozen meters. When he stopped. His face went blank but for a deep frown, as if everything before had been but an act. When he spoke, his words were even and calm.

"I believe that's more than enough evidence for now. Not only do you refuse to give up on the child, but you even make open claims of invasion and occupation. What say you, Elder Xiurong?"

Rather than a response of words, the ground beneath Alpha rumbled. Alpha backed up the TAWP just as the ground he was standing on exploded outward. From the ground rose a gargantuan figure. It continued to rise into the air, circling around until all 35 meters of its 1.5-meter diameter body emerged. Alpha observed the new arrival to find it was some kind of giant, scaled serpent. Its head was more mammalian than a reptile, though covered in dark green-black scales. Two stubby, immature horns poked out of its skull, and a thick, jet-black mane ran down the length of its body, from the top of its head to the tip of its tail. The only limbs on the creature were two feathered wings near the middle that appeared far too small to support such a massive creature.

The creature stared down at Alpha, a fire burning in its throat as it hissed at him. Then it moved.

Quicker than something its size should have been able to, it fell from the sky toward Alpha, its mouth hyper-extended, two massive, meter-long fangs plunging downward like unstoppable blades.

But stop, they did.

The TAWP's hex shield sprang to life, flashing blue as the massive serpent's jaws pushed harder into the energy barrier. The rest of its long body flailed, then wrapped around the barrier, squeezing it hard as it tried to crack through Alpha's defenses. Alpha wouldn't give it a chance.

A dozen cracks of thunder echoed through the prairies, followed immediately by minor explosions, as a dozen [Crystal Rails] pushed their way out of the TAWP's nanite skin. The flying snake screamed, quickly disengaging. None of the rounds had pierced the thick, armored scales covering the creature, but several places were cracked and broken or burned black. The [Crystal Rail] still wasn't combat-ready by Alpha's standards, but if the snake's initial assault was the best it could do, he doubted it could even break through his passive defenses, let alone his hex shield.

This could be a good chance to collect combat data.

Alpha fired a few more rail shots towards the creature, who nimbly dodged many of them, to his surprise. It seemed the overall projectile speed had taken a severe hit. Even so, each bullet traveled as fast as a standard civilian handgun; even seeing them was an impressive feat, let alone dodging them.

As he chased the snake creature with a barrage of bullets, a second figure appeared in what would have been Alpha's blind spot if not for rear-facing optical plates and active [Wasp] drones.

A young, muscular human woman flickered into being several meters above him. She carried a thick metal rod in her hands, and on the end of the rod, a heavy chain attached to a metal ball as wide as she was tall.

Against every law of physics Alpha knew, the woman twisted and swung the giant flail at the AI. Again, his hex shield flashed to life, absorbing the entire blow and not moving Alpha a single inch. The young woman's eyes went wide, but it was too late. Several [Crystal Rails] swerved and fired in the blink of an eye. The woman was sent flying back dozens of meters as several rounds hit her center mass directly. The woman hit the ground hard, rolling for several more meters and leaving a small blood trail along her path.

To Alpha's surprise, however, the woman didn't stay down. When she stopped rolling, she pulled herself up on shaking arms, coughing up a small stream of blood. A quick bioscan showed only one round had penetrated, piercing her right lung, while most of the remaining damage had been caused by the explosions. Bulletproof fabric, then? But why? Strange.

"Fang Peng!"

A voice called out. Another figure, a young teen girl dressed in a black robe-like dress, flickered and appeared next to 'Fang Peng.' This time, Alpha had caught it. It wasn't some form of teleportation, but a high-speed movement. So fast, Alpha had to toggle down his reference frames by several degrees. How a biological reached such speeds without any apparent augmentations, he didn't know, and he doubted they would answer if he asked.

Instead, he targeted the pair and open-fired.

This time, however, a thick plan of crystal or glass materialized in the projectile's path, which exploded harmlessly against the hard substance. No… not glass… ice? Through his drones, Alpha could see the girl in black lay glowing hands on the wounded woman. A gentle light enveloped her as the older woman's grimacing face loosened.

Before Alpha could examine what the younger woman was doing, dozens of needle-thin shards of ice slammed against the TAWP, individually not strong enough to trigger the automatic hex shield. Where they hit, thin layers of frost spread, not really doing much else.

Alpha turned his attention skyward to find a glasses-wearing young man standing on what appeared to be a panel of floating ice. His white-gray robes billowed in the wind, and his long brown hair was pulled back into a simple ponytail.

{Ok, this magic bullcrap is getting out of hand…}

Alpha thought to himself as the young sneered down at him. The young man held out a clear glass bow in front of him and drew the string. As he did, a liquid arrow condensed on the string, seemingly from thin air. The man released the string, and the watery arrow flew forward at such speed that it disintegrated before making it halfway to Alpha.

Instead of falling harmlessly to the ground, each of the dozens of water droplets that had formed the arrow rocketed toward him, freezing in midair to form more icy needles. Again, they pelted into the TAWP with just as little effect, unable to scratch the war machine's heavy armor. Alpha could see the man visibly grinding his teeth in frustration.

Alpha sent a round of fire his way, only for it to be blocked by another icy barrier. The AI tsked, switching out a few [Crystal Rails] for energy turrets. This time, the thin energy beams cut through the ice walls like butter, forcing the man to dodge at the last second and abandon a third shot.

A thundering, feminine voice suddenly sounded over the rumble of railfire.

"Retreat! I told you to stay behind, Disciples!"

The entire time Alpha had been focused on the three humans who'd popped out of nowhere, the creature had been twirling and wiggling in the air, dodging most, but not all, of his shots. As it did so, each swish of its tail sent a pressurized blade of wind slamming against Alpha's hex shield.

Internally, Alpha sighed.

Of course, the giant flying snake could talk… he wasn't even surprised anymore. What next? Was a rock going to stand up and introduce itself?

The young teen with glowing hands cried back.

"But Elder! We can still—"

The creature, whom Alpha assumed was this 'Elder Xiurong', yelled back.

"Enough! I said retreat! This beast is beyond you! Flee and inform the Sect!"

Alpha took a moment to stop firing and offer his own words.

"Ooooor! You could all surrender now and save me the trouble of having to kill you. The Federation respects all forms of peaceful surrender under the Galactic Wartime rules and Codes of Conduct. Peaceful cooperation will be met with likewise. I highly—"

Another blade of wind dispersed harmlessly off his hex shield, the Elder Xiurong rudely interrupting him.

"Be silent, you foul beast! You dare besmirch the Origin Sect's honor by suggesting we would surrender to a confessed invader of our allies in these prairies? Hear now, criminal! You stand not against us four, but against the entire power of one of the Five Great Pillars!"

She then turned to the three humans and yelled.

"Go, now! I will meet with you soon!"

The humans protested, but soon nodded.

One by one, they vanished.

Elder Xiurong stared down at Alpha, flames flickering in the back of her throat as she spoke.

"You may think your words are immutable, but the Origin Sect has crushed more petty tyrants like you than you have ever known to exist. Do not think you can simply walk on the innocent without repercussions, beast!"

The talking snake opened its mouth wide, the flickering flames shifting to jet-black as they billowed toward Alpha like a dark flamethrower.

"[Draconic Spark!]"

Alpha only shrugged as he responded.

"Oh well, have it your way. I warned you."

In only a split second, Alpha had analyzed the strange flame's energy output and found it… wanting. In a moment of curiosity, Alpha loaded a nitrogen rod into the [Gungnir's] firing chamber. He only had a few dozen nitrogen rods left, but he wanted to see just how this overgrown snake stacked up against his fiery chicken friend.

The results were… disappointing.

A blinding lance of ionized gas and light, several times larger than the beam that had split the boulder, cut through the black flames as if they weren't even there.

In less than the blink of an eye, the ion-cannon's beam swung upward, carving a deep groove into the ground… then slicing the coiled, flying snake into several large pieces before continuing upward. As the beam passed, the clouds parted in its wake, revealing a thin, shallow groove in the nearly invisible barrier in the sky before it swiftly healed over.

Elder Xiurong's eyes grew wide, their eyes quivering before the various pieces of her body fell from the sky in a gory rain. Even if someone could dodge bullets, that didn't mean they could dodge light itself.

The various bits wiggled around for a bit until finally, going still.

Internally, Alpha sighed. Well, that had been a waste… Oh well, at least he'd gathered some good data. Alpha collected a few bio-samples and even poked around the creature's heart but found nothing. Oh well.

Alpha turned away from the body, not wanting to waste more time than he already had here. Tuguslar had disappeared sometime during the conflict, but Alpha didn't mind. Something told him they'd meet again, real soon.

Besides, he'd been 'kind' enough to leave the black box behind. Alpha collected the prize and checked his map to ensure he was headed in the right direction.

Soon, Alpha had left the battlefield far behind him.
 
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Yeah, that fight went about as expected. Alpha does have limited resources, and does like to play with his toys. Especially new toys. However, when the gloves come off, the other side isn't a space chicken.

Meanwhile, high level conspiracy means that the bad guys were able convince the elder that Alpha was in the wrong. If the apprentices are lucky they'll be able to cast all the blame on the elder. If they aren't then they'll be considered part of the conspiracy when it's uncovered. Somehow I doubt the words of conspirators will be believed about what threat Alpha poses.

At this point though, you'd think Alpha would set up a subroutine to automatically change his reference frame whenever someone or something moves fast enough near him. This is not the first time he's had to deal with that after all.

Couple notes writing wise:

Probably the largest surprise (not a bad thing) is the suddenness of killing off a viewpoint character. I like it as an occasional thing, but beware of the Attack On Titan effect. Where we are afraid to become attached to anyone because we know they'll probably die.

Other thing is it seemed like you swapped viewpoints a few times in the last chapter. It was clearly from Alpha's POV, but the bad guys reactions included some internal feelings instead of just expressions.
 
Probably the largest surprise (not a bad thing) is the suddenness of killing off a viewpoint character. I like it as an occasional thing, but beware of the Attack On Titan effect. Where we are afraid to become attached to anyone because we know they'll probably die.
XD There are going to be some people mad about tomorrows chapter, but it was all done with reason.
 
Book 1 - Lesson 45: There are lessons in defeat.
Here's the chapter for today!

Tell me what you think of the way Info was presented in this chapter!

I'm trying to say away from more "Info-Dumpy" narratives like I did with the Translight, and this was something someone recommended; make the information actual dialogue and have it serve a purpose other than just to inform the reader.

Tell me what you think and If this feels more natural!

————————————————————————
Book 1 - Lesson 45: There are lessons in defeat.
————————————————————————

Several minutes after Alpha had left.

Lin Weiyuan flicked back onto the battlefield several moments later, a struggling, ice-encased Fang Peng under his arm. Qi Mingxi appeared next to him only a moment later… only to scream and erupt into loud sobbing.

The three of them had retreated a distance away, like Elder Xiurong had told them to. The plan was to stall the mysterious metal Spirit Beast long enough for them to escape, then meet up at the checkpoint. But only a short while later, they witnessed that strange beam of light split the sky.

The sight had sent a chill down his spine.

Something like that… that shouldn't have been possible! Not here, not in the Radiant Sea! Not even the most powerful of the Akh'lut could display that much of their power here! That was the point of it! What in the nine hells was going on?! What was that thing?!

While Lin Weiyuan was trying to process what he'd just seen, Fang Peng attempted to go back. The young man had to restrain her. The Elder had been right; this was far beyond them. He couldn't let her rush back to her death, not in the state she was in. Even so, his [Ice Manacles] could barely restrain the rampaging body cultivator.

After waiting a few moments with still no sign of Elder Xiurong, Lin Weiyuan and Qi Mingxi agreed to return to the battlefield; what they saw when they did so nearly broke their spirits. The body of Elder Yu Xiurong lay where it fell, cut into several distinct pieces.

Fang Peng stopped struggling, all fight seeming to have left the young woman. She only stared, unblinking, her mouth moving but producing no sound.

Qi Mingxi knelt in a pile of blood, her arms wrapped around the severed head of her Master, openly weeping as she cradled it.

Lin Weiyuan felt numb, himself. Like an icy pit had opened in the center of his chest and threatened to suck all the heat from his body. For the first time since he'd become a Cultivator all those years ago, his mind felt sluggish and blank.

He tried to run through all the scenarios in his head, trying to figure out where it had all gone wrong. What had he missed?!

No matter how he tried, none of it made any sense.

He only stood there, unmoving. A quiet voice broke him free of the endless loop he'd trapped himself in.

"She's alive…"

Lin Weiyuan shook as if shocked by a Static Mage and slowly looked down at Fang Peng, not quite understanding.

"What?"

Fang Peng yelled, her body flexing, opening up her wounds but shattering her icy restraints.

"SHE'S ALIVE!"

The young woman half ran, half crawled to where Qi Mingxi knelt, quickly tracing her muscular hand along the severed head's scales. Lin Weiyuan to rushed over, placing his hands on the remains.

It was only then he could feel it. It was faint… weak like a flickering candle, but it was there. The gentle thump of vital and Spirit energy. He turned to Fang Peng, grinning from ear to ear, the woman matching him as he shouted.

"She's alive!!!"

