Keeper of Totality [Time-Travel LitRPG]

Chapter 35 (2 of 2) Unwanted Education: 1. Alichanteu Politics: 0.
"And here we are! The Academy of the All-Aeon Athenaeum!" Efratel exclaimed cheerily. They both stepped off one of the many teleportation arrays and walked out of the path of all the people around them to observe the place for a moment. A notification dinged for them.





[You are standing on the grounds of the All-Aeon Athenaeum's Academy, a Sub-Faction of a Supreme Institution.]





The Academy was an immensely tall structure made of towering spires, the main colours of its brick being predominantly dark purple, blue, and black. Its tallest spire rose above the clouds. It was covered on all sides by thousands of mana-circles and larger magic arrays that whirled and hummed, stirring up the mana as millions of spells were cast each second. In a semi-circle around the front of the Academy were around fifty large domed buildings with roofs depicting constellations of all kinds, the teleportation arrays of the Spatial Tower. Millions of people streamed to and from these buildings, most dressed in robes denoting their school, Order or Tower of magic. Strange levitating objects whirled around many of the people, magical devices of different kinds.





Marellen turned around and walked back to the teleportation array. "You know, I think I've changed my mind. Let's just go back and-"





"Not happening," Efratel said as he grabbed Marellen's collar and dragged him back. "And your father has already sent a message about this to your mother. Are you willing to face her wrath when you return so quickly?"





Marellen shot his cousin a weary look. "Is there not some other way to avoid Archmage Merkenia? In fact, isn't directly joining a sub-Faction of All-Aeon Athenaeum the most likely way to meet him again?"





"Which is why we decided to send you here so quickly, so no news about this reaches Alichanteu for some time," Efratel retorted, yanking on his wrist, and dragging him towards the direction of the Academy.





Marellen pulled weakly against him, but unfortunately, his complete disregard for the STR stat meant it was useless. He gave up and despondently trudged after the blonde-haired man.





They walked through the crowds of people to enter the main reception hall of the Athenaeum, where new students went for the first time. He wasn't a new student, having done his education there up until he was eighteen, but they needed to go there, as he was coming back as an academic. He shuddered as he remembered his teenage memories of the place. He was glad he was staying far, far away from that part of the Academy.





A young male mage dressed in dark purple robes of the Academy's staff uniform came up to them. "Can I help you with something?"





He stayed silent as Efratel stepped forward with a polite smile. "I'm here to submit the sponsorship registration documents as his private manager."





The man's eyes widened. "Ah, yes! Please, follow me."





They did so, walking behind the mage as he led them off to a side hallway of the main reception hall. He took them to a smaller room that had several people sitting behind desks, some of them talking to other people. They were brought to a desk, where the man behind it, dressed in long white robes, looked up.





"A recipient and his manager for the sponsorship program," their guide explained, before bowing slightly and leaving them with the man.





The mage in the white robes, appearing in his mid-30s nodded and stood up to shake hands with them both. "Vicela Mesifeth," he introduced. "A High-mage of the White Order. I'm currently in charge of the sponsorship program."





Marellen and Efratel nodded after shaking hands with him. "My name is Efratel Vadel, and this is my cousin Marellen Vadel, who I am the manager of, and who will be sponsored to enter the Academy," he explained.





"I see. You have the registration forms?" the man asked.





Efratel, using a dimensional item he owned, summoned the papers to his hands and passed them over. The High-mage briefly glanced at them, and after seeing the seal of the All-Aeon Athenaeum, he nodded and gestured for them to follow. "I'll take you to the Academy's Archive to register this."





They followed him down a few corridors for a while, until they entered a massive hall filled with many bookcases, automatically being sorted through and distributed by mana-circles and magic arrays. Set into the centre of the hall was a giant bronze sphere, slowly rotating where it was in the floor, covered in ever-shifting runes, and projecting many different multi-coloured symbols and icons into the empty air above it. A handrail separated people from the sphere, and on four sides of the outer ring around the sphere, there were slanted tables covered in buttons and switches of all kinds. Many people were at the tables, controlling the sphere's projections, reading, and accessing data.





Marellen had only seen the Junior Academy's Archive artifact, which was larger than a house, but this one was five times the size. He knew the Archive artifact of All-Aeon Athenaeum's origin plane was even larger and more powerful, linked to all the Sub-Factions' Archive artifacts.





Vicela walked up the circular ring of stairs to the only empty table, raised slightly higher above the other tables. A small white circle appeared horizontally above his palm, and then a round brass device dropped into his hand. He held up Efratel's and Marellen's registration documents and pressed a button on the brass device, and it lit up with a cyan glow. It beamed a ray of light onto both documents and then dimmed, which was when the High-mage inserted the orb into an empty circular slot on the table. He passed the documents back to Efratel as the table lit up with a hum, and he began manipulating the controls.





The High-mage explained some of what he was doing to them. "If you were just a normal Academic, then we could just give you your Archive orb to connect you to the sub-Faction, and wouldn't need to do this," he said. "But as you're being sponsored, your manager, who would normally not be able to stay on Athenaeum property, will also need to be linked to the Archive. As he is not a mage of All-Aeon Athenaeum, he will need a slightly different device."





The projections continued to twist and arrange themselves to form different sentences, all using the original language structure of runes. After a few seconds, the table stopped glowing, and he removed the brass orb. Then he turned to them. "The Archive now has your information, and you have been registered as a private manager and academic mage of the Senior Academy. Follow me to collect your Archive items."





They walked to another section of the immense hall, where several tall glass cases stood against a wall. He opened one of the cases and took out another bronze orb that looked like his own, as well as a large brass ring that appeared to be a bracelet. He raised his orb, which lit up again, beaming light onto both of the new objects. Both of the objects glowed in response, after which he handed the orb to Marellen and the bracelet to Efratel.





"Use your mana to mana-bind the objects," the High-mage told them. He looked at Efratel. "As you are not a true member of the Athenaeum, you will only have temporary Sub-Faction access. But this will enable you to contact the recipient while on Athenaeum property, as well as access most of the functions of an Archive orb."





Marellen inserted a thin stream of mana into the bronze orb on his palm and blinked as he felt it link with the object, a semi-permanent string constantly connected to the item. Then he raised his eyes when he heard the familiar sound of a System notification.





[The Supreme Institution of All-Aeon Athenaeum:]


[Welcome back to the Academy, Marellen Vadel.]





He instantly felt sour as soon as he saw that notification, but didn't focus on it as Vicela started walking again once they had bound their items. They followed as he left the Archive hall, taking them back to the room they had found him in. He gestured to one of the staff, who walked up.





"Take this man to the 57th floor so he can receive information about his authority as a private manager and the sponsorship regulations."





He nodded, and Efratel waved to Marellen as he left. "I'll see you in a bit."





"Now that's done…." the High-mage said, turning to Marellen. "We need to go over what conditions your sponsor has asked for, and your previous information recorded in the Archive, to see what will need to happen for you."











Sometime later, Marellen and Vicela entered what seemed to be the High-mage's private office. With a gesture from the High-mage, he sat down on a plush armchair opposite the man's desk, while the white-robed man walked behind the desk and opened a few draws, searching for something. A small glowing orb sat on his desk, spinning with a constant mechanical buzz as it sat within a crystal container. The walls of the room were lined with roof-high bookcases filled with heavy books, and several tables near the bookcases had other magical items sprawled across them.





The High-mage sat down when he had found what he was looking for, a small metal stand that he placed on his desk, and then sat his Archive orb on. He dragged a piece of paper before him and picked up a pen as the orb lit up, and projected lines of neat runic script into the air between them.





"Right. So, your name is Marellen Vadel?" he began, reading off the projection.





"Yes sir," Marellen replied with a nod.





"Then I'll just check with you to make sure all this data is correct," the man said, jotting down words on the page before him. "You completed your education at the Junior Academy, studied at the Senior Academy for two years after that, and then graduated?"





Marellen nodded, and so the High-mage continued reading his information. "You're quite young to receive a sponsorship then…" he murmured absentmindedly, making Marellen wince as he knew what was coming. Vicela paused and frowned slightly when he saw something else. "Graduated five years ago?"





Marellen suppressed a sigh. He knew he appeared young due to his innately high magical density, something that came about due to his father being a High-mage before his birth and was also responsible for his hair that refused all forms of alteration, but it was incredibly annoying to be mistaken as an eighteen-year-old, Every. Single. Time. That was without mentioning the teenage girls….





"I'm twenty-three," he replied wearily.





The High-mage looked up and stared at him for a moment before he coughed. "Ahem. All is in order then. And… upper ranked magecraft graduate for that year? With those grades?" he asked, raising an eyebrow.





"That was the year the 74th 5th generation Princess graduated," Marellen explained.





"Ah, no wonder then," the High-mage remarked. "Very few could beat a member of the royal family, and that would've pushed everyone's ranking down. But you should've received several offers to become a personal student…."





Marellen grimaced as the High-mage's eyes flew wide open, having found the offers in question in the information. "2 Archmages…. 4 Grand-mages… 7 High-mages…." He stared incredulously at Marellen. "You didn't accept one of these?"





"…could we please move on?" Marellen replied weakly.





Vicela gazed at him for a second longer, before sighing. "I suppose it's none of my business. Let's have a look at the conditions set by your sponsor that should already be in the Archives…"





Marellen watched the projection change, showcasing new details. He was curious to know, as he didn't know what conditions he had to meet. He blinked as the High-mage frowned. "There's…. nothing. There's only a request to know what people approach you, High-mage or higher, and the general request to send your basic progress information over to them. That last one is a common request for all sponsorships, but they've given you complete freedom over everything."





Vicela looked up in confusion. "There's not even a budget set. What kind of sponsor would ever do that?" Then the High-mage paused. "I should probably check who your sponsor is."





Marellen shifted awkwardly in his seat as the man searched for the information. Then silence fell on them as he found out who it was.





The High-mage slowly raised his eyes to look at Marellen. "You're the recipient of the Aurelian Commission Head," he stated blandly.





"Apparently, but I wouldn't know why they picked me," Marellen replied, hoping he wouldn't ask questions.





Vicela continued to stare at him, before shaking his head. "Whatever then. Considering you're being sponsored by an Empire noble rather than one of the vassal kingdoms' nobles, that will authorize you to access higher-grade spells within the Archive, without the research contribution requirements they need." He put down his pen and intertwined his fingers. "It seems all your information is accurate, so I'll now explain what's available to you as a sponsored academic, and what you need to do."





Marellen nodded, so Vicela began. "I understand as a former student here, you don't need me to repeat the information about the Academy's facilities and normal operations itself, so I'll skip that part. As a Grade 1 Academic, you have access to every department's resources and don't need the same special access permissions as them. You'll have access to the same information level as most 5th-year students as well," he said.





"As your sponsor hasn't set any conditions for you," he continued, "You will be able to select what department to enter, what research topic to pick, or even topics if you wish. This can be completed using the Sub-Faction access of your Archive orb. Now, while studying as a student requires you to gain the appropriate merit points to pass your selected area, academics have a different process to go through."





The High-mage leaned forward slightly with a serious expression. "You need to gain contribution points. This is a type of Athenaeum currency that only academics or full members of the Orders and Towers have access to. With it, you can purchase spells, skills, spell tomes, magical materials, items, artifacts, and other resources. Even as a sponsored academic, there will be some things unavailable for your sponsor to purchase using crowns under any circumstances…." Then he hesitated. "…. Is what I'm supposed to say, but the Aurelian Commission Head is slightly different," he said with a light cough.





"We tell that to nobility because the actual price of those resources is so astronomically high that it's better we don't reveal this, so they won't try to purchase them and embarrass themselves, creating political issues. We've had too many problems with that in the past," he explained with an awkward look on his face. "But I'll allow your sponsor to purchase those without your contribution points if they so wish, considering the amount of money available to them." He frowned. "They also haven't set a condition for them to receive part of your contribution, so you will be able to use your contribution purely on yourself. This means you will have access to a lot of contribution, as we set the contribution gain rate to be higher for a recipient, expecting the opposite."





…..Marellen was getting the feeling he really, really needed to have a talk with Efratel about this sponsor of his, because he had no idea what they wanted from him. The lack of expectations was making him more worried than he thought he'd feel if there were expectations placed on him.





The High-mage shook his head with a sigh after a moment. "I won't change that. Considering you haven't even been given a budget, it doesn't matter whether you have access to more contribution points or not. Anyway," he continued, gesturing to the bronze sphere he still held. "Contribution can also allow you to purchase more features for the Archive orb, and as an academic, you have private lodgings, so you can also have your lodgings customised to your wishes. All of this information and more will be sent to your Archive orb."





He stood up and passed Marellen a sheet of paper. "Tomorrow at midday you need to turn up at the Magic Assessment Facility so the Academy can record your current level of ability. Use your Sub-Faction access through your Archive orb to find the location. Do you have any more questions before you leave?"





Oh, Marellen had many, but not something the High-mage in front of him could answer, unfortunately.











"Who in the realms is the Faction Head?!" he hissed, slamming his palms against the table.





His blonde-haired cousin just chuckled and reclined back in his armchair as he drank his tea. "I'm revealing nothing. Have a bit of patience, and you'll find out."





Marellen groaned and sat back down in his armchair. They were in a café that was part of the residential area of the Academy, and he had cast a sound barrier spell to prevent anyone from hearing their conversation. "Efratel, I'm not saying this because I'm curious. I'm worried."





Efratel raised an eyebrow. "You shouldn't be. They're not that scary."





"Then explain to me why I somehow seem to have no conditions whatsoever listed for my sponsorship," Marellen replied wearily. He raised his Archive orb and activated it, setting it to levitate between them. Then it projected the 'list' of conditions in the form of a white-blue System screen.





Efratel leaned forward to read…. what was barely a few sentences. He leaned back and crossed his arms with a strange expression.





"Come to think of it, we didn't discuss the finer details of what this sponsorship entails," he remarked.





"….Isn't that the most important thing to discuss?" Marellen asked incredulously.





"Well… I couldn't meet with them very often due to the attention being placed on them last week. I barely got to see them the day after the event," Efratel replied with a hand on his chin. "But they asked for me to keep contacting them, so it's not like you'll be kept at the Academy for the rest of time doing nothing. I told you yesterday about the expeditions, remember?"





Marellen frowned slightly. "I don't have any experience with field research. And it would be dangerous for somebody with no experience to go to places like the Old Era planes, which have strange magical phenomena nobody understands."





"That's probably why they sent you here first, rather than straight into those outer planes," Efratel explained. "And you'd likely be going with Roa if you did."





"Have you contacted her yet?" Marellen asked.





Efratel shook his head. "Not yet. That's what I'll be doing this week. That, and probably contacting your sponsor to work out a few more details, considering we're rather lacking in that department." Then he smiled. "But first, let's have a look at just what's available to you now!"





He sighed and tapped on the System screen to access other features of his Sub-Faction access. "So… do I pick a department?"





"Hmm." Efratel considered it. "I think we wait on that one. I need to check which departments support expeditions, after all, and I'd like to contact the Faction Head first." He pointed to a function on the screen. "Why don't we check the Archive orb?"





Still feeling very unsettled and not impressed by Efratel's unwillingness to explain who the Faction Head was, he tapped on the button to take them to the screen that showed the options available for his Archive orb customisation.





"Elemental ratio scanning… golem automation…. alchemy recombiner…. semi-array engraving module?" Efratel said with an odd look on his face, reading out some of the options. "I'm not quite sure what a lot of this means. You might need to check this out in your own time."





"I'm familiar with how the Archive orb operates, although I never received a professional model like this," Marellen replied. "I got one to use during my time here at the Junior Academy, and then one at the Senior Academy as well." He read the list of options again. "This orb is the complete version, however, and will be what I continue to use if I get transferred to the Aeonic plane."





He looked at his cousin as he had a thought. "Has my sponsor said anything about that topic?"





"Transferal?" Efratel asked, slightly surprised. He considered it. "No, they haven't. I don't think they would be against it. You being a full member of the Athenaeum would probably be more beneficial for any potential expeditions."





"…I'm still not sure what I think about that," Marellen muttered.





"Well, at least try it once before you decide what you think. Also, wouldn't you be safer now with that… new addition to your skillset?" Efratel said, raising an eyebrow.





"Again, if I could receive enough information from the skill to guess what events will occur, it wouldn't be a Rare skill," Marellen retorted. "It's nowhere near powerful enough to calculate more than the results of a low-ranked spell."





Efratel shrugged, then held his chin. "I've been meaning to ask. Have you tested out the spell it gave you yet?"





Marellen blinked and then shook his head. "Not yet, no. Maybe that's something I should do… I wonder how it interacts with unbalanced mana reactions…." he murmured thoughtfully.





His cousin shook his head wryly. "Please consider these things later, when I'm not here in front of you. For now, let's just discuss what we're both going to do this week."





They spent the rest of the afternoon talking about what Efratel and Marellen planned to do.











"Marellen Vadel…. yes, you've been registered for the testing. Please follow me," the staff member said after reading the information projected by his orb.





Marellen followed the man through the hallways of the Magic Assessment Facility, rooms behind glass walls on either side. He could see mages testing their abilities and casting spells at obstacles and on the testing equipment, the whole spatially expanded level echoing with the sound of destructive magic. The staff member held up his orb to beam onto a sealed door, taking him to one of the more advanced rooms. The room didn't hold many people, and he was told to wait for a bit.





Sometime afterwards, his name was called, and so he stepped through a pair of doors to enter a small circular room. Standing on a level slightly higher than him and behind a protective mana-shield were two people. One was sitting behind a control table of sorts, while the other was standing, wearing red robes and appearing in his mid-40s. The red-robed man stepped forward to talk to him through the barrier.





"High-mage Demar Edgelin of the Red Order. Before we begin, I would like to ask you for your name, Rank, level, mage advancement, and class details," he explained. "You can choose to hide your class details if you wish, but if we detect abilities that come from any classes under Ancient already registered in the Archive, these details will be added to your records."





Marellen nodded. "Marellen Vadel, at Rank 2, Level 212. I'm an advanced mage. My main classes are All-Element Mage, Runic Decipherer and Spellcraft Scholar. I also have an Element Alchemist side class."





"So, two Rare main classes, and an Epic main class. All-Element Mage… hmm," the High-mage mused. "Level 212 is a rather high level for someone registered to have been Level 70 five years ago, and also without a battle class, but I suppose that can be attributed to your non-combat Rare classes of Runic Decipherer and Spellcraft Scholar. Moving on then," he said, with a gesture to the man at the control table.





The man nodded and pressed a button. The floor in front of Marellen opened up to reveal a large clear orb sitting on a stand. Demar gestured to it. "Place a hand on it to allow us to record your basic affinities."





Marellen suppressed a sigh and did as asked. He inserted his mana into the large head-sized crystal, which quickly gained swirling hues of red, brown, blue, white, yellow, and black. The two people watching the orb waited for the colour distribution to change and show his dominant affinities. It didn't.





"Naturally balanced affinities for all six essential elements? This isn't on the setting that tests runic model enhanced affinity, is it?" the High-mage asked the man next to him. The man shook his head, making Demar raise his eyebrows.





"A Minor affinity for all six…. You could use any and every school's runic model. You're quite the talent," the High-mage remarked.





Marellen smiled awkwardly. "It's only an innate ability."





"It is. And therefore, we will test your current magical proficiency now," Demar replied with a nod. He turned to the man at the control table, who flipped a switch. Glowing magical targets lit up on the walls behind Marellen, so he turned to face them.





"The standard multi-casting fireball test first. When you're ready," the High-mage announced.





Raising his hand to gesture at the targets, Marellen rotated his runic model to access the right runes. Then he used his mana to project them into his field of influence. Thirty small mana-circles appeared, which he used to shoot the targets with orange balls of fire mana with a bang.





Demar nodded. "Above average multi-casting abilities. Very good." He gestured to the man next to him. "Onto the next test. Please cast the spell with the most layers that you can cast so we can test your multi-layer spell-casting ability."





Carefully arranging the required runes needed, Marellen built up his spell. The High-mage raised his eyebrows when he was done.





"6-layer advanced spell? That's rather impressive," he commented. "Then we'll now do parallel elemental manipulation. Considering you have all six affinities, show us how many you can manipulate at the same time."





Marellen released his mana into the surrounding air, the multi-coloured gaseous hues swirling and mixing. Then he slowly added effects to it and pushed the mana into six different orb-like structures. Spinning in a circle around him was an orb of water, a ball of fire, a cyclonic whirlwind, a hard rocky clump, a radiant spark, and a shadowy swirling circle. He maintained them for the High-mage to see.





"All six. You must have spent quite some time learning to multi-task like that," Demar remarked. "Let's move on. A couple more tests."





They continued testing to document his abilities. Some were tests that tested his flow rate, others his elemental comprehension which would allow him to summon his elements, and there were a few that tested his rune arrangement speed and his field of influence size. The High-mage nodded one last time.





"One final test. Please attack the mana barrier of the wall over there with your most powerful spell. You can have as much preparation time as you need," he stated.





Marellen considered it for a moment.





I'm sure the earth-fire fusion would do more pure damage, but if it's power…






He turned to face the mana barrier opposite the High-mage. Raising his hand, he pointed at it as he released his elemental mana. The mana began to be attracted to a singular point set a few metres away from his face in mid-air.





Wind, 15%. Water, 16%. Now add fire, 5%. Earth, light, dark, another 6% each.






A multi-coloured orb began coalescing, filled with dense elemental runes, and quickly drawing in all the mana within the room, causing the orb to swell. He raised his other hand, and three rings of dense dark-blue runic lines wrapped around the swelling orb, restraining it in place.





Arcane mana seal, 3-layered tri-bind. Another 10% of fire, light and dark.






The High-mage behind him widened his eyes, but Marellen didn't see it. Small flecks of mana began flaking away from the mana barrier as the outer edges of the room became a vacuum of mana, the energy all being attracted to the psychedelic swirling sphere the size of his head hovering in front of him, thin streams of dense elements adding to it. It strained against its seal but didn't break.





He winced as several of the seal's runes disintegrated, the pull of the mana becoming too strong, and the orb instantly swelled again. He tried to add another seal, but only one ring of runes attached themselves properly. A slight breeze ruffled his clothes and hair as the wind mana was drawn into the orb.





And slowly, 1% more earth…. 2% more earth….






Several more seal runes fractured, and a slight headache began to build as he struggled to control the conflicting energies within the orb. He cautiously added more earth mana, but the fire mana within the orb repeatedly flared up as he did so. When he got to 10% earth mana, the orb bulged and strained again with new intensity, the sealing runes barely holding it in place.





"Activate the next tier of mana barriers," Demar ordered the man next to him.





Sensing the spell wasn't going to achieve completion, Marellen quickly materialised several mana shields to hide behind. Then he frowned slightly as he received a strange sensation from his runic model.





My skill is telling me… to add more earth mana? Now?






He glanced at the orb, only a few seconds from bursting. Then he gritted his teeth and did so. The orb instantly shattered its seal and the air gained the vibrating sensation of chaotic mana as the sphere began distorting in shape. They cautiously shielded their eyes as they waited for it to burst….





…but it didn't.





They stared at the elemental spell that had finally formed. Surrounded by six rings of elemental essence, the six-coloured orb sat peacefully in mid-air, twice the size of Marellen's head. The runes within shifted and slowly cycled, switching to different elements with a regular pattern. The surrounding mana had completely stilled but there was tension present in the atmosphere.





"… It seems the earth mana stabilised it," Marellen muttered quietly. Before the High-mage could say anything, he gestured with his hands, and the orb floated near the mana barrier. Then, Marellen activated the spell.





Boom!






With an exceedingly quick speed, the orb and its rings unravelled, unleashing the full force of its elemental blast into the room. The mana barrier, and even the newer ones that had been set up, trembled, and cracked like fracturing glass, while the floor vibrated with the force. A rainbow gaseous hue swept the room like a gust of wind, the multi-coloured mana swirling about the place and not losing its colour until a full thirty seconds had passed.





Marellen watched the result curiously. It was the first time that spell had ever formed successfully for him.





Even with the fire mana conflicting, adding the earth mana at the last second briefly stabilised it enough for the natural elemental balancing of the spell to correct it without my intervention. This supports my theory that elements have a fundamental optimal ratio they require to maintain constant manifestation and lines up with what my Origin Skill demonstrates when I test it using fusion elements. I have to wonder if this 'optimal ratio' is another fundamental behaviour relating to the Mana Resonance Principle, or if this ratio can be considered a new principle altogether….






"-adel."





…another interesting detail was the mental suggestion I received from my new skill. I felt the desire to perform that action, when predicting the outcome of a spell of this magnitude should lie outside my hypothesised parameters for the skill. Perhaps this 'optimal ratio' is what the skill's cause and effect analysis is built on, tracking changes from this origin point of perfect harmony. My spell is not an archetypal version of any natural elemental harmony, but it was capable of being self-contained through some unknown process after I added that earth mana. This also suggests the possibility that my sense of cause and effect will exponentially increase the further the environmental atmospheric mana is from natural harmony, an opposite conclusion to what my first results from the skill pointed to. As for how to test thi-






"Vadel!"





He blinked when he realised Demar Edgelin was calling him. He turned around to face the High-mage. "My apologies. I was lost in thought," he said with a slight bow.





The red-robed man regarded him with mild bemusement for a moment and then shook his head. "Happens to the best of us I suppose. All right then, Attack power-" He paused, and reread the sentence the Archive orb he had attached to the control table was projecting. He slowly spoke with a strange expression, "Attack power: lower advanced mage, mana density: upper advanced mage, runic theorem……." He turned back to Marellen with a slightly astonished look on his face. "Lower High-mage level."





Marellen remained silent, uncaring. Hearing that may make some people happy, but not him. The only reason why his spell could be completed was due to pure chance, after all, and had no influence from his knowledge of runes. The fact he relied on his new skill to cast the spell was just a sign that his understanding of magic wasn't high enough.





The High-mage sighed. "Overall magic level: peak-level advanced mage. At Level 212." He shook his head. "Maybe I'm getting old. Anyway, that's it for you. Advanced mage Marellen Vadel, you may go."





With a nod, he did so and left the room with slightly quicker steps than he entered. Considering the newest event with his spell and skill, he was eager to test out new ideas and experiment.





After all, he had magic to do.

A wild mage in his natural habitat (forgot to fix up the hands):
Tried a different style with this. I'll probably end up redrawing a ton of my pictures.
 
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Chapter 36 (1 of 2) A Crafty Commander's Complex Contrivance.
… And so, Marellen has been panicking about what he's supposed to do at the Academy. A little direction for us both would be very welcome. I also may have kept it a secret from my cousin who exactly the Commission Head is, so if you could help me continue to hide that, I'd be thankful.



Sincerely, Efratel Vadel.






Lucille smirked slightly as she read the last line before Efratel's name, but tucked the letter back into its envelope. She pulled out a drawer of her desk to retrieve paper and an envelope and then dipped a pen in a nearby inkwell. She started responding to Efratel's letter.





To Efratel Vadel,



I'm glad to hear you've both been officially registered with the Academy. You should be safe for a long while now. As for what I want from your cousin… I'm aware he has a Minor affinity for all six essential elements. Consider it as me giving him the opportunity to try to continue to develop that all-element magic of his. Especially as all-element magic is a path that hasn't been open to magic-users for a very long time. You also don't have to worry about that 'gift' of mine. I received it as a System reward, and so nobody will know of it unless I tell them.



As for transferral, I have no particular opinion. Any additional resources that an official mage of All-Aeon Athenaeum can access I am able to purchase, so there is no need to be overeager to go there to try gain these resources. However, going to the Aeonic origin plane will grant Marellen access to much greater runic theorem knowledge contained in their main Archive, and likely also contain all-element spells or theories that aren't studied or used by the mainstream schools. They will be immensely useful if he wishes to remain an all-element mage.



With expeditions, I have a suggestion. If he intends to discover more about the environmental mana laws of the six essential elements, going to planes with natural mana phenomena would enable him to see how it works in person. Ancient planes that are being explored for their natural artifacts, for example.




She spent some time adding more details, such as discussing finance and other smaller things. She also stated that she was very willing to keep her identity from Marellen a secret. She finished off the letter by signing it and sealed it in the envelope so she could ask for someone to send it by teleportation courier eventually. She leaned back, crossed her arms, and kicked her feet up on the desk as she considered what she needed from the two nobles.





The answer was something very simple: she didn't. That's not to say there wasn't anything she wanted from them, but it was less of a 'want' and more of a hope or wish. She just wanted to see what ripples the thrown stones of Trisroa Vel-Winteridge's formerly dead party could make in this timeline. In her opinion, any change was a good change, unless it benefited the Hero. Well, he was about to go gallivanting off to receive 'hero-worthy' rewards from completing a Dungeon or Lair with his fanatically loyal redhead party member somewhere after going to the Forerunner Event.





Her expression went cold as she considered that. He had never seen her true appearance. That was a good thing for her, but it meant she was unaware of how he would react if he happened to see someone 'new' at the Event. Although there were a thousand forerunners, and he didn't have an eidetic memory, so the possibility they wouldn't even meet or him notice her was there.





She shook her head and stretched her arms in front of her, having decided to stop thinking about him. Today she, as Adrianna, had to make a special request to Commander Arkenast, and she also had to prepare for the competition event she was hosting. That meant formally greeting Artair Alichanteu, Rosaline Chavaret and Viscountess Femidela, the three County representatives coming to judge the competition. It was annoying, but that was what she had to do as the Head of the Commission.











"-And that is why I use the Rare-ranked Fiery Wave Footwork skill rather than the Epic-ranked Wildfire Cyclic Path," finished a woman with long, curly red hair, sitting at a table with several other individuals.





One of them, a woman appearing in her late twenties with green eyes and brown hair, leaned forward curiously. "But wouldn't the lesser AGI stat amplification bonus for the footwork be a weakness when you come across those who utilise the White River weapon clan's signature mana-art?"





"Of course," the red-haired woman replied with a nod. "But the Fiery Wave Footwork skill is still only an auxiliary footwork ability. I use Chavaret's Battle-forged Red Flame mana-art as an heir of the County, after all. The movement abilities of the mana-art are enough to counteract the White River weapon clan's techniques, and the Fiery Wave Footwork skill just provides a series of smoother transition moves to support it."





"I see," the green-eyed woman responded. She smiled and took a sip from her cup. "As someone with a more background-focused role, my mana-art's strength lies in wide-spread abilities and area of effect elemental release. I'm interested in how my poison manipulation compares in that sense to the red flame used by your clan."





Lucy remained silent as Rosaline Chavaret and Viscountess Femidela discussed their combat techniques and experiences with mana-arts. She, along with Vincent and Artair, were quietly 'listening' to the two women, with the three of them having nothing to add. It had been like that for the last half hour. Viscountess Femidela, now in a slightly less formal setting than the debut ball, had ditched the traditional masked attire of Ravimoux's vassals and subordinates, which was why they saw her face. The 25-year-old Rosaline was wearing a long-sleeved white shirt and red leather pants with boots, all high quality, showing how she prioritised her status as a warrior than as a noble.





