Hello, my dudes. Due to my Lenten hiatus from SV, I decided to take reader advice and go for a longer chapter. In this chapter, we have our first flashback of the story, as promised, as well as some progress on the plot. I hope this is installment is worth the wait.
Beta'd by
@no., who is a gentleman and a scholar.
Chapter 9: Exploring the Ruins
The night's dinner was relaxing after the alternating rush and confinement of the past few days. Madeleine's cooking was simple but judiciously seasoned. Henri and Yuuno discussed some of the former's potential projects, eventually moving on to the background of the Lascaux ruins: dated to the time of Al-Hazard, utterly dissimilar in architecture and design to known Al-Hazardian remains, various artifacts that indicated a high level of matter technology rather than the characteristic ancient magic. Nothing that Brigitte didn't already know.
Rather than listen, she watched Laurent, who was focusing all the stubbornness of his five years on eating neatly and without spilling anything on the tablecloth. His struggles with the knife and fork were...
I better not say anything. He would hate being called cute.
After dinner, everyone retired for the night. Yuuno and Brigitte walked out to the building behind the house, a small cabin. The night air was quiet, yet refreshing.
"After you left us together, Henri suggested that we have Madeleine take us to see the ruins if we want to go before he finishes with his current workload," Yuuno said. He unlocked the door and pushed it open. "What sort of timetable are you on?"
"I'm not in that much of a hurry," said Brigitte, following him in. "We can take our time here. That aside, Madeleine already offered to take us on her own, so there's no reason
not to go tomorrow."
"Good. Then we'll work that out tomorrow."
The interior was mostly bare, with an unpolished wooden floor and single bunks set into the other walls. Brigitte ran to the one to the right of the door and hoisted herself up, flopping down on the cot. "You sure you don't want to talk now?"
Yuuno sat on the bunk on the opposite wall. "Are you in such a hurry that you can't wait until we're better-rested?"
Brigitte scrunched her face in concentration. "Hmm...not really." She glanced at him. "So, sleeping as far from me as possible? Is it for symmetry, or is it awkward for you to sleep in the same room as a girl?"
He coughed. "Now that kind of question is a sign that you're too tired to carry on a serious conversation. Good night."
She sighed and closed her eyes. Come to think of it, he had slept as far away from her as possible in their room on the ship, without even a pillow.
Bet there's a story there. And nobody told me about it? Come on!
--------------------
Brigitte couldn't fall asleep.
...
"Brigitte."
She glanced up from her work. "Yeah?"
"Do you believe that he can do it?"
She scoffed. "Of course. He may not be you, but he's definitely a genius. He's been working on his complex time theory for years now."
"I wasn't referring to that."
"Huh?" She stopped and gave him her full attention.
"We are agreed that, if the experiment succeeds, the prototype must be destroyed, yes?"
She frowned. "What do you mean, doctor? We went over that from the start."
"I have doubts as to whether he can go through with it."
Brigitte's breath caught. "You...don't think he will?"
The man on the other side of the bars steepled his fingers. "Brigitte, you understand what sort of man your father is far better than I do. Tell me: do you honestly believe that, given the opportunity and knowing what we know now, he would eradicate the prototype before it could be studied?"
"Yes." Brigitte stared him down until he blinked and looked away.
He sighed. "I will grant that he has the resolve to do as he intends. However..."
"However what?" demanded Brigitte.
"What of the younger man, burdened neither by death nor cynicism? What would he do, if told what was to happen?"
"...he would insist that the knowledge was worth the risk, and that he wouldn't repeat the mistakes of the future?"
The doctor smiled. "Who can say? You've always been quick to grasp my meaning. Regardless, someone would insist that sealing and study are sufficient bulwarks against accident. That policy on Lost Logia has served the Bureau well for everything short of the Book of Darkness, and perhaps the Mariage."
