Combinatorial Explosion (Worm/Original)

Interlude 4: Amy
The Artist sat on the porch, ignoring the wet slapping of mud falling apart nearby as she plied her trade. With grace and care, the clay of the river was lifted up in her hands , and was shaped into a beautiful urn, striped with red and black, colors taken from her pouch of tricks.

To the side, however, the apprentice showed no such calm as she sat in the river, hands splashing in the water with reckless abandon. With desperation, she attempted to stitch up the soil beneath her, her needle passing through the pillars of mud that rose up in the riverbed even as they sloughed away, chunks falling apart as they decayed before her eyes.

A simple box of medical supplies sat next to her, bandages, ointments, unguents, and yet more things left ignored in favor of her preferred tool, floating nearby, tied to the wooden porch to keep it from being swept away.

The river nearby served neither of them, inexorably pushing forward, splashing their works with haphazard carelessness. The cruelty of nature stifling the artist.

"No, no no no," the apprentice wept, needle passing uselessly through the mud as it washed away, the sutures failing to do much as the pillars oozed between her fingers, the faces on them sagging into nothing.

She fought to avoid the gaze of the artist next to her, the artist who looked at her with disgust as she shaped the clay she lifted up from the ground.

She could feel their sneer, cruel and dispassionate, one long weary of the apprentice playing with their mud and toys.

She could not see into the house they were both near, but she knew within it lay urn after urn, works of art long since dried, filled with measures of the river's water. A crucial resource for the art to be made.

The artist hoped as all did, to one day dam the river. To protect her home from its flow, before the foundations wore thin beneath it.

The apprentice was a blind animal, too simpleminded to ignore the sight of faces in the mud, too foolish to lift up what she wished from the river, and too ignorant to attempt anything useful.

"Will you be the one to dam the river?" The artist asked, time and time again, only to be ignored. The artist believed this answer to be unsatisfactory.

Salty tears fell into the water as the apprentice sewed up what could not be held together by needle and thread.

For a moment, it seemed as though the child's frustration would erupt at any moment. A tantrum in the river would be disastrous for the faces in the mud, and yet it may turn up the precious clay beneath. Perhaps once such a tantrum ended, the child would be ready to ply the artist's trade.

However, there seemed to be some hope for the apprentice. Faces were ignored briefly, as the apprentice was struck with realization, and began to pull stones from the river, piling them up behind her as she giggled in an unhinged way.

For a moment, the artist watched, but soon grew disappointed. The apprentice had stopped piling up the stones, as soon as it seemed that the river's diverted flow would leave a few of the faces in the riverbed untouched.

A job well-unfinished, the apprentice rocked back and forth in the water, watching with glee as her little pile of stones diverted the rivers flow ever so slightly. She could no longer see the pillars of mud be washed away in her little patch of the river.

Her attention was so drawn to the fruits of her small labor that the artist's own work was left ignored for the moment.

This one would not be the one to dam the river, the artist was now certain.

A traveler soon began walking down the road nearby, a sickly, withered old woman with a load far too large on her back. Crude barrels held sloshing liquid as the withered hag approached, grinning like the devil.

Her face was stained with blue, as if she had been devouring some messy, sickly sweet fruit.

"Sissy! I brought you something nice!" she shouted, tromping through the river without a care in the world, splashing blue from the barrels on her back.

With a renewed sneer, the artist pulled her clay pot away from the hag before this design could be ruined by her careless motions that threw the river's flow into turbulence.

"You're unwell," the artist said, looking at her deranged sister with concern. The doctor was so far away, and her sister looked as if she had aged years since they last met, eyes bloodshot with mania.

The hag looked up from where she was ruffling the apprentice's hair, the child uncaring, or perhaps not noticing.

"I'm just fine you old bat! Now do you want what I've got or don't you?" the hag said carelessly, ignoring the years of ettiquite that they had learned in their youth, in favor of the slang of the children.

"Let me see," she said, demandingly as she pulled her sister up onto the porch.

The river continued to flow, heedless of the dribbles of blue that diluted the water as it spilled from her barrel.

"I got whatchu were wanting, sissy, so, you going to share some art with your ol sister?" the hag asked, pulling from her side a fat waterskin, stained with the blue liquid.

She waggled it in front of the artist, only to have her hand forcefully shoved away. "Not even a taste?"

The artist had no intention of drinking the fluid, having seen full well its effects.

But even still, the color called to her, a vivid blue that stained what it touched so brightly, even in spite of how quickly water could wash it away.

"No. But I will take it from you, as we agreed," she said, reaching out and taking the waterskin from the hag's wrinkled hands.