A soft whimper drew his attention, and Lin Weiyuan turned to see Qi Mingxi staring up at them both. Her eyes were bloodshot, and her face tear-stained, and when she spoke, her voice was raw.

"What?"

Lin Weiyuan raised a brow, but then it suddenly dawned on him.

"Ah! That's right. You rose through the ranks pretty fast, didn't you? You've not likely taken a lot of the informational classes yet."

Lin Weiyuan turned and placed his hand on the much younger girl's head as he spoke, entering lecture mode. He'd taken those classes enough that he could probably teach them himself.

"Elder Xiurong was — is — a high-tier [Soul Fusion] Cultivator halfway through the [Earthly Transcendent] Realm. What is the purpose of that realm?"

Qi Mingxi frowned as she spoke.

"To Transcend our worldly limits. It is the middle ground of Ascension, where we begin shedding our mortal form and replace it with one suited for the Heavens. What does that have to do with it?"

Everyone knew that. It was one of the most basic lessons any Cultivator learned. To lie down your [Foundation], to [Transcend] your limits, and finally, [Break] through the Firmament above to take your place among the stars. That was the meaning of the Three Great Realms that made up their Path.

But even [Firmament Breakers] could die, let alone an [Earthly Transcendent].

Lin Weiyuan nodded as he continued.

"Correct. And do you know what happens during the greater step before [Soul Fusion]?"

Qi Mingxi opened her mouth but quickly closed it, shaking her head. Of course, she didn't know. She was only an early stage [Shackle Breaking] Cultivator, the last step of the [Mortal Foundation] realm. Why would she know about a step that would likely take her another century to even reach?

Lin Weiyuan spoke again, informing her.

"The greater step before [Soul Fusion] is called [Core Condensing], and it is one of the most important steps a Cultivator will ever take. It is here that we… condense our cores!"

Lin Weiyuan raised his hand to the sky as if making some grand proclamations. Qi Mingxi stared blank-faced at him, but Lin Weiyuan didn't miss the slight twitch of her lip and how her eyes brightened slightly. As talented and mature as the young woman sometimes seemed, it was easy to forget that she was still young, barely an adult in most places. Lin Weiyuan smiled down at her and continued.

"As for what that means, it's simple. All Cultivators condense their energy into a physical 'center' in their body, be they Human, Awakened Beast, or any other sapient species. For us humans, we form a Dantian—"

He placed his hand over his torso, slightly above his navel.

"—For Beasts, they form Beast Crystals in their hearts. Dragons form 'dragon pearls' in a similar manner. This is true for every species, even if the place and nature of this energy well changes. Once you reach [Core Condensing], things change."

Lin Weiyuan moved his hand and placed it right over the center of his torso, slightly higher up.

"You said it yourself. The goal of [Earthly Transcendent] is to replace our mortal body with one more compatible with the Heavens, and thus Spirit energy. [Core Condensing] is where that begins."

Qi Mingxi's eyes widened, and Fang Peng nodded in understanding, raising a finger and continuing where Lin Weiyuan had left off. She rarely showed so much interest in a topic, so he let her.

"When a Cultivator enters [Core Condensing], they begin transforming their Dantian, Beast Crystal or whatever, into a [Spiritual Core]. Functionally, they're the same, acting as a reservoir for stored Spirit energy, but with one key difference. A [Spiritual Core] has no physical form. It's a pure energy construct, and because it isn't physical—"

Qi Mingxi cut her off, realization striking her.

"—It has no Limits…"

Fang Peng wilted her big revelation stolen from her by the child genius.

Lin Weiyuan patted Fang Peng's shoulder but continued from there.

"Right. Because the [Spiritual Core] isn't limited by physical size, it can store unimaginable amounts of energy, far surpassing what we ever could otherwise, without it utterly destroying us in the process. It also primes the Cultivator for their next step, [Soul Fusion]. It's here that the Cultivator fuses their very soul to this [Spiritual Core]. This is critical before the next step, [Shedding Flesh], in which the actual process of replacing one's body begins. Care to take a guess why?"

Qi Mingxi furrowed her brow, trying to think hard about what she'd learned. After a moment, she spoke her thoughts out loud.

"[Core Condensing] isn't just necessary for energy storage. The Foundation steps are all about growing your Dantian, but a [Spiritual Core] is limitless. You can't grow something that's already boundless…"

Lin Weiyuan nodded as the girl continued to put her thoughts into words.

"But if it was just about using energy, why not go straight to [Shedding Flesh]? If there's no qualitative change, what's the point of taking the extra step to fuse your soul with your [Spiritual Core] core? How does that prepare you to—"

Suddenly, the young girl's eyes shot wide open, her face snapping back and forth between Lin Weiyuan and the severed head. Lin Weiyuan nodded, smiling as he finished.

"Yes. The point of [Soul Fusion] is to fuse your soul to your [Spiritual Core], thus anchoring to this core… instead of your body."

Qi Mingxi rushed to her Master's head and placed glowing hands on its surface. She was silent for a long moment before her face furrowed and fresh tears began pouring from her eyes. Lin Weiyuan walked over and gently wrapped the weeping girl in a hug before tapping her head. A thick layer of gentle ice slowly enveloped it, preserving the head and injecting Spirit energy to nurture the wounded soul trapped inside.

As a Cultivator nearing the end of [Soul Fusion], Elder Xiurong had long completed the process. She was just stuck gathering the energy needed to start transforming her body and step fulling into [Shedding Flesh]. She could absolutely still die, especially if she ran out of Spirit energy and her [Spiritual Core] collapsed.

But as long as they could bring the Elder back to the Sect, she should make a full recovery, even if severally weakened by the event. If she'd been only a few greater steps high, she could have even totally rebuilt her body from ashes herself, given enough time and Spirit energy. But being only in the middle of [Earthly Transcendent] meant she would slowly bleed off energy unless assisted, so time was crucial.

Once Qi Mingxi had calmed some, Fang Peng folded her arms and voiced a question he'd been stuck on as well.

"I don't understand, though. Why didn't the creature destroy her [Spiritual Core]? That's standard practice for Cultivators of their level, if I understood correctly. No one likes when an enemy you thought you killed pops up a few decades later, even stronger. Some kind of sick mercy? Or is it mocking us?"

Lin Weiyuan lifted the Elder's frozen head into the air with his Spirit energy and shook his head. Staring off into the distance, he asked himself the same question.

"I… don't know."

—————

Huff Huff

Juatan and Ulagan stood over three bodies, panting. Munkh sat cross-legged on her shield, the heavy metal object pinning a fourth man down. Ganbaatar stood guard over Zolzaya and Kallik as they stabilized a wounded innkeeper. Ganbaatar hadn't brought his own spear to the room but held Juatan's sidearm, a small gladius, at the ready.

Kallik's room was a wreck, looking like a storm or wild beast had passed through. The bed was utterly destroyed, having been cut into several pieces. The door had been kicked off its hinges during the opening move as two armed men rushed into the room, while the window had been shattered when two more broke through.

Despite the sudden intrusion, the group had been ready, and their enemy had either been overconfident or didn't realize the sheer amount of talent gathered in the room. Either way, the fight lasted only a handful of breaths as two assailants practically threw themselves onto Juatan and Ulagan's spears, while a third quickly succumbed to Kallik's poisoned arts. In contrast, the assailant's own attacks didn't even scratch the party. Even though each of the four men was low [Silver Spirit], the small room had worked against them. Their every blow was blocked by several phantasmal shields connected to Munkh's own via Spirit wires.

The only one injured had been the innkeeper, who'd rushed up the stairs as soon as the fighting started, only to get caught in the crossfire.

Once the innkeeper was stable, Kallik approached the pinned man and knelt down to speak.

"I'm guessing you'll not willingly tell us who sent you, will you? No matter, I have something for that."

She pulled out a small yellow pill, grinning from ear to ear.

The man met her eyes… and mirrored her grin before clinching his jaw.

Kallik's eyes went wide, and she snatched the man's face, prying open his mouth, but it was too late. The man's eyes rolled to the back of his head, and a thick black foam poured from his mouth.

Kallik flared her Spirit energy, burning away some of the poison lingering on her hand, and tsked.

"I should have seen that one coming…"

She stood and shook her head, then turned to the group to speak, but before she could, the dead man's eyes turned pitch black. With a yelp, Munkh lept off the body as it was enveloped in a thick black flame. One by one, the three other bodies also burst into black flames, and in the span of a few breaths, not even ashes remained.

Kallik stared at the spotless floor and cursed to herself.

"Wasn't expecting that, though…"

The group shared a look and laughed, but their relief was soon cut short as the sound of heavy footsteps rushed up the inn stairs. A moment later, a dozen fully armed Guardians stood outside the destroyed room, their spears ready. The group parted to let an older man, in slightly more ornate armor, into the room.

The grizzled-looking man stopped at the broken doorway and stared into the destroyed room. One by one, his eyes coasted over each of them, pausing only on the innkeeper and Juatan, to whom he gave a raised brow.

After a long moment of silence, he spoke in a commanding voice.

"Grassreader Kallik and company, you are hereby placed under arrest. Surrender your weapons peacefully and present yourself for processing."

The three Slatewalker Guardians shared a look and dropped their weapons, raising their hands in the air. Ganbaatar hesitated, but a sharp look from Juatan had the young man following suit.

Kallik sighed and pinched the bridge of her nose.

She hadn't seen that one coming either, though, in retrospect, she really should have…


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Now, I'm sure some of you are a bit upset with the Yu Xiurong thing. So I thought I should take a bit of time to explain.
Yu Xiurong, in the original novel was intended to be Alpha's "Team Rocket" or Majima. Someone who keeps popping up at inopportune moments to get their "revenge" only to be killed off near instantly. Then revive and repeat. Kind of like a comedic Rival to Alpha.

Now, for various reasons, that didn't happen. Yet, I didn't want to abandon the character or the idea entirely too.
That being said, just going a copy past wouldn't work either, mostly because of the Origin Sect's reduced presence in the first book.

Instead, I decided to try something a little different and use her "death" as a way to better explain, in story, a bit more about the cultivation system and how it works.

I'm still debating if I still want to use her for that "Comedic Rival" role, as the tone of this story is a bit more serious overall. Though I have a few ideas.

Anyway, just wanted to put that out there for those wondering WHY, since I know personally, I don't like unexplained "Oh, ya, na they actually survived" either. Hope that clarifies it a bit!
 
Huh, when I saw that comment yesterday I expected more deaths, not this. Good one.

Other thing I'd note is assuming Alpha isn't an idiot, and he's stopped playing around so I assume he is, then he left a wasp drone at the body. Allies coming back after the battle is to be expected, and half of what Alpha does requires patient information gathering.

So, the info dump was also to him as well, even if he didn't understand any of the bolded words or what they're talking about, the idea of mental uploading or using energy to store energy cannot be a new one to him. The good news is you've shown Alpha as a character with morals and who will follow whatever laws there are about defeated enemies. Even had he known at the time, he wouldn't have killed her.

That dichotomy between his patience and his actions is one of the funniest parts. Especially since most people only see the fighting and playfulness. He might not like waiting, but the whole hijacking a drone thing he did probably took significant amounts of it.

Edit: Spelling
 
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That dichotomy between his patience and his actions is one of the funniest parts. Especially since most people only see the fighting and playfulness. He might not like waiting, but the whole hijacking a drone thing he did probably took significant amounts of it.

Ya, Alpha was written as a character than complains a lot and does stupid things, not because he's stupid, but because he thinks it would be funny and likes to push people's buttons.
 
Book 1 - Lesson 46: "Get your arrays in order!"
If, for some reason, the pictures don't work for you, links can be found at the end of the chapter.
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Book 1 - Lesson 46: "Get your arrays in order!"
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Progress!

Both literally and metaphorically!

Alpha had arrived at the small checkpoint building nearly 12 hours ago, and not much had happened since. The "checkpoint" itself was a simple thing, little more than a small courtyard surrounded by a stone wall, a dozen meters tall, barely able to hide the TAWP if Alpha crouched. In the courtyard's center was a watchtower, twice as high as the walls, allowing someone at the top to see for dozens of miles in all directions.

The entire complex was the first permanent structure he'd seen since the ruined temple.

A few small, humble buildings dotted the courtyard, which Alpha had assumed were offices and barracks for the stationed soldiers. Not that there were occupied, of course; this checkpoint, and the ones he could see several dozen miles away in either direction, were totally abandoned. The humans had said they'd likely be, as the soldiers were pulled back to more public areas during this "Darkest Night."

That said, Alpha had half excepted the black-and-white man to show up again or some new threat to pop its head out of the woodwork, but the last few hours have been eerily quiet.

Probably had something to do with the giant, swirling vortex of darkness in the sky…

Alpha turned his attention back to the strange phenomenon he'd been studying since he arrived. Like the Earth Shrine, the swirling clouds hadn't been visible until he got close enough, even with his advanced sensors. It was like something in the air was scattering everything he threw at it, almost like the icy shell surrounding the planet.

Instead, he'd first witnessed vibrant streams of shimmering, rainbow energy coalescing in the sky, like auroras in the night sky. These streams seemed to come from all over the prairies, likely the Earth Shrines, if he understood the human's explanations. As they drew near the center of the prairies, they combined, growing thicker and more visible until they converged into the swirling vortex.