They were all sitting at a table in the Pavilion, having lunch. Artair, to Lucy's amusement, was gazing off to the side with a distant expression, having completely forgotten that his presence as Alichanteu's representative required him to at least try to seem engaged for politeness' sake. Vincent had a calm smile on his face as he watched the two women conversing, but Lucy knew he only ever smiled like that when he had to deal with nobility, and didn't care about what they were talking about in the slightest.





She was actually considering how surprisingly normal the interactions between everyone were. It was slightly unnerving. There had been no major discussions about politics or attempts to discover more information about her, nor had anyone properly approached the subject of the competition apart from when they first greeted each other that day. She supposed she could attribute that to the people who had come as the representatives though.





Rosaline Chavaret commanded one of the legions of her County's mercenary army, and so didn't often take part in many political events, as she was mostly fighting on Event Battlefields for the forces that had hired them. Artair was…. well, from what she had gathered, it seemed the first heir of Alichanteu wasn't too motivated to become the new Count. Maybe he aimed for it out of a feeling of responsibility. As for Margaery Femidela, Lucy wasn't quite sure. She had a suspicion the woman just signed up to judge the competition for fun, as dealing with the members of Olden and Radical at Headquarters that Ravimoux had decided to remove certainly didn't take a noble with a fiefdom title.





Vincent was obvious. He was there as her aide, and so would follow her lead when choosing to discuss politics or not. But she knew he considered all dealings with nobles a matter of professionality, so he wasn't about to make small talk with them. She still hadn't worked out why he got the nickname of 'Dictator' in the past though….





Judging that Rosaline and Viscountess Femidela were deep enough in conversation to not care if she started another one, she glanced at the blonde and blue-haired man opposite her. "Sir Alichanteu."





He didn't respond. She tilted her head as there was no reaction from him, still distracted by his thoughts. She gave him a small wave, but he still didn't notice. She leaned back in her chair and held her chin. "Perhaps I should support Arwen to become the new Count after all," she thought aloud.





Vincent shot her a mildly exasperated look as the man opposite her blinked once, then several times, and then directed his attention to her, staring at her with bemusement and slight incredulousness as he finally registered what she had said. "…. what?"





She smirked. "I'm kidding. I had to say something to get your attention." She pointed to a hedge bush near the wall of the Pavilion. "You seem to have found something rather interesting about that bush if you've continued to stare at it for so long."





He glanced between her and the plant a few times in incomprehension before realisation set in and his expression turned very awkward. "My apologies for the lapse in focus, Faction Head. I will avoid repeating my mistake."





Lucy grinned. "Who said I was upset you weren't paying attention?" She gestured to the two women, who ignored them to continue their discussion. "I don't believe they assumed the three non-warriors would stay engaged the entire time. I can't say I'm finding much interest in the differences between one weapon clan's art and the other."





He stared at her, taken aback by the frankness of her words. "Uh… right." He glanced at Rosaline and Viscountess Femidela. "As a member of Alichanteu, I've had little to no relation with those of Glory Pantheon and its forces. Alichanteu is purely in charge of administration and land ownership, unlike Chavaret and Ravimoux." Then he frowned slightly. "Although, Ravimoux isn't part of Glory Pantheon…"





"Technically all that's needed to be considered a force of Glory Pantheon is to register a mana-art exclusive to your clan or family with them, so they are in some sense," she replied, picking up her cup from off the table. "But Ravimoux doesn't participate in any Tournaments, so they're not a weapon clan." She took a sip and set it back down as he nodded. "Perhaps if they did, their dark mana-art's ranking would come close to the 3rd Duchy's."





Viscountess Femidela shot her a smirk before returning to her conversation, obviously having heard her statement, while Artair gave Lucy a very slight grimace. "Please don't let the members of the 3rd Eternal Duchy hear you say that. They're rather ruthless when it comes to eradicating any threats to their position."





"Well, Ravimoux has to have maintained their control over the Empire's black markets for so long while remaining a County somehow," she said with a shrug. "But potentially hidden strength of the Black County or not, I wanted to ask you something else." Her smile widened. "How has the distribution of my plans' management authority been going in Alichanteu?"





He stared at her for a few seconds. Then, he slowly began to appear very, very hesitant about something. "It… uh… could be going better," he replied awkwardly.





She raised an eyebrow at his reaction and crossed her arms. "What, is your half-brother giving you trouble? Depending on the context I may be able to intervene here."





Surprisingly, he shook his head with a grimace. "It's not an issue I can ask the Faction Head to help with. This is a problem for both Arwen and me." He sighed. "The vassals are continually fighting over who gets what responsibility, and a resolution to this problem is nowhere in sight. There's no cohesion whatsoever among them."





Vincent spoke up for the first time in a while, paying proper attention to their conversation. "Surely if it's that bad, then you and Arwen can come to an agreement to settle the dispute? Regardless of the relationship between you two, Alichanteu's current situation is important enough to be prioritised," he asked.





Artair glanced at him and shook his head. "Unfortunately, we don't have the power. Alichanteu only has me, my sister, and Arwen as its direct bloodline members, so the Count's power hasn't been shared very much. And the authority to call a vassal assembly lies with the direct vassals, not us." He rubbed his temples. "They've been calling an assembly every few days, most lasting longer than eight hours. It is… very tiring to deal with them," he explained wearily.





"Well, when it's not related to the Commission, it's true I don't have the authority to intervene," Lucille replied with a slight frown. "I can't do much about the vassal assemblies. Is there a main instigator behind all this?"





Artair considered it. "Not an 'instigator' as such….. but the main reason we're having so much trouble with the vassals is because of the neutral faction besides Arwen and me."





"Neutral?" Vincent asked curiously.





"The Count's supporters who still haven't switched sides," Artair explained. "They're the largest faction in Alichanteu at the moment, but because all of them are firmly staying out of any succession issues, neither Arwen nor me has enough power to tip the sides completely. I haven't discovered why they're so fixed on staying out of the succession battle."





"Do they have any specific characteristics as a force?" she asked him.





"They're the vassals involved in magic engineering," he confirmed with a nod. "All of them have a long history of magical design and construction, and are one of our most important forces to maintain all our city mainframes and sea ships in our port cities and on our water planes." He gestured to her. "They'll be the ones helping you with your 'trainline' construction when the time comes."





That… was very important information. It seemed Artair may be talking about the group responsible for the airship development. The reason they were staying out of the succession conflict was probably because they wanted to prevent Radical or Olden from discovering the airships, with the current likelihood of those political force supporters being among the Alichanteu vassals. The fact they were so determined to be seen as neutral…. She could use this.





She traded glances with Vincent, who also knew the significance of what Artair had said.





"It appears I will have to contact them soon then," Lucy said to Artair. "And perhaps when we discuss the trains I can ask them to pressure the other vassals into making a decision."





"If by that stage it is still needed, then I'll be thankful," he replied, sounding slightly tired. Then he blinked and then straightened up, looking curious about something. "However, one issue the vassals have been discussing is who will take on the responsibility of the trainline development. They seem to think the finance that will be used for it could be better spent on other ventures, considering the existence of teleportation arrays."





She smiled and raised her cup to sip from it. "And do you think this way?"





He shook his head. "Oh no, certainly not. No, I can see the logistical improvements the existence of such transport will make. A form of short-term transport itself will be incredibly useful for any city." He became more animated as he continued talking, "And the concept of underground transport routes… it reminds me of the descriptions of Rocht'guardes' dwarven railway tracks and their moving fortresses. Commercialising such a thing is an amazing idea."





"Well, the trains will not have such massive sizes, nor will they be outfitted with any weaponry like the rail fortresses," she said with amusement. "But the concept is similar. And the reason why I want to implement them goes beyond short-term transport." She continued, placing her cup down again, "Foremost would be to cut down on teleportation array costs for Gilded Seat and the Faction."





Vincent blinked and looked at her with slight confusion. "You still care about this?"





She shot him a mildly exasperated look but clasped her hands together. "You know I have a magic background," she said to her aide. Vincent slowly nodded, while Artair looked a bit confused. She continued with her words, "That means I was able to find out just how much teleportation arrays cost when teleporting an individual even only a ten-kilometre distance, and how much people should be paying to use them."





Her expression went flat. "The current cost of using teleportation arrays is the equivalent of using a dragon king to pull a commoner's cart."





They stared at her. "Surely it can't be that bad… can it?" Artair asked hesitantly.





She sighed and rubbed her temples. "For citizens of the Empire, no. The Empire is incomparably powerful compared to anything else in the Mystical Realm, and this means it is incomparably rich too. So the expense of magic arrays is seen as very little for most people and less for nobles, especially when even the lowest nobility of a Minor Kingdom rule, at minimum, over ten million people per person." She leaned back and crossed her arms. "But the mana cost of a teleportation array activating, receiving mana, and teleporting one person ten kilometres away has the same mana cost as teleporting them to another plane. Even the time required is the same."





Viscountess Femidela and Rosaline paused their conversation when they overheard her words. Lucy hadn't been quite sure how to explain the current teleportation array situation was like placing thousands of airports just to take someone to the next suburb for the same resource cost as taking them through intra-dimensional warping into the next world, but it seemed the message got across to Vincent because he narrowed his eyes.





"Then how come I happen to hear that to use the Athenaeum's planar arrays you are charged more than ten times the price of normal teleportation arrays, all to 'ensure the efforts of the Violet Order and Spatial Tower in engraving such wondrous magic for the masses to use is duly rewarded'," he stated with strong suspicion.





"Greed, obviously," she said with a shrug. "Granted, planar teleportation arrays are more complex than localised teleportation arrays and may require more space to be engraved so increasing the price somewhat is acceptable, but even the mana cost of teleporting to one plane versus a further plane isn't dependent on physical distance, as teleportation arrays utilise planar alignments, dimensional leylines, astral pathways and other complicated spatial phenomenon to function. Their claim of 'distance increasing mana cost' is a blatant lie."





There was silence. It made for a very funny scene when all four of the people at Lucy's table turned their heads to stare in the direction of what they knew to be the nearest teleportation array dome outside Headquarters. Vincent's expression twitched, Rosaline glared at the Pavilion bush blocking her view, the Viscountess narrowed her eyes as a cruel smirk appeared on her lips, and Artair began to look rather awkward and uneasy.





"Also, if any of you try to bring the Empire's attention to this, it wouldn't work. Most high nobility already know this, and get decreased teleportation costs in return for staying, and keeping others, silent," Lucille added.





Their gazes turned back to her, and they went quiet for a few moments. Then Viscountess Femidela laughed. "Well, this has been very enlightening," she replied, still smirking. "To know just how much of my income has been stolen by those snobbish old men when it didn't need to be… regardless of the high nobility, I'm sure my superior would like to know this," she told Lucy.





Lucy smiled and didn't physically say anything, but she sent a spiritual transmission to the poison master.





'You may also like to mention to Count Ravimoux on my behalf that this detail could be very useful information when it comes to renegotiating deals with the Violet Order and Spatial Tower after the sub-dimension deal with the Artificers.'





The woman blinked, and her smile widened a tad, but she didn't show any other movement that would indicate she received some sort of message. Artair looked a bit queasy. "Are we allowed to know this?" he asked cautiously.





"If you don't try to draw attention to it, then you'll be fine," Lucy replied, picking up her cup and drinking from it. "As I said, most high nobility already know this. It's an open secret among them. Of course, the Commission doesn't contain high nobility, so the real reason behind the trainline implementation has to be hidden for now."





"And are you allowed to reveal all this?" Rosaline asked her.





She smirked and spread her arms. "Whatever could you possibly mean? The Athenaeum has no records of someone named 'Lucille Goldcroft' having ever joined their Institution. How could some young girl completely unrelated to them be responsible for this leak in information?"





The Viscountess gave a slight laugh as Rosaline nodded, looking satisfied. Vincent just shook his head.





"You said cutting down on costs was one of the reasons for the trains," Artair said curiously. "What are the others?"





"Well, the second is to reduce traffic in Gilded Seat," she explained. "Particularly now as the Coalition's technology is developing, more and more mana-engine carriages and other transport vehicles are flooding the streets. It would be bad if the city couldn't accommodate that."





Vincent frowned at the table as the others nodded. "I had been noticing the traffic has been getting particularly bad these last few years…"





Viscountess Femidela looked at Lucy and narrowed her eyes while smiling. "Are you predicting that the Coalition's technology will become more popular as time goes by?"





Lucille nodded. "The Coalition's technology emphasizes efficiency and use of materials rather than just power, making them cheap. Their constructions can be high-quality while also using materials with less value." She gestured in the direction of the unseen teleportation dome. "The Athenaeum's spires, for example, are made out of the most valuable magical stone and metals available, with the wizards and mages competing to see whose spire can contain the largest and purest control gem. They might be powerful, yes, but if they can't put the abilities of the magical resources to good use, it's wasted."





She gestured to them. "I take it that you've all seen one of the Minor Kingdoms in your life." The four of them nodded, so she continued, "The lower magical density of those planes means that they can't get access to the same materials and resources the higher planes can. They're permanently stunted and incapable of developing like the Empire. But the Coalition's and similar technology can change this."





Lucy leaned forward with a serious expression as they paid attention to her words. "And this is why the trains are so important. They can be used for the unranked planes."





She waited silently as they all took in what she said and considered the implications of her words. They all looked thoughtful, and it was Vincent who finally spoke up, "You intend on raising their status."





"It's impossible for unranked planes to come close to reaching even a vague resemblance to the Empire's level of development," she replied. "Even once their citizens choose to leave and visit the Empire using Obelisks, when they come back and try to advance their plane, it doesn't work. They don't have the logistical capability. There's just not enough mana to place more teleportation circles."





"But these trains made with magic engineering don't function on purely magical methods," Artair murmured, looking at the table. Then he raised his eyes to look at her. "The materials used to craft the trains will very quickly lose power when placed on such low mana-density planes though."





She nodded in agreement. "They will need to be crafted to the specifications of the planes. The lower-ranked planes' trains will be very simple, used purely for transport. It's only when we start reaching the Major Kingdom level that we'll begin adding spatial expansion, additional services, and aesthetic focus." Then she smirked. "I intend for the train on Gilded Seat to have three levels, one for transporting goods, one for the commoners and the top level to be for nobility, where the ride will be for leisure and recreation. Obviously, the price for riding in special luxury surroundings will be fair and appropriate for individuals of such high status."





Her listeners chuckled because as merchant nobility, they had no problem charging other nobles an exorbitantly high price for things. Viscountess Femidela smirked as she spoke, "And there's one more thing I'm hearing about this that I like. Did you say you'll be charging the passengers a price?"





Lucille grinned. "Yes. The money earned from this will go to the Commission rather than the pockets of greedy spatial magic users." She leaned back and shrugged. "Of course, the intention behind this is to reinvest the profits from the trainlines back into redeveloping Gilded Seat, but it will take at least a few years to design the city's train and construct it before that." She looked at Artair. "And because this is being funded by the Founder's vault, those people arguing over whether the finance should be used on them don't have the right to do so. The decision of where the money will go has already been made."





He nodded in agreeance. Rosaline replied to her, "I've heard from my father that you said the contents of the Founder's vault was about a century's worth of the Commission's current incoming annual finance."





"In monetary value, yes." Lucy nodded. "And there's enough in pure currency that I can take out of the vault to more than fulfil the equivalent of ten million crystal tokens I said would be used over the next five years. The rest of the vault's contents, however…." She smiled at them. "Not so easy to find a purpose for."





"Because of the types of assets?" the Viscountess asked curiously.





"Some nobility like to donate to the vault very special items made uniquely by their fiefdoms," Lucy replied wryly. "An ornate fountain made of Ancient-ranked marble might be pretty, but I don't need an entire two hundred and thirty-nine of them."





"Sounds like you might need some help exchanging these assets," Artair said thoughtfully. "An auction might be worthwhile."





She grinned. "In return for a healthy portion of the proceeds going to Alichanteu, I presume?" She gestured to Rosaline as well. "Not all of it is of only interest to Alichanteu either. There's a rather large stock of weapons and weapon crafting materials Chavaret may like."





Rosaline looked intrigued as Lucy turned to the brown-haired woman next to her. "As for Ravimoux…" She smirked. "There may possibly be the mana-arts and special inheritance of one or two destroyed noble clans that need taking off my hands."





The poison master smirked back. "I don't believe Alichanteu will want to deal with the political backlash of revealing those at their auction. But Ravimoux's black market would certainly love to get their hands on them."





"It seems like now might be a good time to discuss the distribution of the sale responsibility of these assets then," Vincent spoke up. "We'll need to agree on what assets and resources each County has priority access to."





The others nodded, including Lucy. "I suppose I'll begin explaining what the Founder's vault contains…." she began.











Lucy sighed as she sat down on her couch and rested the back of her head against it, gazing up at the ceiling. It wasn't like talking with the three representatives had been difficult, and they were easier than what a discussion with the Counts would be like, but she still disliked having to deal with nobility. She had her experience with them, but never had she been such a direct part of their world.





She was glad something could be done about all the useless objects in the vault though. She did not need five hundred sets of Rare-ranked cutlery.





She glanced at the still-sleeping winged silvery snake next to her. Scytale would probably be bored out of his mind if he had been awake during this time, even with the competition ready to begin. Well, he'd probably go to antagonise Ashale'viaf in the library, so maybe not too bored. Although that was one place she hadn't been to yet.





Deciding she wanted some coffee, she got up and went into the kitchen, then returned with a mug and the brass jug artifact. She set about pouring it as she considered her interactions on Adrianna's side. She was glad the Commander seemed happy to accept her request, and she expected him to be because she had asked for something similar in the last timeline.





She went to pick up her mug. The only issue was she had never been a subordinate under his full leadership before, so she wasn't aware of how things would go if she worked on his ship with her Ra-




She froze with her mug just a few centimetres from her lips.



He was here? At this time?



She put down the mug and rubbed her temples as she considered what she was going to do.



It seems I'll have to merge my consciousnesses for the foreseeable future. This is… unexpected.
Huzzah! A picture of Vincent I am finally pleased with!

Well, if I ignore the botched shading on the nose.
 
Chapter 36 (2 of 2) A Crafty Commander's Complex Contrivance.
-A while earlier-




[Status: ]

Name: Adrianna Riftmire (Lvl. 52)

Class: Illusionist of Monstrous Apparitions – Epic (Tier: V)

Age: 21y

Race: Human

HP: 1600/1600 {+40/5m}

MP: 5100/5100 {+620/1m}

Stats:

Free Stat Points: 0

STR: 23 SPRT: 115

CON: 32 MENT: 25

AGI: 22

DEX: 34

INT: 113

WIS: 62

[Origin Skill: Manifestor's Cuboid Energy Matrix | Type: Soul/Realm

Desc: On a world yet unknown to the Tower, individuals have developed a vast array of abilities that function in unique ways. Due to the User's natural talent with the soul, they have gained the ability to compute and display mentally registered magic whenever they wish, disregarding the need for a long cast time and enabling their spells to function on automated commands.

Subskills:
  • Soul Construct
  • Manifestations of the Mind
  • Simulator
Pseudo-Domain – Zone of Control
Awakening: 6% ]





She felt an indescribable sense of déjà vu as she looked at the white-blue screen before her. It was a very strange experience to see her old Level 52 Status again. Well, not quite the same, considering she had never actually been 21 years old at this time, and the 10+ levels she had gained on top of the original levels had their stats distributed differently. The Alter-Ego skill worked just as well as she expected, being a System skill and all. She could even feel her Origin Skill back in place, its silvery-white cube structure represented within her mental power as well as just below the heart area where an Origin Skill was normally only found. She was a little special.





But there were a few slight differences she had sensed over the last few months compared to the Origin Skill she originally had. She looked through the subskills of her skill.





[Sub-skill: Soul Construct | Type: Soul/Psychic ]

Desc: The User's incredibly high talent for the manipulation of their soul has manifested in the form of an Origin Skill that creates a control centre for all manipulation of mana, spiritual energy, and soul power.

Abilities:

Mental Tesseract – Cube of calculation.
  • Gives the User a mental structure that can compute and register multi-dimensional energy-form objects and entities, storing patterns and creating processes.
Soul Configuration – Unique soul talent.
  • Gives the User access to SPRT and MENT at Rank-0.
  • Gives the User access to the Soul Compression Aspect.
[ ]





[Sub-skill: Manifestations of the Mind | Type: Soul/Magic ]

Desc: Mana may affect natural laws with more ease than spiritual energy, but it is spiritual energy that forms the soul and controls the energy of the material realms. With a deeper understanding of this phenomenon, the borders between imaginary and real are blurred.

Abilities:

Amplified Mana Manipulation – Control of the mind equates to control over mana.
  • Enables the User's mana manipulation proficiency to develop with direct correlation to their spiritual energy manipulation on a 1:1 ratio and vice versa.
Magical Materialisation – Fine elemental control granted by a powerful soul.
  • Gives the User the ability to have enhanced control over their elemental affinities. Current affinity: Mid-level compound: intermediate Illusion Affinity (99%).
  • Gives the User the ability to have their registered patterns materialise without rune arrangement or the User's mana manipulation.
[ ]





[Sub-skill: Simulator | Type: Soul/Psychic ]

Desc: Through the Mental Tesseract, the User gains high computational power that will allow them to make estimates on the outcomes of spells and their magic when they activate the Mental Tesseract. The higher their knowledge of the fundamental mechanics of reality, the higher the accuracy of their predictions.

Ability:

Microcosmic Emulator – Simulation of Reality.
  • Gives the User the ability to mentally simulate the consequences of different rune arrangements, spell models and all registered patterns in the Mental Tesseract, enabling the User to determine if a pattern will successfully materialise or not, and how it will interact in different scenarios.
[ ]





The first two were the same as they had originally been, but not the last one. That one had changed from 'Pseudo-Simulator' to just 'Simulator'. Not that such a change was bad. In fact, it was very good. The structure of her Origin Skill had become significantly more complex, by about an additional 30% compared to her old one. She could tell the abilities of the soul construct were capable of more comprehensive and in-depth analysis.





She had managed to recreate and improve on all the functions of her mental tesseract with spiritual energy and soul power over time, taking her soul's abilities to another level, but considering her soul clone's current limitations in that regard, the slight upgrade was a welcome addition. If she had this exact subskill in the last timeline, she estimated her magical progress would've been only half as fast, just because of how complex the skill now was. Her past self would've struggled to utilise it well.





The reason why she was checking her Status though was because of her request for Commander Arkenast. The request she was going to make was nearly the same as the one she had made in the past, just one month earlier. But she wasn't using her main body in the Navy, so she was able to ask now rather than after the Forerunner's Event as she had done in the past. It was her current primary skills that gave her the combat power needed if he accepted her request though, so she pulled her first one up to double-check it.





After a particularly nasty run-in with a memory-altering effect proving her eidetic memory was not infallible, she had developed the habit as a precaution.





[Primary Skill: Intermediate Mage of Illusion's Compendium | Type: Runic/Elemental ]

Rarity: Rare

Tier: V (5)

Desc: The mid-level compound element of illusion has some of the most esoteric capabilities of all the elements, yet few truly comprehend the possibilities of the element. This User has begun to explore the infinite potential of an element that can mimic all the elements and has chosen to follow the method of permanently engraving its runes into their mana pool to manipulate it.

Subskills:

Runic Model: Illusion – The crystallisation of modern rune theory come to fruition.
  • Grants the User the Intermediate Illusion Mage Aspect (Tier V).
  • Grants the User an illusion element runic model that increases in complexity as User adds more runes to it. Current progress: 12% towards advanced level.
Phantasmal Spell Tome – The most important part of being a mage.
  • Grants the User access to the following spells based on current runes in runic model: Lesser Illusion Dispersion, Lesser Mirage, Invisibility, Arcane Detection, Arcane Scan….. [collapsed]
  • Grants the User access to the basic runic theorem knowledge of an intermediate mage.
Subskill slots:
  • [empty]
  • [empty]
  • [empty]
[ ]





Just seeing it made her feel incredibly annoyed. She spent ages earning the right skills to increase the rarity of the skill, but now she had to do it again. At least she knew the best way to improve it.





Because of how tiering up skills and classes functioned, it could be quite hard to get a better rarity. Tiering up a skill consumed the secondary skills in the skill slots, increasing the tier of the class's Aspect so when the class itself tiered up it would give percentage-based boosts to things like mana-sensing capability, spell efficiency and effectiveness, mana density, INT and WIS multipliers, and other bonuses. It was these bonuses she wouldn't be able to gain for her main body because she was going to forego a class, meaning she would never have the same stats as other Users.





When all of a class's primary skills reached the same tier, the class itself would tier up and these bonuses were gained, and then the cycle started again. If someone hadn't merged classes to evolve them, then the class would only need its original primary skill to tier up. If their class had multiple primary skills, the skill amount needed to tier up the class drastically increased.





But doing this didn't increase the rarity of a skill. It didn't add any new subskill to the primary skill. Only when a subskill in the subskill slot was highly compatible with the primary skill would the skill evolve, and permanently gain something new. This was what made a path of progression so useful to many. They already knew which skills were highly compatible.





For people who didn't have a path of progression, they could always decide not to use the secondary skills in the subskill slots if they didn't want to risk losing the skill, but gaining a lower rarity skill locked the User out of gaining a higher rarity one until it disappeared, so it wasn't suggested. It was a good thing she knew what skills she needed to evolve it the way she wanted.





The actual rarity of a class only changed when two main classes were merged, and then the User selected the evolution they wanted, adding one or two more features to the class's Aspects, while also increasing the stat gain and maximum class tier cap to fit the rarity. But because her first primary skill was only Rare, its rarity tier cap was lower than her second primary skill's, and so until she evolved her first primary skill to the rarity level of her second, her class wouldn't be able to tier up fully. Although, as a Rank-1, she had a Rank tier cap of 6 anyway, so she didn't need to be too hasty to evolve it just yet.





Her second primary skill was a little more… unusual.





[Primary Skill: Enhanced Soul, Mind and Spirit | Type: Mental/Magic ]

Rarity: Epic

Tier: V (5)

Desc: The field of the soul is not one studied by many of the material realms. Very few not belonging to the Heavenly Realm choose to apply its functions to their abilities, but this User has chosen to do so. Rather than discover the esoteric Daos and wonders of cultivation, they will instead build up a powerful mind to enhance their magical abilities.

Subskills:

Metaphysical Cognition – The presence of mind increases the presence of soul.
  • Grants the User the Soul Mage Aspect (Tier V).
  • Grants the User the ability to be conscious of their soul's presence at all times, enabling them to detect the application of spiritual energy when casting magic.
Spiritual Control – Soul over mind over matter.
  • Grants the User the ability to imbue their magic and mana with spiritual energy. Allows for remote control and extended field of influence.
  • Grants the User access to the basic spiritual energy and soul power knowledge of a Rank-1 soul mage.
Subskill slots:
  • [empty]
  • [empty]
  • [empty]
[ ]





Technically speaking, there was no such thing as soul magic, for all that it was called that. Soul wasn't an element, nor were there any runes that influenced it, and so she wasn't a soul 'mage', but that was the term the System decided to use as her designation. The class enabled her to enhance her spell-casting ability by creating mental structures that were capable of computing runic algorithms and spell models more easily.





In that sense, the class was mostly a support class to be used in conjunction with another magic class. It didn't give her the capability of supporting the constant information load received through her perception field she kept permanently active with her main body though, so besides in combat, she wasn't using a large perception field.





It was with the soul mage class that she learnt how to make 'cores' of spiritual energy that she stored her monster constructs in, then added illusion mana that mimicked a monster's mana to form the body. Using the 'Scan' function she designed with her Origin Skill, she was able to record the abilities of monsters to use for her purposes, if at weaker strength. As time went by and she quit being Admiral, she stopped using the magic she developed in the Navy. Considering she was going to be using the status of a military member for some time, she was interested to see how much further she could take her old magic.





She closed the screens and jumped down off the wall ledge she had been sitting on. The training camp had officially concluded the day before, the second last day of October, and now was just the day when everyone said their goodbyes and left to go spend the next three months elsewhere. As the mana ice-storm period of the Distorted Depths was far too dangerous for most new members of the Navy, they and all new members were given leave until February. They had received their badges that indicated they were Officers of the Navy yesterday.





She didn't believe that when Griffin came back the next year his discovery of her decision would be an issue. She had firmly 'proved' to him she was in no way a person from Earth in the first timeline, and with that misconception having lasted over two hundred years, it was unlikely he'd suddenly sense something was off. She had used an illusion spell to disguise herself as someone else so she didn't use her real or Adrianna identity when she went to the Forerunner's Event, after all. She expected him to attribute it to his so-called win during the last battle motivating her to gain strength, which would probably make him rather self-satisfied. Well, the more incorrect assumptions he made, the better for her.





What would possibly be an issue is that she planned on revealing her inability to sense killing intent to the Commander. He had actually discovered it last time and got mad at her for hiding such a weakness and not having enough trust in her crewmates to reveal that to them, especially when they were frequently in life-or-death combat. It hadn't been a matter of trust. She just didn't want them to know she was even more abnormal than they thought.





Typically, mages weren't expected to be able to detect killing intent very well, but her complete incapability of doing so quickly became obvious when the stronger monsters' intent knocked everyone else of her Rank unconscious. She had masked her weakness when it came to sensing attacks by developing many detection spells and using her scanning function often.





But she was pretty sure Commander Arkenast would be more curious than anything if she revealed it. She didn't think it was even possible for her to lose his 'favour' as her crewmates had put it, although that was the wrong description. Her abilities weren't why he paid attention to her in the past, and now.





……most of their past interactions had stemmed from him just trying to get a reaction out of her. He could be very annoying when he found someone interesting. Maybe that was why Ross had always complained to her of all people. He felt some bond of shared suffering.





But she could tell that the last of the members of the training camp had left, so it was time she went to go find Ross and ask to meet the Commander. All going well, she would not be leaving like the rest of the former cadets, and would instead stay during the most dangerous months of the Distorted Depths.











"Why are you still here?" the dark-haired man exclaimed, aghast.





She had found him as he was just about to leave the training camp section of the fortress layer. He was staring at her with what seemed to be horror like he was appalled at the idea of willingly choosing to remain in White Squall Fortress any longer than necessary.





"I want to meet the Commander," she replied.





He gazed wearily at her. "You do realise I'm no longer head instructor, right? I'm not in charge of you anymore."





"As an Elite Officer, I don't have the authority to meet with the Commander. You weren't going to be dismissed from your position until the day after the training camp-" She gestured to him and then the open door of the building. "-which I assume you were going to do now."





He ran a hand down his face exasperatedly. "Oh, that's right, I'm talking to the person who memorised the entire rulebook of the fortress's Navy operations." He paused and narrowed his eyes at her with suspicion. "Did that happen before or after your little adventure down to the mainframe level?"





"I read it before that."





His expression became strange as he heard her answer. "…I'm not sure if that makes it better or worse," he muttered. He pulled back his sleeve to check his wristwatch, glanced at the open doorway, and sighed. "It's true I was heading there, so I may as well take you. I doubt you'd waste his time with something stupid."