He turned his gaze back to Brigitte. "Who can say? Would your father hold firm against his friends in the Bureau? Certainly, they would entertain his words. Yet against his younger self...might he not crack, even the slightest bit?"
"Why are you saying this?" Brigitte crossed her arms. "That's all conjecture. Are you saying we should send Chrono back instead, if we get it working?"
The doctor chuckled lightly. "No, no. Nothing of the sort. I'm sure he would attempt to shut our project down, if he could get here at all." He stood from his chair and began to pace sedately around his cell. "No, I was considering you."
"I'm sorry?"
"Oh, come now, girl. Adventure, heroism; don't they appeal to you? To sweep in under the Bureau's nose and remove the danger with no one the wiser? To see firsthand the fruits of our project and the discovery of travel through time?"
"You're just saying that," mumbled Brigitte. "I don't have Dad's experience. What makes me more capable than him? Besides, this just sounds like one of your schemes from years ago when you would stir up trouble with Lost Logia for your own amusement."
"Miss Scrya. I am entirely serious when I say that I consider you fully capable of fulfilling the task at hand. Your father has trained you himself, has he not? Do you think he held back?"
She sighed. "No. Not since I was a little kid."
The doctor smiled. "Your talent for mathematics is no less than his. With guidance, you have as good a chance as he to complete the project safely. Will you not consider it?"
She shook her head. "This is Dad's brainchild. I haven't done a quarter of the work for it, not compared to the two of you."
"Oh, but you have, and more." The doctor sat down again. "After all, it was you who convinced me to assist and your father to accept my help. My portion can be attributed to you, if indirectly." He smirked. "Consider it. You owe it to yourself, at least."
...
Well, if that memory didn't put a damper on her mood. Ugh.
She thought of the Dr. Scaglietti of this time and shivered. Had time in prison changed the one she knew that much? Or had he always been like that, and she too young to notice? The way he looked at her like she was an exotic specimen...
What had her Dr. Scaglietti's motive been in persuading her to go? He hadn't bothered to warn her about the isolation inherent to a world where nobody knew her. Talking to Yuuno and Madeleine helped the loneliness, but there was so much she couldn't tell them.
She wanted to go home soon.
--------------------
"All right! Are we all ready to go?" Madeleine was practically bouncing with excitement.
"Rea'y," yawned Laurent, rubbing his eyes with his sleeve.
Brigitte let herself smile. "I think so."
"Everybody into the SWERV!"
Yuuno blinked. "The what?"
"Super wacky extra rocks vehicle," Laurent recited in monotone.
Brigitte frowned. "Uhh, I thought it was the spider-washing excellent repertoire vagabond."
"Huh." Laurent frowned back. "That one's pretty good. Can I use it?"
"...Sure."
Madeleine made an exasperated face. "Please stop making fun of my acronyms. That's not even close to the real meaning! While I can excuse Brigitte, you should know better, young man!" She pointed a finger at Laurent.
"Not sorry," he stage-whispered.
Brigitte patted him on the head, but he pushed her hand away. "Never change, Laurent."
Yuuno cleared his throat. "Why don't we go outside and get started on our little trip? It's not exactly a short one."
"Well, it's not long, either," Madeleine said. "Not at our usual speed."
"Oh," said Yuuno. He looked to Laurent. "Should I be worried?"
The boy shook his head vigorously but failed to suppress his smirk.
--------------------
This was Yuuno's first time in a wheeled vehicle travelling over a surface that was not a road.
He prayed that today's return trip would be the last.
--------------------
"Well, that was fun!" Brigitte's face was plastered with a wide grin, as was the face of the now-fully-awake small child walking next to her.
Yuuno was slowly recovering from a state of shock. "Do you always drive so...so..."
Madeleine looked offended at his grimace. "The purpose of a vehicle is to provide efficient transportation. My driving is the pinnacle of efficiency, as it should be."
"The petulance isn't necessary, please," muttered Yuuno.
"See that arch up there?" Madeleine called from ahead, ignoring him. "The tour begins once we pass through! I hope you brought a light source, because we're going into the caves before long."