As the vortex churned, all the colors mixed into a muddy brown cloud, this too condensing into a deep, black color that reminded Alpha of rich, fertile soil for some strange reason. The soil clouds swirled inward toward an absolute center, directly above a large building in the distance that he could just barely make out. There, the swirling black cloud grew tighter, then descended like a funnel cloud being pulled to the ground.

As they neared the building, however, something… changed. The dark, rich color of fertile soil was quickly overtaken by a choking black cloud that swirled around it, slowly filtering in and tainting it.

Not that Alpha had any idea what was happening or how the civilization he'd witnessed so far, even in the much larger "Jadewalker" city, would be capable of something like this. This was the type of weather and energy manipulation he would have expected from the Federation. Not a bunch of nomads still using swords and spears. It was more proof for Alpha's theory that someone off planet had stakes here that the natives weren't aware of.

He couldn't even get any [Wasps] close to the storm or building to scout further, either. The same interference that blocked his sensors jammed his connection to the drones. Even setting them to auto-scouting didn't work. The onboard AIs didn't have the intelligence or reflexes to make it very far into the danger zone. So rather than waste more drones, Alpha had taken the time to study the storm however he could and scout the area.

The scouting had turned up little, just more empty outposts every few dozen miles and a couple of wandering hazards that he made a note of for later. Where he had made some breakthroughs had been his arrays. Studying the storm, even with what little he could gather from it, had been a godsend. As he suspected, the energy gathering and concentrating was nearly identical to the energy inside the heart crystals.

Alpha wasn't sure which came first, though. Did the creatures naturally gather and condense this energy from their environment for later use? Or was the energy released into the environment as creatures died, leaving behind their heart crystals? Either way, observing how the energy behaved in the storm led him to several discoveries.

First, much like how electricity preferred straight lines, this strange energy preferred circles. To be more accurate, the more the energy circulated, the more organized and easier it moved. In its natural, free-flowing state, it was chaotic and highly volatile, but it became far more stable and less prone to "straying" once it started circulating.

That would explain several strange "nodes" he'd found in the drone's array. Even after identifying the functions of several parts, he'd still been unable to figure out what the point of the weird circular pools dotted along its length were. It turns out they were "rest stops" for the energy, where the energy could be circulated and stabilized before being moved to other areas.

That would also explain why most of his prototypes kept exploding. The energy was being forced through the array without enough time to stabilize properly, causing it to stray and run wild.

The second thing he'd discovered was that the energy flowed more like a gas than a liquid like electricity did. This meant several things. First, the energy had a tendency to collect into pockets of density. Higher-density energy would displace lower density, pushing it through the array. However, if there wasn't enough force, the energy would pool into pockets, eventually crystallizing.

In the small test arrays, these crystals were microscopic but were still apparently large enough to destabilize and explode, causing further chain reactions. Comparing it to the drone, Alpha realized that was another purpose of the various nodes. As they circulated and stabilized the energy, they also "cleaned" the array, removing crystalized build-up and turning it back into flowing energy.

With everything he'd learned, it only took a few hours for Alpha to finish modeling a new design for his storage array.

————





————

The design itself was simple compared to some of the more intricate and flowing arrays seen on the drone, but Alpha liked the simplicity of it. More importantly, it worked!

Originally, Alpha had been trying to force the raw energy from the stone into the arrays. This had caused the unorganized, chaotic energy to pool and clot faster than Councilmen Harris' arteries during taco Tuesdays. This time, Alpha took a different approach.

The array was divided into three major parts; input, output, and storage.

His input was still the same shaped grove he'd been using before, but now it was more apparent why the drone's input was a spiral. The energy's tendency to follow circular paths meant a spiral was perfect for drawing the energy out. This pre-stabilized energy was then directed into the second area: storage.

The storage array itself had three main parts as well. The first, the prime energy circuit, was where the energy would circulate and transfer between various parts of the array. From here, it could drain into the energy storage circuits or be directed to the output channels.

Once in storage, the energy storage circuits would act similarly to the nodes scattered around the drone's arrays. The energy would be collected, condensed, circulated, and mixed in five separate circuits connected by a primary circulator at the center. This prevented any build-up of crystals while keeping the energy condensed and ready for use, like an industrial mixer continuously spinning to keep a batch from coagulating.

From the primary circulator, energy would leak back into the prime energy circuit, where it would either begin the process again or be directed to the output channels for use.

The output had been a stroke of brilliance, if he said so himself, even if it was simple in practice. The output channels could be curved or straightened as needed using a bit of nanite skin. Since the energy almost always followed the more curved path, Alpha could keep the energy contained within the prime energy circuit by straightening the channel. Alpha could curve the output channel when a certain output needed energy, tempting the energy to siphon in.

Alpha could use this method to control when and where the energy went and how much was used. This resulted in the modular storage array, which could attach to other arrays directly through the primary output connectors. The square connectors would still circulate the energy, but made the energy very "agitated," wanting to escape. So when a second input from another array was connected to them, the energy gladly moved to the new array.

He could even link multiple storage arrays together in this way! Though he saw little use for that at the moment.

Progress was progress, though; he couldn't complain. Once he had a real base, he could dive into the deep end and see what this energy really was and what it could do. That was for later. Right now, he had other matters to deal with.

The TAWP hadn't moved for hours, ever since he'd settled into the checkpoint. To any outside observer, it might have appeared he'd simply fallen asleep… or died. But he'd been constantly monitoring the area while he worked, so his new "guest" hadn't slipped past his notice.

"Are you going to introduce yourself?"

Alpha spoke into the empty courtyard. For a long moment, no one answered until a lone figure walked out from behind a nearby building. They wore armor resembling the gear Alpha had seen worn by the various "adventurers" in Jadewalker City. Of far higher quality, however.

Had Alpha not already known what array lines looked like, he would have assumed the dense scrawl on the figure's leather armor to be decorative. At the very least, Alpha could tell whoever had done the work was far more skilled than whoever had done the sparse scrawling he'd recorded on the other adventurer's gear.

Strange enough, it still couldn't compare to the meticulous and detailed work the old man had done to his drone. It made part of the AI wonder who the petty old fart really was.

The stranger's array work was particularly dense around the wrists, lower legs, and on the otherwise featureless wooden mask they wore. The mask itself was interesting, as it didn't even have eyeholes. Whatever their purpose, Alpha suspected at least one function was voice modulation. When the figure spoke, their voice was grainy and rough, obviously artificial, after all.

"I shouldn't be surprised. Your reputation precedes you, 'Lord Protector.' If my companion hadn't warned me about you, I'd have thought all my -cloaking- [Hahdj@#5a] were damaged or defective."

Alpha noted the first unknown word he'd heard in a while. His guest hadn't used the word for arrays, but it had contained similar root syllables. Interesting. Was it a cultural thing? Or was there more to it? Filing that away for later, Alpha responded.

"Strange. You don't strike me as a native. And everyone else around these parts has the funny habit of not staying in enough pieces to talk about me. I'll assume you're not supposed to be my contact, either. My friends are currently… indisposed at the moment. What was your 'companion's' name? Maybe I can point you toward what's left."

The masked figure only shrugged and strolled in his direction as it spoke.

"There's no need for that, Lord Protector. My companion is being returned home as we speak. As for who they are, I'm afraid I can't say much. Professional standards and all that, I'm sure you understand. But have no fear. I'm not here for revenge. Not against your esteemed self, at the very least."

The TAWP stood, and Alpha turned to face the figure, raising the war machine to its full height. That display, at least, gave the figure pause, stopping several dozen meters away.

"Oh? Then who are you after?"

The figure laughed and answered.

"Let's just say the enemy of my enemy is my friend—"

Alpha could hear the grin in the figure's next words despite the mask.

"—And I hope we can be very good friends, Mr. Lord Protector."

—————

"Let us out! This is ridiculous! We're telling you we were attacked!"

Ganaa rattled the bars of his cell, despite the hard glares of the Guardian standing guard on the other side. They'd been locked up for hours now, with no news at all. They hadn't even been allowed to defend themselves and had been thrown into cells as soon as they'd been dragged to the jail cart.

The excuse they'd been given was no one had time to deal with a 'drunken brawl' this close to the Darkest Night, but Ganaa knew it was elkcrap! This whole situation was fishy as hell, from the priest's odd refusal to the attack from unknown men who'd burst into black flames. Hell, even the Guardians reacting so quickly was strange. The fight had lasted only a handful of breaths; unless a patrol had been walking by at that exact time, how would they have even arrived so fast?

"Ganaa. Stop. Sit down and rest; you'll be no help to anyone if you don't get some sleep. Zolzaya will kill you if you wake her up, too."

Ulagan placed a hand on his shoulder and pulled him away from the bars. With their guard ignoring him, Ganaa turned and directed all his pent-up frustration on the other man instead.

"How can you be so calm, Ulagan?! How can any of you sleep? You can't tell me that any of this is normal!"

Ulagan shook his head and responded, his voice soft.

"No. It's not normal. But there is nothing we can do about it right now. All we can do is wait and try to contact someone who will listen."

Ganaa threw his hands into the air and yelled.

"We don—."

Ulagan's sharp glare cut his words off. Ganaa glanced at the three nearby women as they slept in a pile, and Juatan, off to the side, resting with his back to the wall. He continued, more in a whisper this time.

"We don't have time, Ulagan! The Darkest Day is less than two days away, and the Lord Protector should already be in place by now! If we don't hurry, we'll be too late."

Ulagan sighed and patted Ganaa's shoulder again.

"Yes. I know. Even so, we—"

"Too late for what, exactly? What is it you're really planning?"

The loud voice cut Ulagan off and caused the sleeping Slatewalkers to stir.

From the open door, the same priest who had turned them away at the temple walked into the room, sneering down at them through the bars.

When he spoke, it was no longer with the cold detachment from the temple but with audible disdain.

"I knew it was smart to keep you backwater yolks from the Head Priest. Tell me, what are your actual goals? We detected Black Arts in that room you destroyed, so don't think you can fool us any longer! We will not tolerate cultists of Iris in this city!"

————

 
We lease the Kraken: Pilot Chapter
I've got something special for you all today!
I recently saw a funny pun and it triggered that inspiration bug!
What was suppose to be a short 2k word concept chapter, turned into almost 6k words after 8 hours of writing. orz...
The story itself is a "System" story set in a superhero "nexus" world, where the MC sets up shop then collect various Cryptids to sell or Rent.
I really like the story concept and what I've got here so far.
No time frame for when I'll start working on this one fully yet, but it'll likely be sometime after the first book of Alpha Strike is finished, here in the next few months.
Tell me what you think!
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We lease the Kraken:
Pilot Chapter

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Jeremiah tapped the small fishbowl sitting on his desk. The tiny red octopus inside waved back at him, blowing a few bubbles. The young man sighed and stood, placed one hand on his hip, and ran his hand over his face.

"What am I going to do with you…?" he asked, not really expecting an answer. It's not like he had asked for a new pet. But what was he going to do? It's not like he could tell the old man across the hall he didn't want a pet. That would have been rude. It was a birthday gift after all, and despite his rough exterior, Jeremiah liked the old codger.

Mr. Roger was the first person in the musty, rundown apartment building he'd moved into that didn't speak to him like he would mug them as soon as they turned their back. Not that Jeremiah could blame them; this part of the outskirts of Prima City wasn't the safest.

Then again, despite claiming to be 80 years old, Mr. Roger was a 6'5', 300lb wall of muscle while Jeremiah barely broke 5'11 and never weighed over 180lb in his entire life, despite being slightly pudgy from life as a veterinary student. The first time Jeremiah met the intimidating black man, he was more than a little ashamed to admit he feared what would happen to him.

Despite his appearances, though, Mr. Roger was a jolly man who more than once had helped Jeremiah out of a tough spot in the last few months. Jeremiah did his best to return the favors however he could.

Good people were hard to find in this part of town, or at least learned how to keep out of sight.

The neighborhood hadn't had a residential "Boss" in nearly five years. Not since the last one was killed by a rival during the last outskirt war. In theory, any other Super could have taken over and reigned in the other criminal elements. But every time they tried, the former boss's old rival would… remove them. Sometimes with bribes, sometimes with threats, and sometimes with more bloody methods when neither of those worked.

No one knew why the old rival did not just take up the area for themselves. Maybe it was some kind of sick game, playing with the old boss even after they'd already won. Maybe the outskirt wars took too much out of their gang, and they didn't think they could hold it, so instead kept anyone else from taking it until they could.

Whatever the reason may have been, with no Boss to keep the criminal element in check and no Capes patrolling this far out, the neighborhood had gone to hell. Within half a year, most of the buildings had been abandoned, and the people gone, leaving only those too weak, too old, or too poor to move anywhere else. At least that meant he had got the apartment for cheap.

It was a small blessing in the chaos that had been the last four months.

Jeremiah laughed at himself. Four months? Was that all it had been since his life had gone down the drain? Why did it feel so much longer? Yet only yesterday.