She opened her mouth to respond but he glared at her before she could. "No, don't tell me. I don't want to know what you plan to ask him. I was here, expecting to be free from dealing with you lot."





He began walking to leave the building and headed towards the main command building, and so she followed, staying silent as he started his complaining yet again.





"I can tell you, I am not ever accepting one of the Commander's offers again. Becoming head instructor was the worst mistake of my entire life. If he tries to get me to transfer, or take another position, or even promote me I will firmly decline-"





…there was a lot she really wanted to say about that topic but she kept quiet.





"-quit if he tries to do it anyway. And if I hear one more 'training grounds', 'training camp', or 'spar' I am going to punch someone. I swear, this month has made me lose more years of my life than ever before, regardless of my current lifespan. Nothing the Commander has done in the past has come close to what I've had to put up with these last-"





It continued like this until they reached the main command building and entered it, making their way to where the Commander's office was. They earned quite a few looks as they went through the building, no thanks to the overly verbal Officer next to her.





"Sixteen years under the Commander, and I am at wit's end. Now if he offered to transfer me to another fortress, that I would accept, if only to escape him and his-"





"You do realise," she interrupted. "We're outside the Commander's door? He can probably hear you."





"-tendency to-" He paused when he registered that she had spoken up. Then he realised what she had said, and glanced between her and the door in question.





Right at that moment the door opened for them to see the smirking blonde-haired Commander Arkenast there. "You ruined my fun. I was interested to hear what else he had to say about me."





Very predictably, Ross Stanhope glared at his superior. The scarred man glanced between them both. "Now, are you here for separate reasons or?"





"Separate reasons, but it's fine sir. She can listen." Ross glanced at her. "In actual fact, she already knows what I want to request."





"Is that so? Well, come in," the Commander replied, standing back so they could enter his office. The Commander sat down behind his desk as the dark-haired Officer stepped forward.





"I request to take leave," he asked, standing up straight with his hands behind his back.





The battle-scarred man raised an eyebrow. "The instant the training camp ends? Are you still mad at me for the training grounds prank?"





The Officer very nearly glared at his superior once more but coughed to recompose himself and shook his head. "I had planned to request this before that."





Commander Arkenast smirked and crossed his arms. "But what if I don't want to give you permission?"





Ross sighed wearily. "Please sir, I believe a two-week break is an acceptable request."





"Hmmm." The Commander drew out his hum, smirking as he registered the twitch of the Officer's expression. "Well, alright then. But on one condition."





The dark-haired man gazed dully at him before shaking his head. "If it gets me away from here, I don't care what I have to do."





Commander Arkenast turned to Adrianna with a toothy grin. "Did you hear that? He's accepted. This came out of his own mouth. You're witness to this."





The man turned back to Ross and spread his arms. "Congratulations, Stanhope, on your promotion from Elite Officer to Head Officer!"





He stared. "What-"





"Now, obviously you wouldn't take on the duties just yet, considering you've just taken leave," the Commander continued quickly, pulling out a draw of his desk, "But once you come back you will immediately receive your tasks and responsibilities." He got up with a small object in hand and walked speedily towards the man. "The workload may be hard at first but I have full confidence you will succeed at it."





"But, sir-"





"The training camp under your authority had exemplary results, so I expect you will achieve great results in this position too." He roughly shoved the Head Officer badge into the dark-haired man's hands and began pushing him out the door. "After your holiday, I expect we will be seeing each other much more often."





He smiled and waved to Ross as he began to close the door. "I look forward to working with you, Head Officer Stanhope."





"Wait-"





Click.






The door shut on him, leaving only the Commander and her in the room. The wild-haired man dusted his palms with a satisfied smile and grinned at her. "That was much easier than I expected."





He walked back over to his desk to sit down, then reclined back in his chair as he looked at her. "It can be quite hard to get that man to open up, but I've found when he does, he can be very talkative. The fact that he's acting like that after only a month of knowing you is quite astonishing."





She hadn't exactly done anything for him to be like that besides be subjected to too much of the Commander's attention as well. But she was sure the man in front of her knew that.





"It seems it hasn't quite clicked for him that out of all the people to complain to, he chose the one with eidetic memory," she replied.





Commander Arkenast's bushy eyebrows shot up before he burst out into loud laughter. "Oh dear, it seems he's shot himself in the foot this time," he said, chuckling. He waved to her to come closer, so she did. "Well, let's hear what you're here for now."





"I came here about two things, sir," she began calmly. "One is to inform you about a feature of my capabilities that would be important for you to know as I continue working in the Navy."





He raised an eyebrow curiously. "Oh?"





She took a breath and continued, "I can't detect any form of killing intent."





Her answer made him pause, and consider it for a moment. "Reduced sensitivity?"





"No," she replied, shaking her head. "Complete incapability of sensing anything. I am immune to it, and can't emit it myself."





He went silent as he observed her, likely thinking over the implications of this for her time in the Navy, and possibly wondering how true it was. "I think this needs testing," he said after a while. He gestured to her. "Do you mind if I…"





She shook her head, and so he watched her as his irises gained a red-hued outline. As the seconds ticked by, the hue deepened in colour indicating he was increasing the strength, but she was perfectly fine with no outward symptoms and experienced none of the sensation of deep fear nor imminent death most experienced when subjected to killing intent. As a Rank-5 combatant over several centuries old, he definitely had accumulated strong killing intent.





The red hue disappeared as he leaned back, looking very intrigued. "While I'm certain there's stronger killing intent than mine out there, I think that was quite enough for me to know you're telling the truth. That is… very interesting," he said, tapping his fingers on his desk. "Any idea why that's the case?"





"It could be a side-effect relating to my talent with spiritual energy but I'm not sure," she replied.





"And I guess you're telling me this so the fact it wasn't revealed won't become an issue later," he mused. "I can tell you that it won't be too much of a problem, as we don't expect high killing intent sensitivity from magic users anyway. Although I am curious about how this works in a physical combat setting," he added with a grin. He gestured to her. "What was the second thing you wanted to talk to me about?"





"I want to request to stay here for the next three months," she responded.





"I see." He observed her with a smile as he held his chin. "You do realise I've had a few requests like these in the past, right? Very few have I ever accepted. What makes you think I won't deny your request?"





"Well sir, for one thing, I'm not an adrenaline-filled battle addict without a sense for their own capabilities, nor a young noble with little succession rights who thinks they'll become their clan's new favourite by bringing back a few stuffed king-ranked monster heads, and I don't intend on trying to fast-track to the next Rank by attempting to slay a deadly monster way above my pay grade," she stated dryly.





He laughed. "All right, you got me. Those are exactly the same reasons why I denied their requests. Then I'll ask a different question." He pointed at her. "Why do you want to stay here?"





"To become familiar with the Navy," she replied. "Especially as I'm now a Squad Leader, and will soon be in charge of the M.W.S. Dawnlight. I'll have to deal with the ice-storm period of the Distorted Depths next year, and I want to get experience with it now when I won't get killed instead of experiencing it for the first time next year on the ocean."





"So it's due to you wanting to prepare," he commented, eyeing her curiously. "What would you do if I declined your request?"





"I'd probably go back to doing mercenary work," she said with a shrug. "That, or adventuring. It's best if as the Squad Leader, I'm at a much higher level when the others come back."





"Hmm." Commander Arkenast crossed his arms. "If I accepted, you'd have to be temporarily demoted from Squad Leader."





"I need a squad to be a Squad Leader."





That made him chuckle. "Right. You get it." He rubbed his chin thoughtfully as he considered her request, and then he smirked.





She did not like that smirk.





"I'll let you stay on one condition," he said, lifting a finger.





She gazed wearily at him. "Could I please hear what this condition is before I agree, sir?"





The battle-scarred man clicked his tongue. "Learnt from Stanhope's mistake, have you? Oh well." He grinned wickedly. "You help me test out how this no killing intent thing works, and I'll let you stay for the next three months."





She went silent as she considered what he meant. Then she sighed slightly as she realised she was talking to one of the aforementioned battle addicts. "You want me to spar with you?"





His grin widened. "It would only be for the next month, as my ship will set out in December to head for the central waters. I won't occupy all your time, maybe every few days." He rested his chin on his hand. "But I have a feeling you could make a very interesting physical combatant if you wanted."





It wasn't actually a bad suggestion. She did have some experience with fighting physical combatants up close, even if not with her limbs as such, and she knew her inability to manifest killing intent meant she was a very unpredictable fighter for them. If she could use the experience with her main body it would be useful. The only issue was she knew exactly what the man in front of her was like when fighting. But it was a little detail in the scheme of things.





"I'm fine with it. Learning how to fight a physical combatant up close might be helpful," she eventually replied.





"Very good." He smiled. "Now, as for what you'll do during these next few months…" He paused to consider something, seemingly having had an idea. He glanced at her again. "As the future leader of the crew of Dawnlight, it might be a good idea for you to become familiar with the combat operations of the fortress's main attack crew, rather than just stay here and combat shoreline monsters." He tapped his fingers on his desk thoughtfully.





He leaned forward to gaze intently at her. "I'll tell you what. My ship will be doing several rounds this month as we prepare to head into the central zone, getting back into the right habits after 8 months without the ice-storm period. If you," He pointed at her, "Can prove your abilities with us during this time, then I'll put you on my ship for the rest of the ice-storm period."





She stared at him for a few seconds, feeling quite surprised. He wasn't one to ever let a new, low-ranked, young member of the Navy do something like that. "But sir, I'm still Rank-1. And Level 52."





"We have a few Rank-1s on the ship. You'd never be asked to enter combat unless under very specific circumstances, circumstances we try to avoid, so your level isn't a worry." Then the Commander raised an eyebrow. "But they're highly talented individuals who've performed far, far better than their peers. Which is why I need to see in person how you'll go over the next month."





She nodded. "Then I'll do my best, but I'm not sure I'll meet your requirements."





He pointed a finger at her. "And that answer has instantly made you better than the hundreds of idiots who've come to me before spouting words of unfounded self-confidence. Nothing is proven yet, so I'm only asking for your full effort. As for who you'll be placed under…." He thought for a moment and then grinned. "I'm sure my new Head Officer will be interested to know who's going to be one of his subordinates when he comes back."





And things were working out just like they had been in the past timeline. Ross would never be able to escape the curse of being given more work. She nodded, expecting the Commander to direct her to someone to arrange for her continued stay in the Navy, but the blonde-haired man said something else.





"And there's someone I'd like to introduce you to, but…." He blinked and then smiled. "Ah. Here he is."





Then she saw him. She felt her body freeze up as she felt a very familiar presence enter her perception field, and knock on the Commander's door, a stack of papers in hand.





The Commander called out to him, "Come in."





The door was pushed open to reveal a young man in his early twenties with tousled sea-green hair, sea-green eyes, and cyan wave patterns that trailed down the right side of his face and neck, appearing on his forearms as well. The tips of his ears were semi-translucent and luminous aqua veins could be seen within them. He paused when he saw her and gave her a smile and nod, before walking up to the Commander's desk to deposit the documents.





"Thank you," Commander Arkenast replied. "Now, Wharifin, this," he said, gesturing to her, "Is Officer Adrianna Riftmire, who is the new Squad Leader chosen from this month's elite training camp. She'll be working with you for the next few months."





The young man blinked in surprise. "You mean Ross's group? I see."





She stared with slightly wide eyes at the young man who turned back to her, holding out his hand for her to shake as he smiled. "Hi. My name's Caspian Wharifin."





He was the man who had been her closest subordinate for 25 years in the Navy and was quite possibly the worst person the Commander could've ever chosen to put beside her.

Yay! Happy 19th birthday to me! On Friday the Thirteenth :/
Also, an additional explanation of classes and skills and stuff. Not mandatory to read as the stuff described will later be revealed in the story.
Both skills and classes have rarities. Both skills and classes have tiers.

3 secondary skills tier up a primary skill (normally). When all primary skills of a class are the same tier, the class tiers up. But different rarities have different Max Tiers.

Common: 3 tiers.

Uncommon: 6 tiers.

Rare: 9 tiers.

Epic: 12 tiers.

Ancient: 15 tiers.

Legendary: 18 tiers.

Mythical: 21 tiers.

And different ranks have different Rank Tier Caps. Each Rank the tier cap increases by 3, so two people, both at Rank-0 but one with an Epic class and one with an Uncommon class, can only tier up their skills to Tier 3, regardless of the rarity of their primary skills. But at Rank-2, the one with the Uncommon class can only tier up their class to Tier 6, while the Epic User can tier up their class to Tier 9. An important thing to note is that the Rarity tier cap is the same for both skills and classes.

Aspect tiers correspond to their respective primary skills. This will be explained later, but I'll put it here just to make things easier to understand. The difference between a class and independent main skills Like Lucy's Alter-Ego skill is that a class requires you to select its Class Aspect as well. Independent main skills don't automatically come with Aspects. So it's possible for someone to be unable to select a new class even if they have an empty main skill slot, if they've already filled all their Aspect slots.

When the primary skill tiers up, its corresponding Aspect tiers up too. But only when all primary skills of the class are at the same tier does the Class gain a tier, and then the stats of the Aspects are improved.

Also, class evolutions are mostly independent of skill evolutions. Merging two classes (basically making a class have two Aspects and two primary skills) of equal rarity will evolve a class, increasing its tier cap and Aspect bonuses, as well as adding new effects to the Aspects. Merging two classes with one having a higher rarity primary skill than the other will make the class have the same rarity as the highest rarity primary skill. This happened in Lucy's case in the past timeline, where she obtained a second higher rarity Epic class for her second main skill and merged it with the first Rare class, making the new class's rarity Epic. It also ended up giving her a new 'Class Title', the name for her Alter-Ego's current class: 'Illusionist of Monstrous Apparitions'. Because technically her class is made of two classes. When she was just Rank-0 her class title would've been Intermediate Illusion Mage, the name of her first class Aspect.

It's complicated, I know. And I have yet to describe how stats work, skills vs magic, cultivators qi vs mana, how I calculate ATK, HP, MATK, SATK, regen, Daos and Grand-spells, Archmages vs Grand-mages vs High-mages ecetera ecetera, but I'll get there. Everything is planned out. And my notes describe everything as being a hell of a lot simpler than I'm showing here.

I will be adding a Glossary/Index/Guide thing after I post Chapter 50, which will list all the strength levels such as lesser, low-ranked, intermediate, greater and so on, in context with the different races and realms. As well as a comprehensive description of how the strength system works, along with a flowchart for the skills. As the story goes on, I'll try to make sure the details aren't dumped on people. This section is just if you'd prefer an explanation now rather than get the details slowly fed to you over the course of 50 more chapters.
 
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Chapter 37 (1 of 2) Elves and public speaking.
"Thank you again for agreeing to meet with me."





"It was no issue," she replied. "I have not needed to visit any of the other realms for some time. Using one of my Obelisk teleports was a simple thing."





Trisroa Vel-Winteridge, or Roa as she preferred to be called, watched the blonde-haired man in front of her curiously as they both sat down in chairs opposite each other. It had been quite the surprise to receive notice from the Adventurer's Guild that Efratel Vadel wished to meet her again, after three months of no word from him. Especially considering the… Archmage incident. She gestured to him.





"You look to be in good health, so I take it you and your cousin have been safe and well?" she asked.





He nodded with a smile. "Indeed. That issue has been… mostly resolved. In fact," he continued, "My request has something to do with that as well."





Hearing that, she narrowed her eyes, but the man opposite her held up his hand and shook his head. "It's not related to Merkenia Alichanteu. I'm not going to try to involve you with an Archmage."





That made her feel more relaxed, and she nodded. Although it was a mystery what sort of discussion he could want that would be related to the Permafrost Glacial Abode trip but not the Archmage. She supposed she was about to find out.





Then he said something absurd.





Efratel pointed at himself. "You see, Marellen got sponsored like you suggested, and I'm his private manager now."





She couldn't help but stare at him for a while. She… had suggested that but never once had she thought it would happen. She could agree that Marellen was talented, but to be a sponsored mage of a noble meant you needed both talent and connections, and she remembered that Marellen had explained he wasn't even an heir, and that both of them came from a Major Kingdom's Barony. And who would even accept the political risk of their situation anyway?





Efratel grinned. "It's rather funny to see you looking so shocked."





She blinked when she realised what expression she was making and coughed. "Apologies. That is… very surprising."





"Quite. I'm still struggling to accept the fact myself," he said with a strange expression. He shook his head and continued speaking, "It occurred purely due to a series of coincidences, so Marellen and I are currently trying to work a few details out about this 'sponsorship' thing."





"And so, who is this new sponsor of yours?" she asked curiously.





He hesitated. "Ha… well…" He frowned slightly and rubbed his head. "I'm not sure how to go about explaining this." He gestured to her. "Have you heard the rumours of there being a new Aurelian Commission Head?"





"The Adventurer's Guild in the Beast Realm is a branch of the Mystical Realm's Adventurer's Guild, so yes, I have received that particular piece of interesting information." She realised what he meant and very slightly raised an eyebrow. "You mean to tell me you were sponsored by the soon-to-be Honorary Count of the Commission themselves?"





"A fact I am still trying to reconcile in my mind, yes," he replied with a nod.





"I suppose that might explain why you haven't been chased after by any hostile water Archmage from Alichanteu," she said after a moment. "Alichanteu is a County under the Commission, after all." Then she sent him an odd look. "Although hearsay says the Commission Head is not the real authority behind the scenes."





"Apparently the situation is mostly intentional and on the Head's behalf, but I'm still trying to work out just what exactly the power dynamic within the Commission is," he muttered. Efratel sighed with a shake of his head. "It seems to be safe for Marellen and me. The Commission Head's aide personally affirmed that we would be protected as if the Commission Head had all the power."





"Intentional and on their behalf…" she mused. "Interesting. And I assume this is not something to be revealed to just anybody then."





"I doubt many would believe you if you said the Commission's four Counties were listening to a juvenile new leader anyway." He paused with a strange look on his face. "Have we just discovered the reason why the Commission Head is pretending to be a false leader? Making people underestimate them?"





"Ensuring the rest of the Empire's nobility doesn't see them as a threat perhaps," she considered. "And so, how does being sponsored relate to what you wish to speak about today?"





He smiled. "Well, I've been asked to offer you the Commission Head's sponsorship as well."





She returned to staring silently at him for a while, but she didn't care. She had just heard something extremely confusing, shocking, and unbelievable. "Me."





"You," he confirmed with a nod.





"They want to sponsor me."





He just waited as she sat there, stunned. She rubbed her temples and frowned slightly. "I'm… not sure how to respond." She glanced at him. "Perhaps I should first ask why they would want to sponsor me?"





"The Head mentioned it would be worthwhile to sponsor a member of the Snow Elf bloodline," he replied.





That answer made her rather unhappy. "So, this is about my bloodline?"





For some reason, he hesitated. "Maybe, but… the Head seemed to know of you before receiving news of our party if I interpreted things correctly. Your full name was stated."





She narrowed her eyes at him. "My history with the Vel-Winteridge Duchy of Glenheim may contain many undesirable aspects, but I am not that infamous."





The blonde-haired man just shrugged. "Sorry, but I don't know. Maybe you can ask the Head yourself if you accept the sponsorship."





She frowned at his response but realised there was another important question she needed to ask. "But who is the Commission Head? That particular detail has been slow to spread to the Beast Realm."





Efratel grinned. "Well, this was why I said the sponsorship was very coincidental. It was pure luck." Then he gestured to her. "In fact, you've heard of them as well."





"… how do you know I've heard of them?" she asked dubiously.





"Because we've spoken about them to you," he replied with a smile.





She tried to figure out what he meant. Considering he had used 'we' he must've been referring to the time spent with the two mercenaries, Marellen and him, but they had discussed many topics then, so selecting one mentioned individual from all of it was a rather hard task to do…





The blonde-haired man smirked and decided to give her a clue. "The Commission Head is a girl."





A girl? But who could- wait.








Her eyes widened incredulously. "Don't tell me you're referring to that woman who we persistently and futilely tried to persuade Marellen was not a time traveller for the entire Permafrost Glacial Abode trip?"





"That's the one," he said with a wide grin. "Lucille Goldcroft. The new Head of the Aurelian Commission."





"… that is a coincidence beyond the mind's imagining," she replied, flabbergasted.





"And also the reason why we got her support to enter the Academy." Efratel nodded. "Although, she also wanted to know what exactly happened with the Archmage back then. It sounded like she was taking her job as the Commission's new Head very seriously."





She blinked as he gained a strange expression. "But not that seriously. She hid her identity when we met again so she could see my reaction when she revealed herself as the Commission Head." Then he scowled. "She also never signed the letter requesting my presence on my debut invitation with her name, so Marellen and I were panicking over what would happen to me when I went to Headquarters."





"So, still as much an interesting character as I've heard?" she replied, amused.





"Yes." He sighed. "In fact, when she revealed her identity to the Commission's nobility, she slid down the staircase handrail."





"… are you certain this sponsorship offer isn't some elaborate prank she decided upon?" she asked with suspicion.





"Feeling less certain after this conversation, that's for sure," Efratel muttered. He shook his head with another sigh and gestured to her. "Anyway, if you accept her sponsorship, I'll be your manager too. She's suggested I allow you to work with Marellen, however, if you wish, you will be sponsored through the Adventurer's Guild rather than become a mage of All-Aeon Athenaeum."





"Hmm." She pondered over the idea of being sponsored, and what that would mean for her life from thereon after. "I do not desire to join the Athenaeum, that is true…" She looked at him curiously. "What would the Commission Head wish for Marellen and me to do?"





"She has mentioned sending you both to outer planes as expeditionary researchers," he explained. "Old Era planes specifically. It would be no issue to give one of the non-factioneer exploration slots to you with the Commission Head's status."





Exploring Old Era planes sounded… very interesting. Investigating ancient ruins and fallen cities to find powerful artifacts and lost magic of times gone by was the archetypal idea of every magic user's dream. But being sponsored by a Count of the Aeternus plane… and the Commission Head didn't have the same status as just any Count.





The finance available to the Aurelian Commission was second only to the Eternal Duchies, and they held a position most recognised as equal to the Marches. She was bound to get caught up in politics eventually if she accepted the offer, and if her family heard word of it… she didn't want to have to deal with them. She had been enjoying living as just 'Roa Winteridge'.





"I think… if I accept this offer, that I will wish to eventually meet the Commission Head in person," she finally replied.





The blonde-haired man in front of her nodded in understanding. "I assumed so and even mentioned this to her. She said she intends on inviting Marellen and I to Headquarters sometime next year, and I expect that will include you too if you accept." He hesitated and gave her a sheepish grin. "But if you accept the sponsorship, can I ask that you don't tell Marellen who the Commission Head is? I may or may not be trying to keep her identity a secret from him until he meets her."





She smiled. "I am sure his reaction will be interesting to see when that happens. I will endeavour to avoid revealing this if I happen to accept this offer." She tapped her fingers against the armrest of her chair thoughtfully for a while and then looked up. "Can I request that I reveal my answer in a week's time? I believe this requires more thought."





"Certainly," he said with a nod. Then he smirked. "Although, I know of one more important factor you may want to consider while thinking this over. The Commission Head is in charge of a very rich organisation. Please keep in mind that she now has full authority over the Founder's vault, containing the accumulated donations of thousands of nobility over the past fifteen centuries. And she has permitted you and Marellen to have no budget."





… she certainly needed to consider this offer further. "I will make sure to consider this offer carefully." Then she hesitated. "But… what would happen when it comes to my family?"





He frowned slightly and held his chin. "Well, she's willing to sponsor you, which means she's not afraid to deal with any political issues. You're not a direct bloodline member of the Duchy either, so I doubt it would be too big of a problem if they discovered you working for her." She nodded in agreement as he thought over it. "I'll ask the Head through a letter, and I should be able to get back to you by the time you've decided things on your end."





"Then I suppose we agree to meet here again at the same time next week?" she replied.





He nodded. "That sounds acceptable. Now, I believe that was all I needed to talk about with you today…" He looked down at his watch, then looked at her and grinned. "But it would be a shame if we ended our discussion so soon, wouldn't it? I'm interested to hear how things have gone for you these last few months."





She was slightly surprised but happy to continue her relationship with the young noble. Her party members had been interesting people. "Of course. I myself am curious to know how your interactions with the new Commission Head proceeded."





"Yes, well, she is… interesting, that's for sure," Efratel said with a chuckle. He smirked. "And Marellen wanted me to ask you a few more questions about your ice-fire magic."





She shook her head wryly. "That would be like him. Then, let us leave the complicated questions for later, and I will discuss how my last few months have been…."










"-competition will test your ability and push you to your limits, and the Commission will support you the entire time. With the lucky winner getting my permission to implement my plans-"





In an enormous, large hall, a dark-haired girl was speaking to an audience from a balcony. She had been relaxed and easy-going, and she was smiling cheerfully as she continued speaking for a while longer. She had clumsily stumbled over her words a few times while doing her speech and didn't carry herself with the seriousness and calm attitude most would have when talking in front of such a large congregation. The girl made a show of looking down to read the rest of her speech off a piece of paper and looked up to finish. She gave them a wide smile.





"-The representatives and I all look forward to seeing the results of the first round in two days. As the Aurelian Commission Head, I thank you for coming today, and wish you the best of luck."





With that, she turned around and walked through the pair of doors behind her, a spring in her step. A blonde and blue-haired man stepped forward to take over her spot and began speaking to the audience. The instant she stepped through the doors, her cheerful smile faded to become a calm one, her open body language was erased and changed to controlled meticulous movements, and her steps became measured and steady. There was no trace of the happy-go-lucky girl from before.





In the room on the other side of the doors, Vincent stared at her with a strange expression.





"I can still never get used to seeing you do that," he stated. "It's like I'm looking at a completely different person."





"That is the intended purpose of my act, you know," Lucille replied, sitting down on a couch. "If you think that way, then it means I'm doing something right."





"Your 'act' goes far beyond the normal definitions of the word," he said, sitting down on a couch opposite her. "Your tone changes so utterly that it takes me a few seconds for me to register that it's you speaking."





"Ah, you mean when I change my voice?" Lucy gestured to her neck. "This was a skill I developed because I needed to make my illusions more realistic. That changed when I finally became capable of creating illusory sounds. I can also 'throw my voice' as ventriloquists do."





She had actually learnt those skills on Earth. Consistently and successfully running away from her great uncle all the time required unique skills.





He regarded her with mild bemusement. "I suppose that's one more strange fact about you to add to the list."





"One of quite a few, I assume?" she asked wryly.





"You could say that." He sighed and shook his head. "Anyway, after this, the first round begins. The rest of the Gold Dome Hall western sector is almost prepared for the different categories, they just need a few more hours and then very little setup will be required tomorrow."





"Glad to see everything is on track," she said. "Depending on the success of this event, this might become a yearly occurrence."





He gave her a curious look. "Yearly occurrence?"





She nodded as she watched Artair through the large windows on either side of the double doors continue to explain the event to the audience. "The Commission doesn't have any event unique to itself, which is unusual for a large Faction, even if the Commission isn't a normal Faction. Turning this competition into an annual thing will increase cohesion and sense of Faction loyalty among the members," she explained. "It would also serve as a way for nobility to identify promising individuals to support, which enables less talent among the Commission's members to go unseen."





Vincent nodded thoughtfully. "And if we increase the scale of the event, the Faction would have a truly special celebration that would strengthen connections between the Counties' nobility and outside. We could also invite guest judges from other Factions and the Institutions to facilitate good relations with them." He glanced at Artair. "But if we do that, I'll be worried about the attention the Coalition and Athenaeum will give us."





"As this is the first year the Commission has done this, I've been lax with the restrictions for proposed projects," she replied. "But if this is well received, I will ensure any magic or magic technology proposed must be firmly within the confines of a suggested product to sell or business to invest in, so we don't infringe upon their yearly events."





Lucy raised her arms above her to stretch. "And I think we'll be ignored this year because the final round makes it so they have to suggest it as a business idea, as the separate categories are removed by that stage."





"I suppose we just wait to see how well this goes," he said.





She and Vincent were in the Gold Dome Hall, the largest event venue in Gilded Seat. The Headquarters didn't have the facilities to hold all the participants, and so the Commission used a wing of the hall instead. The next year, when the external debut would occur, the entire Gold Dome Hall would be used to contain all the Empire and inter-realm representatives. Currently, the opening ceremony of the competition was occurring, where Artair was explaining the rules to the audience below.





The actual event was fairly simple. Different parts of the facility were set up for the different categories, such as magic engineering and product concepts, where the participants would have booths to showcase their ideas. The judges, members of the Commission who elected to stay for the competition as well as the debut, were to go around and evaluate everyone's ideas.





As nobility, she expected there would be a fair amount of corruption and bribery going on, which was why the commoner sections would be judged purely by Headquarters' Commission staff, who had a greater quantity of commoners among them. Corruption would still be present there too, but to a lesser extent. No noble would be able to threaten a commoner into ensuring their own child's proposal is given a pass, as they were separated.





She was thinking of turning the competition into a type of business conference and expo. It would enable her to better use the 'Commission' part of the Aurelian Commission, making use of the Faction's status to double as both a corporation and a proper government organisation, possible only because of the structure of the Empire.





Of course, politics being what they were in a feudal society, she would have greater restrictions than a government organisation on Earth, but lesser restrictions in some cases too. Such as legally being able to destroy other Factions, conquer planes, and kill things in general.





She was sure it was only the all-powerful System that stopped the Empire's society of 304 billion residents, excluding the unranked planes, from descending into chaos. Status screens were very useful for controlling the lives of hundreds of millions of commoners when you were a Titled noble.





While she could continue musing about how an all-encompassing incomprehensibly powerful non-physical entity managed to keep a feudal-level war-mongering Empire from instantaneously falling to ruin when they hadn't even developed airplanes yet, Artair was finishing up his speech, so she returned her attention to her present location.





The blonde and blue-haired man gave the crowd a wave, turned around with a confident smile on his face, and then walked towards the doors. The instant they shut behind him he slumped.





"That was tiring." He sighed. "How many times did you say I have to do this again?"





"Before and after each round, and then at the closing ceremony, so that will be about seven times," she replied with a smirk.





He gazed wearily at her and then walked over to an armchair to sit down. "Surely seven speeches is a bit too much?"





She tilted her head innocently. "But if you become the Count, you'll have to make far, far more speeches than just these."





He stared at her for about two seconds before frowning at the ground. "Maybe I should give up the succession after all?" he muttered.





She shook her head wryly as Vincent spoke up, "Please don't. The other Counties would prefer to see Alichanteu survive beyond only one more generation."





"Yes, if I had to meet Arwen any more frequently than I already do, I would instantaneously pass off the Faction inheritance token to the first person who asks," she added.





Artair glanced between them both hesitantly. "… I thought you've said you weren't going to get involved in the Alichanteu succession fight?"