"Right, of course," the hag cackled, winking at the artist as she relinquished the skin, and began pulling the barrel from her back.

"Should be enough to get you started. I'm sure you'll figure out how it's made, won't you, [Queen Shaper]?"

The artist scowled. "Not in front of the child. She must not know her heritage," they responded, glancing at the apprentice, who looked up for a moment, confused for a moment by their surroundings.

Soon, however, the dream became a dream again, and she returned to gazing at her faces in the mud, smiling as they smiled back.

"You are out of line," the artist said quietly, dipping a finger into the liquid, and examining it with caution. The substance was interesting, but she had little intention of tasting it.

The hag took a swig from another flask at her side, grinning toothily at her sister.

Down that path lay madness. Her sight, smell, and touch would suffice for this discovery.

The hag's eyes darted to the sky, and her mad grin became a frown.

"What is it?" the artist asked, unable to see what hallucinations, or perhaps, visions, that her sister apparently did.

"...There's a storm coming. My child has grown strong on the drink. Perhaps I have as well," the hag responds, the cloudy grey tinge to her pupils fading into a startling blue for a moment so brief that the artist almost wonders if it was a trick of the light.

"You have not. This drink is killing you," the artist responds plainly, her eye for detail seeing all the signs present on the withered hag's body.

Instead of arguing, the hag continues to stare, as if seeing clouds on the horizon. "If you don't drink, you may not be strong enough to weather the coming storm," she says mysteriously.

"I've survived fine on the river's water. We have faced storms before," the artist responds, uncomfortable with this line of discussion.

The hag smiles. "The water you've saved won't last forever, and already, the weather has changed. Be safe, won't you, Sissy?" the hag says, standing up and grabbing a pot full of clay, and starting to pull herself through the river again, climbing up onto the banks on the other side, and walking off in a random direction.

The artist watches until she is gone, before turning to the apprentice.

"Come along, child. You don't want to get caught in the rain," the artist says, imagining what lay further upstream.

She imagines droplets of blue, falling from the sky. She imagines pulling her apprentice up onto the porch as a drop of the fluid plops onto her mousey nose, tugging them under the roof as the child looks at the faces in the river with worry.

"They will keep for now, child. Let us teach you a new trade, where his majesty cannot see," she says, pulling the child inside.

With the barrel came her sister's crude drawings, stick figures in blue, with big smiling faces inked onto them.

With a sigh, the artist shakes her head, smiling. Her sister had always proven better at deciding where art must go, true, but creation of quality art lay solely within the hands of The Artist, as these scribblings can attest.

[Callsign Change Request: Artist] she said out the window, awaiting an answer from the bird sitting on the branch nearby.

[Rejected], the bird responded, for the eight-centillionth time.

Queen Shaper frowned, but returned to her plan, closing the window and, drawing from her private box a fine needle, dipping it into the blue ink until the needle's hollow was saturated.

The child shuddered, wondering what purpose it would serve.

"You are strong, child, are you not? If you will not shape the clay, then do not complain when I offer you an alternative," the artist demanded, planning in her mind the art she soon would create.

The artist imagined that rain began to fall as they worked, lines of blue tattooed onto her precious apprentice.

She imagined that the rain was a vivid, bright cerulean, and that in the sky, blue, red, and black warred for dominance, peals of thunder raining down as the river coursed out of all control.



Amy gasped, falling out of her bed and thrashing, she could feel her corona potential going wild, a burning heat rampaging through her as light began to burn through her veins, energy coursing through her uncontrollably.

A scream erupted from her, but it was a choked, half-hearted thing, there was no air for her to shriek, no muscle control for her to exhale in full the pain she felt.

"Amy?! Amy!" Vicky said, smashing through her door at the sounds and the thumping.

In moments, it was done, and she collapsed bonelessly onto the floor, feeling within her body all the veins and vessels that her power denied her from seeing in her own flesh, while permitting her to see in others.

"Mom! Something's wrong with Amy!" Vicky said, picking her up in a princess carry and running through into Carol's bedroom.

The hospital was called, but Amy was off in her own little world, prodding with terror the parts of herself that her power forbade her from affecting.

As Vicky flew with blinding speed to the nearest hospital, Amy felt relief as her power still refused to allow her to do anything to her own self. She couldn't reshape her own flesh, it was safe from her temptations. Instead, she sensed within her every cell an energy that felt so familiar to her.

Through her vessels, intangible vitality flowed intermixed with her plasma. Through her skin, a faint force was emitted. Through her lungs, a slight breeze as the energy was reabsorbed from the air. Every organ, a flow. Every tissue, an ebb. Chemical, Physical, Thermal, Electrical, and now, present within her at long last, Magical.