Only four months ago, he'd been a promising young student on the fast track to graduation from one of the top veterinary schools in the country. He'd lived state-of-the-art house, literally built from the ground up by his Artificer older sister. They'd been living the dream! The ideal that was promised to so many people who came to Prima City seeking refuge and wealth.

Oh, sure, now these days the Wilds weren't that bad, at least most of the time. With Supers becoming more and more common over the last few centuries, especially Artificers like his sister, mankind had taken its place at the top of the food chain. Now, hubs of technology and civilization can be found across every corner of the country.

But occasionally, you'd still hear stories of some small town getting wiped out when an animal triggered a little too close to their walls. Or someone who thought they could cut costs on their rift dampeners, and a rift opened up in the town square. Or a hundred other things that could go wrong in a place without enough strong Supers.

That's why places like Prima City, as an established Hero's Hall, were so popular with the common man. Even if that led to rapid overpopulation and development. It always surprised Jeremiah what some people would do to feel just a little safer.

His sister, and by extension, Jeremiah, were some of the lucky ones. Artificers were always in demand. After all, they're the ones who created all the technology that allowed such a mega city like Prima City to exist in the first place. As a B-Rank Artificer, Sarah never had to worry about finding work, even as a freelancer. People were throwing themselves at their door to hire her for various projects.

As her younger brother and only family member, Jeremiah also naturally benefited. She'd practically raised him after their parent's death, and he'd never wanted for anything for as long as he could remember. Everything was perfect. He was going to graduate at the top of his class. His sister had promised to build him a state-of-the-art clinic, and he'd pay her back for everything she'd ever done for him.

His future was laid out before him like a gilded carpet, and all he had to do was strode proudly toward it.

Funny how life can pull that carpet out from under you without a moment's notice.

They say that when something life-changing happens, your brain imprints the details in hyper-focus. Jeremiah could say for a fact that it was a load of bullcrap.

He didn't remember where he was or even what he was doing when he got the news. All he could remember was feeling numb. Like his brain had shut itself off in denial.

Sarah was dead.

Not just dead, but killed.

As a Villain.

The official story was that she'd tried to steal something from her latest employer. When they caught her, she went berserk and used her powers to escape. In response, the Hero's Hall sent a team to subdue her. If it had ended there, things would have been fine. But according to the Capes who responded, his sister had resisted arrest and severally injured one of the responding Supers.

Under Prima City law, that automatically labeled Sarah as a "Villain."

The ensuing fight leveled an entire city block near the outer ring, and the Capes were "forced" to put her down.

Even now, thinking of the report made Jeremiah's blood boil. What kind of bull was that?! Sarah had been one of the kindest, caring people he'd known. That wasn't just his bias talking, either! His older sister regularly built higher-end tech and sold it for under cost in the poorer parts of the city, just so those people could have some comforts that those more well-off hoarded.

She'd even campaigned with others to help build up the outskirts and other rougher parts of town.

The thought that Sarah would not only use her power to steal but purposefully hurt others was preposterous to him. He'd sooner believe that the moon was made of cheese.

Many people his sister had helped had felt the same. Thousands had marched on city hall to demand the truth and justice for Sarah, with Jeremiah leading the helm.

That's when the stories started.

Rumors of embezzlement. Supposed loans and debts Sarah had taken on to fund various projects. Past "thefts" that were somehow only now coming to light. All of it was ludicrous to those who knew his sister and flimsy from a legal standpoint. But, as more and more "evidence" appeared, whispers began, and support for his sister slowly dwindled.

Until near the end, only Jeremiah remained, standing in front of the courthouse, holding his sign while the surrounding crowd jeered and laughed. Posthumous trials were rare, but thanks to the nature of Sarah's "crimes" and the heavy push from the mega-corp she'd "stolen" from, Sarah's trial had turned into a sensation plastered over every news station and even the internet.

It only took 30 minutes for the "jury" to reach a unanimous verdict of "Guilty."

Just like that, Sarah Bridge, a woman once called the "Saintess of the Outskirts," was labeled a Class-B Villain, in the same category as murderers and megalomaniac psychopaths.

Under Prima City law, everything she owned, her tech, her bank account, and their home, was seized by the city and used to pay reparations to the "victims." Not that the people whose homes and businesses were destroyed ever saw any of that, of course. Nearly 95% of it went to pay the corporation she had been working for, as it was deemed they'd "suffered the greatest lose."

More bullcrap.

He'd tried to fight it. Tried to clear his sister's name. Anyone with eyes could see what was going on. How could anyone believe any of this?! But nothing worked.

He was homeless, penniless, but for what was left of the allowance in his personal account. No news station would talk to him, and all of Sarah's old contacts and "friends" had either cut ties completely or vanished into thin air.

To make matters worse, his college had called to inform him that his leave of absence had been denied for unspecified reasons. If he didn't pay the next semester's fees, all his hard work would go down the drain.

Jeremiah's hand tightened around the edge of the fishbowl, and it shook. A fire burned in his chest at the memories, and his gaze became distant and glassy. The gentle touch of a tentacle wrapping around his finger broke him from his memories. Jeremiah jerked and lifted his hand, pulling the tiny creature up with him.

The baby octopus, barely the size of his thumb, stroked a shallow cut that ran the length of his palm. Only then did Jeremiah notice the slightly red tinge to the water in the fishbowl and the smear of blood along the bowl's lip.

He'd gripped the edge so hard it had cut into his palm, and he hadn't even noticed. That was some strong glass…

"Oh, crap. I'm sorry, little one. Let's replace your water and then head to bed," Jeremiah said as he lifted the bowl with his free hand.

A few moments later, the water was replaced, and Jeremiah's hand was wrapped. The baby octopus sat at the bottom of its fresh bowl, happily nibbling on a small shrimp. The good thing about such a tiny creature was it ate little, and Mr. Roger assured him that once the few shrimps he'd given Jeremiah ran out, it would eat just about anything.

At least he didn't have to worry about feeding it.

Jeremiah took a deep breath and stared at the small creature through the glass as it enjoyed its meal. He felt a little calmer, even if the smoldering sparks in his chest still threatened to consume him if he let them.

Maybe Mr. Roger was right. Maybe he needed something to take his mind off things for a while. Sure, he specialized in terrestrial animals, but how hard could it be to watch over a tiny octopus?

Ok, that was probably oversimplifying things, but it would be nice to think of other things for a while…

Jeremiah tapped the glass. The baby octopus stopped eating and looked up at him with intelligent eyes. Several tentacles raised and waved back before the creature returned to its meal.

Jeremiah stood and smiled. Ya… maybe that would be nice…

The young man softly whispered, "I guess that means you need a name, doesn't it? Mr. Roger said you were a boy, but I didn't specialize in marine biology, so what do I know?"

The octopus looked up at him and tilted his head.

It reminded him of a hamster he had as a child before his parents had died. That memory made Jeremiah laugh, and he asked the tiny creature, "How about... Billy?"

The baby octopus raised all its tiny tentacles and waved them around in excitement as if it understood. Jeremiah laughed again and patted the tank.

"That's that, then. Goodnight Billy. Sleep tight."

With that, Jeremiah climbed into the tiny bed in the middle of the empty apartment and reached for the small desk lamp.

The last thing he saw before the light clicked off was the enormous eyes of the newly christened Billy staring at him.

——————

Several hours later, Jeremiah sat in bed and stared at the dark ceiling. Even after four months in this place, he still had trouble sleeping. Sometimes the nightmares would wake him up in the middle of the night. Sometimes it was the sound of gunshots or fighting on the streets below.

Even now, the bright yellow light from the streetlight cut through the darkness of the almost empty room like a merciless blade, intent on killing Jeremiah's sleep. The curtains were too short, torn by the previous occupant for one reason or another. Jeremiah moaned and rolled in bed, pulling the cover over his head, but to no avail.

He sighed and flipped on his back before reaching over to the desk Billy's bowl sat on and opened a drawer. Jeremiah rummaged around for a moment, careful not to wake the sleeping creature, before pulling out a small object.

He pulled it close and held it up in the beam of light so that it was visible. It was a small metal amulet, not much bigger than Billy, and appeared to be made of two pyramids, fused bottom to bottom, twice as long as wide. It hung on a thin chain, spun silently, and glistened in the light.

He stared at the amulet fondly, a soft smile on his face. It was the last thing his sister had ever given him. An "early birthday present," she had said. Even now, he could remember the letter that came with the box.

"Hey, dork! Happy birthday! I know it's still a few months away, but I've got a big project coming up, and you know how I can get when the itch takes over, so I thought I'd give this to you now. Before you complain, I know you don't like jewelry, but I made this specifically for you, so show some appreciation! It might not look like anything special now, but I promise, this is some of my finest work yet! I can't wait to show you everything it can do! I think I'm almost more excited than you! It's locked for now, though; I don't need you going and breaking it. I'll unlock it when I return home next week, and we can review everything. Till then, keep staring at it and wonder what mysteries and secrets it holds! HAHAHAHAHAHHA!

Signed, your loving provider and mistress supreme, Sarah."


Jeremiah laughed to himself and wiped away a tear. Sarah had always been a little… odd, but she'd always been there for him. What more could he have asked of family?

Now this tiny, plain-looking amulet was all he had left of her. The only reason even that hadn't been taken from him was because no one knew it existed. He'd been waiting to show it off to his friends until after Sarah unlocked it. There was no telling what the thing actually did; knowing her, it could have been anything for a microcomputer better than anything on the public market, to some kind of prank Holographic display that made him look like a monkey. He didn't want to think she'd give him something like that for his birthday, but there had been the cake incident on his 12th birthday.

His friends had never let him live that one down… better safe than sorry.

But, of course, Sarah had never returned.

Maybe someone more callous would have considered selling it. After all, despite how plain it looked, it should have still been a piece of B-rank technology, right? It would have been worth something to someone, maybe even enough to get back on his feet.

But he couldn't bring himself to do it. It was the last piece of Sarah he had, and he couldn't bear to part with it. Not yet. Not until he finished what he had to do.

Silently, he slipped the chain around his neck and let the cool metal of the amulet rest against his chest. Jeremiah slowly drifted off to sleep with the sound of his beating heart in his ears and the icy chill of the amulet against bare skin.

——————

Billy opened his eyes and stared out of his tank. His eyes focused on the nice shrimp man sleeping on his bed. Not that the tiny octopus knew what a tank or bed was. He was smart, but he was only a week old, dang it! Stop expecting so much from him!

The tiny octopus stirred the water as he stretched out his mighty tentacles and slid out of the comfy cave the nice shrimp man had built him. It was still dark out, but that didn't bother Billy much. His kind could see quite well, even in the dim light. All the better to capture unwitting prey in the murky depths. Like Shrimp! Shrimp was tasty…

Billy shook his head and cleared his mind of food… for now.

He had things he needed to do! Silently, Billy stretched his tentacles up and out of the water, then pulled himself over the bowl's edge. He plopped down over the edge and landed on the desk before pulling himself along the surface, leaving a water trail as he went. Billy had to be quick about this. He didn't like it up here in the -air-. It was much too dry for his liking.

Once he reached the edge, he streeeeetched with all his might and just barely grabbed onto the thin cloth sheet covering the thin mattress with a sucker. He then lept the rest of the way and pulled himself onto the shrimp man's bed. Billy waved his tentacles in the air.

Success!

Celebration cut short, Billy climbed on top of the snoring shrimp man's chest. The tiny octopus stared down at the sleeping man with large, intelligent eyes for a long moment.

Did he really want to do this?

Uncle Roger had said it was his choice. No one would force him. But the tiny octopus also understood this wasn't something to take lightly. He might have only been a week old, but the memories and instincts buried deep in his genes told him that once he made this choice, there was no going back.

Billy considered and thought hard.

Memories flashed in his mind of the past few days. Of the shrimp man's warm smile. The gentle finger that petted his head. Of the stories the man told him while he ate.

Was this really something he wanted to do now? The memories in his genes warned him how humans could be. How fickle and cruel they were sometimes. How even the kindest soul might rot and burn if given the time or reason.

Did he want to take the chance?

Uncle Roger said that if you want to know a person's true nature, you should look into their eyes. Their eyes would never lie. So what did the shrimp man's eyes tell him?

Billy remembered the look in the shrimp man's eyes before they went to bed. How it had burned with fury and rage that scared the tiny creature. Yet, he also remembered the sadness in those same eyes. A deep pain that made the little octopus's heart hurt, too.

Uncle Roger had given Billy to the shrimp man for a reason, right? Maybe he'd seen those eyes too and thought Billy could help?

Who was Billy to argue with Uncle Roger?

Billy nodded, his decision made.

Suddenly, the room was filled with a quiet light. Dozens of tiny blue rings covered Billy's body, flickering and casting shadows on the walls. The shadows and light played, dancing in a way that made it appear like the room had been cast into the ocean's depths.

After a moment, the light dimmed, and the blue rings covering Billy's body softened until they were only lightly glowing. The ring wiggled around until they split, forming dozens of tiny lines that wiggled and swirled, forming various mystical patterns and shapes. Slowly, some patterns converged on one of his tentacles, and when Billy touched the shrimp man's chest, then slipped off and onto the human's skin, like ink moving from page to page.