"Oh, I'm not," she replied with a nod. "But I am perfectly happy to express my opinions about who I would not support for the next Count." She pointed at him. "That's because nobody will care about the words of the 'puppet leader', the other Counties have a no-interference rule, and only the vassals of Alichanteu have the real decision-making power here. Which," she continued, "lies mostly in the hands of the neutral faction you discussed the other day."





"Well, I suppose…" Artair considered with a strange look on his face. "But… if you say you're staying neutral about something, aren't you supposed to not tell anyone your real thoughts?"





"That is how most nobility would typically proceed regarding something like this, yes," Vincent replied dryly. "In case you haven't worked it out, Lucille is unique."





She narrowed her eyes at her aide but magnanimously elected to ignore what he was implying. "I also happen to not officially be a noble yet," she pointed out.





"You have about a month until you do though, as the Empire's end-of-year banquet is soon," Artair responded. "Speaking of which…" He glanced at Lucy. "Am I supposed to call you Count or Countess?"





"Count. It would be Countess if I was married to a Count," she told him. "But considering my title would only be used when I'm at official Empire events, I doubt you'd have to call me that very often. I'm the Faction Head first and foremost here."





"On the topic of marriage…" Vincent spoke up with a slight grin, "Have you realised just how many marriage offers you'll be getting once you finally step into the central Empire?"





Her expression went flat. "Burn them."





"…I think you might have some problems there when it comes to the marriage offers of the Marches and Duchies…" Artair added hesitantly.





Lucille gestured offhandedly to her aide. "And that is when he needs to exercise his power as the 'real' Faction Head to step in and ignore them all for me."





Vincent smirked. "But what if I accept?"





She slowly turned to stare at him. "Then that is when I will exercise my power as the real Faction Head to step in and ignore them all for me."





He chuckled. "I suppose I'll save you the effort and decline them all beforehand."





"I am truly grateful from the bottom of my heart that I have such an extremely capable aide," she stated dryly. She shook her head and pulled out her pocket watch to check the time, and then gestured to them both. "I believe it may be time for us to end our conversation here, as I'm sure we all have plenty of work to get back to."





Vincent nodded while Artair just groaned and buried his head in his hands. "Don't remind me. And Arwen's tag-a-long won't even do anything to help."





She smirked. "But if you become the Count, you'll have to do much more work than this."





He slowly raised his head to gaze wearily at her. "Are you sure I can't give up the succession?"





"Absolutely. Because I might end up having to erase Alichanteu if you do."











After some time, she was finally released from all her work to take a break. Deciding to go for a walk, Lucy used her perception field to avoid people so no opportunistic nobility would find her. She navigated her way through the wing of the Gold Dome Hall, past the extravagant vases and paintings that decorated the rooms, past windows behind expensive curtains and-





She paused when she saw a very… unusual scene occurring in one of the rooms that had just entered her perception. With a slightly strange expression, she changed her path and walked towards the room. She stuck her head around the corner, looking at the visage of Viscountess Margaery Femidela in the room, who had her back turned. The woman paused for a second and turned around to see Lucy there, and then smirked as she spread her arms.





"Oh dear. It seems I've been caught."





Lying there on the ground around her were four dead bodies, three of them male, and one female. One was slumped against the side of a couch, and there was a fair amount of blood covering all of their clothes. Two of them had strange puncture wounds, while the other two seemed to have died from poisoning. The carpet was stained red, and some sections of Viscountess Femidela's outfit of dark trousers and shirt seemed to be suspiciously darker than the surrounding cloth. The curtains of the room were torn in places, and there was also blood smeared on some of the walls. The ceiling chandelier was hanging by only half of its fixings.





"Hmm." Lucy took a step into the room and observed the surroundings with a mix of morbid interest, slight curiosity at what caused such a situation, and mild bemusement. "I'm not entirely sure the curator will appreciate the new change in décor."





The Viscountess chuckled. "Really? But I worked so hard to find a new shade of carpet that he might find appealing," she replied, gesturing to the stained carpet.





"Perhaps the members of the Evernight March may enjoy it," Lucy told her. She tilted her head as she looked at the four bodies on the ground. "Which force were these from?"





"Oh, both Olden and Radical," the Viscountess said, giving her a casual shrug. "It seems a little conflict occurred between the two groups, so I decided to step in and resolve the situation for them."





"And the identities of these people in particular are…?" Lucy asked.





Viscountess Femidela pointed to them. "Two of the men were participants, while the other two here were some of the Commission's staff."





Lucy raised an eyebrow. "They just happened to chance upon each other in this room, then began fighting?"





The woman in front of her let out a light laugh and shook her head. "There may have been a few letters planted by me requesting them to come here, all under the disguise of it being their faction's orders."





"I see." Lucille took another glance around the room. "Considering their bodies haven't disintegrated, I'll take it that they've already used their last resurrections. Will you send for someone to remove them?"





"No need. I'll take care of it myself," Viscountess Femidela replied. The brown-haired woman snapped her fingers as a white 2-dimensional disc appeared in mid-air, and she plunged her arm within it. When she withdrew her hand, held within it was a small vial filled with a grey liquid of some kind. She walked over to each body and dripped several drops on them. As Lucy watched, the bodies and their clothes melted away, steam rising from where they were. The liquid they turned into quickly evaporated, and the Viscountess returned the vial to her dimensional skill.





"The Grey-Bloom Dissipation poison is a particularly hard poison to synthesize for one that's Rare-ranked," Lucy remarked once she was done. "Was that your own work?"





"It was, yes," the Viscountess said. She gave Lucy a curious look. "You have experience with it?"





"Not so much when it comes to using it on dead bodies," Lucy replied, although she had used it for that at one stage, "However, I was once interested to see how its alchemical properties worked when infused with a specific fire-type spiritual plant of the Heavenly Realm."





"And the outcome of that experiment?" Viscountess Femidela asked with interest.





"It changed the poison from one requiring physical contact to a form of gas," Lucy told her with a strange expression. "And the spiritual properties it gained meant the poison became a soul dissipation poison instead. That was one biohazard I regret creating."





"Well, I however am very interested to know what spiritual plant you used." The poison master smirked.





Lucy grinned. "I'm sure you are, but the problem with the poison was not the fact it was a soul dissipation poison. My issue with it," she explained, "Was that it tried to dissipate my soul as well, and ignored all protective measures I had in place. If you wish to die while using the poison on your enemies, then I'm willing to give you the recipe."





The woman blinked. "Ah. That would be an issue. No, I suppose I'll pass on your offer in that case," she said with a smile.





Lucy took another glance around the room. "Were those the only ones you needed to deal with?"





The Viscountess smirked and shook her head. "They weren't, but besides the ones I've already dealt with, the others I will deal with another day. I'll send for some of the Commission's staff to clean this up now."





Lucille nodded and then took out her pocket watch to check the time. "It appears to be time for lunch in only half an hour, so it would be best to deal with this before then."





Viscountess Femidela gave her a nod. "Then I will bid you goodbye, Faction Head."





They both left the room and separated, going different ways. As Lucy walked away from the room, she ruminated a little on what had just happened.





That was a slightly strange event to come across. I haven't been involved in a situation like that for several months now.







She slowed her steps for a second and then sped back up.





Although, maybe that fact is the stranger one. Living such a normal day-to-day life for an extended period has left me feeling a little… off. That, combined with my soul shock and dealing with the merged consciousnesses for a while… I've been trying to wait until the stages, but…





She shook her head and looked out of a window she was near.





Oh well. I can't do much about it. I should focus on the reason why I took a walk in the first place.







She sighed and used her spiritual energy to imbue her mana with the mental imagery of illusion mana. The illusion mana in the environment, attracted to mana that had taken on its characteristics, became drawn to her, where she was able to use her spiritual energy to surround herself with the illusory energy. Painting the imagery of blending into her surroundings over herself, her elemental manipulation made her invisible, and so she opened a door set in the wall to step out onto a balcony overlooking the open area below.





There, the contestants of the competition event could be seen, with crowds of people viewing all the proposals and items. It seemed the event was quite popular, which was good, however, that wasn't why she had stepped out.





She removed her mask from the right side of her face and glanced at a random person below.





[Status: ]

Name: Gil Bramwell (Lvl. 231)

Class: Molten Engineer – Rare (Tier: VIII)

Age: 27y

Race: Human

HP: 5900/5900 {+76.81/1m}

MP: 19850/19850 {+3200/1m}

Stats:

Free Stat Points: 4

STR: 89

CON: 118

AGI: 90

DEX: 642

INT: 397

WIS: 320

[Origin Skill: Smouldering Iron Hammer | Type: Crafting/Realm

Desc: [Collapsed]

Subskills: [Collapsed]

Awakening: 22% ]





She… could see Statuses.
 
Chapter 37 (2 of 2) Elves and public speaking.
[Status: ]

Name: Gil Bramwell (Lvl. 231)

Class: Molten Engineer – Rare (Tier: VIII)

Age: 27y

Race: Human

HP: 5900/5900 {+76.81/1m}

MP: 19850/19850 {+3200/1m}

Stats:

Free Stat Points: 4

STR: 89

CON: 118

AGI: 90

DEX: 642

INT: 397

WIS: 320

[Origin Skill: Smouldering Iron Hammer | Type: Crafting/Realm

Desc: [Collapsed]

Subskills: [Collapsed]

Awakening: 22% ]





She… could see Statuses. She had discovered this before the meeting with the main County members, when she had taken off her mask for a bit and glanced at a Commission staff member who happened to be in the room at the same time, the screen accidentally popping up. She knew that the 'Shard of Totality' as it seemed to be called was capable of seeing elements of the System, showing her stuff that was technically not supposed to exist.





But to be able to pierce through to see all of someone's stats and their Origin Skill laid bare, and if she chose, to see each of their primary, secondary, and tertiary skills as well? She had a feeling, that she could even choose to see someone's Titles and Aspects if she wanted. And that was not good in the slightest.





It wasn't like she cared if someone saw her Status as Adrianna unless it was the Hero. People from Earth normally had far fewer hang-ups about discussing stats and skills than people from other realms, on account of their deep culture of gaming and digital entertainment. It wasn't like the concept of 'skill levels' was a thing in the System either, so the actual capabilities of an individual couldn't be judged just by seeing their stats or skills. However, all of this did not stop it from being extremely, extremely dangerous for other people to know she had this ability.





The five realms had a culture of avoiding discussing things like Statuses. When the User was under a certain Rank, level, and class rarity, it wasn't so important, but when they had a special bloodline, came from a powerful clan, or were a member of an important noble lineage, everything changed. It meant she would be capable of discovering secrets like the fact the Sanctity Caladrius were close to becoming a Mythical bloodline regularly.





She didn't want that! She did not want to find out things like that any more frequently than never! She already knew more than enough for every single Supreme Institution to issue a kill-on-sight order for her. Some of her memories and knowledge about things she had even prevented Scytale from being able to see, on his request.





Being able to see Aspects, Origin Skills and primary skills meant she would be able to see the unique secret abilities of powerful forces, and the most private capabilities of incredibly powerful people. The Empire's royal family, for example. The trouble she would find herself in if they found out she glimpsed even one Origin Skill of their members'…





She might also end up finding out secrets like the bloodline connections of people. What if she found out that a main bloodline member of a Duchy was a fake and wasn't related to them at all in the slightest? That someone was the illegitimate descendant of a powerful noble? Or that a demon was possessing someone? And these weren't even the worst possibilities.





Some might say Lucy was overreacting, but she knew exactly what kind of abilities and items existed out there that could detect her knowing the wrong things. Ancient magical artifacts capable of powerful prediction, Wonder magic items that functioned on strange rules and logic that could point the wielder to people who knew their secrets, spiritual treasures that could track down her soul…





High-level cultivators were even capable of soul reading. Well, she had enough soul power to protect herself from that, but it would still be very bad for her to have to reveal she had that capability at her rank. But still, just because she was safe from the Citadel's Sages, did not mean she was safe from the Heavenly Realm's diviners, where the entire realm didn't use mana and only used spiritual energy to function. Just imagining what would happen if a Heavenly Sect discovered she knew one of their Sect Leader's or successor's core abilities…





Yeah. She was not happy in the slightest she gained this 'overpowered' ability. It was the definition of not worth it. She may have just become the most powerful appraiser of the entire Tower… but was she in the All-Aeon Athenaeum, Inspecting rare and exotic old artifacts? No. She was going to be the new Honorary Count of the Aurelian Commission, where being a noble automatically made her a target for assassinations, she was also the only contractor of the Demon Emperor, and she had to deal with the Hero and his knowledge of the future.





She. Did. Not. Need. This.





Unfortunately, short of removing her eyeball, she doubted she could get rid of it. And considering it had seemingly fused with her body… removing it might not even be a solution in the end. She sighed, and replaced the mask over her right eye, turning away from the balcony. When she was back inside she dropped the invisibility, and turned to walk back to where she had come from before seeing the Viscountess.





So far, at least, it seemed the ability to see User's Statuses didn't activate when the mask was on. That was good. What wasn't so good was the fact it instantly activated as soon as the mask was off. Until she became Rank-1, she doubted she would be able to tell if her control over the abilities of the shard would improve or not. For the foreseeable future, she would never be taking it off. It wasn't like having the mask on all the time made things difficult, as it wasn't uncomfortable.





She made her way along the path to where she knew the dining hall was, as lunch was going to be soon. The competition seemed to be going well. It was unlikely there would be many hiccups, and once it was done, she and Scytale would head to the Forerunner's Event.





The Event itself wasn't that important, outside of it being mandatory for all forerunners, and Scytale only wanted to go because he didn't go last time and it was a rare System Event. She'd also be able to find out more about 'broken' Origin Skills while in the Capital. After that, in the next month, would be the Empire's annual end-of-year banquet. It lasted two weeks, and during that time Vincent would be dealing with most of the politics instead of her.





…except maybe regarding one person. The people at the top of the seven Eternal Duchies likely already knew she wasn't a real puppet head, and so when she visited Archduke Stolas Eterial, she would do it with the full status of the Aurelian Commission Head.





I should probably send the request to organise a meeting with him within the next few days. He's known to be hard to meet with outside of Empire events, so if I send an official letter now I can meet him during the banquet. And if I don't do it now, it will be unlikely I'll be able to meet him at the banquet because thousands of other nobles probably have the same idea as me.








That was a task for later. For now, she had lunch with the Country representatives.










A ponytailed man with dark hair walked through the crowds of people, looking at the different items and objects in the crafter's section of the competition. Sedric was currently doing as Lucille had suggested, exploring the event to see what other crafters had made.





It had been interesting enough to see what was being made, although some items were too high-rarity for him to Inspect, as he was only Rank-1. None of the items without spells, for example. The fact that he needed to be Rank-3 to craft items without spells for skills was very interesting, and if Lucille needed him to use spiritual energy to craft her item, then she didn't want an item crafted that only used spells. But she refused to tell him what it was she wanted crafted, which annoyed him beyond belief.





Before the System though, the Mystical Realm only knew how to craft items with spells. He wasn't sure it was possible to craft non-spell items without the System. He didn't know much about what it was like before the System because the Mystical Realm had been assimilated for over a hundred chapters, so he wouldn't really know if it was possible or not, but he guessed after so long had passed it didn't matter anymore.





Finding interest in something he saw, he walked over to one bench to check out an item.





"-but the main alchemical solution would evaporate if you increased the amplification by that much. The circuit would generate too much heat."





"And that is why I use a secondary water-element coolant here. The temperature is regulated and kept to a minimum, the properties of the solution itself being retained due to its transmutation recipe."





"Oh? It doesn't mix with the main coolant?"





"No. If you look at the Item sheet for the secondary solution, you can see that it is mineral-based, so it doesn't merge with the other coolant here, which uses several types of mana water mixtures, and-"





Sedric looked up from the item he was viewing to see two people who were surrounded by a small crowd, having quite a loud discussion as they analysed the device on a bench. It seemed they were one of the more popular contestants. Interested, he came closer to see what they were talking about and read the Item Sheet of the object.





[Apparatus – Type: Compounder, Magic Item ]


Name: 3-Element Compounding Engine


Rarity: Rare


MP: 5600/7,000


Desc:


Crafted by an advanced craftsman, this device was designed to compound basic alchemical materials from raw substances so the User has access to simple alchemical substances without needing an Alchemist class to transmute them. As this item is a prototype, it can only be used with materials of the elements of fire, earth, and water. Using one multi-layer intermediate spell and several advanced-level mana circuits, this device requires an input of 50MP to activate, 250MP per second to recharge until full and uses its mana storage based on how rare an alchemical substance you want to synthesise.


Abilities:


Automated Alchemy – Machine-powered transmutation.


  • This prototype compounder can synthesise a combination of elemental materials of fire, earth, and water to create alchemical substances at Rare level or under. Synthesising time is dependent on the substance's mana density.

Internal Pseudo-Recombiner – With the existence of a pseudo-recombiner within, the device will always provide accurate results.


  • This compounder will recycle the alchemical output if not a stable alchemical material, reconstituting the alchemical material until it is stable enough to be a substance for use.

[ ]





The object that sat on the bench was a rounded pot-like device cast out of brass, covered in dials and switches. He watched it vibrate and tremble as steam escaped from valves, making lots of noise as it created whatever alchemical substance it had been tasked to make. He was surprised to see how practical the item was. He could definitely see the uses for it, if not for him personally.





As the Commission Head's crafter, he had free access to many resources, alchemical solutions and substances that could be bought whenever he wanted. But for a normal crafter, this device would make crafting items much cheaper due to being able to transmute raw materials into alchemical substances directly, instead of asking an alchemist to do so for an expensive price.





For an organisation like the Commission, he could see how being able to mass produce alchemical substances would be useful. Especially for producing many elixirs, which could be made up of several alchemical solutions, synthesised using other alchemical solutions, which were in turn synthesised from more alchemical solutions. Crafting elixirs was a very expensive profession.





The internal pseudo-recombiner was also interesting. He had a recombiner on his bench in his workbench, which he couldn't use yet due to the mana cost being too high at Rank-1, so he was a bit curious to see how the creator of the item managed to reduce the mana cost for his item.





He was going to walk forward to get a closer look when one of the members of the crowd looked back and stopped to stare at him for a second. Sedric blinked when he realised he recognised the person.





"Hey, you're that person from… back then," the blonde-haired man in his early twenties began hesitantly. He was the junior head crafter Sedric and Lucy had met in the craftsmen zone, Sameul. "You were… uh…"





"It's Sedric," he replied as the man moved away from the crowd to come to talk to him.





"Right." The man nodded. And then with an awkward look on his face, he continued, "And the person you were with at the time… she's…"





"Yes, she's the person you're thinking of, no, she's not really like how she acted earlier, and no, she's not as useless to the Commission as she's pretending," Sedric said, well aware of what Sameul's issue was.





"So I really did unknowingly meet the Commission Head and talked about joining her event right in front of the person herself," he muttered. Sameul shook his head and sighed. "Yeah, that was a shock I was not prepared to receive today. So she's intentionally acting like that?"





"I… don't know much about what she's trying to do. I'm not part of the Commission, technically," Sedric explained. How was he supposed to know what was inside that woman's head?





"Huh. I figured you must've been if she took you to the craftsmen zone," Sameul replied, surprised. "Then what's your relationship with her? Are you a participant in the competition like me?"





The day had finally come when Sedric could brag about his status. He smirked and crossed his arms. "Don't need to be. I'm her personal crafter."





The blonde-haired man's eyes widened. "Really? Her personal crafter? You must be pretty skilled then. What kind of crafter?" he asked curiously.





"Accessory. She said the adaptability of my class is useful," Sedric replied with a shrug.





"Accessory crafting is a pretty rare profession to go into, from what I know." Sameul gestured to himself. "As for me, I'm just a boring magic engineer. Haven't felt the need to branch out just yet."





All right. Sedric felt like that was enough small talk to be considered a functioning member of society. Now he needed to find some way to politely exit the conversation…





"I saw you looking at that compounder earlier. Do you have an interest in the Coalition's magitech?" Sameul asked.





……crap. He was asked another question. He was still stuck.





Sedric prevented himself from sighing as he came up with a reasonable-sounding answer that wasn't 'my highest known rarity class has magic engineering as its third primary skill and I know absolutely nothing about it'.





"Uh… kinda. I'm interested in magic engineering, which is why I'm in this section of the competition. I've been wondering if I should take it as my third main skill."





The man in front of him blinked and looked between him and the object on the bench. "That's… surprising. Not that I'm saying it's surprising that you specifically are interested," he added. "But just that someone not from the Coalition is interested at all. The profession of 'magic engineer' was only fully formed two thousand years ago, after all, and the All-Aeon Athenaeum doesn't have the most favourable attitude to us, which makes most people prefer to use other alternatives to our stuff," Sameul explained. "Can I ask how much you know?"





"I just know you need to align single-layer spells with engraved spell lines on cogs, and the input of mana then helps your machines move. Not much besides that," Sedric replied.





And Lucille's knowledge comes to my rescue- no, wait. That doesn't make me happy at all. I don't want her to be my saviour.






Sameul gave him a grin. "That's more than most people know." He seemed to think for a moment and then gestured to Sedric. "If you'd like, I can show you a bit about how it works."





That made Sedric pause in surprise. He… was actually kind of interested in the offer. It was important that he learnt more about the profession, and maybe if he left the event having learnt a bit, he could show Lucille he wasn't as stupid as she seemed to think he was. He might even end up seeing a look of shock on that inexpressive face of hers. It would beat that irritatingly self-satisfied smirk she got when she did smile.





That thought alone almost made him instantly accept, but as he considered it further…… wasn't this too nice of someone he had barely even known for longer than ten minutes? What reason could someone with the status of junior head crafter have to do something like that? It couldn't be the fact he was the Commission Head's personal crafter, because most crafters never had that much power in their organisations, even if his case was different…


He was suspicious.





"I mean, I'm interested, but why would you do that?" he asked Sameul.





Sameul gave him a dismissive wave and gestured to Sedric to follow him. "I'm just happy enough that someone's interested in my home plane's technology. It's not like I'll be teaching you some hidden secret of the Coalition or anything, so I may as well let you take a look."





Even as he followed the man, Sedric was still sceptical. There was no way the man was being helpful… just to be helpful. That was stupid. Nobody ever did anything like that. He bet the man was just trying to get close to Lucille using him. Yeah, that made more sense. This Sameul guy was probably going to try to use the fact he told Sedric about the Coalition's tech to make him 'owe him a favour', using him to meet Lucille again so he could become her new personal crater instead, and take over his position as-





"By the way, if you were looking at that compounder, I can't say that was the best example of the Coalition's magic engines, with the multi-layer spell inside and all," Sameul spoke up as he led Sedric through the crowds of people.





Sedric forgot his original train of thought as he answered, "Ah. That. I was just interested in that pseudo-recombiner trait of the compounder. I wanted to know what changes he made to the spell to reduce the mana cost so much."





"Oh, that was the same reason I went to look at it," Sameul replied as they walked. He scoffed. "Yeah, it's nothing much. The only reason people were crowding around the crafter's compounder was because the item's concept was unique. The actual spellcraft was really shoddily done. It was like a patchwork blanket, stitching random frames together to give it some half-baked functionality. I swear half of those runes were redundant."





"I guess being a magic engineer would give you a better idea of spellcraft than other crafting professions," Sedric said, stepping to the side to avoid some people.





"Yeah. Understanding basic rune theory is essential for magic engineering." Sameul nodded. He glanced at Sedric. "That's one thing I should probably tell you if you want to branch out into magic engineering. While it's true that most of our machines use single-layer spells, it's not a rule that we have to only use single-layer spells. Some of our machines use multi-layer spells."





…could it be? Was Lucille wrong about something? "Really? So your technology isn't made mostly out of simpler spell types?" Sedric asked, almost expectantly.





Sameul chuckled as he turned a corner. "Oh no, we definitely still use a lot of single-layer spells. What I mean is, that our really, really powerful devices use multi-layer spells and even arrays. But to get to the point you need to be somewhere around advanced to senior ranked in magic engineering," he explained, "which requires more than just time and effort."





Well, that was disappointing. Although, now that Sedric recalled, Lucille had said very rarely did magic engineers use multi-layer spells. Not, 'not at all'.





"Where are you taking me, by the way?" Sedric asked.





"Just to my section of the competition," Sameul replied. He looked around. "It should be somewhere around-"





The man came to a stop as he stared at something. Sedric followed his gaze to see a crowd of people at one specific display, seemingly discussing the object. He glanced at Sameul. "Is that supposed to be your bench?'





"…it is, but why are there so many people around it?" Sameul said quietly.





Sedric took another glance at the people near the bench, noticed their expensive clothing, and then looked at Sameul with a strange expression. "…aren't they nobles, too?"





Sameul gave him a wide-eyed look, and then slowly took a step back, preparing to run away. At that moment, one of the members of the crowd looked back and pointed out Sameul to the rest of them. The nobles turned to see him, and then, with one leading in front, they walked towards Sameul.





"oh- dearth-mother no, they've spotted me," Sameul muttered. "What do they want? Go away, go away, blight-blight-blight-blight-"





"Are you Sameul O'Dearvy?" the front noble abruptly asked, looking at Sameul. He had brown hair, looked to be in his mid-30s, and was dressed in a black and red suit. The noble watched Sameul with narrowed eyes.





"Uh… yes. And… may I know… who exactly you are, sir?" Sameul replied hesitantly.





"Erastus Aldithley," the man replied shortly. He gestured to Sameul's bench behind him. "I am here because I have a proposition for you. Sell me the rights to your device here, and I will give you a position as a crafter under the main business of Alichanteu."





There was silence as Sedric and Sameul registered the words of the noble. It seemed noble drama had come to the junior head craftsman next to Sedric.





"I'm… already a junior head craftsman though…." Sameul responded.





Aldithley scoffed. "Yes, I've heard. You work as a junior head craftsman for one of the vassal businesses in the crafter's zone. But I am promising a position in a main business of the Blue County itself, rather than just one of their subordinate businesses."





That was all very good and well, but…





"I wouldn't be a junior head craftsman if I took your offer though, right?" Sameul asked.





The noble marginally raised an eyebrow, as if the idea itself was absurd. "Obviously not. You may have created an interesting device, but you do not have the status or have demonstrated enough potential to be given such a position."





"So… if I wouldn't have my current status… and I wouldn't have the wage and access to resources of a junior head craftsman… why exactly should I accept your offer, sir?" Sameul said.





"Why, to become a part of a prestigious noble-owned business, of course," Aldithley announced haughtily. "And if you show talent, then perhaps one of our crafters will be willing to take you as a student."





Sedric and Sameul traded glances before Sameul turned back to him. "But I'm a magic engineer? All the best teachers for my profession are at the Coalition, so if I wanted a teacher, I would've stayed there," Sameul told him. "And sir, I came to Gilded Seat to make connections with other crafters, which," he gestured to their surroundings, "Is what I'm doing right now, by joining this event."





Sameul crossed his arms and shook his head. "I'm sorry, but your offer doesn't interest me."





The noble, and the nobles behind him, just stared at him, like they couldn't believe someone had refused an offer from a noble. The surrounding watchers winced, aware of what was going to happen next. Erastus Aldithley slowly turned red and then opened his mouth to release his fury.


"You dare to refuse my offer? A mere commoner like you refuses the offer of a Viscount from the 23rd Major Kingdom-"





This is getting stupid. I just came here to know about magic engineering, but he's not stopping.





Should I… reveal my status as the Commission Head's personal crafter? I could probably resolve this… and I heard something about how nobles aren't supposed to be in the commoner section of the competition too.






Sedric glanced at Sameul, who was looking more than just a little bit tired of the tirade being directed his way.





If the Commission staff got involved then they'd probably be on my side. I… don't want to stand out, but if there's going to be no end to this…






He took a step forward and waved a hand between Sameul and the Aldithley guy, getting their attention.





"Uh, hey, Erastus or whatever. Could you quit it?" Sedric said.





The noble glared at him. "That is Lord Aldithley, to you, commoner."





Sedric sighed. "Yeah, fine, Lord Diddly-something. Look, this guy's not interested," he pointed to Sameul, "And I have a feeling you guys aren't even supposed to be in this section," he gestured vaguely to the nobility behind the man, who seemed to be nobles of similar rank, and who flinched at his statement, "So unless you think shouting at someone is going to change their mind, maybe we could all just leave?"





Aldithley narrowed his eyes at Sedric. "And who might you be, to say this?"





Sedric reached into his shirt pocket and pulled out his black access card for the fortieth floor of Headquarters. "The personal crafter of the Aurelian Commission Head."





Sameul, the crowd, and the nobles all turned to stare at the black card with the Commission's symbol of three gold coins in his hand. There was silence for a while before people began muttering to each other. The nobles started looking worried until Erastus Aldithley scoffed. "You think you can fool me with that fake?"





"Excuse me?" Sedric asked incredulously. "Fake? Do I look stupid enough to pretend to be the Commission Head's personal crafter right in the middle of a literal Commission event? Where even the lowest-ranked staff member can verify my card whenever they want?"





"-then you stole it," Aldithley stubbornly replied.





"I stole it?" Sedric put a hand to his temples. "From who exactly? Who do you know has this card that I can just randomly walk up to them and take this from their pockets?" He looked around until he spotted someone he had met once before the competition at Headquarters. "You know what, let's get another opinion. SIR ALICHANTEU!" he shouted, cupping his hands around his mouth.





The blonde and blue-haired Artair Alichanteu, who was going around doing his job as the representative of the Blue County, blinked and looked around when he heard his title. He stopped when he saw Sedric waving to him, before walking over.





"Mr. Ferin? I didn't know you would be here. What seems to be the-" Artair paused when he saw Erastus Aldithley and his group of nobles, all looking rather pale now that they discovered Sedric knew the first heir of Alichanteu.





Artair frowned at Aldithley. "Sir Aldithley, I tasked you with reading the profiles of participants of the nobility, not taking a walk through the venue of the competition. You are not supposed to be here." He looked at the other nobles. "None of you are supposed to be here. The nobility and commoner competitions are separated until the next round." He narrowed his eyes at them. "Leave now, and if I see you here again before the round is over, I will give you more than just a warning."





They quickly made their way towards the nearest exit, and the crowd dispersed. Artair put his hands behind his back and turned to Sedric. "Now, what did you need me for, Mr. Ferin?"





Sedric pointed a thumb in the direction of the leaving nobles. "You've pretty much just dealt with it. That Aldithley guy was trying to get junior head craftsman Sameul here," he said, gesturing to Sameul, "To hand over the rights of his device to him, in exchange for a place in one of Alichanteu's main businesses."





Artair stared at Sedric for a few seconds, before slowly, he gained a grin. "Oh really? Is that true?"





Sedric raised an eyebrow at his reaction. "Uh… yes. Is that… good?"





Artair's grin widened as he shook his head. "Well, definitely not for them, but certainly for me. You see, it seems my little brother's tag-a-long by the name of Aldithley has just broken a few rules set by our mutual acquaintance, and this will reflect on his lord. It's quite a spot of good luck for me."





……ah. It seems someone might have just annoyed Lucille. Sedric was slightly curious to know how that would end up for them, but… maybe ignorance was the more healthy option for his continued mental well-being.