Brigitte sidled up to Yuuno but didn't look at him. [I want you to distract them while I look for the things.]
[What do you have in mind?] asked Yuuno.
[Okay, not really distract. More like, keep them company while I wander off on my own. Can you hold this for me?] She handed Yuuno a palm-sized disk with a blinking green light.
[And this is?]
[It's a teleport beacon. That way, I can get back quickly if they wonder where I've gone. I would use telepathy to triangulate, but the walls are pretty close in here, and I don't want to get stuck in one.]
Yuuno thought it over. On the one hand, she hadn't told him just what she would do when she found the device for which she was searching. On the other, she hadn't abused his trust since agreeing to work together. [That's acceptable,] he replied. [Come back once you find it, though. I don't want you to excavate anything today.]
Brigitte glowered at him. [Don't tell me what to do.]
[If it's as dangerous as you say, then you absolutely should not deal with it alone.] Yuuno returned her look impassively. [Both for your safety and my peace of mind.]
[Hmph, fine.] She didn't press it further.
--------------------
"And over here, we have the Narcolepsy Room, named for the pictorial depictions of comatose figures on the upper walls and ceiling. You may notice the cyclical nature of the pictures; they story they tell seems to loop back into itself." Madeleine waved at the painted engravings set in the stone of the chamber. "As a general rule, the art found in the caves here is of a cyclical nature. We still don't know what exactly it means about the people who made it, since we've found no written records in this area. The style is also different from the hieroglyphic writing system developed and used by the ancient rulers of Al-Hazard, some of which has survived in the magic systems based around mathematics."
Madeleine was in full tour-guide mode, spouting memorized descriptions of anything and everything in the cave system that comprised the bulk of the ruins. Laurent followed close, standing right behind her when she stopped to explain something in detail, which mostly amounted to 'we don't know anything about this.' Yuuno found himself interested nonetheless; Madeleine's ramblings were full of details that he would not have noticed on first glance. Brigitte seemed interested as well--if she was only feigning an interest while looking for an opening to escape on her own, she was a very good actor.
They came through a tunnel into another room. The lights that lined the walls of the other chambers were conspicuously absent here, leaving the room black except for what light spilled from the tunnel mouths.
"And this is the Chamber of Unbreakable Darkness, named for its natural anti-magilink field," Madeleine explained. "Magic-based light sources will not work here, so this room requires more primitive light sources, like electric filament bulbs." She produced an electric flashlight from a pocket and flipped it on to light the way.
A natural anti-magilink field? thought Yuuno. He whispered to Brigitte, "Does that mean the boundary here between imaginary space and realspace is weakened?"
Brigitte's reply came a second later. "We think it's a side effect from when the thing I'm looking for was landed here. I told you it rips up realspace when it's used."
"Who's 'we'?"
Brigitte's tone was sharp. "Don't pry."
Yuuno closed his eyes. "Right. Sorry."
"You made a good observation. My source tells me that it should be around this area, within a close radius. I'll want to break off here."
Madeleine droned on as they walked through the chamber, oblivious to their conversation, with Laurent holding her hand. Yuuno and Brigitte began to fall behind.
"How do you plan to give Madeleine the slip without making her panic?" Yuuno could have sworn Brigitte rolled her eyes at this, except that he didn't swear and it was too dark to tell.
"Don't worry, I've got this. I know exactly what I'm looking for. Start up a conversation with her so I can deploy an Area Search."
"How do you plan to do that within the radius of the natural AMF?"
Some light spilled in from the tunnel at the other end of the room. Brigitte scowled. "Of course I'm not doing it in here, dummy. I'm going to let it out on the perimeter and search from there. Once the search finishes, I'll know where to go."
They exited the room into the tunnel, and Yuuno switched to telepathy. [I thought you already knew the location.]
[Well, the tunnels are different on my map! The excavation changes some things, you know.]