Her fingers twitched as a mask was put over her face, and a flashlight shined into her eyes by a doctor.

Her hand moved, and the river winding through her body changed, the red flow of blood and the clear flow of skin shifting briefly out of line with a faint pressure before returning to where they belonged, and the illusion of solidity was returned to them.

Her fist clenched, and she felt her power eagerly set upon the energy she once lacked the tools to shape.



[] Interlude: Lisa
[] Conclude Interludes
 
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Interlude 5: Lisa
Lisa woke up with a smirk on her face in the apartment she had obtained using some of the tides of cash that had been washing in ever since she signed up to work with Sage.

As she let out a breath and yawned, she felt a new part of her power well up inside her, throwing up dozens of errors as the noises she made failed to affect the ambiance around her in any meaningful way.

Yawning is not a valid spell.

"Oh good, that's working now," she muttered, feeling her soul now producing energy that made her power's side of the equation redundant.

With one last shrug, she walked over to her laptop, flipping it open and checking the security feeds. Being the owner of an apartment wasn't the best source of money, but it was a great security investment for a social-thinker with money to spare. A fortress that paid for itself.

Flipping through the feeds, Lisa was satisfied with the lack of any suspicious activity, and moved on to get ready for the day.

Now that she finally got this whole 'soul' business sorted out, Lisa had every intention of capitalizing on it, and with how her power seemed to rapidly adapt in response to mana producing an artificial ambiance for the sole purpose of letting Lisa keep using the magic words it had picked up on, she knew it was only a matter of time before she met whatever criteria was required for a creature to independently produce mana.

Looking in the mirror, she ignored the slew of little facts about herself that came with looking at mirrors, and instead brought her hand close to her mouth, practically whispering to it.

"*Let magic act like ordinary water. Let it cling to five-fingered hands and pool together on them. Let mana stop responding to sound.*" Lisa spoke, using long-winded, overly intricate prose to describe in Water what in plain English took three sentences.

The mana turned from an invisible distortion in the air into clear, swirling water that clung to her hand as if in zero gravity. A bit of soap made it suitable for quick and efficient washing up.

With a frown, Lisa tried to manipulate the watery magic by thinking at it, but it remained unresponsive. Unlike Sage, it seems Lisa's power didn't give her direct control over the mana it produced.

She called forth mana from her own meagre reserves into her other hand, and found it much more responsive.

"Some people just have all the luck," she mutters, dismissing all of the magic with a flick of her wrists, water splattering onto the mirror as she reached for a towel to dry off.

To someone else, it might have seemed incredibly petty, for Lisa to complain within minutes of her power growing stronger and even more versatile, but those people didn't know a quarter of what she did.

She wondered if her boss had even an inkling of how messy Brockton Bay was about to get with a Trump of her caliber in it?



Sage wanted her to man the register while she dug out and replaced the ruined foundations of the building underneath them with magic.

"I just need you up here while I'm down there," she said, pointing to the fenced off area she was working in. The building being uprooted had been damaging for more than one reason, and it took money and time for the rogue to get certified in all the things she needed in order to legally mess with the wiring and plumbing that had been torn up by the Merchants.

Time that Sage apparently planned on spending by reworking the very foundations of the building while Lisa had to play cashieer.

"Sure," Lisa shrugged, and with a thumbs up, Sage leapt down into the pit, already channeling vast swathes of magic to begin the repairs.

Lisa, glancing down to see that her boss was busy, started weaving some magic of her own. Ambiance was spoken to, and her own magic placed at the helm.

While water couldn't act like a person, it could fill a vessel perfectly, which was very well represented in the language she knew. Several minutes of speaking was all it took for Lisa to create a dead-eyed double of herself to handle sitting at the counter accepting payments.

"And that's that," Lisa said, clapping her hands.

"What?!" Sage called out from the pit.

"Nothing! Don't mind me!" Lisa cried back down, giving her double once last glance before leaving. The attack on Sage had consequences, and Lisa needed to find out what those were.



The Palanquin was a very clean establishment, which marked it as an oddity among nightclubs intended for the 'common folk'. Despite lacking a strict dress code (Fat wallets were mandatory in other, equally high-quality places), it still had a fresh smell and the audacity to use backlights decoratively.

Of course, when you considered the band of parahuman mercenaries who lived here, it made a good deal more sense.

"ID?" the bouncer asked, looking at the young girl at the front of the line.