Then Artair turned to Sameul. "Although, not quite as good luck for you, crafter Sameul. I apologise as the representative of the Blue County that there was such an incident," he said with a slight dip of the head.





Sameul was quite flustered and quickly shook his hands to refute. "N-No need to apologise to me, Sir Alichanteu. I'm fine now that they're gone."





Artair nodded. "Well, if that was all… oh." He took out a notepad and pen and gestured to Sameul. "Could I please have your full name so I can report his incident? It may come in handy for me," he said with a smirk.





"Sameul O'Dearvy," the blonde-haired man replied.





Artair jotted it down and then blinked. "Wait… did you say O'Dearvy?" He put away the notepad and instead pulled out a thick wad of envelopes from the inside of his suit jacket. He riffled through them, until he found what he was looking for, and then pulled it out. He smiled as he put away the other envelopes and handed the last one to Sameul. "Then let me congratulate you, participant O'Dearvy. You've progressed to the next round."





Sameul stared at the envelope with a violet seal in his hand with wide eyes, then glanced between Artair and the envelope. "No way…"





Artair just glanced at his wristwatch and gave them a nod. "Then it's time I returned to handing out the rest of these envelopes. Farewell." And with that, the Alichanteu heir left them.





Although Sedric could've sworn he heard the man singing a song under his breath with the lyrics of 'Arwwwwen's going to get in troooubbble~' as he walked.





He turned back to the stunned Sameul next to him. "So… congratulations, I guess?"





"I- uh, t-thanks," Sameul stammered, still staring at the envelope.





"What is your device, if you don't mind me asking?" Sedric asked.





The man stopped staring at the envelope, blinked, and then put it away. Then he walked towards his bench. "Oh, it's a type of engine that uses water element solutions and the fire element to create steam. The pressure from the steam then generates mechanical power which is converted to magical power. This method only uses basic elemental reactions to power it, meaning the cost of alchemical substances is minimised."





That made Sedric interested. "How did you get the mechanical power to produce mana?"





Sameul grinned. "Well, this can be your first lesson in magic engineering. With mana circuitry, just as a spell can generate machine power, machine power can also generate mana…"





Sedric spent the rest of his time that week discussing magic engineering with Sameul, or looking at the rest of the crafter's section, pondering new ways to use his skills and abilities in a way that might have a chance of surprising Lucy.
 
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Chapter 38 (1 of 2) Return of the Noisy Noodle.
-End of week 3 of November-








"-and the final winner of the Aurelian Commission's Competition is… Lux Bramwell!"





The crowd gave a round of applause when they heard the silver-haired man's announcement. The winner, a young man with brown hair, came and shook hands with the dark-haired girl first in line, and then the County representatives, beaming as he held a big picture frame containing an ornament with the Commission's symbol. There were a few more congratulatory words and another speech to the audience before they could all leave the massive auditorium.





Lucille spoke up first, "Right. That's all done now."





"Except we still have to deal with the aftermath," Artair said with a sigh.





"It's easier compared to the work that we needed to do during the event," she replied, as she, Artair, Viscountess Femidela, Vincent and Rosaline stepped into a large living room.





"I'll go talk to Lux Bramwell then," Vincent told them, as he received nods in return. "I have to discuss how we'll implement his idea."





"And I will see to ensuring no… extra influences have snuck past my purview these last two weeks." Viscountess Femidela smirked then she waved goodbye, and left the room.





Artair and Rosaline also went their separate ways to do their jobs. Lucy grabbed her cane and headed towards a room she was going to use to meet several individuals.





I suppose it's time for me to begin forming my own force.











A large room of the Gold Dome hall was filled with the chatter of people talking and discussing the reason why they were asked to be there. Twenty-three people turned to look when they heard the door of their room open and blinked in surprise when they saw it was a dark-haired girl with a mask, the Aurelian Commission Head, and not one of the other representatives. Lucy took out her pocket watch to check the time.





"I'm three minutes early, however…" She raised her head and looked around the room. "It seems all of you are here, so I may as well begin."





She went to the front of the room and sat down on the chair there. She waved to the rest of them. "Take a seat."





The people opposite her hesitantly did so, unsure as to why they were meeting with the Aurelian Commission Head herself. Lucy crossed one leg over the other and then gestured to them.





"Now, I assume all of you are wondering what will you be told that is so important that you had to sign a magical contract promising your silence on whatever you saw and heard within this room," she began. She smiled. "That is because I will be giving you all an offer."





She let them absorb her words for a while. When the crafters began exchanging hushed whispers, she decided to continue. Lucy held up one of her gloved hands, showing five fingers.





"If any of you come to work for me for five years, during this period I will support them with my resources as the Aurelian Commission Head, and use the Counties' expertise to refine their final idea submitted in this competition until they are fit for commercial use. This refinement will be completed before the five-year period is over."





Her audience fell silent and then began talking amongst themselves. She didn't do anything and just stayed still, letting them discuss it. One man hesitantly raised his hand, so she pointed to him. "Question?"





"Are you offering this to only one person among us, or…."





Lucille shook her head. "No. If all of you accept, then I will support you all. These terms apply to all who accept my offer."





The talking among them grew slightly louder, all of them surprised by the offer. She could hear them talking about the pros and cons of her offer with the people next to them. It sounded like most were willing to accept, but they hadn't noticed one little detail she had mentioned at the very start. Another man raised his hand, making her point to him and nod.





"What about our current jobs?" he asked.





"As the County vassal business you all work in are part of the Commission," she replied, "And my status as the Aurelian Commission Head is enough to order for your transferal with no breach of contract. Your workplaces will be compensated for the loss of a competent worker."





When there were no more raised hands, she gestured to a Commission staff member in the corner of the room, who nodded and began handing out the details of the offer, which mentioned things such as wages and crafting allowance. Most immediately read the information on the pages, but one blonde-haired man didn't pick it up and just raised his hand.





Lucille smirked and pointed to him. "Yes, Mr. O'Dearvy?"





Sameul blinked at the fact she knew his last name but coughed and gestured to the pages on his lap. "I have a question. Who will we be working under?"





The rest of the crafters fell silent and looked up as they realised his implication. Lucy propped her chin up with the armrest of the chair and gestured to them all with her hand. She spoke to them with a wide smile.





"I have offered this to you all on one condition. You will be supported with resources from the Founder's vault, have your plans refined, and your intellectual property will remain yours at the end of it, only if you work directly under me, Lucille Goldcroft."





She continued as they gained slight frowns, "Not my aide, Vincent Evisenhardt. Not under any other member of the Commission, unless ordered to. No, you will be direct subordinates of the Aurelian Commission Head, and no one else. My orders always have to be your first priority."





There was silence among them as they took in her words, frowns of deep contemplation on all of their faces. Lucy gestured to the exit. "If you don't like the idea of being under the Aurelian Commission Head when they have questionable power of their own, then you may take your leave now, and we'll forget this meeting ever occurred," she told them. "But you won't be able to speak about this offer or anything that happened in this room because of the magic contract in effect," she added.





After a few seconds, two of the twenty-three people in the room got up and gave her a short bow. She nodded to them, and they left the room. She waved to the Commission staff member to come forward, and they did, with magical contracts and pens in hand.





"If there are any more questions, please ask them," Lucy said.





Nobody raised their hands, so she tilted her head. "Nobody?" After she received no answer, she narrowed her eyes and smiled. "If so, then I will wait for you all to make your decisions. You have one hour, after which the offer will no longer be available. Please think carefully."





With that, she leaned back in her seat and waited. Her audience began discussing things among themselves, wondering how much power she held if she was making an offer like this. After a few minutes, one person stood up and walked over to her.





"Here's my signed contract," Sameul said with a grin. "I don't think I need to wait long to think about this one."





She smirked, and took his contract, then signed it with her own pen. "I assume coming to a decision must be easier for you, considering the circumstances of our meeting. I've heard you've been talking to my Legendary crafter."





"Yeah- wait." His eyes went wide. "Legendary?"





"Not the first impression you got from him?" she replied wryly. She handed the contract back and gestured to it. "You are now one of my direct subordinates. As stated in the contract, you get a 10 rose crown signing bonus and will start work on the first day of next year. Enjoy your break, Mr. O'Dearvy." She grinned. "You are now free to go."





He blinked and then smiled. After a short dip of the head, he turned and left the room. Lucille looked back at the rest of the people in the room and gave them a wide smile.





"Now it's your turn to make a decision."











Twenty out of the original twenty-three agreed to be her subordinates. Now Lucy had completed one of the final few steps she needed to do before the next year, which was when things would become much busier for her. However, that was for then. With the competition over, she had returned to Headquarters for the day, with tomorrow being the day she would go to the Capital for the Forerunner's Event. But first, she had a job to do.





She swung open the door of her living room, shut it behind her with a click, and then walked over to one of her couches. Seated there was an unusually shiny winged snake, his body slowly moving as he breathed. She squatted down next to him and… poked him.





"Scytale."





He didn't move. She gently tugged on one of his head feathers. "Scytale, get up."





He still didn't move. She sighed, and shifted closer so she could cup her hands around her mouth and talk into his ear, "Scytale, if you don't get up now, I'm ditching you and going to the System Event all by myself so you won't get to spy on the Hero."





There was still no reaction, the magically induced sleep being very hard for him to escape. She stood up and placed her hands on her hips, considering what to do. Eventually, Lucy decided there was only one way she could wake him up. Summoning her most vivid memory of a magical sound blast to the forefront of her mind, she took the sensation… and drove it through their bond to be plunged straight into Scytale's mind.





"GAH!"





The snake sprang up and shook his feather-crested head. "Ow, ow, ow, ow-" He glared at Lucy. "That hurt. Why did you have to wake me up like that?" Scytale shook his head again. "Urgh, my head's still ringing."






"I did try to wake you normally, I'll have you know," she replied with a raised eyebrow. "You were completely unresponsive. Be glad I didn't use one of my even more painful memories."





"Yeah, whatever. You just wanted to inflict suffering on me," he grumbled. "So, is it time for the Event?"








"Not yet. That's tomorrow," she responded, taking a seat next to him. "There's something I wanted to do first in case it became useful."





"And you needed me awake for it?" She nodded, so he tilted his head curiously. "What is it then?"






She reached into her dimensional pouch to take out a mug and the brass jug. "I wanted to go to the Library to find out more about your 'Sympathetic aura effect'." She began pouring herself some coffee.





"Ooooh. Yeah, that. We didn't really focus on it at the time, did we." Scytale nodded. He stretched out his wings to get rid of the sleepiness in his body.





"Well, that was because I don't know what it's supposed to do," she stated, taking a sip of her drink.





He paused and turned to stare at her. "Wait… you don't know what it does?"






Lucy shrugged. "Obviously I know what an aura effect does. It's another type of affix and applies to mana only. But while I've heard of the Sympathetic aura effect, its actual effects are unclear to me. However," she continued, "I do know that it's one of the effects those who focus on CHAR are more likely to get."





"That explains why it's a Sanctity Caladrius bloodline ability," Scytale said. "Actually, let me bring up the skill page to see. I still don't have eidetic memory yet."






[Sub-skill: Glorified in Bygone | Type: Bloodline/Elemental ]

Desc: As brilliant beacons of light, the many winged Sanctity Caladrius have often been guardians and idols of worship for the lesser, mortal masses. Descendants of one of the few peaceable primals, the Light Bringer, they have protected and purified many areas where abominable creatures roamed, allowing the races to hold deep respect for these beings, with some placing them on a pedestal as more than mere beast.

Abilities:

Neophyte Light Bringer – Child of the purest light
  • Gives User advanced Light Affinity. All light element spells have up to 75% increased efficiency and effectiveness. Element ratio: 75%
Golden Pillar of Peace – Everywhere you spread your wings shall see your light.
  • Gives the User Lesser light manipulation.
  • Gives the User the spells: Sanctification Zone, Rays of Purity, Force of Power (light), Brilliant Beacon
  • Gives the User the Sympathetic aura effect. Applied to all light spells.
Emergent Glory – What was, shall return in time, and the praise of mortals will be with them once more.
  • Gives the User a buff depending on the quantity of onlookers. Current onlooker count: 1/50. 50 = +50% skill effectiveness.
  • Gives the User mana regeneration +1/1m for every onlooker.
  • Gives the User a temporary mana cap of +1000 for every 100 onlookers.
[ ]





"Right. It's applied to all my light-element bloodline spells, so it's a passive effect I can't turn off. But can't you guess what it does from the name?" the snake asked. "You're more familiar with the System's naming conventions than me, so you must have some idea."






Lucy shook her head. "Not this time. I don't know what it does because as it's an aura effect, it's not mental." She gestured to the screen. "If this was a spiritual energy affix, in a way similar to how Apophis's Despair mental affliction is a demonic power affix, then I could guess. But when it comes to mana… I'm not sure. It must work differently than just generating 'sympathy' in those you cast your spells on."





"Huh. Well, what are we waiting for? Let's go check it out!" he exclaimed, flapping his wings.





Lucille just sighed. "Scytale. At least let me send you my memories of the last few weeks first."





He sheepishly pulled back his wings. "Uh… yeah. Let's do that first."












After she had shown him her memories of her time at the Commission and as Adrianna, they got up and began making their way through the corridors to find Lucy's study. She had something she needed to do there before they went to the Library.





"What are you going to do about him though?" Scytale asked her, continuing a conversation they were in the middle of having. "You met him a whole three months earlier."






"There is nothing to be 'done'," she replied, turning a corner. "The only difference is that I don't have a reason to be so cold towards him this time around. I'll just avoid making a few mistakes I did last time."





"…Lucy, are you happy you got to see him again?"





She paused slightly, glanced at her bond near her feet, and then continued walking again. "Yes." Then she frowned. "But… this means I'll have to keep the Hero firmly in check, otherwise… it won't end well. Again." She sighed.





"Take care of the things you can do in the present, and forget the rest, Lucy. Maybe we won't even meet the Hero tomorrow, and we can just have a nice day out," he replied.





She huffed a slight laugh. "I wouldn't bet on it."





"Oh! Hey, Lucy- woah, that is one shiny snake. I was not expecting that when I heard you had a serpent bond."





Lucy and Scytale turned around to see a blond ponytailed man there, holding a stack of paper in his arms, and looking stunned as he saw the silvery snake on the ground. Jacques and Caius had begun working at Headquarters two weeks ago.





Scytale flapped his wings. "I know a green scaly thing is what stereotypically comes to mind when someone thinks of a 'snake'," he snarked, "But don't generalise us so much. We can be pretty too."






Jacques smirked. "My apologies then, O bond of the Faction Head," he said with a slight bow. It seemed he approved of the snake's character.





Scytale took the sarcasm in stride and spread his wings proudly. "As long as you understand the high status I hold," he replied with grandiose.





"High status being on the floor, like a lowly crawling insect," Lucy stated dryly.





Her bond looked down at himself and then turned to her. "Lucy, can you lift m-"






"Not happening."





Scytale slumped as Jacques looked between the two with amusement. "Can't you just fly?"





Lucy and Scytale stared at Jacques for a few seconds, making him confused. "What? What did I say?"





"I'm getting déjà vu," Scytale muttered.





Lucy just sighed and continued walking to go to her study. "My bond here will be able to fly when he reaches advanced rank. But not at his current bloodline strength."





Jacques and Scytale followed her as they made their way there. "Was there any particular reason you called out to me earlier besides noticing my bond?" Lucille asked the man.





"Hm? Oh, yeah." He held up the documents he held in his arms. "I was just going to say I've got the updates on how the preparation for the first organisational changes are going in the Counties. Ravimoux is nearly finished and will be done by the end of the year. Chavaret is the next quickest, then Evisenhardt, with Alichanteu taking the most amount of time."





"That's to be expected with the mess that County is in. And that second heir of theirs…" she muttered with a scowl. She shook her head as she opened the door of her study. "I'll do something about them after the banquet."





Inside her study, Caius looked up from the armchair Vincent usually sat in. "Oh, Lucille. I was just waiting here because Vincent's out," he replied. He stood up from the chair.





"That's fine," she replied. "I'm here because I want you to give Vincent a message for me when he comes back from the 17th floor. Tell him Scytale and I went to the Library for a while, in case he's wondering where I am."





"Sure," Caius said with a nod. He gave her a curious look. "Not going to tell him yourself?"





"He's currently dealing with the man known as Gordon Merst," she stated flatly. "I'm not getting involved. Only one of us needs to be sacrificed for that job."





Jacques and Caius gained strange expressions when she said that.





"Note to self: don't bother Vincent for a while…" Jacques muttered.





"Er… right. No going to find Vincent." Caius coughed. He held out a white envelope with a sky-blue seal to her. "Anyway, the reply from the 7th Eternal Duchy came."





She blinked and then took the envelope. She went over to her desk to find a paper knife, and unsealed it, reading the letter. She nodded after a moment. "It seems the Archduke has accepted my request for a meeting at the banquet. That's good. Although it will be an entirely private meeting, so Vincent can't come."





"Archduke Stolas Eterial?" Jacques asked with surprise.





"The Empire only has one Archduke," she replied wryly. "I'll inform the Duchy we received their acceptance later." Then she looked down at the ground next to the couch and frowned. "Also, Scytale. Stop trying to trip Caius over."





"Tsk."





Caius flinched he heard the sound of a young boy in his head and looked down to see a white-gold winged silver snake reluctantly removing a long silvery tail from next to his foot.





"He hadn't noticed me," Scytale muttered with annoyance.





"And so your decision to alert him to your presence was to attempt to make him have an accident," she said with narrowed eyes.





"It worked with Annaliese. And that was because you were all ignoring me!" he exclaimed, rearing up.





Lucy just rolled her eyes as she left the study, the snake following along. Jacques turned to Caius with confusion.





"Who's Annaliese?"





Caius watched Scytale leave with mild bemusement. "I think he's referring to the Citadel's new Prophetess."





"Huh- no, wait." Jacques stared at Caius. "Did her bond just say he intentionally tripped over the Citadel's Prophetess of Fate?"











The lift descended to the basement of Headquarters, and Lucy stepped out, with a sneaky serpent on her shoulders, who had finally managed to get her to put him there. In front of them was a massive hall filled with bookcases reaching the room's roof. Occasionally in places, glowing books lifted themselves off of book trolleys to be reordered by the mana-circle automatically cast on them, and inserted into the bookshelves. The flutter of paper and whir of magic was the only sound heard in the room.





"So… are you going to expand your perception field to find the information you need? It might give you a headache as you are now though," Scytale asked.





She smirked. "No. There's an easier way. Could I please have some help, Ashale'viaf?" she called out to the empty room.





There was silence for a few seconds before a cloud of semi-translucent pink petals appeared in front of them. The form of the white and pink-haired rose spirit cloaked in white robes with gold trimming coalesced. Ashale'viaf had an expression that looked like he had eaten something sour as he glanced at Scytale and then turned to her.





"What do you need help with, Faction Head?" he asked wearily.





Scytale stared wide-eyed at the spirit. "Why are you here?"






Ashale'viaf's expression twitched as he looked back at the snake. "Because I'm the librarian." Then he sighed. "As a spirit, I can manifest my incarnation in more than one place at a time."





Lucy's bond narrowed his eyes. "Yes, but that can only happen if you're powerful enough to form two or more incarnations. Which means if you're capable of doing this in the Mystical Realm, you'd have to be a nearly fully-manifested spirit, who's close to making the material realms their home."






The rose spirit's expression stiffened, clearly not expecting Scytale to know that much about spirits. Scytale looked between him and Lucille's widening smirk. "What are you not telling me?"





Lucy tapped her bond on the head. "Let's forget about this for now," she said, to Ashale'viaf's visible relief. "I came to the Library to find out more about aura effects," she said to the spirit. "If there's anything on the 'Sympathetic' effect specifically, I'd like to read it, but if not, then a book that briefly lists aura effects and their purposes would be fine."





He nodded and gestured with a hand. "Please follow me then."





She did, and with Scytale on her shoulder, they spent a few minutes navigating the many bookshelves, placed in alphabetical order of Imperial Common. He finally came to a stop before one of the bookshelves with a ladder leaning against it, and with a gesture of his finger, one of the books lifted itself off the shelf. It fell into his hand, where he turned around and passed it to her.





"There is no book specifically on the 'Sympathetic' effect currently in the Headquarters' collection, however Copan Earlwight's Encyclopedia of Affixes contains information on the aura effect you are looking for. This is the 7th volume," he explained, "Which is the most up-to-date version."





"Thank you," she replied with a nod, taking the book from him.





"If that is all then I will take my leave," he said, giving her a short bow, but not before narrowing his eyes at Scytale, who just flickered his tongue in return.





She sat down on the last step of the bookshelf ladder as Ashale'viaf disappeared in a cloud of petals once more. Scytale sidled up to her as she flipped open the book.





"Don't you already know what's in it? It's inside your perception field," he said to her.





She raised her eyes from it to give the snake next to her a flat look. "I'm opening it so you can read it."





"Ohhhh…"



Aura Effect 98: Sympathetic


This aura effect is an ability commonly given by the System to Users with high CHAR or charm-type bloodlines and paths of progression. The Sympathetic aura effect is sometimes mistaken for the Empathetic aura effect, but it is important to know that there are differences between them. As an aura effect, this ability does not mentally instil 'sympathy' in those affected by the User's aura, but instead enables the User's mana to be predisposed to forming small mana links and mana bonds with the mana of the people around them. These bonds are unnoticeable unless viewed on an extremely small scale, but allow the User to absorb and send information through them, while also transferring mana. The transferred mana has different effects depending on the affinity of the User.


These links seem to occur as a form of enabling the connected to gain a common understanding with someone, the bonds enhancing comprehension. This characteristic is why the Sympathetic aura effect is often confused with the Empathetic aura effect. However, the linkage of mana in the case of the Sympathetic aura effect is universal, and not dependent on shared affinities like the Empathetic aura effect. This is because the mana linkage is completed using non-elemental mana as an intermediary. This is also the reason why the connection benefits of the six essential elements* are non-dependent on elemental effects, as seen below:


Affinity:

Earth – Temporarily increases the interruption resistance of the mana of those connected for the duration of the connection. Increases the interruption resistance of the User in turn if the connector has stronger interruption resistance.

Fire – Briefly increases the power of the mana of the connector. Casting spells or using mana-dependent skills while in this state will consume the link. Power increase and cooldown before new link forms are dependent on WIS of the User.

Water – Increases the attraction of elemental mana to the connected and the User when using elemental abilities, enabling potential activation of the ability amplification phenomenon. Attraction level scales with the number of connected.

Wind – Increases the mana flow speed of the connected and User, dependent on the number of connected. Enables quicker activation of skills and abilities.

Light – Shares mana, regenerating the connected's mana. This uses the User's mana to do so, transferring mana out of their own mana pool to fill the mana pools of the connected. Transfer speed is dependent on mana regen.

Dark – Drains the mana of the connected to refill the User's. Drain speed is dependent on mana pool size, or INT.

*The aura effects of mid-level and high-level elements are not documented in this book.


These affinity effects can only be activated intentionally, and the User can specify which connection to activate these effects on. It should be said that as it is 'universal', the User's mana automatically pseudo-bonds with all sentient beings' mana. It takes time and practice to prevent the link from occurring and to disintegrate these links but likewise means others are unable to readily sense the connection.






It took Scytale a while to read it and absorb the information. After a while, he raised his head to look at Lucy.





"Okay, so… this does what exactly? I can share mana with people, that's neat… if I knew enough people to make this ability worth it!"






She smirked. "You regenerate mana dependent on how many people look at you. In summary, Scytale…" She gave him a wide grin. "You've become my battery."





He glared at her. "You use atmospheric mana."








She shook her head. "Ah, but I still need to use my own mana and spiritual energy with Apophis and Ouroboros. So, in actuality, you're their battery too."





"But I physically can't be!" he exclaimed, spreading his wings. "I fight with my Primal Descendant skill. I'll end up being over 30 metres long once I reach advanced rank and activate it if I reach Skulker's size again. I can't fight alongside you like that!"








Lucille just shrugged. "I don't know what to say to you, Scytale. In essence," she gestured to the book, "this is completely useless to you."





The winged snake looked between her and the book, then sagged. "Useless ability, clogging up space on my Status for no reason," he grumbled sourly. "I already have so much on there when I'm not even Rank-1 yet."








"That's the case for every high-rarity beast though," Lucy replied, shutting the book. "As a Hybrid with the Primal Descendant skill, you have it even worse. You have a whole two more subskills in your Origin Skill than nearly everyone else besides other beasts with primal descendancy. But Scytale, remember your light-element spell list?"





"Sanctification Zone, Rays of Purity, Force of Power, and Brilliant Beacon, right?" he said to her nod. "What about it?"





"Only Force of Power is an attack spell," she stated, extending her spiritual energy to lift the book back into its spot on the bookshelf.





He hesitated. "Wait… what do the others do?"








"Sanctification Zone is a spell that temporarily converts the elemental mana in your vicinity to light element mana," she explained, standing up and beginning to head towards the Library's exit. "Rays of Purity is a weak healing spell that can be cast on multiple people at once. As for Brilliant Beacon…" she grinned. "You become glowy."





"…glowy?" he repeated.





Lucy nodded. "Yep. Glowy." She raised her hands up. "You let off a tall pillar of light. It does nothing else."





"So… my light-element bloodline is pretty much useless right now?" he asked, following after her.





"It's not like your illusion bloodline spells do much either though," she replied, stepping into the lift, Scytale entering just after.





"Yeah, but seeing through lies, going invisible, camouflaging myself and having a spell that makes people gloss over any mistakes I make while invisible is at least better than being a walking light show!"








She stopped reaching for a button on the lift to give Scytale an odd look. "Scytale… may I remind you that you don't have a human form right now, so any metaphors like that sound extremely strange when taking your current appearance into account."





He stared at her, then looked down at himself. "This stupid body," he muttered. "I'm not leaving human form for at least a week when I finally get it."








The lift began to rise as Lucy turned to him. "How's your progress with your bloodline?"





"It's going fine," he replied. "I can tell I need over a month more, but probably not a month and a half. I'm guessing I'll reach it within the first two weeks of January."






"Good that everything's all on track then," she said.





"So what are we going to do now?" Scytale asked.





She got out her pocket watch and checked the time. "Now I think might be the time to check out the Founder's vault."





"Any particular reason?"





Lucy pointed to her dimensional pouch. "The first reason is that I have yet to get around to emptying all the Inheritance Trial's items out of here to look at what we received. I haven't needed to yet." Then she sighed. "And the second reason… is to retrieve a particular object I discovered when I first searched the records. It's unlikely I'll be able to use it for what I want, but I want to have it on me just in case."





Scytale flapped his wings, and Lucy lifted her up onto her shoulders again. "I guess I'll wait until we're up there to see what item you're talking about. But how do we enter it exactly?"








Lucille stepped off the lift as the doors opened. "We need to go to the vault's room first. As a dimensional System artifact, it doesn't take up any physical space in the main realm, so it's kept on our floor. All I need to do is use my pocket watch to access it."





She made her way through the corridors of the fortieth floor until they came before a small side hallway. Entering it, a large pair of white double doors stood before them, set into the end of the hallway. Lucy brought out her pocket watch and opened up its Item Sheet.





[Inheritance Token – Type: Pocket Watch, Magic Item ]


Name: Token of the Aurelian Commission's Founder


Rarity: Ancient


MP: 10,000/10,000


Desc:


This pocket watch has been designated as the Aurelian Commission's succession item by the Founder of the Aurelian Commission, Crawforde Lockhart. Crafted by a master crafter, it functions as both a clock and a locator for members of the four founding Counties of the Commission: Evisenhardt, Chavaret, Ravimoux and Alichanteu.


Abilities:


Four Founding Counties – Used by the Aurelian Commission Head to locate members of the Counties.


  • Gives the four symbolic gemstones of the Commission's four Counties the ability to locate the closest member of each of the Counties. Consumes mana passively and must be recharged once a month.

Commission Head's Compass – Special ability of the Aurelian Commission's succession item.


  • Gives the yellow gemstone the ability to locate what the Commission Head desires to find. Requires varying mana costs dependent on location, distance, rarity, and type of target.

Total Faction Authority – Faction Authority of the Aurelian Commission.


  • Grants Total Faction Authority of the Aurelian Commission to the User soulbound to this token.

[ ]





"Huh… this is really lacklustre. Isn't what's written on here the exact same stuff Ashale'viaf told you?" Scytale asked.





Lucille nodded. "Exactly. Which is why I didn't bother showing this to you beforehand." She placed a hand on the doors and pulled on her soulbond with the item. "Activate Total Faction Authority to open the Founder's vault," she said.





[User Lucille Goldcroft has used their Total Faction Authority of the Aurelian Commission Head to access the Founder's Vault.]





The doors in front of them lit up with a white-blue glow as the notification sounded. They swung inward, revealing what looked to be a blank white wall.





"So… uh… do we just step through? Into the seeming nothingness beyond?" Lucy's bond asked hesitantly.





Lucy smirked. "Yep." And with that, she stepped forward through the white wall, and then the doors shut behind them.
 
Chapter 38 (2 of 2) Return of the Noisy Noodle.
On the other side of the wall, Lucille and Scytale were faced with a massive corridor filled with repeating doorways. The walls were white, the same shade as the double doors, and the floor was hard stone. White ceiling lights dotted the roof every metre or so. Scytale turned his head to Lucy.



"This feels like the Mansion."



"I also can't use my spiritual perception. The hallway isn't endless like the Mansion's though," she replied, stepping forward. Nameplates were above each doorframe, and she glanced at them as she passed, looking for where she wanted to go. The nameplates had words such as 'Books' and 'Magical Items' on them, as well as numbers to show the years the items on the other side of the doors were deposited. Lucy kept going until she found one room with a nameplate saying: 670-700/100 A.S. Magical Tools.



"Explain to me how to read the Mystical Realm's Calendar again?" Scytale asked, narrowing his eyes at the nameplate.



Lucy rolled her eyes. "The 670 to 700 indicate that this room contains items submitted from the year 670 to the year 700 of the Mystical Realm's 101st millennium after assimilation. The 100 indicates the millenniums after assimilation already passed, while the A.S. just means 'After System'."

Scytale tilted his head. "So the item you're looking for must be pretty old then? The Commission's only been around for a millennium and a half, so this item has to have been deposited…" He hesitated as he tried to do the math.



Lucille sighed and opened the door. "It was deposited in the 684th year, so that's 389 years ago. It is old, yes, although not for the reasons you are thinking. But it was an unexpected item to find in the vault's records, that's certain."



With Scytale on her shoulders, she stepped into the large room. Filling the room were tall shelves filled with chests and boxes of different kinds. Lucy navigated the shelves to find the aisle containing the item. Eventually, she managed to find a shelf containing a small wooden box. She pulled it off the shelf and opened it to look inside.



Within the box was what looked like a round brass cylinder containing a tube made from crystal. One end of it was shaped like a cone. Five small dials ran down its length, and there were two gemstones set in the metal, a purple one on its base, and a red one on the cone-like end, but not obstructing the tip, which had a small hole.