Yuuno gave her a flat look. [No need to be petulant. Get started already.]
He increased his pace to catch up to Madeleine and Laurent. As he came next to them, Madeleine gave him a smile. "So, what do you think of the tour so far?"
"It's been quite illuminating," he replied. "I begin to understand the allure this place holds for Brigitte. I'm tempted to come and investigate myself, at some later time. I find the idea of a technological development separate from, but simultaneous to, that of Al-Hazard fascinating." The corridor branched, and Madeleine led them on the left path. "My own excavations, while exciting in their own way, didn't have nearly as much historical significance. Even if this is only a fragment that died here, without making it into the main stream of Al-Hazard's cultural evolution, its mere existence confirms the possibility that other sites like it may have survived."
Madeleine nodded."Yes, of course! That's one of my interests as well. In a few years, when Laurent is old enough to attend school on his own, I plan to pursue an advanced degree in archaeology with a focus on the interplay of ancient magic with Al-Hazard society. It's a small field, but that just means I have more work to do!"
Laurent made a disgruntled noise. "You guys are nerds. Only nerds are happy about more work." He swung Madeleine's hand back and forth impatiently.
Yuuno smiled. "You know, I don't really think that's true. One of my friends is an investigator for the Administration Bureau, and his favorite thing to do is paperwork. He says that as long as he's doing paperwork, it means that nothing's gone wrong that he has to fix."
"And...pardon the question, but how often do things go wrong?" Madeleine sounded genuinely curious.
Yuuno sighed. "Last I heard, he's out of his office two to three days of every six. And none of that is vacation. He doesn't take vacations."
"Your friend sounds boring," pronounced Laurent.
"If you exclude the times he blew up a dozen robots with a single attack and froze a city-sized monster, sure." Laurent spun to face Yuuno, his jaw slack and eyes comically wide. Yuuno smiled. "And those are just the ones I was there for."
Madeleine sighed, but she was smiling too. "Don't lead the boy on like that, Yuuno. There's no way he'll leave you alone if you have stories like that to tell."
Yuuno shrugged. "They're long stories, but I'm willing to tell them if you're willing to listen, Laurent. I can try to keep things cut down to the interesting parts."
"I...I would like to hear about your experiences, too," said Madeleine, almost timidly. Then she looked back. "Wait, where's Brigitte? Wasn't she with us?"
"No," said Laurent. "She took the other path back where the tunnel split up."
Yuuno gave him an appraising look. "You're quite observant, Laurent."
"I know! I have to be, since I want to be a ship captain like Uncle Gerard when I grow up," the boy said, nodding firmly.
Madeleine looked back up the tunnel. "Was she not paying attention and took the left path by mistake?"
"That depends," said Yuuno. "Where does that path lead?"
"Nowhere in particular," said Madeleine. "That's the area for the new excavation; there's nothing there yet."
"I see," said Yuuno. "Now tell me, Madeleine. Why did Brigitte come here in the first place?"
"She wanted to do archeological work of her own," Madeleine replied. "That's what she told me."
"That is indeed what she said. The question is, did she go off on her own out of innocent curiosity or out of malicious, rule-flouting curiosity."
"I'm...sorry?" Madeleine's mouth hung open in surprise, as if she couldn't reconcile the words with his nonchalant tone.
"Never mind that. Let's go look for her. That's what you would suggest, isn't it?" Yuuno met Madeleine's eyes. She flinched and looked away.
"Do you not like Brigitte?" asked Laurent.
Yuuno sighed and squatted down next to the boy. "That's a very complicated question. It's not that I don't like her; it's that I don't know her well enough to trust that she wouldn't leave the group on purpose." He glanced down the tunnel. "That, and she's not enough of an airhead to miss the path in a blank tunnel with nothing to distract her." He stood up, took a few steps in the direction they'd come, and turned around, shaking his head. "I'm sorry. It isn't like me to vent on acquaintances. I've spent the last three days with her, and the lack of proper communication has been...trying, to say the least."