Lisa didn't even bother being coy, handing over a few bills bound together with rubber bands. While most other minors here at least had the decency to be a little subtler about it, with a fake ID and some money clipped to the bottom of it, it was hardly necessary, in Lisa's opinion.

The bouncer seemed to agree, as he simply unclipped the cliche velvet rope blocking potential patrons from entering, letting Lisa through.

People in the massive room were dancing, drinking, or trading money for "nothing" and then making their way to the bathroom to use that "nothing". Lisa paid it all no mind, beelining it to one of the backrooms, where the fruit of several spent favors was waiting.

To be frank, Lisa wasn't the biggest fan of Faultline's crew, mostly due to their leader being an annoying person who liked to think of herself as Lisa's intellectual equal. What Lisa absolutely loved, however, were the words "Information" and "Free". Faultline's crew, ignoring the price of admission, were a source of both.

As she walked down the hall to the room they agreed to meet in, she pulled a simple domino mask on, before opening the door and entering a rather spartan area, a few couches, a lamp in the corner, and the faint thrum of the loud music resonating all the way back here from the dance floor were the only real points of interest.

Well, aside from the gaggle of Case 53's hanging around in it, Faultline being the only person there who wasn't either distracted by something, or a case 53 herself.

"So, you're finally here. The infamous informant," Faultline says, her voice slightly muffled by the thick metal mask she wore at all times. The scars on it were a testament for why she felt it a neccecary addition to her outfit.

Lisa smiled. She may not have played the cape game, but when someone steals zeroes from bank accounts, it builds a reputation no matter how careful you are.

"Yeah. So, do you know why I'm here?" she asked, her power already helpfully building a clue-filled picture of the room around her.

"You want information. I think that's ironic and suspicious, all things considered," she said, arms folded as she leaned back in her chair.

'See, shit like that is exactly why you annoy me,' Lisa thought to herself. Did this woman think she plucked knowledge from the ether? Even thinkers universally needed input to get their outputs. Even if that input was something absurd, like humidity or micropostures on television.

"Well, as I don't play the same games as you and your group do, I don't have the same connections. It stands to reason that you would know less about-"

'Practical things,' Lisa carefully doesn't say, catching herself at the last moment. With all the information Faultline has gathered up on Brockton Bay to keep her crew out of the way of major players, Lisa would be able to wrap the city around her finger, as far as keeping Sage out of the way of the worst of it. It was the sort of thing money couldn't buy without paradoxically getting the wrong kind of attention. Not getting thrown out of this meeting was more important than verbally fencing with Faultline.

"The same things I do, and more about what I don't. I need information on gang movements. Your group prides itself on being neutral and not catching flak from the gangs here, and wouldn't you know it, my employer could use a bit of neutrality themselves," she explains, coaching her expression.

The woman across from her doesn't immediately respond.

"And in return? The information you want is valuable, and it's less valuable if it's leaked," she retorts.

"Our eternal gratitude?" Lisa says snappily.

"More," Faultline says, not even entertaining the joke.

Lisa rolls her eyes.

"How about the gratitude of a Case Five?" she says, summoning up a magical ball of liquid.

Everyone in the room jumps to attention.

A Case 5, or, in layman's terms, a Permanent Trump Effect. It was the sort of thing that people scoffed off as rumors until reminded of how uncomfortably often capes with powers like that seemed to crop up.

It was exactly the sort of thing that a band of Case-53s would be interested in, considering how many of them resisted surgical and parahuman methods of returning them to some semblance of normality.

"My employer is powerful, but she's in her growth period, and gathering attention. While I can get the information I need myself, I'd rather not when you all have a vested interest in helping, free of charge," Lisa explains, dismissing the magic immediately to show she means no harm.

"You know how it goes. The longer my employer goes under the radar, the more she'll grow into her abilities, and thus, the more you'll get out of approaching her later on. You're investing in your future, giving me everything you know on the local scene."

Faultline frowns beneath her mask.

"That doesn't mean anything if she isn't actually useful to my crew. What exactly is her power?"

Lisa grins, a downright mischievous, vulpine thing that promises headaches.

"Yes."



With a USB drive full of secrets and a song in her heart, Lisa made her way back to her apartment, humming merrily as she unlocked her door, checked for intruders, and plugged the drive into a disposable laptop to examine it.

As the drive's program began downloading files from a secure server, Lisa decided to give her power the attention it had been craving, an itch that only one thing would scratch.

Laying down on her bed, she flipped a mental switch, and a particular mana type was summoned by her power from nothingness, the last quirk her power's adaptation had to offer.

Ambient Noise was brought into being, and Lisa heard.
 
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