Lucille pressed the purple gemstone, and both gemstones began glowing. As they watched, the tube made from crystal gained glowing dark-blue lines of runic script and then began to slowly turn. She pressed the red gemstone, and out of its tip extended a thin needle of silver. She pressed the red button again, and the needle retracted. After pressing the purple gemstone on its base, the glowing light died down, and Lucy nodded.



"It seems to be working correctly."



"Lucy, no Item Sheet is popping up. I can't tell what this is," Scytale said.



She put it back in its box and continued walking through the aisles. "That's because this is one piece of three."



"Huh? Then why is it separated from the other pieces?"



She shrugged. "To conserve space, I assume." She gestured to the shelves. "This entire artifact must automatically sort itself, otherwise all of these items would be piled together without rhyme or reason. Nobody else but us has entered here for more than a millennium, after all."



She walked further until she came to a stop in front of a section of the room without any shelves. Instead, there was a massive spherical object of some sort, hidden under a large sheet. Stepping forward, she grabbed the sheet and pulled it with one large yank. The sheet slid off, revealing a giant clear orb, taller than her, inside a frame of bronze. The orb seemed to be made from several layers of glass, and engraved mana circuits filled with metal covered each spherical layer. In front of the main body of the object was a metal switchboard covered in dials and buttons. Lucille took the bronze cylinder from earlier and slid it into an empty round hole within the switchboard. She twisted it, and it locked in place, but nothing happened.



"It seems like this needs an external power source to work," she murmured with a slight frown. "I won't be able to check its Item Sheet until it's powered."



"That is one big plasma ball," her bond said, eyeing the giant structure with slight confusion. "This is supposed to be only one of the other pieces?"





Lucy blinked and then shook her head. "No, this contains the third piece inside." She pulled a lever on the switchboard, and a hatch on the side of the giant orb opened. She walked around the side to reach through the hatch to bring out a smaller orb the size of her head made of glass and bronze, covered with several metal buttons. Four violet gemstones, about as wide as her fist, were evenly spaced from each other on four sides of the orb.



"This is the third piece," she explained as she walked back around to the switchboard. "It's a container. The main structure of the machine could be considered the… processor, while the brass cylinder is an extraction device."



"Okay… I guess having a giant magical plasma ball in the Founder's vault is pretty surprising…" Scytale replied.



She shook her head as she kneeled down on the ground next to the switchboard, placing the smaller orb down next to her. Scytale jumped off of her. "No, the shape and size of the device wasn't why I found it unexpected. There are several stranger objects in the vault's records." She peeled off her gloves and started running her fingers along a metal panel in the side of the switchboard, looking for indents. "You see, this device is actually outlawed."



The silvery snake glanced between her and the massive sphere with wide eyes. "This defective snow globe is outlawed?"





Her fingers brushed over a small symbol in the metal, and so she began inserting mana into the plate. "I suppose it's not illegal to own, or even use, technically. However, the creation of these devices was banned about sixty thousand years ago. And those who brought one of these devices to the royal family for its destruction were given a hefty reward, so they quickly declined in number. We're probably looking at one of the last few in existence." The metal plate came off, and she reached her hand inside.



"Sixty- Lucy, what are you doing to an expensive antique?!" Scytale exclaimed, flapping his wings in horror. "Stop disembowelling it and get it fixed back up so we can sell it!"





She sent him a flat look as she pulled back her hand. "Scytale, as someone without an ounce of true technical knowledge, could you please not refer to my work as 'disembowelling'?" She put a hand to her face to remove her mask and inserted mana into her right eye to see through the switchboard and into its internal mechanisms. "This was donated to the vault by a noble family of crafters who ended up losing their title because their crafting legacy wasn't carried on. However, when I looked into it, this was submitted as being in 'perfect condition'."



She reached an arm in again. "The item list of the System artifact showed that the item didn't have the 'incomplete' label on its Status, which meant it was in perfect condition. But I need to check what type of powering system to use for this device. Crafting and magic were less standardized back then than now." She finally managed to grab what she was looking for and pulled it out. She unplugged the connecting tubes and held up a rectangular metal plate covered in small uniformly cut crystals and gemstones, a runic symbol engraved on each one.



"Hey, that looks like a powerful keyboard!" Scytale suddenly said, sticking his snout near the plate. "I bet it was used by… keyboard warriors!" He snickered to himself. "Get it? powerful keyboard? Keyboard warrior? Am I funny? Come on Lucy, laugh!"



She looked at him with mild exasperation and then proceeded to ignore him, inserting a bit of mana into each gemstone to check how the runes lit up. As she did, each gemstone projected its engraved rune in the air above it.



"Tch. You're no fun," the white-gold winged snake muttered. He slithered around the side of the giant glass sphere in the frame and raised himself up to stick his nose through the hatch. "What are you even doing right now, anyway?"





"Comparing the 4th grade runes on this rune plate to the ones in my memory," she stated, putting down the plate. "I was checking if they used mainstream ones or not, as some crafting blueprints in crafter inheritances require niche runes, especially for a crafter family with history reaching back over sixty thousand years ago." She gestured to the plate. "It seems this device uses runes that are only two thousand years out of date. I should be able to make an adapter mana-circle for the power system without much effort."



"Did you have to do all this inside the dimensional artifact though?" he asked from inside of the giant orb he had just climbed inside. "You could have just taken it out of the artifact by clicking on the item list."





"Yes, but I didn't think Vincent would've approved of discovering that a giant orb that takes up an entire room's worth of space was now cohabitating with us on the fortieth floor," she replied with a smirk. She plugged back in the connecting tubes to the base of the plate, returned the rune plate back inside the switchboard, and then picked up the metal side panel. Pushing it against the switchboard, it locked back in. Lucy pulled on her gloves, put her mask back on, picked up the smaller sphere next to her, and then stood up. With a sigh, she walked around to the side of the giant orb to gaze dully at Scytale.



"Are you going to get out?" she asked him.



"Nope," he replied smugly, flickering his tongue.



She rolled her eyes at the predicted answer and then glanced at the open hatch. There was a moment of delayed realisation from her bond, before… she shut the hatch. It sealed itself firmly closed.



"Uh… Lucy… I'm willing to get out now…"



"You know…" she said, holding her chin in mock contemplation, and ignoring the snake's words. "It might be better for you to stay here for the next month and a bit as you finish your advancement…"



"I happen to disagree with that statement…"





"…you'll be very protected in the System artifact, as only Ashale'viaf and I can enter…"



"No, I don't really need the protection…"





"…my peace and quiet would continue…"



"…ugh. I can't deny that one…"





"…and I can always send Ashale'viaf here to check up on you."



"You're going to bring in a torturer too?!"





There was silence for a beat, before Lucille narrowed her eyes at the snake. "Scytale."



"…what is it?" he asked hesitantly, unsure as to why she was using a different tone of voice.



"You are not allowed to leave my sight during the Forerunner's Event," she told him firmly. "Do not run off."



He avoided eye contact. "What a ridiculous idea… why would I ever do-"





"Scytale."



"Clearly you don't understand me as well as you think you do! How could I ever have such intentions as to-"



"Scytale."



He slumped, before flapping his wings angrily. "All right! All right! Fine, I won't go wander off anywhere. Sheesh, do you have to take the fun out of everything…" he muttered grumpily. "What's even going to happen if I don't do as you say? Going to kill me?"





"No, but if I sense even a hint of the intention to do as I told you not to right now, you will be confined to this 'defective snow globe' for the rest of the month," she stated blandly. "So, you better put any plans to mess with the forerunners firmly out of your mind."



He let out a groan. "But it would be so funny! Imagine all the references I could make, all coming from a talking magical snake! They'd be completely stunned!"





She sighed, having known exactly what Scytale wanted to do as soon as he asked to go to the Event. She hadn't even needed to see his thoughts to guess. "Scytale, that would be a terrible idea. Because of the fact that sharing memories requires an advanced level bond between us, which takes an average of twenty years to form." She placed a hand on her hip. "How are you going to explain your knowledge to them? If the Hero hears about it, his first thought won't be 'they have a strong bond with a forerunner'. His first thought will be 'There's another regressor, and it's someone who's been to Earth'."



"…urgh. I hadn't considered that," he murmured.



"Which is why I'm telling you this now." She said. She gestured to the door. "So, can I let you out without the Hero wanting to make killing the Aurelian Commission Head and her serpent bond his first goal?"



He drooped his head. "Yes…"





Stepping forward, she undid the hatch. He slid out, where she returned the sphere in her arms to the giant orb. She shut the hatch and went back to the switchboard, where she removed the extractor device from its slot.



"Don't need the rest of it?" Scytale asked.



She held up the bronze cylinder, which she then placed back in its box, then in her dimensional bag. "I just need this for now. I'll come back for the rest of it if this ends up being used at all, but that would require me to have more space in my dimensional bag. Speaking of which…" She held out her arm for Scytale to climb up. "Time to empty it."



They left the room, heading down the hallway again. It took a few minutes before they came to the end of it. At the very end, a room with a nameplate that read: 070-100/101 A.S. Unassigned was found. Lucille walked in and set Scytale on the ground.



"All right then," she began. She first took out the box containing the extraction device and set it down on the ground next to her. Then she unbelted her dimensional bag, widened its opening, and turned it upside down. There was a delay, until with loud sounds of clanging and dinging, her random collection of magical items received in the Inheritance Trial, items stolen from Abbott Everett's Emporium, items bought using her crowns, and any other random objects she picked up over the last few months since entering the Tower tumbled out. Even the rose, silver, and bronze crowns she had exchanged all fell out with the sound of raining metal, leaving the final pile to sit at almost waist height in the room.



"That's a lot of junk," Scytale stated.



"It was getting crowded," Lucy agreed. "It took far too long to search through all my items with my will than needed, and while I haven't picked up any large objects, so I could store a lot, I've been restraining the amount of spiritual energy I use at any one time, and so I was reaching the limit of what I could mentally retain."



She pulled out her pocket watch and opened up her Total Faction Authority. "Now, I can't use my spiritual telekinesis, but…" she pointed at the pile. "Sort all items in room 070-100/101 A.S. Unassigned."



[Sorting all items currently within Aurelian Commission's dimensional System artifact, room 070-100/101 A.S. Unassigned]



The pile in front of them lit up with a white glow before the assorted objects slowly reshuffled and separated from each other. They waited a few minutes before several smaller piles formed for the three types of coins, while the items were arrayed in neat rows. Lucy walked over to the coins and pointed at them.



"Place selected items in room 070-100/101 A.S. Unassigned into User Lucille Goldcroft's soulbound dimensional bag."



[Placing selected items currently within Aurelian Commission's dimensional System artifact, room 070-100/101 A.S. Unassigned into User Lucille Goldcroft's Soulbound dimensional bag item]



She stretched her arms above her head and then walked over to the rows of Abbott Everett's items.



"Alright." She pointed to them. "Complete and utter mass-produced garbage. All of these items can be deposited in a magical item store room and never seen again. Transfer selected items in room 070-100/101 A.S. Unassigned to 070-100/101 A.S. Magical Items."



[Transferring selected items currently within Aurelian Commission's dimensional System artifact, room 070-100/101 A.S. Unassigned to 070-100/101 A.S. Magical Items]



The items lit up, and then with a pop, they disappeared. She walked over to the other items and looked down at them. "Now, these I bought before going to your enclave," she said to Scytale, "And until we get some high-quality items made for when we level up, they will probably do. It's not like we'll end up failing the stages even if we forgot something."



She picked up a rope, a sleeping roll, and a few other items such as a mana lamp that would be useful in adventuring scenarios. The rest she also sent to the magical item room.



"Transfer selected items in room 070-100/101 A.S. Unassigned to 070-100/101 A.S. Magical Items."



[Transferring selected items currently within Aurelian Commission's dimensional System artifact, room 070-100/101 A.S. Unassigned to 070-100/101 A.S. Magical Items]



Then she walked over to the other items. One was her brass jug, which she picked up and put next to the extractor device's box. Then she went and sat down next to the pile. "Time to look at all the Inheritance Trial's items."



She picked up the closest object to her, which just so happened to be the golden goblet with an emerald embedded on its front that Scytale had pointed out to her back then. She removed her mask, placed it on the ground next to her, and then used her right eye to bring up the goblet's Item Sheet.



[Utensil – Type: Goblet, Cursed Item ]

Name: Velista Femidela's Emerald Bane

Rarity: Rare

MP: 50/1000

Desc:

This goblet was crafted as a gift to a noble clan outside of the Aurelian Commission. When tasked to assassinate the receiver of the goblet, the poison master of the County of Ravimoux at the time cast a curse on this goblet, imbuing a special toxin that killed the goblet's receiver. Ravimoux's Count granted the poison master's family the inherited role of the Ravimoux Count's direct subordinate from then on.

Abilities:

Emerald Lips – A poisonous gift.

  • This goblet inflicts the Emerald Sleep poison on anyone who drinks from this cup.
[ ]



Lucy gained a slightly strange expression after she read the description.



"Isn't Femidela the last name of that Viscountess you met at your debut?" Scytale asked her, coming closer to the items.



"Yes, it is. It seems this is an ancestral item of some kind." She tapped on her chin as she considered what to do with it. "She might appreciate receiving it, as it may hold some sort of historical or possibly sentimental value-"



"Oh, hey, Lucy. That creepy board game is here," the winged snake interrupted, using his snout to gesture to the black senet-like game.



Curious, she pulled it forward and read its Item Sheet. Then she fell silent.



"So… going to show me what it says?" Scytale questioned, confused about why she hadn't shared her visual sensation of the screen with him.



"I'm… not entirely sure you'll want to see it," she replied hesitantly. "This isn't something most people would like to know exists."



"…surely it can't be that bad though, right?" he said with scepticism. "Just show me. You have to be exaggerating."





She shared it with him. He fell silent for a while too.



"Uh… so…" he eventually spoke up, "This creepy board… allows you to mind control your enemies by making them take certain actions, getting them to fall into traps… as slowly you end up creating a trap for yourself without your knowledge, even though it seems like you're going to win… until both you and your enemies end up succumbing to the power of the board game and fall to ruin, along with all your friends and family."





He looked at the board. "I mean… it's just as creepy as I expected from a game made out of blackest black wood and literal bone, but I don't really see the issue-"





"Someone within the Commission had this created within the last century," she interrupted flatly.



The golden-eyed snake stared at her as the seconds ticked by. "Er…… who, exactly?"





"Well, he's probably already dead, so no need to be too worried," she said, making the snake let out a sigh of relief. "It's says here his name was Gredaire Ravimoux."



"Ravimoux again? Is there any cursed item here that does not have a relation to them?" Scytale asked, sounding slightly exasperated. "But how do you know he's dead?"



"Because when we visited the Black Lily, Count Ravimoux's interactions with Vincent seemed to suggest he killed all his family members to ascend to his current status," she stated, pushing away the game board and crossing her arms as she gazed at it.



He looked between her and the game board. "Uh… but couldn't this Gredaire guy be a distant relative? Who's to say he had succession rights anyway?"





"He wasn't."



"Wasn't what?"





"Wasn't a distant relative," she explained. "He was the Count of Ravimoux before Regulus Ravimoux. His father."



Scytale tilted his head, trying to remember how the visit to the casino had gone. "I know my memory's pretty bad right now compared to before, with the seals and all, so I get that I can easily misremember things, but… I seem to have missed the part when he told us his father's name…"





She shook her head. "He hasn't told you, but he's definitely told me." She gave him a funny look. "You still don't remember?"



"Remember what?" he asked confusedly. "All I know is that for some reason you seem to have known the Count's dad is named Gredaire, yet didn't know Regulus Ravimoux killed his family to become Count until the Black Lily visit."





She flicked his forehead. "Just the fact you know that much should've made it click for you." Lucy sighed. "Count Ravimoux told me his father's name in the last timeline." She glared at him as his eyes widened. "I've already told you that I knew him. It was the entire reason why I wasn't fazed when that intruder came to my room in the second week of being Commission Head. I knew how he worked, and knew it wouldn't be an issue long term."



"Wait… is this to do with that sketchy period of your life taking on random jobs to find out random people's secrets?" he asked.



She narrowed her eyes at her bond. "'Sketchy period of my life'?" She rolled her eyes when he just flickered his tongue. "It wasn't random people's secrets. I was looking to find clues to several important pieces of information I needed." She let out a sigh. "Yes, I met Count Regulus Ravimoux several times then. Ravimoux does have the best information Guilds, after all. We had a professional relationship where I completed tasks issued by him related to what I wanted to know, and he gave me access to all the information Ravimoux obtained through the completion of the task."



"I think I'm beginning to remember those memories you showed me," Scytale replied. He looked at the board game. "So… what're you going to do with that?"





She thought for a moment. "I believe the Count must know what to do with an object like this. This can't be the first cursed item his father wanted crafted."



The silvery snake next to her tilted his head. "Hang on…why was this in the Inheritance Trial to begin with?"





"To hide the fact this was made, I assume," she said, reaching for the next object on the ground. "Sometimes, noble clans of the Commission might give one of their members an object to place in the trial when they use their inheritance key. You could say it's a way of demonstrating their 'loyalty' to the Faction. Gredaire Ravimoux must've organised for this to be hidden in the Inheritance Trial."



"Huh. All right then, what's the next creepy item you got there?" Scytale asked.



They spent the rest of the hour going through the items and objects from the Inheritance Trial. There weren't any useful items, either due to the item being less powerful than ones they could buy present-day due to out-of-date magic or crafting techniques used, or had gemstones that required over thousands of mana to refill, which they had no time for, and wasn't worth it for the rarity of the objects. Eventually, all the items were sorted, and Lucille used her Total Faction Authority to place them in storerooms. She and her bond left the unassigned store room and headed for the exit.



But just before they left the dimensional artifact, Scytale turned to Lucy.



"But what was that giant orb thing anyway? You made it sound quite important."





"Ah." She sighed, her hand a few centimetres away from pulling open the doors to leave. "It's… a particularly foul device, due to what it was made to do." She pushed open the doors.



"You see, the device allows one to steal the Origin Skill and bloodline abilities of a slain magical beast."







"So, you'll be back before the day is over?" a silver-haired man asked.



Lucille nodded with a smile, dressed as she was in a grey long-sleeved shirt, black pants, and boots. Apophis and Ouroboros were in their two sheaths on her belt. She didn't have her suit, sash, or cane, and Scytale was riding on her shoulders.



Vincent narrowed his eyes at her. "And you'll tell me what it is you plan to search the Athenaeum's Archive for?" he asked suspiciously.



"If I can," she replied. She tugged on her gloves to straighten them, ready to leave.



Vincent sighed. "Well, have a safe trip to this special Event of yours. I wish you'd tell me more about what it's for."



She smirked. "Maybe. I'll see you soon," she said with a wave.



Her aide nodded. "See you later."



And with that, Lucille and Scytale left to go to the Forerunner's Event in the Capital City of the Eternal Empire's Aeternus plane, along with a thousand other forerunners, anxious to know why they had been teleported into these strange new worlds by the mysterious System.

Sorry for the delayed post everyone!
 
Chapter 39 (1 of 2) Cosmic Origins.
"Woahhh."





A woman with a fiery red bob cut and piercing green eyes stepped off a teleportation array to stare at the busy streets of the Capital City of the Eternal Empire. She stood still, blocking the exit, and annoying the other users of the array behind her, so a tall man with dark brown hair and gold eyes next to her grabbed her arm to pull her out of their path.





"Get out of the way before you start staring at everything, Cathy. You're annoying everyone else." Conlan sighed. "Imagine you're blocking the exit ramp of a plane."





"Yeah, but look!" she exclaimed, gesturing with two hands to the view before her. "You told me they still hadn't invented trains yet! How does this city look like it's part of the Middle Ages?!"





They were looking out of a side window of the teleportation dome, observing the traffic and buildings in sight. Tall buildings built out of unusually brightly coloured stone spread across the city, brass streetlights dotting the roads every few metres. The shopfronts were painted rainbow with the sheen of psychedelic mana - mana-circles, magic arrays, artifacts, and powerful items spitting out spells and supernatural abilities every second within the shops. Carriages pulled by exotic beasts with plumage and fur of vivid colouration rolled through the streets, the carriages' symbols sometimes glowing with power, and high-density mana radiating off of them. Sometimes, rumbling metallic constructs with luminous steam escaping their valves roared past, the metal glowing orange with heat.





The skies were filled with roaring beasts flying overhead, occasionally mages and wizards with flowing robes flying past as well. Very rarely, figures of oriental clothing on swords soared above. The auras and emanating magic of the city bled together to create a visual cacophony of illusory rivers, and luminescent streams coating the vision of all who saw the city. The sky lit up with flashes and loud bangs of magic spells and abilities combined with the calls of magical creatures, an auditory chaos matching the visual one. And the streets were crowded with millions of people, all dressed in an assortment of clothes from all realms.





"I never said the Empire was similar to the Middle Ages," he replied, pulling on her arm to drag her out of the teleportation dome. "Do you think our Navy uniforms are something people from the Middle Ages would wear? Or even the facilities there?"





Catherine hesitated for a second. "Well… I just thought that was the System doing stuff. I didn't realise they had the tech normally." Then she pointed a finger back at the teleportation dome behind them. "But none of the other planes we visited were like this! All those Dungeon cities were medieval-ish, unlike here!"





"That's because they were lower-ranked planes," he explained wearily, continuing to drag her onward as she turned her head around, looking at all the sights. "Also, I suggest you turn off the passive Inspection function of your Status, otherwise-"





"Ack! My eyes! I'm blinded!" Catherine suddenly exclaimed, waving her hands around while blinking rapidly. "Why does everything here have an Item Sheet? My mind's getting overloaded with notifications!"





"-that will happen," he finished.





The redhead blinked once more and then sighed in relief. "Okay, it's finally turned off. But why were there so many-" She paused to stare at the ground in disbelief. "Conlan," she hissed.





The man looked at her weirdly as she whispered into his ear. "The stones in the footpath are Epic rarity."





Conlan facepalmed as he received strange gazes from the people around them, who were probably all Ascendants and very likely capable of hearing her words. He grabbed her wrist and pulled Catherine onwards before she could attempt to pry up a pebble from the ground below them. "Would you stop embarrassing us? You're acting like a country bumpkin. And why would you even want an Epic-rarity pebble?" he told her quietly as they followed a little marker on the mini-map the System had given them to find the Event.





"It was only going to be a souvenir!" she complained, following after him. "But seriously, why is everything so high-rarity here? Even the lamppost over there is an Ancient-ranked item. We're pretty much walking on solid gold."





"The Capital has been built using the most valuable resources so it's protected by the innate mana-density of the materials," he replied, turning a corner of the main street. "If anyone uses magic in this city, it'll be much harder for them to damage anything. This is also because we're on the Aeternus plane, the only Superior plane. Even if you used an advanced-level spell, you might not be able to leave a mark on the dirt here."





"Huh. Where did they get all this stuff though?" Catherine wondered aloud, watching everything with curious eyes.





"From older planes, most likely," he said, waiting for the carriages on the road to roll by so they could cross it. "Magical resources and natural treasures become more powerful by absorbing mana over time. Or they got it from the Beast Realm, whose regions have a much higher magical energy density than most planes in the Mystical Realm."





"So… why doesn't everyone just live there then, if so much mana is available?" she asked, following him down a side street. "You explained when we visited those lower-ranked planes that less mana meant they couldn't advance their tech, so if mana helps places progress…"





He smirked as he glanced at her. "We'd be killed by the monsters and magical beasts there, who've gotten strong by eating all the powerful natural treasures. Any place with lots of mana has lots of very strong creatures."





They continued walking for a bit before they entered a small alley without anybody nearby. They came to a dead end and Conlan stopped. Catherine looked around in confusion.





"Uh… Con? There's nothing here…"





"Just wait a bit," he replied, waving to her. He tapped on his Status screen to access the Quest Log.





[Quest Log: ]
Main Quest (Rank-2: Demon Realm):
  • Complete Stages 11-20 In the Demon Realm to reach Rank-2
Rewards: Rank-2 status, Lvl cap increased to 299, Main skill slot +1, Class Tier cap +3, Aspect cap +3, Class Tier +1, 6000xp, Main Quest (Rank-3: Tartarus Realm) Unlocked. Failure: N/A
  • In the Demon Realm, slay a demon at Intermediate or greater strength, and return to Obelisk alive 48 hours after its defeat.
Rewards: Stages 11-15 Unlocked, 3000 xp, Crystalline Token +1. Failure: N/A

General
  • Resist the demonic aura of a demon without being affected by mental influences for 30 seconds or longer.
Rewards: Stages 16-20 Unlocked, Demon Resistor Title. Failure: N/A

Class
  • N/A
Faction
  • N/A
Realm
  • N/A

Personal
  • Explore the realms of the Tower as pioneers for Earth. Unlimited Resurrections during this period.
Reward: Forerunner Title, Home Realm Permissions, Class Rarity ^1. Time Limit: 4:6:11:19:22:39
  • Go to the Hidden Temporary Event in the Mystical Realm exclusive for Forerunners on November 22nd. Objective location indicated in Directory.

Reward: ??? Failure: -50% xp Penalty. Time Limit: 0:00:00:30:5


[ ]





"And five, four, three, two, one…" he counted.





When the clock ticked down from thirty minutes and five seconds to thirty minutes, the wall in front of them gained a small white oval. It grew in size, to become larger than a person. The white oval rippled, until the inside disappeared, leaving a hole in the wall that seemingly allowed someone to step through it into the room on the other side.





[Gateway to Hidden Temporary System Event: Forerunner's Event]


[Time until closure: 29:43]





Conlan gestured to it. "We can go in now."





"Okay, but…" Catherine looked around. "If this is the Event, where are all the other forerunners?"





"We probably all get our own entrances to prevent anyone in the Capital from noticing us gathering," he said. He hadn't actually put too much thought into the reasons behind why the System did things. Who cared why it did things the way it did? "You're in a party with me, and you're a forerunner, so I guess we get to use the same entrance."





He turned to the gateway. "Let's go."





He stepped through, Catherine following him just after. The gateway shut behind them and they found themselves inside a massive hall with black walls, white light flooding the place from overhead. There were no lamps that could be the origin of the light, but the walls sometimes had neon blue glowing lines making geometric shapes. In their peripheral vision, a counter indicating the slightly under half an hour left before the Event began had appeared.





Other white ovals appeared on the walls and enlarged to let people in. Several were already in the room, leaning or sitting against the walls. They all looked anxious, and slightly wary, even of their own world's people. Most of them clutched weapons and had mixed armour of some kind. All of them were looking worse for wear, the anxiety of being dropped in entirely new worlds with no knowledge of how to return to Earth a constant cause of stress over the last nearly 5 months.





"Now we wait," he said to Catherine, who let out a groan.





"Really? We have to wait even more?" She crossed her arms with a scowl. "I just want to know why this dumb Event is even occurring in the first place! Although…" She looked around again. "This room is nowhere near big enough to fit everyone from Earth. So, did only some of us become forerunners?" she thought aloud.





Conlan smiled and gave her a shrug. "I don't know. I guess we'll find out today though."





"Yeah, but only after waiting another near half ho-" Catherine's words died in her mouth, and she froze, staring at one particular individual who had stepped out of a gateway.





Conlan saw her strange reaction and followed her gaze. "Cathy? What are you looking- oh."





The brown-haired woman looked around the room interestedly with blue eyes. A large longbow was strapped to her back, and she wore mixed leather armour and blue clothes. She didn't seem too fazed about the appearance of the room, nor even thinking about the reason why they were there, because she had a smile on her face, and was watching everything with pure curiosity. Her eyes swept past Catherine and Conlan when she hesitated and looked back at them again. Her eyes widened as she stared at them.





"…Cathy?" she said, stunned. "And… Conlan?"





Catherine stared at Liliana Mason, the water-element archer she and Conlan had met at the Navy's elite cadet training camp. Conlan just watched the two girls' reactions, feeling a little amused.





The silence drew longer as even some of the other forerunners noticed the awkward staring contest before Catherine suddenly slammed a fist down on her palm.





"I knew it!" she exclaimed loudly, making the nearby forerunners flinch at the sound. "I just knew you had to be a forerunner! All those little things you've said or done, all the many hints! It was so obvious!" She abruptly narrowed her eyes at Liliana. "You never told me you came from Earth."





"B-But that was because I didn't know you were also from Earth!" Liliana replied, looking very bewildered by the situation. "If I had known, I would've told you!"





"Yeah… I don't know…" Catherine said with suspicion, her green eyes still narrowed. She turned to Conlan. "What do you think of this, Con?"





"Oh, I already knew she was a forerunner," he stated calmly.





"…what?"/ "Huh?"





Both girls stared at him, which made him confused because he didn't know why they were reacting that way. Then it clicked.





…shoot. I'm not supposed to know this yet.






He coughed and waved his hand placatingly as he came up with an excuse. "Er, well, maybe didn't know for certain, but I had a pretty strong idea that she was one." He gestured to Liliana. "Her last name is very Earth-like, after all."





"Her last name?" Catherine muttered. She held her chin as she glanced at Liliana. "I mean, I guess… but have the last names been that different here?"





"Most of the first and last names, if they're from people from the Mystical Realm, are pretty similar, but not exactly the same as we'd hear on Earth," he explained. "If someone has both a first name and a last name that sounds Earth-like, I'd bet they came from Earth."





Catherine stared at him with admiration, and Liliana looked at him with surprise. "I didn't realise you were so perceptive, Conlan," Liliana said. "It's amazing how you're able to pick up on details like that."





Well, that was because he was completely making that up, and had no idea whether the names of members of the Tower had any pattern behind them or not. He coughed again and gestured to the rest of the room. "Should we head to the front? It seems like there's a door that will open."





The two women turned to look at the door in question. With two massive black double doors wide enough to fit ten men across, one covered in geometric white patterns that bore a vague resemblance to a tower of some kind, and another covered in geometric blue lines that created the surface of a globe-like structure, possibly representing Earth, was at the end of the long room. They nodded and headed to the front, where more people were gathering.





Conlan noticed a few individuals who stuck out. One brown-haired woman with features of someone from East Asia, wearing a white dagger attached to her belt, had a casual posture as she studied her nails. Another holding a tall staff that Conlan could tell was at least Epic rarity, if not higher, based on the mana he sensed emanating off of it. His Inspection skill wasn't powerful enough to pierce its protection. A third person with dirty-blonde hair and brown eyes, in his mid-twenties, with a calm and relaxed smile on his face.





He stopped to stare when he saw someone he recognised. In fact, someone he knew very well, and used to be an early member of his party before circumstances caused him to drop out. With red-blonde hair, blue eyes, and roguish features, one of his closest first friends in the Tower, Anthony Walters. The man looked up from the ground, and Conlan looked away before he could notice him staring.





But… is it worth forming a relationship with him again? He dropped out because his blacksmith class wasn't a high enough rarity, so investing in him- no. I shouldn't be worried about this.






He glanced at the man again.