The glowing patterns swirled and wiggled on the human's skin before converging just over his heart. The glow lines soon formed into the image of a bright star, eight long beams of light extending from its center. It flashed once, then faded away.

Billy nodded his head and turned to make the daunting trip back to his bowl when a voice cut through the darkness.

Billy froze, fearing he'd been caught, but it didn't sound like the shrimp man.

//Energy signature detected. Beginning Analysis.//

The pointy metal object sitting on the shrimp man's chest spoke in a flat, cold, feminine voice before vibrating. The invisible mark on the shrimp man's heart lit up once more, and some of the blue lines broke off and flew into the metal object.

Billy waved several tentacles in a panic. Wait! It wasn't supposed to do that!

However, the metal object didn't care, and it absorbed the blue lights before falling still. Billy slowly stretched out a tentacle to poke it, but before he made contact, the metal object shook, then elongated lengthwise, splitting into several spinning, floating square rings, tethered together at the middle with blue light. Billy pulled back quickly, crawling away and hiding under the thin sheet.

From under the covers, Billy heard it speak. //Analyzing… Electric… Atomic… Mutagenic… Psionic… Cosmic… Ki… Spirit… DING! Energy signature identified; all erroneous signatures discarded… checking user ID… Soul marker recognized… personal Mana signature recorded… Welcome USER: JEREMIAH BRIDGE. Please submit data for your custom System experience.//

//Please submit details.//

//Please submit details…//

//Please submit details…..//


Billy peeked out of the covers and stared at the object just … floating there. Not seeing it do anything more, the tiny creature gathered its courage and slipped out of the covers. He approached slowly and stared. The floating metal energy thief just floated there, repeating the same thing over and over. Did… did it want something?

Billy carefully reached out a tentacle and lightly tapped the metal object. His tentacle made contact, and the object glowed blue. Billy panicked and tried to pull away, only to find he couldn't move. His tiny heart beat fast; he could only listen as the metal object spoke again.

//Mana signature recognized. Please state your desire; USER: JEREMIAH BRIDGE//

Who was that? Billy was Billy, you glowing meany!

Again it spoke. //Please state your desire.//

Desire? Did it want to know what he wanted? Would… would it let him go if it told the thing?

Billy's mind wandered to things he wanted. Images of shrimp man cleaning his tank. Of shrimp man giving him tasty shrimp. Of shrimp man playing with Billy and teaching him things. Slowly, the tiny octopus's beating heart slowed, replaced with a warm feeling that made him happy.

The metal object stopped glowing, and Billy's tentacle fell away. The metal object then spoke again, //Brainwaves recognized. Compiling Data. ERROR; gathered brain activity is incongruent with records. Data corrupted. Attempting connection to primary servers… Warning! Primary servers compromised. Attempting connection to secondary servers… Warning! compromised…//

//Warning, Trinary servers compromised…//

// Warning, Quaternary servers compromised…//

// Warning, Quinary servers…//

// Warning, Senary…//

// Warning,
Septenary…//

// Warning…//

// Warning…//

//….//

//Conditions met. Emergency protocol initiated. Connecting to Transdimensional Backup…connecting… connecting… connection successful. Beginning data debugging… Debugging complete. Beginning Analysis.//


Billy had no idea what it was saying… his head hurt just thinking about most of the words…

The metal object grew quiet for a long time. Long enough that Billy started making his way back to his bowl, having grown sleepy. He'd just reached the desk when the metal object spoke again. //Analysis complete. Custom System Compiling… DING! Compiling complete! Please standby for [Mystic Menagerie] System integration.//

The metal object then spoke in a voice that sounded the same but was far kinder and less flat than it had used so far. "Hey, Jerey… you might want to lie down for this part. This is going to hurt…"

The metal object then clicked shut, returning to its original shape, and fell back to the shrimp man's chest. Billy stared, wondering if it was finally over. The metal object wiggled for a few seconds before sprouting dozens of metal tentacles of its own.

GASP!

Had it been a friend all along?!

Nothing with that many tentacles could ever be someone bad. Billy raised his own tentacles and waved them. His new best friend waved back.

Billy's naïve, childlike trust was instantly shattered the next moment, however, as his metal friend's tentacles stiffened… then plunged into the nice shrimp man's chest all at once.

——————

For the first time in weeks, Jeremiah had a good dream. He couldn't remember the details in that strange, dreamlike way, but he remembered Sarah's voice. It was good to hear it again. He'd started to… forget as time passed, which only worsened his wild mood swings. Hearing her voice again after so long had been like a soothing balm to his soul, even if he knew it was just a dream.

Dream Sarah turned and looked at Jeremiah. He couldn't remember what she said, but she hugged him warmly, and the young man wept.

Holding him, she gently whispered something that cut through the dream fog.

"Hey, Jerey… you might want to lie down for this part…"

——————

"AHHAAARRRRGGGG!"

Jeremiah woke from the dream, screaming and clawing at his chest.

Ithurtithurtithurtithurt!

The pain overwhelmed all of his other scenes as he felt "something" burrowing its way into his chest. He clawed at the thing but found no grip against the cold, twisting, blood-covered metal. All he could do was writhe and squirm and scream.

After what could have been hours or seconds, the pain stopped suddenly. Time was hard to tell while in that fog of agony. Jeremiah collapsed in his bed, breathing hard, covered in sweat and blood. He lay there for an undeterminable amount of time, the stark contrast between mind-breaking pain and absolute stillness overloading his mind and refusing to let thoughts form.

After a moment, he reached up a shaking, blood-covered hand to touch his chest and felt… metal.

Jeremiah's heart raced as he shot up in bed, wiping away what blood he could with the stained sheets, and stared down at his chest, gobsmacked. In the middle of his chest, right above his sternum, a small metal rhombus was embedded into his flesh.

His sister's amulet…

Jeremiah gently poked it a few times, his brain refusing to process what he saw.

After a moment, he whispered into the darkness, "What the hell, Sarah?! What is this thing? What did you do to me?!"

His thoughts were cut off the next moment by a heavy pounding on his door as a deep baritone voice yelled from the other side. "Jeremiah! JEREMIAH! ANSWER ME, LAD!"

Jeremiah scrambled to his feet, wiped as much of the blood away as he could, and rushed to the door as the voice continued. "I'm coming in, boy! You better not be dead on me!"

Jeremiah called out before the man on the other side could break his door down, "I'm coming! Just, just give me a second!"

Jeremiah rushed back to his bed, pulled one of the cleaner sheets off, and wrapped it around himself before running back to the door and throwing it open. Mr. Roger's giant frame filled his doorway, and if the braced shoulder said anything, he'd, in fact, been only seconds away from breaking down the cheap plywood door.

The large old man paused and turned to look at Jeremiah. The dim hallway lights cast everything in shadow, and Jeremiah could barely make out the dark-skinned man's deep frown. He placed a hand as big as Jeremiah's head on the young man's shoulder and asked in a worried tone. "Boy, are you all right?! I heard the screaming from across the hall. What happened?!"

Jeremiah tried to laugh it off, but his voice broke as it spoke, "It-it was nothing, Mr. Roger, just a bad dream, I promise. Thanks for checking up on me like that. Sorry if I woke you."

Mr. Roger's frown deepened, and he asked, "Are you sure, Lad? Those were some mighty loud wails for nothin more than some night terrors."

Jeremiah nodded and answered, "Yes sir, I'm sure. Again, thanks for checking on me."

Mr. Roger pulled his hand back and stood straight. The frown never left his face, but he nodded anyway as he spoke. "I see. In that case, I'll leave you be then. I'm glad to see you're alright, Jeremiah. Just remember, though, Lad. Whatever brought you here, to this point of your life, you're one of us now. People of the Outskirts? We've got to look after each other, you hear? No one else will. So if you ever need anything, don't hesitate to ask."

Jeremiah opened his mouth, but the words caught in his throat. He closed it and swallowed before looking down at the floor and nodding. Softly he whispered, "I… I will. Thank you, sir."

Mr. Roger grinned and turned, waving behind him. "Goodnight, Jeremiah. Try to get some sleep."

Jeremiah nodded and closed the door.

The young man stood in front of his door for a long moment, then breathed.

He didn't enjoy lying to Mr. Roger. The man had been nothing but kind to him since he'd arrived. But honestly, what was he going to tell him? That the last piece of rogue technology from his dead sister, who'd been condemned as a powerful villain only a few months prior, had burrowed itself into his body for some unknown reason?

He could already see how that would go. The man would likely insist on taking him to the hospital to get the device examined. The hospital would inform the city, and he would either be arrested for being in possession of "stolen" super tech, or it would be cut out of him and taken away.

Worst-case scenario, maybe they'd say he'd gone "crazy" like his sister, and he'd be put down and dissected. Ya, there was no way he was telling anyone about this until he understood what the hell the amulet had done to him. Or was doing? He didn't know anymore…

——————

Mr. Roger's grin slipped as he stared at Jeremiah's closed door. From down the hall, another door opened, and a middle-aged woman in a nightgown walked out, two small heads peeking out from behind the door beside her.

She called out to him, her voice carrying far in the quiet hallway. "So? What's the news, David? Is he dead? I told you this would be a bad idea. If someone finds out…"

David "Davey" Roger waved his massive hand back and forth as he answered. "No, no, Martha, false alarm. The Lad just had some night terrors, is all. Nothin' to worry about."

The woman, Martha, frowned and narrowed her eyes before sighing and shrugging. She spoke in a tired voice, "If you say so. Never heard nightmares that bad, though. And my youngins jump at tiny bugs. If it's nothin', it's nothin'."

The youngest child behind the door pointed at Martha and spoke, offended. "Hey! They were not tiny! They were—wait!".

Martha shooed the children in the door and closed it behind her, cutting off the child.

David turned and made his way to his own apartment. As he did, he raised his hand and stared at the small splotches of fresh blood staining them. The blood sparkled blue for a brief moment, almost undetectable if one didn't know what to look for. He smiled lightly, then wiped his hands clean on his shirt and opened the door, muttering to the empty hallway.

"Ya… nothin' to worry about…"

Then walked inside, shutting the door behind him.

——————

It took Jeremiah 20 minutes to clean up the mess, but it got done. No point in sleeping in blood-soaked sheets, after all. He'd spent another 10 minutes staring at himself in the grimy mirror. No matter how long he stared; however, no answers came. Eventually, he cleaned himself off, left the tiny bathroom, and returned to bed.

Walking back to his bed, he noticed movement in Billy's bowl. Jeremiah turned his attention to the bowl to see the baby octopus staring back at him. Jeremiah smiled and knelt down, placing one finger on the glass as Billy placed a tentacle on the other side.

"Hey there, little guy," he said, "did I wake you? I'm sorry. How about we head back to bed now, huh?"

Jeremiah squinted his eyes at the tiny creature and frowned. Why did it look like Billy had a fuzzy outline? Was the bowl dirty? He'd just cleaned it, though. He rubbed the glass's surface, seeing if he'd missed a spot, but the outline persisted. In fact, it seemed to follow Billy as the tiny creature moved. Strange.

Jeremiah rubbed his eyes, thinking maybe something was in them, and when that didn't work, he focused on the outline, trying to determine what it was he was seeing.

"Woah!" Jeremiah nearly fell backward as something popped into view in front of his eyes.

=================================

Name: Billy

Species: Polaris Kraken (Newborn)

Age: 0 years, 0 months, 1 week, 3 days.

Rank: SS - 0 - 0 - 1

Rarity: Mythical

Pedigree: 8 Stars

Ecology: These mythical creatures, also called the "Heralds of the Guiding Star," Polaris Krakens, are said to lead wayward ships to safety during harsh storms with no stars visible. Its glowing light, vast power, and gentle nature have made it a deity of protection and an omen of safety and good luck for sailors across millennia.

But woe onto the fool who tempts these gentle giants' goodwill and kind nature, for even if the creature may forgive, the Sea itself does not take kindly to the mistreatment of one of her favorite children.

As the saying goes, the lost ship abandoned by its guiding star will never find shore again.


=================================

Jeremiah could only stare in shock at the strange white screen in front of him.

"What the hell…"
 
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Book 1 - Lesson 47: "Its good to have friends in high places."
Woot! We're drawing close to the end of the arch and the end of the first Book!

That being said, I'm taking next week off. hahahahahha.

Wait! Stop throwing things! QAQ,

This next week will be Important to reset and recharge as we make the final sprint to the end.

Also, Necromancy skill releases in Runescape, so I'll be binging that HAHAHAHA.

But if you absolutely can't wait, the lowest patreon, ($2.50) is a week ahead, while the highest ($7.50) is 2.5 weeks ahead. So if you really need your fix, check them out! Every subscription helps to support the novel and lets me continue to bring you new chapters and stories regularly!

And if you would rather not do that, I recommend checking out the story below by The Walrus King if you've not already! Its a great story filled with just as many laughs and wow moments!

www.royalroad.com

The Butcher of Gadobhra | Royal Road

Life is rough. Jobs are non-existent. And far too many people live in poverty in the real world and can only find work online in VR worlds. And it's getting worse. The old internet is unusable and hacked to pieces. The new system needs AI to run things, but most of them are destroyed. Now...