"Of course," said Madeleine, breathily. "That's...quite understandable. I won't mention it to her."
Yuuno nodded. "Thank you."
Madeleine took Laurent's hand and the three began to retrace their steps down the tunnel.
--------------------
Brigitte climbed over a pile of debris. The tunnels in this area were only partially cleared; some of the ones on her map weren't visible at all. They were also dim, lit only by a conjured light spell that Brigitte carried with her. Apparently, the excavations had not yet reached this area.
That was fine. As long as she could get to her target location, or sufficiently close to it, Brigitte could excavate on her own.
With a mental nudge from her, Calliope projected the holographic map of the cave system. Another nudge overlaid it with the updated map of the tunnels' current condition, the first in green, the second in blue. Brigitte squinted at the display and examined her projected route, highlighted with a soft yellow. Based on the condition of the tunnels, she would have...at least two blockages, and maybe a wall to break through. Hopefully, no more than that.
She slid down a short slope of loose rocks and started to sing softly.
"Hopokk had a talk with neighbor Neviden.
'Come out, see the sun, and have a bite of grass.'
Neviden said, 'Again? Must you tempt me from my den?
All you have by day is horrid sand that turns to glass.'"
Coming to a cavern with many openings and hollows, she checked her map and crawled into the second opening from the right. She had to get on her hands and knees to fit through. Fortunately, her barrier jacket kept her skin from getting scraped.
"'How is that a way to behave,
Luring me from my lovely cave?
There's water here, but none to save
For a greedy lump like you.'"
It was harder to sing while crawling, but she managed.
"'Don't impeach my motives so.
I'm giving you a place to go,
to find things you might never know,
and the warmth of the sunlight, too.'"
She broke off as the tunnel widened, giving her room to stand and brush herself off. "I wonder if I'll see any nevidens down here today?" Brigitte twisted her torso to slip through a group of stalagmites. "Calliope, do you sense any?"
[Negative. Wide area search not deployed. Vital scans impaired in Navagation Device shell.]
"Oh well," sighed Brigitte. "Let me know if you see any."
[Affirmative.]
"This situation kind of makes me the hopokk, doesn't it?"
[...Answer unresolved. Query: intended as metaphor?]
Brigitte patted the Device on her wrist. "Good job, Calliope. I told Dad I could teach you."
--------------------
Chrono tapped at his desk irritably. "Is there nothing else? No more possible leads?"
Amy shook her head. "No, that's everything."
Chrono scowled. "At this rate, I might have to track Scrya down so I can question the girl as a witness. He might not even know about the fire yet."
Amy shrugged. "Maybe not. Do you have a way to contact him?"
"That's the other problem." Chrono got up from his desk and started to pace back and forth. "Six years, Amy. Six years as the Chief Infinity Librarian and the man still doesn't have a personal Device. If he had one, I could request a long-distance connection, but right now, I only know the planet. I can't cover a planet with telepathy, especially not a planet two days' travel away on an unregistered vessel. No, we're stuck waiting for him to contact us." He halted and laid his hands on the desk again.
Amy put a hand on his shoulder. "I think you could stand to be a little more calm about this situation, Chrono."
He groaned. "I would be a little more calm about this if I knew
what the hell was going on over there."
"Vacation time is always rough," said Amy. She sat him down in his chair again and ruffled his hair in a comforting gesture. "I'm sure something will turn up. It usually does."
--------------------
Brigitte took a deep breath. She had almost reached her destination. The only barrier left was the solid rock slab blocking the entrance to the chamber, right where the excavation report said it had been when Dr. Durand had found it.
"Well, we're here," she said to Calliope. "Scan it for weak points, please."
[Scanning. Warning: field irregularities detected. Some scanning functions impaired.]
"That's expected, since we're so close." Brigitte ran her free hand across the slab's dark surface. It was polished smooth, with only a little dust.