I know where to find thousands of extremely valuable resources, and inheritances which will give him powerful crafter skills, enough to be worthy of being in my party as the party's private crafter. I know how to get him a powerful class and path of progression, so he won't fall behind. He can be useful, but if he's not… I'm sure he'll end up dropping out of his own will again.






Wondering if there was anyone else he recognised, he kept looking around the steadily gathering crowd, until his eyes rested on a strange sight. Leaning against a wall with her arms crossed was an expressionless black-haired young woman dressed in dark clothes, no older than her late teens. She couldn't be considered very tall and had her eyes closed, or from what he could see. She had sharp, attractive features, with a long fringe that reached her eyebrows, and straight hair that fell on either side of her pale face, her hair reaching her waist in length.





Two curved daggers were in sheaths on either side of her belt, but what was surprising was the black leather mask that prevented him from seeing the right side of her face, and the silver snake with white-gold wings and a feather-crested head resting across her shoulders and head.





A magical beast bond? It's not advanced level yet either. That's very surprising. The System's Status Guide briefly describes the realms before a User exits the Tutorial, so most forerunners would never head deep into the dangerous regions to be able to contract an intermediate-level beast. They'd only go to that realm to reach Rank-1. And…






Conlan hesitated. She feels a little… familiar…






He double-checked to make sure and shook his head.





No, I have definitely never met her before, because I have no memory of ever being near someone with her presence. If it's not her presence that's making me feel this way… then… have I seen her somewhere before?






He tried to work out what was familiar about her appearance. He didn't think they had met in person in any way, but she almost felt like someone… he had seen… on… TV…?





He was prevented from continuing that train of thought further when the woman's silver snake, whose head had been resting on the woman's, opened its golden eyes and stared directly at him. The snake raised itself higher and then began hissing. He blinked when the woman seemed to make a very faint frown and opened her own eyes, revealing her visible left eye to be a piercing, unnatural, vivid shade of violet that could only be attributed to possible high-density supernatural power in her body. The woman raised a hand to gently tap the serpent on the head, making it stop hissing. She glanced at him for one brief second, smirked slightly, looked away, and then walked off.





Conlan felt an eyebrow twitch. Did… she just snub me? Me? The only Hero of Light… and Guild Leader of the most powerful Guild in the Tower? That's…






He shook his head and rubbed his temples, turning back to the door.





No, I can't be annoyed by the attitude of one random woman right now. She's irrelevant, anyway. One day, if she doesn't die, she'll be seeing me on Earth's news, so why should I care about her reaction? No, let's focus on this Event first. We have ten minutes left.





And… he needed to deal with the new individual, the man with blonde hair and brown eyes who he had seen earlier, now approaching him.










Alright… time to see if it's worth forming a connection with any of my fellow earthers.






Randall Holloway looked about the room, tapping the ground with a foot. He had his suspicions about what the Forerunner's Event was for, and what it was going to reveal, from the moment he found it on his Quest Log after the Tutorial. The fact that one of the personal quests had called them 'pioneers' for Earth, and would give them 'home realm' permissions… well, it was the process of elimination.





So, unlike many of his fellow forerunners here, Randall wasn't worried about finding a way home. No, he was much more interested in seeing how the abilities of his home world's people matched up to the powerful residents of the Tower.





[Origin Skill: Inexorable All-Seeing Eyes | Type: Vision/Realm
Desc: Secrets are part of every individual's life. Some are more important than others, some create chaos when revealed, and some… should never be seen or heard again. This User is capable of piercing through the veil of mystery to see the truth and only the truth. They must take care they are not crushed under the burden of this knowledge, for this ability is not a boon, but a curse.
Subskills:
  • Status Seer
  • Records of Sight
  • Inexorable Unveiling
Awakening: 6% ]





He smirked as he read his Origin Skill page. If he wished, he could see the Titles, Aspects, skills, and abilities of anyone. He could view the information of powerful items, look at people's stats, and see how much potential someone has. And this information was stored in his skill, so he would never forget the Status of someone he had seen. No item or artifact could prevent his skill from seeing something's Status.





He had used this fact to get a gauge for just how powerful the people of the realms were. Considering what he suspected about the reasons behind the Event, this skill would be very useful for seeing how the people of Earth would compare to them. So, he paid attention to people with noteworthy gear, and weapons, or just held themselves differently.



Hmm. The staff is fancy, but her class is only Rare. She's more likely going to get killed for her item.






He has a combat class, yet he's not even Level 70 yet after four months? And his class isn't a rarity high enough that would give him a large xp reduction. He's probably only doing adventurer work for money.






The woman with the white dagger… she has one of those mana-art things. It seems a weapon clan found her talented and took her in… it would be bad if I get involved with her clan's politics but she might be a useful contact… I'll keep her in the back of my mind…






He paused when he saw a trio of three people, two girls and one man. One girl had brown hair and blue eyes, the other had fiery short red hair and green eyes, while the man in his early twenties had brilliant golden eyes for some reason. It seemed the three knew each other, so, curious, he had a look at their Statuses.





The two girls… they're only at Levels 64 and 66 which would normally indicate they're not motivated or talented fighters, but the rarity of their skills and the tiers of their classes are surprisingly high. That means they've managed to earn a lot of compatible skills somehow. And their items…








Not willing to waste time when he had almost only ten minutes left, he twisted his Origin Skill to give him the summarised information.





[Eternal Empire Navy's Military Grade Longbow]


[Rarity: Rare]





[Eternal Empire Navy's Military Grade Spear]


[Rarity: Rare]





Both military military-grade items for the Empire's Navy. This meant both of the two girls had been professionally trained and became members of the military if they were allowed to carry around items made specifically for the Empire's military.





Definitely need to get their contact information, or at least how they entered the military at their levels. The redhead even has an Origin Skill that increases her attack strength the more powerfully her flames burn, so she might be a User who gets stronger over protracted battles. The other girl's Origin Skill grants her naturally high proficiency over all archery skills. I wonder what the man's Status is like, as it almost seems like he's their leader.






He opened the golden-eyed man's Status… and stared.





[Status: ]
Name: Conlan Griffin (Lv. 70)
Class: Hero of Light - Unique
Age: 21y
Race: Human
HP: 8600/8600 {+93/1m}
MP: 5850/5850 {+690/5m}

Stats:
Free Stat Points: 0

STR: 196

CON: 177

AGI: 183

DEX: 130

INT: 121

WIS: 74

[Origin Skill: A Hero's Blade | Type: Weapon/Elemental
Desc: [Collapsed]
Subskills: [Collapsed]
Awakening: 16% ]





……he had a Unique class. The only individual he had heard of in his information gathering of the realms that had a Unique class was the Citadel of Fate's Prophetess, the icon of a Supreme Institution. And… it was called 'Hero'. Just the stats alone were almost more than double any other forerunner here, making him incredibly powerful, and he had one of, if not the rarest class type, that also symbolised something very important. He needed to talk to the man as soon as possible, but he decided to check the man's Titles, just to be sure there was nothing-





[Title: Regressor | Type: System]

[Rarity: Unique]





His breath hitched in his throat as he stared at something he couldn't believe was real. The seconds ticked by as he tried to consider all the possible implications of this Title existing, and all the steps he needed to take next. Then, struggling to hide his widening grin, he made his decision. Putting on a calm and confident smile, although he made sure it wasn't arrogant, he walked up to the man, 'Conlan Griffin'.





The 'Hero' seemed to hear his footsteps and turned around to look at him curiously, the girls next to him doing the same. Randall held out his hand to the man.





"Hi. I'm Randall," he introduced. "I was a bit curious about your weapons, so I thought I might have a chat with you guys."





The golden-eyed man blinked and then nodded with a smile. He grabbed Randall's hand to shake. "I'm Conlan. Yeah, having a chat with someone else from Earth sounds nice." The man turned to gesture to the girls next to him. "And these two are…"





"Catherine, but just call me Cathy," the redhead piped up.





The smiling woman next to her nodded. "My name's Liliana."





Randall shook hands with them both, before asking a question. "So, I noticed that all of your weapons seem to have similar design styles and characteristics. It almost looks like they were made by the same person."





"Ah, no, they probably weren't made by the same person," Conlan replied, gesturing to the weapons. The golden-eyed man smiled. "We got these for becoming members of the Eternal Empire's Navy."





Randall made his eyes widen. "The Empire's Navy? How on earth did you manage to do that within only a few months after the Tutorial?" Then he pretended to hesitate. "Unless… did we get teleported into the Tutorial at different times?"





Conlan Griffin chuckled. "No, I got teleported into the Tutorial in July. I'm pretty sure all of us forerunners got teleported into the Tutorial at the same time."





Good. He confirmed something I already knew from talking to other forerunners. Then let's discover why he wanted to join the military.






"We demonstrated our abilities to apply for the Distorted Depths region's Navy Battalion," the brown-haired man in front of him continued to explain.





Randall hesitated for a brief second. "That's… one of the most dangerous regions in the Beast Realm?" He took another look at their gear and Statuses.





"It is, yes, but the warships of the Empire give us protection against the monsters there," Conlan Griffin said. "We get free high-quality weapons, armour, access to the military's skill libraries and are allowed to eat purified monster meat from powerful monsters."





Ah, so he's there to build up strength. He must be planning to leave after a year or two.






"That sounds like much better benefits than what joining the military on Earth would get me," Randall joked. He decided to see if he was of interest to the 'Hero'. He pretended to rub his neck awkwardly. "Do you think you might… be able to tell me… how to enter the Distorted Depths' Navy too?" he asked 'hesitantly'.





The golden-eyed man seemed to study him for a second. "Depends. Could I know what your class type is?"





He wants to know if I'll be useful. Here goes nothing.






He scratched his neck. "Uh, I'm actually… a dark mage."





The man and the two girls in front of him blinked at him in surprise. He gave them a sheepish grin. "Yeah, I know, I don't look like one, with the blonde hair and all. I'm not a necromancer though," he said, "But just a dark mage."





Conlan Griffin went silent, holding his chin as he gave Randall an appraising look. Then he smiled. "I just want to know one more thing. Was asking about our weapons the only reason you approached us?" he asked.





I need to be very careful what I say here.






"Well…" He looked away as if he was looking for eavesdroppers. Then Randall lowered his voice. "I… couldn't help feel like you're someone important. It feels a bit weird to call it an 'instinct' or something, but…" He shrugged. "I think a connection with you is one of the steps I need to take first here before anything."





The 'Hero's eyes widened as he stared at him for a few seconds, and then he smiled at Randall. He gestured to the weapons. "While the Distorted Depths' Navy does take mages, if you're 25 or older, you won't be able to undergo the elite training camp to become elite members of the Navy. The elite training camp only occurs once a year in October, as well."





That is… very disappointing. I'm already 25. Then, how can I-






"-but," Conlan Griffin continued, "That's not to say you can't become an Elite Officer by joining the Navy normally. The Distorted Depths' Battalion recruits year-round." The golden-eyed man smirked. "Especially talented Officers can become Elite Officers in less than twelve months. Us three are part of White Squall Fortress."





He's telling me to prove myself before coming to him if I have plans of joining him. There's only one decision to make here.






"That is… very useful information. Thank you." He nodded. He glanced at his counter in his peripheral vision, then looked back at them and smiled. "I'll have to think carefully about what to do with this knowledge. If you're lucky then…" He gave them a grin. "Maybe you'll see me next year."





Conlan Griffin and the two girls gave him smiles and nods. "Hopefully, if you decide to join, we'll see you again," the brown-haired man said.





With that, Randall left the three of them to disappear back into the crowd of nearly a thousand, a new goal in sight. He needed to make new plans, and research more about this 'Distorted Depths Navy'. He looked down at his fist and clenched it.





If he expects twelve months, then I'll do it in six.






He stood to the side near a wall, having found a comfortable gap. As the counter in his vision approached three minutes, he prepared to find out what this Forerunner's Event was all about. He casually inspected the crowd again, until his eyes caught a glimpse of silver, which drew his attention. He blinked when he saw what the origin of the metallic colour was.





A dark-haired woman wearing a mask covering the right side of her face was standing a few paces away from him. She had a long fringe and two short sheaths attached to her belt, potentially holding daggers of some sort. Her left eye was an unusual shade of intense violet, but what was surprising was the silvery winged snake draping its tail across her shoulders, its crested head and white-gold wings raised above the woman's head.





A magical beast got in here? It must be one of those 'bonds'. And… wait a second…






Randall stared at her, feeling slightly confused.





I feel like I recognise her from somewhere. Is she a celebrity of some kind? Famous on the datanet somewhere, possibly? I'll need to think more about this, but I should check what Origin Skill she has for now. It might have something to do with enhancing familiarity and closeness with animals…






He viewed her Status… and frowned.





Lucille Goldcroft… the name feels familiar, but what… is this?






[Status: ]
Name: Lucille Goldcroft (Lvl. 1̷̢̤̑)
Age: 18y
Race: Human
HP: 350/350 {+1/5m}
MP: 0/100 {+1/5m}

Stats:
Free Stat Points: 35

STR: &̸̧̨̖̦̩̖̥̪̅͑7̵̛͍̂̅̽̐̽́̄͠2̸̧̱̲͓̭̎̎̀̀̔̔ SPRT: 7000

CON: _̷͕̫̦̟̖͓̳͈͊̌̋̏͋̍̀͋̃2̸̣̼͗͒̕&̵̢̛͚̘̖͎̣̰̗͊̀̓̎̈́̊́̉̏̅7̴̡̢̻͇͎̼̦̈́ MENT:65

AGI: *̴̦̺̫̳̼̳́̍̈́̆̃̈́̀̔̈́͋̚͝2̶̢̼̬͖̰̭͕̬̥́̄̊̓̓̃̚)̸̛̩̩̃͂̑̀̀̒̓͗̈9̶̪͎̬̤̦̹̟̒͛͊͋͊́́̋͌̏̓͑̕̚ CHAR: 5̶̡̛̼͇̪̩͈̝͉͍̮̠̏͜^̷̨̢̣̰̖̟̮̘͇̀̎̎̎͐̀̀̆͗̇̋͝͠7̶̨̼͍́̈́̽̈́̄̎͆̈́͊̂̽̒̊͝ͅ

DEX: 1̶̛̹͕̬͇̰͖͍́͋̿̋̇̉̄́̉̏͒͛̒̉̈́́́̀́̈́̄̚͘͝ͅ5̷̨̟͕̫̙̖̼̣̯͙̯͇͖̻̦̣̙̼͔̟̩̝̻̘̇͗͆̽͒̀́̿̈́͜!̵̛͍̥̯̙̲̀̒̾̀̌̋̐͑̕͘̚͝͠͠͠3̶̧̢̣͉͙͚̣̝̪̮͍͇̣̮̪̮͈̭̖̳̈́̏͂̉̓͋̌̆̆ CHP: -̴̨͓͔̗̥̤̞̗̠̜͇̦͈̖́̀̂́͐̈́̇́̑̀̎́̉͌̈́̓̉̕͘͠

INT: 3̶̹͇̏̈́̄̄̒͛@̵̳͚̣̀̌̓͋͌̏͒̚2̴̧̬̜̦̤̞͔͊͒̃̌̅̕ͅ9̶̛̣̗̬̱̜̿̀̀̐ HRP: -̴̨͓͔̗̥̤̞̗́̀̂́͐̈́̇́̑̀̎́̉͌̈́̓̉̕͘͠

WIS: N̵̛̙͖̄̉̓̋́̋̅̌̄̔̓͊͋̀͐̿̌̂̐̋͘̚3̴̡̡̡̛͎̠̹̖̰̥̳̘͇̯̾̄̇͊̾̍͛͗͊͑̈́̀̀̚̚͘͠͠$̷̨͚̰̖̜̥̝͈̲̥̆̀̀̐͊̑̎̎̈́̀̅͗̕͘̕͜ͅͅ8̸͕̗̯̫͕͕̪̠̓̾
[Origin Skill: -___- | Type: /null/
  • Desc: user.blank/data{^*}->all
  • Subskills: ---------------

Awakening: 0 ]





Is my skill malfunctioning? That shouldn't be it, it says it can't be blocked, so what am I looking at here? Is she hacking the System somehow? Even the stats I can see are impossible to get at Rank-0, so they must be fake somehow. Does she possibly have an Origin Skill that's supposed to be capable of blocking out information, when my skill is supposed to be unstoppable, so it's become glitched like this? But where's her class?





Randall rubbed his temples and decided to see her Titles, to make sure-





[Title: Regressor | Type: System]

[Rarity: Unique]





He stared blankly at what he was seeing. Then he felt the blood drain from his face. He stole a glance back in the direction of the 'Hero', seeing that the Title was still there, and he glanced back and forth between the two to compare, but couldn't deny the reality he saw in front of him.





There wasn't only one regressor. There were two.
 
Chapter 39 (2 of 2) Cosmic Origins.
There wasn't only one regressor. There were two.





How?! Why are there two?! Are there more of them? Do they have a relationship? Do they have hostility towards each other? And the familiarity I feel from her name is making me worried. I can't make heads or tails of her Status, there's no useful information I can obtain- wait.





He facepalmed as he realised why her name felt so familiar.





Lucille Goldcroft! I know where I've heard that name before! She's the crazy heir of Medallion! The largest incorporation in the world! How could I have been so stupid?! Her great-uncle is one of the most powerful people on Earth!






Randall bit his nails anxiously, and began to pace around a bit, the other forerunners giving him looks.





This is bad. Have I involved myself too early? I shouldn't have been so hasty in approaching that man… but I can't even see her class, stats, or skills, so how could I know whether it's worth siding with her or not? Although for some reason her eye colour changed, and she's wearing a mask…






He stole another glance, noticing she was looking at the floor.





I might be overthinking things. Who's to say they even know each other? It's possible the memories of the future they have are different. Maybe they could end up as allies, although it would be risky to introduce them this early. And I have yet to prove to the Hero I can be trusted. Besides, I promised myself that I would never, ever give anyone even a hint of my Origin Skill abilities. I can't tell either of them there's another regressor.






He took a deep breath, and let it out.





Let's calm down. That 'Hero' is currently a known variable because I can see his Status, so I'll stick with him for now. It might not be too late to jump ship later. And… maybe I can drop hints over time, because with Lucille Goldcroft's Status……. she's an unknown variable. It's better to get rid of unknow-






He froze. Two golden, slitted eyes were staring directly at him. The serpent bond of the Medallion heir had raised its eyes and was staring at him, the snake not moving. Then, slowly, the dark-haired woman raised her vividly violet eye and stared directly at him too. Like he was watching a video in slow motion, the woman very slightly tilted her head. She gazed silently at him for a few seconds, then lifted her right gloved hand to slowly remove the leather mask from her face. He stared, stunned, when he saw the slowly rotating golden circle within her eye, mesmerizingly brilliant.





Then her lips parted in an unnervingly wide smile, and the winged serpent across her shoulders bared its fangs. With clear, exaggerated movements of her mouth that enabled him to easily understand the meaning of her silent words and emphasised gestures of her hands, she sent him a non-verbal message.





She pointed at him.





'You'.





She raised her hands.





'Can'.





She gestured to her eyes.





'See'.





Then, she slowly lifted her gloved hands to outline the border of the Regressor Title box hovering above her head.





'It'.





She narrowed her eyes as she finished her sentence, still smiling.





'Can't you?'





His heart pounded in his chest, his limbs stiff, as the meaning of her actions was made clear to him. Involuntarily, his eyes drifted over to the 'Hero' in the distance, and the dark-haired woman in front of him followed his gaze. His mind went blank when she returned her gaze to him, tilted her head to the other side, and then her strange smile widened even further.





At that point, Randall knew, with utter certainty, that Lucille Goldcroft was aware there was another regressor.





The woman with violet and gold eyes made a gesture to the snake on her shoulders, which slowly slithered down to coil around her arm. She held her arm out as the serpent raised its upper body high in her hand, hissing loudly. The rims of its two golden rises gained a red hue which deepened over the seconds.





Then Randall was struck with a deep, resonating sense of impending death as if he was going to be killed in near milliseconds. His heart thumped painfully inside of his chest as his limbs trembled with fear, cold sweat sliding down his face and causing his clothes to stick to him. He felt lightheaded as the breaths he drew became short and harsh in his chest, his throat feeling dry and rough. He clutched his head as a headache drummed a painful beat in his head. With pain-induced hyperfocus, he watched the woman move again.





She pointed one gloved finger at him, then smirked. She tapped on her lips to symbolise 'Speaking'. Then she pointed a thumb at her neck and made a very slow swiping motion across it.





The counter in Randall's peripheral vision ticked down to 00:00.





[The Forerunner's Event will now begin. Please enter through the open doors to receive information on your purpose here in the Tower]





The black double doors with glowing geometric lines made a sound akin to the unlocking of heavy metal bolts, then swung open. The one thousand people in the room began to filter through the inky black wall of darkness on the other side, disappearing from view.





As he just stared blankly at the dark-haired woman, the snake around her arm hissed louder at him, hued irises deepening in colour. The woman's smirk widened as she glanced at Randall, and gave the serpent's head a gentle, placating pat. The serpent stopped hissing, and he gasped as he was released from the sensation of imminent doom, taking heaving breaths. Almost lazily, the woman returned the snake to her shoulders and then replaced her black mask.





With his limbs still frozen in place from fear, he didn't move an inch as the woman came closer, heading towards the double doors. But as she passed him, she paused, putting a hand on his shoulder. She was still smiling, but her icy voice was barely loud enough to be a whisper, her serpent hissing softly once more.





"Randall Holloway. Do not interfere."





And with that, she patted his shoulder once and walked onwards, leaving him standing there in clothes drenched by his own cold sweat, and shaking uncontrollably in apprehension for what his future held.










'When do we kill him?'








Lucille was still smiling as she walked towards the entrance of the Event.





What could you possibly mean, Scytale? Why would we ever want to kill someone who hasn't tried to hurt us yet?





''Yet' being the important part,'
he replied mentally, lowering his head to give her a sideways look. 'Leaving him alive could ruin all your plans, Lucy. His existence is a liability.'








Her smile didn't change as she came near the doors.





Do you not have confidence in your killing intent?








'Of course that's not it.'
Scytale's internal sigh leaked through the bond. 'I just want you to explain why you don't seem to be worried about this.'





She lost her smile and looked over her shoulder to give the man who had seen her Status another glance. He made saw her looking and immediately avoided eye contact. She turned back to the large open doorway.





I noticed him when we first entered the room. It was pretty easy to pick up on what type of person he was. He kept scanning the room, his eyes stopping on individuals with unique traits of some kind, and never lost his smile. That meant his smile was an act he put on, not a natural trait of his. And when we watched him interact with the Hero earlier, he acted in a disarming way, trying to ensure the Hero's group didn't find him suspicious. In essence, he's a schemer. Someone who likes being in control of events, and being a part of them.








She shook her head.





And those types of people value themselves first and foremost. He would never, ever reveal his greatest strength by hinting at the ability to know the Statuses and Titles of people. Because they place themselves first, it means they're also very cowardly when not in a position of power. And right now, I'm in a position of power, because I know what he knows, but he doesn't know enough about me.








'So, if we had to worry about him, it would be in many years where maybe he's earned the strength to go against us.'








Exactly. But I'll be asking Ravimoux to watch him closely.






She placed one foot into the pitch-black wall on the other side of the double doors. Now, let's enter.








She stepped through, finding herself on a pure white narrow platform that extended forward for a few metres, before connecting to a circular white centre platform. The room was black and appeared infinite. They couldn't see anything on either side of the walkway platform as a pitch-black oval floating in mid-space behind them shrunk and disappeared. Lucy kept walking until she stepped onto the circular platform. It turned clear at the same time a notification chimed.





[Welcome to the Planetary Simulation Viewer]





Slowly, pinpricks of light appeared in the distance of the endless space, until thousands appeared, in a replica of the Milky Way, revealing themselves to be millions of stars. Below the transparent circular platform was the slowly rotating giant form of Earth, its night-time continents lit up with twinkling golden lights of cities and houses. Two semi-translucent chairs appeared for Lucille and Scytale, allowing them to sit down. As they sat, another notification sounded out.





[In this space, all information about Earth and its future assimilation into the Tower is available to the User, as long as they request it. This includes knowledge about their future return to Earth in 4 years and 6 months.]





[The System waits to see what potential lies in those from Earth….]





There was a delay before a final notification appeared.





[The first planet of the 6th Realm: The Cosmic Realm]





With that last notification, Lucy stretched out her hands before her and decided to get working. She didn't need to ask about her return to Earth, and so, she was going to see just how much 'all information' covered. That information would likely go unused, but it was possible that she could eventually use it for something. Scytale was just happy to see the hyper-realistic 3D documentary animation that was the space around them when she searched for information.





Now, let's begin by asking about the collision and fusion chance of non-elemental mana-types with mundane weak nuclear force and strong nuclear force over these next few years on Earth.











"Ugh. Information overload," Scytale complained. "I mean, the close-up exploding star simulation was pretty awesome, and because it was the System, it had no difference to the real thing, but all the long words you used made my head spin."








He flickered his tongue near her head as they walked through the Capital City's traffic.





"Like, what the heck is an astro-magnetised star-core reduction reaction?"








She turned a corner of the main road they were walking beside. "A type of star implosion caused by extremely strong artificial gravity."





"So… a black hole?" he asked dubiously.





She shook her head. "It's not a black hole."





He went silent and hung his head dismally. "I give up. I surrender to my fate. I'll never be good at this nerd stuff."








"I'm not a-" She stopped talking, and just sighed, rubbing her temples. "Never mind. Anyway, we're here."





She came to a stop in front of a large, imposing building. Built out of dark purple and black brick, the massive structure had a long series of stone steps leading up to its open doorway, thousands of people in mage and wizard robes climbing and descending the steps with books, tomes, magical items, staves, and scrolls in hand.





Towering supporting pillars of glittering purple marble that had golden and silver engravings in the shape of powerful beasts made from runes held up the triangular roof, in a way similar to the Parthenon of Athens, and carved above the doorway was a scroll the length of a train - big, bold, glowing golden words that spelled out 'ALL-AEON ATHENAEUM – CAPITAL CITY IMPERIALIUS AETERNIA' painted along it.





Seven sky-high beacons of mana in the colours of green, red, blue, white, yellow, black, and violet soared up from its roof, the elemental mana gushing over the roof and down the sides of the building, a tantalizing scent coming from it all, and a sense of euphoria emerging alongside it. Lucy had to summon her spiritual energy to coat her body with enough of it to prevent the mana from flooding her body, potentially changing her affinity. The mana mixed, creating rainbow hues as elements fused to become mid-level elements such as wood, lightning, or lava. Scytale flapped his wings, breathing in the rich energy.





"Now that is an amazing sensation. As a magic beast, I'm loving it here. I wonder how many poor sorry Users they're sapping for mana to keep those mana beacons burning."








Lucille pinched her nose bridge as nearby mages shot him dirty looks. "Scytale, could you please not ruin my chances of fixing my skill before we even get inside?"





"I'd like to see who could refuse the money you can throw in their faces," he replied cheekily.





She just sighed as she began climbing the steps. The humongous open double doors they were approaching were made of glossy black wood, the corner frames fancy ornamental designs of runes. The doors were large enough to fit twenty buses across, and three times as high. Their surfaces were carved with four giant runes, which Lucy knew meant 'Knowledge', 'Secrets', 'Known' and 'Unknown'. Sometimes briefly, deep within the lines of the runes, they glowed with violet light. She walked past them into the crowded entrance hall. Powerful magical artifacts radiating mana were encased behind protective crystal on either side of the entranceway, golden plaques describing their abilities and historical value beneath.





In the centre of the entrance hall, set into the floor of dark grey polished stone with gold veins, was a giant bronze compass-like design. It had no arrows or needles, as the floor was perfectly flat, but dials spun and clock faces rotated within it. A magic array of dark blue arcane mana was perpetually being cast above it, enabling hundreds of people to cross through the array.





Most of the mages and wizards entering or exiting the building did just that, the array recognising their Archive orbs, and letting them through after documenting their presence, but if Lucille tried to walk past, she'd be lucky if she wasn't incinerated by a fireball spell.





One side of the entrance hall was where the smaller population of non-factioneers of the Athenaeum were, lining up behind a glowing globe structure the size of a car. They left, gaining a glowing cyan rune on the back of their hands, where they would wait until a mage or wizard behind one of the many desks called for them. Unfortunately, that required casting a spell on the individual, and Lucy just so happened to be very immune to spells. Luckily, she had an alternative.





She walked up to one of the desks, which had little to no people waiting behind it. The wizard at the desk, a man with a silver beard, glasses, and a badge with seven stars on it, indicating his status as a 7th-circle wizard, looked up at her.





"This desk is for those who wish to purchase information from the All-Aeon Athenaeum's Archives," he informed her indifferently. "Only nobility holding Titles from the Aeternus plane may utilise this service. If you do not wish to purchase information or do not have the right status to do so, then please use another desk."





"I don't have a Title currently," she told him, making him frown, but she continued, "However, this should be enough to prove my status." She took out her violet pocket watch and placed it on the desk.





The wizard opened his mouth, likely to tell her to leave, until he glanced down at the pocket watch and paused, probably seeing its Item Sheet. "Excuse me," he said, making her nod to allow him to pick him up. He adjusted his glasses to peer at the item.





Lucille tapped her fingers on the desk. "The Head of the Aurelian Commission holds an Honorary Count Title," she said. Then she smirked. "And the Empire's annual banquet is in two weeks."





He raised his eyes from the pocket watch to look at her, probably understanding her meaning of 'I'm going to be a Count in two weeks when I can then get you in deep trouble if you reject me now'. He placed back down the pocket watch and looked at Scytale.





"And the snake?"





"He's a compeer bond," she explained. "I believe he's allowed in, according to the rules."





The wizard nodded, having Inspected Scytale and found the status of 'bond' on his Inspection page. "As long as he's a bond." He pushed the pocket watch towards her so she could retrieve it, which she did, and he pulled out a sheet of paper with words written in silver ink. He grabbed a pen from beside him and held it out to her. "Your signature, and method of payment."





She signed it and then wrote down her chosen method. When he pulled it back to read, he raised an eyebrow. "Deposit method? That requires you to have at least five crystalline tokens on hand, the excess to be returned after you have retrieved your information."





She nodded. "I'm aware."





He gave her another appraising look, but eventually let out a short sigh. He rolled up the contract and placed it in a small metal box which he locked by infusing the rune on the front with mana. Then he withdrew a small badge from a drawer of his desk, picked up the metal safe box, and passed both to her. He pointed to the other end of the entrance hall.





"That badge will allow you to pass the identifier array without issue. Take the badge and box to the fifteenth room on the left, where someone will take you to a private room to complete the trade," he explained. "The 'Watcher' will sign a contract promising his silence on all seen or heard within that room once you have placed the deposit. After that, you may ask for what information you need, and the total cost will be returned to you, then taken out of your deposit if you wish to proceed with the deal."





He paused and said one more thing. "The Athenaeum will take a base minimum payment of one hundred rose crowns if you do not wish to continue with the deal. Is that all?" he asked.