—————

————————————————————————
Book 1 - Lesson 47: "Its good to have friends in high places."
————————————————————————


The sneering priest shook his head and pointed toward the blank-faced Juatan as he spoke.

"What's with that look? I would think a 'Guardian' would have had better control over his flock. Then again, I guess that was asking too much of a barbarian. Yes, I remember you, Juatan. Given the ruckus you caused all those years ago, how would I not? Some no-name barbarian appears from nowhere, only to weasel his way into the Guardian academy. Even after all this time, people still talk about how you cheated to snatch your graduation position away from those more deserving."

In response, Juatan stood taller and glared down at the priest through the bars.

"Is that what this is? Some petty noble upset he was beaten in a fair duel years ago? I'd have thought a few decades in the temple should have taught you a mote of humbleness, Priest Tarkhan?"

The priest's face went red, and his eyes bulged but quickly returned to a calm sneer.

"Deny it all you wish. Your lies won't help you this time. After hearing the rumors of what you did to my cousin when you arrived yesterday, I knew I made the right choice in protecting the Head Priest from your poisonous tongue. Then, after all that, you have the gall to attack a temple messenger?! You've dug your own grave this time, Guardian, and I'll happily see you buried in it."

Ganbaatar pushed himself up against the bars beside Juatan and yelled.

"What messenger! We told you we were the ones attacked!"

Tarkhan turned to Ganbaatar and sneered,

"Humph. So you say. Yet our real Guardians found no bodies, equipment, or even traces of this 'black fire' that you claim consumed them. On the other hand—"

Tarkhan turned and gestured to the nearby doorway. A young man covered in bloodstained bandages entered the room. He walked with a slight limp, slowly, each step seeming to be a struggle. Upon seeing the Slatewalkers in the cell, he jumped, hiding behind the priest, as if afraid they could reach him from the bars.

Tarkhan patted the young man on his shoulder and turned back to the Slatewalkers, frowning.

"—We have eyewitnesses that will attest to seeing the messager enter the inn, only to come running out several minutes later, covered in blood and yelling for help. Had a Guardian patrol not passed by at that moment, I shudder to think what you ruffians would have done to him."

Ganbaatar pointed at the "messenger" and yelled, his face turning red.

"That's elkcrap! We've never seen this man in our lives!"

Tarkhan rolled his eyes and responded.

"Riiight. As if that's not something a child caught with his hand in the honeypot would say. But then I wouldn't expect critical thinking from someone associated with such… company."

Tarkhan turned his narrowed eyes to Juatan, frowning.

The priest turned to leave but spoke over his shoulder.

"Now, all that's left is to wait for the Innkeeper to awaken and confirm the story. I was hoping to have you lot in a noose by the end of the day, but lucky for you, the healer doesn't expect the man to wake for a few days more. Until then, you can spend the Darkest Night in a cell. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have more important matters to attend to."

As he moved to leave, another voice called out from in the cell.

"Priest Tarkhan, whatever grievances you might have against us, you're not a stupid man. Surely you can see that something doesn't quite add up here?"

Tarkhan paused and turned to see a freshly awoken Kallik walk to the bars. He narrowed his eyes and responded.

"Don't think your Adventurer mind games will work on me, Grassreader. I've heard quite a bit about you, and you're just as bad as the barbarian. Don't think the accords will keep you safe. I'll be speaking with the Grassreader's Council personally."

Kallik shook her head and folded her arms.

"That's a mistake, Priest Tarkhan, and you know it. If Head Priest Erden heard how—"

Tarkhan took several steps forward, pointing at the Grassreader as a vein pulsed on the side of his neck.

"Head Priest Erden won't hear of this, of any of this. He is a far busier man than most, and—"

An unfamiliar voice called out behind the door, cutting the priest off.

"And why exactly wouldn't I hear about this, Priest Tarkhan?"

Tarkhan froze, his eyes wide. Slowly, he turned and came face to face with an older man wearing ornate robes. The Head Priest was the picture of a kindly old grandfather whose wrinkled face told the story of a man more accustomed to laughing than otherwise. Yet the gentle smile and squinting eyes sent Priest Tarkhan shivering. Priest Tarkhan bowed deeply and spoke in a stuttering voice.

"S-Sir! Why are you h-here?! You don't n-need to concern yourself with these… criminals! I can assure you, e-everything is well in hand!"

Head Priest Erden stroked his short, gray beard and stared down at the shaking priest. His smile slipped into a frown, and his eyes opened slightly, revealing concentric black and white rings. When he spoke, his voice was flat.

"You know I don't like being kept out of the loop, Tarkhan. Please explain to me why you thought I would ignore allegations of one of our messengers being attacked?"

The old man turned and smiled fatherly at the injured "messenger." The young man turned away and hid behind Tarkhan.

Tarkhan didn't bother to rise as he spoke.

"Head Priest! I didn't intend to overstep my boundaries! With the Darkest Night approaching, I only assumed that you would be far too busy to hear out such… outrageous claims from such dubious origin."

Head Priest Erden nodded but asked in response.

"That's true. This time of the year is quite busy. This year, more so than most. However, I distinctly remember that any information regarding the missing child was to be brought to me immediately, regardless of how minor it might seem. Yes?"

That got Tarkha's attention, and the priest stood, pointing as he cried.

"Sir! You can't possibly trust anything a barbarian like this has to say, let alone any of his compatriots! His kind are why we were forced to these prairies in the first place!"

Head Priest Erden tilted his head and raised a brow, then asked.

"Oh? And why would I not want to hear from the messengers sent by our own patron?"

Tarkha stuttered, her brow furrowing as if unable to fully process the Head Priest's words.

Head Priest Erden turned and called out behind him.

"These are your companions, correct, my new friend? Or has this old fool embarrassed himself?"

A new figure walked into the room and nodded his head, the same concentric black and white rings as the Head Priest's staring daggers into Priest Tarkha. His eyes only flickered over for a moment to the people in the cell before he spoke.

"Yes, sir, that's them."

Head Priest Erden nodded his head in understanding, while Priest Tarkha could only stare at the young man's eyes, his mouth opening and closing as if trying to speak, but no words would form.

Ganbaatar was the one to break that silence as he pushed himself up against the bars, grinning ear to ear as he laughed and yelled.

"YUTU! About time you woke up, you lazy bum!"

——————

Several hours earlier.

——

Yutu slowly woke from a dream he couldn't quite remember, of places and things he'd never seen or imagined before. They were strange dreams filled with equal parts wonder, excitement… and soul-chilling sorrow. Even now, in this liminal place between wakening and dreaming, he could feel that mind-numbing chill weight heavy on his soul. As if all sparks of warmth and joy had long faded, leaving cold, barren stone in its place.

Only the tiny embers hiding under the ash kept him from totally freezing over. Kept him from giving in to the call of lifeless, unmoving stone. And then… it was gone.

He was awake.

Yutu shot up in bed with a yell, reaching out for something he didn't fully remember. His heart pounded painfully in his chest, and hot tears rolled down his cheek. Slowly, reality reasserted itself. Yutu looked around the room, unsure of where he was.

The last thing he remembered was fighting the Beast Lord. He'd just activated his formation after the Akh'lut pup and the strange Spirit Beast had appeared. They had the Beast Lord trounced, but then… he raised a shaking hand to his chest, feeling the bandages neatly wrapped there.

No… no, that wasn't quite right either. There was more, he knew. But it was all hazy and distorted. He couldn't rightly distinguish between what had been real and what had been a dream. Even so, one thing stood out in his memory as clear as day. A face. The face of a woman beautiful beyond words. A face touched by the sun, but perfect, as if carved from pure marble by the hands of a master artist.

And those eyes.

Deep, piercing eyes unlike anything he'd ever seen before, more gemstone than anything, yet alien, with concentric black and white rings of equal size converging into a pupil so black he felt like they had no bottom.

The sound of the door opening broke him from his daydreaming as an older woman walked in carrying a tray. Seeing Yutu sitting up, the woman jumped but smiled brightly as she spoke.

"You're awake! Good! That's good! We thought you might be out for a few days more, sonny. Don't see many civilians come in with injuries as bad as yours. Lay back, lay back, don't want to open up your wounds now."

The woman walked forward with her tray, grinning ear to ear.

"I'll let the doctor know you're awake, and then we can see about getting you some food. How does—"

Yutu turned to look at the woman, and she froze. She stared at the young man for a moment. Her mouth hung open, cut off mid-word, and her eyes widened. The tray slipped from her hands and clattered to the floor, medical tools and fresh bandages skidding across the floor.

The woman turned and bolted for the door, yelling at the top of her lungs.

"Doctor! DOCTOR!!!"

——

Head Priest Erden sat at his desk and continued to tackle the seemingly never-ending pile of paperwork stacked on one side. Long were the days when he was a simple priest, tending to the flock and doing simple chores. No, now every stroke of his pen had the potential to shake entire cities and decide the fate of countless souls.

The Jadewalkers were only a middling city on the scale of the Radiant Sea and even a smaller one compared to some of the most prosperous cities on the Skybreaker continent. That didn't mean being the spiritual leader for the entire city was easy, however. That wasn't even considering the dozens of towns and villages under the Jadewalker banner, each with their own individual problems and needs.

It didn't help that despite being recognized by the general public as a "religion," the Temple of the Prima operated more like a sect or clan. Just one where their "sect leaders" happened to be the physical manifestation of natural forces. That meant all the drama, squabbling, and competition between the Prima factions that came along with it. Not that the Prima interacted with the mortal world much at all, to begin with.

Only Fēnghuǒ the Forgeking, Lord of Embers, remained active, though only to endlessly demand tribute from his followers to work on some grand project that only the higher-ups of the Temple even had an inkling about the details of.

The Herald of Storms had little contact with mortals to begin with. For good reasons, too, as both his temper and his blessing could be as destructive as his namesake.

While the Sleeping Child of the Deep preferred her never-ending war under the waves rather than dealing with the politics and schemes of the surface world.

As for his own Hearth Mother… well, it had been millennia since she'd been called that. Instead of the "Mother of Hearth and Home," now these days she was more likely to be addressed as "Queen of the Underworld" or the Lady of Cold Stone. No one knew what caused such a drastic shift in their patron. What had caused all the warmth she'd once had for her people to flicker and die? If her siblings knew, none would say.

Many in the temple looked to take after their patron and be shiny beacons of apathetic stoicism, unwavering and undaunted by any outside force. Yet just as many sought to keep the old ways. To remember when their faction sought not to be the ever-unchanging Stone but the sheltering and protecting Brick. The unmovable wall that stood between an uncaring world and its people. The warm hearth that welcomed you home after a long journey.

Head Priest Erden shook his head and stared down at the paper that had sat unsigned on his desk for several minutes. He'd let his mind wander again. He found it was happening more and more lately. Even as a peak [Sixth Circle] Mage, roughly equivalent to a [Golden Spirit] Cultivator, Head Priest Erden found himself starting to feel the tug of old age. He'd known he'd risked falling behind the curve when he took this position in the Radiant Sea almost a century ago, but how he missed the days when he could stand without clicking.

Erden put down his pen and stretched his old bones. Maybe it was time he finally thought about retiring. The senior priests had been nagging him about his successor for a while now, and he had to admit, having the time to do some proper mage work for once was appealing.

He glanced over at the enormous pile of papers he could have sworn were a few sheets larger than the last time he looked and sighed. Then again, he still had so—.

The door to Head Priest Erden's office slammed open, and a young priest stumbled in, gasping for breath, his otherwise neat stone gray robes ruffled and sweat-stained.

"H-head *heave* Head Priest *huff* Erden!"

Head Priest Erden shot to his feet and moved to help the man.

"What?! What happened, my boy?"

The priest held out a hand, trying to check his breath. When he did, he pointed down the hall and said in gasping breaths.

"The *gasp* medial wing."

——

A few moments of light jogging later, Head Priest Erden rounded the corner to find a swarm of priests and acolytes crowding the hall, all trying to push their way in or see something inside.

He spent a moment trying to politely push his way through, to no avail. The Head Priest frowned and stepped back before clearing his throat.

AHEM!

The sound washed over the crowd like a wave, jostling a few and nearly toppling some of the younger acolytes. The crowd grew silent and turned, staring at the frowning Head Priest with wide eyes. As one, they bowed and scattered on the wind, leaving only a few ruffled-looking senior priests standing in the doorway. Head Priest Erden sighed and shook his head.

As the Head Priest approached, the guarding priests bowed and let him through.

Head Priest Erden walked through the doorway to see a different crowd this time. A small mix of doctors, nurses, and priests surrounded a young man sitting on the bed. The nurses poked and prodded the young man, taking various samples or changing his bandages, while the doctor shone a beam of light from his finger into the boy's eyes, peering at something.

Hearing him approach, the doctor turned and smiled, saying,

"Ah! Head Priest Erden! I'm glad you could make it so quickly. I think you need to see this."

Head Priest Erden raised an eyebrow and tilted his head. See what? What was so wrong with the boy that they had to pull him away from paperwork to deal with? He didn't look like he was dying.