[Scan complete. Density significant. Brute force inadvisable.]
Brigitte sighed. "No punching, got it."
[Durability of subject almost certainly exceeds maximum assisted impulse of gauntlet form.]
Brigitte cracked a smile. "Now you sound like Dad." She took a step back and swept her gaze around the giant doorstop's edges. "So, wedge it out with forcefields and binds, or try to cut through?"
[Unlikely to work.] Calliope flashed. [Cross-checking database for possible methods...]
Brigitte pondered. When faced with a problem, the proper response was to step back and reduce the problem to its most essential components. Goal: get into the chamber on the other side of this rock. Obstacle: the rock was blocking the way, and she couldn't phase through walls. Solution: remove the rock. Blowing it up was out; fists wouldn't do the trick, and shooting magic might blow up the whole chamber, if she had any spells strong enough for the job (she didn't). That left moving it. Direct approach with physical constructs--also out, which left...
[Suggestion: teleportation magic.]
Brigitte frowned. "I thought you would tell me that a teleport in an irregular mana field was highly inadvisable."
[Clarification: teleport rock, not self.]
Ah. Still inadvisable under normal circumstances, but much less dangerous than teleporting herself inside the room. Brigitte snapped her fingers. "That's a decent idea. Set it up, please."
[Request acknowledged. Setting up.]
Calliope expanded, components from its parallel-space storage unfolding to form a gauntlet over her hand. Brigitte's barrier jacket flared, adding an active protection layer, visible as a brown cape designed to mimic what her father wore in old pictures. Brigitte lifted both hands in front of her. "Calliope, find me the spot with the least interference. I'll cast unassisted from there."
[Two steps to your right, one step back.]
Brigitte followed the directions and focused. While teleporting herself was muscle memory at this point, she had less practice teleporting other things from a distance--that was more of her father's thing. She estimated the dimensions of the rock, factored in Calliope's estimate of the mass density, and chose a clear space about three meters from the rock's starting position. It
seemed feasible, but you could never quite tell with unknown mana field distortions...well. She would just do it and hope for no explosions.
Adding and scaling the required vectors in her head, she focused on the flow of mana through her linker core and squeezed. A teal-green magic circle flared to life under the rock, which shimmered and vanished, reappearing with a similar shimmer approximately seventy centimeters from the desired spot. Brigitte frowned. "Distorted mana fields are no joke, huh? That's way more error than I expected." She gingerly started walking toward the now-open entryway. Suddenly, the rock tipped over and crashed to the ground, showering her with splinters. Brigitte beckoned her floating light closer to it and was able to make out hairline cracks across much of the stone's surface, as well as strange ripples where it had been completely smooth. Paling slightly, she turned away and passed through the doorway.
The ceiling rose above her, fading into blackness that her small light couldn't quite pierce. Scant reflections flickered from polished carvings on the near walls and geometric patterns in a floor mosaic. Brigitte waved her hand, summoning three more lights, which she sent ahead of her in different directions. With the extra illumination, she could make out the grays and reds of the stone, with some of the black material of the late door, Kaiser rest its soul, mixed in. The patterns on the floor were radial, all leading to the center of the circular chamber. Somehow, it made her think of a kind of shrine.
Of course, she'd seen this chamber before and thought the same then. The only different thing was the massive lump of purplish-black metal embedded in the rock where the floor patterns intersected. It seemed to pulse faintly, reflecting deep violet rays she could barely see while devouring all other visible light. Rising at an oblique angle, it towered almost to the chamber ceiling.
Well, here I am, thought Brigitte,
and there it is. The Lost Logia that started this whole horrible mess. Now, it was time to destroy it and prevent the ensuing tragedy.
And immediately, the moment was ruined, as Brigitte realized that she had neglected to think of how, exactly, she would destroy the equivalent of a ship's drive in an enclosed cavern in the center of a magic distortion zone.
"Merde. I should have asked the Doctor for some explosives."