"Yes, thank you," she replied, giving him a nod. He nodded in return and continued working on his documents. Lucy and Scytale moved past the identifier array, easily walking past the many layers of mana-circles that had risen to try to analyse them. There was no such thing as protection of privacy when it came to the Athenaeum storing their information. Too bad it wouldn't work on Lucille, with her 'pseudo-invulnerability' to magic. Scytale… well, she'd have to escape the Capital's Athenaeum branch quickly after the trade so she could avoid any mages or wizards asking to study her hybrid bond.





She continued walking, the wide hallway at the end of the entrance hall containing more ornamental magical artifacts hidden behind glass cases. Eventually, she found the fifteenth side corridor, which led to a small room where only one woman was working behind a desk. The woman looked up at Lucy, who showed her the badge. The woman nodded, standing up and giving her a slight bow. She pressed a button on her desk before gesturing to a door on the side of her.





"Please enter this room and wait until the Watcher arrives," the woman said.





Lucille went and opened the door, entering the room beyond as the woman shut the door behind her. Two plush armchairs on either side of a table were inside, and she took up a spot on one of them as Scytale slid onto the back of the chair. She waited patiently for the 'Watcher'.





After a few minutes, a man dressed in blue robes with dark hair opened a door opposite the one Lucy came in through and gave her a slight bow. He sat down in the chair opposite her.





"Good afternoon," he said. "My name is Elron Farnelost of the Blue Order, and I will be the Watcher for this trade." A white circle appeared horizontally above his palm, where a sheet of paper dropped out, covered in sentences of golden ink. He placed it down on the table and slid it forward for Lucy to read.





"This is the Ancient-ranked contract I will be using to promise my silence on who requested the information, and what information was requested. I will sign it as soon as you have deposited the five crystalline tokens in the sealed box." He gestured to the box she held. "Could you please pass it for me to unlock?"





She passed him the box, where he tapped the glowing rune on the front with a finger. The box opened, and he placed it down on the table. Lucy opened her dimensional bag to withdraw five tokens, placed them in the box, and then slid back the contact after she had read it, making sure no loopholes existed in it. The mage took out a pen from his dimensional skill and swiftly signed the contract. He shut the safe box and then leaned back in the chair.





"Now. Before I ask what information you're requesting, I need to inform you of several things," he explained, intertwining his fingers, and resting them on his lap. "The older the information you request, the more expensive it will be, due to the mana required for the Archive to search back that far. The more forces involved in the information, the more expensive it will be as well. And," he continued, "If this information is popular, and requested by others, the price will go down, due to other people knowing about it." He gestured to her. "Any questions?"





She shook her head, so he nodded. "Then you may state what information you want."





"I would like to obtain records of broken, incomplete, or unfinished Origin Skills," she said. "Not ones that have been changed by the User undergoing a race change to undead or beastmen," she explained, "But ones that have had strange lines in their descriptions, or required resources outside of typical Origin Skill primers to function properly. And, if possible, I want to know what those particular resources were."





He tilted his head, considering the strange request. "Incomplete Origin Skills… hmm. It's possible we don't have anything on that subject, as it pertains to the System," he said, to her nod, "Which isn't known to make many errors, if at all, and is hard to study. You don't mean Origin Skills with hard-to-raise awakening rates, do you?" he asked.





Lucille shook her head. "No. I mean Origin Skills that either have lines of System jargon in their description, specifically state something like 'incomplete' or cannot be activated at all."





"I see," he replied. He gave her a nod. "Then I will ask for this information to be retrieved from the Archive. If the event comes that there is no information on this topic, then we will only take the minimum cost out of the deposit, but if the Archive takes a while, we will ask you to return another day to retrieve it." Then he shook his head. "Although, that usually occurs when there is an excess of information to search through, which I doubt is an issue in your case."





He stood up and walked over to the door he entered through. He glanced over his shoulder to tell her one more thing. "The time to retrieve information from the Archive is typically half an hour on average."





Lucy nodded, and he left, shutting the door behind him. She closed her eyes as she and Scytale prepared themselves for the wait. Slightly more than half an hour later, he walked in, three folders in hand. He placed them on the table between them.





"It seems there were three records matching your requirements. Due to being submitted quite a while ago," he told her, "The cost of the information will be a total of two crystal tokens. Do you accept this cost?"





"I do." She nodded.





He stood up and gave her a bow. "Then I will leave the room, and withdraw the required amount from the safe box. Use this device," he said, putting a brass bell-like object between them, "To call me when you have finished reading, where I will destroy the copied records and return the excess of your deposit. I hope you find what you need in those records," he finished politely. With that, the mage left.





Lucille picked up the first folder and set about reading it. The record revealed details about a man who failed to absorb the bloodline of a powerful magic beast to become a beastman and mentioned the strange way his Origin Skill description warped in the process.





'But I thought you specified not to receive information about those who underwent a race change?'






I did. But technically, this person failed the race change, so he never underwent one.






'And they still charged you for the information? Wow, what a scam.'







She placed down the first disappointing record and picked up the second. This one was slightly more useful. It discussed a special Origin Skill of a member of a dying human subrace on an outer plane that was conquered seventy thousand years ago. The User could use their Origin Skill, as their tribe had a method of pre-awakening Origin Skills using pseudo-elixirs made from purified monster parts, a method many unassimilated planes and worlds used.





But it seemed the User's ability was unique enough that the System couldn't instantly categorise it, especially as it was race-specific, and their race had few members. Unfortunately, all it took was less than a week before it could categorise the Origin Skill, so it never underwent 'fixing' of any sort.





Lucy sighed, putting it down.





I didn't expect to have much luck, but this is pretty poor.






'You still have one more. Read that first.'






She picked up the last one…… and paused.





Archive 18.10.792/17 A.S: Unfinished Origin Skill.


Documented Occurrences: 1.


Record Submitter: Faltin Summerel


Record Event Date (Estimation): 24.3.124/1 – 24.9.124/1 A.S.


Subject Name: Unknown.


On the 24th of March, Year 1124 after the Mystical Realm's assimilation, reports of a high-noble heir of the 2nd Eternal Duchy, incapable of using or viewing their Origin Skill after the Tutorial were heard. A high-ranked wizard known for being a well-learned System Scholar came to the Duchy and was tasked with discovering what the issue was. Several months passed, and it was thought the wizard would be incapable of determining the issue.




The wizard then unexpectedly called in a water Archmagus capable of using the water-space fusion element of Maelstrom and then requested the presence of wizards or mages of each of the other four space fusion elements after that. The five space fusion element users of All-Aeon Athenaeum returned to the Aeonic plane soon afterwards.




The heir was then tasked with undergoing the first ten stages by the Duke of Medolin at the time, even without their Origin Skill. The heir returned from the Beast Realm, and it was reported that their Origin Skill was functional. Reports say the heir stated they were given a special catalyst or unique primer by the System once they had completed the final stage and received their stage rewards.



It is not fully known what exact item the heir absorbed, however, a few transcribed coded letters discovered several thousand years later in the Medolin Duchy seem to suggest the heir may have received a dimension core in their stage completion rewards. The identity of the heir, the subject of this report, is not known, but the most likely theory is that they were the founder of the Violet Order, who are thought to be the one responsible for founding the Artificers. This theory is supported by the fact they were an heir of the Medolin Duchy, also known as the Star Fall Astrum Duchy, the only magic-using duchy of the 6 Eternal Duchies.



The Star Fall Astrum Duchy is the place of origin for the high-level Astrum element, the element used by the most high-ranking Astrologers. The Astrologers are considered the highest-level authority in charge of both the Violet Order and Spatial Tower, with the Artificers not being under their direct authority, but having close connections with them. It is known the Violet Order is a relatively recent addition to the All-Aeon Athenaeum, as the absence of any mortal or nonmortal individual capable of using pure space element means having an order named after spatial essence sparked much controversy. Nonetheless, its creation enabled there to be more users of the five space fusion elements, which, 'coincidentally', were all used by the five Archmagus and wizard visitors of the heir in their youth.






'Okay, lots of words, and you're frowning slightly. Which means you've found something, or you haven't, but you're still looking at this, so…what did you find?'






Lucille put down the report and rubbed her temples. I think this is what I've been looking for.






'That's good!'






The item I need will be given to me by the System after I complete the Beast Realm stages.






'Yay. Easy fix then-'






But the item is a dimension core.






Scytale paused and looked between her and the folder. 'I… kinda see your problem, but remind me what those are again?'






They're the objects used to create lesser dimensions. The grading scale goes from red to violet, the closer the colour is to violet, the higher the dimension. They're very rare, found on newborn planes, and to create one artificially you need to use plane sources. A stronger plane creates a more powerful dimension core. Violet grade is enough to create powerful dimensions that could even hold the Institutions' origin planes.






She sighed and rested her head against the back of the armchair. But my new Origin Skill has to have taken on some of the characteristics of my old Origin Skill, which deals with the soul and spiritual energy, so what's the link between dimensions and the soul? I know for a fact that there is none, because the spiritual realm has no dimensions, being omnipresent, immaterial, and non-physical. How can dimension cores exist for something that doesn't have any dimensions?






Lucille crossed her arms.





Then there's the fact this means my Origin Skill seems to be a type of nascent dimensional skill.






Dimensional skills were incredibly, incredibly rare compared to the entire population of the Tower. Even with the fact demons and spirits were natural 'dimensional existences', capable of traversing the material realms through the immaterial realms, nobody was able to manipulate pure space element. This meant dimensional skills were only found in one realm. The realm that often gave magical abilities without elements.





'But Lucy, you can see why you could get a dimensional skill, right?'






She looked at him and frowned slightly, but nodded.





'The most important thing is that we can fix it. I say we stop thinking about all this and return home for a break.'






She shook her head wryly. You always tell me to stop bothering to think about things.






'Doesn't make it any less true.'






With that, she stacked the folders, pressed the bell device, and after getting her remaining crystalline tokens back, she and Scytale left the All-Aeon Athenaeum's branch in Imperialius Aeternia, the Capital City of the Eternal Empire's Aeternus plane.

From Chapter 3 (2 of 2) Introducing the Real Conman:
At least those from the Beast Realm liked keeping the names simple, because if she had to scroll through a thousand 'Verdisandel Ve Reschtin City' or 'The Anciente Supreme Abode of Archmagus Aerost Runestar Medolin the 2nd of the Highest Seat of the Violet Order', she just might decide the System needs to be deleted.

Also, some announcements. In one or two weeks I'll be switching to a M-W-F schedule to help me build up my Patreon backlog, as I'm working on that and a discord for my story. And from November 11th to the 25th (which is two weeks) I'll be taking a break so I can rewrite the first ten chapters and create the index/glossary thing I mentioned. But anyways, with this chapter, we're 11 chapters away from finishing the first major arc. That's also 110k though lol.
 
Chapter 40 (1 of 2) Observations of a Strange New Colleague by Caspian Wharifin.
The main command building of White Squall Fortress was filled with Officers going back and forth with documents, doing their work, and sorting out the operations of the several thousand military members stationed in the cliff-top structure. Warships the size of islands crested the sea horizon outside of the fortress, and titanic beings with massive flocks and crowds of their lessers flooded the fleets in an attempt to destroy the ships and devour the Officers commanding the boats.





In one of the many corridors of the main command building, a young man with sea-green hair watched as the tall, curly-haired woman with glowing hair walked in front of him, carrying a stack of paper to deliver to the next room.





Caspian Wharifin had a new colleague.





And… he couldn't work her out. When the Commander told him they would be working together, he didn't realise the man meant it literally, both of them being placed under the same new superior, and doing most tasks together. He had originally thought it was to help the woman get used to the work, but when it became clear she needed very little help at all and he told his superior that, she still wasn't transferred elsewhere. She was even allowed on the Commander's warship for the past month, like him. Although for her, maybe that wasn't a good thing. He shuddered as he remembered her sparring session with the Commander.





It seemed the Commander was treating her like Ross and him though. The man would get immensely interested in one or two people now and then, and would then devote himself to terrorising them until they left the Navy. The woman in front of him didn't seem like someone who would quit easily, but that could just possibly mean when her buttons were finally fully pressed, it would be a big event.





"Officer Wharifin?"





He blinked when he heard the toneless voice and saw Adrianna Riftmire, the person in front of him, looking back at him. He shook himself out of musing.





"Ah, yes, Officer Riftmire?"





"You've been staring at me for the last few minutes," she stated coolly.





… it was slightly awkward that she had noticed. He coughed. "Sorry. I was distracted……"





"……by your hair."





Her expression instantly went cold, making him feel amused. One of the few things he had worked out about the woman was that her hair seemed to be a little bit of a sore point.





"Then I suggest as your colleague you spend your time more effectively," she replied icily. She continued onwards with that march of hers, ignoring him once more.





He realised something. "…how did you know I was staring at you though?"





She glanced back over her shoulder to give him what he was beginning to recognise as a dubious look, so he explained himself.





"I mean, your back was turned. You shouldn't be able to see me," he said.





She gazed wordlessly at him, which, if this was still the beginning of November, he might've been a bit weirded out by it, but by now he had realised it was her wondering whether to tell him something or not. She let out a very slight sigh.





"I use spiritual energy. I can see on all sides of me at all times." Then she began moving again.





Ah. So, don't do anything behind her back, thinking she's not looking.






But now he had another strange fact to add to the dozens of other observations he had made about the weird new colleague of his over the nearly three weeks they had worked together. Which included amongst them her ability to keep her voice perfectly neutral at all times, her limited facial expressions, and her glowing hair. He thought he also remembered Ross mentioning strange sleeping habits…?





Adrianna Riftmire paused and took a turn to go deliver her documents to another room of the fortress's Main Building, leaving him alone. As always, she didn't bother to inform anybody what she was doing until she had done it. Or at least if she thought it unimportant, which clearly showed how high interaction with him ranked on her list of priorities. Although he was beginning to think differently these last few days…





When he had asked the Commander, his superior, and a few others questions about her, they had said he was strangely curious about the new Officer. And to a certain extent, Caspian was. Just the fact she had such a striking appearance made her an unusual person, but she had a multitude of other characteristics that made her interesting to him.





One was just her general behaviour. She looked like she was in her early twenties, but she didn't speak like one in the slightest, nor did she interact with the other Officers her age beyond what was necessary. He hadn't been around her when she was near the Commander and their superior to see how she was around them, but…





She was also highly talented, with a seemingly perfect memory. The fact she used spiritual energy probably explained that fact, but he thought she was a Rank-1, so it was another mystery how she could use SPRT at her rank.





Also, she was taller than him! He wasn't short and wasn't someone who had anything against a woman being taller than him, but it was still very strange when standing next to her. Slightly embarrassing when he couldn't reach into a tall cupboard and she ended up getting him the object too.





But he was picking up on little details that told him Adrianna Riftmire wasn't quite as cold as she seemed. None of the Officers said they had experienced her being rude in any form, and while she spoke like the colour very light grey was an emotion, a few of her comments could be interpreted as humorous if always said without any expression that could tell you if she was being serious or not.





He had actually had more luck reading her body language than her expressions when it came to working her out, although when he tried to point out the real meaning of some of her words to the other Officers, they just looked at him like he was insane.





Well, he had always been like that. Good at picking up what someone was feeling based on little details. Still, Adrianna Riftmire's body language felt a bit too… artificial. And there was her weird reaction to seeing him when they first met. Sure, Atlanteans were very rarely seen outside of their capital city in Atlantea, but he was only quarter-Atlantean, and didn't even have their skin colouration. While not many, there were still some beastmen and magical beasts in White Squall Fortress, so she shouldn't have been so surprised to see his appearance.





He still couldn't work out why she hadn't been transferred though. Or at least given a different position if the Commander didn't want to remove her from under their superior. Her work ethic was leaving him feeling a little subpar, actually, even though he knew he worked better than most Officers, which was why he had been under the Commander's direct command for so long.





…the Commander wasn't trying to play matchmaker, was he? If he was, that would be horrifying, and very scary. Caspian didn't need the Commander picking up weird new hobbies at this point. That man caused the Officers of the fortress grief even when things were going well for them all, so this could be the final straw before a riot occurred.





But he had gotten lost in his thoughts again, and had work to do, so he decided to focus on the present and get his work done before the shift was over.











"-and that should be the last of it," he said, placing down the stack of papers on the desk.





"Tomorrow we'll be going on the Commander's ship again," she replied, placing down her stack too.





"Ah… yeah." He tried to prevent himself from grimacing, not wanting Adrianna to notice his reaction, although the silent stare he got didn't give him much hope she had missed it. He raised his arms above his head to stretch. "Shift's over then."





Adrianna nodded and then turned around to leave the room. He followed… not because he was some creepy stalker, but just because the cafeteria was in the same direction. He wondered what to start a conversation with, so the trip to the cafeteria wouldn't get too awkward. "So… what did you do before joining the Navy?"





She glanced at him. "I used to be a mercenary."





… Alright, so 'I used to kill people for a living' wasn't quite the answer he was expecting.





It seemed Adrianna had picked up on his thoughts because the icy-eyed woman let out a sigh. "Just so you know, I never killed anyone. I only worked in a supporting role."





Come to think of it, I don't know what her class type is.






"Supporting role?" he asked curiously.





"I'm an illusion mage, so I didn't use attack spells," she replied.





An illusion mage was a strange class to use if you were entering the Navy, with the lack of attack abilities at low ranks, and he had heard she was the new Squad Leader chosen from the elite training camp, so he wondered how that worked. To be chosen as a Squad Leader from the elite camp, you needed to have high combat strength, regardless of commanding ability, so she must have had some method of fighting she hadn't told him yet.





He had been a Squad Leader a few years ago, although he never entered one of the training camps. He was picked for his other abilities. But there was another more important detail of her statement to address.





"…the Commander's spars with you are always physical though?"





Her expression seemed to twitch slightly, and she slowed her pace for a moment. "You could say he's found one trait of mine to be slightly interesting."





That was a bit vague, however… "He seems to find whatever trait this is of yours more than just a 'little' interesting," he said hesitantly.





Adrianna's expression went flat. "The Commander is a very special kind of person. You can only accept he has his faults and move on."





Caspian stared at her in disbelief. "…what did you just say?"





She looked at him for a brief second and then faced forward again. "I said the Commander's only using me to keep himself entertained until the ice-storm period begins."





No, you cannot just brush over it like that!






"Hey, I know full well what you just said, and it was not that!" he hissed, speeding up his pace to walk closer to her. "Don't think you can just pretend I never heard what you said!"





She very slightly raised an eyebrow at him. "Then why did you ask me what I said in the first place?"





He glared at her, and when she didn't receive an answer she just walked off. He followed after her. "You called the Commander a 'very special person'. As your senior Officer, I cannot ignore that! You do not just call the highest commanding authority of this fortress a 'special person'!"





"But I just did."





"You-" he groaned and pulled at his hair, even as she continued.





"And everyone's special. Everyone is a unique, special, very distinctive individual. Even you. Especially you," she added.





Caspian narrowed his eyes at her. "Did you just call me not right in the head?"





"Officer Wharifin, if that's how you interpreted my words, then that means that's what you think of your Commander," she replied, tilting her head slightly. "As your fellow Officer, I cannot ignore that. You do not just call the highest commanding authority of this fortress 'not right in the head'."





He stared incredulously at her, any comeback lost amidst the mental struggle of feeling very, very annoyed, or quite stunned at the words coming out of her mouth. He finally managed to speak after a few seconds.





"Should I go find our superior to reveal your opinions about our Commander?"





She gave him one slow blink and then nodded. "Yes, let's do that. I need to report to him about an Officer who seems to think the Commander's mentally challenged anyway, so may as well." And with that, she marched onwards.





There was a delay before Caspian's thoughts caught up to what she said. He ran after her. "Hey, hey, hey, actually, let's not do that. How about we just drop this whole conversation topic, in fact."





She glanced at him over her shoulder and then shrugged. "If you want. But you seem to think our superior will disagree with us. I'm not sure you're right."





He hesitated as he considered it. Actually, the man would probably agree with them very wholeheartedly, and then proceed to punish them for daring to say it. He coughed and gestured to the open doorway at the end of the hallway. "Let's just have lunch, and forget we ever had this conversation."





They went into the cafeteria and got their trays of food. Adrianna sat down at a table, and he decided to sit down opposite her. She didn't seem fazed. She didn't even react.





"By the way…" he began, "Did I do something? Because for some reason, you're bothering to talk to me, and it's weirding me out."





She slowly raised her eyes from her food to give him a dull look. "I thought you said to forget the fact we were having a conversation."





"No, I said to forget the fact we had a conversation," he responded, waving a fork at her. "There's a difference."





"You mean the conversation where you called the Commander-"





"Ah! No, no, sorry, I have no idea what you're talking about!" he interrupted hastily, drawing odd looks from nearby Officers. "No idea at all! Next topic, please!"





He watched, slightly surprised, as she rolled her eyes. "If you wanted to start a conversation, beginning with 'I'm getting weirded out because you're talking to me' isn't the best way."





He crossed his arms and leaned back, raising an eyebrow. "And you think you can do better?"





"Sure," she replied with a slight shrug. She gestured to a group of Officers in Navy uniform at one of the tables. "I just have to ask a bunch of Officers how long they've been in White Squall Fortress and they all get into a contest about how long they've survived under the Commander."





He considered it… and realised that was actually the easiest way to begin a conversation in the fortress. "Uh… has this happened more than once?" he asked with a strange expression.





She nodded. "I made the mistake of bringing it up among a room full of Senior Officers the last time." She made an expression Caspian interpreted as a grimace. "I had to use an invisibility spell to escape."





"Okay then…" He took another bite of his meal and pointed his fork at her. "So, if you're so capable of starting a conversation, then how come you don't do it more often?"





She stared silently at him like he had said something stupid. "I don't talk to people because I don't like people," she stated flatly. She glanced down at her food, then at him. "On that note, why are you making noises with your mouth in my direction? Stop doing that. It's annoying." Then she returned to her food.





Caspian clicked his tongue. "It's called communication. You know, one of those essential life skills? A skill you seem to be lacking?"





"I'm a fully functional adult. I just removed features I haven't needed since I was a teenager when I last cared about people," she deadpanned.





"Then how come the sarcasm is still there?"





"Because, unlike good communication skills, sarcasm is essential to the fully functioning adult," she stated calmly, pouring some water out of a jug on the table into her cup.





It seemed Adrianna Riftmire, when she bothered to engage in conversation, was a much more interesting person than she let on. He leaned forward.





"If sarcasm's so essential to you, why haven't I heard you use it more?"





She gazed wordlessly at him. "Because I'm always using it. Nobody notices because they can't read my emotions, so they end up gazing blankly at me trying to work out if I was being sarcastic or not."





He hesitated because he couldn't quite tell if she was being serious… and then he realised he was doing exactly as she just stated. He shook his head and decided to ask her something he'd been curious about for a while now.





"Anyway, how old are you? You look like you're in your early twenties, but you don't act like it at all, so I've been thinking you're older," he said.





She glanced at him, and put down her cup after taking a drink. "I'm 21."





He stared at her for a few seconds. "Wait, really? You're younger than me?"





She gave him a dubious look. "Maybe, but I don't know how old you are."





He blinked and then coughed. "Right. Of course you don't. I'm 22." He considered if it was worth asking her this now, and decided he might as well. "Can I call you Adrianna?"





She opened her mouth to answer and then paused for some reason. She continued before he could comment on it, "I guess, but I'm still calling you Wharifin."





Caspian blinked at the strange answer. "Huh? Why?"





She used her fork to point towards an open doorway, and he turned around to see what she was gesturing to. Then he hesitated as he saw three people there he recognised. Wearing light-blue badges, and giggling as they hid behind the doorframe, were three girls in their late teens, girls he knew worked for the healers' division. They also happened to be looking at him, and he knew exactly why they were there.





"I'm not getting caught up in your love life," Adrianna stated flatly. She got up from the table with her tray in hand.





"Uh… I swear that isn't what this is-"





"So you have no love life?"





"Ye- wait, no, that's not what I-" He paused as he saw the corner of her lips curled up in a faint smirk.





Is she… teasing me?






…..huh.






He got up and followed her with his tray in hand. "Anyway, I strongly object to the statement that I have no love life! That is an outright lie!"





She turned to him with a sceptical look. "Having a love life requires there being females attracted to you nearby, Wharifin. Where exactly are they, if those three," she pointed at the girls in the distance, "Aren't part of your love life?"





He raised an eyebrow. "Aren't you right here though?"





She stared at him for a couple of seconds. Then he watched as her face morphed into her most expressive look yet, an expression of abject horror. "Officer Wharifin, think very carefully on what you just said, and your implication, and please tell me you don't mean it."





He considered it. Ah, it was females attracted to him nearby, so he had suggested that she was- ohhh. He held his chin and then nodded firmly. "I have suddenly decided that I can find zero feminine characteristics about you whatsoever, so therefore, you are no longer considered a girl in my books. Situation resolved."





She gave him a flat stare, and then rolled her eyes, and walked off to deposit her tray. "I guess if we compare our heights, I don't have a height typical of a woman, so in that sense, yes, I have fewer feminine characteristics than you."





Oh, he was so not going to let her off for that dig. "At least I can comfort myself in the fact that I don't have sparkly, glowing hair," he replied, depositing his tray as well.





She slowly turned to face him and then narrowed her ice-blue eyes. "I'd take glowing hair over phosphorescent sensory organs any day."





Phosphorescent sensory organs? What does she- hang on.






He frowned and put his hands up to cover the top half of his ears. "They don't glow that much."





"I can see the veins in them," she informed him tonelessly. "It's like you've got a strange dose of mana poisoning. You remind me of an axolotl."





He glared at her as she looked away, put a hand to her chin, and tilted her head slightly in mock contemplation. "Do Atlanteans count as amphibians?"





"I am not a sea animal," he said through gritted teeth.





"Many sea creatures use gills to breathe underwater," she continued, ignoring his words. "Do you have gills?"





He scoffed and crossed his arms. "No."





"But you can breathe underwater?"





He narrowed his eyes at her, suspicious as to why she was asking this. "Yes."





She took another glance at his ears and returned her gaze to his face. "Axolotls' gills are external, so they look like ears."





"I happen to know axolotls require fresh water, which doesn't support your theory that I am some form of part humanoid amphibian," he hissed.





"I have a reason why you might be able to breathe in saltwater," she said calmly. She spread her hands. "Magic."





With that last statement, she turned around and headed for the exit. Caspian glared at her leaving figure and turned to storm off in the opposite direction so he didn't have to deal with her anymore.





…at least until their next shift that day.











"Officer Wharifin, watch your step," said the emotionless voice of a woman with blue and indigo-streaked black hair.





He looked down past the tall stack of papers he held to see the pen rolling near his foot. With a sour expression, he stepped over it, then looked back at Adrianna, still annoyed about her comments from lunch. "Am I supposed to say thank you for warning me now?"





"I don't understand why you're so angry," she replied, using a pen to write up documents while at her desk. "It's not my fault your ear tips are semi-translucent. Be a functioning adult and move on, Wharifin."





"I regret trying to talk to you," he muttered. "Why don't you go back to ignoring me as you always have?"





"If that's what you want," she stated, continuing to work.





He eyed her dubiously, expecting her to make another annoying comment, but she didn't look at him. He sighed and walked across the room to place down the stack of papers. He came back over to her once he was done. "Anyway, have you completed most of these yet?" he asked, gesturing to the work she was doing.





She didn't respond.





He frowned. "Adrianna?"





She still didn't respond. She didn't even look at him.





He facepalmed when he realised what she was doing. "When I said to continue ignoring me, I didn't mean it literally!" He didn't receive any answer, making him slam his hands down on her desk. "Hey!"





She finally raised her pale eyes to look at him. "Then what did you mean? Because I don't know how you can ignore someone figuratively if I'm not allowed to do it literally."





He ran a hand down his face with exasperation. "Is this how you really are? Because if so, I can understand why you seem to have no friends. Who could even put up with you?"





"You can," she replied, unaffected by his words.





He gave her a strange look. "What do you mean I can? Haven't I just complained that I can't?"





"Our superior stationed you here beside me so you have no choice but to put up with me."





He glared at her. "It shouldn't have to be that way! I shouldn't have to have no choice but to suffer because of you."





She seemed to consider his answer for a moment and then pointed a pen at him. "This is just my personality. You wouldn't have to 'suffer' as you put it if you hadn't spoken to me, so in essence, this is all your fault. I can't be blamed."





Caspian just sighed. "Whatever, I'm done with you." He pulled back his uniform sleeve to check his wristwatch. "The shift ends in half an hour, so let's just agree to avoid antagonising each other until then."





They continued working in silence for a few more minutes, and he stepped through the room's doorway into the hallway, prepared to go get something from another room. Then he paused when he saw someone coming down the corridor.





Ross Stanhope was marching down the hallway, a dark expression on his face. "Blighted Commander…" he muttered. He looked like he was very intent on killing someone, or at least badly maiming them.





When Caspian saw the dark-haired man, he slowly began to step back into the room he and Adrianna were working in, feeling a sense of foreboding, and recognising the look on the man's face.





Ross looked up and noticed Caspian there, then waved to him. "Hey, Caspian, come with me! Let's go get a drink!"





Oh… nononono, I am not doing this now. Quick, I need a scapegoat.






He looked behind him and noticed Adrianna was watching him. He waved hastily to her, mouthing at her to come to him. With a strange expression, she looked between him and Ross, and then firmly shook her head.





Crap. She knows.






Ross grabbed Caspian's wrist to drag him onwards, then frowned when he saw Caspian was distracted. "What are you looking at? ...hm?" He noticed Adrianna there and waved to her. "Yeah, you too. I need someone else who can understand my woes."





Well, at least she can suffer beside me.





Looking slightly tired, she held up her work. "There's another twenty minutes before the shift ends."





"And just who is your superior, Riftmire?" Ross retorted. "Get over here."





With what seemed to be defeat, she sighed and stood up from the desk, and then followed after Caspian and Ross. They made their way through the main command building, exiting it, and Ross took them to one of the inns on the lower level, filled with other Officers off duty. He waved to the innkeeper as they walked in.





"Get me something strong," he called out.





"How strong?" the innkeeper asked.





"The strongest," Ross replied with a dark voice. "I'll need it after today." He glanced at Caspian, then turned back to the innkeeper. "I'll get some ale for the guy next to me too." Then he jabbed a finger at Adrianna. "You can get your own if you want some. You don't deserve any freebies from me after what you've put me through."





Adrianna just rolled her eyes as Caspian glanced between the two curiously.





Does… Ross have something against Adrianna?






They sat at a table as the innkeeper brought the drinks. Ross took a big sip of his tankard, before slamming it down on the table. It had begun. "The Commander is insane!" he suddenly exclaimed. "He's completely mad! You could try to bring me another man more mad than him to prove me wrong, but I swear, he is the craziest person in all the realms!"

Just a fun chapter of Lucy messing with her past first mate.
Also:
My best picture from the last few months.
And quit stalking my Patreon already people! It's not done yet, dammit! Why do I have so many impressions after three days?
 
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