Head Priest Erden moved closer, and the boy turned to look at him. The Head Priest's eyes shot open wide, and he froze. That was when two pairs of matching concentric black and white ringed eyes met each other for the first time.

Looking back, many years later, Head Priest Erden would realize it was also that moment the rusting gears of a clock that had laid dormant for millennia began to move once more.
 
Someone is about to have a very unfortunate "Can I talk to your manager?" moment lol. If anything happens to the kid, he's a dead man 3 times over

Given the last chapter, yeah. That "Priest" is at the least going to be cast out. More likely he's going to be the one behind bars. At best did just admit to planning to use his position to murder some people because of an old grudge. That's ignoring the whole thing about causing the heir to die putting him square into the conspirator camp.
 
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"Head Priest Erden won't hear of this, of any of this. He is a far busier man than most, and—"

An unfamiliar voice called out behind the door, cutting the priest off.

"And why exactly wouldn't I hear about this, Priest Tarkhan?"

*CHEF'S KISS*

Beautiful. Just beautiful. I could practically hear the record scratch in Tarkhan's head.
 
Book 1 - Lesson 48: "Even AIs make mistakes..."
Annnnnd We're back! Hurrah! Well that was a good break week. Got some rest, got some time with family, and settled some issues. Now its back to the grind! Hurrah!
Enjoy the chapter!
———————
Woooooot! We're nearing the conclusion of this arc, and the final arc of the first Volume! HURRAH! This chapter was a doozy, I'm telling you.
For this Chapter in particular, I want everyone's feed back!
Does the reveals make a bit of sense? Do they come to fast? How is the structure and flow? etc etc? This is honestly one of the chapters most likely to get a revision or major overhaul if most people find something off about it.
So feel free to pick it apart!
Thanks for your support everyone!
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Book 1 - Lesson 48: "Even AIs make mistakes..."
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———
Roughly the same time that the Head Priest was meeting with the Slatewalkers.
———​

Alpha blazed across the prairies heading toward the large storm off in the distance. As he plowed through the thick grass, "Flight of the Valkyries" blared from several external speakers, breaking the otherwise eerie silence. Beside the TAWP, a lone figure raced on the wind.

The masked figure, who'd introduced themselves as only No. 7, managed to keep up with the blistering speeding of the TAWP's travel mode somehow. How they were doing it, Alpha wasn't sure. He could see that it had something to do with the arrays carved into their leg armor, given the energy they were giving off. Yet he couldn't detect any crystal or even a siphoning spiral anywhere in the design, even after multiple scans.

Could it all be internal? If so, why? Even if it was to hide vulnerable components, why have anything visible then? Given what he'd observed, he doubted No. 7's equipment was of higher quality or more sophisticated than his own drone. So what was different?

If that wasn't surprising enough, No. 7 had enough breath to speak over the loud music.

"Is all of that really necessary?!"

No. 7 yelled.

Alpha chuckled and cut off the music as he answered them.

"Yep!"

No. 7 sighed and asked,

"Why announce our presence like that? Didn't you plan to stake out the location and wait for backup?"

Alpha came to a skidding halt, turned to his mysterious companion, and spoke.

"Well, plans change. They're moving the child as we speak. I don't know what's up with that storm or why they're headed there, but it can't be anything good. Besides, they already know we're here. Why not make an entrance?"

No. 7 stopped next to Alpha, showing little sign they'd just run several dozen miles at high speeds. The featureless mask turned and stared at Alpha as they spoke in that same toneless voice.

"They know you're here. Charging through the front door wasn't part of the deal. I'm still skeptical you can even get a reading with all the [fha@$jh@] in the area."

Alpha shrugged, a rather awkward movement with the TAWP, as he responded.

"Look, a deal's a deal. You help me find the child, and I'll help you find your targets. It's a win-win for everyone. How that happens doesn't matter, the result is the same."

No. 7 folded their arms and countered,

"Maybe not to you, but I have a reputation to uphold. If my target gets spooked and makes a break for it, there's no telling how long it will take to track them down again."

Alpha laughed and responded.

"Well, you shouldn't worry too much about that."

No. 7 frowned under their mask and asked,

"What do you—"

The ground rumbled beneath them. The ground bulged upward a few dozen meters away, and several figures emerged. Three were identical; large, hulking mounds of stone and soil, crushed together in a vaguely humanoid shape. Frome between the gaps in the stone, a deep swirling black fog leaked out, gently falling to the ground and dissipating. In front of the three rocky humanoids stood two human men.

The first Alpha had never seen before. He was a taller, older man in a fine suit. Despite looking old enough to be the other man's grandfather, the older man stood straight with his hands clasped behind his back. He was the absolute picture of the gentlemanly butler type popular with the Federation's more well-off. Down to the disapproving glare he shot them from over his nose.

The second Alpha recognized. It was the same young man who'd gifted him the large heart crystal not too long ago. His ever-present cheery smile was gone, however, replaced with a dark frown. Tuguslar stepped forward and reached into his sleeve, pulling out a [Wasp] drone, pinched between his fingers. He then addressed Alpha in a flat tone.

"I assume this… insect is yours, 'Lord Protector'? I'm not sure how you slipped this past my personal defenses, but some would take it as an insult that you would attempt to spy so openly. Is this how you tracked the child as well?"

The [Wasp] sprang to life, melting and slipping out of the man's grasp before reforming and flying to Alpha. It landed on the TAWP and melted into his nanite skin while Alpha responded.

"Trade secret, I'm afraid. Then again, everyone in this place keeps falling for the same trick, so why bother changing a good thing?"

Tuguslar's frown deepened, and he turned his attention to No. 7. The frown morphed into a sneer as he gave a chuckle.

"I must admit, I'm surprised to see one of the Camp's 'hunting dogs' working with someone. I was under the impression your kind preferred not to share their prey? Or did you learn not to bite off more than you can chew last time? Are you going to run away with your tail between your legs again?"

Alpha turned his optic sensor to stare at No. 7. Had they already attempted to get close, only to fail? That would explain why they knew the area and why they were so willing to work with Alpha. Still, Alpha didn't like not having all the information.

No. 7 folded their arms and responded to Tuguslar with just as much venom.

"You and the Priestess can't honestly have expected the Camp to ignore being stabbed in the back, yes? Not even the Five Great Pillars are brave enough to make fools out of the Camp in such a manner. What makes you think you're any different?"

The young man threw his head back and laughed, wiping away a tear. Looking back toward No. 7, he grinned from ear to ear. Tuguslar snapped, and the old butler-looking man walked forward, handing him a large, cantaloupe-sized orb. The orb appeared made of crystal or glass, but the inside swirled with dark colors. One moment it looked like it was filled with viscous oil, reflecting the dim light of the area in a rainbow sheen. The next, it was filled with choking black clouds that rolled and flashed like those above the distant temple.

The man held out the orb before him and gazed into it longingly, his words soft.

"Tell me, Camp Dog, have you ever wondered what the Radiant Sea truly is? I would not expect the Lord Protector to have any guess, being new to this place. But the Camp has made nearly as many attempts to gain a foothold here as the larger clans and sects."

He turned to No. 7 and grinned before continuing.

"Why is the -Spirit energy- of this place so chaotic? Why does it suppress our power so much? What is it about these lands that rebuff even the most powerful of this world from just stripping it clean of all its treasures? What aren't we being told?"

Thick black smoke began pouring from the orb like a waterfall. It pooled at the man's feet and started spreading all around them.

"There are theories, of course. Some say it's a natural formation. Some claim it's a trap laid by an Ancient -Celestial-. Others think it results from conflicting laylines and foolish tampering by those who didn't know better."

The thick, ankle-deep fog suddenly shot backward at high speed, covering the prairies behind Tuguslar for several hundred meters.

"What if I were to tell you all of those were right? Yet… none of them? At least not in full. What if I were to tell you that the Radiant Sea wasn't just some random formation or some natural trap for the greedy and foolish? What if I were to tell you it was a prison? A seal purposefully placed and maliciously designed."

The ground once more shook, this time far more violently. Then, from the black smoke-covered prairies, figures rose from the earth. Not just a few, but thousands or even tens of thousands. They came in various shapes and forms, some more humanoid and small, while others were beast-like and as larger, or even larger, than the TAWP. Some were hulking masses of crushed stone and soil like the smoky behemoths behind Tuguslar , while others appeared like withered, desiccated corpses made of little more than skin and bone.

The most numerous were the giant penguins, making up easily 40% of the horde.

Alpha stared at the sudden army, unsure of how to process the image.

{First space chickens, then man-eating penguins, and magic lines, now bloody zombies?! Ya, just screw every damn thing about this world!}.

The young man threw his arms out and laughed.

"You asked why we thought we could get away with crossing your pathetic Camp? Here is your answer, dog! Why would we fear you? Why would we fear any power in this puny world when we have the Mistress at our backs?!"

No. 7 swore and drew their weapon, a thin rapier-like blade, and yelled, clear panic in their voice for the first time.

"Blood hell, you're cultists! Do you honestly think anyone will let you get away with this? The accords—"

His sharp teeth bared, Tuguslar snarled at No. 7

"The accords mean nothing in front of truth of this world!"

His face smoothed over, and the calm visage returned.

"Besides. It's already too late to stop it. Soon the seal will be broken, and the darkness sleeping under the Radiant Sea will be awoken. It will wash over this world like an unending tide and consume it whole. Once this world is dead and rotting in its shell, like a hatching egg, the last barrier will crumble, and our Mistress will spread her blessing to the Sister above. Then to the worlds beyond."

No. 7 took a step back, shaking their head.

"You're insane!"

Tuguslar laughed again and shook his own head.

"No. I've seen what real power looks like. Here, let me show you."

Tuguslar man handed the orb to the man in the suit. The butler-looking man bowed, then turned and laced his hands, holding the orb between them with his palms up. Space around the orb pulsed, and it glowed slightly. Smoke began pouring out once more, thicker than before. Instead of spreading like it had for the young man, the smoke swirled around the suited man, clinging to him.

Before it fully enveloped him, Alpha could see the old man's features starting to warp and deform. The man was gone in less than a second, replaced by a vaguely human-shaped cloud of rolling black smoke. At its center, the black orb pulsed with bright black light.

Tuguslar again threw his arms out and stared in awe as the figure grew with each passing moment. With a laugh, he yelled out as if proclaiming to the world itself.

"Behold! Behold and tremble at the might of—"

"Ya, Screw that."

BANG!

A single thunderclap cut Tuguslar's words off as a 10lb iron rod traveling mach-10 slammed into the center of the stormy giant. It impacted the glowing orb with an accuracy only an AI could achieve, as a dark barrier appeared around it. Its barrier held for the briefest moments before caving inward with the sound of broken glass. The iron rod continued unhindered and struck the orb.

The orb, and several meters of smoke surrounding it, vanished in the blink of an eye. Less than a second later, the rod slammed into the building wall, far off into the distance, throwing up a cloud of dust.

Like mist in the morning sun, the cloud of smoke surrounding the figure quickly evaporated, revealing a grotesque, half-formed thing. What Alpha could only assume had once been the old man stood straight for a moment, staring down at the gaping hole as wide as the old man had once been tall.

The thing turned and bowed to Alpha before collapsing into a disgusting slurry of malformed flesh and bone.

No. 7 and the young man watched, dumbfounded. Tuguslar, in particular, had frozen mid-laugh, his arms stretched out and his eyes wide.

Slowly, he turned his head toward Alpha, only to notice a new addition to the AI's form. A large, square-shaped barrel rested on his back, still crackling with electricity as the end of the barrel warped the air from the sheer heat radiating off it.

The [B55-Vijaya] had been described as the Railjack's little brother, as its conception and overall design took heavy inspiration from the weapon. Originally envisioned as an orbital bombardment platform for use on cruisers, Alpha had tweaked the design for atmospheric use.

Compared to weapons of mass destruction like the Railjack or [Gungnir], the [B55-Vijaya] lost in power, range, and speed by a large margin. But that didn't mean it didn't pack a devastating punch. In fact, the rail cannon had come to be something like the TAWP's primary heavy gun, when against larger targets the small rail turrets couldn't really deal with.

In his words, it was his solution to "big problems you needed solving, now," but when he didn't want to deal with the cleanup (or cost!). A 10lb iron rod was cheaper than the expensive alloy needed for the Railjack to achieve its insane velocity and far cheaper than nitrogen crystals.

Lucky for Alpha, he'd recently come into possession of a large metal supply.

Alpha pointed the [B55-Vijaya] toward the young man and spoke flatly.

"I said I would warn you only once. Yet, I feel the need to reiterate. This isn't your world anymore. It's mine. I'll admit, I don't really get what you're rambling about or who this 'Mistress' of yours is. But honestly? It doesn't matter. You speak of power? Look above you. You see those stars? All those glistening points of light in the distance? Each one represents a Federation world. Each one is a world that was once just like this.

"Small. Ignorant. Thinking itself the center of some grand plan. When in reality, they're but numbers on a census. Data points to an ever-expanding network, all working toward a greater goal. That hasn't changed. Like everyone before her, your 'Mistress' will fall in line.

"Or she'll be removed from the equation entirely."

Both Tuguslar and No. 7, stared at Alpha silently as if not quite understanding what he'd just said. After a long moment, the young man burst into laughter. He turned to No. 7, still laughing as he spoke.

"Haha, hahaha! And you, hahaha, and you call me the insane one, Camp Dog?! No matter, hahaha. This fool has already sealed your fate."

No. 7 stared up at Alpha for a long moment before slowly shifting their gaze to Tuguslar and asking.

"What are you talking about, cultist?"

The young man grinned from ear to ear and answered.

"The orb that idiot just destroyed was the control mechanism for various arrays we've been installing across the prairies for the last few centuries. With nothing left to restrain them, they're likely going to go critical, with no way to stop them, hahaha hah!"

No. 7's head snapped at Tuguslar as she spoke.

"Arrays?! What Arrays?!"

The man's grin grew larger as he responded.

"All of them."

———

The Captain ushered the last of the villagers behind the Earth Shrine wall just as it came up, rising dozens of meters into the air, tall enough to protect even the tallest of the Grand Elk. They were the last village to enter the safety of the shrine, and he had feared they might not make it in time at first.

Not after they'd entered the final few miles of the journey, only to see the Earth Shrine enter lockdown, gargantuan stone walls slowly rising from the ground. Much of the village had panicked, but quick thinking on his Guardian's part had seen the village in a mad dash to get behind the walls before they closed.

They had to abandon some of the larger, slower buildings, but thankfully the entire population made it by his own count. As the enormous walls peeked, slamming into place and blocking out most of the remaining light, a loud wailing sound emanated from the Earth Shrine. It was loud enough to be heard even over the voices of millions of people and Spirit Beasts crammed into the safety of the walls.

The obelisk at the center of the shrine flashed once, and from the tip, a shimmering barrier spread outward, encompassing the entire walls and then some.

The Captain narrowed his eyes and turned to the wall. What was going on? He'd only seen the Earth Shrine's walls raised once before, in his entire life, when an abnormally large Beast wave triggered by Lux Apex swept across the Radian Sea. Typically, the barrier was more than enough to hold off anything attacking.

Frowning, he bent his knees and lept, shooting into the air several dozen meters before stepping on a protrusion and leaping again. He saw dozens of other figures doing the same all along the wall. He'd reached the top a few more leaps, then stared off into the dark prairies. Only after several of his Guardians followed him up did he see it.

A thick, black mist had seeped up from the ground past the barrier, covering it like rolling waves until prairies were replaced by a black sea for as far as his eyes could see.

This… wasn't normal. What was happening? A thousand possibilities flashed through his mind.

One of the younger Guardians pointed off into the distance and asked, his voice cracking.

"What… what the hell are those?!"

Off in the distance, where the rolling mist was thickest, thousands of figures pushed their way out of the soil. They were still too far away to make out much detail in such low light, but the Captain could see various forms and body shapes moving in the dark mists.

Before he could call for a scouting device, a hunched-over old man, who'd most certainly not been standing beside him only a moment ago, stepped forward. The old man scuttled forward and peered into the darkness, his eyes squinting, before he spoke in a cold, flat tone.

"Those, my boy… are the Children of Iris."
 
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Oops... On the other hand, I can't blame Alpha for that one. Plus, as long as the arrays aren't inside the earth Shrines I have a sneaking feeling that the Planes themselves will take care of the problem relatively quickly.
 
Book 1 - Arc 3 Epilogue - "Tic Tock"
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Book 1 - Arc 3 Epilogue - "Tic Tock"
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Voooooom!

A burning lance of light swept horizontally across the battlefield, cutting down hundreds of desiccated, shambling figures along its path. A few larger figures were split in two, their top half sliding off as the bottom crumpled. The intense heat and energy simply erased many of the smaller figures.

[Warning! Core Energy at 72%!]

Yet even as the roaring blades of winds cut down the straggling survivors and blew away the remaining dust, more zombie-like creatures pushed themselves out of the ground. Another burning lance swept across the battlefield, incinerating more of the horde as Alpha charged forward.

[Warning! Core Energy at 71%!]

Alpha tsk and turned off the warning from his Sub-AI for now, sweeping a third core-charged [Gungnir] blast through the zombie horde. No. 7 stood on top of the TAWP, holding a thin, rapier-like blade. Each swing or thrust of the weapon, and every wide kick, produced massive gusts of gray, cloud-like wind. While Alpha was in charge of cutting their way through the horde toward the distant structure, No. 7 had taken to protect their rear and sides.

Good thing, too, as Alpha had quickly discovered that physical bullets didn't work against this enemy. Unlike zombies in the movies, even obliterating a zombie's head wouldn't do much. They would just continue to shamble around aimlessly. To stop them, you had to either incinerate them or cut them into ribbons, in No. 7's case. The most annoying ones were the large stone creatures. Even after blasting a few of them apart, they just kept reforming. Only after No. 7 spotted and destroyed the small, smoke-spewing orbs among the debris had the two made any actual progress.

Even then, after three hours and two dozen core-charged [Gungnir] blasts, they'd barely made it 1/4 of the way to their target. The young man, who No. 7 had later identified as "Tuguslar," had vanished into the sea of zombies almost immediately after Alpha destroyed the large black orb. It was possible he'd been devoured by the out-of-control horde, but Alpha's gut told him otherwise. As insane as the man seemed on the surface, he had been far too calm about the situation. Alpha knew he would pop up again; when he did, there would be no more words.

After all, a bullet traveled faster than sound.

Suddenly, the ground beneath the TAWP shook, and dozens of fissures spread from under them. The ground bulged upward a few meters, and Alpha jumped. The TAWP soared into the air several dozen meters before landing on and crushing one of the large stone creatures.

A new figure rose from the ground where the TAWP had just been, easily four times larger than any other on the battlefield, even dwarfing Alpha.

Alpha pointed at the figure and complained out loud.

"Oh, come ON! I killed you already!"

The fifty-meter-tall stone penguin stared down at Alpha silently. Most of its upper body had been replaced with a shining, shifting metal-like substance, while the stones and boulders that made up the rest of its body were covered in dried blood and gore. It looked at Alpha with dull eyes made of the same black orbs controlling the stone creatures. They leaked streams of dark fog, almost making it appear as if the creature was weeping.

But when it opened its long beak, the creature screamed unintelligently, a deep black light glowing at the back of its throat.

As the creature blindly charged them, Alpha doubted little, if anything, of the former 'Beast Lord' truly remained.

——————

The room the Slatewalkers found themselves in wasn't lavish or fancy. This was a room dedicated to business and discussion, after all, not a pompous display meant to impress and stroke the egos of some noble.

Even so, it was finer and more luxurious than most in the small group had ever seen in one place. Zolzaya sat beside her mentor on the soft couch, gently sipping the exquisite tea they'd been provided. Juatan, Ulagan, and Munkh stood at the ready around the room. They were once more in full Guardian attire, their weapons and armor returned.

Ganbaatar and Yutu stood in a corner, deep in hushed discussion over the details of an expertly carved wooden statue. If one didn't know the boys, you'd think they were fine art connoisseurs admiring the artist's work. Though if you moved close enough to hear their whispers, it would be clear they were more interested in the actual craftsmanship and techniques used rather than the art itself.

Zolzaya smiled to herself as she watched, part of her wishing she could join them. She could still barely believe that Yutu was so lively after everything he'd gone through. The last few weeks had felt like she was a leaf in a maelstrom, as she was tossed from joy to nightmare to hope and back again, over and over.

Even now, at what should have been the end of the story, when the heroes brought to light the evil masterminds' schemes and their plans were foiled, it seemed life had even more twists and turns for them.

When the Head Priest had rescued them from the prison, Zolzaya thought things were coming to a head. Yet they'd barely sat down and had the chance to start their story before the alarms started sounding through the Earth Shrine and the walls started rising. The Head Priest had excused himself and rushed out of the room, leaving the Slatewalkers both confused and worried.

Even now, she should see the massive walls towering over the city through the room's balcony door. They'd been waiting for news ever since, though the priests that regularly brought them refreshments admitted even they weren't sure what was going on.

The sound of a creaking door broke Zolzaya out of her ruminations, and she put down the empty teacup.

Instead of the priest dressed in humble robes as she expected, a young woman stood in the doorway. Despite looking only a few years older than Zolzaya, the newcomer scanned the room in a way that spoke highly of her experience and skill. Her leather armor was of a finer craft than anything Zolzaya had ever seen and almost glowed with the sheer number of enchantments packed into it.

Yet even that didn't compare to the woman herself. She was beautiful, yes, but in a strange, wild way that triggered something deep in the primal part of Zolzaya's mind. Her long, black, and white hair was pulled into a warrior's braid, woven using dozens of gold and silver clasps, each embedded with a single, carved Beast Core.

What shook Zolzaya the most, however, were the woman's eyes. Her bright amber, almost yellow, eyes bore into Zolzaya with an intensity that left the young Grassreader apprentice frozen to her seat, like a mouse caught in the gaze of a tiger.

The Guardians weren't so easy to shake. As soon as the woman had barged in, all three Guardians turned, their weapons ready, expecting another attack.

However, instead of drawing the blade at her side, the woman did nothing but flare her Spirit energy.

All three Guardians were immediately driven to their knees as the full spiritual pressure of a high-mid rank [Shackle Breaking] Expert slammed into them. Zolzaya felt like a mountain was sitting on her chest, pressing her into the couch, and she found breathing hard. She couldn't even turn her head when she heard Ganbaatar and Yutu collapse to the ground behind her.

The newcomer's frown deepened, and her eyes narrowed. When she spoke, her voice, though musical and smooth as silk, sounded more like the growl of a bloodthirsty predator in Zolzaya's ears.

"Where is my baby sister?!"

——————

Newly appointed High Priestess Hera, freshly promoted after her sister's… untimely death, stood before the central dais, staring up into the open sky. The once pristine and holy sanctum in which she stood was not covered in the bodies of Prima priests and Akh'lut Gaurdians alike.

The rest of the clergy had been confused when she'd announced a new ceremony during the Darkest Night instead of the typical retreat. Officially, it was in celebration of her promotion and to bless the Heart against the ill omen of the previous High Priestess's death. Most of the old fools, so stiff and slow as stone, hadn't even questioned it. A few still loyal to her sister had their suspicions, however.

It had already been too late when they finally became apparent what she intended. Like a scythe, her followers had cut down all opposition. It pained her slightly to spill her own people's blood so wastefully, but sometimes it was better to cut the rot out quickly before it could spread.

They might lose some this day and in the coming days, but soon, she would have the power to rebuild what was lost. Soon she would exceed not only the Five Great Pillars but all world powers. And when she stood at the top of the mountain, she would even pull down the heavens themselves.

Slowly, she spread out her arms and basked in the dark glow of the 10-meter-wide stone orb floating in the center of the room. The Heart of the Radiant Sea bobbed slightly in the air as the dark clouds above were funneled down into it. The radiant, twirling rainbow of color that pulsed inside struggled against the dark smoke, but it was slowly losing ground, slowing dimming and being replaced by the dark light.

There was still a long way to go, but the process would slowly speed up as the Darkest Night progressed. Soon the seal would weaken enough that even the power of the sleeping Prima couldn't keep it intact. Soon it would be time for the last piece.

She turned and stared at the five altars circling the Heart. On four of them, a small obelisk sat, and on top of those, a small marble floated, slowly spinning, the mirror image of the larger Heart. On the fifth, a young Akh'lut pup slept peacefully, pinned down by smoky chains.

It had taken centuries to locate all the keystones. Even longer to steal them in a way that wouldn't alert her sister or any of the other Chosen. Lucky for Hera and her followers, the Chosen had grown complacent after years of peace. They'd grown lazy and dull-eyed, their 'eternal vigilance' slipping with each passing year.

However, the Chosen's inattention had caused even Hera to lower her guard. Otherwise, how would she have missed her sister's growing suspicion? Hera had underestimated Metis, of that she would freely admit. Both her craftiness… and her cruelty.

The child wouldn't survive the keystone extraction process.

But no matter.

Her sacrifice would ensure that her family stood at the top of this world and beyond for all eternity.

Footsteps from behind drew her attention, and Hera turned to see a young man walking through the doorway, carefully stepping over bodies and quickly drying pools of blood. He stopped at the bottom of the stairs and bowed. Hera stared down and asked.

"Back so soon, Tuguslar? Am I to assume everything went according to plan?"

Tuguslar rose from his bow and grinned, responding.

"Yes, mot—"

Hera's icy glare made the young man freeze and correct himself.

"Yes, High Priestess. It did, indeed. Our mysterious Spirit Beast friend has proven to be far more powerful than we initially assumed, but it seems even he cannot stand against the might of the Mistress. At their current pace, we should have no fear of them being able to interfere anytime soon."

Hera grinned ear to ear and nodded as she spoke.

"Good, good. The Darkest Night will reach its peak in only a few hours."

She turned back and stared at Heart in awe. She continued, half speaking to herself.

"Soon, all the pieces will fall into place, and we will finally achieve our Destiny!"

Tuguslar bowed once more and turned. The young man grinned as well as spoke softly, his hidden under the constant thrum of the Heart and the clouds above.

"Yes… Yes, we will."
 
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